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A14900 Balletts and madrigals to fiue voyces with one to 6. voyces: newly published by Thomas Weelkes. Weelkes, Thomas, 1575 (ca.)-1623. 1608 (1608) STC 25204; ESTC S103041 2,366,144 144

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this doubt there is a threefold kinde of liberty to be considered a naturall liberty civill and spirituall 1. The naturall liberty I call that wherein Adam was created being subdued to no bondage neither spirituall of sinne nor corporall in any outward subjection to any creature but as he had a freedome of will and was made Lord of his affections within that he needed not to have sinned unlesse he would himselfe so he had the dominion of the creatures given unto him This originall liberty of nature considered servitude and bondage was brought in as a punishment of sinne and so is not simply and of it selfe agreeable to the Law of nature 2. But now since Adams fall there is another kinde of civill liberty and civill servitude opposite unto it Civill liberty is defined to be a naturall faculty for every man to doe as himselfe liketh nisi si quis aut 〈◊〉 aut jure prohibetur unlesse one be hin●●●d by force or in right for that is no true liberty for a man against right to doe what him li●teth ser●itude contrariwise de●●eth unto a man power vivend● 〈…〉 to live as he would according unto nature Now this servitude simply accordeth not with nature as the Apostle saith If yet thou mayest be free use it rather 1 Cor. 7.21 shewing that every one by nature desireth liberty and freedome But after a sort this servitude is agreeable to nature not simply or of it selfe but as other punishments are said to be naturall as tending to the maintenance of society among men which is properly naturall And if it be objected why since all men are fallen in Adam and so brought into subjection why all likewise become not servants the answer is that two things must be considered in this our corrupt state the one is the Law of corruption brought in by sinne the other the goodnesse of God that although all men are subject by sinne to the same bondage and corruption yet the goodnesse of God qualifieth that slavish condition of nature as that some doe enjoy an outward liberty and freedome like as in the inward faculties of the soule the Lord giveth unto some more light of understanding dexterity of wit profoundnesse of judgement and other naturall gifts than unto others 3. The spirituall liberty is wrought in us by grace in Christ which is from the subjection of sinne and malediction of the Law that our conscience is no more terrified with slavish feare but we are at peace with God and beside by this spirituall liberty the faithfull have restored unto them the dominion over all creatures that though not in externall possession yet in a spirituall right all things are theirs whether the world life death things present or things to come 1 Cor. 3.22 and all things worke to the best to those that love God Rom. ● So these may very well stand together externall servitude and spirituall freedome it is possible for one to bee a freeman to God and yet a servant in the world and another to be a bondman to sinne and yet free in the world for there are divers objects of these two kindes of liberty and bondage the outward freedome respecteth this life and state the free use of riches and pleasures of this life the spirituall and internall freedome hath set before it the salvation of the soule the favour of God and life eternall Christian religion then overthroweth not the diversity of degrees among men But as Christ though he were by his spirituall right free from all taxes and impositions yet lest he should offend payed poll money Matth. 17. so Christians though they are made free by faith in the Sonne yet for the maintenance of peace and love and avoiding of offence in disturbing the temporall State they are bound as well as others to be subject unto the powers of this world Et potestatibus 〈◊〉 nos subjici in eo homine qui elementis ex quibus constat subditus est In respect of that man of ours which is subject to the elements whereof it consisteth Borrh. QUEST XI How these six yeeres are to be accounted Vers. 2. HE shall serve thee six yeeres in the seventh he shall c. Some doe expound this De publico generali anno septimo of the publike and generall seventh yeere some of the private as every mans service began Lippoman But that it is to be understood of the publike yeere of intermission it may be made plaine by these reasons 1. Because whereas every seventh yeere was appointed a yeere of intermission to forbeare tilling of the ground or exacting of debts Levit. 25. Deut. 15. if every man should make a yeere of remission of servants in his owne house and not observe the generall and solemne yeere of intermission this would have brought in and bred a great confusion Tostat. 2. This also appeareth by the analogy of the great yeere of remission which was in the fiftieth yeere for there the buying of possessions or servants was no● to be counted from the time of such buying but from the yeere of Jubile for as many yeeres or few remained of the Jubile so was the price to be valued Levi● 25. Tostatus 〈◊〉 Lyran. 3. And beside seeing in the seventh yeere there was a 〈…〉 for if a man might exact ser●ice of his servant and not 〈…〉 more base than their substance which is not to be 〈…〉 then the meaning is not that every 〈◊〉 of the Hebrewes 〈…〉 for it might so full 〈◊〉 that he should serve but one if he were bought immediatly before the yeere of Jubile but that he should not at any time serve above six yeeres Tostat. QUEST XII The reasons why they ought to set their servants free HE shall goe out free for nothing 1. That is he shall pay nothing for his liberty because he is made free by the Law nor yet for any thing else As if the servant had lien sicke any time of the yeeres of his service and his master had beene at cost in healing of him his master in this case was to expect no recompence because his servant was as his possession even as the oxe or asse purchased for his profit and therefore his master was to stand to the losse of it Tostat. qu. 6. 2. And the reasons why this favour was to be shewed unto the Hebrewes being servants were these 1. The Lord saith For they are my servants which I brought out of the land of Egypt Levit. 25.42 that is he doth not only put them in minde of that generall benefit of their deliverance out of the bondage and servitude of Egypt the remembrance whereof ought to make them kinde and mercifull to their servants the Hebrewes which were partaken of the same common deliverance But the Lord likewise pleadeth his right and interest in them saying They are my servants so that although the Lord did somewhat depart from his owne right in suffring of them to serve six yeeres in regard of
an account of yet this is not the meaning here 3. But it is an hyperbolicall speech which is often used in Scripture whereby it signified not indeed that they should bee in number as the dust for all the people in the earth put together cannot compare with the dust in number but they should be a very great people not compared with others for so many people were greater than they Deut. 7.1 but considered in themselves QVEST. XII Of the divers reading of this word gnolam ever in Scripture Vers. 15. TO thy seed forever 1. This word in the Hebrew gnolam which the Septuagint translateth by the word ha●on ever doth not alwayes in Scripture signifie an everlasting time without end as Exod. 15.18 The Lord shall reigne for ever and ever The first word is gnolam the other gued this latter signifieth true eternity as the Lord is said to dwell in eternity Isay 57.15 the other seemeth to imply the age of this world the Lord shall reigne then for ever during this world and the next thus the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken by forren writers Aristotle defineth it to be periodus durationis cujusque rei the period or time of continuance of any thing lib. 1. de coelo So Horace useth the word aeternum Serviet aeternum qui parvo nesciatuti He shall ever be a slave or servant that cannot tell how to make much of a little as hee is alleaged by Augustine 2. Yet Hieromes observations doe not alwayes hold that gnolam is with van signifieth eternity without van the yeare of the Jubile for Deut. 15.17 gnolam is with van and yet it betokeneth the Jubile he shall be thy servant for ever 3 Wherefore this word is diversly taken in Scripture beside that it signifieth an everlasting time without end 1. It is used for the duration or continuance of the world as the Rain-bow was a signe of Gods everlasting covenant that is so long as the world continueth 2. It signifieth the whole time of a mans life Psal. 89.1 I will sing the mercies of the Lord for ever that is as long as I live So Anna promised that Samuel should abide before the Lord for ever 1 Sam. 1.22 3. It signifieth a long indefinite time though not infinite without end as Gen. 6.4 which of old time were men of renowne 4. It was used to signifie the yeare of Jubile which was the space of fifty yeares 5. That is called eternall whose time is not prefixed with man though it be with God as circumcision is called an everlasting covenant because it was not to be altered by man 6. Some thing is called eternall not in respect of it selfe but that which it signifieth as some thinke the land of Canaan is called an everlasting possession Gen. 17.8 because it was a figure of the celestiall Canaan Pererius QVEST. XIII How the land Canaan was given for ever to Abraham and his seed NOw in that the Lord saith The land which thou seest I will give to thee and thy seed for ever These words are taken by some literally by others spiritually by others partly literally partly spiritually 1. Augustine thinketh that it may be understood simply because the Jewes dwelt in some Cities of Canaan still though they were expulsed Jerusalem but though it were so yet the Jewes were not Lords or possessors of all that land and howsoever it was in Augustines time that Countrey is not possessed of them now and indeed long before Augustines time the Jewes were expelled by Adrian the Emperour 2. Some doe take these words literally but with a condition that the land of Canaan should be so long their possession as they walked in obedience before God as Deut. 4.25 If yee corrupt your selves c. ye shall perish from the land Iun. Mercer Cajetane to this purpose hath a good conceit as if the Lord should say quamdiu erit semen tuum c. as long as they shall be thy seed I will give them this land therefore when they beganne to degenerate from Abraham and were not his right children God was no longer tied to his promise 3. Some further that like best of the literall sense doe by ever understand a long continuance of time for so the Israelites the seed of Abraham possessed Canaan 1640. yeares Perer. But this doth not fully satisfie that the space of lesse than two thousand yeares should be counted an everlasting time 4. Others by ever doe take all the time of the law till the Messiah come that should renew the world by his comming as Samuel saith that God would have established Sauls Kingdome for ever 1 Sam. 13.13 Musculus Oecolampad This sense may very well stand concerning the ceremonies that were to give place unto Christs doctrine but the possession of Canaan if the Jewes had beleeved should have beene no impediment to Christs Kingdome 5. Some doe understand here the spirituall seed of Abraham and the spirituall or celestiall Canaan which the faithfull shall possesse for ever but this were to turne an history into an allegory 6. They which interpret these words partly spiritually partly literally some take the land of Canaan for that Countrey which was shewed Abraham but by the seed they would have understood the faithfull the spirituall kindred of Abraham and so Augustine saith that the Christians inhabited that Countrey after the Jewes but the Christians inhabit it not now for Saracens and Turks have subdued it therefore it was not their possession for ever 7. Others understand the land promised spiritually but the seed literally for Christ who was truly descended of Abraham Matth. 1.1 and so Saint Paul by seed insinuateth Christ Galat. 3.16 so unto Christ his members the promise of the heavenly Canaan belongeth Iunius This sense is confirmed by the Prophet Ezechiel 37-24 David my servant shall be King over them c. they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Iacob my servant where your fathers have dwelt and they shall dwell therein they and their sons and their sons sons for ever Saint Paul also by seed understandeth Christ Gal. 3.16 Thus we see that not only the land of Canaan but the whole earth is inhabited by the Christians the spirituall seed of Christ their David and King and to them appertaine the promises of the celestiall Canaan whereof the terrestriall was a type and figure Mercer This sense together with the second before alleaged of the hypotheticall that is conditionall promises seeme to be most fit and proper and before the rest to be preferred QVEST. XIV Whether Abraham walked thorow the land as the Lord bid him Vers. 18. THen Abraham removed his tent and came and dwelt in the Plaine of Mamre Abraham did not presently as some Hebrewes thinke goe over all the land of Canaan neither is it like as Tostatus collecteth because Abraham dwelt in this Plaine that he did not walke thorow the land as the
of the altars which the Patriarkes had made to aske counsell of God seeing God was every where present to the prayers of the faithfull 7. Neither are we to imagine that she used any such superstitious way as to lay agu●● castus lawrell or any such thing under her head to have a dreame or a vision as she had seene her friends to doe in her owne countrey sic author histor scolastic in Gen. c. 66. for she was farre from such superstitious toies ex Perer. 8. Nor yet did she consult with God by Abraham then living as Aben Ezra Iun. for this oracle was given her by Gods owne mouth rather than mans Calvin 9. But she went to some secret place to pray and received some revelation from God Muscul Calvin Mercer Perer. QUEST XXXII How many waies they used to consult with God in Israel FOure waies they used to aske counsell of God in Israel 1. Beside the casting of lots which was but seldome used as by Iosua in Achans cause Iosua 7. and by Samuel at the election of Saul 1 Sam. 10. and by Saul to finde out the transgression of his vow by Ionathan 1 Sam. 14. there were three waies beside to aske counsell of God which are mentioned together 1. Sam. 28.6 by dreames urim and prophets 2. The second way was by dreames and visions as the Lord spake to the elder Patriarkes but this way God seldome revealed his will by after he sent them prophets and for these visions they used to prepare themselves by fasting and prayer Dan. 10.3 3. They used in hard and difficult matters to seeke unto the prophets as Saul went to Samuel 1. King 9. Ieroboam sent his wife to Ahiah the Prophet 1 King 14. These Prophets had such matters revealed unto them three waies 1. The Lord instructed them aforehand as he did Samuel before Saul came at him 2. Sometime at the same instant when they were consulted with as the Angel of God spake to Eliah 2. King 1.15 3. Sometime the Prophet presently gave no answer but waited upon God by prayer as Dan. 9. or stirred himselfe up extraordinarily that the spirit might come upon them as Elisha did 2. King 3.15 4. They also consulted with God by the priest who asked counsell of God for them by his Vrim as Abiathar applyed the Ephod for David 1. Sam. 23.9 30.7 Now the Priest received answer by the Ephod not as the Hebrewes fable by finding written in the foulds and pleats of the Vrim the sentence or answer of God nor as Iosephus supposeth by the extraordinary shining of the stones in the Vrim which miraculous kind of answering he confesseth to have ceased two hundred yeares before his time 3. antiquit Iudaic. for how could the shining of the stones be a signe in such variety of matters which were demanded of the priests and more than two hundred yeares before Iosephs time who lived vnder Domitian were such gifts of prophecying ceased as under Iudas Maccabeus 1 Maccab. 4.46 yea long before that the Church complained We see not our signes there is not one prophet more Psal. 74.9 And further the Scripture would not have beene silent in setting downe such a miraculous gift Therefore God did otherwise reveale unto the priest and inspire him with the knowledge of his will by the illumination of his minde for so Vrim signifieth illumination Perer. QUEST XXXIII How the elder is said to serve the younger Vers. 23. TWo manner of people shall be divided out of thy bowels c. the greater shall serve the lesse 1. The Hebrewes apply this text against the Empire of the Romans whose Emperors they say came of the Idumeans as Iulius Caesar the rest that succeeded him who though they held the Iewes in subjection in the end should be destroyed sic David Kimhi Rabbi Salomon ex citat Perer. 2. But the right literall meaning is of the Idumeans and Israelites the posterity of Esau and Iacob for so we read that the Idumeans were subdued unto Israel by King David 2. Sam. 8.14 and so continued to the reigne of Iotham Mercer 3. Neither were the Israelites onely superiour in temporall dominion but also in spiritual blessings for they were the visible Church of God Edom was cut off Calvin 4. Spiritually these two people doe signifie the carnall Iewes subdued unto the Christians being yet themselves the elder people August lib. 16. de civitat c. 25. Againe by the striving of Esau and Iacob in their mothers wombe is signified the continuall fight in the wombe of the Church betweene the true and carnall professors which are said to be the greater because they are more in number but as the greater here did serve the lesse so the wicked while they persecute the righteous quibus nocere volunt pr●sunt plurimum stir●●●tem ipsi maxime nocent they profit those whom they goe about to hurt hurting themselves most Augustin serm de tempor 78. Beside Origen draweth from hence this mysticall sense understanding these two people to be within vs and this strife and combat to be betweene the flesh and the spirit vertue and vice hom 12. in Genes QUEST XXXIV How Iacob was sanctified in his mothers wombe FUrther whereas Iacob strove with Esau in his mothers wombe which was an extraordinary motion and worke of Gods spirit here ariseth a question whether Iacob were sanctified in his mothers wombe which doubt not resolved but onely expounded by Pererius may thus briefly receive satisfaction 1. that first if santification be taken for an actuall and inherent holinesse so neither Iacob nor any other were sanctified but onely Christ in which sense the Angel saith to Marie That holy thing which shall be borne of thee shall be called the sonne of God Luke 1.35 2. There is also a certaine holinesse ascribed to all the children of the faithfull because they are within the covenant 1. Cor. 7. vers 4. whereby they are distinguish●d from the seed of unbeleevers Iacob was sanctified otherwise than thus 3. There is a particular sanctification that is a setting apart or preparing of a thing to some speciall use as Paul was separated from his mothers wombe in the purpose of God to preach the Gospell Galath 1.15 Thus also was Iacob sanctified and separated to be the father of the people of God 4. A thing also is said to be sanctified when any extraordinary worke or motion is wrought upon it by the spirit of God as Iohn Baptist was sanctified in his mothers wombe when as at the voice of Maries Salutation the Babe sprung in his mothers belly Luk. 1.44 and thus Iacob also was sanctified and stirred by the spirit to wrestle with his brother not that he had any sense or understanding in fighting against the carnall generation but he was used as an instrument by the spirit to prefigure that state and condition of the people of God which should be resisted and wrestled against by the world QUEST XXXV Esau why so
maketh the Sabbath ceremoniall in these foure respects First in the determination of the day Secondly in the allegoricall signification as it was signum quiet is Christi in sepulchro a signe of Christs rest in the grave Thirdly in the morall sense prou● significat cessationem ob omni actu peccati as it signifieth cessation from every act of sinne Fourthly in the anagogicall signification ut praefigurabat quietem c. as it prefigured our rest in the Kingdome of heaven So Thomas 2. 2. qu. 122. artic 4. But I rather with Vrsinus take this spirituall Sabbath which is begun in this life in ceasing from the works of sinne and perfited in the next to belong unto the morall and internall part of the Sabbath than to the externall and ceremoniall the two first indeed are ceremoniall in the Sabbath the other are not properly ceremoniall seeing they are perpetuall but morall rather spirituall and mysticall 5. So then by this which hath beene said it is easie to make a difference betweene our Lords day and the Jewish Sabbath 1. In that we are not tied to the necessary prescript of the day 2. And have more liberty and freedome in the rest 3. And their Sabbath was a type and figure of those things which are now fulfilled and accomplished in Christ. Bastingius QUEST VII What it is to sanctifie the Sabbath day TO sanctifie it 1. God is said to sanctifie the seventh day one way and man another God by instituting that day and consecrating it unto his service man by referring it unto the use and end appointed of God Vrsin 2. Neither is God said so to sanctifie it as though this day had any speciall kinde of holinesse in it selfe affixed to it but in regard of the use because it was consecrated and set apart for holy duties Simler 3. And this sanctifying signifieth two things both a separating of this day from other prophane and common dayes and the speciall addicting and appropriating of the same to the service of God 4. And it is not referred onely to the day sed ad ipsos homines c. but to the men themselves that they should be sanctified and prepared for the service of God Gallas 5. They then are deceived which thinke they doe sanctifie this day onely in the corporall rest and that they have done the dutie here required by abstinence from labour for the day must be sanctified that is consecrate to the service of God Deus non curat principaliter de quiete corporum God principally doth not take care for the rest of the bodie sed curat de cultu suo but he taketh care for his service the bodily rest is commanded to no other end than as it is an helpe to the setting forth of Gods worship Tostat. qu. 13. QUEST VIII Of the labouring six dayes whether it be a Commandement Vers. 9. SIx dayes shalt thou labour 1. In the Hebrew it is Six dayes shalt thou serve and it seemeth to have speciall reference unto the servant that hee should dispatch all his masters worke in six dayes and deferre none unto the seventh the other clause and doe all thy worke concerneth the master himselfe and those which were free for the servant did not his owne worke but his masters but the master and the free man did his owne worke Oleast 2. God here enjoyneth not to labour six dayes as though it were not lawfull upon any occasion to rest upon the weeke dayes sed ipsa facilitate ad parendum invitat but he doth perswade to obedience by the easinesse of the precept Calvin 3. And hereby the Lord sheweth how liberally he dealeth with us that whereas wee ought to spend every day in his service yet he leaveth unto us six dayes for our affaires and reserveth the seventh onely to himselfe Basting 4. And yet further God so giveth unto us six dayes to worke in as that the private worship of God be not neglected in prayer and hearing of his word as occasion serveth but the seventh day is set apart for his publike service in such sort as that then all other affaires must give place unto it Vrsin 5. Three reasons then are specially used to move unto the obedience of this Commandement one is from the end because it is to be kept holy to the glory of God another from Gods example which two reasons are mentioned afterward and here is propounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the easinesse of the precept that seeing wee have libertie to worke six dayes we may the better rest upon the seventh Pelargus QUEST IX What works were permitted to be done upon the Sabbath Vers. 10. THou shalt not doe any worke 1. We must observe that there was a great difference among the Jewes in the observation of their festivall dayes For the Sabbath was more strictly kept than the rest therein they were forbidden to prepare or dresse that which they should eat Exod. 16.23 or to kindle a fire Exod. 35.3 In the other solemne dayes as in the first day of the Pasch those works are excepted which were about their meat chap. 12.16 onely they are restrained from all servile worke Levit 23.7 And the reason hereof was because the Sabbath was a speciall figure and type of our spirituall rest in Christ and figures are most exactly to bee kept for the more lively shadowing forth of that which was prefigured And therefore we have now more libertie in keeping of the Lords day wherein it is lawfull to provide for our food and to doe other necessary things because the figure and shadow is past and the bodie come Tostat. qu. 13. 2. Notwithstanding the strict injunction of bodily rest certaine works it was lawfull for the Jewes to doe even under the law much more for us now as first works of necessitie qua non p●terant bene differri neque anticipari which could neither conveniently bee deferred nor yet prevented Lyran. Of this kinde is necessary defence against the invasion of the enemies as Mattathias resolved to fight against the enemie upon the Sabbath day lest they should have beene put to the sword as their brethren had beene before 1 Maccab. 2.40 So Ioshua with his companie compassed the walles of Jericho seven dayes together of the which number the Sabbath was one it was also lawfull for them on the Sabbath to lead their oxe or asse to water Luk. 13.15 and if their beasts were fallen into the pit to helpe them out Luk. 14.5 And as it was lawfull to save their cattell so also their other substance as if an house were set on fire to quench it if their corne were like to be lost in the field to preserve it They might also in case of necessitie seeke for their food upon the Sabbath as the Apostles rubbed the eares of corne Matth. 12. Secondly it was lawfull to exercise works of mercie and charitie upon this day as to visit the sicke to cure and heale the diseased as our Saviour
is not so lawfull upon any day si autem pro necessita●● corporis c. But if it be for the necessitie of the bodie we doe not forbid it upon the Lords day for no man hateth his owne flesh 2. If it be a sinne to wash upon the Lords day neither is it lawfull so much as to wash the face Si hoc in corporis parte conceditur cur hoc exigente necessitate toti corpori negatur If this be permitted in one part of the bodie why necessitie so requiring should it be denied to the whole bodie So then neither were the Jewes so strictly bound from all corporall labour as they superstitiously observe as may appeare by Ioshuahs and the whole hosts compassing of Jericho seven dayes together Iosh. 7. and by the Macchabees fighting upon the Sabbath 1 Macchab. 2.41 And Christians have more libertie herein than the Jewes had for it is lawfull for them to prepare their food upon the Lords day which it was not lawfull for the Jewes to doe upon their Sabbath for as Thom. Aquinas well resolveth Opus corporale pertinens ad conservandum salutem proprii corporis non violat Sabbatum A corporall worke belonging to the conservation of the health of ones bodie doth not violate the Sabbath and this is grounded upon that saying of our blessed Saviour The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath Mark 2.27 God would not have the Sabbath which was made for mans benefit to be used to his hindrance Lyranus yeeldeth this reason betweene the strictnesse imposed upon the Jewes and the libertie of Christians quia illa vacatio figuralis erat because their resting was figurative and therefore was most strictly to be kept à figura quantumcunque modico subtracto mutatur tota significatio and take never so little from a figure the whole signification is changed as if you take l. from lapis or s. from stone that which remaineth signifieth nothing but though somewhat be taken from the substance of a stone it is a stone still 4. Conf. Against the Anabaptists that would have no day kept holy unto the Lord. IN the next place are the Anabaptists to be met withall and who else doe condemne the observation of the Lords day among Christians because the Apostle reproveth the Galathians for observing of dayes and moneths Galath 4. and in other places Contra. 1. The observing of dayes is not simply prohibited by the Apostle sed cum opinione cultus vel necessitatis but with an opinion of religion placed in the day and necessity the Jewes kept their Sabbath as making the observation of the day a part of Gods worship and they held it necessary to keepe that day unchangeable It was also unto them a type and figure of the spirituall rest But the Christians now keepe not the Lords day in any of these respects either as a day more holy in it selfe than others or as of necessitie to be kept but onely for order and decencie sake because it is meet that some certaine day should be set apart for the worship of God Vrsin 2. As in the practice of Physicke and in politike affaires and in the trade of husbandrie there is both a lawfull observation of dayes and an unlawfull for to observe seasons of the yeate for the earth and for ministring unto the bodie of man as also to make choice of the most convenient times for civill businesse is not unlawfull yet the superstitious respect of dayes as making some fortunate some unfortunate and to depend wholly upon the aspects of starres is a vaine and idle thing So likewise in the businesse of religion as dayes may bee superstitiously kept so they may also for order sake and to other good uses bee distinguished 3. Like as then though Christians yeeld a comely reverence unto the publike places of prayer yet not in like sort as the Jewes accounted of their Tabernacle so according to the same rule there is a preeminence given unto the Lords day but not with the like difference of dayes as the Jewes esteemed their Sabbath Simler 5. Conf. Against the Zuincfeldians that hold the preaching of the Word superfluous whereby the Lords day is sanctified THe Zuincfeldians doe also faile in the manner of celebrating the Lords day counting the ministery of the Gospell and preaching of the word of God whereby the Lords day is sanctified a superfluous thing cleaving wholly unto their vaine speculations and phantasticall visions and revelations whereas it is evident out of the Scriptures that both the old Sabbath of the Jewes was solemnized and kept in hearing Moses read and preached Acts 15.21 and the Lords day in like sort was sanctified by the Apostles with preaching Acts 20.7 ex Bastingio Now proceed we on to deale against the Romanists who diversly erre as touching the Lords day 6. Conf. That the Lords day is warranted by Scripture and not by tradition onely FIrst they hold that the keeping of the Lords day in stead of the Jewish Sabbath is not warranted by Scripture but onely by tradition from the Apostles To this purpose the Rhemists Matth. 15. sect 3. And there are other beside in these dayes that make the observation of the Lords day onely an Ecclesiasticall constitution Contra. 1. There are three most evident texts of Scripture usually alleaged which doe make it evident that this change of the Sabbath began in the time of the Apostles and so by their Apostolike authoritie being thereto guided by the Spirit is warranted and so declared and testified in Scripture These are the places Act. 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 Revelat. 1.10 In the first we have the exercises of religion preaching and ministring the Sacraments which were peculiar to the Sabbath transferred to the first day of the weeke In the second publike charitable collections for the poore which was also used upon the Sabbath In the third the very name of the Lords day is set downe 2. And further that this day was consecrated by divine authoritie the great works doe shew wherewith this day from the beginning hath beene honoured as Augustine hath sorted them together Venerabilis est hic dies in quo transgressi sunt fili● Israel mare rubrum c. This day is to be reverenced wherein the Israelites passed over the red sea wherein Manna first rained upon the Israelites in the desert our Lord was baptized in Jordan water was turned into wine in Cana of Galile wherein the Lord blessed the five loaves wherewith he fed five thousand men wherein he rose againe from the dead entred into the house the doores being shut wherein the holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles c. Serm. 154. 3. This reason also may perswade it because the Lords day is now sanctified to holy uses as the Sabbath was to the Jewes but it belongeth onely unto God to sanctifie by his word as the Apostle saith Every creature is sanctified by the word of God and prayer 1 Tim. 4.5
for all offer up himselfe in sacrifice for us and still continueth our Mediatour Borrh. 4. Now the inferiour Priests garments are fitly applied to set forth the qualities and conditions of the faithfull which are the members of Christ as the other did shadow forth Christ our head 1. Beda by the linen garment interpreteth decorem castitatis the comelinesse of chastitie by the girdle vigilantem mentis custodiam the diligent watchfulnesse of the minde to keepe the same by the bonnets visus anditus gustus custodiam the diligent keeping of the sight hearing taste and of all the senses 2. Thomas maketh a more generall use Castitas significatur per femoralia c. Chastitie is signified by the breeches Puritas vita per lineam tunicam Puritie of life by the linen garment Moderatio discretionis per cingulum Moderate discretion by the girdle Rectitudo intentionis pertiaram And a right intention by the bonnet 3. But this application is more fit The linen garment signifieth our innocencie and righteousnesse which we receive in the lavacre of regeneration being cloathed with Christs righteousnesse as the Apostle saith All yee that are baptized unto Christ have put on Christ the girdle signifieth constancie in the truth as S. Paul saith Stand therefore your loines girded about with veritie Tiara protectionis divinae signa erant The bonnets were signes of the divine protection the linen breeches shew what care should be had of comelinesse and what reverence is to be used in the service of God Pelarg. Marbach Who addeth this further that as we put more comelinesse upon our uncomely parts as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2.23 So our Saviour hath respect unto the vile and abject members of the Church such as are despised and counted base in the world 4. And like as we use three kinde of garments some for necessitie to cover our naked parts some for ornament and comelinesse and some for defence as militarie garments as here the Priests had their linen breeches of the first sort their linen coat of the second and their girdle of the third So unto a Christian are necessarie three kinde of spirituall garments the first is the garment of faith whereby our sins are covered secondly the ornaments of the soule are requisite whereby Christians must be adorned in the sanctitie and integritie of life thirdly they must put on their spirituall armour and take the sword of the Spirit the word of God whereby they may fight against Satan Simler Borrhaius 4. Places of Doctrine 1 Doct. None must intrude themselves into the callings of the Church Vers. 1. CAuse thou thy brother Aaron to come In that Aaron intruded not himselfe into the Priests office but was thereunto called Procopius giveth this note Qui temerario ansu ad se trahere sacerdotium c. He that will rashly draw unto himselfe the Priesthood shall suffer punishment So also Oleaster So the Apostle observeth upon this very example of Aaron No man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God as Aaron Heb. 5.4 2. Doct. The agreement which ought to be betweene the Civill and Ecclesiasticall state OLeaster noteth here further in that Moses who was the chiefe Magistrate called Aaron to the Priesthood the concord and amitie that ought to be betweene the Civill and Ecclesiasticall state is commended that as Ioash prospered while hee followed the direction of Iehoiadah so both the Ecclesiasticall state should imitate Iehoiadah to give holy counsell and direction unto the Magistrate and the Magistrate to be like Ioash in following the same 3. Doct. Profitable arts are the gift of God Vers. 3. SPeake unto all cunning men whom I have filled with the Spirit of wisdome c. Gallasius hereupon thus writeth Omnem artem industriam c. Dei donum agnosco Every art and industrie which bringeth utilitie unto man I acknowledge to be the gift of God as the Prophet Isaiah saith that God instructeth the husbandman to have discretion Isa. 28.26 Men therefore to whom God hath given the knowledge of profitable and commendable arts should have a care to employ them to Gods glorie and not to abuse them to wantonnesse 4. Doct. Whatsoever is instituted in Gods service must proceed from his wisdome Vers. 3. SPeake unto all cunning men in the Hebrew wise in heart Whatsoever is instituted in the service of God à sapientia Dei proficisci debet must proceed from the wisdome of God no humane device must have place or bee admitted there Simler Sauls policie in transgressing Gods Commandement in saving the best things of the Amalekites though hee thought hee did therein well and wisely yet was displeasing unto God 5. Doct. The sound of the Word in the Gospell exceedeth the sound of Aarons bels under the law Vers. 35. HIs sound shall be heard c. Herein as Lippoman well observeth appeareth the excellencie of the Gospell beyond the Law they heard then but the sound of Aarons bels Nunc audimus clarum sonitum Evangelii Now we heare the cleere sound of the Gospell c And as the understanding of a man exceedeth the capacitie of a childe and the cleere day the dawning so the cleere light of the Gospell excelleth the shadowes of the Law God providing better things for us as the Apostle saith that they without us should not be perfect Heb. 11.40 6. Doct. There ought to be order among the Ministers of the Church Vers. 40. THou shalt make for Aarons sons coats In that Aaron the high Priests coats were made more costly and glorious than his sons the inferiour Priests therein commendatur ordo inter Ecclesiae ministros is commended order among the Ministers of the Church that although Christ doe forbid bid his Disciples Luk. 22. to exercise dominion one over another as the Princes of the world doe Neutiquam tamen ordinem abrogat Yet he doth not abrogate order seeing he hath not onely distinguished them himselfe in gifts but in offices as the Apostle saith Ephes. 4. He hath given some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Doctors c. Marbach 5. Places of Controversie 1. Controv. Against the superstitious apparell of the Romish Priests Vers. 4. THou shalt make a breast-plate an Ephod and a robe and a broidered coat These Priestly garments being ceremoniall and typicall are now abolished Christ the true high Priest being come with his ornaments Therefore the Romanists doe plainly Iudaize in bringing againe into the Priestly order such varietie of garments as the Pall the Miter the Crozier staffe the Albe the Chimere the gray amice the Stoale with such like Their Priests come forth as though Aaron addressed himselfe with his attire to sacrifice at the Altar S. Paul hath given us a rule concerning these things which are but a shadow of things to come but the bodie is in Christ Coloss. 2.17 But it will bee here further asked if it bee not lawfull now for the
unto which the seat of choler is annexed betokeneth anger H●c omnia consecrarijubet He commandeth these things to be consecrated To the same purpose also Basil Quibus omnibus id nobiscum agitur ut adversus voluptatem totam quasi contra multorum capitum hydram c. By all these we are moved that we should fight against all pleasure as a serpent of many heads c. 2. So Borrhaius thereby understandeth the mortifying of the old man and by the carrying of the flesh skin and dung without the gate as a thing ignominious the suffering of Christ which tooke upon him our reproach without the gates of Jerusalem as the Apostle applieth it Hebr. 13.12 So also Gallas Marbach 3. By the foure corners of the Altar which were touched with bloud Lippoman interpreteth the shedding of Christs bloud who is our Altar and sacrifice by the which we are redeemed Terra quoque nostris sceleribus polluta c. hausto Christi sanguine reconciliatur c. The earth also being polluted with our sinnes having as it were drunke in Christs bloud is reconciled which otherwise would crie out for vengeance against us 4. Marbach by the laying the bloud upon the foure corners of the Altar would have signified the preaching of the shedding of Christs bloud and the dispersing thereof to the foure corners of the world And by the inwards liver and reines which are the seats of pleasure the willingnesse of Christ and delight in fulfilling the will of his Father So also Osiander 5. But this is the most proper signification thereof by the fat is understood the grosnesse of our nature in all the faculties and powers of the soule which are three 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the understanding in the heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the angrie motion in the liver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the concupiscence or desiring facultie in the reines all which by nature are corrupted and therefore they must be offered unto God to be purged by the fire of his Spirit So Iunius Pelargus Simlerus QUEST XVII Why the sacrifice for sinne was offered first Vers. 15. THou shalt also take one ram Now followeth the second kinde of sacrifice which was the burnt offering 1. The bullocke the sacrifice for sinne was first to be offered that thereby the other sacrifices might be accepted for as it is in the Gospell Ioh 9.31 God heareth not sinners neither doth he accept the sacrifice of sinners And hereof it was that in the solemne day of reconciliation the high Priest first prayed for his owne sinnes and made reconciliation for himselfe and his house Levit. 16.11 and then for the people So in this place the burnt offering and peace offering would not have beene accepted unlesse first the Lord were appeased toward them for their sinnes it was requisite therefore that the sacrifice for sinne should be the first whereby the rest might be sanctified 2. But it will be objected that by the same reason neither can the sacrifice for sinne be accepted because he that offereth it hath not yet obtained remission of his sinnes The answer whereunto is this That it must be considered whether he that sacrificeth for sinne doth it for his owne sinnes or anothers for others his sacrifice cannot be accepted as long as he is in sin but for his owne sins such sacrifice is available As concerning prayer likewise which is the spirituall sacrifice of Christians a man yet in his sins shall not be heard praying for another but for his owne sins he shall be heard otherwise it would follow that he which hath committed any sin should never have remission and forgivenesse of them if his prayers should not be received 3. Beside as it is in the Sacraments of the new Testament Quadam requirunt dispositionem in suscipiente quaedam non Some required a disposition and preparation in the receiver some not as in the Eucharist unlesse one examine himselfe before and so be prepared to receive that holy Sacrament he is an unworthy receiver and eateth and drinketh hi● owne damnation 1 Cor. 11.29 But in the other Sacrament of Baptisme no such disposition in the receiver is required for infants that cannot examine themselves neither have faith are thereunto admitted So the like difference there was in the sacrifices of the Law some served to prepare and dispose the offerer to performe other duties as the sacrifices for sin some required a preparation and disposition going before as the burnt offerings and peace offerings Tostat qu. 9. QUEST XVIII How the bloud of the burnt offering was bestowed upon the Altar Vers. 16. THou shalt take his bloud and sprinkle it round about upon the Altar 1. This must be understood to be all the bloud which was to be bestowed round about upon the Altar for it was not lawfull to carrie any part of the bloud to any other prophane place and it was the law of burnt offerings that all the bloud should be offered unto God Levit. 1.5 2. Concerning the manner of sprinkling or powring this bloud round about upon the Altar neither is the opinion of R. Salomon and Lyranus to be received that thinke this was not done in parte superiore sed magis circa basin in the upper part of the Altar but rather toward the bottome for it was sprinkled upon the Altar therefore not under and it was offered unto God but all offerings were offered upon the Altar And againe Levit. 1.15 it is said the bloud should be strained shed or pressed forth on the sides of the Altar it seemeth then that it was sprinkled above and so ran downe by the sides of the Altar Neither yet doth Tostatus ghesse aright that the bloud being powred aloft did run downe per partem exteriorem by the outward part or side of the Altar for it could not be conveniently so powred without as to run downe by the sides therefore the bloud was rather powred on the inside of the Altar because it was part of the burnt offering and therefore was to be consecrate unto God by fire as it is said vers 18. It is an offering made by fire unto the Lord. And by this meanes the fire licked up the grosse substance of the bloud and so dried up the vapours thereof which otherwise would have beene very noisome Simler QUEST XIX Why the hornes of the Altar are not here touched with bloud Vers. 16. ANd thou shalt sprinkle it round about upon the Altar 1. Some things are common to the burnt offering and the sacrifice for sin as that Aaron and his sons did stay their hands upon the head thereof that it was killed before the Lord and that the bloud thereof was laid upon the Altar but these things were peculiar unto it the dividing of the parts not to burne them by peece-meale one after another but to couch them better together and to lay one part upon another then the inwards and legs were washed and all was burnt upon the