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

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or greeke sentences which a slender scholler in the Grammar schoole may quickly do whereas they ought to labour and striue to profite the meanest of their hearers in which number the greatest part are I haue heard many iudicious hearers many times complaine that the producing of forreigne testimonies and the speaking of strange tongues much hindereth attention and disturbeth the memory they haue so much variety of sauce set before them that they forget to taste and eate of the meate But our doctrine must put vs in minde that the Minister must haue a care of euery part of his flocke The heathen Oratour pronounceth that they are worthily laughed to scorne that vse such words Cicer. offic li. 1. as that they are not vnderstood Curandum est vt sermone eo vtamur qui notus est nobis ne vt quidam Graeca verba incultantes iure optimo irrideamur Hee wrote this to him that vnderstood the Greeke but because hee wrote it for the vse of others also he abstaineth from intermingling of vnknowne words And in another place hee saith Cicer. Tuscul quaest lib. 1. he disliked as much the speaking of greeke among latine as the speaking of latine among greeke So should we account it as vnfit and vnseemely to speake latine in an english Sermon as to speake english in a latine Sermon Thus the Gentiles that knew not the true God yet by the light or naturall reason amended by the helpe of art and learning knew the inconuenience and incongruity of this medly and therefore we should take notice of it Againe it reprooueth such Ministers as are ignorant that cannot are idle that will not teach the people as also Non residents that neuer come among thē for their good but for their goods not to teach the truth but to receiue their tithes these doe indeed take care of none whereas they should take care of euery one Secondly let the Ministers labour to practise Vse 2 this duty to shew their care as of the whole so also of euery part Doubtlesse they haue not performed loue to Christ that haue not care of his lambes as well as of his sheepe of the feeble as well as of the strong of the small as well as of the great and do not seek to be profitable euen to the meanest and the simplest Little children must haue the bread broken vnto them and cut into little peeces for them that they may eate it if an whole or hard loafe should be set before them they might rise vp an hungred as they sate downe and we might iustly bee thought to desire to starue them rather then to feed them So ought the Minister to studie to shew himselfe approoued vnto God a workeman that needeth not to be ashamed rightly diuiding the word of truth 2 Tim. 2 verse 15. A Physition that dealeth with his patient hath not onely a care of the whole body in generall but he applyeth his physicke to euery particular as he seeth it in his discretion to haue need so he that is a spirituall Physition must deale after the same manner he must not only haue a generall care of all in grosse but a speciall care of euery one to apply vnto them either doctrine or reproofe or instruction or consolation as hee shall see them to stand in need He must labour to strengthen the weake to beate downe the proud to instruct the ignorant to comfort the broken-hearted to raise vp them that are fallen and to deale toward euery one as his condition requireth Lastly seeing this duty is required of the Vse 3 Ministers it admonisheth the hearers that they suffer them to deale thus in particular with them They are wolues and not sheepe that cannot abide that the shepheard should touch them and handle them whose desire is to tarre them not to teare them because hee hath a care of their good in particular It is the common corruptiō of the multitude they cannot abide that the Minister should strike them home or apply his doctrine to thēselues Some speake against the Minister because he is too sharpe he points at them he aimeth at them like those that would bee angry with the Surgeon because he toucheth the sore laieth the plaister vpon it Others reprooue the Minister because he bringeth common knowne things ordinary points such men haue itching eares and hunt after new things and so turne away their eares from the truth 2. Tim. 4 3 4. These doe not consider that the Minister hath charge of euery soule and must haue a care of the whole and of euery particular and in the Congregation though some be strong yet others are weake though some be learned yet the greatest part are vnlearned whereas their care must bee to strengthen the weake as well as to establish the strong And as for them that are strongest their memory is weake their affections oftentimes cold that they haue need to be put in minde often of the same things indeed it is profitable to thē Phil. 3 1. 20 And the Lord spake vnto Aaron Thou shalt haue none inheritance in their Land neither shalt thou haue any part among them I am thy part ● 10 9. Iosh 13. ●e 44.28 and thine inheritance among the children of Israel 21 And behold I haue giuen the children of Leui all the tenth in Israel for an inheritance for their seruice which they serue euen the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 22 Neither must the children of Israel henceforth come nigh the Tabernacle of the Congregation lest they beare their sinne and die The Lord declareth in these words how the Leuites shall be maintained They had no inheritance in the Land as the rest of the Tribes neither might they take vpon them any trade but must wholly attend the duties of their calling and therefore they haue the tenth in Israel assigned vnto them for the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation The doctrine arising from hence is this The Ministers of the word of God must be liberally maintained of the people ●trine Ministers ●e word of must be ●ally mained Mat. 10 10. 1 Cor. 9 14. Gal. 6 6. 1 Tim. 5 17 18 God claimeth and chalengeth all tithes due to himselfe Leuit. 27 30. Heere he maketh an assignation or resignation of thē to the Leuites whom he maketh as his Bayliffes or Deputies to receiue them as his rent and reuenue and the Priests are appointed to receiue the tenths of their tenths Here two causes are rendred wherefore God made ouer these tithes to these persons First because they had no part of the diuision of the Land the rest of the Tribes had the Land diuided to them by lot therefore they must be prouided for another way Secondly because their labour was incessant and continuall and they were worthy to be rewarded for it accordingly They were deputed to teach the people bestowed much paines and attendance in the
purchase it The Prophet teacheth that the people are destroied for want of knowledge Hos 4 6 thereby depriue themselues of the means of saluation Vse 3 Lastly we should learne to eschew auoid Idolatry in the very beginning before by custome and continuance it be encreased If we once entertaine it with the least liking and approbation we shall neuer or hardly reclaime our selues till we fill vp the measure of it The Apostle exhorteth vs to abstaine from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5 22. And Iude admonisheth vs to hate the garment spotted with the flesh verse 23. We must hate therefore as well the occasions and appurtenances of Idolatry as Idolatry it selfe as those things which bring much dishonour to God and much hurt vnto our owne soules Obiection But some peraduenture will say What need all these things or what cause is there of so many words touching Idolatry the remnants therof all this might well enough be spared and passed ouer forasmuch as heere are none of vs that are Idolaters and if any haue beene so that is forgotten and forgiuen long agoe I answer Answ it is not to be denyed but confessed that we liue in a reformed Church wherein Idolatry is swept away and yet many do in this point much deceiue themselues and are like the Pharisies that iustified themselues For if we would examine our selues by the strict rule of the word of God what Idolatry is and what it is not then certainely it will manifestly appeare that in the Church of England there are Idolaters yea notable Idolaters to bee found The Law is plaine and do we not reade what God saith Exodus 20 verse 4 Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image neither the similitude of any thing thou shalt not bow downe to thē nor serue them If these were asked of this Commandement they would be ready to answer with the young man in the Gospel All these things haue I kept from my youth Matth. 19 20. For we thinke commonly that vnlesse we be popish Idolaters to fall down before an Idoll worship it we be no Idolaters at all But heereby we shew that we doe not vnderstand the Law of God neyther the rules of interpretation For as murther consisteth not onely in taking away life but in hatred also and reuenge as the Apostle Iohn testifieth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him 1 Iohn chapter 3 verse 15. Matth. chapter 5 verse 22 and as adultery consisteth not onely in the outward acte but also in the inward and secret lustes of the heart so may there be Idolaters that do not fall downe and worshippe an Idoll and there is an Idolatry in the heart as well as in the practise The Apostle Paul in the second Epistle to the Corinthians chapter 4 verse 4 calleth the diuell The god of this world and yet there are none in the Church that worshippe the diuell in any outward or visible shape but they hate the thought of it no lesse then the deed How then is it that many or that any make him their god but that they beleeue in him obey him and trust more in him then they do in almighty God Whereupon he concludeth that they are no better then worshippers of the diuell howsoeuer not in outward fashion yet in the inward affection So if we would examine our owne hearts and spirits by this law which is spirituall we shall finde our selues to be grosse Idolaters many wayes Many worship theyr wealth and make theyr riches theyr god and set it vp as an Idoll in theyr hearts and this is one relique of Idolatry These are they that thinke gaine to be godlinesse 1 Tim. 6 5. and are grosse Idolaters in theyr hearts howsoeuer they neuer worshipped any visible Image Againe there are some that worship GOD with theyr bellies Phil. 3 19 such are the drunkards gluttonous persons howsoeuer otherwise they hate an Image yet are they notable Idolaters in theyr hearts There are also Idolaters of other sorts and other reliques of Idolatry some haue made theyr pleasure theyr god this is the common sinne of great men and these worshippe and serue theyr owne delights and pastimes loue them more then the Lord. Now whatsoeuer a man loueth better then GOD that same he maketh to bee his God Many such there are among vs who albeit they abhorre the open worshipping of Images yet in theyr hearts they reteyne the dregs of Idolatry and are indeed notable Idolaters And if wee would make diligent tryall of our selues and search into the secret corners of our harts by the cleere light of the word as with a candle we should finde our places persons and times to be full of Idolatry forasmuch as the most part haue preferred theyr pride theyr couetousnesse theyr lustes before God himselfe and therefore these are Idolaters haue ioyned themselues to Idols And concerning those that haue liued heeretofore in Idolatry and thinke that now they haue forsaken it therefore shall do well enough let them take heed they do not deceyue themselues For a man may leaue sinne and yet not repent for it A man may ceasse from the practise of it and yet not hate it neyther turne vnto God And doubtlesse if these men can yet laugh heartily at theyr former practises and make a iest and sport in telling what they haue done before an abhominable Idoll they may iustly suspect that they remaine filthy Idolaters still and if occasion were presented vnto them againe they would fall afresh to theyr former Idolatry as the dogge to his vomite I say therefore vnto such that without vnfeyned repentance there is no saluation but as they liued in Idolatry so they shall dye Idolaters and be condemned with Idolaters eternally Reuel 21. verse 8. CHAP. XXXIII 1 THese are the iournies of the Children of Israel which went foorth out of the Land of Egipt with their armies vnder the hand of Moses and Aaron 2 And Moses wrote their goings out according to their iournies by the commandement of the Lord and these are their iournies according to their goings out 3 And they departed from Rameses in the first Moneth on the 15 day of the first Moneth on the morrow after the Passeouer the Children of Israel went out with an high hand in the sight of all the Egiptians 4 For the Egiptians buried all their first borne which the Lord had smitten among them vpon their gods also the Lord executed iudgements 5 And the children of Israel remoued from Rameses and pitched in Succoth 6 And from Succoth c. AFter the inheritāce was giuen to the two Tribes the halfe on this side Iordan Moses describeth by the commandement of the Lord the places of their abode in the Wildernesse their seuerall mansions where they pitched their Tents vntil they entred into the Land of promise In this Chapter consider
Eleazar the Priest and Ioshua the son of Nun. 18 And ye shall take one prince of euery tribe to diuide the land by inheritance 19 And the names of the men are these Of the Tribe of Iudah Caleb the sonne of Iephunneh 20 Of the Tribe of Simeon Shemuel c. 21 Of Beniamin Elidad c. 22 Of Dan Bukki c. 23 For the tribe of Manasseh Hananiel c. 24 Of Ephraim Kemuel c. 25 Of Zebulun Elizaphan c. 26 Of Issachar Paltiel c. 27 Of Ashur Ahihud c. 28 Of Naphtali Pedahel c. 29 These are they whom the Lord commanded to diuide the inheritance vnto the children of Israel in the land of Canaan This is the second part of the chapt where the persons are appointed and named which ought to diuide the land these are of 2. sorts the chiefe and principall were the priest of the Church and the Captaine of the hoast the rest were ten Princes chosen out of the ten tribes so that two tribes are left out to wit Reuben and Gad because they had their inheritance befalne them already at their owne request on this side Iordan All these Princes are particularly expressed by their names and by the names of their fathers and all are ioyned in equall commission together that nothing should be done with partiality to whose arbitrement and determination all were bound to stand From hence three questions may bee raysed First Obiection what need there was of any Princes to diuide the land and giue the Tribes their possessions seeing this was to be done by lot I answer Answ the one of these doth not take away the other there was vse of them both For seeing the lot could not bee vsed except the land were diuided into ten parts or Prouinces therefore it pleased God to vse the helpe and ministery of men to diuide it into tenne parts after which diuision made the lots wer cast by iudgement whereof euery Tribe had his portion of the land Thus we see how both of them were very necessary and that the one did not ouerthrow or disanull the other Againe Obiect why doth God ioyne ten other Princes to Eleazar the Priest and to Ioshua the son of Nun were not these two sufficient Answer I answer that which belongeth to all ought to be done of all and thereby God taketh away that enuy which might he cast vpon them when the matter was indifferently decided by a seuerall Prince selected out of euery seuerall Tribe Thus the mouthes of all were stopped and euery one perswaded to rest without complaint or contradiction in the deciding which they should make Thirdly the question may bee asked Obiect Why the Priest was employed in this diuision For some haply will maruell that matter of temporall inheritance in which himselfe and the rest of that tribe had no other portion but the Lord should be committed to him that had the charge of the Tabernacle and this may seeme altogether impertinent to his function I answer Answ this was done for sundry waightie considerations For this was not without a mystery Why the high Priests helpe was vsed in the diuision of the land And as euery ceremony had his signification so heerein the Priest was a figure of Christ to whom the spirituall inheritance belongeth who is ascended to prepare a place for those that are his in heauen Secondly this was done in regard of the Priests Leuites for albeit they had no inheritance in the land yet some part and parcell fell vnto their share out of euery Tribe as we shall see in the following chapter Thirdly if any controuersie should arise in this great and waighty busines of making a stable and vnchangeable diuision that might remaine among their posterity for euer they might haue the Priest at hand for direction and to aske counsell for them at the mouth of God Lastly that this whole action might bee sanctified to them theyr children it was to be begun with prayer and to be finished with thankesgiuing for which the Priest was the fittest according to the saying of the Apostle Coloss 3. verse 17. Whatsoeuer ye do in word or deed do all in the name of the Lord Iesus giuing thankes to God and the Father by him This diuision offereth diuers instructions In that Eleazar Ioshua the cheefe of the rest appointed to set out the land are named before other it teacheth that superiours whose head God hath lifted vp aboue their bretheren ought to giue good example to others Againe wee see that God maketh choise of men to bee his instruments so that not onely those things are to be holden diuine and of diuine authority which are done immediately by God himselfe but such also as are done by men assigned to their office by him Thus God hath called men and not Angelles to preach the Gospel whereby hee regenerateth vs and maketh vs heires of his kingdome if we receyue the same by fayth We are therefore to submit our selues vnto it and to bee content to be informed and reformed by it no otherwise then if an Angel from heauen nay no lesse then if God himselfe should speake vnto vs Luke 10 16. 1 Thess 2 13. Acts 10 33. This is the way to heare aright Furthermore obserue the faith of this people They were not yet come into the land they had not passed ouer Iordan nor obtained one foote there the Canaanites yet dwelled in their Cities and armed themselues to resist them they had strong Cities walled vp to heauen and mighty men of strength and stature to oppose against them they had a generation of Gyants mighty men that were as so many Goliahs to bid defiance to Israel yet we see they are occupied in diuiding the land and haue Princes appointed to determine the same and all of them are no lesse busie in the work then if the land were already conquered subdued vnto them which sheweth to vs the nature of faith according to the description of the Apostle Heb. 11.1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for the euidence of things not seene for by it the elders obtained a good report This we saw before in the daughters of Zelophehad how zealous they were in the cause of their father to haue a part of the inheritance particularly to themselues True it is this is touching a temporal promise or a promise of a temporall blessing howbeit it had reference typically to the eternall inheritance in the heauenly Canaan So then this teacheth vs that true faith apprehendeth appropriateth Doctrine True faith is of an applying nature and applyeth Gods promises as if they were present True faith is of an applying nature It doth not onely assent vnto the promises of God but maketh application of them to our selues and both are necessary to saluation Ier. 31 33 Esay 25 9. Cant. 2 16 and 6 3. Iohn 1 12. and 6 51 35 and 3 14 15. None had comfort by the brazen
more to the heaps of their other wickednesse Sixtly theyr estate or ability what theyr lands or liuings bee what goods and substance they haue where their dwelling and abode is whether they haue any thing to lose and bee able to make satisfaction if happely they be found tainted For beggers and bankrout strangers and straglers vnknowne and vntryed may soone bee brought to lift at an oth for a little money and for hope of gain and the party grieued and abused by theyr falsehood and forgery shall purchase theyr eares when they are in the pillery at a deare rate if he list to sue at the Law for them Lastly theyr faith or religon is of speciall consideration because that is the bond of all good order If they feare God and regard theyr conscience there is no feare of them we need make no scruple of conscience to allow of them For infidels Turkes heretiques or vnbeleeuers make little account to renounce sell Christ and the Christian faith which they doe not beleeue fot a small gaine and aduantage Neuerthelesse the Gentiles themselues did put such religion in othes if they had sworne solemnely by their false gods that they feared vengeance to fall vpon them Iuuen. satyr 8. if they did breake them Thus wee haue seene what witnesses ought to bee now let vs see how they offend when they are such as they ought not to be For no man must thinke it a small offence to wrest iudgment and to be a false witnes A false witnes offendeth sixe wayes inasmuch as they offend against God against the truth against the Iudge against the person accused against the commonwealth and against themselues First of all they sinne against GOD himselfe who is the Author of truth and the President of iudgment seates for they feare not to lye shamelesly to his face and to pollute and defile his Tribunall they despise and contemne his Law and call vpon him to be a witnesse of falsehood Secondly they do offend against the truth which is that onely light wherein the knowledge of things consisteth this they go about to darken with theyr lyes and to hide it from the sight of men as they that couer a candle vnder a bushell or like to theeues that cannot abide the light but put it out that neyther they nor their doings may be espied Thirdly they transgresse against the Iudge who pronounceth sentence according to the words of the witnesses and maketh their depositions as a rule to guide and direct him It is a common thing for the Iudge to erre and to go astray Phil. Bosquieri theatrum patie p. 280 being seduced and deceiued by their falsehood pronouncing with his mouth sealing with his hand and striking with his sword otherwise then it ought to be who ought to be the instrument the oracle and the interpreter of God Fourthly against such as are accused and brought to iudgment whether they be guilty or not guilty If they be guilty and bee acquitted and discharged by them they free them from punishment which might bee a good meanes to doe them good when they should receiue according to their deserts and besides they encourage them in euill because to escape without punishment inflameth them with a desire to continue in euill If they bee not guilty they are wronged and oppressed by their false testimonie eyther in their life or in their goods or in their name or in such like earthly blessings Wilh Zepper de leg Mosaic lib. 5 cap. 7. For whatsoeuer is taken from the condemned person by sentence of the Iudge is all done by the fault of the false witnesse If life be taken from him he is the murtherer if he lose any of his goods hee is the theefe if his good name be impaired he is the slanderer Fiftly against the common-wealth because the end of iudgments and of the courts of iustice is not attayned to wit the peace and tranquillity of the people For wherefore serue so many places and seates of iudgment but that wee should leade a peaceable and a quiet life The end of warre is said to be peace so the end of suites is that we should not sue Now this great and precious iewell of peace is wronged and wrested when the Iudge following the rule of the witnesses and iudging according to things alledged and proued doth condemne the innocent and absolue the guilty person For as hee is iniurious against my body that cutteth off a sound arme or leg so is he against the citty which casteth way a good and profitable citizen Again as he is hurtfull to my body that doth not cut off a rotten member or perswade the Surgeon to cut it or to burne it when need requireth because the sound members that remain are endangered thereby so likewise he that moueth or perswadeth the Iudge to acquit a guilty person who is no better to the common-wealth then a rotten member is to the body is an enemy to the state and iniurious to the body politicke Lastly against himselfe False witnesses doe hurt themselues most of all because he depriueth himselfe of all blessings belonging to soule and body The Lord professeth himselfe to bee a sharpe and speedy Iudge against those that sweare falsely Zach. 5 4. Mal. 3.5 Hence it is that Salomon sayth A false witnes shall not be vnpunished and he that speaketh lyes shall not escape Prou. 19 5.9 and chapt 25 18 A man that beareth false witnes against his neighbour is a maule and a sword and a sharpe arrow to wit not onely toward his brother but striking piercing wounding and hurting himselfe It is the part of an enuious person to pull out both his owne eyes to put out one of his neighbours but such are all false witnesses they annoy themselues in soule and body that they may hurt the body onely of their brother So then a false witnes doth hurt himselfe more then he doth another or can do He may by his false testimony take away his goods or his life or his name and this is all when in the meane season he destroyeth and damneth his owne soule and casteth it into hel fire there to be tormented with the diuell and his angels CHAP. XXXVI 1 ANd the chiefe fathers of the families of the children of Gilead the sonne of Machir the sonne of Manasseh of the families of the sonnes of Ioseph came neere and spake before Moses and before the Princes the chiefe fathers of the children of Israel 2 And they said The Lord commanded my Lord to giue the land for an inheritance by lot to the children of Israel and my Lord was commanded by the Lord to giue the inheritance of Zelophehad our brother vnto his daughters 3 And if they be married to any of the sonnes of the other tribes of the children of Israel then shall their inheritance be taken from the inheritance of our fathers and shall be put to the inheritance of the tribe
wee are not to be addicted vnto them seruilely in things vnlawfull and vnhonest or in obeying theyr traditions as Gods Commandements Obiection But Christ saith Call no man master vpon earth Math. 23 10 because one is our Master Answ euen Christ I answer this must be vnderstood as the former when Christ forbiddeth to call any father to wit to hold him in chiefe and not subordinate to Christ and for Christ Obiection Againe it is obiected that sinne brought in seruitude and slauish subiection of man to man For albeit in the innocent estate there should haue been teacher and scholler thogh not by office and calling to preach the word or to teach schooles and gouerners and the gouerned Answer yet not master and seruant I answere sinne was the occasion of sundry things in theyr nature good or at least through Gods mercy and blessing bringing good out of euill For it brought into the world vpon man a necessity to marry for the auoyding of fornication yea sinne may bee saide to haue caused a necessity of Christs comming as also to cause a necessity of preaching and of laboring in the sweat of our browes and a necessity likewise in relieuing the poore Besides euery kinde of subiection is not against the law of pure Nature as might bee shewed by the subiection of the wife to the husband and of the children to theyr parents So then seruitude is no new inuention of cruel men in these latter dayes neyther is a faithfull seruant to be accounted a perpetuall asse crouching vnder his burden No man must be ashamed of that calling neyther reprooue it as euill and vnlawfull but rather labour to adorne the Gospell in it by seruing not with eye-seruice but dealing faithfully as the seruants of Christ Vse 3 Lastly all superiours must so carry themselues as that they may deserue reuerence and draw not contempt vpon themselues 1 Tim. 4 12 Prou. 16 31 and 21 30. Leuitic 19 32. 1 Tim. 5 1 2. And those duties are of diuers sorts which are to be performed by them whereof they are put in minde by the names whereby they are called The first degree of this superiority concerneth parents to whom it belongeth to teach The dut●es of parents to correct to defend and to prouide for theyr children as we haue shewed already chap. 30. This reproueth such as are carelesse what become of them such as pamper them to much and suffer them to doe what they list till they shame theyr fathers mothers theyr friends and the Church of God and grow obstinate and incorrigible Touching masters The duties of masters it lyeth vpon them to order theyr seruants and families aright they must require of their seruants no more then is iust and equall Col. 4 1 remembring that they haue a Master in Heauen who requireth onely things iust and equall at their hands they are to prouide for them food and rayment and such like necessaries or else they are worse then infidels and haue denyed the faith Prou. 31 21. 1 Tim. 5 8. Likewise it behoueth them to teach and instruct them as faithfull and beleeuing Masters haue done and found a great blessing vpon theyr labors Acts 10 7. Gen. 24 12. And if Masters desire to haue theyr houses dutifull subiect vnto them they must chuse such as are religious or be carefull to make them religious that so they may obey for conscience sake If at any time they shall make conscience to serue the Lord they will not be slouthfull to serue theyr Masters But there are many Masters that are alwayes threatning theyr seruants Ephes 6 9 and neuer speake kindly vnto them to encourage them in wel-doing there proceedeth nothing but fire out of their mouth and smoke goeth out of theyr nostrils And not so onely but they command hard and cruell seruice at theyr hands and after a sort sucke out theyr heart blood by ouer-burdening and ouer-bearing them beyond theyr strength like the cruell taske-masters of the Egyptians who gaue the Israelits no straw to make them vp the tale of their brickes but made them gather it themselues and yet would diminish nothing of the worke Exodus 5 7 8. Thus were the people scattered abroad throughout all the land of Egypt to gather stubble in stead of straw And Sampson being a seruant or rather slaue to the Philistims was not onely made a laughing-stocke but compelled to grinde in the prison-house Iudg. 16 21. Such masters are they also that are immoderate and excessiue in correction know no measure as if theyr seruants were beasts and not theyr brethren Nay Balaam the false prophet is reproued of the Angel for his cruelty toward his asse Numb 22 32. but these respect men no better then if they were asses or horses for the whip is neuer from theyr backes or the bridle from theyr mouthes or the fist from theyr eares or the staffe from theyr sides Thus also did the taske-masters beate the officers of the children of Israel without any cause or desert Now touching Magistrates Exod. 5 14. The duties of Magistrates they are the fathers of the countrey and common-wealth they must be careful to plant sound religion among the people and be carefull that God be serued in the first place because they must rule for GOD and not for themselues And thus did the godly Kings of Iudah They must establish peace and tranquillity that men may sit vnder theyr vines and figge trees that there bee no inuasion nor going out nor crying and complayning in the streetes And they must publish and prescribe such wholesome Lawes as may serue to keepe men in obedience and when they are once enacted and established they must not suffer them to rust for want of execution but remember they are the Ministers of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Rom. 13 4. If then they suffer men to doe what they list as if there were no king in Israel if they be carelesse of Gods seruice if they doe not defend the innocent like Ahab nor punish the transgressors or command vniust and vnlawfull things or spare offenders that ought to dy like Saul they prouoke the wrath of God against themselues as wee haue shewed already in the former chapter 5 And Moses commanded the children of Israel according to the word of the Lord saying The tribe of the sonnes of Ioseph hath saide well 6 This is the thing which the Lord doth command concerning the daughters of Zelophehad saying Let them marry to whom they thinke best onely to the family of the tribes of their father shall they marry 7 So shall not the inheritance of the children of Israel remoue from tribe to tribe for euery one of the children of Israel shall keepe himselfe to the inheritance of the tribe of his fathers 8 And euery daughter that possesseth an inheritance in any tribe of the children of Israel shall bee wife vnto one of the family of the
they haue any workes of supererogation or the measure of theyr workes running ouer that haue not enough for themselues 10 Euen as the Lord commanded Moses so did the daughters of Zelophehad 11 For Mahlah Tirzah and Hoglah and Milcah and Noah the daughters of Zelophehad were married vnto their fathers brothers sonnes 12 And they were married into the families of the sonnes of Manasseh the sonne of Ioseph and their inheritance remained in the tribe of the family of their father 13 These are the commandements and iudgments which the Lord commanded by the hand of Moses vnto the children of Israel in the plaines of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho The third part of the chapter remaineth to wit the marriage of these fiue daughters what God had appointed and Moses had published they approue and allow For Moses setteth downe both where they married and to whom They matched in their owne Tribe to wit into the families of the sonnes of Manasseh and particularly it is saide They were married to their fathers brothers sonnes that is to their cousen germans Doctrine The marriage of cousen germans is lawfull From hence we learne that the marriage of cousen germans that is the children of brothers and sisters is lawfull In the proofe of this point no man must look for any expresse law or commandement to marry in this manner because no man was euer commanded to do so it is enough to shew that it is left free and not prohibited that will appeare by sundry examples of all sorts The marriage of Esau the sonne of Isaac is recorded to haue bin with Mahalath the daughter of Ismael Isaacs brother Gen. 28 9 so that he married his fathers brothers daughter And albeit hee were a wicked man and prophane yet he is not reproued for marrying so neere of kinne Gen. 29 10. And Iacob himselfe is charged by his parents to take a wife no farther off and therefore hee being the sonne of Rebecca matched himselfe with Rahel the daughter of Laban Rebeccaes brother thus hee married his mothers brothers daughter as Esau before him had married his fathers brothers daughter In like manner we see the same in a sort betweene Isaac Abrahams sonne the sonne of promise and Rebecca the daughter of Bethael sonne to Nahor Abrahams brother Gen. 24 15 whereof the one is cousen german the other is cousen german but once remoued To these examples it will be obiected that they were all before the law and therefore they might be lawfull but the matter stood otherwise after the law Let vs see therefore how the case stood after the law And first obserue the example of these daughters of Zelophehad mentioned in this place of whom it is said that they married their fathers brothers sonnes verse 11. But it will be saide that by brethren wee must vnderstand nor naturall brethren but others farther off But if it were so then it had beene sufficient to haue called them their fathers brethren without any addition of sonnes or their owne brethren and then indeed the marriage had bin left doubtfull and vncertaine but the addition of sons to brethren doth rightly and readily distinguish the cousen germans from all the rest of their kindred And to make the matter more cleere and apparent it is euident that Zeloph●had had brethren of his parents that had store of sonnes for what man of any vnderstanding wil exclude those that most properly may be meant and runne to others that may vnproperly bee tearmed his brothers sonnes Now that Zelophehad had brethren and they also sonnes is no way doubtfull because out of the loynes of his brother Hepher came a great family called in respect of the multitude of them The family of the Hepherites Numb 26 32. as of Gilead the Gileadites Furthermore wee reade in Ioshua of the marriage of Othniel the sonne of Kenaz with Achsah the daughter of Caleb Kenaz brother so that they were brothers children Iosh 15 verses 16 17. If any heere also dally with the ambiguity of the word Brother as suspecting and surmising that it is there taken for some kinsman farther off and not properly for a brother of the same immediate parents this may easily be disprooued by the terme after giuen to Kenaz of younger brother to Caleb Iudg. 1 verse 13 which plainely noteth the age and order of brethren in one family and from one parent and not any order of kindred among those that are of diuers families and parents according as the eldest sonne noteth the order of children in one family as may appeare in the order of Genealogies 1 Chron. chap. 2 verse 13 where the sonnes of Iesse are so distinguished and knowne by the eldest the second and so forward of the rest And there also it appeareth that Caleb had other bretheren as Ierameel in the ninth verse and the two and fortith verse yea euen that Caleb which had Achsah to his daughter as we may reade verse 49 and therfore in respect of those elder Kenaz might well be so called his yonger brother nay hauing elder wee cannot without great confusion of speech and verie much vncertainety of meaning referre the younger vnto any other of his kindred whatsoeuer Thus we haue seene diuers and sundry examples of the marriage of cousin germans recorded faithfully in the Scriptures both of the godly and the vngodly both before the Law and since the Law and wee neuer finde that any of them were reprooued or gain-sayed which may induce vs to hold them lawfull and not against the Law of GOD and godlinesse Let vs passe from the Iewes to the ancient Romanes and other Nations and from the Romanes to our selues The Apostle Paul teacheth vs in the second chapter of the Romans and the fourteenth verse that the Gentiles which haue not the Law doe by nature the things contayned in the Law and it were not hard to shew out of diuers and sundry prophane writers such at were Liuy Plutarke Cicero Tacitus Historiographers Philosophers and Poets an infinite number of examples of such matches frequented among them whereupon Caluin a most iudicious Diuine and one of the foundest interpreters of these latter times sayth plainely Tam Lege Mosis quam gentium iure id semper licuit that is to say As well by the Law of Moses as by the common law of Nations the marriage of cousin germans was alwayes lawfull True it is sometimes for feare and sometimes for flattery they haue bene induced to consent to incestuous marriages Claudius Caesar the Emperor had concluded a mariage betweene himselfe and Agrippina his brothers daughter yet they durst not celebrate the solemnities of their vnlawfull loue openly for it was incest neyther was it practised before that the brothers daughter shold be brought into the vnckles house as wife whereupon he commanded the Senate to passe a decree Tacit. annal lib. 12. by vertue whereof marriage betweene the Vncles and Neeces daughters to their brothers should from
in those that follow yet there was a legall impurity and a ceremoniall vncleannes in them putting them in mind of the foulenes of sinne Thirdly such as haue touched a dead carcase must also goe out of the hoste these were also vncleane for a certaine season The first sort to wit of the lepers was infectious the two latter were accounted vncleane and abominable in respect of the law and ordinance of God that forbade those ceremonies vntill the time of the restoring of all things and yet some of them could not be auoided as the touching of the dead These are the parts the manner followeth shewing that this commandement is generall and toucheth all ages and sexes yong and old male and female Prince and subiect rich and poore there must no partiality be vsed God will haue none of these vncleane persons to be spared or suffered among his people from the king that setteth on his throne to the begger that lyeth on the dunghill Hereupon Moses saith both male and female ye shal put out without the campe shall ye put them And in the booke of Deuteronomy it is said Deut. 24. ● Take heed in the plague of leprosie that thou obserue diligently and doe according to all that the Priests Leuites shal teach you as I commanded them so ye shall obserue to do Remember what the Lord thy God did vnto Miriam by the way after that ye were come forth out of Egypt She was the sister of Moses and Aaron had gone before the women in singing the praises of God for their deliuerance at the red sea yet when she spake against Moses Num 12.14 she was shut out from the campe seuen dayes according to the law Leui. 13 4● All the dayes wherein the plague shall bee in him he shal be defiled he is vncleane he shal dwel alone without the camp shal his habitation be The practise hereof we see in Gehazi the seruant of Elisha because he had taken two talents of siluer contrary to the wil of the Prophet he said vnto him 2 Kin 5.27 The leprosie of Naaman shal cleaue vnto thee and vnto thy seed for euer and he went out from his presence a leper as white as snow In the seige of Samaria by the Syrians it appeareth that foure leprous men dwelt out of the citie who for feare of that great and mighty hoste abode at the entring in of the gate 2 King 7.3 and were the first messengers of glad tidings that the enemies had broken vp their campe in haste and were fled away When Ahasiah presumed in the pride of his heart to execute the priests office the Lord smote the king 2 King 15. ● so that he was a leper vnto the day of his death and dwelt in a seuerall house Thus we see how this law was executed without al respect of persons or degrees and estates of men high and low bond and free master and seruant The reasons of the former commandement follow which are two in number the one drawn from the nature and condition of these vncleane persons the other from the person and presence of God The former reason concerning the foulenesse of the leprosie in these words lest they defile their camp may bee thus concluded If the lepers defile the places of their abode then they are to be remooued But the lepers defile the places of their abode Therefore they are to be remooued The conclusion of this argument is the commandement it selfe mentioned in the 2 verse so also is the second part in the end of the same verse The first proposition is to be supplyed The next reason drawne from the Lord himselfe in these words I dwell in the mids of them is thus concluded If God dwel among his people then no vncleane thing is to be tolerated among them But God dwelleth among his people Therefore no vncleane thing is to be tolerated among them The parts of this argument are partly expressed and partly vnderstood as we shewed in the former that went before and therefore need not be repeated Thus much of the commandement the execution heereof followeth in the 4. verse set downe first generally and particularly Generally the children of Israel did so Particularly they put them out of the campe as the Lord spake vnto Moses Now whereas the tents among the Israelites were threefold one of the Tabernacle another of the Leuites the third of the Tribes 〈◊〉 in Nume ●5 sundry of the Hebrews hold that such as were leprous were banished from them all three that such as had running issues were suffered in the campe but neither in the court of the Tabernacle nor among the tents of the Leuites and that such as were defiled by touching the dead were onely banished and excluded out of the court of the Tabernacle and the Tabernacle it selfe But these are more curious speculations then well grounded obseruations whereof the Hebrew Rabbins are full and seeme to be ouerthrowne in this place where they are thought to be established forasmuch as Moses ioyneth all these 3. together and turneth them out of the host ●biect Before we proceed to handle the doctrines of this diuision it shall not be amisse for vs to answer one obiection which we will do briefly and that is whether God in requiring the lepers to be put out of the campe doe respect the bodies of his people or not forasmuch as the leprosie was a contagious and infectious disease ●nswer I answere I am not ignorant how diuersly diuers men doe carry this and vnderstand hereby that God as a prudent and prouident Lawgiuer giueth wholesome counsell and direction lest contagious diseases should creepe among the people and so infect one another But this is too weake a coniecture and collection reacheth not to the purpose nor attaineth to the intent of God who respecteth the soule rather then the body For he doth not in this place giue counsel as a Phisition that prouideth for the health of his patient but he dealeth as a Physition of the soule and therefore vnder these outward rites and ceremonies he would traine them vp teach them to giue themselues to holinesse of life to study to attaine vnto and acquaint themselues with purity and to beware of all filthines and vncleannesse This appeareth in the example before set downe of such as were driuen from the company and society of men being stricken with the leprosie by the hand of God Besides this reason is rendred of their casting out of the hoste lest they should defile the campe in which the Lord dwelled Lastly we see that such as haue issues in the flesh such as touch the dead which are no infectious diseases and the one no disease at all are ioyned with the leprosie in this chapter so that the drift intent of God in this place is not to prouide for the body or to keepe the people in health and strength but for the
3 we see the wicked prosper and florish spredding themselues as the greene Bay tree for loe God hath set them in slippery places Psal 37 53. and casteth them downe in the end vnto desolation they are suddenly destroyed horribly consumed as the chaffe which the winde driueth away and as a dreame when one awaketh This tentation hath ouertaken the children of God and caused them oftentimes to shrinke back when they saw the prosperity of the vngodly Psal 73 2 3. Hab. 1 4. and on the other side the troubles of the godly hath made them to reason within themselues of the prouidence of God But shall not the King rule his owne kingdome or the Master gouerne his own house as pleaseth him And shall not we giue the Lord leaue to dispose of all things in heauen and earth after the good pleasure of his owne will Hee fatteth the wicked against the day of slaughter he leaueth them without excuse and maketh his blessings as a witnesse against them Contrarywise the children of God although they suffer afflictions yet afflictions to them are not euill but try their faith as the furnace doth the gold Senec. de diui prouidentia c. 8 Let vs not deceiue our selues in iudging and esteeming of good and euill That is good which maketh vs better that is euil that maketh vs worse The workes of the flesh adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnes idolatry witchcraft hatred debate emulations wrath contentions seditions heresies enuy murthers drunkennesse couetousnesse and such like are manifestly euill These God keepeth from his deere children and his deere children from them that they reigne not in them The Israelites in Egypt liued vnder hard masters and carried many heauy burthens and sent vp many passionate sighes to God with deepe grones of spirit whilst Pharaoh and the Egyptians tooke crafty counsell together and sported themselues in the miseries mischiefs which they had brought vpon them But whose condition was the more happie let the red Sea testifie from which the Israelits were deliuered Exo 14 27 29 in which the Egyptiās were drowned Dauid taken from the sheepe-folds tasted of many sorrowes being in perils among the Amalekites in perils in the Wildernesse in perils of his owne Nation in perils of his own seruants in perils among false bretheren and was hunted from place to place as a Partridge in the Mountaines 2 Sam. 31 4. whilst Saul sought his life and enioyed the pleasures and treasures of a kingdom But whose estate was the more happy let the end and yssue of them both determine the one liued in glory ended his daies in peace the other sheathed his sword in his owne bowels and so dyed in despaire The Apostle Iames willeth vs to take the Prophets for an example of suffering aduersity and of long patience which haue spoken in the name of the Lord Ye haue heard of the patience of Iob haue knowne what end the Lord made Iam. 5 10 11. for the Lord is very pittifull and mercifull Lazarus a poore begger destitute of succour and friends lying at the rich mans gate hauing his minde as full of cares as his bodie was of sores whilst the rich glutton was clad in purple gorgiously and fared deliciously euery day But whose condition was the more blessed and happy of them twaine let this tell vs and teach vs for our instruction that Lazarus when he died had the holy elect Angels to attend vpon him to carry his soule into Abrahams bosome Luk. 16 22 23 that is to say into the kingdome of heauen Matth. 8 11. the rich man also died his body was buried his soule was carried cast into the torments of hell Where the worme neuer dyeth Marke 9 44. and the fire neuer goeth out the one vnsufferable the other vnquenchable both infinite Let vs not therefore rest in beholding the present face of outward things but possesse our soules with patience in a sweet meditation of Gods prouidence considering that it shall in the end bee well with all them that feare the Lord and that howsoeuer the wicked do prosper in the world increase in riches yet if we enter into the Sanctuary of God Psal ●3 ● we shal see they are set in slippery places they are lifted vp on high and therefore their fall shall be more fearefull seeing all the threatnings of God must without faile fasten vpon them Lastly seeing the menaces and threatnings Vse 4 of God must bee performed this serueth also to assure vs that the gracious promises of God made in mercy to his people shall in truth and righteousnesse bee accomplished The Lord that is alwaies the same as hee is true in his threatnings to the vngodly so wil he be found true in his promises toward the godly For seeing no part of his word shall passe away that he will not falsifie his trueth Psal 89 ● nor alter the thing that is gone out of his mouth one part serueth to confirme another his threatnings are ratified by the assurance of his promises and his promises are established to bee surer then the heauens by the assurāce of his threatnings So then let vs learne to depend vpon God to trust in him knowing 2 Cor. 1 that all his promises are yea and Amen vnto the glory of his name Let vs rest in him for the pardon of our sinnes for the hearing of our prayers for the feeding of our bellies for the resurrection of our bodies for the inheritance of euerlasting life hauing a strong assurance of faith that the Lord is iust and true in all his promises This is a notable comfort and consolation to all the childrē of God to cause vs to set our hope in him hauing a patient and constant expectation of all things that by faith we haue beleeued saying with the Apostle 1 Tim. 1 12. For this cause I also suffer these things but I am not ashamed for I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day Verse 25 26. Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and cause Aaron to strip off his Garments and thou shalt put them vpon his sonne Heere is deliuered how Aaron yet liuing his sonne is inuested and installed into his Office with the ceremonies and solemnities thereunto appertaining at the appointment of God to shew the continuance of the Priesthoode to take away al occasions of dissentions from the people Thus we see the good estate of the Church is prouided for by Moses before Aaron dyed Doctr● The Ch● must be in good after co● parture and went the way of all flesh The Doctrine hence is that the good of the Church must be regarded of vs to leaue it in good case after our death and departure I say it is a principall duty required of vs when wee must leaue the worlde to prouide for the
common to all but peculiar to some It commeth not by inheritance but by grace Parents may leaue vnto their children their houses their lands their substance they may conuey vnto them their inheritance but they cannot conuey vnto them the gifts that accompany saluation Wherefore all parents that are faithfull are to intreate and craue of God the continuance of his couenant toward theyr children and to begge from his hands an holy and sanctified seede to his glory and theyr comfort Verse 14 15. The name of the Israelite thus slaine was Zimri the sonne of Salu and the name of the Midianitish woman that was slaine was Cosbi c. Wee heard before in the fixt verse how Moses hath layde open the shamelesse and impudent behauiour of this beastly adulterer who shamed not to bring the Midianitish harlot into the hoast and in the sight of all the congregation of the children of Israel which were grieued to behold such horrible villany neuerthelesse we see in this place that Moses is not content in a generall manner to describe his wickednesse but singleth him out particularly by his name by his father by his tribe Neyther doth he content himselfe to set downe the Midianitish woman by her nation but calleth her by her name and further openeth the name of her father and her fathers house So then Moses hauing shewed who they were that brought the plague of God vpon the people he now descendeth to marke them out by their proper names and of what calling and profession they were Doctrine It is lawfull sometime to reproue by name From hence we learne that it is sometime lawfull and conuenient to reprooue by name speciall people and particular men that offend in the Church and to record them in writing A particular reproofe of particular offenders sometimes standeth with the word of GOD. So did Eliah deale with Ahab and Iezabel he told him that it was hee and his fathers house that troubled Israel This we see practised by the Prophet Esay against Shebna who being a notable fauourer of euill men and a great hinderer of good things is by name threatned to bee carried away with a great captiuity Esay 22 17. Thus doth Ieremy deale with the false Prophets and other obstinate enemies Ier. 28 12. Likewise our Sauiour Christ denounceth many fearefull woes against the Scribes and Pharisies hypocrites Matth. 23 13. which shut vp the kingdome of heauen before men deuoured widows houses vnder a colour of long prayer compassed sea and land to make one of their profession tythed mint and annise and left the waightier matters of the Law as iudgement mercy and fidelity So did Paul withstand Peter to his face because he was to be condemned Gal. 2 11. And when he saw in the Church such as put away faith and a good conscience and made shipwracke of the doctrine of Christ he giueth the Church notice and warning of them saying Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I haue deliuered vnto Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme 1. Tim. 1 20. And in another place hauing to doe with such as cast off the doctrine of godlinesse hee noteth the ring-leaders and principall authors Of this sort is Hymeneus and Philetus which as concerning the truth haue erred from the marke saying that the resurrection is past already and do destroy the faith of certaine 2 Tim. 1 17. In like manner he specifieth Alexander the copper-smith which had done him much harme 2 Tim. 4 14. So the Apostle Iohn warneth the Church of Diotrephes who loued to haue preheminence among them Al which examples of the Prophets of the Apostles of Christ himself do teach that it wil not alwaies be sufficient to reproue the errors and heresies of obstinat sinners but somtimes it is expedient to lay them open by their names and to signifie them to the Church by a particular discouering of them The Reasons of this practise are to be considered Reason 1 First because the Church should haue warning of thē that others might shun them and auoid their company So the Apostle nameth Alexander to prepare Timothy not to trust him It is good to know false bretheren lest they spying our liberty take the greater aduantage against vs. Hence it is that Paul chargeth Timothy to beware of Alexander who had withstood his preaching sore 2 Tim. 4 15. While we are familiarly conuersant with the wicked it will be hard for vs not to bee entangled in their sinnes For how can a man walke among thornes not pricke himselfe or how can a man touch pitch and not be defiled We must flye from such as from a deadly plague We must separate our selues from them lest the like vengeance fal vpon vs also Secondly they must by a speciall note bee made knowne to the Church that they may Reason 2 be degraded and brought to reproch The Apostle vsed this remedy thereby to shutte their mouthes and to stoppe them from speaking euill of almighty GOD and his truth which ought to be precious to vs. This naming of them is to set a marke of infamy vpon thē as if a man were boared in the eare or burned in the hand for a malefactor God will haue them and their wickednesse registred to their perpetual shame in the Church for euer that they should not be of any more credit to infect the good and to draw the weake vnto destruction The vnnaturall sauage dealing of the Amalekites toward their brethren the Israelites is by God expresly commanded to be recorded in a booke to their infamy and confusion The Lord saide vnto Moses Write this for a remembrance in the booke and rehearse it to Ioshua for I will vtterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from vnder heauen Exod. 17 14. So we haue in the Scriptures set forth the vncleannesse of Sodome the hard-heartednesse of Pharaoh the conspiracy of Corah the couetousnesse of Ahab the cruelty of Iezabel the disobedience of Saul the treason of Absolon the treachery of Iudas and other infamous beasts the record of their shame is in perpetuall memory and stinketh vnto this day The like we might say of all bloody persecutors in all ages since Christs time they haue theyr names and facts remembred in the Acts and Monuments of the Church Seeing therefore obstinate enemies must be both shunned shamed in both respects we learne that it is lawfull for the Ministers of God to point out some by name that they may be knowne otherwise the Apostles of Christ would neuer haue done it the Prophets would neuer haue practised it Christ himselfe would neuer haue allowed it Let vs apply this to our selues First it serueth as a bridle to restraine euill men especially all such as bring a publike detriment and hurt to the Church and are the cause of common Vse 1 mischiefes they shall to the shame of theyr persons to the reproch of theyr names to the infamy of their posterities be
Adam which also is our sin Now there are four things that doe continually and distinctly cleaue to sinne Foure things cleaue to sin the fault the guilt the blot and the punishment The fault is the offence committed against God in the action which is the root of all the rest The guilt is an obligation to punishment for the fault and offence which we haue committed The blot or spot thereof is as it were a marke or print set and branded in the soule of him that sinned when he groweth to an hight in wickednes like the marke that was set vpon Cain when he had killed his brother For the multiplying of offensiue actions is the continuall encrease of the blot or blemish of the soule til in the end the light of nature be vtterly extinguished and men come to a reprobate sense and grow to be past feeling through the blindnesse of their mindes and the hardnesse of their hearts Euen as the dropsie man the more he drinketh the more hee dryeth so the more a man sinneth the more he is giuen to sinne As the couetous person alwayes desireth to get more so the sinner alwayes desireth to sinne more and to worke al vncleannes with greedines The punishment it selfe is the wages and iust recompence of all the former which is the first second death The first death is a separation of the soule and body the second a separation of the whole man from God for as the soule is the life of the body so is God the life of the soule Know therefore and acknowledge from hence that it is an irkesome and bitter thing to prouoke him by our sin which driueth away his comfortable presence from vs. Vse 2 Secondly this teacheth that none can escape death by strēgth or policy by friends or fraud or by any occasion in asmuch as all are sinners euen from their mothers wombe vnto the day of their death Psal 58 3. 51 5. Gen. 8 21. Iob 4 17. 15 14. 25 4. It is a fearefull and cruell tyrant an outragious and wasting enemy that maketh spoyle and hauocke wheresoeuer hee commeth sparing neyther young nor old rich nor poore Prince nor people good nor bad Psal 89 48. It standeth vs therefore in hand to account of euery day as our last day and to know that euery moment may cut off the threed of our life so that wee are suddenly gone are no more we must prepare for it continually our whole life should be a meditation of it Againe we must pull out of our hearts this false conceit and imagination whereby euery man naturally blesseth and notably deceiueth himselfe and thinketh though he haue one foot in a maner in the graue yet hee shall not die this yeere but he may liue one yeare longer as the rich man was in a pleasant dreame did forecast for many yeares Luke 12 19. And yet alas we know not what shal be to morrow Iam. 4 14 no nor what one day may bring forth Pr. 27 1 Vse 3 Lastly let euery one labor to take away the power and strength of his own death And to this end we must deale with it as the Philistims dealt with Sampson they neuer gaue ouer till they had learned where his strength lay Iudg. 16 5 6 and then they quickly weakned him and preuailed ouer him who before had preuailed ouer them So ought we to doe we must know wherin the strength of death consisteth that is in sin onely Take this away by repentance from dead works faith in Christ and you shaue off the seuen locks of it that is you shall weaken it that it shall neuer bee able to hurt you So many sinnes as liue and reigne in vs so many stings hath death which serue to wound our soules to eternall death If then we would die the death of the righteous let vs endeauour to the vtmost of our strength to liue the life of the righteous Then we shal lay a good foundation that shall neuer be shaken and build our house vpon the rocke wee shal begin our eternal life in this mortall life and haue our conuersation in heauen while we walke vpon the earth Phil. 3 20. Let vs beware of putting off the time from day to day whatsoeuer we would do at the last gaspe grone when we are dying let vs doe the same euery day while wee are liuing The most wicked when he seeth he is presently to leaue the world will seeme desirous to pray though he neuer prayed in his health and to require others to pray for him and haply those whom before he contemned and derided their prayers also then likewise hee will promise and protest amendment of life make solemne vowes couenants with God Let vs therefore do this daily which these men doe at their last day that when death commeth wee may be found ready and prepared with oyle in our lampes like the wise virgins Math. 25. To conclude he that would liue when he is dead must dye when he is aliue and there is no way for vs to come to life but first to enter by the gate of death 6 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 7 The daughters of Zelophehad speake right thou shalt surely giue them a possession of an inheritance among their fathers brethren c. 8 And thou shalt speake vnto the children of Israel saying If a man die and haue no sonne c. 9 And if hee haue no daughter then yee shall giue his inheritance vnto his brethren 10 And if he haue no brethren then ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his fathers brethren 11 And if his father haue no brethren ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his kinsman c. The deciding of the former question being referred by Moses vnto GOD followeth in these words wherein he returneth his answer consisting of two parts the one special the othe general the one respecting the time present the other the time to come The speciall belongeth to the cause of these fiue sisters God approueth theyr suite requireth that an inheritance should be giuen to them all so much as theyr father should haue inherited if he had liued longer The accomplishment of this designement is afterward related Iosh 17 3 4 c. where hee performeth this Commandement of the Lord. The generall ariseth vpon the former particular case and this belongeth to all the children of Israel wherein God determineth in what order they shall inherite Now these are the degrees First the neerest heyres are the heyres males The law for i●heritances a mans owne sonnes Secondly if hee haue no heyres males his daughters shall be his heyres Thirdly for default of such yssue the inheritance shall go to his owne brethren for after his children his brother is next in nature and blood vnto him therefore if his owne children faile his brother must be his heyre Fourthly if he haue no brother then his fathers
brethren his vnkles Lastly if his father haue no brethren the inheritance must descend to the next kinsman whatsoeuer he be of his tribe and family Here a question may bee asked whether this law binde in conscience all Nations and persons for euer Quest And many things may be saide of it and for it as most equall and the voyce of nature it selfe Neuerthelesse all things considered Answ I rather take this law to be among the Iudicials that do not necessarily tye all places persons to the performance of them Hence it is that it is saide afterward verse 11 that it is a statute of iudgement and to whom not to all Nations but to the children of Israel so that though some of their iudiciall and politicall lawes do binde yet all do not as we see in Exodus where they are handled in the 21 22 23 chapters Secondly this law appointeth that the inheritance must of necessity passe from one to another from the father vnto the childe c. without any interruption if then this order must hold as a perpetuall ordinance for euer it should be vtterly vnlawfull to sell a mans inheritance for any cause or vpon any occasion or to buy a mans inheritance because the Iewes were as well tyed to that and if they did it must returne to the owner again at the yeare of Iubile as wee reade in many places of the Law of Moses Leuit. 25 23 24 Numb 36 8 and it appeareth farther in the practise of Naboth 1 Kings 21 3 when Ahab required of him his Vineyard eyther by way of sale or exchange he answered The Lord forbid it mee that I should giue the inheritance of my fathers to thee Thus doth God ordaine that euery mans Land should keep and continue within his owne tribe and not passe from tribe to tribe which would bring much confusion and an intermingling of one tribe with another all which were peculiar to this people Thirdly God ordained it as a statute also in Israel that the eldest should haue a double portion of all that a man hath because hee is the beginning of his strength therefore the right of the first borne is his this is grounded vpon the same reasons that this is yet who accounteth this precisely imposed vpon all as a morall ordinance Nay M Dod exposit on 5. Command some of good note and name in the Church are of opinion that they should receiue the best portion that are best and inherite most that haue most grace in theyr hearts and therfore they take not this precept to be as a president to binde all posterity And if this do not necessarily binde why should the former Fourthly the words of the law in this place do not seeme to mee as a law of annexing the inheritance to these that it should not be lawfull to alter this course It is saide if a man dye and haue no sonne or if he dye and haue no daughter then shall the inheritance descend thus and thus but this hindreth not but a man while he liueth may by will or otherwise make conueyance of his estate and this law is nothing against such conueyance Lastly we find that the Israelites themselues did sometimes giue inheritance to their daughters euen while they had heyres males as appeareth in Caleb Iudg. 1 15. 1. Chron. 2 18. Salomon was not the eldest sonne of Dauid yet hee succeeded his father in his kingdome and had more then all the rest To conclude if grace must haue the first place vertue must make the heyre then nature must giue place to grace But to leaue this doubt Doctrine Propriety of goods is the ordinance of God let vs come to the Doctrine for heereby wee learne that the propriety of goods is the ordinance and blessing of God he hath appointed that men should haue theyr possessions peculiar to themselues in this life So did Abraham buy a possession for buriall and paied for it currant money among Merchants Gen. 23 16 he layde no clayme to it before he had purchased it as if it had beene no lesse his thē any other The Patriarkes chalenged as proper to themselues the Welles which by theyr owne labour and industry they had digged and complained of wrong and violence when they were taken from them Gen. 26. To this end did God appoint that euery Tribe should haue inheritance giuen them by lot Hence it is also that wee reade that the faithfull haue had possessions and retained their possessions and are saide many of them to bee exceeding rich to haue possession of flocks possession of heards and great store of seruants and others are saide to become great to haue siluer and gold and iewels Gen. 26 24 as Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph Obadiah and infinit others In the New Testament wee reade of Iohn the Euangelist of Ioseph of Arimathea a Disciple of Christ who honoured the buriall of his Master of Lazarus raised vp by Christ his two sisters of Simon the leaper of Ioanna of Susanna and these liued in the daies of Christ and had possessions After his ascension many beleeuers solde theyr possessions Tabitha was full of good works Cornelius the Captain gaue much almes to all the people Philemon and Philip and sundry others all which professing and some of them preaching the Gospel are no where commanded to abiure their possessions and to renounce their houses and lands neyther did they betake themselues to a supposed community knowing that priuat possession and Christian profession stand together and do not one ouerthrow the other as hath bene plentifully declared elsewhere Reason 1 The grounds of this doctrine are very apparent First God approueth of buying and selling or else the first Christians might not haue solde their possessions and taken money for them and they did alienate them from them not because they could not lawfuly be possessed but because the poore should be releeued Act. 4 34. The Lord likewise giueth rules in the Law for the right ordering thereof Leuit. 25 15. Secondly God commandeth almesgiuing to the people as an holy and Christian dutie which he also promiseth to reward to a cuppe of cold water Matth 10. and euery where he commendeth the releeuing of the wants and necessities of their poore brethren threatneth the contrary Deut. 15 11. Thirdly hee forbiddeth stealing and wronging one of another in temporall things and hurting one an other in their goods Exod. 20 15. As also the defrauding one of another Mark 10 19. Lastly euery man hath his children proper to himselfe euery man knoweth his owne children and can say These are mine these are not mine Now children are part of their fathers goods as appeareth Iob 1 As then they are proper vnto euery man so also ought other goods that euery man may know his owne Vse 1 This reprooueth the Anabaptists that would bring in a communion or rather a confusion of all things who while they goe about to
bound her soule 7 And her husband heard it and held his peace in the day when he heard it then her vowes shall stand c. Now Moses intreateth of such vowes as were made by those that are vnder the authority of others as children vnder their parents concerning which the father hath authority to disanull them Hereby the power of all parents is so magnified and aduanced that a vow made immediatly to God is frustrate there is a meere nullity of it except they confirme it They haue power to make it good and they haue power to make it voide Doctrine Great is the iurisdiction authority of parents ouer their children Heereby wee learne that great is the authority and iurisdiction of parents ouer their children by the Law of God and Nature The very heathen haue this truth shining in their hearts that parents are to be honoured and that their authority should be inuiolable Exod. 20 12. Eph. 6 1 2. Ierem. 35 6 7 8 c. Gen. 27 8 43. and 28. 2. When the father sayth Goe the child goeth when he sayth Arise he ariseth when he sayth Come he commeth Christ our Sauiour giueth testimony of his perfect obedience whom all both men and Angels stand bound to worship and to whom euery knee must bow of things in heauen of things in earth and of things vnder the earth Philip. 2 yet hee was subiect to his parents and went with them Luke 2.51 1. King 2.19 The reasons are euident Reason 1 First the precept of honouring parents hath the first place in the second Table and is set before all other so that next vnto GOD we are bound to reuerence them to whom we are most bound and it is the foundation and band of obedience to all the rest of the commandements that follow For if men doe not stand in awe of the Magistrate the father of the Common-wealth and the Captaine of the people all the other would soone be violated 2 Kings 20 5. Againe the Apostle teacheth that this is the first Commandement with promise Eph. 6 2 it hath a speciall promised annexed of long life Thirdly children receiue great and manifold blessings from the hands of theyr parents and gouernours and likewise are freed from many euils and dangers that otherwise they might fall into Fourthly patents giue life and breath and beeing after a sort vnto them for children receiue all these from thē Fiftly parents are honoured by sundry titles and names the which are giuen to God himselfe Matth. 23.9 One is your father which is in heauen therefore call no man your father vpon earth Obiect 1 Touching this impregnable and inuincible truth sundry questions may be asked and diuers doubts to be remooued As first seeing their authority is so great why doeth our Sauiour speake of hating father and mother as Luke 14 26 If any man come to me and do not hate his father and mother he cannot be my disciple Answ I answer Christ speaketh in that place comparatiuely that is wee must not regard them in respect of himselfe whom wee ought to loue aboue all and so it is expounded Mathew 10 37 Hee that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthy of me To loue our parents next after GOD is piety but to loue them more then God is impiety Wee hate them therefore when we loue them lesse then God in comparison of whom we should hate our liues Obiect 2 Secondly Christ forbiddeth vs to call any man father as we haue heard before Matth. 23. Answ I answere Christ condemneth not the name or appellation giuen to men simply for then he should be contrary to himselfe where he alloweth the title to earthly fathers Math. 7 9. Marke 7 11 and the Apostle should bee contrary to his master 1 Cor. 4 15. Therefore he meaneth that no man is or can be our Father as God is to wit that we should trust in them and make them the authors of our life and the giuers of all good things that come vnto vs. Obiect 3 Thirdly what if our parents be euil persons and vngodly ought we then to obey them yeelde vnto their authority who are by their wickednesse vnworthy thereof Answ I answer It skilleth not whether they bee good or euill touching our obedience For euill parents are our parents and euill Magistrates are Magistrates and euill Ministers are Ministers Seruants are commanded to bee subiect to theyr masters not onely vnto them that are good and gentle but to them that are froward 1 Peter 2 18 so ought children to yeeld obedience vnto their fathers though they be euill Hence it is that God saith generally in the Law Honour thy father and mother not honor them when they are good onely But it will be farther obiected What if they Obiect 4 be excommunicate persons may they then be obeyed or should children then do any dutie to their parents and is not that to set light by that censure I answer Answer Excommunication rightly vsed is indeede the most greeuous iudgement that can bee inflicted in this life both in respect of the soule and of the bodie and is as it were the messenger of death It is a great punishment to be banished from a well ordered City much more to be thrust out of the Church which is the Common-wealth of God and of his Son Christ Dauid did greatly lament his estate and condition when hee wanted the holy assemblies of the faithfull among the Infidels and could not come into the presence of God with his people and did thinke himself driuen away from abiding in the inheritance of the Lord 1 Sam. 26 19. Who would not tremble and be afraid to bee deliuered vp vnto Satan 1 Cor. 5 6. the enemie of God The children of Israel were deliuered ouer to Nebucadnezzar and other wicked tyrants to be afflicted and they bewailed exceedingly such bodily captiuity Psalme 137 1 2 how much more fearful then ought the excōmunicate person to esteeme it to be deliuered vp not to wicked and vngodly men but to satan himselfe The prince that ruleth in the hart of the children of disobedience Notwithstanding all fellowshippe and familiarity with them is not denyed to vs. It is lawfull for the family to conuerse with the gouernors of the family though they be excommunicate persons The wife may not deny due beneuolence nor the childe dutifull obedience if he bid them go they must goe or to come they must come neither are they by such behauiour culpeable or guilty of their sinne of which we see more before chap. 5. Fourthly if the sonne be a Magistrate Obiect 5 the father a priuate man it may bee demanded whether he be to yeeld obedience to his father I answer Answ though the father must obey the sonne as hee is a Magistrate yet in another respect the sonne must obey the father as he is the father so that neytner is the sonne to bee depriued of the honour and
conuersation of their wiues Againe the Apostle Paul teacheth the wife to feare her husband Ephes 5 33 and Peter teacheth the same Shee must haue her conuersation with feare 1 Pet. 3 2. This duty is seated in the heart and helpeth to set in order all other duties This will shew it selfe in meeknesse of Spirit which is in the fight of God of great price and in obedience in all lawfull things that not by constraint but willingly and readily as seruing Christ without murmuring or gainsaying If they performe these things they shall be christian wiues and the daughters of Abraham and Sarah to their great comfort Such will do their husbands good and not euill all the dayes of their liues Prou. 31 12. Hence it is that Salomon sayeth A vertuous woman is a crowne vnto her husband Prou. 12 4 but she that is stubborne and disobedient maketh him ashamed and is as rottennesse in his bones A good wife is not onely an honour but an ornament vnto her husband and therefore is compared vnto a crowne of gold If shee had beene compared vnto the ring vpon his finger it had bene a great Ornament if to a Chaine of Gold about his necke it had beene a farre greater but behold while shee keepeth her selfe in her place and dischargeth her duty with loue and subiection she is said to be a crowne vnto him then which what greater honour and glory can there be And therefore in another place he saith Houses and riches are the inheritance of fathers but a prouident wife is from the LORD Prou. 19 14. On the other side he sheweth that it is better to dwell in a corner of the house top thē with a brawling woman in a wide house Prou. 21 9. And againe A continuall dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike Prou. 27 15 and 19 13. Lastly it is the duty of husbands seeing Vse 3 authority is committed vnto them ouer theyr wiues and as it were the brydle put into their hands to loue them tenderly to defend them from euils and to cherish them as their owne flesh as Christ Iesus doth the Church Eph. 5. The heathen king could tell Sarah that her husband was as a couering of the eyes Gen. 20 16. It is his duty therefore to dwell with his wife according to knowledge giuing honour to the wife as vnto the weaker vessell 1 Pet. 3 7 as beeing heyres together of the grace of life that their praiers be not interrupted And why are they commanded to dwell together but that the husband should yeeld to her these 4. things first good example secondly instruction thirdly maintenance lastly employment in her calling for his good and the good of his family CHAP. XXXI 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Auenge the children of Israel on the Midianites afterward thou shalt be gathered vnto thy people 3. And Moses spake to the people saying Arme some of your selues vnto the warre and let them goe against the Midianites and auenge the Lord on Midian 4. Of euery Tribe a thousand throughout all the Tribes of Israel shall ye send to the warre 5. So there were deliuered out of the thousands of Israel a thousand of euery Tribe twelue thousand armed for warre 6. And Moses sent them to the warre a thousand of euery Tribe them and Phinchas the sonne of Eleazar the Priest to the warre with the holy Instruments and the Trumpets to blow in his hand MOSES hauing taken order for the Church now commeth to the ciuill plantation and to the inheritance of the Land This had beene promised to theyr fathers Gen. 15 now they begin to preuaile and to receiue as it were the first fruites of it to assure them of the full and finall conquest of the rest Obserue in this Chapter the history of the battell fought against the Midianites The contents of this chapt who combining themselues with the Moabites as we see saw chap. 25 drew the Israelites to whoredome by the counsell of Balaam when they despayred to preuayle against them by the sword By this meanes they defiled themselues with Idolatry also and prouoked the wrath of God to the destruction of many thousands among them The parts of this Chapter are three First of the procuring causes of this warre Secondly the manner how it was followed fought Thirdly the euent and yssue of the whole The first part is in these words wherin we see the Commandement of God and the preparation vsed to accomplish this commandement For Moses sendeth them foorth and with them Phinehas the Priest appointeth souldiers to execute that which GOD commandeth out of euery Tribe Obiect From this arise diuers doubts that are to be discussed First why doth God command vengeance in this place that forbiddeth it else where Rom. chapter 12 verse 19. Deut. chap. 32 verse 35 Answer I answere this may not seeme strange vnto vs neyther should we thinke there is any change in GOD but wee must know the difference and distinction betweene the reuenge of God and of priuate men True it is God will haue his children beare iniuries patiently and to giue place to wrath and to ouercome euill with good Rom. 13 4 yet hee retayneth power to himselfe to execute vengeance against his enemies and neuer disclaymeth that office nay he challengeth it as proper to himself For he wil execute iustice and iudgement by himselfe and his ministers so often as it pleaseth him Numb 25 16. So then albeit the faithfull must bridle the desire of reuenge and not retaile like for like yet when God calleth and appointeth them to be executioners of his wil and wrath he putteth a sword into their hand and when the cause is iust their calling is lawfull Thus we see This is called the reuenge of the Lord verse 3. how souldiers are warranted to shedde blood for they are called to be magistrates onely it is required of such that they be carried kindled with an holy zeale of Gods glory not with priuat hatred grudge and reuenge which make a thing lawful to them vnlawfull Secondly Obiect the question may be asked what is meant hereby that Moses shall be gathered to his people I answere that he should dye Answ the body returning to the earth the spirit to God that gaue it Eccl. 12 7 for with him are the spirits of iust men made perfect Heb. 12 23. So it is said of Abraham Gen. 25 8 he gaue vp the ghost and died an old man full of dayes and was gathered to his people that is to his fathers Gen. 15 15. So then heereby wee must learne the immortality of the soule for Abrahams body was gathered to the body of Sarah onely for he was buried in the sepulcer with her So it is said of Isaac Gen. 35 29 hee was gathered to his godly forefathers and of Moses himselfe afterward Deut. 30 50 as also of Aaron before chap. 20 24. But it will be
Wee should make diligent search of the temporall estate of our brethren but much more how they stand toward God how they do increase in the best things that we may reioyce in their standing and mourne in their decaying and thereby bee prouoked either to giue God praise glory for their continuance and perseuerance or to pray to him to open theyr eyes to see their weaknesse their standing stil or going back or leauing their first loue that so they may repent and do their first workes Reuel 2 5. Lastly it is our duty euen to aduenture our Vse 4 persons and estate for our brethren if by any means we may releeue the distressed This we see in Abraham toward Lot Gen. 14 Moses refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter but visited his brethren and when he saw an Egyptian offer one of them wrong Hee defended him and auenged him that was oppressed Acts 7 24. So it was with Obadiah that liued in Ahabs Court when Iezabel raised hot persecution against the prophets of God he took them and hid them and fed them in a Caue not fearing the fiercenesse of their enemies 1 Kin. 18. The like we see in Ester a notable nursing mother of the Church she went boldly to the King with this resolution If I perish I perish Ester 4. verse 16 to haue the liues of her people giuen at her request chapt 7. verse 3. Many in our dayes thinke they haue gone far in Christianity and take themselues to be notable and zealous Christians if they wish wel vnto the state of the Church or be not open enemies vnto it But it is not enough to wish the good of it except by all meanes we labor to procure it and learne to cast down all that wee haue and bee content to licke the dust of the Churches feete Many will needes be accounted to bee the friends of the Church who wil hazard neither goods nor frends nor honor neither the fauor of great men nor the credit of the world much lesse either limbe or life wheras the Apostle teacheth that this is true loue To giue our liues for the brethren 1 Iohn chapt 3. verse 16. 20 And Moses saide vnto them If ye will do this thing if yee will goe armed before the Lord to warre 21 And will go all of you armed c. vntil he haue driuen out his enemies c. 22 And the land be subdued c. 23 But if ye will not do so behold yee haue sinned against the Lord and be sure your sin will find you out 24 Build you Cities c. 25 And the children of Gad c. 26 Our little ones our wiues c. 27 But thy seruants c. Heere we haue the conclusion of the whole controuersie betweene these tribes and Moses and vnder what conditions hee assenteth vnto them that there might be no mistaking one of another The summe whereof is this If they would go vp armed before their bretheren and go forward with them vntill their enemies were cast out then they should return backe againe and be guiltlesse before the Lord and this land should be their lawfull possession if not they should be guilty of sinne before the Lord and should not bee able to escape the vengeance of God These conditions propounded by Moses are approued by the Tribes who promise that they wil leaue their wiues and children and families behinde thē and passe ouer armed for warre before the Lord to battell From hence I might handle sundry instructions that arise in Moses we see his patience in hearing and determining and therefore it is the duty of Magistrates willingly patiently to hear the people Again these two Tribes and halfe might not be discharged till they had finished the Lords worke and therefore in all good duties perseuerance is necessary and we must continue to the end as wee haue shewed chapt 7. Lastly Moses threatneth that if they sinned against the Lord they might be well assured their sin would find them out that is the punishment of sinne shall certainly fall vpon you therefore sinne and the punishment of sinne are vnseparable companions as we see in Kingdomes Cities Families Doctrine The onely cause of punnishment is sinne and particular persons that haue offended against him And hereby we may obserue that the only cause of iudgement and punishment is sin God is neuer displeased with any people or person but for their sinnes Esay 43 24. 63 10. Hos 4 1 2. This is farther confirmed in the examples of his iudgments that fell vpon men and Angelles kingdomes and States houses and persons they haue bin destroyed subuerted for sin 1 Cor. 10.8 9 10. Reason 1 The grounds hereof follow First sinne is the transgression of the law 1 Ioh. 3 4. and 5 17. so defined by the Apostle he gaue a law to al which he would haue to be kept now then when this is broken and transgressed it cannot be but he should be offended and execute punishment against those that break it Secondly God is holy yea most holy and therefore cannot but punish sin which is directly opposite to the holines of his nature The more iust and righteous a Iudge is the more he is greeued at the enormities of malefactors that he hath to deale withall so in this case God being most holy and righteous nothing can be so offensiue and displeasing vnto him as the sinnes of men which are committed against him Thirdly sin is the destruction and condemnation of the creature and bringeth the ruine of soule and body The Apostle teacheth that the wages of sin is death Rom. 6 23 it is the cause of naturall death of spirituall death of eternall death If God doe thus hate sinne that it draweth Vse 1 from him all plagues vpon vs then it giueth wicked men to vnderstand what they are in the sight of God nothing but such as displease greeue and prouoke him by their sinnes and therefore he hateth them as his enemies and setteth his face against them as the Iudge setteth himselfe against euill doers and a Prince setteth himselfe against rebels that do resist against him There cannot be a greater miserie then for a man to commit sinne because it is that which is so highly displeasing to God the procurer of his displeasure and indignation against the committers of it and therefore this pointeth and painteth out the most fearefull estate of all wicked sinners that liue yet are dead in their sinnes seeing God is such an enemy vnto them and they vnto him Some thinke the onely miserable condition to bee to liue in pouerty and neede and want of all things in reproch and contempt in famine dearth of all things in hunger and nakednesse in sickenesse and diseases howbeit these are greatly deceiued who are themselues so much the more miserable that they know not what misery is neyther wherein it consisteth Our sinnes are the true sores and
at the right hand of his Father Col. 3 1 2. Luke 12 32. Seuenthly it is an vnsatiable euil as a gulfe that swalloweth whatsoeuer is cast into it and as the poore ill-fauoured and leane fleshed kine that Pharaoh saw in his dreame which did eate vp seuen well-fauoured and fat kine And when they had eaten them vp it could not bee knowne that they had eaten them but they were still ill-fauoured as at the beginning Gen. 41 21. Hence it is that Salomon saith He that loueth money shall not be satisfied with it Eccl. 5 ver 10. Eightly it maketh such as are infected with it companions with Achan with Gehazi with Iudas Iscariot nay the most couetous persons are worse then that traitor and farther from the kingdome of heauen because he was touched with some remorse restored the thirty peeces of siluer whereas they keepe by them that which they haue wrongfully taken from others and yet haue no sense or feeling eyther of the sinne present or the punishment to come whereas without restitution confession they cannot be saued Vse 4 Lastly from hence we ought all to learne contentation with our seuerall estates wherein God hath set vs which should be as bounds to hedge vs in as if it were saide vnto vs Behold God will haue vs to rest and stay vpon that which he hath giuen vs and to content our selues therewith otherwise we trouble the whole order of the world and defie the Lord himselfe to his face as if wee meant to proclayme open warre against him This obedience S. Paul had learned when he professeth that he knew to be rich and to be poore to be hungry and thirsty and likewise to haue abundance Phil. 4 12. He had learned to be patient in pouerty and to be content with his estate Both these are two notable vertues and special graces of Gods Spirit This is it to learne to be rich and to abound when we do not desire to gather yet more and more neyther are proud to trust in our riches neyther take occasion by them to oppresse the weaker sort that haue no friends in the world to maintaine and defend them and finally when we so vse the world as if we vsed it not be ready to become poore for Christs sake and to leaue all whensoeuer it shall please God to lay that crosse vpon vs. This is a great blessing when such as are rich in wealth can be poore in heart and indeede greater then the former and more needfull to be vrged then the former Many will be ready to laugh at this speech to know how to bee rich But if wee consider how vnsatiable for the most part such are and how their eares and harts also are stopped with earth and clay we shall finde that it is not without great reason that Christ our Sauiour telleth vs that It is an hard thing for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of heauen Mat. 19. For they are for the most part more discontented then poore men and so farre in loue with their owne shadow for what is riches but a shadow that they cannot be satisfied And if they had the whole earth in possession they would think that too little and beginne to dreame of two earths Wherefore let vs labour after the grace of Contentation which is a vertue whereby wee are content with our present estate and such blessings as we haue lawfully gotten and rest in them with a quiet heart and bee ready to beare the burden of pouerty patiently The holy Scripture setteth before vs as in a glasse Motiues to moue vs to contentation sundry motiues to mooue vs to seek after and to practise this gift First because it is commanded of God to euery one to be content with his estate Heb. 13 5. Secondly such as are endued with it neede not feare want or pouerty or to be forsaken in theyr pouertie for God hath promised to be their deliuerer and hath sayde He will neuer forsake them Heb. 13 5. Thirdly such as are endued with it shal not be destitute of godlinesse which is great gaine to supply all things 1 Tim. 6 6. Fourthly it is a testimony of true faith resting in the will and pleasure of God Matth. 19 21 for it witnesseth for them that they haue their treasure in heauen Fiftly it maketh this life sweet and comfortable Prou. 13 15. and without it there is nothing but trouble and vexation of spirit Lastly a little with the feare of God is better then great heaps of riches treasures Prou. 15 16 17. 16 8. 13 And Moses commanded the children of Israel saying This is the Land which ye shall inherite by lot which the Lord commanded to giue vnto the nine Tribes and to the halfe Tribe 14 For the Tribe of the children of Reuben according to the house of their fathers and the Tribe of the children of Gad according vnto the house of their fathers haue receiued inheritance and halfe the Tribe of Manasseh haue receiued their inheritance 15 The two Tribes and the halfe Tribe haue receiued their inheritance on this side Iordan nere Iericho Eastward toward the Sunne rising In the former words wee heard the Commandement of God to Moses touching the bounds and diuision of the Land here we see the execution of it commending his obedience wherein he encourageth the Israelites to prepare themselues to enter into the Land We haue all need to be comforted and encouraged to good duties in regard of our present dulnesse Againe we see that the consideration of the neerenesse of Gods mercies should embolden and encourage euery one to bee constant and couragious that wee faint not in the last acte This made Moses say This is the Land which ye shall inherite he doth as it were point it out with the finger and biddeth them lift vp their eyes and behold the goodnesse which God had promised to their fathers For as the consideration of iudgement at hand lying at the doores ought to moue terror and astonishment so when we behold the mercies of God before our eyes which are not prolonged for many yeares it ought to enflame vs with an holy zeale and desire to see the accomplishment of the same as Christ teacheth his Disciples touching the last day the comming of the Sonne of man Luke 21 28 When these things begin to come to passe then looke vp lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth nigh But to passe these ouer let vs stay our selues a while in the consideratiō of the estate of the Church of Israel as now it stood Some were at rest other were to passe farther Some had their inheritance and some had none Some had Townes and Cities to dwell in and some were yet left to the wide world and were to wander farther Some had much and others little or nothing at all Some wanted and some wanted nothing This teacheth vs what is the estate of the
whereunto they are receiued so shall it bee taken from the lot of our inheritance 4 And when the Iubile of the children of Israel shall be then shall their inheritance be put vnto the inheritance of the Tribe whereunto they are receiued so shall their inheritance bee taken away from the inheritance of the tribes of our fathers WHereas Moses had spoken before of the diuiding of the inheritance in generall among the tribes in this place a certaine speciall case is propounded by the Manassites touching the right of inheritance before assigned to the daughters of Zelophehad to wit how prouision might bee made that the same portion might remaine in that tribe and not be conueyed or translated to some of the other tribes For they propound these 2 as repugnant one to the other the right of succession which these women had obtayned and the priuiledge of the yeare of Iubile which they thought was weakened by this meanes if happely these maydes should marry to any other husbands then men of their owne tribe neyther did they know how to cleare this doubt But Moses instructed of God setteth downe a Law that inheritance should not passe from tribe to tribe and that such as were inheritrixes might not marry any of other tribes but among their owne onely which was carefully obserued by these women This is the summe of this chapter wherewith the whole booke is concluded In this obserue three points The contents of this chapt first the question of the Manassites secondly the resolution of Moses thirdly the marriage of the daughters of Zelophehad Touching the first it is handled in these foure verses The question was moued by the chiefe heads of the tribe of Manasseh how the inheritance might rest without a manifest detriment to their tribe For if they should marry in another tribe it was as much as to cut off an arme from the body And by this meanes it might come to passe in processe of time that the chiefe portion assigned to one tribe might be possessed by men of other tribes which would breed great confusion and disorder This practice and proceeding of theirs teacheth first that the Magistrate is and ought to bee the supreme Iudge in causes of inheritance Secondly no man ought to bee Iudge in his owne cause Thirdly wee see how they come to Moses not in contempt or with a commotion as if they meant to gaine that by force which they could not obtayne by fauour but they beare themselues lowly and dutifully as became them to the Magistrate when they say The Lord commanded my Lord and againe My Lord was commanded Doctrine Inferiors must reuerence their superiors c. From hence wee learne that it is the duty of all inferiors to reuerence the superiors in gesture in word in deed We might also shew that Magistrates must acknowledge themselues to rule vnder God and to be Lords vnder that highest Lord. But wee will onely handle this point that inferiors must vse speeches of reuerence such as betoken subiection this we saw before chapt 11 28 and 32 5 25 31. 2 Kings 5 13 1 Peter 3 6. Nehem. 2 5. Esther 7 3. 2 Sam. 24 3. 1 Kings 1 23 24 31. 2 Kings 2 12 and 13 14. Mal. 1 6. 1 Sam. 25 24 25 26 27 28. Gen 16 9. The grounds first because superiors beare Reason 1 the image of God and are to their inferiors in Gods place as Moses was to Aaron when the Lord sayth Exod. 4 16. Thou shalt be vnto him in stead of God Secondly it is the expresse law of God To honor father and mother that is all superiours Exod. 20 12. Psal 82 6. 1 Tim. 5 3. They are set ouer inferiors for their good not for their owne 1 Tim. 2 ● where the Apostle teacheth that Princes are appointed vnto eminent place not to lift vp their hearts against theyr brethren and to maintain themselues in all riot and excesse but that the people may leade a quiet peaceable life vnder them Fourthly such do adorne the Gospel 1 Tim 6 1. This serueth to reprooue such as are so farre Vse 1 from giuing of good words and vsing soft gentle speech sauouring of Christian modesty and subiection that they reuile them rayle at them and speake all manner of euill agaynst them which they ought not to do vnto any much lesse to their fathers or masters or Magistrates to whom they are bound in a neerer band and tyed to a farther duty Hence it is that Moses sayth Exod. 22 28. Thou shalt not reuile the gods nor curse the ruler of thy people It is deliuered as a generall precept binding all that will be the children of God Blesse them that persecute you blesse I say curse not Rom. 12 14. Iam. 3 9 10. It is a thing acceptable to God to speake euill of no man Titus 3 2. It is therfore a thing detestable to speake euill of our superiors vnto whom all dutifull language is due that sauoureth of peace and loue nay of submission and subiection The Apostle exhorteth seruants to bee obedient vnto their owne masters and to please them in al things Tit. 2 9. not answering againe with stout and vnseemely words Such then must learne by the feare of God to bridle their tongues that they offend not that way Iam. 3 4. Many there are who in their seruice are reasonable but they haue no rule ouer theyr tongue they will not onely mutter and murmure but giue curst and cutted answers It is the fruite of an euill seruant to bee euill tongued and to take liberty to taunt in vnseemly manner against those that are set ouer them This was the sinne of Agar that despised her mistresse not onely in her heart but likewise in speech Ge. 16 4. Let such consider the words of Salomon Prou. 15 1. A soft answer turneth away wrath but greeuous words stirre vppe anger Iames chap. 1.20 Iudg. 8. verses 1 2 3. 1 Sam. 25 32. Secondly we see the place of subiection is Vse 2 not an vnlawfull calling● neyther must wee think that Christianity hath abolished Magistracy and ciuill authority but rather ratifyeth and establisheth it Titus 3 1. 1 Tim 6 1. And it is lawfull for good men and especially for Magistrates Ministers to haue seruants as Abraham had many Eliah one likewise Elisha Ioseph had a Steward of his house Iacob had men-seruants and mayde-seruants Gen. 14 14 and 15 2 and 44 1 and 32 16. Mephibosheth had a seruant and that seruant had twenty seruants 2 Sam. 9 10. This ouerthroweth the damnable sect of the Anabaptists and Libertines who teach that Christians may not be subiect vnto any Obiection They obiect that they are the Lords free-men I answere Answer it is true but this freedome is inward and spirituall from sinne and Satan and condemnation Obiect Againe they alledge that wee are forbidden to be the seruants of men Answ 1 Cor. 7. I answere the meaning is
tribe of her father that the children of Israel may enioy euery man the inheritance of his fathers 9 Neyther shall the inheritance remooue from one tribe to another tribe but euery one of the children of Israel shall enioy euery man the inheritance of his fathers The second part of the Chapter followeth which is the answere of Moses to the former question where hee commendeth those that made this demand and then he setteth downe first a particular Law touching the daughters of Zelophehad that they should marry to whom they thought best howbeit within their owne tribe and secondly a general Law binding perpetually all daughters among them that possessed any inheritance in any tribe of the children of Israel that they shall be wiues to one of the same tribe thus euery one should quietly enioy his own and the inheritance should not remoue from one tribe to another Out of this diuision wee might obserue sundry instructions We must commend good in whomsoeuer First Moses commendeth that which these chiefe fathers had well spoken and well done teaching that wee ought not onely not to dispraise that in which others haue well deserued but wee should praise and commend it Thus hee did to these daughters before Chapter 27 7 when they sued for an inheritance Secondly in that they are directed to marry to whom they thinke best we see that none are to be denyed marriage which is the ordinance of God It entred into none of theyr hearts to remedy the alienation of inheritance by restrayning any from marriage when daughters fell to be inheritrixes but it was left free to them according to the precept of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7 2. Againe it teacheth that marriage is not to be enforced vpon any eyther by the Magistrate or by the parents or by any gouernours Gen. 24 57. 1 Corinth 7 39. For this were to exercise tyranny ouer our children For as children ought to haue the consent of theyr carefull parents and not to dare to bestow themselues without their aduice which practice wee see in the very Gentiles as appeareth in Euripides where Hermione answereth Orestes Eurip. in Andromacha desiring of her a promise of marriage Sponsaliorum meorum pater meus curam habebit non est meum statuere hoc That is It lyeth not in my hand at all my selfe for to contract Vnto my fathers care and power I must referre that act So likewise parents ought to haue the consent of their children not bestow them vppon others against their wils for that were to lay an euill foundation and to fill the house with iarres and dissentions Thirdly obserue that Moses sayth Euery daughter shall be a wife vnto one of the family teaching vs that howsoeuer the marrying of many wiues was practised among the Patriarkes and people of God yet this is the Law of Nature that one man should haue one wife not wiues Gen. 2 24. Mat. 19 5. But to come to the maine point Doctrine The inheritance of the Israelits must continue and remaine in one tribe wee learne that the inheritance of the children of Israel must remaine and continue in one and the same tribe and neuer passe from tribe to tribe The reasons of this Law giuen vnto them are that the Israelites might enioy euery man the inheritance of his fathers verse 8 and for this cause are the borders of euery tribe so carefully assigned afterward Secondly that it might certainly he known that the Messiah came of no other tribe then of the tribe of Iudah according to the promise and prophecy of Iacob Genes 49 10. The tribe shall not depart from Iudah till Shiloh come Thirdly that peace might bee preserued and confusion auoyded among them whereas if the inheretrix had not beene restrained by this Law but left at liberty the bounds of euery tribe in processe of time would haue beene abolished These Lawes did onely binde the Iewes touching inheritances not impose a necessity vpon others as we haue shewed before chapt 27 as likewise that the eldest must haue his double portion and that no man might lawfully sell the fee simple of his inheritance which precepts with sundry others if they should be brought into all Christian commonwealthes would turne vpside downe the very foundation of them and alter all Lawes and customes generall and particular and bring in an horrible confusion For other nations doe hold their lands by see simple but God holdeth the Israelites as his farmers Leuit. 25 23 The land shall not be sold for euer for the land is mine for ye were strangers and soiourners with me hee would not haue them as owners neither to be as purchasers of that land Now let vs come to the vses Vse 1 First it is the ordinance of God that euery man keepe his proper inheritance to haue and to hold the same as his owne Distinction of inheritance is agreeable to his word whatsoeuer the madde spirits of the Anabaptists doe teach Obiect It will bee said that this is a fruite of mans first sinne and disobedience and that if he had stood in his innocency there should haue beene a community of all things But mans transgression brought in this priuate possession Answ I answere wee will not reason what should haue beene forasmuch as wee see what man hath done and how he is fallen It is in vaine for a man to thinke how rich hee should haue beene if his house had not beene burned when hee seeth it is consumed sticke and stake to the ground and hee become a poore begger So likewise it is needlesse to debate and dispute what should haue beene if Adam had stood seeing God made man good but he sought out many inuentions Eccles 7 29. For inasmuch as man is wholly corrupted by sinne that communion if any should be cannot in this estate take place but euery man must know what is his owne and what is not his owne Vse 2 Secondly this should teach parents to prouide for their daughters as well as for theyr sonnes and not to leaue them to the wide world especially in these our dayes wherein more enquiry is made what they haue then what they are and what goods are without them then good things are within them But God sheweth by this Law that hee hath no lesse care of them then of sonnes Men are to consider that their daughters are their children as well as their sonnes and therefore euen they must bee prouided for also The Apostle teacheth that parents should lay vp for their children 2 Cor. 12 14 not for one child onely or for his sonnes onely Nature teacheth that if any member be weake it is chiefly to be strengthened The woman is the weaker vessell and needeth to bee supported and it encourageth them in obedience when they see themselues respected And what a shame is it to parents to bring them into the world and then to leaue them as it were destitute to the wide world
Tribes and families of Israel and hauing seene what forces and number of men fit to beare armes were found in euery Tribe from 20. yeares of age vpwards hee appointed vnto them by direction from the Lord such Princes and Leaders as in worth and reputation were in euery Tribe most eminent Numb 1 46. The number of the whole army was 603550. men for the warres besides women and children also beside the strangers which followed them out of Egypt This great body of an army was diuided by Moses into foure grosse and mighty Battalions each of them containing the strength of three whole Tribes hauing Captains and Colonels appointed vnto them Thus did the blessing which Israel gaue to his children and God himselfe before to Israel take place among them In the middest of the foure great armies sorted vnder their seuerall standards was the Tabernacle Numb 3 8 as a portable or mooueable Temple carryed which was surrounded by the Leuites and the Leuites also by the other Tribes so that not onely the Pagans and Heathens were forbidden accesse vnto it Verse 38 but the sentence of death passed vpon euery soule of the Israelites themselues that durst approach it who were not of the Leuites to whom the charge was wholly committed So sacred was the Tabernacle of the Congregation Numb 1 39 and with such reuerence garded and regarded that two and twenty thousand Priests were dedicated to the seruice and attendance thereof For as the industry in framing euery the least part thereof the curious worke-manship bestowed vpon it Exod. 31 3 4 and the charge and expences about it were exceeding great so the dutifull obseruance in the preseruing and laying vp of the holy vessels the solemne remoouing thereof the vigilant eye in attending thereon together with the prudent and prouident defence of the same serued to procure all due reuerence to the holy things of God and to encrease zeale and deuotion in such as approached neere vnto him euen as on the other side this is the maine cause of the prophanation of the Sacraments and of the contempt of the Word and Prayer and of so little practise of true piety among vs because there is so little feare and reuerence in the hearts of men towards the worship of God and the parts thereof Great was the zeale and forwardnesse both of Princes and people as appeareth both in making the Tabernacle and all manner of worke for the seruice of the Sanctuary Exod. 36 5. in offering afterward For after that Moses had taken order for all things necessary written in the Lawes numbred his armies and diuided them into seuerall Regiments or squadrons whereof the Tribe of Iudah led the Vantgard the twelue Princes or Commanders of the Tribes renowned of the Congregation and the heads of thousands in Israel Numb 1 16. brought their Offerings before the Lord to wit sixe couered Chariots and twelue Oxen to draw them therby to transport as they marched the parts of the Tabernacle Numb 7 2. with all the appurtenances the Sanctuary onely excepted which for more reuerence and regard was carried vpon the shoulders of the sonnes of Kohath vnto whom that care and charge was commited Numb chap. 3. verse 31. Neuerthelesse after so many mercies of God vpon them hauing seene so many miracles shewed so many victories atchieued so many remissions obtained so many benefites receiued and so many iudgements inflicted vpon the disobedient yet they as a stubborne and rebellious generation a generation that set not their heart aright Psalme 78 8. whos 's spirit was not stedfast with God neuer ceased to prouoke him by their sinnes and oftentimes as it were made a generall Conspiracy against him and Moses his seruant so that Miriam and Aaron were not free Arist Rhetor. lib. 2. cap 24. Numb 12.1 verifying the saying of the Philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Euen a mans Kindred know how to enuy at him But among all other mutinies and murmurings recorded in this Booke none was greater then that which happened after the returne of the twelue Aduenturers or Discouerers sent out by Moses into the Territories of Canaan as wel to informe themselues of the force of the inhabitants and fertility of the Countrey as also to take knowledge of the Wayes Passages Riuers Foards Plaines and Mountaines thereof that nothing might be hidden from them For the wrath of God was turned against Israel being kindled by the violent breath of their rebellion Numb 14.22.30.31 so that hee punished the same in a most fearefull manner Iude verse 5. and almost extinguished euery soule of the whole multitude which he had brought out of Egypt for onely two Caleb and Ioshua were excepted And albeit Moses was the mildest and meekest man vpon the earth Numb 12.3 and often prayed vnto God for them to renew his wonted mercies and to consider that theyr destruction would encrease the pride of the Heathen Nations both of the Egyptians from whence they came Numb 24 13. and of the Canaanites to whose Land they were going and preuayled by his wonderfull prayers with him For the prayer of a righteous man auayleth much if it be feruent as the Apostle Iames saith chapt 5. verse 16. yet they ceased not to murmure against him witnesse heereof amongst others the insolent behauiour and conspiracy of Korah Dathan and Abiram and their Partisans Numb 16. verse 1. who for the contempt of God and his Ministers and seeking to ouerthrow the order and discipline of the Church were some of them swallowed vp aliue and by the earth opening her mouth deuoured others euen two hundred and fiftie in number which offered Incense with Korah their Captaine were consumed with fire from heauen besides fourteene thousand and seuen hundred which iustified the former mutiny were stricken dead with a sodaine pestilence as Numb 16. verse 49. Thus while the wicked multitude vsurped ecclesiasticall authority and endeauoured to subuert the power of the Church-gouernment and to bring in a parity that is an horrible confusion by making all men alike by pretending that all the Congregation are holy euery one of them as Numb 16. verse 3. and by rebelliously contending against the high Priest and the cheefest Magistrate to whom God committed the ouersight of all the Almighty altered the course of Nature that They dyed not the common death of all men neither were visited after the visitation of other men Verse 29. but he made a new thing and wrought one of the greatest wonders and myracles which fell out in all the time of Moses his gouernment And the better to assure his people and in his great goodnesse to confirme them touching the election of Aaron and his sonnes to the Priesthood it pleased him also to approoue the same by a great miracle of the Twelue Rods giuen in by the hands of the twelue Tribes of which Moses receyued one of euerie Head and Prince of his Tribe all which being
vntoward but holde on in a constant course 2 Tim. 2. Proouing if God at any time will giue them repentance to come out of the snares of the Diuell of whom they are holden captiues Lastly we must testifie our sorrow for our people mourne for the hardnesse of their heart and be heartily greeued to see their vntowardnes that though the Sunne shine neuer so cleerely yet they shut their eies and will not behold the light of the truth whose eyes the god of this world hath blinded and hardened their hearts lest they should bee conuerted and saued This affection of vnfeigned sorrow was in Christ our Sauiour when he had preached with great power but small profit in the hearers He looked round about on them angerly mourning also for the hardnesse of their heart Mark 3 5. If these things bee found in vs readinesse of minde to care for the people painefulnesse in our places to turne them to God and sorrow of heart for their hardnesse and infidelity we may truely comfort our selues and be assured to be honoured of Christ both in this life and in the life to come CHAP. II. 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses and to Aaron saying 2. Euery man of the Children of Israel shall campe by his standard and vnder the Ensigne of their Fathers house farre off about the Tabernacle of the Congregation shall they pitch IN this Chapter is set foorth the disposing and ordering of their Tents For in the former chapter we haue heard how the people were numbred the Tribes distinguished and ouer euery one seuerall Princes appointed who were choise men euen the heads of the house of their Fathers to be Rulers Gouernors ouer this great multitude For what is the people without Princes but as an hoast and armie of men without Captaines to leade them as a shippe without a Pilot or as a body without an head or as an house without a maister The heathen haue seene thus far that the multitude is as a monster with many heads Horat. Epist resembling the confusion that was at Babel Wherefore the necessity of ouerseers being so great it pleased GOD first of al to appoint them Magistrates to take the muster Now wee haue heere to consider another testimony of Gods mercy toward them in that he doth diuide and distribute them into certaine rankes and regiments and maketh choise himselfe in what order they should pitch their Tents and likewise march forward toward the Land of Canaan in what manner they should make a stay and in what manner he would haue them remoue This was both necessary and profitable and not to be omitted seeing nothing can be more foule and deformed then to see a company of men gathered together without order and mingled together in all confusion The causes of this dealing of God toward his people are three Three causes why God assigneth to euery Tribe his place and order one in respect of himselfe another in respect of Israel the third in regard of the enemies of them both of God and his people The cause respecting God is that they and all other might see what a wise God they serue For he would haue his name not onely knowne in Israel but magnified throughout all the world If they professing the knowledge and seruice of the true God had wandered vp and down in the wilde and waste wildernesse in such troopes and bandes of men in a confused and disordered manner not knowing who should go before nor regarding who should follow after the name of God would haue beene dishonoured his wisedome impaired and his glory diminished It pleased him therefore euen in regard of himselfe to make manifest his wisedome and excellency in leading them foorth in most excellent and exquisite order and to assigne to euery one his proper place that they might say What god is like vnto our God Or who is to bee compared with him Who is so glorious in holinesse fearefull in prayses doing wonders Exod. 15 11 Let vs therefore confesse that he is wise in heart yea the wisest and mighty in strength yea the mightiest so that the foolishnesse of God is wiser then men and the weaknesse of God is stronger then men Iob 9 4 Esay 31 2 1 Cor. 1 25 and therefore to this God onely wise must bee praise and glory through Iesus Christ for euer Secondly hee leaueth them not to themselues but assigneth to each Tribe his proper mansion to take away from them all confusion and to cut off all matter of contention For except he had established as by a law the order that should be obserued among them and thereby decided all questions and controuersies that might arise touching priority precedency many hurli-burlies and heart-burnings would be entertained and part-takings would be nourished which being kindled at the first as a little sparke of fire would afterward breake out into such a fire and flame as would spread further and in the ende hardly be quenched For the tribe of Reuben challenging the preheminence in regard of birth-right would not easily lose his right but wold take it done in contempt and to his reproach to be put behinde to come after any other On the other side their harts were not so high and haughty to lift vp themselues aboue their brethren but the rest of the Tribes woulde haue thrust them downe as low and to their perpetuall disgrace and dishonour haue sunke them downe to the bottome and appointed them the last and lowest place in regard of the curse of Iacob that lay heauy vpon them who had saide long before Gen 49 4 Thou shalt not bee excellent thy dignity is gone Againe a new trouble and tumult would arise touching the sonnes of the Concubines for such as were borne of Rahel and Lea the two wiues of Iacob would neuer yeeld nor thinke it fit to make thē equal to themselues much lesse to suffer them to go before them and so to carpe and crow ouer them For as it was in their fathers while the corne was in the grasse hope of posterity was in the cradle so it would bee in the children We see the emulation that was between Isaac and Ismael betweene Iacob and Esau likewise betweene the sonnes of Iacob who were the founders and fountaines of the twelue Tribes Moreouer such as did exceede the other in multitude of men and strength of armes had tasted of Gods blessings before others would iudge themselues worthy to be honored and preferred and themselues wronged iniured vnlesse they had not onely the right hand of fellowship giuen them but the vpper hand of iurisdiction authority granted vnto them and thus the sonnes of Simeon would neuer haue suffered themselues to be brought into order and haue pitched vnder the standard of Reuben but haue iudged themselues worthy of the place of superiority and haue made the other their vnderlings as a footstoole to tread vpon For
albeit many things fell out to restraine the course of liberality as their multitude importunity and ingratitude that are in need yet he could not be hindred by any of them from shewing mercy vnto them ●eut 24 53. considering that if we feed them their bellies shall blesse vs if we cloath them their loines shall blesse vs if we visite them in sicknesse their bodies shall blesse vs nay their soules shall blesse vs albeit their tongues reuile vs and their mouthes be full of cursing and bitternesse Let vs therefore turne our selues from them vnto God who will reward euery good worke euen to a cup of colde water Heereby we shall testifie our religion to be sincere hereby we shall be like our heauenly Father assure our hearts that we are his children hereby we shall be made conformable vnto Iesus Christ our head who being equall in glory with his Father and being in the forme of God made himself poore that he might enrich vs hereby we shall prouide well for our selues by making vs friends with the riches of vnrighteousnesse yea hereby we shall heape coales of fire vpon the heads of all vnthankfull persons doing good for euill and shewing mercy to them that doe not deserue any mercy at our hands 25. The standard of the Campe of Dan shall be on the North side by their armies the Captaine of the children of Dan shall be Ahiezer the sonne of Amm●shaddai 26. And his host and those that were numbred of them were threescore and two thousand and seuen hundred 27. And those that encampe by him shall be the Tribe of Asher and the Captaine of the children of Asher shall be Pagiel the sonne of Ocran 28. And his host and those that were numbred of them were forty and one thousand and fiue hundred 29. Then the Tribe of Naphtali and the Captaine of the Children of Naphtali shall bee Ahira the sonne of Enan 30. And his host and those that were numbred of them were fifty and three thousand and foure hundred 31. All they that were numbred in the camp of Dan were an hundred thousand and fifty and seuen thousand and sixe hundred they shall goe hindermost with their standards We are now come to the last standard expressed in these wordes These three Dan Asher and Naphtali that is the Tribes that descended of them being three of the sons of Iacob doth the Lord in this place cast into the last squadron to make vp the fourth battailion And albeit they were set in the last and lowest company of the army yet wee do not reade that during the long time of their tarriance in the wildernesse which was the space of 40 yeares they opened their mouthes against the ordinance of God or murmured through impatience and discontentment at the order established among them neyther did other murmure at them albeit some of the children of the handmaids were preferred before the naturall sons of Leah and Rahel An hoast of men consisting of great multitudes is like a full or corpulent body that needeth not any external meanes to throw it downe it being ready to ouerweigh and ouersway it selfe through it owne heauines Many estates and kingdomes arising from small beginnings as it were large stoods from little fountains haue proceeded swelled so great Liuy in the Preface to his History that the bignes thereof is comberous to themselues and the puissance of so mighty people hath wrought their own destructiō Thus it fel out in the commonwealth of Rome whose proper power strength wanting a forrain enemy to encounter with all wrought it owne ruine so that it had no greater opposite then it owne too great felicity Epito Flor. But not to trouble our selues with forraine examples let vs briefely touch the example of the Disciples of Christ they were few in number they were a little company like a small boat that might be easily ruled and gouerned inasmuch as they had the best Maister that euer was to stand at the sterne yet they no sooner heard of Christs departure out of the worlde but they condemned parity and contended for superiority Math. 20 20. Thus we see what our nature is one man cannot abide any to be his equall another cannot suffer any to bee before him Wherefore to cut off all occasion of emulation and to teach them the benefit of contentation the Lord assigneth to euery Tribe his standing place and they in humility and obedience rested in the roome ranke that God in mercy appointed for the generall benefit of the whole and the particular good of euery one among them Verse 25 26. The standard of the Campe of Dan shall be on the c. The three combined together in this army whereof Dan was principall the other two Asher Naphtals were assistants are indeed the children of the handmaids inasmuch as Rabel in greefe of her barrennesse giueth her maid vnto her husband who beareth him Dan and Naphtali Leah also following her sisters example giueth him her maid who beareth bringeth forth Asher There can no reason bee assigned by man why they should go march in this order then in any other but onely the good pleasure of God yet they are quiet and striue not one against another being brethren one to another From hence we learne that euery one Doctrine 6 ought to be contēted with his present estate I say Euery one is to be content with the condition wherein God hath set him how meane soeuer our condition be yet God requires it as a special duty at our hands that therewith we be content Hereunto commeth the commandement giuen by the Apostle 1 Corinth 7 20 24. Let euery man abide in the same calling wherein he was called To the same purpose hee teacheth elsewhere that Godlinesse with contentment is great gaine and afterward 1 Tim. 6 8. Hauing food and rayment let vs bee therewith content And as he deliuereth this doctrine by precept so hee sealeth it vp by practise and experience Phil. 4 11 12. I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to bee content I know both how to be abased I know how to abound euery where and in all things I am enstructed both to be full and to bee hungry both to abound and to suffer need It is a great and wonderfull knowledge and very hard to be practised to know to be rich that is to vse riches soberly it passeth our reach vnlesse we haue a speciall and extraordinary grace giuen vnto vs. We must learne also what it is to be poore which is as hard a lesson as the former forasmuch as we are ready to murmure vnder the Crosse whereas though wee should walke naked be hungry and thirsty be afflicted and passe by the sword yet we ought to be patient our trust must not faile which we haue in God who will feed vs in the time of famine Reason 1 The reasons heereof are of great force and carry
It is no good report that I heare ye make the Lords people to transgresse But Dauid was loth to displease his sonne but sought to please him in all things and behold what came of it it turned to his hurt and in the end to his vtter ouerthrow If then we lay these seuerall points together that God will shew our election and the election of our seed to stand firmely and onely vpon the purpose of his wil and cut off all occasion of boasting from vs that we are able to deriue grace vnto them lest therby we should ascribe their regeneration conuersiō to our selues so take the glory frō God to whom onely it is due vnto our selues to whom in no sort it is due that God in his counsell purposeth to destroy some of them and that they often want education a good meanes to bring them to God wee may truely conclude this point with which we deale namely that godly parents which doe beleeue haue many times vngracious and vnrighteous children that doe not beleeue This often falling out to the most faithful Vse 1 that desire to leaue an holy seed behind them let vs consider what we are to learne from it And first this sealeth vp this truth as a principle that neuer faileth namely that the father is not saued by the child nor the child by the father The Prophet saith truely Hab. 2.4 The iust shal liue by his faith not by the faith of the father nor by the faith of the sonne but by his owne faith The faith of the godly father shal not saue the vngodly child neither shal the faith of the godly child saue the vngodly father Thus are Gods wayes cleared to bee equall which are oftentimes challenged and slandered to be vnequall This doth the Prophet Ezekiel Ezek. 18.4 5.13 14 17 20. and 33.20 handle at large Chap. 18. and 33. Behold all soules are mine as the soule of the father so also the soule of the sonne is mine the soule that sinneth shall die If a man be iust and doe that which is lawfull and right if he beget a sonne that is a robber or an oppresser he shal surely die his blood shall be vpon him But if he beget a sonne that seeth all his fathers sinnes which he hath done and considereth and doth not such like hee shall not die for the iniquitie of his father he shall surely liue The soule that sinneth it shall die the sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father neither shall the father beare the iniquity of the sonne the righteousnes of the righteous shal be vpon him and the wickednes of the wicked shal be vpō him Where he sheweth that if the father that is righteous beget a sonne vnlike vnto himselfe the righteousnesse of the father shall nothing profit or auaile him he shall receiue such a recompence of reward as is due to his impiety He mentioneth in this place three seuerall persons the grandfather the nephew and in the middle betweene them both Calui praelect in Ezek. cap. 18 he setteth the sonne of the former and the father of the latter Of them all he setteth downe this rule that euery one shall be rewarded as he hath liued and receiue according vnto his workes The blessing of GOD shall rest vpon all those that are iust whatsoeuer their posterity shall bee as Esay Chapter 3.10 Esay 3.10 Say yee to the righteous that it shall be well with him for they shall eate the fruite of their doings and to that purpose we reade in the Psalme Psal 58.11 Men shall say verily there is reward for the righteous verily he is a God that iudgeth in the earth God is a iust Iudge and therefore rewardeth euery man as his owne life is They therefore doe greatly deceiue themselues that runne into all excesse of riot and thinke to haue mercy shewed vnto them because of the godlinesse of their parents whereas rather this shall serue to heape vppe farther iudgement vpon their heads On the other side it serueth to comfort those that forsake the wickednesse of their parents progenitors forasmuch as god will accept of them and embrace them in the armes of his tender loue and neuer charge vpon them those sinnes nor vpbraide them with the same Blessed therefore are all that walke in his wayes but vnto them that turne away from righteousnesse and commit iniquity and doe according to all the abominations that the wicked man doth all his righteousnesse that he hath done shall not be mentioned in his trespasse that he hath trespassed and in his sinne that he hath sinned in them shall he die Wherefore to conclude it is required of vs not to stand vpon the goodnesse of our ancestors but vpon that which we finde in our selues inasmuch as many of the godly and righteous seruants of God haue had children appointed to wrath and destruction The people of the Iewes gloried and boasted that they had Abraham to their father albeit they did not the workes of Abraham but of their father the diuell Ioh. 8.44 Ioh. 8.44 Hence it is that Iohn the Baptist exhorteth them to bring forth fruites meete for repentance Matth. 3.8 9. and not to thinke to say within themselues We haue Abraham to our father forasmuch as God is able of the stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham It is a vaine thing in earthly things for a man to boast of his predecessors The heathen man could say Ouid. Metam lib. 13. that stocke and ancestors and such things as our selues haue not done we may scarcely cal our owne Much more doeth this holde in heauenly things and in true religion which goe not by kinde or kinne they descend not from father vnto sonne as temporall inheritances doe no man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and hee to whomsoeuer the Sonne will reueale him Matth. 11. Matth. 11.27 Let euery man labour to know God and to plant the feare of him in his owne heart that so we may liue by our owne faith as his life is maintained and continued by his owne soule Vse 2 Secondly let no man be discouraged though they see their seed vntoward and vngracious Religion cannot be conueyed to children by parents as house and land neither can they leaue it vnto them as they leaue them a possession to descend by a continued succession from the father to the sonne and to the sonnes sonne in one race and generation Godlinesse commeth not to vs by naturall generation Godlinesse is no inheritance from father to sonne but by spirituall regeneration neither hath the first-borne greater title to it then the second That which the Apostle speaketh of the Ministery that Paul may plant and Apollo water but it is God that giueth the increase may be truely spoken of the bringing vp of children in the nourture and information of the Lord. We may and ought
the Lord Obiect Ephes 6. Ephe. 6.4 If any obiect against these commandements They will be vnruly and disordered albeit they be neuer so well brought vp and though their parents be very carefull they will be very carelesse and therefore they were as good holde their peace as to speake to them and not to be regarded Answer I answere so it is sometimes but alwayes it is not so Many that haue feared GOD with all their housholdes haue receiued much comfort by their children and seruants that haue had good instruction put into them as pure and wholesome liquour into a vessell and haue seene the fruite thereof to the vnspeakeable ioy of their hearts This we might shew at large in the reformed families of Abraham and Cornelius and sundry others As they planted and sowed good seede in the parts of their families as it were in a fruitfull field so they reaped a plentifull haruest Abraham had seruants that were also Gods seruants Gen 24.12 and 14.14 Act. 10.7 and prayed earnestly vnto him Cornelius had a souldier that waited vpon him that feared God yea all his band of Italian souldiers were Christian souldiers Againe we must trust GOD with the effect and successe of the education that we giue them He will worke thereby by his Spirit in all that belong vnto him as seemeth good to his heauenly wisedome If he doe not giue a blessing for causes vnknowne to vs but knowne to him let vs leaue Gods secret yet iust iudgments to himselfe The third particular branch is to pray to God for them to guide them in his wayes and to blesse them in his feare and to blesse our labours bestowed among them This wee see in Iob Iob 1.5 Chapter 1. toward his children When the dayes of their feasting were gone about he sent and sanctified them and rose vp early in the morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all for he said It may be that my sonnes haue sinned and cursed God in their hearts He was carefull for those which were committed vnto his charge and feared they might offend God in their meetings albeit hee knew no such euill by them The wise man saith Happy is the man● that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Prou. 28. Prou. 28.14 A like example wee haue in Dauid Psalme 72. where he prayeth for Salomon Giue the king thy iudgements O God and thy righteousnesse to the kings sonne hee shall iudge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poore with iudgement So then the faithfull are to entreate and craue from God the continuance of his couenant to their children and to begge from his handes an holy and sanctified seede We must not presume because we are faithfull and haue receiued to beleeue that therefore our seede must of necessity be so likewise for then we shall but deceiue our selues Let not vs therefore faile in crauing a blessing from God vpon our children if we desire to make them heires of blessing Fourthly it is required of vs to reioyce in the blessing of God vpon them and to giue him praise and glory when he vouchsafeth to shew mercy vpon them and vpon vs. If hee did leaue them in their sinnes and in that corruption which they receiued from vs Psal 51. as it were by inheritance we could not finde iust cause of complaint against him who is bound neither to vs nor to our children but forasmuch as he sheweth much mercy to our posteritie as he hath done vnto vs we haue matter of praise and thankesgiuing giuen vnto vs whereby also we shall procure their farther good It is noted of the Iailour Actes 16. Act. 16.34 that he reioyced that they of his houshold also beleeued in the Lord. He accounted it not sufficient for himselfe to beleeue nor reioyced onely in his owne saluation but forasmuch as God had vouchsafed greater mercy vnto him to call his family also to the faith this cheered his heart much more If we haue tasted of the like mercy let vs not be forgetfull of the like duty Lastly it belongeth vnto vs for the furtherance of their good to giue those all good encouragement in well doing that are conscionable in their duties to God and to vs we are bound to praise and commend them to comfort them to cheere them vp and to defend them against all malicious enemies that seeke to disgrace them The Apostle Paul willeth parents not to prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Coloss 3.21 It is a meanes to coole and quench zeale to finde discouragements in godly proceedings On the other side we ought to shew all dislike and hatred against euill and an angry countenance toward such as are vnreformed The Prophet touching the right ordering and good gouernment of his house declareth that hee would not know a wicken person and him that hath an high looke he will not suffer Psal 101.4.5 His eyes should be vpon the faithfull of the land that they may dwell with him hee that walketh in the perfect way hee shall serue him This is a good meanes to make both houses to prosper and kingdomes to flourish when the godly are aduanced and the euil doers are beaten down but when euil is set aloft and goeth vnchecked and vncontrolled and godlinesse is driuen to the wall it prognosticateth and foretelleth the ruine and vtter desolation of those societies albeit for a time they may continue When they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse Wee haue hitherto spoken of the destruction of Aarons sonnes before the face of their father now let vs see for what cause it was done The sinne of his sonnes is remembred to be this they offered strange fire that is such as was not appointed and commanded of the Lord they tooke not the fire from the altar to burne incense with all which came downe from heauen and was preserued by the diligence of the Priests vntill the captiuity of Babylon Now whereas the authour of the second booke of Macchabees telleth vs that whē their fathers were led into Persia the Priests that were then deuout tooke the fire of the altar priuily Macch. 1.19 and hid it in an hollow place of a pit without water where they kept it sure so that the place was vnknowne to all men hath no testimony of trueth out of the sacred Scriptures as we shal shew more in the 26. Chapter of this Booke of Numbers Moses maketh mention of this example of the sinne and punishment of Aarons sonnes to the end the Leuites should be more wise and wary in the execution of their office because God hereby sheweth that they shal neuer escape his hand that do not rightly discharge the duties committed vnto them For the examples of Gods iudgements vpon the corrupters and contemners of his worship must make vs more carefull and fearefull to offend Now whereas they are punished according to their
build it or when it should be builded or where it should bee builded Hence it is that the Lord sent Nathan vnto him who said vnto him Shalt thou build me an house to dwell in Whereas I haue not dwelt in any house since the time that I brought vp the Children of Israel out of Egypt 2 Sa. 7 5 6 7. euen to this day but haue walked in a Tent and in a Tabernacle In all the places wherein I haue walked with all the Children of Israel spake I a word with any of the Tribes of Israel whom I commanded to feede my people Israel saying Why build ye not me an house of Cedar So then seeing it might be said to him Who required these things at thy hands Who commanded of thee any such worke Who euer spake vnto thee to doe it Howsoeuer his purpose might be commended yet the fact is reprooued And God vseth two reasons to call him backe from his desire and enterprise one taken from his owne person the other from the person of Dauid From the person of God because hitherto hee had liued in a Tabernacle so that there was no cause in respect of him to trouble himselfe with the building of a Temple From the person of Dauid because he was to consider that there were many in Israel besides him many Iudges and Princes beside him and before him yet none of them had any such charge laide vpon them or committed vnto them or required of them so that he ought not to haue enterprised that which was commanded to none of them nor to himselfe True it is GOD saith in the booke of Deuteronomy that there should be one place where he would be worshipped but what or where that place was he did not foreshew therefore his farther pleasure to bee reuealed was to be expected and an expresse commandement to be waited for For wee see in the Scriptures that oftentimes somewhat is commanded which commeth not by and by to be practised and executed as we declared before touching the chusing of a King from among their brethren Deut. 17 14. when they came into the Land which the Lord their God had giuen them So Christ sent out his Apostles into all the world and commanded them to teach all nations but at what time they should go forth they were to expect a new commandement and commission Matth 28.19 Luke 24.49 so that albeit they were bidden to goe yet if they had gone before they had knowne when to goe they had offended The summe and effect of this answer cometh heereunto that Dauids thought and purpose was good and godly if we consider the roote of it inasmuch as it proceeded from a desire of promoting true religion neuerthelesse although God approued his intent yet he suffered him not to goe forward because hee wanted his word to warrant his intent and therefore did not obey God but follow his owne mind and deuice Thus wee see the cause why God forbad Dauid to builde him a Temple and yet afterward the people in the daies of Haggai are reproued Hag. 1 4. being returned from captiuity because they builded not Heere he forbiddeth that which there he cōmandeth These things seeme not to agree together but to be contrary one to the other and yet though different in shew they agree very well in deed in truth For in this place Dauid is pulled back from his purpose as running too fast trauelling as it were without his guide and sailing without his compasse because he had not the word of God whereas they were reproued because albeit they were stirred vp by the Prophets and called continually to that duty by the word of God yet they could finde no leasure to fall to worke but followed wholly their owne profites and pleasures Thus we haue answered the obiections let vs now come to the vses see what we are to learne from hence Vse 1 First of all wee are taught that touching things that are to be done or not to be done we are not to iudge by the false rule of our owne carnall and corrupt reason but according to the sure word of the Prophets and Apostles It seemeth a small thing in our owne iudgement to burne Incense with strange fire but it is a most greeuous sinne and deserued a most greeuous punishment if we consider the word of God thereby transgressed or respect his commandement thereby violated For these two sonnes of Aaron died not the common death of all men nor were visited after the ordinary visitation of the rest of the sons of men but God wrought a strange worke he brought fire from heauen and consumed them Numb 16 18. The like we might say of Corah and his company they contented not themselues with the ordinary calling of the Leuites to do the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Lord and to stand before the Congregation to minister vnto them but they would also take euery man his censure and put incense in them but they sought the Priesthood also and vsurped the office peculiarly appointed to Aaron and to his sons It might seeme a small thing to set vp others to burne incense and a man might say Why might not Korah do it as wel as Aaron What skilleth it by whom it bee done But hereby the will of God is broken and little regarded yea God himselfe is contemned and little esteemed in our eyes This then bindeth euery soule to humility not to thinke any thing better wiser or more expedient and profitable to the Church then that which is prescribed vnto it neither yet to account any thing idle or superfluous or vnnecessary or that might be amended There be many prophane men that think most basely and contemptibly of the most excellent things of God as of the Word of the Ministery of the Sacraments and of the prayers of the Church It seemeth to many a slight thing not to be washed with the water of Baptism but it is not so with God who hath instituted that Sacrament and therefore woe vnto them that neglect it or despise it The like we might say of the Lords Supper it is accounted among many a small matter whether they come to the Table of the Lord or not But we must measure the necessity of it not by the outward shew of the outward actions but by the Commandement of God because whatsoeuer Christ hath instituted for the perpetuall vse and benefit of the Church we are commanded to yeeld obedience vnto it Whosoeuer neglecteth to doe what hee appointeth sinneth most greeuously against him Wherefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 11. 1 Cor. 1● As often as ye eate this bread and drinke this cup yee doe shew the Lords death till he come Such then as come sildome to this Sacrament declare plainely that they regard not the death of Christ They looke to receiue life and saluation from him but they do not esteeme the meanes whereby they may be made
Law they are called Priests Exod. 19.24 Thou shalt come vp thou and Aaron with thee but let not the Priests and the people breake through to come vp vnto the Lord lest he breake forth vpon them At this time Aaron and his sonnes were not consecrated to the office of the Priesthood neither was the tribe of Leui chosen to come neere to the Lord and therefore these Priests could be no other but the first borne that were sanctified vnto the Lord which is the point that now we deale withall Reason 1 This will farther appeare vnto vs if we consider what their dignitie was and wherein it consisted who excelled from the beginning in three things First he was Lord ouer his brethren according to that of Isaac when hee blessed Iacob the yonger in stead of the elder and thereby preferred him to the dignitie of the first borne Gen. 27.29 Be Lord ouer thy brethren and let thy mothers children bow downe vnto thee The like wee see in the booke of the Chronicles Chap. 21.3 touching the sonnes of Iehoshaphat Their father gaue them great gifts of siluer and of gold and of precious things with fenced cities in Iudah but the kingdome gaue hee to Iehoram because he was the first borne Secondly he had a double portion Deut. 21.17 that is two parts of all that the father had whereas the rest were contented with a single portion And this was so firmely established and decreed that no man vpon priuate affection ought to be disinherited and the reason is rendred for he is the beginning of his strength and therefore the right of the first borne is his Thirdly he was holy vnto God and was the Priest of the family vnder his father whom for the most part he vsed as an assistant vnto him in the managing of all the affaires thereof All this appeareth plainely in the dissolutenesse that fell out among the sonnes of Iacob which was sufficient to haue wrought the dissolution and desolation of that family when Reuben sinned against his father and defiled his bed by horrible incest he was disinherited and his excellency was diuided among his brethren Iudah gate the scepter Leui had the Priesthood and Ioseph obtained the double portion 2 Chronicles Chapter 5. verses 1 2. Againe as nothing is more naturall then Reason 2 that the father instruct and direct his children and set them forward in the wayes of godlinesse and well doing so nothing is more seemely among brethren then that the elder should help the yonger the stronger assist the weaker and the richer helpe the poorer Now none could be fitter to assist the father in the Kingly and Priestly office while he liued and to second him in them both when hee dyed then the first borne who is said to be the beginning of his strength the excellency of dignity and of power Genesis Chapter 49. verse 3. Seeing then it is iust and right and profitable it ought to be confessed and acknowledged of vs. Lastly heereunto in processe of time was Reason 3 added another reason and a new necessitie of lifting vp their heads when GOD destroyed all the first borne in the land of Egypt so that there was no house wherein there was not one dead Now Exod. 12.29 inasmuch as the first borne of Israel escaped out of this common calamitie as it were a brand taken out of the fire God saith vnto Moses Sanctifie vnto me all the first borne whatsoeuer openeth the wombe among the children of Israel c. it is mine Exodus Chapter 13. verse 1. From hence we may conclude that all the first borne were consecrated vnto GOD and were to bee employed in his seruice This is indeed a type and figure and hath Vse 1 not place among vs howbeit it is written for our admonition vpon whom the endes of the world are come and offereth many good and profitable instructions for our edification This teacheth who are chiefly bound to serue the Lord. The greater our giftes are the fitter we are for God and none is to disdaine to employ themselues and all that is in them to his seruice To this purpose commeth the saying of the wise man Prouerbes Chapter 3. verse 9. Honour the LORD with thy substance and with the first fruites of all thine increase Such as haue receiued the greatest measure of grace are bound to yeeld vnto him the greatest honour and to bring forth the greatest obedience as the fielde that hath most cost bestowed vpon it giueth the greatest encrease Such as haue receiued fiue talents should gaine with them other fiue If he haue made vs as the first borne preferred vs before many other and doubled his Spirit vpon vs as it were a double portion let not vs content our selues in any wise to giue him a simple and single gift or recompence of all his labours bestowed vpon vs. The first reproofe This reprooueth those that scorne the Ministery as base and reiect the calling it selfe as needelesse and superfluous in their eyes that account it too contemptible to employ the best and chiefest of their children in it In former times the first borne were teachers of the families and Ministers of the Church vntill God set apart the tribe of Leui to serue at the altar in the temple The best things that we haue are not too good for God euen to giue them vnto him all the dayes of their life For whom are the best fittest but for him that is best He challenged the eldest to serue him the rest he permitted to the father to be employed as he saw good First God will be serued as it is great reason he should be and afterward he giueth vs leaue to serue our selues Iesse serued the king with his eldest sonne in the warres 1 Sam. 17.13 and kept his yongest at home and bestowed him about his owne businesse If any thinke his first borne to be too good to minister before the Lord he honoureth them aboue the Lord. Doth any thinke himselfe too good or too great a man to be sent as an embassadour from the Prince to forraine estates or rather doe not men sue for such high places and think themselues happy when they attaine vnto them How commeth it then to passe that men of countenance are ashamed to see their children to be the embassadours of the king of kings and to be employed in the greatest seruice to make peace betweene God and man and to saue soules from death and destruction If a man be blessed with many children if any bee more toward in wisdome in learning in iudgment in stayednesse and in giftes he were fittest for the Lord. But the Ministery of the word in our dayes through the abundance of sinne and of iniquity getting the vpper hand is grown into disgrace and contempt because men cannot abide to be reproued whereas to them that are sanctified and shal be saued it is the power of God 1 Cor. 1.24 and the wisedome
themselues For he saith in the place before named and mentioned Thou shalt not take the summe of them among the children of Israel that is while thou art reckoning the number and taking the muster of the other Tribes thou shalt not meddle with this Tribe who were exempted from the warres And the reason thereof is rendred Num. 1.50 Thou shalt appoint the Leuites ouer the Tabernacle of the Testimony and ouer all the vessels thereof and ouer all things that belong vnto it He calleth it sometimes the Tabernacle of the Congregation because the people assembled at it for the worship of God and sometimes the Tabernacle of the Testimony ●●mb 17 8. ●●abl annot Nume 1. because in the Tabernacle was placed the Arke and in the Arke the two Tables of the Testimony in which the ten commandements were written wherby God testified his will to the Israelites both what he would haue them doe and what he would not haue them to doe Verse 34. 35. And Moses and Aaron and the chiefe of the Congregation In these words beginneth the execution of the Commandement of God Moses numbring the Leuites according to their families and assigning to euery one of them their seuerall offices and charges This obedience of his is worthy of great praise inasmuch as in this description of the numbring of these families he remoueth farre from himselfe all suspition of giuing scope to his owne affections and therefore he signifieth that he did nothing of pride or partiality aduancing the Leuites before the other Tribes or preferring the family of the Kohathites before the rest of the Leuites but hath dealt in all things as became the true minister of God euen according to the commandement and commission that he had receiued of whom it is said afterward chap. 12. My seruant Moses is faithfull in all mine house ●umb 12.7 ●eb 3.5 euen as in the building of the Tabernacle he added nothing of his owne but did all things according to the patterne that was shewed him in the mount We learne from hence that whensoeuer we haue heard the word and had the will of God reuealed vnto vs we must yeeld Doctrine 1 obedience to the same The word heard must be obeyed It is a duty required of vs to practise so much of Gods trueth as is in mercy made knowne vnto vs. So did Noah Gen. 6.22 when he was commanded to make an Arke he did it as God commanded So did Abraham when he was commanded to circumcise himselfe and the males in his family Gen. 17. This is it that Moses teacheth the people after all his teaching and exhorting of them Deut. 10.12.13 Now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to walke in all his wayes and to loue him and to serue the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soule that thou keepe the commandements of the Lord his ordinances which I command thee this day for thy wealth And in the beginning of the next chapter Deut. 11.1 Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God and keepe his charge and his statutes and his iudgements and his commandements alwayes The Apostle Iames vrgeth this duty vpon those that are swift to heare and haue receiued the word with meeknes which is able to saue their soules chap. 1.22 Be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne soules Christ our Sauiour describing the good hearers by the good ground saith They bring forthwith patience some sixty fold some thirty fold Luke 8.15 Matth. 13.23 and some an hundred fold euery one some fruit no man is barren altogether To conclude this point it was the exhortation of Moses and of the Priests and Leuites Deut. 27.9 10 which they spake vnto all Israel Take heed and hearken O Israel this day thou art become the people of the Lord thy God thou shalt therefore obey the voyce of the Lord thy God and doe his commandements and his statutes which I command thee this day So thē we must all know what is required of vs to wit to be doers and not bare hearers to be practisers and not talkers to be obeyers and followers not idle professors Maruell not at all at this For first to encline Reason 1 our hearts to walke in his wayes that we haue learned is an infallible signe that we truely feare God This we see in the example of Abraham God tempted him and said vnto him Take thy sonne thine only sonne Isaac whom thou louest and offer him for a burnt offering he preferred the commandement of God before the loue to his owne sonne God accepted his willing mind and therefore he heareth this comfort Lay not thine hand vpon the lad neither doe thou any thing vnto him Gen. 22.12 for now I know thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thy sonne thine only sonne from me Not that he was ignorant before but because he made that knowne to himselfe and to others which before was known to him alone and not thoroughly to Abraham himselfe For what is in vs we know not certainly our selues vntill we be prooued Thus then we see that Abrahams notable obedience in so great a tryall was an euident testimony that hee truely loued God Reason 2 Secondly obeience is alwayes ioyned with recompence God-rewarding it to the ful who is a most rich pay-master No man shall serue him for nought If Laban could say thus to Iacob Gen. 29.15 Because thou art my brother shouldest thou therefore serue me for nought will not the Lord much rather say to vs because ye are my children should ye therfore serue me for nothing The Prophet Dauid setting downe the singular fruits and effects of the word of God saith By it is thy seruant made circumspect Psal 19.11 in keeping of it there is great reward Consider brefly how it was with Abraham of whom we spake before he receiued an hard commandement himselfe to offer vp in sacrifice his only sonne yet because he delayed not to put it in present execution he receiued a threefold reward first God deliuered his sonne from death secondly he commendeth the faith of the father and thirdly he repeateth the promise to him and confirmeth his faith in it Gen. 22. Reason 3 Thirdly if we hearken vnto him he will hearken vnto vs if we serue him he will not be backeward or behinde hand with vs to serue vs. This doth the Prophet Esay point out vnto vs chap. 58.9 Thou shalt call and the Lord shall answere thou shalt cry and hee shall say Here I am On the other side if we will not hearken to obey him he will neuer hearken vnto vs neither regard when we call vpon him The wise man bringeth in wisdome crying without and vttering her voyce in the streetes Pro. 1.24 25.26 Because I haue called and ye refused I haue stretched out mine hand and no man regarded but ye
out before you and the land is defiled therefore I will visite the wickednesse thereof vpon it and the land shall vomit out her inhabitants The Prophets are full in all places of the like threatnings There is a notable testimony to this purpose Ier. 5.7 8 9. where the Lord complaineth of this iniquity and of the abuse of his manifold benefits Though I fed them to the full yet they committed adultery and assembled themselues by companies in the harlots houses they rose vp in the morning like fedde horses euery man neyed after their neighbours wife shall I not visite for these things saith the Lord shall not my soul be auenged on such a natiō as this We reade in the booke of Genesis that when Pharaoh at the commendation of his Courtiers had taken Abrahams wife into his house the Lord plagued him and his house with great plagues 〈◊〉 12 17. and they ceassed not vntill he had restored her againe and giuen his seruants commandement to doe him no hurt The like we might also speake of Abimelech the king of Gerar when he also sent and tooke her though he had not yet come neere her but onely purposed euill yet the Lord came to him in a dreame by night ● 20.3 and said vnto him Behold thou art but dead because of the woman which thou hast taken for she is a mans wife So then there is ordained for all adulterers and fornicators both temporall and eternall punishments These sinnes shall bring a man to beggery euen to a morsell of bread Prou. 6.26 they shall roote out his house destroy his posterity consume his flesh waste kingdomes yea shut out of Gods kingdome and bring to the condemnation of the diuell forasmuch as no vncleane thing shal enter into the heauens but all murtherers and sorcerers and idolaters and whoremongers shall haue their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death Reason 1 The reasons hereof are these First the wrath of God is kindled against such In his fauour is happinesse but if his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all that trust in him For this cause the Apostle saith Ephe. 5.6 Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for because of these things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience In the words going before he had shewed that no whoremonger or vncleane person hath any inheritance in the kingdome of Christ and of God the reason is because such lye vnder the heauy wrath of God He is angry with them and therefore woe vnto them If the child see the father angry with him how is hee greeued what saith the Lord vnto Moses concerning the sinne of Myriam his sister Numb 12.14 If her father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seuen dayes And the Apostle to the Hebrewes chap. 12 9. We haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs and we gaue them reuerence shall we not much rather be in subiection vnto the Father of spirits and liue What subiect can beare the displeasure of a Prince The feare of a king saith Salomon is like the roaring of a Lyon Prou. 19.12 and 20.2 and 16.14 who so prouoketh him to anger sinneth against his own soule If the lyon hath roared who would not feare as testifieth the Prophet Seeing then the wrath of a king is as messengers of death what shall we thinke the wrath of the King of kings to be who is euen a consuming fire Hebr. 12.29 and deuoureth all as straw and stubble before him Secondly it appeareth to bee a greeuous sinne because it is worse then theft as Salomon Reason 2 maketh the comparison Prou. 6.30.32 Men doe not despise a theefe if he steale to satisfie his soule when he is hungry c. but whoso committeth adultery with a woman lacketh vnderstanding he that doth it destroyeth his owne soule It is an odious name to be called a theefe but it is more odious to be called an whoremaster A theefe when he hath stollen is carried to the gallowes but the adulterer deserueth it much more What an horrible offence is it to destroy a mans owne soule we pittie him that layeth violent hands vpon his owne body and killeth himselfe Who doth not account Saul and Achitophel and Iudas most infamous who perished with their owne hands but the adulterer doth a thousand times worse he destroyeth his owne soule which is a greater price then the body Thirdly adultery and vncleannesse defile Reason 3 the land not onely the persons and the houses but whole cities and countries vntill all become abominable and the land become full of sinne and therefore no marueile though it be punished of God To this purpose the Lord speaketh in the Law of Moses Leuit. 19.29 Doe not prostitute thy daughter to cause her to be a whore lest the land fall to whoredome and the land become full of wickednesse This sinne is of an infectious nature aboue other suffer it but a little and it will quickly encrease like fire that is kindled in dry wood which suddenly taketh hold and easily passeth from one to another vntill the whole be enflamed Fourthly we must know what our calling Reason 4 is The Gentiles that knew not God and were ignorant of his law defiled themselues with these abominations and were cast out before his face for the land did spew them out as loathsome But we haue learned better things and God hath vouchsafed vs greater mercy he hath called vs to be an holy people to himselfe and redeemed vs that wee should serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues This the Apostle noteth 1 Thess 4.3 4 5 7. This is the will of God euen your sanctification that ye should abstaine from fornication that euery one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in sanctification and honour not in the lust of concupiscence euen as the Gentiles which know not God c. for God hath not called vs vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse To this we shall adde sundry other reasons afterward when we make vse of this doctrine Vse 1 This serueth to teach vs sundry instructions both touching our knowledge and concerning our obedience First let no man flatter himselfe in this sinne It is accounted of the greatest sort a small and sleight matter a veniall sinne a tricke of youth Such scoffers as these it seemeth were in the Apostles times but now they are more common as the sin is more commonly practised and aboundeth euery where This doth the Apostle declare 1 Cor. 6.9 Know ye not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God be not deceiued neither fornicators nor adulterers nor the effeminate shall inherit the kingdome of God It is a fire that shall deuour to destruction and bring strange punishments vpon the workers of such iniquities The first reproofe Iob 31.3.12 This serueth to reprooue diuers sorts of men
bee yea thou shalt diligently consider his place and it shall not be the Lord shall laugh at him for he seeeth his day comming Then it shall be saide to all the wicked ●th 25 41. Go ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the deuill and his Angels The truth may be ouer-borne and smothered for a time yet it cannot be disgraced and concealed for euer It were well for them if they might lie for euer in the graue and neuer come into the light it were well for them if their works might neuer come to bee examined might dye as the vntimely fruite of a woman that neuer saw the Sun but it shall not go so well with them they must not then looke for auie comfort like the rich Glutton who was denied a drop of water to coole his tongue If then they would giue a thousand worlds for one day of repentance or for one droppe of Faith or for oyle in their lampes they cannot obtaine it Heere life is either wonne or lost here saluation is begun or else we neuer haue it Then all things shall appeare as they are though many things are that do not now appeare Then the vizard of the hypocrite must be pulled off and hee shall deceyue no more by shewes of honest dealing And she shall conceiue seede In these words wee haue a second promise made to the Woman suspected of adultery against whom nothing could bee proued For God maketh a two-fold promise to the innocent party The first was set downe before that she should be free from the imputation of the sin and from the castigation of punishment Now cometh the second promise to bee considered which reacheth further then the former wherein God doth wonderfully recompence the slander charged vpon her and declare himselfe to be a maintainer of chastitie and innocency For what could a woman in this case haue desired but to haue her innocency made known to her husband and to the whole Church It was an hard case to vndergo this triall and to haue her name in this manner called into question but after she is tried God doth abundantly recompence her sorrow and affliction and doth not onely cleere her good name but giueth her yssue making the barren woman to keepe house and to be a ioyfull mother of children Hee doth not onely set her free the thing which she desired but withal maketh her fruitfull which is more then shee could haue expected We learne hereby Doctrine God bestow●th more mercy vpon his hildren then they desire that howsoeuer the faithfull are many waies tried and troubled yet all their sorrowes are turned to their good When the innocencie and righteousnesse of the godly is once made knowne God is more gracious vnto them then they could desire or craue at his hands We see this in the examples alledged in the former Doctrine as in a glasse most cleerely Remember what wee saide of Ioseph albeit he liued for a time as a prisoner and was clapt in the stocks yet hee was deliuered and his innocency reuealed But was this all Or did God content himselfe to bring his sincerity to light No he was aduanced to honor Gen. 41 41. and made ruler ouer all the land of Aegypt which he neuer dreamed of nor looked for nor gaped after And as it was with the sonne so was it also with the father For Iacob vowed a vow to God that if he would bee with him and keepe him in his iourney that he was to go Genes 28 20. with ●2 9 10. And would giue him bread to eate and raiment to put on then the Lord should be his God His desires are not extended farre but he is contented with a little he craueth of God his daily bread the which Christ also willeth and warranteth vs to aske Mat. 6 neuertheles God was more gracious to him then so and gaue him great riches as himselfe cōfesseth to God his louing kindnes I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed vnto thy seruant for with my staffe I passed ouer this Iordan and now I am become two bands The like we might speak of Iob the faithfull seruant of the Lord who may be compared to him in the suffering of aduersity Or who can match him in patience He sustained the losse of his Children and of his goods and yet these were but the beginnings of sorrowes forasmuch as he was deepely afflicted in body and minde What then did he desire of God in his miserie Iob 42 10. to haue his Asses and Camels and cattle doubled vppon him and all the substance of his house to be increased He had no such thoght in his hart and yet it came to passe according to the saying of the Apostle Iames 5 11. Yee haue heard of the patience of Iob and haue seene the end of the Lord for the Lord is verie pittifull and of tender mercy Let vs also call to minde the example of Dauid the least in his Fathers house hee was called of God from feeding his sheepe and following the Ewes great with young and was annointed to bee King and appointed to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel whereof he neuer dreamed Psal 78 71 72. The like we might say of Daniel of Mordecay of Ester and many other children of the captiuity who saw great dangers ready to fall vpon the church as it were a gaping gulfe ready to swallow them vp quick or as a huge rocke threatning ship-wracke if they had onely tasted of the mercie of God and his power in working their deliuerance they wold haue magnified his great goodnesse and sung his praise with the Psalmist Psal 34 19 20 Many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth him out of them all hee keepeth all his bones not one of them is broken Psal 34 19 20. But besides this he gaue them fauour in the sight of Princes 1 Sam. 2 8. and raised them from the dung-hill to make them inherit the Throne of glory as Hannah singeth who had good experience of it who was contemned but now regarded who asked of God one sonne and obtained not him alone but three other sonnes and two daughters From all which concents of holy Scripture we conclude that the faithfull and righteous seruants of God are oftentimes blessed not onely aboue their deserts which are none at all but aboue their desires and demands Reason 1 The Reasons that serue to confirme this truth to our consciences are to be considered of vs. First God is infinite in his loue toward his people he is no niggard of his goods hee keepeth not all to himselfe as the couetous man He is as the liberall man that freely bestoweth where he seeth need we are as poore beggers that haue nothing our own but rags and rents or as poore criples that can boast of nothing but wounds and sores full
vnto him and hee dyed as the man of God had saide Zachariah the Priest had an Angell sent vnto him from God standing at the right side of the Altar of Incense 〈◊〉 1 13. telling him that His prayer was heard and that his wife should beare him a sonne and that many should reioyce at his birth ●●rse 14. howbeit hee would not beleeue the message he measured all things by the course of nature the word of the Angel would not suffice him that stood in the presence of God and was sent to speake vnto him and to shew him these good tydings hee must farther heare verse 18. Whereby hee should know this But he that would not rest in these good tydings is constrained to heare heauy tydings that he should be dumbe ●se 20 and not be able to speake vntill the day that these things be done because he beleeued not his words which should bee fulfilled in their season The like we might also say of the Israelites in the wildernesse as wee shal see afterwards in the eleuenth chapter of this booke of Numbers Moses shewed the weakenesse of his faith and the people the want of their faith so that the Lord complaineth against them against Moses that hee was of little Faith against the rest that they were for the most part a faithlesse generation albeit they had knowne his goodnes tryed his power felt his iustice and seene his mercies and miracles plentifully amongst them he might iustly take vp the same complaint against his people which Christ did against his Disciples Mat. 17. verse 17. O generation faithlesse and crooked how long now shall I bee with you How long now shall I suffer you Hence it is that when Moses considering the want they had of flesh Numb 11 21 22. saide Sixe hundred thousand foote-men are there of the people among whom I am and thou sayest I will giue them flesh that they may eate a moneth long Shall the sheepe and the Beeues be slaine for them to finde them eyther shall all the fish of the sea bee gathered together for them to suffice them The Lord saide vnto Moses Is the Lordes hand shortned Thou shalt see now whether my worde shall come to passe vnto thee or no. Hee sent them that which they desired but hee sent it not as a blessing they lusted with Concupiscence in the Wildernesse and tempted GOD in the Desert so that it turned to bee a curse vnto them Verse 33. for While the flesh was yet betweene their teeth before it was chewed euen the wrath of the Lord was kindled against the people and hee smote the people with an exceeding great plague Yea such was the iudgement that came vppon them Verse 34. that the place was called Kibroth hattaauah the graues of Lust for there they buried the people that fell a lusting to keepe thereby the greatnesse of their sinne fresh in remembrance verifying that also which the Prophet saith Psal 106 16. Hee gaue them their request but he sent leannesse into their soule They had flesh enough but it did them no good they abounded but their aboundance turned to their destruction So whē they wanted water and Moses Aaron did not teach them to be patient vnder the crosse and contented with Gods hand the Lord spake vnto them Because ye beleeued mee not Numb 2● 12 to sanctify me in the presence of Israel therefore ye shal not bring this Congregation into the land which I haue giuen them There is no greater wrong can bee done to God then to doubt of his trueth of all sinnes this is one of the most highest and most heinous to haue in vs an euill heart and vnfaithfull to depart away from the liuing God Wherefore when wee or any part of the Church are in extreamity and lye vnder affliction let vs not cast off our confidence that hath great recompence of reward Heere is a stay to rest vpon heere is a pillar that cannot bee shaken heere is a most sure and firme foundation vpon which we should builde our house Is hee more mercifull to his Saints then they can wish or desire Let vs then know for a certainety that there is great hope of deliuerance in the greatest extreamities though wee know no way to escape but that wee rest as a prey in the teeth of the Lyon yet the loue of God toward vs is infinite and vnspeakeable hee can restore vs and redeeme vs by sundry wayes that wee could not thinke of nor dreame of nor desire This is that which Mordecai is bolde to put Esther in minde of Ester 4 14. If thou holdest thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy Fathers house shall perish Faith is the ground of things hoped for and the euidence of things not seene Heb 11 1. If there be faith in vs as the graine of Mustard seede which is very little we shall finde the benefite and fruite of it If any grace bee wanting in vs the fault is in our selues and not in God wee haue the truth of his word deliuered vnto vs but we beleeue not the doctrine which we heare This wee see in the Prophet Esay chap. 50 2. Wherefore came I and there was no man I called and none answered is mine hand so shortned that it cannot help Or haue I no power to deliuer Beholde at my rebuke I dry vp the sea I make the floodes desert Their Fish rotteth for want of water and dieth for thirst And afterwards the same Prophet vrgeth this point Esay 59.1 2. Behold the Lords hand is not shortned that it cannot saue neither his eare heavy that it cannot heare but your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your GOD and your sinnes haue hidden his face from you that he will not heare Nay his eare is so farre from being heauy that he cannot heare that on the other side he is quicke of hearing and so quicke that hee is sought of them that asked not for him and found of them that sought him not Esay 65 1. Seeing then hee is fo bountifull aboue all our desires woe vnto vs if wee beleeue not his worde nor rest vpon his power nor content our selues with his promise When the Israelites were oppressed with the hard and cruell taske-masters of the Egyptians what could they desire or what did they desire at the hands of Pharaoh but to go into the wildernes to serue him and to carrie with them their owne Cattle their children and their substance But God did not only grant that vnto them but brought them out with great substance Psal 105 37. Exod. 12 29. He gaue them siluer and gold there was not one feeble person among their tribes They neuer durst aske of God to giue them the treasures and the spoiles of their enemies yet he gaue them that which they neither dared to aske nor desired to obtaine for they
the children of Zebulun did offer 25 His offering was one siluer charger the weight whereof was an hundred and thirty shekels one siluer bolle of seuenty shekels c. Behold heere how the other Princes are not inferiour to the first that offered nor the other Tribes to the Tribe of Iudah Obserue heere that the spirit of God accounteth it not sufficient to set downe what was offered in generall neither in particular what Nahshon the sonne of Aminadab of the Tribe of Iudah offered the first day or what Nathaniel the son of Zuar Prince of Issachar offered the second day but he goeth forward to set downe the speciall offerings according to euery mans name and according to the day assigned vnto him Obiect It may be demaunded what was the cause why these offerings are thus particularly pointed out why are the same chargers the same bolles the same spoones so often repeated might not all these things heere mentioned haue beene more summarily concluded what need more words haue bene vsed when fewer would haue serued I answere Answer we must not account any thing idle friuolous fruitles or superfluous in holy Scripture The Lord knoweth best what is fittest to bee dilated largely and what to be comprehended shortly If there were no other reason then this so it pleased the Lord it ought to content vs and to make vs rest in it The like example we finde Psal 136.1 2 c. Where in euery verse and at the recitall of euery blessing this reason is repeated for his mercy endureth for euer Adde heereunto Reuel 7.5 6 c. where this is repeated according to the number of the Tribes that twelue thousand were sealed of them Hee might haue said briefly of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand but he repeateth the words twelue times so in this place the offerings are repeated twelue times particularly according to the number of the twelue Princes The reasons may be first to teach vs to be content to heare the same things though they be oftentimes repeated as Phil. 3.1 The Apostle saith It is not grieuous to me to write the same things often and for you it is safe Wee are ready to forget the best things and therefore must haue them continually sounding in our eares as many strokes giuen with a hammer to make vs heare Secondly that wee should apply these examples vnto our selues and if wee passe ouer one of them without regard yet we should take holde of the next Thirdly to teach vs that no man shall haue that forgotten to the vtmost of his praise who is any way forward in doing good because he will honor those that honor him but they that despise him shall be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 The doctrine Doctrine from this particular rehearsal and enumeration of the gifts of those Princes is this Euery good worke of gods children is knowne and shall be rewarded that all the good workes of Gods children done to the setting forth of his glory to the aduancement of his worship to the maintenance of true Religion or the good of his children shall be reckoned vp rewarded and come vp in account before him he taketh notice of them all and will neuer forget any one of them As their deeds are here registred in the booke of God so the doers of them are registred in the booke of life Matth 10.42 Our Sauiour teacheth that a cup of cold water shall not go vnrewarded that is giuen to drinke in the name of a disciple to one of these litle ones And afterward it is said Matth. 25.7 A certaine woman came vnto him hauing an alabaster boxe of ointmēt very precious and powred it on his head as he sate at table and because she had wrought a good worke vpon him verse 10. he sayth Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospel shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her verse 13. To this purpose speaketh the Angel that appeared to Cornelius Act. 10.4 Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp for a memoriall before God So then euery thing shall be remembred no one worke shall be forgotten Reason 1 For God is a righteous God giuing to euery one according to his workes Hee is the Iudge of the world Gen. 18. and cannot but iudge vprightly Hereupon the Apostle saith Heb. 6.10 God is not vnrighteous to forget your workes and labor of loue which ye haue shewed toward his Name in that yee haue minstred to the Saints and doe minister He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward for he will reward very bountifully euery good worke If we be not barren in good workes he will not bee behind with vs to recompence vs. Secondly how can they but come into an account seeing he accounteth them as done to himselfe Matth. 25.40 When any thing is giuen to the Saints it is esteemed as done to the Sonne himselfe and when it is bestowed vpon one of the least it is regarded as bestowed vpon the greatest and highest The seruant receiueth it but the Master will reward it Vse 1 Touching the Vses we may first conclude the happy estate and condition of them that leaue this world and depart this life in the true feare of God because we heare their workes shall be remembred and therefore the doings of his seruants be rewarded with eternall glory being done in the loue of God and of his trueth none of them are forgotten but they shall follow them nay goe with them and beare them company This we reade in the Reuelations of Iohn chap. 14.13 I heard a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Write blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the spirit that they rest from their labors and their works follow them to wit at their heels as the word importeth Death cannot cut them off though it be a cruell and mercilesse tyrant and hath as it were a sithe or sickle in his hand to cut downe such as come in his way yea though it cut off riches reuenewes honours pleasures dignities delights wife children houses lands and life it selfe according to the saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.7 We brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out with vs yet it cannot cut off good workes neither bereaue vs of the fruits of a liuely faith which are of such great force and efficacy that they are able to breake in sunder the chaines of death and the strength of the graue and cannot be holden in darknes and obliuion It were therefore a point of great wisedome and good policy so many as would willingly die the death of the righteous as Balaamites and all wicked men will seeme desirous to doe to prouide a goodly traine of good works which death cannot keepe backe they will presse so fast and knocke so hard at heauen
is the better for them because they are thereby made to beare the more fruit whereas such as are wilde and crabbish are let alone So in the Church of God we see some men lye vnder afflictions and the hand of God sore vpon them these wee may iudge to be as liuely stones cut and hewed for Gods building or as good trees pruned to bring foorth more fruit as for others they are as stones refused being suffered to runne on in their sinnes and not regarded of God For if God did take any pleasure in them he would afflict them and make them fitter for himselfe He winketh at many sinnes in the wicked which hee will not doe in his owne children because they are so neere to him they are so dear vnto him therefore he looketh for more at their hands then he doth of others as he reuealeth more vnto them then he doth vnto others He giueth them more knowledge and he requireth of them greater obedience or else they taste of his deeper chastisement A fire although it burne at the last that which is farther off from it yet at first it taketh hold of that which is neerest to it and burneth it 2 Sam. 14.30 Exod. 22.6 Heb. 12. ●● So God who is a consuming fire albeit he will punish the wicked that they shal not escape which are strangers vnto him and farre off from him yet hee will beginne with his owne first because they are nearest vnto him To conclude as we are not to thinke the estate of the wicked the better because they liue in pleasure and prosperity so we are not to esteeme the condition of the godly to be the worse because they lie vnder aduersity and the vngodly deride them and mocke and scoffe at them in their misery and calamitie CHAP. XIII 1 ANd the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2 Send thou men that they may search the land of Canaan which I giue vnto the children of Israel Of euery tribe of their fathers shall ye send a man euery one a Ruler among them The fourth murmuring HEere is the fourth example of their murmuring For the Israelites thorough the occasion of such as searched the land and brought vp a false report thereof murmured against God as if he had neuer purposed to giue them possession of the land of promise This point is handled to the end of the next chapter shewing their sin their punishment and their reconciliation vnto God Consider in this Chapter two things the search of the Land and the report giuen after the search In the history of the searching are set downe the things going before to wit Verse 1. ● Gods commandement to Moses but at the peoples request Deuterom 1.21 For they come to Moses willing him to send men to search the land being now not farre from the borders of it Moses declareth their petition to God who approoueth of it and sheweth that he is well pleased with it as appeareth in this place Secondly Moses sendeth men Verse 3 ● not light headed persons or base companions of no worth or reputation but the choice of euery tribe that their testimony might be more certaine and carry greater credite among the people These are set downe by name of euery tribe one verse 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 so many that the matter might bee carried without partiality and no more lest the discouerers should be discouered the messengers intercepted Againe if all had beene of one Tribe or if these that were selected had beene of no note their testimony might bee thought partiall and vncertaine But being indifferently chosen from among all the people without inclining or declining to any side they haue their commission giuen vnto them ●erse 17 18 ● 20. to view the land the people and the cities The Land whether it were barren or fruitefull wooddy or champion good or bad The people whether strong or weake few or many The Cities whether walled or not walled The search it selfe containeth the fact of these twelue men sent out solemnely by the authority of God by the commandement of Moses and by the consent yea the desire of the people themselues What they did is set downe ●erse 21 22. first generally they went vp they searched the Land from the wildernesse of Zin vnto Rehob c. then specially they came to Hebron where gyants dwelt and inhabited then to the riuer of Es●col that is of grapes where they cut downe a mighty branch with one cluster of grapes which for the weight greatnesse thereof they carried on a barre betweene two of them with other fruite of the country for a tryall verse 23. Neither may this any way seeme vnto vs either vnpossible or vnprobable forasmuch as Strabo witnesseth that in the region of Margiana and vnder the Mountaines of Taurus or Caucasus where it is likely the Arke rested after the flood are the most excellent vines in the world and clusters of grapes found containing two cubites in length and it is the more probable because that place agreeth in climate with this part of Palestina where the searchers of the Land found these branches of equall bignesse God had promised vnto their fathers to Abraham and his posterity to giue them the Land and he that cannot lye would performe it neuerthelesse for the furtherance of his promise he would haue them vse the meanes to worke out his prouidence The doctrine Howsoeuer God bee able without any meanes and instruments to bring his purposes and promises to effect Doctrine 〈…〉 duty 〈…〉 meanes 〈◊〉 further ●ods proui●●nce yet it is the duty of the godly to further the same by all such meanes as God putteth into their hands We see this in Hezekiah he was certified in his mortall and desperate sicknesse for there was no hope in any art of man frō the mouth of God that hee should liue fifteene yeares longer yet he must apply the dry figges to his boyle and no doubt he vsed food and rayment for the sustenance of his body and the curing of his disease which heereby seemeth to be the pestilence So Acts 27 31. This also we see in Rahab albeit she had a promise of the spies for the preseruing of her life the sauing of her houshold and the sparing of her kindred yet to be more sure and secure shee vseth meanes she bindeth them with an oath keepeth within the doores of her house and tieth the line of scarletthreed in the window Iosh 2 18. Likewise touching Noahs preseruation he must build the Arke and thereby be saued Gen. 6 14. For we must consider that no blessing is to Reason 1 be looked for at the hands of God when hee sendeth meanes if we do not vse them Indeed God is not tied to them but can worke without them yet he will not helpe vs without thē when hee affoordeth and offereth them vnto vs. When the Aramites came against Ioab hee encouraged
their practising performing of this duty If we reason soberly reuerently Christ Iesus will come among vs and be present with vs by the grace of his Spirit and by his blessing of our endeuors which ought to be an encouragement to the same 30 But the soule that doth ought presumptuously whether he be borne in the Land or a stranger the same reprocheth the Lord and that soule shall be cut off from his people 31 Because hee hath despised the word of the Lord and hath broken his commandement that soule shall vtterlie be cut off his iniquity shall bee vpon him Hitherto we haue spoken of the sinne of ignorance now of presumption and voluntary sins which are said in the originall to be cōmitted with an high hand that is proudly scornefully arrogantly despitefully and desperately against God And therefore it is said that he reprocheth the Lord and hath broken his couenant such a one must be cut off from his people This cutting off for iniquity some vnderstand of excommunication by the censure of the Church others of killing by the sword of the Magistrate but which way soeuer it be taken it sheweth the greatnesse of this crime And because there is no kinde of sacrifice set downe for the expiation of this sin some do hold ●tus that it figureth out the sinne against the holy Ghost which sinne being vnpardonable Math. 12 32. 1 Iohn 5 16 there remaineth no sacrifice for it but a certain looking for of iudgement and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries Heb. 10 26 27. Howbeit I rather thinke that no sacrifice is expressed because there is no new addition prescribed touching any sacrifice as there is of the other because this is already handled in the booke of Leuiticus chap. 6 2 c. And this sinne is opposed against the sinne of ignorance but all sinnes of presumption are not the sinne against the holy Ghost God forbid we should so entangle mens consciences and hold all presumptuous sinnes to be that vnpardonable sinne ●hat com● in Num. Neither can I be of their opinion that thinke God would haue no sacrifice offered for such sinnes lest the sacrifices should waxe vile and contemptible and men should thereby bee encouraged to giue themselues ouer to commit sinne with greedinesse and neuer regard whether they sin ignorantly or presumptuously It is no encouragement to sinne of ignorance because the meanes is set downe to be cleansed of it And who will willingly wound himselfe albeit he haue a Physition that can cure it ●ctrine From hence we may gather a difference betweene sinne and sinne ●re is a ●erence be●ene sinne sinne all breake the law and deserue eternall death Ezek. 18 4. Rom. 6 23. Neuerthelesse some are greater and some are lesser There are therefore of sinnes sundry sorts Iude verse 22 23. Hence it is that sinne is diuided diuers waies eyther it is originall which we draw from our parents and bring with vs into the world this is an hereditary sinne it is the inheritance that all parents bequeathe vnto their children as Psal 51 5. Ro. 5 14. Or else it is actuall which is a fruite of the former such are euill thoughts words and workes such as agree not with the law of God This distinction is proued Rom. 5 14 and 7 20. and 9.11 Againe there is a raging and reigning sinne when the sinner maketh no resistance by the grace of the Spirit Rom. 6 12 and 1 Iohn 3 8. He that committeth sin to wit of set purpose and delighteth therein is of the diuell it is so called because we foster and cherish it and become bondslaues vnto it and likewise because it hath rule ouer man carrieth him headlong to destruction Such are all sinnes in the vnregenerate and so continue till there be a new birth and some also in the regenerate in their slidings and fallings against their conscience and there is also a sinne not reigning which the sinner repelleth and resisteth by the grace of the Spirit daily reneweth his repentance for them Such are the sinnes of ignorance omission and infirmity which remaine in the regenerate so long as they liue which they acknowledge bewaile hate and resist and pray daily that they may be forgiuen them saying Forgiue vs our debts 1 Iohn 1 8. Rom. 7 17 and 8 1. Many other such differences of sinnes might be noted but these are sufficient to shew that there is difference betweene sinne and sinne And no maruaile because the commandements Reason 1 of God are not alike but some are greter and some lesser The lawes of the first Table are called the first and great commandement Math. 22 38 and do concerne the Lord himselfe The lawes of the second are inferiour to these as they that concerne our brethren like to our selues Secondly there is great difference in the Reason 2 manner of sinning some sinne ignorantly some wittingly Psal 19 12 13. 1 Tim. 1 13. Some are principall and ringleaders in the sin others are onely accessaries some are onely in thought others in deed some offend of malice some offend of weaknesse some commit sinne others besides this haue pleasure in them that do them Rom. 1 32. Thirdly in respect of God himselfe all sins Reason 3 do not alike dishonor him neither is his wrath kindled alike against all some are desperate sinners that will not be reclaimed and despite the Spirit of grace with whom the Lord cannot but be more offended then with such as are humbled for their sinne This difference serueth to condemne such Vse 1 as make all sinnes equall none greater or lesser then others none before or after other True it is Campian rat 8. and Duraeus in his defence the Church of Rome lay this errour to our charge as also they falsely do many other as if we were of the sect of the Stoikes holding an absurd opinion touching that absurd doctrine of the equality of all sinnes which sheweth that they are farre spent and drawne dry and cannot charge vs with true crimes when they are constrained to obiect against vs such grosse opinions as we detest and condemne haue confuted more then they both in Schooles and Pulpets What errors and heresies thinke you will these men be afraid to broch against vs among their owne disciples that take vp al things vpon trust at the second hand and what imputations wil they not dare to lay vpon vs in their Sermons which they know shall neuer come to be examined forasmuch as their hearers are forbidden to reade any of our writings when they blush not neither are ashamed to publish to the view of the whole world such open and manifest vntruths Obiect But they obiect that we teach all sinnes to be mortall and to deserue death euen the least of them Answer I answer we teach no other doctrine then the Scripture teacheth vs Rom. 6 21 23. Iam. 2 10. Neuerthelesse it followeth not by
continuance of the Church and truth of God that it may flourish after vs and not dye with vs or bee buried in the earth for euer This appeareth by the Apostle Peter I will endeuour alwaies that yee also may be able to haue remembrance of these things after my departure 2 Pet. 1 15. Heereunto accordeth the care of the Apostle Paul writing to Timothy Watch thou in all things suffer aduersity do the worke of an Euangelist cause thy Ministery to be throughly liked of for I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departing is at hand 2 Tim. 4 5 6. This we see many waies in Moses who would not leaue the people without a guide as sheepe without a Shepheard and therefore praied for a fit Gouernor Let the Lord God of the spirits of all flesh appoint a man ouer the Congregation ●●b 27 16 who may goe in and out before them And therefore it is said Deut. 34 9. that Ioshua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisedome For Moses had put his hands vpon him and the children of Israel were obedient vnto him and did as the Lord had commanded Moses ●●ro 2● 9. Likewise Dauid at the point of death exhorteth the Officers of his kingdom and Salomon his sonne which was to sit vpon his Throne to know the God of his fathers and to serue him with a perfect heart with a willing minde assuring him that if he seeke him he will be found and threatning him if he forsake him that God will cast him off for euer Reason 1 And great reason it is wee should haue this care and consideration of the good beauty of the Church For the Church is our Mother who hath conceiued and brought vs forth to liue a spirituall life to God wee haue sucked her breasts and through her we haue here begun our heauen happinesse What vnkindnesse and vnthankfulnesse were this to leaue her destitute who hath trauailed in paine of vs vntill Christ be formed in vs and to withdraw all duty and endeuor from her touching her condition to come Were it not a note of an vnnaturall a lewd a shamefull childe to forsake his owne mother who bare him in her wombe nourished him with her brests dandled him in her lap refused no base seruice for his good cared for him whē he could not care for himselfe in whose eyes he was tender and deare were it not I say a note of great infamy to leaue her in misery or as a prey to the enemy 〈◊〉 19 16 27. We see the Lord Iesus Christ being on the Crosse prouided for his Mother committed her to the care of the Disciple whō he loued In like manner the Apostle requireth this duty 〈◊〉 5 ● 16 If any faithfull man or faithfull womā haue widowes let them minister vnto them And if there be any that prouideth not for his owne hee denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell Whosoeuer therefore hath beene brought vp in the bosome of the Church begotten by the immortall seed of the word nourished at the Table of Christ and taught to looke for an eternall inheritance in the heauens can neuer assure himselfe to bee the true childe of his mother but rather a base and bastardly brood vnlesse he shew it by the continuall care hee hath of the safegard and protection of the Church Gal. 4 2. which is the mother of all the faithfull Besides greeuous and greedy wolues enter Reason 2 vpon the labours of faithfull and painfull Pastours to make hauock of the Church and to seduce the people of God For Satan is neuer idle though neuer well occupied and as a reuerent father once said Latimer he is the most diligent Bishop in his Diocesse he neuer resteth but alwaies compasseth the earth too and fro Iob 2 2. and walketh therein He hath his instruments which he setteth on worke that poison the church with the leauen of false doctrine and sowe the Lords field with the Darnell of their diuellish deuices Therefore the Apostle exhorting the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28 29 30 saith Take heed to your selues and to all the flocke wher of the Holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood for I know this that after my departure shall greeuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Moreouer of your selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to draw Disciples after them Now it remaineth to see the vses heereof Vse 1 First we learne from hence the con●inuance of the Church vpon the earth and the perpetuall remaining of it so long as the earth endureth and so long as the Sun abideth a faithfull witnesse in the heauens Though it bee sometimes driuen from place to place and abideth not in one stay and state like the Moone that sometimes shineth in the full Aug epist 48. sometimes in the wane and sometimes in the eclipse Reuel 12 6. as the woman constrained to flie into the wildernesse where she hath a place prepared of God that they should feed her there and as the reigne of Ahab when Elias thought himselfe left alone as a Sparrow vpon an house top 1 King 19 10. Psal 102 7. yet there alwayes hath beene a Church from the beginning and euer shall bee a Church to the end from Adam the first to the last man that shall stand vpon the earth This the Prophet teacheth Psal 72 5. 102 26 27 28. Let the enemies fret and storme let them rage roare neuer so much they labour in the fire and sweate in vaine they shall perish fall down but the Lord that is able of stones to raise vp Children vnto Abraham holdeth vp the heads of his people that they stand as an house built vpon the Rocke the raine falleth the floud cometh the winde bloweth and beateth vpon that house yet it abideth firmely and falleth not for it is grounded on the Rocke Math. 7 24 25 like the bush that burned with fire but was not consumed Exod. 3 ● Secondly seeing our care must be that the Vse 2 truth of God may liue when we are dead and remaine after our departure It is the duty of all the Ministers of God to preach the word of God in season and out of season 2 Tim. chap. 4 verse 2 3 to be instant in reproouing rebuking exhorting with all long-suffering and doctrine yea to do these things with all their power seeing there is neyther work nor wisedome in the graue whither they go For alas how shall they minde the future good of the Church after their death that mean not the present good of the Church in their life Wherefore let vs take all occasions opportunities to promote the Gospell Act. 20 27 28 Let vs keepe backe nothing that is profitable but reueale to the people the whole counsell of God knowing that
his power is not now weakened he can deale thus with all his enemies the enemies of his Church If he blow vpon them with the blast of his mouth they passe away suddenly as the chaffe is scattered before the winde An example heereof is recorded in the holy History 2 Chron. 20 23. when a great multitude of the Moabites Ammonites and Amorites assembled themselues to fight against Iehoshaphat after he had set himselfe to seeke the Lord proclaiming a fast throughout all Iudah asking counsell of the Lord and praying to him in the zeale of his spirit the enemies slew one another with the sword Thus doth God turn the edge of the sword drawne against the Church vpon themselues rescueth his people when there is none to helpe We haue had experience of Gods protection of his church our eyes haue seene and our eares haue heard how one hath butchered and murthered another whereby God hath giuen a time of rest and breathing vnto his seruants Hee is the same without changing with him is no variablenes neither shadow of turning if we turne to him with all our hearts he will turne to vs and not suffer the rod of the wicked alwaies to rest on the lot of the righteous lest they should put forth their hand to wickednes Therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages therof We haue heard of the murthers slaughters that were betweene the Moabites the Amorites in the which howsoeuer one sought to defend himselfe the other preuailed by vsurpation as might sometimes ouer-cometh right yet the purpose of God who ouer-swayeth all actions of men and draweth good out of euill was to giue rest to his people and to make them inherite and inhabite the Cities and Villages which the Amorites had wrongfully gotten Doctrine Gods childrē are oftentimes brought into the inhe●itāce of the vnfaithfull Hereby we learne for our instruction that God oftentimes bringeth the godly and faithfull that please him to inherite the Lands and possessions of the wicked and vngodly Howsoeuer the beleeuers that feare God are many times thrust out of house and home and haue their lawfull possessions taken from them as we see in Naboths Vineyard 2 King 21 15. Gen. 21 25. and in Abrahams Well yet sometimes God returneth in mercy to the faithfull and maketh the substance and inheritance of the vnfaithfull to descend vnto them This is confirmed in the Booke of Exodus at the departure of Israel out of the Land of Egypt at which time GOD recompenced the sore labours and heauy trauels of his people imposed vpon them by cruell taske-masters For they asked of the Egiptians Iewels of siluer and Ingots of gold and change of rayment then the Lord gaue them fauour in the sight of the Egiptians so that they granted their requests inriched the Israelites and spoiled themselues Exod. 12 35 36. This goodnesse of God the Prophet with praise acknowledgeth toward his people saying He cast out the Heathen before them caused them to fall to the lot of his inheritance c. Psal 78 55. This verifieth the saying of the wise man Prou. 28 8. He that encreaseth his riches by vsury and interest gathereth them for him that will be mercifull to the poore And in another place Prou 13.22 The good man shall giue inheritance to his childrens children and the riches of the sinner is laid vp for the iust In like manner Iob describing the condition of the vngodly fheweth that though he should heape vp siluer as the dust Iob 27.16 17. and prepare raiment as the clay hee may prepare it but the iust shall put it on and the innocent shall diuide the siluer Thus God taketh away the things of this life from such as vse thē wickedly and bestoweth them vpon such as will imploy them lawfully Reason 1 The Reasons remaine to be considered to strengthen this truth and to make it appeare to the conscientes of all of vs to be a necessary and apparant truth First of all the mercy of God toward such as are sealed vp to be his seruants is without end there is no brim nor bottome of it If then his mercy surmount our thoughts he will let passe no part of his kindnes toward them that do feare him Thus the Prophet reasoneth Psal 136 21 22. Where vpon these examples of Gods great kindnes toward Israel in ouerthrowing Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan hee saith He gaue their Land for an heritage for his mercy endureth for euer euen an heritage vnto Israel his seruant for his mercy endureth for euer Whensoeuer therefore wee see this come to passe we must acknowledge the cause of it to be in God who ceasseth not to bee good to those that be his Reason 2 Againe God maketh knowne his power among his people to teach them to depend vpon him to shew vnto them that they serue not a weake and impotent God to instruct them to walke in the obedience of his waies This the Prophet pointeth out Psalm 44 2 3 and 111 6 105 44 45. Vse 1 The vses follow First this truth teacheth who is the soueraigne disposer of all things in heauen and earth namely God He ordereth kingdomes and disposeth Countries he giueth and taketh away hee encreaseth and diminisheth he maketh rich and maketh poore It is not our owne strength or pollicy it is not our owne care or labour it is the bountifulnes and blessing of God that is all in all We haue heere beneath vpon the earth Owners and Land-lords we haue such as account themselues possessours of houses and lands but we must know that wee are all Tenants at will we enioy nothing by Lease or Indenture for terme of yeares but hold the tenure of the Lands and liuings at the will and pleasure of the great and high Land-lord of all the world This is the confession of Hannah in her song of thanksgiuing 1 Sam. 2 7 8. The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth he raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherite the seat of glory for the Pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world vpon them Whatsoeuer therefore we haue let vs acknowledge therein not our owne desarts or merites but the goodnes of God toward vs filling vs with good things to serue him Secondly let vs from hence confesse that Vse 2 all the carke and care of man with his best endeuours cannot alwaies attaine to the benefit and fruite of his trauell but he prouideth that which another enioyeth This the Prophet Haggai testifieth chap 1 6.9 Yee haue sowne much and bring in little ye eate but ye haue not enough ye drinke but ye are not filled ye cloathe you but ye are not warme c. According to that which
youth Shall wee make a mocke of it and a may-game at it These prophane beasts haue filled vp the measure of their sinne and are set downe in the seate of the scorners God alloweth no more liberty in sinning to youth then he doth to age The wise man willeth such to remember their Creator in the daies of their youth Eccl. 12 1. 11. and telleth them that for all the lustes of their eyes the vanity of their mindes the swinge of their pleasures and the lewdnes of their harts God will bring them to iudgement The Apostle teacheth That whoremongers and adulterers shall not inherite the kingdome of God 1 Corinth chapter 6 verse 9. The wise Salomon saith He that committeth adultery with a woman destroyeth his owne soule Prou. 6 verses 22 33. and so is accessary to his owne death And in another place he saith He shall finde a wound and dishonour and his reproch shall neuer be put away and shall wee make a sport of it to delight our selues in it We are admonished by the Apostle Paul that our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Corinth 6 19. so that seeing God vouchsafeth vs this honor to choose our vile bodyes which are dust and ashes earth and rottennesse to make them Temples and Tabernacles for his holy Spirit to dwell in let vs not turne them into filthy stables and vncleane styes and so driue him from vs who would possesse vs as his mansion and dwelling place Heereby then we vnderstand that wee are not to iudge of whoredome after the common opinion of men which make but a sport and pastime of it as we see how scoffers iest at it and despisers of God make a game of it Such mockers were risen vp long agoe in the dayes of the Apostle of whom he exhorteth vs to beware For hauing said that no whoremonger neyther vncleane person hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God he addeth in the next place Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for for such things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 6. And this example of the people of Israel which now wee haue in hand in this Chapter is able to strike a terror and feare into our hearts for euer breaking out into this iniquity The life of man is precious and deare vnto God we are creatures created according to his image he taketh no pleasure in our destruction Now in that hee destroyed such a number of his owne Images and Creatures for this sinne must not this sinne of fornication be great greeuous which kindleth such a fire of his vengeance and indignation that flamed out so farre and could not bee quenched but with the slaughter of so many thousands Thirdly it behoueth euery one according Vse 3 to his place and calling to punish this sinne seuerely that so euill may be taken out of Israel But such as haue a light estimation of this sinne which is the cause of the encrease of it do obiect the example of Christ who hauing a woman brought before him Obiect that was sound committing adultery in the very acte would not condemne her nor pronounce sentence of death vpon her but said vnto her Goe and sinne no more Iohn 8 11. Heere our Sauiour seemeth to free her from the law of Moses Leuit. 20 10. I answere this is Popish Diuinity Answer taught in the dayes of darknesse which cannot beare the tryall of the light For this is to make it not onely a venial sinne but no sinne at all Christ forgaue her freely and denounced no punishment at all against her neither of limb nor life nor chasticement nor other mulct bee inflicted vpon her so that if it doe not proue that the Magistrates should not punish whoredome sharply it proueth as well that he ought not to punish it at all if it ought to receiue no correction we cannot acknowlenge it for any transgression Furthermore the Iewes beeing in subiection vnto the Romanes and constrayned to beare the yoke of forraigne gouernment had the ciuill punishments of death eyther wholly taken from them or at least suspended vpon the will and pleasure of their officers which were sildome vpright often corrupted This is it which the Pharisies confesse in the Gospell For when Pilate willed them to take Christ to iudge him after their owne Law although the malice of their hearts and the cruelty of theyr hands were against him yet they sayde vnto him It is not lawfull for vs to put any man to death Iohn 18 31. Lastly the office of Christ was not to be an earthly Iudge to giue sentence of death but to be a Sauiour to call sinners to repentance Hence it was that hee refused a temporall kingdome when it was offered vnto him Iohn 6 15. and denyed to diuide the inheritance when he was requested as wholly impertinent vnto his calling and therefore he said Man who made me a Iudge or a diuider ouer you Luke 12 14. So then this Obiection being remoued it belongs to all Magistrates to be zealous in punishing this sinne and to sharpen the law against this other sins that bud vp and grow apace among vs lest they ouerthrow good Corne. Yea it appertaineth not onely to Magistrates but generally to all men to bring such offenders to open shame that so they may come to amendment of life The Apostle speaking of vnclean liuers saith If any that is called a brother bee a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such an one eate not 1 Cor. 5 5 11 and speaking of an incestuous person he chargeth the Corinthians to put him from among them and to deliuer him to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus Such vncleane liuers should bee swept out of the Church of God and haue the sword of excommunication drawne out against them that so they might learne not to transgresse But so long as wee beare with such persons and foster them in the bosome of the Church as the practise is too common neyther are we their friends neyther are we the friends of the Church neyther indeed are we the friends of almighty God For if we were their friends and loued them aright we would seeke their conuersion and repentance wee would vse the meanes to bring them to a shame of their offences to a sight of their sinnes and vnto a confession of their iniquities And if we were the friends of the Church we would labour to separate the vncleane from the cleane and the infected from the sound knowing that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe And if we were the friends of God we would be zealous of his glory and not suffer his Name to be prophaned through the lewde and wicked life of such rotten members For so long as such are harboured in the Church which is the body of
This ouercommeth all tentations and all offences whatsoeuer in the world without it it is not possible to be kept preserued in the way of truth What held Nicodemus among the Pharisies but onely the feare of men he could not resolue to follow Christ Ioh. 3 1 12 42 43 And the reproches of the Pharisees cast out against him whē he defended the cause of Christ put him to silence made him giue ouer vntil at length he shake off all impediments and betake himselfe to follow him A good example for vs to follow If we faint for reproches our strength is litle our faith is weake The words of enemies cannot hurt vs except wee through weakenesse and faintnesse hurt our selues For if we neglect and reiect them they returne vpon him that cast them Doctrine God punisheth the sins of parents with the sins of their children Behold ye are risen vp in your fathers stead an increase of sinfull men c. Moses putteth these two tribes the halfe in minde of the former prouocations of their fathers which had caused many iudgments to breake in vpon them these were risen vp in their stead walking in their steps so that it fell out according to the Prouerbe like father like sonnes Wee learne hereby by this sharp charge that it is an vsual thing with God to punish the sinnes of the parents with the sins of their children The parents sin the children are oftentimes giuen ouer to follow them to commit the same sins or such like notorious sinnes whereby he taketh vengeance of their sins Gen. 21 9 10 9 24 27 1 King 11 11 Hos 4 13. This is euident in the Kings of Israel of whom we may truly say that the fathers sinned the children rose vp an encrease of sinful men they were a wicked seed and augmented the fierce anger of the Lord vntill hee remoued Israel vtterly out of his sight So he threatneth oftentimes to visit the sins of the fathers vpon the children to the third 4. generatiō of them that hate him Ex. 20 Reason 1 And God doth deale thus for sundry causes First God respecteth the good of such parents as belong vnto him for hee doth it to hūble them to bring them vpon their knees to repent for their sins which happily they had forgotten long agoe It is a far greater griefe to Christian parents to see them lye vnder this spirituall iudgment then afflictiō whatsoeuer Secondly such parents as are wicked belōg not vnto him are heereby hardned grieued and vexed He doth it in part to pardon them because when euill parents see their children commit any sins against the 1 table which are committed immediatly against God as to delight in swearing and blaspheming in contempt of the word neglect of his worship and in prophaning of the Sabbath they are not touched or troubled at it because they think it no iudgment their sons to haue committed no sins at al so it cōmeth to passe that they are the more hardned againe if they see their children commit any sinne against the second Table as murther theft or the like whereby they vndergoe the punishment of the Magistrate they are greeued and vexed for it not because they haue sinned against God prouoked him to anger but because their childrē posterity are brought to shame and reproch before the world This serueth first of all to teach vs that the Vse 1 wayes of God are iust equall against those that are ready to accuse him of iniustice God is a most iust and righteous God he dealeth with euery one according to his desarts God punisheth sinne with si●●e And he oftentimes punisheth sinne with sinne For he doth not onely punish sin with the sword of the enemy with sicknesses diseases with famine and mortality and such like which all doe acknowledge and confesse to be punishments but he punisheth former sins with later sins Thus he punished the Idolatrous Gentiles when they knew God and glorified him not as God but worshipped serued the creature in stead of the Creator by giuing them vp to theyr owne vile affections and to a reprobate sense to work vncleannes euen with greedinesse Rom. 1. And in these last times of the world because men will not loue and embrace the truth Hee sendeth among them strong delusions that they should beleeue lyes 2 Thess 2 Obiect 12. But how doth God punish sinne with sin may some say Doth he tempt vnto euill or doth he infuse any euill into them Doth hee allure and prouoke men to sin I answer Answer with the Apostle God tempteth no man to sin Iam. 1 13 but hee punisheth this way secretly by withdrawing his grace and giuing them ouer to bee entangled in their owne corruptions Thus God punished Pharaoh by hardnesse of heart not by making that to bee hard which was soft and plyable before but by denying the oyle of his grace whereby it should haue beene mollified Thus also he tempted Dauid to number the people because his wrath was kindled against Israel for their sins 2 Sam. 2● 1 This is the most grieuous punishment that can bee inflicted in this life howsoeuer many men neuer regard it for other punishments through the blessing of God and a sanctified vse of them are vsual meanes to bring vs to true repentance but when we are smitten with this adding of sinne to sinne and are striken with this plague sore we doe more and more flie from him Other punishments are as sharp eye-salues to make vs see our owne misery that we may be mooued to sue and seeke for his mercy but this iudgement doth vs no good at all nay it blindeth our minds it hardneth our hearts it scareth our consciences it encreaseth our sinnes and doubleth our condemnation Thus doth God shew himselfe a iust Iudge Vse 2 Secondly it directeth parents what they ought to do in the sinnes of their Children which may be reduced to these foure heads First they must search to find out the cause of it secondly they must be humbled and sorrow for it thirdly they must labour to reclaime them and lastly they must abstaine from sinning themselues lest by their example they corrupt and infect them The first duty of parents Touching the first it belongeth vnto all parents in the sinnes of their children which they commit to search enquire diligently whether this punishment faln vppon their children bee not the punishment of some particular sinne of their owne formerly committed and doubtlesse in searching they shal not lose their labour but oftentimes find that some fearfull sin of theirs before committed is the cause of those notorious sinnes that they see and behold in their children For example we see some Ministers and men of other callings haue their children fall to idolatry and superstition and are gone after Antichrist and fled into Babylon the mother of whoredomes this is no
owne sins against the fruite of your owne bodies but turne ro God betimes that he may turne vnto you He is faithfull in his word Whatsoeuer he hath threatned it is surer then the heauens it must certainly come to passe If you prouoke him by your sins he wil prouoke you to your faces with his iudgements vnto the vtter confusion of your selues of your posterity after you for euer Vse 3 Lastly this doctrine also belongeth to children putteth them in mind of sundry duties to be performed by them which may bee reduced to these branches First they must not imitate their fathers sins secondly they must pray to God not to remember their fathers iniquities thirdly they must be careful to look to their children that they leade an holy sanctified life that so they may call in Gods iudgements which otherwise hee might iustly bring on them Touching the first they must not follow their fathers in that which is euill The first duty of children All inferiors are ready to walke in the steps of their superiors and for the most part thinke themselues discharged from all crime or punishment if they be like to them no other then they haue bin before them The prophet requireth this duty of the people Psal 78 8. The Apostle willeth the church to follow him so far as he followed Christ 1 Cor. 11 1. So is it required of children to follow their fathers but no farther then they followe the trueth This many among the Turks and Infidels may pleade for themselues and alledge that they worship God as their forefathers did for many generations The 2. duty of children yet this shal not serue their turnes The 2. duty is to pray to God not to remember the iniquities of their forefathers as iustly he might do to the confusion of their posterity For why doth he not leaue them to walke in their waies but that he is mercifull Hence it is that the Lord saith Esay 65 6 7. Behold it is written before me I will recompence euen recompence into their bosome your iniquities Ioh. Wiga●di explic in Esay the iniquities of your fathers togither c. God punisheth the sinnes of the fathers in their posterity and thereore do punishments fall vppon the posterity by reason of the sins of the ancestors This doth Daniel in his prayer acknowledge Let thine anger and thy fury be turned away from thy City Ierusalem thy holy mountaine because for our sinnes and for the iniquities of our fathers c. chap. 9 16 and therefore in the confession of sinnes that hee made before verse 8. he sayth O Lord to vs belongeth confusion of face to our Kings to our Princes and to our Princes and to our Fathers because wee haue sinned against thee So Ezra 9 7. Neh. 9 34. Ier. 32 18. Lam. 5 7. Exod. 20 5. When diuers generations continue in one sinne successiuely the Lord vseth ordinarily to punish the latter more seuerely then the former that thereby the sons might be prouoked to feare to do the like when they see the sins of their fathers Ezek 18 14 and the longer his patience is abused the greater sin is committed The 3. dutie of children the greater vengeance is deserued Thirdly all children must be carefull of their posterity and leade an vnblameable sanctified life that so God may giue them the grace of his Spirit not leaue them to themselues to walke in the euil wayes of their fathers that haue gone before them 16 And they came neere vnto him and saide We will build sheepfolds here for our Cattle Cities for our little ones 17 But we our selues wil go ready armed before the children of Israel c. 18 We will not returne vnto our houses c. 19 For we will not inherit with them on yonder side Iordan or forward because our inheritance is fallen to vs on this side c. The Tribes being reproued do answer for themselues expounding their meaning or at lest propounding equal conditions that they will go vp armed before their brethren and that they will not returne till all their bretheren were possessed of their inheritance that they wold claime no inheritance beyond Iordan but rest in that already purchased The Israelites would haue bin much weakened if these had staid behind Therfore they do here promise that they wil go formost of all Wee saw before that it is God only that giueth the victory yet we see the meanes are not neglected Howsoeuer therefore wee ought not to put our trust confidence in the meanes yet wee must carefully vse the same that so wee may be able to performe those things which the law of God and our calling require of vs. Againe in their disclaiming inheritance beyond Iordan we learne that euery one should be contented with that estate that God hath allotted vnto him whatsoeuer it be Moreouer we see how these two Tribes offer themselues to be companions with their brethren in passing ouer Iordan and in conquering the land Doctrine We must haue a fellow feeling of others miseries in taking such part as they did This teacheth That it is the duty of all Gods Children to haue a fellow-feeling and compassion of the miseries afflictions of their brethren 2 Sam. 11 11. Heb. 13 3. 1 Cor. 12 26. Rom. 12.15 When Abraham heard that Lot was taken prisoner he armed his seruants sought to recouer him out of the handes of the enemies Gen. 14 14. Moses also chose to suffer aduersity with the people of God to leaue all his preferment in Pharaohs Court Heb. 11 he would not enioy the pleasures of sin when the church endured the misery of aduersity Reason 1 The grounds follow First wee ought to haue brotherly loue in vs not onely loue but brotherly loue this wil worke in vs a pittifull heart toward those that are afflicted The Apostle Iohn professeth himselfe a cōpanion with the Church in tribulation in the kingdom and patience of Christ he was greeued for their greef the bowels of compassion were mooued in him for their afflictions Re. 1 9. And the writer to the Hebrews saith Let brotherly loue continue Heb. 13 1. Secondly this dutie performed leaueth a blessing behind it God hath rewarded it for therby some haue entertained Angels vnawares Heb. 13 2 and he will reward it alwaies Thirdly Christ accounteth this as done to himselfe when his children are refreshed he is refreshed when they are cloathed or fed or visited or comforted he is cloathed fed and visited comforted Math. 25 35. Fourthly we are members one of another as we are ioyned vnto Christ as members to the head are mystically made one with him so all the faithfull are fellow-members of the same body In the members of the body if a thorn run into the foot the head stoopeth to it the eies look vpon it the fingers pull it out the eare wil heare
of the Church in what weak and desolate estate had it beene if Mordecai and Ester had not procured the safety of it Was it not taken out of the iawes of the Lyon and pulled out of the pit of death In such times we must cast anker in heauen and make the Lord of hoasts our onely confidence Vse 3 Thirdly conclude from hence that it is a fearefull thing when men become oppressors of the Church For if euery one from the highest to the lowest should be a succourer defender thereof then none brought vp in the bosome of the Church should be an oppressor of it But how many haue there beene who haue lifted vp themselues against it not onely open enemies but close vnderminers who kindle the coales of their owne confusion and haue beene consumed in the flame that they haue raised The Prophet Obadiah concludeth this point ver 10 For thy violence against thy brother Iacob shame shall couer thee and thou shalt be cut off for euer c. as thou hast done it shall be done to thee thy reward shall returne vppon thine owne head Obad. verse 10 15. And touching the persecuting Babylonians that carried the people away captiues and scoffed at them in the day of their calamity the Prophet foretelleth their finall ouerthrow Psalm 137 8 9. O daughter of Babylon who art to be destroyed happy shall hee be that rewardeth thee as thou hast serued vs happy shall hee be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones Wo therefore to all the enemies of the Church in generall or to any particular soule that serueth the Lord they are also enemies to God himselfe Vse 4 Lastly none liuing in the Church must bee ignorant of the state of the Church euery one must take notice how things goe in it whether it go forward or backward encrease or decrease grow better or worse Wee are come for the most part to this to content our selues with looking to our priuate wealth particular estate as if we had nothing else to thinke vpon but to follow our profits and delights So it was with the people after their returne from captiuity they built their owne houses but they let the house of God alone they were very busie in seeking their owne commodities but they were wholly vnmindfull of the seruice of God and therefore they said The time is not come the time that the Lords house should be built whom the Prophet reproueth saying Is it time for you O ye to dwel in your sieled houses this housely waste Hag. 1 2 3. Others there are that shrink back for feare and dare not aduenture and being moued they plead ignorance they pretend they know nothing But the Prophet denounceth a woe against them that are at ease in Sion Amos 6 1. If euery one ought to bee helpfull to the Church and to put on the bowels of pitty and compassion how shall we excuse our selues say we knew not what was wanting or what was amisse or out of course For euery one at his owne perill must know the perils of the Church and be touched with a feeling of thē and ignorance shall excuse no man It is an excellent saying of Salomon Prou. 24 11 12 13. If thou faint in the day of aduersity thy strēgth is small if thou forbeare to deliuer them that are drawne foorth to death and those that are ready to be slaine If thou saiest Behold we knew not of it doth not he that pondereth the heart consider it and he that keepeth thy soule doth not he know it and shall not hee render to euery man according to his works The Lord suffereth his people to fall into sundry tentations and into great dangers not onely to try their faith and to proue their constancy but likewise to manifest their loue affection that seeme to be out of gunshot as Ester 4 14. 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. Ier. 39 16 17 18. 33 And Moses gaue vnto them euen to the children of Gad and to the children of Reuben vnto halfe the Tribe of Manasseh the son of Ioseph the kingdome of Sihon King of the Amorites and the kingdome of Og King of Bashan c. 34 35 36. And the children of Gad built Dibon and c. 37 38 39. And the children of Reuben c. 40. And Moses gaue Gilead c. The inheritance that was giuen vnto these Tribes is heere particularly described to wit what Cities befell vnto them which they diligently fortified and couragiously expelled the enemies that dwelt in them Out of these words some questions are breefely to bee decided And first touching the changing of the names of the Cities which befell to the children of Reuben verse 38 the question may be asked Wherefore their names were changed The answer is that without question the cause of this change was that the former names giuen of ancient time were meerely Idolatrous for both of them had their names of the Idols which ought not to be had in remembrance neyther to be heard out of their mouthes Exod 23 13. Obiection Psal 16 4. Secondly from hence a doubt ariseth how Moses can bee sayde to giue Gilead to Machir the sonne of Manasseh and how he dwelt therein for may we thinke that Machir was then aliue I answer Answ It is not likely that he liued vnto this time rather we must vnderstand the sonnes and posterity that came of him So the children of Israel are called Israel and the sonnes of Edom by the name of Edom. He that knoweth not this knoweth nothing Thus it is said that Iudah spake vnto Simeon his brother Iudg. 1 3 yet neyther of them was aliue in many ages before therefore it must be vnderstood of theyr posterity The like we see Gen. 48 22. I giue vnto thee one portion aboue thy brethren which I haue taken out of the hand of the Amorite with my sword and with my bowe Where Iacob bequeatheth vnto Ioseph by his last will and testament a double portion of the Land 1 Chron. 5 2. By Ioseph we must vnderstand his posterity for in his owne person he inherited nothing but dyed long before and by the sword and bow of Iacob wee must vnderstand the Ephraimites which helped to conquer the Land and were a mighty people in Iosuahs time Iosh 17 14 18. Obiect But it is an harder question to determine how Iaer is saide to be the sonne of Manasseh who doubtlesse did belong to another Tribe For in the Genealogies mentioned in the booke of Chronicles it is euident that hee was the sonne of Segub the sonne of Hetzron of the Tribe of Iudah 1 Chron. 2 22. I answer Answ he is reckoned of the Tribe of Manasseh by the mothers side not by the fathers For it is plaine in the Chapter before named that Hetzron the son of Iudah married the daughter of Machir the sonne of Manasseh 1 Chro. 7 13. Ad difficil loca in Num. c. 131.
And Drusius obserueth that many such examples are found in the Priests which married wiues of other Tribes Now the cause that he had possession in another Tribe is because his inheritance fell in the Land of the Amorites on this side of Iordan not in the Land of Canaan on the other side Out of this diuision wee might obserue in that the children of Gad build Cities that the building of fortifications and strong holds is not vnlawfull prouided that we put not our trust confidence in them Obad. verse 3 4. And that the children of Machir tooke the Citties of the enemies we learne that the people of God are oftentimes victorious in battell But to passe ouer these obserue a notable point of theyr sincerity in cleauing to God and abolishing the monuments of Idolatry that they would not reteyne the former Idolatrous names of the two Citties Nebo and Baalmeon but changed them that they might no more bee had in remembrance nor the people whom God had chosen to be holy vnto himselfe Doctrine The reliques monumēts of Idolatry are to be abolished bee acquainted with them This teacheth that God will haue the remnants and monuments of Idolatry to be vtterly abolished and all occasions that might draw vnto it to be taken away not only Idolatry it selfe to be destroyed but the memoriall of it and the meanes that may bring it among his people againe Hence it is that the Apostle Iohn chargeth the Church not onely to beware of Idolatry but of the Idols themselues 1 Iohn 5 21 for hee shutteth vp the Epistle with this Little children keepe your selues from Idols If we suffer Idols to haue entrance into the Church wee shall not long bee free from Idolatry it selfe Therefore the Prophet declareth his hatred as well of the one as of the other when hee saith I will not make mention of their names with my lips Psalm 1● 4. Zach. 13 2. When God promiseth the ouerthrowing of Idolatry he promiseth withall the vtter destroying of the Idols themselues and that the remembrance of them shall bee cut off and perish out of the mindes and mouthes of men Esay 1 18 and 30 22. Hos 2 17. The reasons are plaine First because God Reason 1 would not haue his people snared by such occasions for they are as stumbling blocks layd before his people to cause them to fall and therefore the Lord saith Deut. 7 25. The grauen Images of their gods shall yee burne with fire thou shalt not desire the siluer or gold that is on them nor take it vnto thee lest thou bee snared therein Secondly it is sayde to be an abhomination Reason 2 to the Lord Deut. 7 25 for whatsoeuer is vnpure is abhominable vnto him and our nature is prone to this false worship is hardly kept from a corrupted religion This teacheth vs first of all what to thinke Vse 1 of the religion of the Church of Rome for as it is a false Church so it is vpholden by a false religion wherein not onely some reliques and remnants of Idolatry are to be found but most grosse open and palpable Idolatry is maintained like to that practised by the Gentiles themselues To manifest this to bee true in sundry particulars first obserue that they teach men to worship things that are without sense images of siluer and gold of wood and stone and yet they are vncertaine what worship to giue them Aquinas one of the chiefe schoolemen and a principall pillar of the Romane faith hath deliuered that the Image of Christ is to bee worshipped with the same worship that is due to Christ himselfe that Christ himselfe remaineth in the Image Bellarmine denyeth this and teacheth that they may not teach so neuerthelesse he holdeth a middle course that the image may be worshipped so farre as it doth represent Christ Againe they teach that we are to worship the Saints and yet it is certaine that some of them are false and feygned Saints such as are so farre from being holy men that they were neyther holy nor men as I haue shewed at large elsewhere because they neuer had life nor beeing Some they worship for Saints that are now by all probability in hell and of whom themselues make question whether they were saued or not Moreouer they say we are to pray to the Saints that the Saints heare our prayers and by that meanes they pray to the Image of the Saint but whether they heare vs by the swiftnesse of theyr hearing or by the reuelation of some Angel that standeth by vs and reporteth it to the Saint we shall know of them when they know thēselues but I beleeue they will take time and leysure to resolue vs. The like wee might say of theyr breaden god whom they worship also and looke for helpe from it and yet they are altogether vncertaine whether it bee the body of Christ or not because theyr consecration dependeth vpon the Priests intention so that we may truely say vnto them as Christ did to the woman of Samaria Ye worship ye know not what we know what we worship Iohn 4 22. Vse 2 Secondly this teacheth vs to abhorre and abandon all false worship whatsoeuer as that which can neuer minister any peace or comfort of conscience and labour to lay a good foundation that so we may bee established in the present truth For doubtlesse this is the cause why many fall away and embrace superstitiō because they were neuer wel grounded neyther tasted the sincere milke of the word of God that they might grow thereby 1 Peter 2 ver 2 3. And howsoeuer the Gospel haue bene purely preached and professed in this Land yet the greatest sort remaine as newters or as indifferent men neyther hotte nor colde and consequently fitte to be made a prey vnto the wolues I meane to the Priests and Iesuites that lye watching in corners for such proselytes and when they haue gayned them they make them sometimes two-fold more the children of hell then themselues Wee must therefore be carefull to haue the principles of true religion planted in vs that there is but one God and one Mediatour betweene God and man the man Iesus Christ and that there is but one meanes to attaine to saluation But the greatest part of our people know nothing at all as they ought to know And let the Minister in conscience of his duty to GOD and the Church preach in season and out of season 2 Tim. 4 2 yet scarse one among tenne is able to giue an account of their faith They are content to liue in their ignorance and despise knowledge are blindly led by blinde guides that cannot informe them in the wayes of the Lord and so both of them fall into the ditch Many shut their eyes because they will not see and refuse to heare the word which is a precious pearle of such price that rather then they would want it they should sell all that they haue to
principle in the heart of man that if markes and bounds were not kept and maintained an horrible confusion and disorder of all things would follow in humane society and no man could know what was his owne neyther possesse that which hee hath in peace Secondly this condemneth all encroching Vse 2 vsurpation one vpon another in kingdoms and Lordships as well as in priuate possessions when men cannot bee content with their owne but would stretch the wings of their power and iurisdiction farther Moses saith notably in his song Deut. 32 verse 8 that the most High diuided to the nations their inheritance when he separated the sonnes of Adam hee set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel Howbeit the ambition and vnsatiable greedinesse of great men hath put all out of order and nothing is so holy which can stay them creeping and encroching vpon the bounds and borders of their neighbours Thus they breake the law of God and nature in seeking to enlarge and encrease their owne dominions These iustly incurre the curse of the Prophet Woe vnto them that ioyne house to house and lay field to field till there bee no place that they may be placed alone in the middest of the earth Esay 5 8. Hab. 2 9 12. Ier. 22.13 Mich. 2 2. For wherefore hath God separated nation from nation and one kingdome from another people but that all should liue quietly communicate one with another that there might be no confusion or diuision and therefore ought all to be contented with their own bounds God hath made them great but they alwayes seeke to make themselues greater he hath set them bounds but they will know no bounds So then from hence we may gather that the warres which are taken in hand vpon ambition and the enlarging of the bounds of their Empire onely are a despighting of God a shedding of innocent blood and a peruerting of the order which hee hath set in nature and nations Euery man therefore ought to abide in his owne possession and inheritance not to trouble or molest one another The ambition of Nimrod first began with setting vp the kingdome of Babylon Gen. 10 10. and afterward many following his example became desirous to winne one from another So it was with Chedarlaomor who spread out his armes and subdued the kings of Sodome Gomorrha Gen. 14 4. Thus men peruerted the order that God had set in the world like vnsatiable gulfes and mighty hunters before the Lord that hunted for the precious liues of men And the cause of al is pride and ambition We all know how in the beginning the earth was couered with water and naturally the sea would stand aboue the mountaines so that all would be ouerflowen It is the speciall goodnes of God and a testimony of his almighty power that the dry Land appeareth whereon wee set footing and build and plant and dwell commerce one with another Seeing then we liue heere and that the earth doth succour and sustaine vs let vs assure our selues that GOD sheweth his pitty toward vs let vs serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind and let all men content themselues with that which they haue without intermedling within the bounds of other men and as hee hath restrayned vs by sundry closures as it were locked vs vp with barres not to be broken so let vs not seeke to break them and so encroch vpon that which he hath not giuen vnto vs. Vse 3 Thirdly this reproueth the greedy and couetous affections of priuate men that couet to be rich they care not by what meanes But as soone as the desire of getting gaine is setled in them they are enflamed to rake to themselues by hooke or by crooke All men doe shunne and abhorre the names of theeues and robbers they cannot abide them they are ready to sue them that brand them with such odious titles but if wee detest them indeede we must lay aside couetousnesse also Hence it is that Salomon saith Prou. 15 27. He that is greedy of gaine troubleth his owne house but hee that hateth gifts shall liue Couetousnesse is a corrupt affection of the minde greedily desiring and too much gaping after the riches of this life They dreame of long life forgetting that no mans life consisteth in the abundance of his riches Luke 12 15. They thinke they shal exceedingly profite them but by the iust iudgement of GOD they turne to theyr hurt They thinke they will be as a shield or buckler to defend them from the iniuries of this life but they are turnd into swords wherby they are wounded and destroyed They haue conceyued a strong opinion that they will bee as a wall on euery side to vnderprop the house but they proue as a double cannon to cast it downe to the ground As then he that eateth moderately is nourished by the meate and it abideth in the stomacke but when it is taken immoderately the stomacke is choked and it is vomited vp againe so hee that greedily heapeth vp riches shall be constrayned to vomite them vp againe Iob 20 15. Couetousnesse therefore is a sinne when a man is discontented with the estate wherein God hath set him and with those things that God hath giuen for the sustenance of this present life when he murmureth against God the more he hath the more he desireth when he heapeth them vp and keepeth them and bringeth them not foorth to any godly or necessary vses but hee distrusteth the prouidence of God and putteth his trust and confidence in his riches as if he could not liue with out abundance of them neyther be sustayned by the hand of God Motiues to auoid couetousnesse The Scripture offereth sundry good meditations to mooue vs to auoyd couetousnesse First because it is forbidden of God Matth. 6 19. Luke 19 13. Hebr. 13 5. His word alone ought to be of great force to perswade vs if we had no farther reason Secondly because it is no lesse sinne then a secret kinde of idolatry Col. 3 5 as the couetous person is an Idolater because he trusteth in his riches not in the liuing God Eph. 5 5. Marke 10 24. Thirdly it cannot agree with the worship of God but one of them expelleth another as it is with contraries with cold and heate with light and darknesse Psal 119 36. Matth. 6 24. Luke 16 13. Yee cannot serue God and Mammon Fourthly it is saide to be the roote of all euill and that because it driueth and enforceth to many sinnes to apostacy to iniquity to lying to treachery 1 Tim. 6 10. 2 Kings 5 22. Mat. 28 13 14 15. Fiftly no mans life consisteth in the multitude of his possessions Lu. 12 15. Sixtly we are called to a better life and we haue a kingdom promised vnto vs that cannot be shaken reserued for vs in heauen and therefore we should set our affections aboue where Christ sitteth
sinne voluntary or vnuoluntary and withall he sheweth that such vnwilling man-slaughter is a sinne Yea this is so cleere a point that Cardinall Allen forgetting the doctrine of his fellowes and the foundation whereupon they builde in his booke of popish pardons chapt 5 telleth vs out of the Councell of Ancyre holden well neere 1300. yeares since in the purest time of Christian religion when our aduersaries dare not say that the faith was corrupted that the Apostles and Bishops haue euer beside the preaching of the Gospel exercised the power of the keyes cōmitted to the Church and inflicted due punishment for euery deadly sinne iustly respecting the greeuousnesse thereof and among the rest he noteth that for murtherers if it were not voluntary were appointed seuen yeares penance but if it were wilfull till the ende of their life Now would this Councell so ancient and so pure as the Iesuite pretendeth haue enioyned so long penance and punishment for innocent persons and such as had committed no sinne at all So then to ende this matter albeit the Lord acquit the party after a sort that hath slayne a man vnwittingly so that there shall no iudgement of death passe vpon him yet hee was constrayned to forsake his owne house and inheritance and to dwell in a strange place and to suffer many inconueniences to his decay and impouerishing and peraduenture his vtter vndoing his wiues and children Wherefore God would haue the party that offendeth vnwittingly neuerthelesse to abide some punishment to the intent he may humble himselfe And I suppose there is no good man if such a thing should befall him but would be humbled and greeued for it all the dayes of his life and craue of God forgiuenesse of what is past albeit there were no euill meant on his part and likewise pray vnto him earnestly for the time to come that he would rule his hands and his feete better so order all his steppes that he neuer swarue frō his holy commandements Now to come to the ground of the Doctrine three sorts are heere directed touching blood the people the auenger and the Iudge The people is restrayned the auenger is permitted the Iudge warranted and allowed The people is restrayned not permitted the auenger is permitted not restrayned the Iudge is permitted and allowed nay commanded to draw the sword The people sinne if they shed blood the Iudge if he do not This teacheth that it is a sinne for men to do that which GOD hath appointed to bee done Doctrine We may not doe lawfull things vnlawfully when they haue no particular calling or commandement for them to doe it This is manifested vnto vs in the facte of Zipporah the wife of Moses taking a knife and circumcising her sonne Circumcision was one of the sacraments that God had ordayned that euery male of eight dayes should be circumcised and haue the foreskinne of his flesh cut off Exo. 4 25. howbeit she sinned greeuously because she would doe it without a calling which was for man not for the woman to do and therefore it appeareth shee had no moe children as we obserued elsewhere chap. 12 and beside she wanted the presence and company of her husband a long time after and when she returned vnto him shee was vexed and afflicte● by the emulation of Miriam a●● Aaron So Saul sinned in offering vp sacrifice who ought to haue stayed for the comming of Samuel sacrifices were commanded of God but he did it without a calling therefore Samuel telleth him he had done foolishly 1. Sam. 13 14. The like we might say of Vzziah 2 Chron. 26 16 otherwise a good king he went into the Temple of the Lord and presumed to offer incense which was peculiar to the Priests and therefore hauing no direction from God though hee did a good thing yet he was presently smitten with leprosie 2 Chr. 26 14 20. This we saw before in Korah and his company chap. 16. Amnon abusing his sister Tamar by filthy incest ought by the law of God to suffer death Absolon killeth him with the sword he did that which God commanded Leuit. 18 9 29 and Dauid had to answer for it because he put him not to death neuerthelesse Absolon sinned greeuously in the doing of it because he was no Magistrate 2 Sam. 13 28 So then the point is plaine that a man may sinne and that greeuously in doing the things that God commandeth when he hath no warrant to do them The grounds are these First he doth it Reason 1 without any commandement from GOD. Whensoeuer a commandement is limited to persons and places to them it is a commandement and to no others The commandements and orders that are directed to such as are free of a citty or of a company or incorporation are no commandements to those thar are forrainers so in this case a commandement to some maketh it a sinne to them if they leaue it vndone whereas on the other side the not commanding maketh it a sinne to others that doe it because it is the commandement that maketh things eyther lawfull or vnlawfull Where there is no sight there can be no blindnesse but it is blindnesse when it is found in the subiect where sight ought to be We cannot say there is blindnesse in a stone because it is not capable of sight Therefore wee say that in indifferent things there can be no sinne eyther to do or not to do the ground is because there is no commandement Secondly it is a rule that all good being out of his proper subiect is euil Consider this in the natural body Is it not euil in nature for the eye to be in place of the hand that should be in the head Or for the finger to grow in the fore-head that should be in the hand this maketh a monster in the body when a member is out of his proper subiect So we may say for morall good whē it is out of his proper place it is no more good but is turned into euill If any aske what is the proper subiect of good I answere the proper subiect of good is he to whom it is commanded and the vnproper subiect is where there is no such commandement Vse 1 By this a man may looke into himselfe and see as it were in a glasse the defects and deformities of his soule and namely that hee doth many things good for the matter and substance and good in those that haue a calling and commandement for it yet euill in him because he wanteth a commandement and consequently hath no warrant for the doing thereof All such haue cause to humble themselues for the euill which they haue brought vpon themselues by doing good things without any good calling To preach the word to administer the Sacraments to make publike prayer are necessarie parts of the holy worship of God that must be performed they are the onely instruments to saue the precious soules of men and yet these euen these are
established by Arcadius and Honorius the Emperors God lib. 5 tit 4 de nuptiis that the marriage of cousin germans shall be allowed and the children borne of them shall bee holden legittimate and succeede their fathers in theyr inheritance And heereunto doe the ancient Councels also accord Epann Concil about the yeare of Christ foure hundred ninety seuen Concil Turon 2. in the yeare fiue hundred and sixty Now the first that did forbid the marriage of cousin germans was Theodosius the Elder as many testifie and that by the counsell and aduice of Ambrose Lib. 8. Epist 66. which hee calleth the Theodosian Law and in his time Austine testifieth it was in force This is wholly or at least for the most part taken out of Zepperus The next witnesse to be produced is Amand Polanus professour in the vniuersitie of Basil in Syntag. Theol lib. 10. cap. 53. who teacheth that the sonnes and daughters of brethren and sisters may lawfully marrie by the law of God whatsoeuer the Popes canon law say to the contrary as Iacob married Rahel his cousin german Of the same iudgement also is Chemnitius in his Examin Chem. exam part 1. For he sheweth that the prohibition of this degree is meerely humane established for no other cause but that the prohibitions of God might bee kept with greater reuerence and where such prohibitions are they ought to bee obserued which is not denied of vs howbeit that is not our case where no such prohibitions are I will annexe to these one forraine testimony more that is of Zanchius a man of eminent note who proouing that the incestuous marriages betweene the brother and sister De oper creat part 3 lib. 4. c. 2 whether they be borne of the same father and mother or of one of them onely are vtterly vnlawfull as also betweene the Nephew and the Aunt and the Neece and her vncle he hath these words The marriage betweene the sonnes and daughters of naturall brethren is lawfull as all the learned and godly agree without any controuersie for as much as we neuer read the same forbidden in holy Scripture in any place but rather allowed by many examples which were neuer condemned by any man And albeit he wish that in all such places as is a restraint heereof men should be subiect to the Magistrate according to the Doctrine of Christ yet hee spareth not farther to deliuer his opinion in this manner For my part I could wish for many causes and those of no smal moment and importance that marriages might simply bee made by warrant of the word of God that whatsoeuer God himselfe hath left free and made lawful the same might also be left vnto men as lawfull I speake freely that which I conceiue of this matter These are the forraine testimonies which I thought good to alledge at this present to which it were not hard to adde infinite others who because they speake the same things and run the same course that the former doe I will not trouble the reader and my selfe any farther in rehearsing of them I will conclude the whole with one more that is our owne countrey-man M. Perkins Mast Perkins a very iudicious godly learned Diuine as any that this age hath brought forth who in a Treatise prouing that a reprobate may in truth be made partaker of all that is contained in the Religion of the Church of Rome and that a right papist by his Religion cannot go beyond a reprobate sayth thus To go further by Gods word they which are distant 4. degrees in the transuers equall line are not forbidden to marry together as cousin germans thus the daughters of Zelophehad were married to their fathers brothers sonnes This example as I take it may be a warrant of the lawfulnes of this Marriage howsoeuer the church of Rome do ouerthwart the Lord in it Let me adde one thing more and then I will end Whereas wee are aduised by many in this question to haue due consideration of offences that may arise in making such matches I would wish also and desire all those that are contrary minded to haue good consideration of such offences as may bee giuen by two earnest disprouing the vnfitnesse and inconueniency of such matches and especially by leauing in doubt and suspence the lawfulnesse of them forasmuch as betweene parties of very good account both in calling and Religion there haue beene and are many matches in this Land of that kinde that betweene high and low rich poore noble and vnnoble which haue beene vndertaken and finished by the iudgement of the godly and learned so that it were not hard to produce sundry examples of Emperors Kings Princes Dukes Earles Barons Knights Gentlemen other of all sorts which now to bring in question for the offensiue conceits of some were more offensiue to the truth to the Church to the learned and to men of all conditions yea more dangerous to the state of those parties and preiudiciall to theyr yssue then any man of iudgement or godlinesse would approoue Thus much of this point of this chapter and of this whole booke The Lord almighty the author of all number of whose vnderstanding there is no number Psal 147 5 who hath ordered all things in measure number waight with whom our dayes are determined and the number of our months are set Iob 14 5 by whose onely mercy wee haue receyued strength to finish this booke of NVMBERS containing the iourneys of the Israelites through the desert from Mount Sinai vnto the plains of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho and admonishing vs of the state of the Church in this life lying vnder the crosse and at length receiuing deliuerance from the Ancient of daies grant vnto vs that being numbred among the children of GOD we may haue our lot among the Saints and be in the number of them that are sealed out of all the Tribes of the children of Israel Reuel 7 4. and so rest for euer in the heauenly Canaan among the soules of iust men perfected and the innumerable company of angels Heb. 12 22. Vnto him be praise and glorie in the Church Amen FINIS Gentle Reader let me intreate thee to amend these faults which otherwise may leade into errour PAg. 18. Col. 2. line 6. had made pag. 79. col 2. l. 37. the iudgement pag. 80 c. 1. l. 1. desired p. 137. c. 1. l. 60. rule and p. 140. c. 1. l. 56. censor p. 167. c. 2. l. 5. not to do p. 206. c. 2. l. 22. vnprobable p. 301. c. 1. l. 26. the Cushite p. 394. c. 2. l. 18. the Cushite p. 422. c. 1. l. 5. his iudgements p. 451. c. 1. l. 30. tender p. 473. c. 2. l. 36. profitable p. 536. c. 2. l. 28. the staffe p. 588. c. 1. l. 47 a double A Table of the principall Contents of this Booke the Figures note out the Page the Letters the Columne If no Letter be