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A00753 Comfortable notes vpon the bookes of Exodus and Leuiticus, as before vpon Genesis Gathered and laid downe still in this plaine manner, for the good of them that cannot vse better helpes, and yet are carefull to read the Scriptures, and verie desirous to finde the comfort in them. By the Reuerend Father in God Geruase Babington ... With a table of the principall matters contained in this booke. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1604 (1604) STC 1088; ESTC S100580 531,878 712

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therefore let the prayer of Dauid bée in our mouth and vttered from our heart O knit mee fast vnto thee that I may feare thy Name Let vs ioyne inward truth to out-ward shew For the Lord loueth trueth in the in-ward parts Absolon Ananias and Saphira Iudas c had their vncleannesie and how ended they 9 The forbidding to eate the fat was a Ceremonie that euen at home in their houses contynued them after a sort in the exercise of Religion For still they remembered the Law and obeyed the same It also as I haue noted before preached vnto them figuratiuely that for God if he so appoint all the swéet pleasures of this world riches honours friends and whatsoeuer else being as the fat pleasing and delightfull are forsaken forborne refused and left A Lesson neuer ynough learned though often repeated so cleane our hearts to this earth and this fatnesse thereof But pray often and pray heartily with Saint Augustine That the Lord would vouchsafe to giue vs what hee requireth and then require what he pleaseth Hée is strong though wée be weake can make vs as contentedly leaue them as euer we receiued and inioyed them 10 The forbidding of them to eate the blood also as before hath béene noted signified vnto them that the Lord abhorreth crueltie in euery Childe of his and will haue them mercifull pitifull gentle c. In the 30. vers The bringing of the Sacrifice with his owne hands and not sending it by others taught humilitie and dutie to God taught that euery one must liue by his owne Faith and not by anothers and may serue vs now to sée how foolish an Error it is in Poperie to giue another his beades to say them ouer for him that day c. The heauing of it vp was a Figure of the lifting vp of Christ vpon the Crosse So was also the lifting vp of the Brasen-Serpent Some haue made it a Figure also of his Exaltation after Death Hell conquered of which the Apostle speaketh when hée saith Wherefore God hath highly exalted him and giuen him a Name aboue all names that at the Name of IESUS euery knee should bowe c. That is hath highly exalted him and giuen him Authoritie and Power and Rule whereunto All shall bée subiect men women and creatures whatso-euer Little thinking of any earthly scraping with the foote at the Word of Iesus when neither word déed nor thought yéeld him reuerence due to him Popish eleuation of their consecrated Cake was neuer thought-of in this heauing and therefore vainely doe they vse this proofe The shaking of it too and fro foure wayes East West North and South shadowed the spreading of that lifting-vp of Christ that is of Christs death and Passion throughout all the world by the preaching of the Gospell 11 Lastly the brest and the shoulder were the Priests and so they were admonished to bée as Brests and shoulders to the people Brests for counsaile and direction in all their affaires Shoulders to beare-vp the burthen of care and labour of them to vnder goe Crosses and troubles in gouernment for them and for them to rest as it were and lea●e vpon in all their wo●s of heart and agonies of minde whatsoeuer A profitable Meditation for all faithfull Ministers euer thus to bée as the Lord shall inable them to their seuerall Flockes in this world And as worthy a Meditation againe for the people to increase loue and singular loue in their hearts towards their Pastors for their worke sake euen for this vse of them in all their distresses and occasions whatsoeuer A godly Pastor is a brest of swéete comfort in aduersitie and a faithfull Shoulder to leane vppon euer and to support both vs and ours when without him we shall fall fearefully and paraduenture eternally Happie are the people that haue them and God worke in their hearts to make much of them In the 37. verse sée a short Rehearsall of all the sorts These are some of the chiefest things in this Chapter CHAP. VIII IF you turne to the 28. Chapter of Exodus you shall finde the most of this Chapter there explaned and therefore a bréefer touch may serue héere It contayneth the Sacrifices and Ceremonies vsed at the Consecration of Aaron and his sonnes into the Priests Office and fitly followeth vpon the other Chapters because after Sacrifices appointed the next care is for Priests to offer and vse them according to appointment For vse and benefite to our selues First let vs note that this Office of holy Priest-hood was not of man nor from man but the Lord Almightie first instituted and ordained it by his owne expresse commandement then being ordained he confirmed the honour and reputation of it by that great Miracle of the budding of Aarons rodde and he very seuerly and fearefully punished the contempt of it in Corah and his companie whom the earth opening swallowed vp with their Wiues and children and families all their goods Upon Ieroboam also and Vzziah for in●hroching vpon it And the Law was sharpe and generall If any stranger whatsoeuer not called to this Office by GOD approach the Altar hee was to dye The Reasons why the Lord thus precisely appointed these Priests and would not leaue it to euery man to performe this Office were these and such like First it was to be knowen that not euery man No not any man but the Man Christ Iesus could appease Gods wrath satisfie his iustice and take away the sinnes of the world reconciling vs to GOD and putting vs in assurance of eternall life This could not be figured out better than by secluding all the whole Hoste of Israel from this Office and choosing but Aaron and his sonnes as Types of Christ this onely able Priest to doe as I haue said and therefore they onely were chosen and so by such ordinance the Maiestie authoritie and if wée may so speake the propriety of Christs Office resembled and shadowed Secondly God was euer the God of order decencie and comelines and therefore in his Church would haue all things done accordingly not induring any to be an inuader of an other mans right an intruder of himselfe into another mans Office and a busie-body out of Rule out of order Certaine men therefore are appointed and they onely shall doe it Others if they meddle being strangers because not called shall dye the death as you heare before Thus hath he also in the New Testament established a Ministerie and giuen some Apostles some Euangelists some Pastors and Doctors for the building-vp of his Church c. Hée also decréed that the contempt of these is the contempt of him and then iudge you first or last what punishment will insue In neither Olde nor New-Testament can we finde the Popish Priest-hood ordained to Sacrifice for the sinnes of quicke and dead For this is to denie the perfection of
persecuting Emperours till godly Constantine came A Ship hath a Gouernor to direct her and so hath the Church her Pilots also And as in the Ship the Pilot may not be blinde that he cannot sée Recks and Promontories dangerous to be touched may not be deafe that he cannot heare the aduise of others may not be vnskilfull in times and seasons with many other things euen so much lesse may the Church Gouernours be such The Mariners in a Ship may not be without hands vnable to row when there is neede no more may Men in the Church be vnfit for the places they possesse In the Ship there are many Offices and yet all care for the Ship so in the Church there are diuersity of administrations and yet al must labour for the Churches sake Some Prophets some Apostles some Euangelists some Pastors and Doctors To one is giuen by the Spirit the word of wisedome and to an other the word of knowledge To one faith to an other the gift of healing c. There be Ships of true men and Ships of Pyrats so there is a Church true and a Church false The false Church falleth when it riseth And the true church riseth when it séemes to fall The true Church endureth nothing strange in the false Church euery thing is strange Remember what you read in the Prophet of Tyrus and make vse of it to this end They haue made all thy ship bords of Firre trees of Shenir they haue brought Cedars from Lebanon to make masts for thee Of the Oakes of Bashan haue they made thine oares The companie of the Asyrians haue made thy banks of Iuorie brought out of the jles of Chittim Fine linnen with broydered worke brought frō Egypt was spread ouer thee to be thy saile blew silke and purple brought frō the Iles of Elishah was thy couering The inhabitants of Zidon and Aruad were thy mariners O Tyrus thy wise-men that were in thee they were the pilots c. Euen so so in the false Church is euery thing strange and far fet For if it come not from Rome it is not for this Church neither any account or vse made of it Strange Doctrines in euery point of Religion strange Ceremonies neuer knowne or vsed of the Apostles beades and bables infinite toyes and trickes of hallowed trash too long to be repeated all as strange as euer was any thing in Tyrus Wherfore as the fal of Tyrus was also strange so shal it be of this church in Gods time This Ship in the Gospell is said to be troubled and it noteth what the Church and euery member thereof in this world is subiect vnto The perils of the Ship are amplified by certaine Circumstances there mentioned as of time that it was night of place that it was in the Sea the midst of the Sea of contrarie windes and of Christs absence all occasions of more trouble and danger For in the night there is darknes the Rocks cannot be so well discerned there is lesse helpe than on the day time stormes and tempestes are vsually greater and many other discommodities In regard whereof the Poet Virgil could say Eripiunt subito nubes coelumque diemque Nautarum ex oculis ponto nox incubat atra Presentemque viris intentant omnia mortem This night naturall may resemble vnto vs a double night where in the Shippe of the Church is much indangered the night of ignorance and the night of sinne Either of them is a great darkenesse and yet little thought of No night so full of perill to a sayling Shippe as either of these to the militant Church Of the first Saint Basil complaineth to his Friend in his Epistle saying Ecclesia sine Pastoribus nauigatio in noote pax nusquam Christus dormit quid non igitur timendum est The sayling heere of the militant Church without Pastors and Teachers is a sayling in the night no light any where Christ is a sleepe and what therefore is not to be feared Of the second night the night of sinne the Scripture euery where it selfe complaineth shewing the distresse of the Church where such darknes abideth In the Psalme Helpe Lord for there is not one godly man left the faithfull are gone from amongst men Euery one talketh of vanitie with his neighbour they flatter with their lips and dissemble in their double heart There is none righteous no not one there is none that vnderstandeth there is none that seeketh after God Their throate is an open Sepulcher they vse their tongues to deceite The poyson of Aspes is vnder their lips Their mouth is full of bitternes and cursing Their feete are swift to shed blood Destruction and calamitie are in their wayes And the way of peace they haue not knowne The feare of God is not before their eyes What a fearefull night now is this vpon the Church yet add vnto this the 3. of Esay and many such other places and iudge if it can goe worse with any ship at Sea in the blackest night than with the Church in such dangerous darknes as this Eusebius speaketh of it and me thinke his words are much to be noted Postquam res nostrae per nimiam libertatem ad mollitiem segnitiem degenerarunt alij alios odio ac contumelijs sunt persecuti tantum non nos ipsos per nos ipsos armis ac telis verborum vbicunque contigit impugnauimus Episcopi in Episcopos irruerunt ac populi contra populos seditiones mouerunt deindé infanda hypocrisis simulatio ad summum vsque malitiae progressa fuit Diuinum iudicium pro more suo senfim ac pedetentim nos inuisere cepit c. After all things amongst vs through too much liberty grewe vnto wantonnes and sloath and euery one with hatred and slaunder persecuted another c. Bishops falling vpon Bishops and people vpon people hypocrisie and dissimulation growing to an height Gods iudgement according as it vseth by little and little visited vs c. Sée this night of the Church which wee speake of and the danger of it The second Circumstance was of place the ship was in the Sea and in the midst of the Sea not néere any Hauen farre from all helpe by land and exposed to the very full power of winde and water A great Circumstance of perill and danger as we all knowe And thus is the ship of the Church said to be when either heresies or schismes abound in it or cruell persecution rageth against it Of the first S. Basil speaketh comparing the troubles of the Church to the surges of the Sea in which the ancient bounds of the Fathers are moued euery foundation and ground of Doctrine shaken by Schismatickes and Heritickes who are as the froth raised by those waues and surges To the second we may referre those raging furies of Nero Domitian and the rest of whom Theodoret writeth thus
to it with what reuerence should we remaine in it and how vnwillingly depart from it before an end What is for the decencie of it how chéerefully should we giue and the wicked prophaners of it how seuerely should wée punish The Prophet Dauid being letted by his persecutors that he could not be present in the congregation of Gods people grieuously complaineth for it and protesteth that although he was separated in bodie frō them yet his heart was with them and that after a very earnest maner For euen as the Hart desireth the water brookes saith he so longeth my soule after thee O God My Soule is a thirst for God yea euen for the liuing God when shall I come to appeare before the presēce of God My teares haue bin my meate day and night while they daylie say vnto me where is now thy God Now when I think therevpon I poure out my very hart by my self for I wēt with the multitude brought thē forth into the house of God in the voice of praise thanksgiuing among such as keepe holy day In an other Psalme I was glad when they said vnto me we will goe into the house of the Lord. In the fifth Psalme But as for me I will come into thy house euen vpon the multitude of thy mercy in thy feare will I worship toward thine holy Temple Againe We will go into his Tabernacle and fall low on our knees before his footestoole Lord remember Dauid how he sware vnto the Lorde and vowed a vow vnto the Mighty God of Iacob I will not come within the Tabernacle of mine house or climbe vp to my bed I will not fuffer mine eies to sleepe nor mine eye lids to slumber neither the Temples of my head to take any rest Vntill I finde out a place for the Temple of the Lord an habitation for the mighty God of Iacob c. Thus earnest to haue a Temple thus earnest to go the Temple and thus grieued to be from the Temple was this holy King and Prophet in whom Gods Spirit ruled Others also that haue zealously loued to go to the Church hath God noted and chronicled in his booke both for the incouragement of such as will doo the like and for the iust condemnation of all stubborne despisers of the same Anna an olde Woman that had béene Widow foure score and foure yeeres the Lord hath caused his holy Euangelist to register this praise of her that shée went not out of the Temple but serued GOD with fastings and prayers day and night It is said of old Father Simeon that he came into the Temple by the MOTION OF THE SPIRIT when the parents brought the babe Iesus to doo for him after the custome of the lawe Gods spirit then moueth men to the Church but neuer from the Church The Pharisie and the Publicā went both vp into the Temple to pray And so good a thing as to go to the Church God wil not leaue vnnoted and praised in a very Pharisie The blessed Apostles Peter Iohn went vp together into the Temple at the ninth houre of prayer when they might haue prayed at home yet they would goe to the Church Three times in the yeare said the law of God shal all the males appeare before me in the place that I shall choose stil still to kéep them in vse and loue and care of the Church albeit they dwelled a great way off Where you may obserue that although the law reached but to the males because God gratiously considered that the women might be with childe or nurses and not able to come yet godly women when they were able and had no impediment would go vp also with their husbands such a zeale had they to the house of God where the assemblie met to serue God So went vp Anna with her husband Elcanah when shee made vnto her Son Samuel a little coate brought it vnto him from yeare to yeare So went vp the blessed Virgine to Hierusalē euery yeare at the feast of the Passeouer both of them when there were grosse and foule corruptions For when Anna went vp what read you of the Sons of Heli the Priest And when Mary went vp Scribes and Pharisies and wicked Priests were in their ruffe Yet they went vp and many other godly and wel disposed to teach vs euer not to fall out with God for mens faults nor to absent our selues from Church and Church exercises because all things are not perfect in the Ministers O let men be men and full of miseries let God be God ful of mercy to regard reward them the so loue him cleaue vnto him to his house to his seruice as for no vices faults of mē they wil be plucked seuered frō him To cōclude what a care had Christ our sauior himself of Church meetings cōming to thē obseruing of thē that he might do good in thē to many Yea euen in his childhood where was he found when his Parents had lost him but in the Temple sitting in the midst of the Doctors both hearing them and asking them questions To teach it euer to the worldes end that the place to séeke Christ and finde Christ in is the Church for in other places you may misse of him as his Parents did but neuer in the Church shall you faile if you séeke him duely It is written of S. Iohn that when he was so olde as he could not go to Church he would be carried by his schollers friends to it Chrisost Quod apud te precatus accipere non potes c. That which praying priuately thou cāst not obtain go to the Church and pray there for it and thou shalt obtaine The prayers there made saith S. Hierom. are like a great thūder-clap yea like the roaring of the sea saith Basil One sticke maketh a fire but many stickes a great and hot fire One string giueth a sound but many strings a melodious soūd c. I could not therfore refraine teares saith S. Austine at the hearing of the songs which thy Church cōgregatiō met together did vse to sing to thee O Lord what time I first began to recouer my Faith vnto thee yea me think euen yet still I feele my selfe rauished not with the singing but with the sweet matterwhich is sung c. To the Church to the Church then let our harts be euer following these blessed examples laide before vs know it well to be but a late deuise of the Diuell to vphold his kingdome by secret perswading of people frō the Church There is nothing in the Church but the Scriptures of God the Sacramēts of God holy praiers holy and comfortable exhortatiōs to amendment of life drawen out of the Scriptures all in a tongue that we vnderstand instruction of our childrē seruants for whom wée must answere if by our
to amend their light from a good heart to haue all well although they so may profit the lights accidentallye yet their owne fingers may be so burned or blacked as they had better haue dealt more charitably Disputations also haue their excellent vse to cléere matters obscure in the doctrine or light of the Church but so that they be rightlie ordered guided not béeing a strife of words whereof commeth enuie and raylings Neither froward disputations of men of corrupt mindes and destitute of truth whereof the Apostle speaketh and biddeth Timothie auoide them Both these good vses and their contrary abuses we may draw from the matter of the Snuffers which was pure gold so to teach that neither men exercising discipline to remooue darknesse and amend the light should be brasse or iron wood or worse nor disputations and explications diuers differing from the matter of the Candlesticke but both of golde the one brotherly affected and méekely minded the other true right naturall agréeing with the bodie of the Scripture with the proportion of faith and the consent of the godly members of the Church in their times Such Snuffers and snuffing wée shall euer praise God for as heartelie intreate him on the contrarie side to remooue away malice rage from vexing his poore seruants and fruitlesse contentions corrupt glosses from hurting or hindering his holy doctrine the true lampe that lighteth vnto him Thus may this Chapter profit vs if we reade it ouer and yet abstaine frō too bold wading into allegories of euery particular thing as some haue done both in times of old since not without danger and deserued blame A measure is fit and that nothing bee vrged against Faith For of the two Rules in these things to be obserued the first is as S. Paul teacheth vs That he which hath prophecie prophecie according to the proportiō of faith that is so expound things as nothing disagree from the Articles of our faith which is a short Summe of all doctrine This did not Origen obserue and therefore in all succéeding ages he still carieth a blame The secōd Rule is out of the old Prouerb The safest way is the best way The safest way is that wherein the Prophets or Apostles haue gone before who albeit they doo not euer at large fellow an allegorie yet many times they point their fingers at some giuing so the diligent Reader occasion to note more So in Esay the Storie of Gideō is referred to Christ and his Church And in S. Paul that of the paschal Lamb of Moses vayle of Abrahams two wiues the free-woman and the bond-woman of the propitiatorie c. CHAP. 26. THE former Chapter hath shewed GOD his purpose to haue a Sanctuarie or Tabernacle made and what offering to that end hee required now will this Chapter goe forward with the description of the same in what order things were placed in it To the description belong the first thirtie verses and to the order the other last seauen verses Touching the Tabernacle these things you may marke the first couering consisting of ten curtaines of fine twyned linnen and blew silke and purple and scarlet with Cherubims of broidered worke wrought as you sée in the picture of your Bible of which speake the first sir verses Then the 2. couering made of curtaines of Goates haire and spoken of from the beginning of the seuenth verse vnto the fourtéenth vpon which was put a couering of rammes skinnes coloured red and a third couering of Badgers skinnes aboue that againe all to defend the weather and to kéepe the Tabernacle drie Lastly a frame of boordes to support all these couerings and to make it a house for God and his people to méete in from the fifteenth verse to the thirtie Concerning the order of things laide down in the last seuen verses you must note that in this Tabernacle there were three distinct places or roomes First the outward Court as they called it wherein the people were where stood the Brazen Altar and the Lauer of which you reade in the next Chapter which roome was as the bodies of our Churches Secondly a place within that seuered from it wherein the Priests onely were in which roome stoode the Golden Altar of Incense the Table of the Shew-bread and the Golden Candelsticke This was called the Holy Place and it was as our quires Thirdly there was a roome within that againe seuered also by a vayle wherein did stand the ARKE couered with the Mercie seate or propitiatory and the golden Censer was there kept Chap. 40. This was called the most holy place into which the High Priest but once a yéere entered and that with blood This was resembled in the Popish time as I take it by drawing a Curtaine crosse ouer the quire and so parting the vpper end of the quire from the rest which as I remember was done by them in Lent Thus was the matter and forme of that Tabernacle 2 To make allegoricall vse of all these things one by one shoulde be vnwarranted curiositie as I haue saide Only therefore as either others haue taught vs or as wel standeth with Faith let vs walke and profit our selues And first obserue what the Apostle to the Hebrewes doth whose steps wee may safely follow and by his example apply the Holiest place of all to Christ Read the 9. and 10. Chapters of that Epistle Others not contrarie to the Scriptures haue noted by the Common Court or Tabernacle in general the visible Church of God imbracing his Word praying to him and heard of him defended by him in all perills and in the end made partaker of eternall life To this end therefore they thinke of Dauids words in many Psalmes as when he saith O how amiable are thy dwellings thou Lord God of hosts My soule hath a desire and longing to enter into the Courts of the Lord c. Againe One thing haue I desired of the Lord which I will require euen that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the faire beautie of the Lord and to visit his Temple For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his Tabernacle yea in the secret place of his dwelling shal he hide me set me vp vpon a rocke of stone Lord who shall dwell in thy Tabernacle that is who shal be a member of thy Church Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and receiuest vnto thee he shall dwell in thy courts and shall be satisfied with the pleasures of thine house euen of thy Temple All which places vnder the figure of this worldly Tabernacle as the Apostle calleth it note out the visible Church of God dispersed now far and wide ouer the face of the earth the comforts of it and the blessings in it 3 The sumptuous dignitie of euery thing so pure so cleane and so excellent noted
to Corne which except it fall into the ground and dye it abideth alone but if it die it bringeth forth much fruite And the Apostle calleth Christ the first-fruites The beating also of the Corne out of the husks shadowed the bitter Passion of our Sauiour 2 The remainder a memoriall being burned to God did remaine to the Priests so shadowing out that Christ should not obtaine Heauen for himselfe but for his Church which was represented in the Priest all being a royall Priest-hood Againe it taught how carefull God would haue his seruants for the maintenance of the Ministrie when they sée him so carefull of them and for them From which care how farre they are that spoyle them and all manner of wayes abus● them let their owne soules witnesse vnto them before the smarting day come And thus doe you profit by this Chapter CHAP. III. THE Burnt-offering and the Meat-offering thus passed ouer this Chapter returning againe to the Sacrifices of liuing creatures speaketh of the Peace-offering that is a Sacrfice of thanksgiuing offered for peace and prosperitie either generally or particularly For who sayth Iob hath beene fierce against him and hath prospered He remoueth the Mountaines and they feele not when he ouer-throweth them in his wrath He remoueth the Earth out of her place and the pillars thereof do shake c. That men therefore might know their peace and safetie both of their persons and goods to procéede only from this Almightie GOD therefore would he haue a set kinde of Sacrifice to be offered of them for the same and called a Peace-offering This kinde of Sacrifice hath something like and something vnlike to the Burnt-offering described in the first Chapter Like were these It was brought to the doore of the Tabernacle as that was the Offerers hand layd vpon the head killed and the blood sprinckled about the Altar as there c. Vnlike were these In that onely a Male might be offered in this either Male or female in that the whole was burnt in this onely a part namely the fat and as you sée vers 4. c in that no part went to any man but the skinne this was deuided into 3. parts one to the Lord one to the Priest and one to the Offerer as you see in the 7. Chapter of this Booke and Deut. 18. in that foules might bee offered in this not c. Of the former nothing néeds to be sayd againe because in the first Chapter they were sufficiently opened but of the latter a little 1 First then what might it meane that in the Burnt-Offering onely a Male might be offered and in this Peace-offering both Male and Female Answere may be made that first the Lord in this would drawe the Israelites from the manner and fashion of the idolatrous Egyptians who in their Sacrifices as Herodotus noteth vsed to offer no Female And secondly hée would herein yéeld a comfort to all women that for them Christ should die aswell as for men and they should be heires of his Kingdome by Faith in Christ aswell as men For there is neither Iewe nor Graecian saith the Apostle there is neither bound nor free there is neither Male nor Female but we are all one in Christ Iesus And ye husbands saith S. Peter dwell with your wiues as men of knowledge giuing honour vnto the women as vnto the weaker vessell Now marke euen as they which are heires together of the grace of Life that your prayers be not interrupted A swéet Sauiour then is the Lord Iesus you sée to women aswell as to men if they haue grace to beléeue and in token here of GOD would haue the Female offered aswell as the Male. It was a blessed Woman that sayd My spirit reioyceth in God my Sauiour And so may euery true-beléeuing woman say with comfort 2 In the Offering of the fat that couereth the Inwards and all the far that is vpon the Inwards c. vers 3. 4. Some haue iudged the delights and pleasures of the flesh to be shadowed which of a true childe of God are to be killed and slaine as Sacrifices were and mortified Others looking at the phrase of the Scripture which vsually noteth by the word fat the best things haue thought that herein was figured taught how men ought to offer to God euer of their best and not as we now a dayes doe of our worst For the phrase you haue it often in Scripture as when God saith All the fat of the Oyle all the fat of the wine haue I giuen thee that is the chiefest or the best Numb 18. In the Psalme God would haue fed them with the fat of the Wheat your vulgar Translation expresseth what that is euen with the finest Wheat-flower In another Psalme My soule shall be satified as it were with marow and fatnesse That is euen as it were with the best things and so in many places more For the matter who in right should haue the best if God should not of whom we haue the best and all whatsoeuer we haue Thinke then of this many wayes by your selfe andaamend what is amisse In your Tythes and Duties do you giue the best Do you offer the fat No no your conscience accuseth you fearefully I feare in this behalfe He that sweareth swaggereth all his youth and intendeth to offer vnto God his old age when for debilitie of body he can doe no more harme doth he offer to GOD the fat or the leane the best or the worst He that hath many sonnes and can indure none to serue God in his Temple but onely one that is lame and full of imperfections doth hée offer willingly the fat vnto his God Who gaue him all these branches of his body and must giue him comfort of them or else he shall neuer haue any but vnspeakable woe and griefe in stéed of it Thus may you go further in this Meditation and be the better by it in many particulars Againe because this fat appoynted to be offered was an inward thing and not an outward Others haue thought that thereby was figured how carefull we must euer be to offer vnto God our inwards without which no eternall dutie can or will please God Hypocrites are full of out-ward holinesse make cleane diligently the out-side of the platter but God abhorreth them and their painted shewes The true worshippers of God take an other course and looke that all be well within The Lord saith Dauid loueth truth in the inward parts and his Sacrifice is a troubled spirit a broken and a contrite heart within not a pale face a downe looke many out-ward sighes that are heard of men vaine fasting from flesh and surfeting vpon Fish c. Enter into thy Chamber and shut the doore to thee and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Still still offer to God thy in-wards Moses prayed within Anna prayed within that her chéeke quiuered with the vehemencie
the Lord graunt it If a traueller haue but a little money left to bring him home hee trauelleth farther in a day than otherwise hee would And so doo you by your present wants take occasion to goe forward faster and faster in a holy course that you may be at home and take your rest Away with murmuring and all euill speaking for a man is knowne by his speech as mettall is by his ring And no glasse sheweth more plainely the spots of your face than your tongue will shewe the spottes of your heart Let it gréeue you to heare others doo it for the Lord is not with them And to be sorie for a bodie from which the soule is departed not for a soule from which God is departed is not pietie saith S. Augustine Foolish men speake foolishly but our spéech should be with a graine of salt S. Augustine noteth it very well that S. Iames doth not say None can tame but no man can tame the tongue that when it is tamed wee might knowe it to be a worke of God and not of man It is walled in wich two walls the lips and the teeth to note a double triall that should be taken of our words before we speake First whether it be lawfull secondly whether it be expedient that we meane to say And if both these then speake on and spare not all shall bee well But if either of these want then kéepe the doore fast and let not that little member haue his will The good Abbot sawe both the good and the difficultie of this who being vnlearned and very desirous to be instructed when hee was come to that verse of the Psalme I saide I will looke to my waies that I offend not in my tongue bad Stay there till hee had learned that lesson which he feared would be both hard and long But happily I am too long also in this point and therefore I shut vp with this wish that no tongue may bee like that cursed Bay tree whereon the Prouerb grew Insana laurus The contagious bay tree My meaning is that no man or woman haue a tongue so venemous to make murmuring wheresoeuer it is as that bay tree would make chiding and strife as long as any iote of it were in ones hand for you sée the sinne of such a tongue and let it suffice God séeth and God heareth who as Augustine saith is euery where and cannot be mocked But happily you will thinke why then doth God suffer any murmuring to bee And I pray you remember Saint Gregorie his Answere Permittitur murmurati● detractio vt caueatur elatio GOD suffereth murmuring and detraction that it may keepe downe in men pride and arrogancie Thus much of this matter of Murmuring if not too much of purpose enlarged because the fault is too generall both in persons murmuring and in matters murmured at 4. But did they all murmure without exception No but although that Text make no exception yet we may safely think the Lord had his number among them that did not murmure at all Yet forasmuch as this number was very small in comparison of the Murmurers therefore there is no mention made of it but all in generall are said to murmure And indéede what are the godly but as wheat hid vnder a great heape of chaffe which doth not appeare so well till the chaffe be wynowed blowne away It was sufficient that the Lord well discerned both c. 5. The words of their Murmuring are expressed in the 3. verse Oh say they that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the Land of Egypt when wee fate by the flesh-pots when wee ate bread our bellies full for yee haue brought vs into the Wildernes to kill this whole companie with famine Words of such impietie as I knowe not how to begin to speake of them O impiam et nefandam vocem O wicked and horrible words saith a godly Interpreter O sinfull and cursed speech may all that reade it and taste of GOD say especially in this people so acquainted with Gods mercy grace and power so made famous ouer the world with miracles wrought for them against their enemies For what is this which they say but all one as if they had saide wee care not for our Deliuerance out of Egypt and from all the bondage and crueltie against vs and our Children wee giue GOD no thankes for it for wee were better so than thus O that hee had let vs alone by the flesh-pots and come to deliuer vs when wee had sent for him Such height of vnthankfull contempt who trembleth not to reade and shaketh not to thinke of in his heart But let it profit vs for to that ende the Lord hath Chronicled it in his Booke First then let it teache vs and tell vs yea soundlie settle in vs howe quicklie these sinfull hearts of ours slippe from their duties if once anie crosse lay holde on vs making those mercies and benefits of God vile and of no account which at the first when we receaued them were most great in our eyes most welcome and acceptable we then saying O how should we thanke the Lord enough for these thinges But is this well Doth the word teach vs thus or doo wee our selues endure this measure to be measured to vs by those to whom we haue béene good and kinde vnto No no And therefore abhorre it as most odious both to God and man and looke wee at the Rule which teacheth vs otherwise Great were the fauours that Iob had receaued from his God aduersitie commeth and that as you know in a great degrée Doth Iob vilifie therefore either in tongue or heart those former fauours and say O that God had neuer bestowed them on me No you know but holily and vertuously he embraceth Gods will and telleth his repining wife That since they had in former times receaued good things from God should not they also receaue euill when it was his pleasure Yes yes And therefore saith hee The Lord gaue and the Lord hath taken and blessed blessed be the Name of the Lord euen in taking as well as giuing and euer for all thinges that he doth The Apostles of Christ were exalted by him to the highest dignitie in his Church it was no doubt a great grace vnto them and very acceptable but afterward cōmeth persecution imprisonment whipping and many crosses Doo they then say as these Israelites O that wee had died by the hand of the Lord O that wee had neuer beene Apostles and so cast the mercies of God in his face for the troubles which followed such fauour Not so you sée but they went away reioycing that they were made worthy to suffer those things for so kinde a Lord as had exalted them to that dignitie and giuen vnto them such graces and places as then they had Let vs looke vpon such Examples as these and pray to God for strength to followe them Let vs
figuratiuely the puritie of the Church cleansed in Christ and how carefull euery member of the same must be to kéepe himselfe pure and cleane as the Lord shall strengthen him The goodly rich furniture and ornamentes shadowed out as hath béene saide the rich gifts and Graces of God powred vpon his Church and the blessed estate of it vnder Christ Of which sée a description in the Prophet Esay most notable O thou afflicted and tossed with tempest that hast no comfort behold I will lay thy stones with the Carbuncle and laye thy foundations with Saphires And I will make thy windowes with Emerandes and thy gates shining stones and all thy borders of pleasant stones And all thy children shal be taught of the Lord c. 4 The three distinct Rooms they haue applied to three kindes or measures of righteousnes thus There was an outward Court and that may represent the first step to God when a man vseth the outward Ceremonies and actions cōmanded as then of sacrificing washing and so forth now of cōming to church hearing c. Those be good things but yet a man is not gotten into the Church only into the outward Court he is gottē there remaineth For euill men may doo these outward matters Then there was an inward place called the Holy place a third within that againe called the Holyest of all So they say there is a second degree of righteousnesse or a second step to God when a man dooth these outward things hartely truly vnfeignedly And a third step when by so dooing his hart is opened and he beléeueth in him that redéemed him and for euer holdeth fast by him And now is he gotten into both the Holy place and the most holy of all Into the Holy place in possession that is to be a true and sound member of Christ his Church and into the most holy of all by hope and in expectation because after this life is ended he passeth into the presence of God in heauen and there liueth for euer 5 By the vaile men haue noted how the obscurity of those Kites and Ceremonies was figured and that the time of full Reuelatiō was not yet come in which things should be most plaine as when Christ came they were Those Types and shadowes being open in him to whom they all caried their meaning Also they noted in it how reuerently we must speak and heare of the Maiestie of God of his Word of his holy exercises whatsoeuer belongeth to Religion And lastly by the rending of the vayle frō the top to the bottome when Christ suffered plainely was shewed that then that kinde of teaching the Church by such figures was ended and they also were ended The body and truth was come had finished all things Now intending to poure out his Spirit more aboundantly and to teach more plainly whatsoeuer belonged to eternal cōfort Read S. Peters Sermon in the 2. of the Acts when the Holy-ghost fell vpon them ignorant men déemed thē drunke Thus may we profit by this Chap. leaue many particulars which idle men haue béene too busie with abounding with vnquiet thoughts and itching loue of nouelties Still still carry this in your minde how God loueth a place of publike méeting for holy exercises and to haue al his come thither vpon daies and times appointed and euer loue you the Church and be not drawen from it CHAP. 27. THis Chapter also goeth forwarde with the description of the Tabernacle and namelie of those pointes which in the former Chapter were not mentioned as the Altar of burnt offerings the Court of the Tabernacle and the Lampes continuallie burning Concerning the Altar how it was made for matter height length and breadth the Text is plaine and you may there read it in the first 8. v. For the vse to vs wée may note two things First that it was a figure of Christ as the Apostle to the Heb. expoundeth it and secondly that the Altars vsed in Popery are not warranted by this example But that the Primatiue Church vsed Communiō tables as we now doo of boords and wood not Altars as they doo of stone Origen was about 2. hundred yéeres after Christ he saith that Celsus obiected it as a fault to the Christians that they had neither Images nor Churches nor Altars Arnobius after him saith the same of the Heathens Accusatis nos quod nec Templa habeamus nec aras nec imagines You accuse vs for that we haue neither Churches nor Altars nor Images Gershon saith that Siluester first caused stone● Altars to be made and willed that no man should consecrate at a wooden Altar but himselfe and his successors there Belike then the former ages knew not that profound reason that Altars must be of stone quia Petra erat Christus because the Rock was Christ as Durandus after deuised Upō this occasion in some places stone Altars were vsed for steddinesse continuance wooden tables hauing béene before vsed but I say in some places not in all For S. Augustine saith that in his time in Aphrica they were made of wood For the Donatists saith he brake in sūder the Altar-boords Againe the Deacons dutie was to remooue the Altar Chrysostome calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy board S. Augustine men sā Domini the table of the Lord. Athanasius men sam ligneam the table of wood Yet was this Cōmunion table called an Altar not that it was so but onely by allusion metaphorically as Christ is called au Altar or our hearts be called Altars c. Marke with your selfe therefore the newnesse of this point for stone Altars in comparison of our auntient vse of Cōmunion tables let Popery his parts fall truth and sound antiquitie be regarded 2 Touching the hornes of the Altar spoken of they litterally serued to kéepe vp the sacrifice from falling of and figuratiuely noted strength so that to binde the sacrifice to the hornes of the Altar was to giue themselues wholly with a strong faith and onely to rest and trust and stay vppon him to tye al carnall affections fast also to the Altars hornes by subduing and making them captiue to God This Altar was in one place the Sacrifice in one place noting how Christ should onely once and in one place offer vp himselfe for al mankinde 3 Concerning the lampes as little doo they warrant Popish tapers and candles as the Altars before did their Altars And Christians vsed no such follies and apish imitations of things abrogated and seruing only for the time For we doo not light candles at noon day saith S. Hierom but in the night wee vse lights as a comfort against darknesse The same saith Augustin Eusebius others whose Testimonies are often vsed And Lactantius asketh whether they be wel in their wits or no that offer candles and lightes to the Author and giuer of all light
and worketh righteousnesse is accepted In the Gospell therefore there is now no difference of meates but all meate frée with Thanks-giuing That which goeth into the mouth defileth not the man but that which commeth out of the mouth that defileth the man saith our true Teacher Christ Iesus and wée must marke it His Apostle after him Saint Paul I know and am perswaded through the Lord Iesus that there is nothing vncleane of it selfe but vnto him that iudgeth any thing vncleane to him it is vncleane Whatsoeuer therefore is sold in the Shambles eat yee and aske no question for conscience sake Neuerthelesse there shall come in the latter dayes some that shall forbid to marry and command to abstaine from meates which God hath created to bee receiued with Thanks-giuing For it is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer But these forbidders and commanders are departed from the Faith giue heed vnto the spirits of errour and doctrines of Deuils They speake lyes through hypocrisie and they haue their consciences burned with an hot iron O note these things earnestly with your selfe and acknowledge Gods goodnesse in thus plainly fore-warning vs long before of that which wée sée in these dayes fulfilled Vnto the pure saith the same Apostle all things are pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing nothing is pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled c. That Commandement to abstayne from things offered to Idolles and from blood In the Acts of the Apostles was but for a time and is ended also in Christ or els it was no Ceremonial law But you thinke per aduenture with your selfe may not the Church in these dayes also forbid some kinde of meate as flesh c The answere is that cause and circumstance must bée considered Ciuilie the Magistrate may that is for the good of the Common-wealth in maintaining Mariners for seruice in helping the yong bréed of Cattle that victual may be more cheape by sparing the eating for a time and so foorth but not for Religion and Conscience as if one meate pleased God more than another for as you heard Peters sheete with all sorts of meates confuteth that many other Scriptures also which yo● may read your selfe ouer But what if one pretend the Magistates law being indéed popish and making difference of meates for religion You must néedes confesse such an one is an Hypocrite and therefore odious to God who hateth hypocrisie and cannot be mocked And what if hée do it in déede for Religion Then hée denyeth in effect that Christ is yet come and hath taken away this Ceremoniall Law of vncleane meates and as the Apostle saith of Circumcision that if we be circumcised now Christ profiteth nothing so is it true also that if wée yet hold a difference of meates for Religion and Conscience Christ to vs is no Christ and wée shall perish What if I sincerly in regard of the Magistrates Ciuill Law for the good of the Land forbeare to eate any flesh vpon times named by Law yet well knowing my libertie in Christ You doe most well and would God the Land had more of these that would obey godly Lawes according to their meaning and abandon all sinfull ryot and libertie contrary to them GOD should bée pleased the Magistrate pleased our Countrie profited and wée knowen to God and man for people of g●ouernment and order 2 But how did God in this Law of his call that vncleane which himselfe had made and saw to be good as all his workes were good Surely in respect of Creation and of themselues nothing is euill or vncleane but in respect of vse forbidden as God hath libertie to forbid at his good pleasure without impeachment of himselfe or of his Creature Euen as the Tree of Knowledge of good and euill hurt not of it selfe or the apple but the transgression after Commandement the thing in it selfe good but the vse forbidden If you say that which goeth into the mouth defileth not and therefore not the apple it is true for the apple defiled not but the breach of Gods Commandement You shall not eate So that euer it was true The Kingdome of GOD is not meate or drinke c. 3 How were beastes called vncleane in the time of Noah when they entred into the Arke before this Law was made except of themselues and their Nature they were so I answere you truely they were then so called not in respect of any fault in themselues or of eating but in regard of the Sacrifices from which God did then exclude them as here hée did from being eaten And as well might God then at his good pleasure choose what he would haue offered for Sacrifice and what not as now what he would haue eaten and what not all being his and his prer●gatiue to doe with his owne as hée pleaseth As now therefore that which was forbidden to be meat is called vncleane yet not so in Nature but in regard of vse therof forbidden so then was that called vncleane which was forbidden to be Sacrificed and not for any euill nature at the Creation but only because of this prohibition of vse that way Now let vs a little looke at the words of the Chapter 1 In the Chapter you sée three sorts Namely beasts of the Land Fishes of the Sea and Foules of the Ayre and these are distinguished or noted by Names and by Signes The Names that are héere set downe Wée are not so well acquainted with some of them because in those East-parts there were diuers creatures not knowne to vs in these Countries by their Names The Signes therfore is the best note for vs and in the beasts they are these diuiding the hoofe and chewing the cudde for so saith the Text. Whatsoeuer parteth the hoofe and is clouen footed and cheweth the cudde amongst the beasts that shall ye eate But if hée did the one and not the other or neither hée was vncleane Read the words your selfe You saw before that these were but shadowes of other things For doth God regard Oxen saith the Apostle and careth hée for diuiding or not diuiding the hoofe chewing or not chewing the cudde who made them all as they are and could haue made them all of one sort otherwise than héereby to resemble berter matters No. And therefore consider with your selfe that in this difference of beastes the Lord shadowed out a difference of men and women in this world some cleane and some vncleane The cleane beastes resemble the Godly and Elect which being clensed by Faith in Christ from their sinnes and sanctified by the Spirit of GOD earnestly and feruently loue the Word of God heare it learne it embrace it Night and Day meditate of it labouring to kéepe it by framing all their words and works counsailes and actions according to it The vncleane beasts resemble the wicked and reprobate that despise the Word and liue
bée poore and pull downe our stomackes if wée bée rich for the matter accepted with God is not glorie and Pompe but a true heart fearing to doe euill and hungring to do well resting in Christ and in nothing els as the true medicine for all our sores and most pleasing Sacrifice for all our sinnes Riches are comfortable if God giue them and grace with them but pouertie is no miserie when wée feare God 6 Lastly concerning the vse with vs wée must well consider that although this Ceremoniall Lawe of Moses be abrogated and gone yet honestie of Nature and modestie in women-kinde is neither abrogated nor gone Therefore euen still wée retaine in our Church a lawfull and laudable custome among women that they shal rest a time after child-birth to gather strength againe in their houses without comming abroad and when God shall inable them to indure the Ayer then to come to Church accompayned with their louing friends and neigbours there thankfully to acknowledge Gods great mercie to them in both giuing them safe deliuerance and blessing them with fruite of their bodyes to their comfort But sée the difference of the Mosaicall Law and this our Custome There the woman was put apart by God and so continued vncleane Fortie dayes vpon a man-childe and double vpon a Mayd With vs neither by God nor man is shee put aside for any time certaine but as the Lord shall giue strength sooner or longer she is at her libetry yet euer obseruing womanly modestie as is most fit There she was to touch no holy thing neither to come into the Sanctuarie til that time was out with vs she may touch any thing and come to the Sanctuarie when shee will with respect aboue said There was a difference betwixt a man-childe and a mayd with vs none but both alike There was a Burnt-Offering and a Sinne-Offering with vs neither the one nor the other There an Attonement was made for her with vs no such thing Lastly there shee was vncleane till all were ended with vs neuer vncleane at all And doe wée then retaine still a Iewish Purifying Farre bée from vs both vntrue speach and false iudgement Our custome you sée differeth greatly from This Iewish Ceremonie and is nothing but a néedfull thing in regard of weaknesse a modest Ceremonie in regard of womanhood and a Christian dutie in regard of mercie and comfort receiued to come to the Church and to giue him thanks most humbly and heartily that hath dealt so kindly and mercifully with vs. Let vs therefore loue to bée obedient to good things hate to be contentious and troublesome in a peaceable Church and let modestie euer make vs estéeme better of our Gouernours than of our selues There was neuer the thing since the world was made which an euill heart and a lawlesse tongue may not carpe at but the Apostles wordes must rule the Apostles Schollers VVee haue no such custome neither the Church of GOD. Women in Womens matters may haue authoritie to discerne what is fitte and why should any immodest minde meddle with them so much as to raise stirres and breake peace in things established by Law by honestie by modestie by long continuance and all good approbation I trust what is past is dead and will neuer reuiue againe God make vs thankfull for our Gouernment and Lawes and for the happy peace both of Church and Common-wealth and let vs neuer bée the breakers of it Amen Amen And so no more of this Chapter CHAP. XIII IN this Chapter you haue an other kinde of vncleanesse spoken of namely the Leprosie a disease verie fearefull and vgly Whereof three sorts are named to wit Of the bodie of the Garments and of the house for all these might be infected and vncleane And learned men are of opinion that after some speciall and peculiar maner vnknowne this day to vs the Iewes were troubled and afflicted with this disease For profite and vse to vs when we read these thinges which is all my drift thus wée may better our selues and gather good First let vs marke who were appointed Iudges hereof to tell when any man was infected with this maladie surely not all the Leuites but Aaron onely and his Sonnes who were Priests By which our popish Teachers would gather an argument for their auricular confession and ea●e shrift that as these Priests were made Iudges of this contagion of bodie by viewing and looking on it so they should bée Iudges of the Leprosie of the soule by hearing confessions of men and women and iudging of the qualities of their seuerall sinnes But alas it hangeth together as the sand doth the one hauing expresse warrant and the other none And if it were good to gather arguments in this sort we might rather conclude the contrarie that forasmuch as Aaron and his Sonnes were not made Iudges of any secret matter but onely when it was broken out into plaine apparance of a swelling in the skinne of a scabbe or a white spot c. Therefore neither must these Romish Masters meddle with hidden and secret thinges as they doe but onely with matters publique and publiquely Let this idle collection therefore of theirs goe and we truely and rightly learne by this that herein was figured not that Romish Priesthood but the pure and holy Priesthood of our blessed Sauiour who doth sée and know handle and touch regard and heale all our spirituall spots as these Priests here dealt with this bodily infection So that if wée be vncleane wée cannot deceiue him but full well He séeth and knoweth vs to be so He iudging vs so putteth vs apart for such and till sorrow sinking into our hearts for the same we repent and take hold of him by Faith that we may be healed by him we neuer recouer any health and when we doe then are wée cured and so pronounced by him to our eternall ioy and comfort Away therefore with our figge leaues for they cannot couer vs if I be a swearer an vncleane liuer a drunkard an enuious person a slaunderer or such like I am a Leper a spirituall Lèper and Christ is Iudge whome I cannot mocke he wil neuer say I am cleane till indéede I be so and so without amendment of life I must out of the host that is out of the Church and number of his chosen to die for euer in my impuritie Thinke thinke of it while you haue time 2 When you read in the fourth verse of shutting vp the partie for seuen dayes and then to looke on it againe you may note with your self how greatly God hateth hasty rash and vncharitable iudgement A thing which many men and women otherwise honest and good are carried away withall to their owne great hurt not onely in soule but in worldly reputation also and to the bitter and biting discomfort of those whom they ought to loue and iudge well of Nay you may reason further with your selfe thus that if in
although it were not of the nature of other Cloudes but a more Diuine thing higher than mans minde is able to comprehend by which in the daie time the heate of the Sunne was tempered and in the night a comfortable light giuen saith Greg. Nyssen writing of the life of Moses The comfort and vse I take from it is this that in new perilles the Lord can haue new remedies at his pleasure Now before vs and now behinde vs and euermore with vs if wee bee with him by a sure trust in his goodnesse blessed be his Name euermore for it The winde which the Lord vsed to cause the Sea to runnebacke was not for any néede of such meanes but that he might shew his power ouer all creatures to vse them commaund them at his wil. So by the water of Iorden he healed Naaman when he could haue healed him without it By clay and spittle he opened eies and diuers such things in the Scriptures when at other times by his only Word he did as much without any meanes at all Then went they through on dry land and the waters stood as a wall vnto them on the right hand and on the left If you aske how they durst aduenture to passe so dangerously seeing the waters might haue gushed together againe and haue ouerwhelmed them The Epistle to the Hebrewes telleth vs That by faith they passed through the Red-sea as by dry land which when the Egyptians had assaied to doo they were swallowed-vp If you looke at the waters on either side you may see the condition of Gods Children in this world beset on the right side with a floud of prosperitie beset on the left side with a floud of aduersitie yet through a true faith walking through both and hurt by neither they arriue on the other side safely when by either of these many others are destroyed pray we then euer for this Faith 8 The Egyptians féele the Lord against them and then would flie but it was too late And let it euer preach vnto our mindes the danger of deferring our conuersion to GOD. For when wée would wée shall not but euen perish and die as here did the Egyptians O what newes in Egypt was this when it came what woe and what weeping what wailing and wringing of hands by wiues for their husbands children for their Fathers and friends for their friends which now were deuoured of the cruell Sea But it is too late Had I wist commeth euer behinde saith the old Prouerbe And therefore a notable Example is this to all degrees one to perswade with an other vnto Religion and the true seruice of God that such fearefull newes may neuer be brought to our friends of vs. For the Lord will not euer beare with our contempt but as here was a heauie Morning when the Sea roaring returned together and they flying and crying in the middest of it so assuredly shall there be either a morning or an euening of miserie vnto them who proudly disdaine to be taught of their God happy are they that thinke of it in time 9 The glorious victorie of the Church here is a thing worthy all due consideration yeelding vs comfort to the worlds end in all our perplexities For how doo they see their enemies destroyed and themselues deliuered how triumph they in Songs of ioy and gladnesse in the next Chapter verse 1. c This is the Word and we must beléeue it these are his promises and we must be strong in them The Church is Christs body therefore it shall not be forsaken It is the house of God therefore it shall not be forsaken He hath bought it with his bloud Acts 20. 28. 1. Pet. 1. 18. therfore it shall not be forsaken It is his spouse Hosea 2. 19. 2. Cor. 11. 2. Apoc. 21. 2. 9. therefore it shal not be forsaken It is built vpon Christ Mat. 16. 18. therfore it shal not be forsaken In a word the Ga●es of Hell shall not preuaile against it neither of his kingdome shall there be any end Math. 16. Luke 1. 33. The harmers of his Church shall in their time be punished and the fauourers of it euer blessed I will blesse them that blesse thee saith God to Abraham and curse them that curse thée Sehon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Basan with all the rest of that sort how did they fall before Gods people and were destroied The Great Mona●chies of the world the Chaldaean the Persian the Graecian and the Roman which were not obedient to his Truth and fauourers of his flocke where are they On the other side how blessed be the Midwiues that were kinde vnto his people how saued he Rahab and all her familie The Widow of Sarepta lost not her loue to his Prophet neither the Ethiopian in Ieremie nor any other So is his Church right deare vnto him you plainely sée and it is the comfort strong of euery member For the loue of the body draweth a loue of the hand and foote and euery part we see in experience by our owne bodies No part can perish without a great greife to the whole neither the vilest part bee but a little touched without an offence to the very heart What comparison betwixt vs and Christ in our loue and his None none and the more he exceedeth vs the more is our comfort ioy We neuer saide that God wanted a Church before Luther as wee are either foolishly vnder●●ood or maliciosly reported but we know he blesseth not all times alike punishing mans ingratitude often with Cloudes yet euer he hath his people and euer shall haue to the end In regarde of which variable estate the Church is resembled to the Moone which after full hath a wanne and neuer abideth still full It is compared to a ship tosse● and tumbled in the Sea and in great perill many times of which you may often thinke with much profit How the Arke of Noe●igured ●igured the Church you may reade in the Notes vpon Genesis Chapter 6. And if you desire to peruse the old Fathers these marginall places may direct you Nauis non ex vno ligno constat sed ex diuersis c. A ship is not made of one board saith Epiphanius No more dooth the Church consist of one man or of one sort of men A Ship is narrow at the beginning and then much broader in the middle so the Church at first is small and farre greater in time yea euen spread abroad in the world Narrow and straight is Abel and Sheth little and small in No● and his famil●e but seuenty Soules came into Egypt yet thousands thousands grew of thē Narrow was the Ship in Elias time but Achab Iezebel beeing gone it grew broader The Apostles Disciples were but few but when at one Sermon there were added three thousand Soules the Ship you see grew broader And so of those