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A07348 Ecclesiastica interpretatio: or The expositions vpon the difficult and doubtful passages of the seuen Epistles called catholike, and the Reuelation Collected out of the best esteemed, both old and new writers, together with the authors examinations, determinations, and short annotations. The texts in the seuen Epistles of Iames, Peter, Iohn and Iude are six and forty. The expositions vpon the Reuelation are set forth by way of question and answer. Here is also a briefe commentary vpon euery verse of each chapter, setting forth the coherence and sense, and the authors, and time of writing euery of these bookes. Hereunto is also annexed an antidot against popery. By Iohn Mayer, B. of D. and pastor of the Church of Little Wratting in Suffolke. Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1627 (1627) STC 17731; ESTC S112551 448,008 564

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Eph. 2.20 Christ Iesus himselfe being the chiefe corner stone Not that Christ only is not the foundation of the Church but because they are the chiefe next vnto him and by them others are built vpon Christ This is therefore thus set forth for honours sake vnto them being the most eminent in this spirituall building The obiection which is made from hence that the Church triumphant in heauen cannot bee meant here because the faithfull shall not then depend vpon the Apostles as they doe in this life for so much as here they need their writings for instruction and direction this I say is most weake for they are not therefore said to be foundations in heauen because others depend vpon them but for the eminency of their glory which is in the highest degree as they haue beene instruments of greatest glory to God in this world And the city lieth foure-square Vers 16. and the length is as large as the bredth and he measured the city with the reed twelue thousand furlongs the length and the bredth and the height of it are equall This foure-square figure serueth to set forth the firme and vnmoueable standing of the faithfull in that glorious estate Bullinger the number of furlongs here mentioned is thought by some to be the length and bredth and height seuerally each of them being twelue thousand But I assent rather to them that account this to be the whole compasse of the city Pareus comprehending the bredth and length for they are plainly cast vp together so that there being foure sides to measure each is but three thousand furlongs that is three hundred seuenty and fiue of our English miles a city of wonderfull greatnesse farre exceeding old Babylon Herod lib. 1. which is also described by Herodotus to bee foure-square but in compasse onely foure hundred and fourescore furlongs the height was two hundred cubits and the thicknesse of the wall fifty cubits but the compasse of this is twelue thousand furlongs the height equall to the length or bredth that is three thousand furlongs and the thicknesse followeth one hundred forty and foure cubits It is set forth to be thus large because there is roome enough for all the faithfull and of an equall bredth and length and so each side equall to shew that it consisteth alike of people of all parts of the world for as much as the Gospell was sent to all the world It is of this extraordinary height and thicknesse to shew that there is no getting into it but by the gates and it is impregnable for strength That the thicknesse of the wall is meant when it is said Hee measured the wall thereof 144. cubits must needs bee yeelded because the height was described before And it is to be noted how all the numbers here goe vpon twelue according to the number of the twelue Tribes and the twelue Apostles for twelue being multiplied by twelue make one hundred forty and foure to shew that onely true Israelites such as are built vpon the holy Apostles are members and parts of this building The measure whereby the city is measured is said to be of a man which is the measure of the Angell Haime Some vnderstand this of the shape of a man wherein the Angell appeared and so it was the measure of a man that is of the Angell in appearance like vnto a man but this is ouerthrowne by that which went before at the first comming of the Angell to talke with Iohn where it is said one of the seuen Angels came vnto mee not one like vnto a man Some therefore thinke that it is meant Viega● that man is an Angell in the estate here described according to that of our Sauiour Christ They shall be as the Angels for they come into the place of Angels but no such thing as I take it can be meant here because not man but man regenerate and sanctified shall be as an Angell and in this state he is not wont to be spoken of by the name of man but the faithfull or Saints Lastly the most genuine and most receiued exposition is Bull●nger Pareus Napier that the measures of furlongs and cubits here measured by are such as bee vsuall amongst men for this kinde of measure was the measure which the Angell vsed and he saith which is of the Angell that is which is the measure vsed by the Angell Whereas this is vsed as an argument to proue that the Church triumphant is not meant here but the Church militant vpon earth because the measure of a man is vsed it is very weake seeing the onely end of this explication of the measure is for our vnderstanding of the iust length breadth height and thicknesse of the wals of the city as this Prophecy is directed to vs and not to shew where this city is Hauing thus described the measures hee proceedeth next to the matter of the building And the building of the wall was of Iasper Vers 18. and the City was pure gold like vnto cleare glasse The Iasper stone is much celebrated in this booke he that sitteth vpon the throne is likened to a Iasper and when the glory of this city was said to be as the glory of God the light of it is immediatly said to be as of a Iasper here the wall is of Iasper and the prime stone of the foundation is Iasper This stone is of a most beautifull greene colour and so may well set forth a state like the Spring alwayes greene neuer withering or decaying by age such as is the glorified estate of the Saints in heauen The cleare crystall 〈◊〉 also spoken of before in describing her light vnto which pure gold is also added here these being things of greatest ex●●●ency and most cleere and pure that hereby we might vnderstand what the excellency of this estate is and more eagerly ensue after it as worldly men doe after gold and pretious stones Vnto the foundations more particularly are ascribed particular pretious stones with which they are said to be garnished for vpon the foundations were inscribed the names of the twelue Apostles as representing them now in their glorified estate who as a foundation in a building are the chiefe par● of this ●●●●uall edifice These foundations therefore are set forth th●● garnished to shew that as all this building is glorious so the Apostles who haue beene the chiefest instruments ●●orifying God vpon earth are most glorious The ornament of the first foundation is a Iasper stone Vers 19. the second a Saphire the third a Calcedony c. Some will haue these stones disposed vnto this order according to the order of the Apostles so that the first in the nature and vertues thereof is fitted vnto the first of the Apostles Peter and the other to the rest applying to each Apostle one Arethas Andreas but here some make Paul the second and some Andrew The Iasper stone they say doth well
Iewes are declared in all places to bee the stiffest enemies to the faith to say nothing of the confounding of the tribes so together as that they shall not afterwards be knowne asunder I preferre also that reason from the Church militant and triumphant here set forth For the promiscuous setting downe of the names of the tribes one obserueth that they are reckoned fiue wayes in the old Testament ●l Viegas and yet to none of them doth this agree one according to their birth and so it is Renben Simeon Leui Iudah Dan Nephtalim Gad Asher Issachar Zabulun Ioseph Beniamin 2. According to the order of Iacobs blessing them and so in stead of Dan comming in in the fift place it is Zabulun Issachar Dan Gad Asher Nephtalim Ioseph Beniamin 3. According to the order of their standards Numb 2.4 According to the places of their habitation in the land of Canaan and he saith there may bee a fift according to their dignity beginning with Iudah and Ioseph Touching the obseruing of no order Beda Rupertus Richard de Sancto Victore Primasius c. here something hath beene already said Others hold that there is an excellent order in the force and signification of the names Iudah signifieth praise Reuben the sonne of vision Gad girt to Asher blessed Nephtalim latitude Manasseh forgetfulnesse Simeon hearing Leui changed Issachar a reward Zabulun habitation Ioseph addition Beniamin the sonne of a right hand And so by this order in setting downe these names they thinke is intimated that such as confesse and praise God shall see his Son and be girt vnto his warres and so become blessed of God whereby his heart shall bee inlarged so towards heauenly things as that he shall forget earthly and neglect them hearkening onely to the heauenly and being thus changed into a new man hee shall be rewarded God will dwell in him and increase all heauenly graces more and more till at the last he come to haue a place at his right hand in eternall glory This resolution I confesse is very ingenious and holy but for so much as the diuersity of peoples sealed seemeth rather to bee intimated by these tribes euery one differring from another and not the seuerall steps of grace by which the seruants of God passe on to glory I rather incline to that country-man of ours Brightman who hath beene most industrious about this Reuelation vnderstanding this order of the order of diuers nations cleaning to the true saith of Christ being considered according to their dwelling East West North and South for so we shall finde the dwellings of these tribes to haue beene as that they which first were famous for the truth of the Gospell held fast amongst them answer to Iudah and so others For when after the time of Constantine the great the Arrian heresie ouer-spread other parts Assyria the South part was cleare answering to Iudah in the South of Canaan after when the Vandals ouerran the South and West the Churches in the East were cleare answering to Reuben and Gad in the East of Canaan After this the Saracens ouer-running the East these North parts of Britaine were famous for withstanding Popish corruptions two thousand Monkes of Bangor at once refusing the Popes yoke and this answereth to Asher and Nephtalim in the North of Canaan After Leo Isaurus in the East and Carolus maguus in the West together opposed images answering to Manasseh on either side of Iordan East and West After this the true Church appeared not in any certaine place but lay hid as Simeon and Leui dwelt scattered amongst the rest of the Tribes After this notable conuersions were made of the Northerne Polands Saxons Danes Sueuians c. answering to Issachar and Zabulon in the North of Canaan After this the Waldenses and Albingenses were famous the one dispersed thorow France the other thorow Germanie answering to Ioseph and Beniamin inhabiting middle regions For though I doe not approue of euery thing here as the extending of the sealing onely from Gonstantine to the Waldenses whereas doubtlesse all faithfull Christians in euery place vnder the Gospell from the first propagation thereof till Antichrists time are set forth as sealed yet doubtlesse these tribes doe represent the parts of the Church comming on successiuely as God in his prouidence directed the Gospell vnto them Lastly for the leauing out of Dan and Ephraim it is no new thing to leaue out Dan for 1 Chron. 2 3 4 5 6 7. where the generations of the seuerall tribes are reckoned vp Dan is left out as a tribe that had rent it selfe from the rest euer since they tooke Laish and dwelt there apart from the rest setting vp an idoll and Priest of their owne Iudg. 18. Grasser will haue the mystery of Antichrists double power spiritual and temporall in these two tribes set forth 1 King 12. euen till the time of the captiuity And touching Ephraim that might also be well left out in detestation of idolatry so frequent in the kingdome of Israel whereof Ephraim was the head by reason of Ieroboam of that tribe who was the first Authour hereof vnto them Touching the signe in the forehead though some stand for the signe of the Crosse pressing that of Ezec. 9. where they are said to be marked with that which of old was written in the forme of a Crosse till the letters after the captiuity were altered by Ezra to auoid communion herein with the Samaritans yet the soūder opinion followed by most is that the seale is Gods grace so imprinted in the heart as that they are hereby setled in the way of saluation but said to be set vpon the forehead because that is the most eminent part of the body and open to the view to shew that these are well knowne to the Lord though men not able to distinguish them from others and also how bold and constant they are in professing the Gospell against the fiercest oppugners as the followers of the beast are afterwards said also to beare his marke in the forehead or right hand to shew their impudency in errour and how by humane industry they further his kingdome all that they can According to this exposition of setlednesse in grace speaketh the Apostle saying The foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. 2.19 and hath this seale set to God knoweth who are his And this may be a great comfort to all the godly in that amidst all the persecutions and troubles of the world they shall be sure to prosper and proceed in the way to euerlasting saluation God taketh notice of euery one of them hath them euer in his fight and is so intent vnto their best good as that he staieth the destruction of the world till euery one of them be well prouided for Onely let vs embolden our selues and not be ashamed to serue God against the mocks and despights of the world thus shewing the print of his seale in our foreheads As for
that is he stirreth vp the Pope a secret enemy in the West and the Turke an open enemy in the East by fire and sword to destroy the company of those that stand for the truth which howsoeuer it hath beene in a great part fulfilled already yet the most remarkable time is to come wherein being gathered together in greatest multitudes they shall be by the immediate hand of God destroyed as with fire from Heauen so that they shall neuer be able to make head againe as was before set forth vnder the sixt Viall Chap. 16.16 by the place called Harmageddon into which they should bee gathered Which time the Deuill being concluded in hell should not in such manner seduce any more till the comming of the Lord to iudgement which is next set forth And I hold with those that say the phrase here is borrowed from Ez●echiel because of the similitude of that which was then done and now Then the people of God being returned from the captiuity were assaulted by Seleucus and Nicanor and Antiochus c. out of Asia Minor and Syria but were mightily deliuered by Iudas Machabeus and his brethren being extraordinarily stirred vp and assisted from Heauen Ezech. 38.22 Ezech. 29.6 and therefore their ouerthrow that came against them is set forth by fire and brimstone and againe by a fire which the Lord threatneth to send vpon Magog For in like manner the people of God in these latter daies being come out of the captiuity of Popery are assaulted with innumerable enemies but the Lord doth mightily preserue them and disappoint their enemies of their purpose and will we doubt not when greatest need shall be at the last yet more miraculously saue his by destroying their enemies both Turkes and Papists when they shall be in an highest attempt against them That the Scythians came of Magog who are the present Tukes and Tartars is agreed by all Writers and that Meshech and Tubal ouer which Gog is said to be the chiefe Prince are Iberia that is Spaine and Cappadocia Ieron de inter Heb. nom Ierome sheweth De interpr nominum Hebr. Touching other exposi●ions and first for that of enemies in generall it is too large and taketh away from the light giuen here to see more particularly into this matter for that which restreineth it to the Turkes onely seeing two names are here vsed I see no reason why both should be referred to one sort of enemies especially there being two that continually infest the Church of God so aptly figured out by them Touching the fire and the casting of the Deuill into the lake of fire and brimstone I cannot thinke it is to bee meant of the last iudgement and of the fire of that great day of the Lord because when that day shall come there shall be a generall security eating and drinking marrying and giuing in marriage and not warring and sighting for if an end of these warres should be made by the Lords comming to iudgement how should the faithfull haue time here to reioyce and to giue thankes vnto to God for their greatest enemies ouerthrowne It is true there may be some relikes of the Antichristian Sect after this 2 Thess 2.8 in regard of which it is said that Antichrist shall bee abolished by the brightnesse of the Lords comming but that hee shall stand to be able to make so great a power as is here described is most improbable The Turkes haue had hitherto great successe in their warres against Christians but they whom they haue fought against haue beene as bad as themselues or worse and therefore they haue beene armed to become a scourge vnto them as was shewed chap. 9. But when they shall come in their greatest power against the true Christians of the Reformed Religion though the Papists shall ioyne with them to make their Armies innumerable God will from Heauen fight against them and confound them In confidence whereof let vs be resolute and comfort our selues if we should see greater preparations of warre made by all our enemies for we shall vndoubtedly triumph ouer them all at the last Quest Vers 11. 4. What is meant by the appearance of a great white Throne and the comming together of all before him that sate vpon it and the fleeting away of Heauen and Earth from before him what are the Bookes and the other booke called The Booke of life according to the contents whereof all were iudged and according to their workes and how are death and hell cast into the lake of fire Answ Brightman There is no great difference amongst Expositors here onely some turne all that is said into an allegory of the conuersion of the Iewes holding that by the dead here set forth to rise together they are meant who haue beene all this time dead as it were in infidelity But the place is so plainly of the generall resurrection at the last day and the arguments so sleighty to cause vs to vary from the common receiued exposition which is of the generall resurrection and the exposition which applyeth it to the Iewes in the particular passages here is so wrested and forced Pareus as one a learned Writer hath well noted as that this may by no meanes be admitted The chiefe reason of this interpretation is drawne from that which followeth Chap. 21.22 because the Authour of it conceiueth that the description of the new Ierusalem with the circumstances cannot agree to the state of the Church triumphant in heauen and therefore a famous Church to come vpon earth must needs be pointed at there but how these may be applied to the state of the Church triumphant in heauen shall appeare in their proper place In the meane season I follow the common exposition of all Writers holding that the generall resurrection and proceedings which shall bee at the last day are here set forth for euery place of Scripture is properly to be vnderstood vnlesse there be a necessity of admitting a figure because otherwise either some absurdity will follow or it will not agree with the analogy of faith neither of which can be iustly said here He that sitteth vpon a great white Throne is the Lord Iesus who appeareth thus to shew his glory for white is a signe of glory Mat. 17.1 the heauen and earth are said to fly away from before him to declare the fiercenesse and intolerablenesse of his anger at that day which is such that neither earth nor heauen are able to beare it a circumstance very vnfit to bee applied to that most notable worke of grace in bringing the Iewes home to the faith They shall fly away in regard of their externall forme and figure for they shall be changed as a vesture the heauens melting with heat and the earth flaming with fire but their substance shall still remaine after this called a new heauen and a new earth as most hold The dead that stand before the Iudge are both great and small
to shew both the vniuersality of the iudgement that shall be Note and the terriblenesse of the Iudge to the wicked so that nothing shall be able to abide his presence and the iust proceedings according to which all shall bee sentenced because they shall be by bookes and according to mens workes and lastly the wofull estate of all that haue done euill after this time they shall be cast into the lake of fire and the ioyfull estate of those that haue done well death and hell is abolished vnto them so that they shall stand in feare of these enemies no more What is written in the booke of life is kept so secret that wee cannot know it but they whose workes are euill may be sure that they are not therein written the booke of life and the register of mens workes doe parallel one another Wouldest thou then see into this great secret goe to thy workes and consider them if they be good thou art assuredly written in the booke of life otherwise thou mayst bee sure that thou art not and then the lake of fire gapeth for thee Psal 34.12 Be not deceiued therefore by thy faith but wouldest thou liue long and see good dayes refraine thy tongue from euill and thy lips that they speake no guile cease to doe euill seeke peace and ensue it Attend to that direction of our blessed Sauiour giuen to him that asked what he should doe to be saued 1 Tim. 6.7 keepe the Commandem●nts and if thou be rich forget not to distribute of thy goods to the poore and so lay vp to thy selfe a good foundation CHAP. XXI IN this and the Chapter following vnder the figure of the new Ierusalem the state of the Church triumphant in heauen is set forth as it shall be after the day of iudgement according to the opinion of all Expositors Brightman Forbs except two of ours who vnderstand it of a flourishing Church vpon earth after the Pope and Turke destroyed and the Iewes conuerted and some Popish Writers who expound it of the Church of Rome whom Alcasar a Iesuite mentioneth and confuteth But that it cannot possibly bee vnderstood of the Church vpon earth in any time or age is most plaine first because this vision followeth after the vision of the last great day of iudgement and therefore in order should represent somewhat after that 2. Because the condition of the Church is such here as that it can neuer be free from suffering and sorrow All that will liue godly must suffer persecution Rom 8.17 wee shall bee glorified with Christ if we suffer with him Ioh. 16. 1 Pet 5.8 and In the world ye shall haue trouble and if at any time there bee outward peace yet the Deuill like a roaring Lion goeth about continually seeking whom he may deuoure and there are bodily pangs and sicknesses and other occurrences that doe afflict whilest this life l●steth Heb. 12.10 for if wee should bee without chastisement wee should be bastards and no sonnes And lastly there is sinne euer here in the best which maketh them to sorrow Matth. 5.5 according to that Blessed are they which mourne for they shall be comforted But the new Ierusalem here described is without all sorrow and paine vers 4.3 Because the Church here described hath the glory of God which is all one with being glorified in heauen so as cannot said of any vpon earth vers 11.4 Because this Church is without a Temple needeth no light of the Sunne c. vers 22 23. whereas the Church vpon earth must alwayes haue a place to resort vnto and must be enlightened and vpheld in grace by meanes and shall euer need the light of the Sun and Moone 5. Because no vncleane thing is in this Church vers 27. whereas in this world the kingdome of heauen is euer like a corne field with tares in it like vnto ground with thornes and briars and stones in it and such as that it may be said alwaies Many are called but few are chosen Lastly to put vs out of doubt that no state of the Church here is meant but in heauen he saith that they shall see his face Chap. 22.4 for this shall neuer be till we come in heauen 1 Cor. 13. then shall we see as we are seene and herein standeth the perfection of blessednesse 1 Ioh. 3.3 for now we are the sonnes of God but it doth not yet appeare what we shall be for we shall see him as he is To say nothing of the new heauens and the new earth 2 Pet. 3.13 which Saint Peter speaketh of when he hath shewed how the world shall bee destroyed by fire but wee saith he looke for a new heauen and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse These reasons I thinke may satisfie any reasonable man against the probabilities that are that it should not be meant of the Church triumphant in heauen except the phantasticall Chiliast who may thinke to reconcile all these to his imagined ioyfull time of a thousand yeeres vpon earth after the first resurrection of the Martyrs onely for they apply all this to that imaginary condition But that hath beene sufficiently confuted already and whereas any thing may seeme to make against the common tenent of the glorified estate of the Church here set forth it shall be answered in the proper place And so I hasten to the exposition of the difficulties here as they offer themselues in order And I saw a new heauen and a new earth Vers 1. for the first were passed away neither was there any more sea By the new heauen and earth here most Expositors vnderstand not any new creation but so great an alteration in the heauens and the earth as if they were made new For these heauens and earth say they shall not cease to bee in regard of their substance but become more glorious as is taught Rom. 8.19 being no more subiect to corruption Neither shall they be renewed that we might again haue a dwelling here for we shall ascend 1 Thess 4. and euer remaine with the Lord aboue but to intimate the new glorified estate of the faithful if the creatures which were made to serue them shall come now to a new glorious condition then much more they for whose seruice they were made as Bullinger speaketh Bullinger But I haue already deliuered my coniecture vpon 2 Pet. 3.8 for the first heauen and earth were passed away This was shewed before Chap. 20.11 and because no mention was there made of the sea here it is added the sea was no more that we might not conceiue but that all the parts of the world fled from the Lords angry presence Bullinger Some thinke that nothing else is meant but that the sea was altered to a more glorious estate euen as the heauen and the earth but it is to be noted that he speaketh onely negatiuely of the sea but both affirmatiuely and negatiuely of the
City in this light they walke that enioy it as all the saued of the Gentiles shall doe and by the Kings of the earth they vnderstand all Regents temporall and spirituall politicke and Ecclesiasticke who bring their glory and honour hither when hauing drawne many by their care and industry in their places to piety they present them before the Lord in Heauen For this is immediatly after set forth to bee the glory here spoken of when it is added Vers 26. Vers 26. And they shall bring the glory and honour of the nations into it for the nations and peoples who haue embraced the faith by their meanes are their glory as Saint Paul calleth the Corinthians his glory 2 Cor. 1. 1 Thes 2. Pareus Napier and likewise the Thessalonians Others agreeing in the light here spoken of yet differ a little about the Kings bringing of their glory hither for they say that they bring their glory hither when as they referre their power and authority to the honouring of the Church so comming at the last to enioy this glorious light for thus the Prophet Esay speaking of the same setteth it forth in words a little different from these Esa 60.3 The nations shall walke in thy light and the Kings in the splendour of thy rising It is againe obiected here that it cannot bee meant of the Church triumphant in heauen but of the flourishing Church of the Iewes that shall be vpon earth because the nations are distinguished here-from so as they shall not bee in heauen in the participation of that light for all shall enioy it immediatly not the nations by the meanes of the Iewes as they are set forth here to doe Againe all earthly kingdomes being in the end destroyed what glory shall the kings of the earth haue to bring into heauen They may indeed be rightly said to bring their glory to the Church when as they come in with their subiects to the embracing of the faith of Christ but otherwise there can be no good exposition of this passage I answer that the nations are not spoken of for distinction but for necessary resolution that the faithfull amongst them should enioy this glorious light as well as the faithfull of the Iewish nation who might easily bee vnderstood by the generall type here represented the new Ierusalem now lest any man should doubt whether the faithfull amongst the Gentiles should not partake of this light also he resolueth it by saying And the Gentiles that are saued shall walke in the light of it for as much as they concurre to the making of this holy City Touching the Kings bringing of their glory to it I take it that nothing else is meant but their accession vnto this building so many of them as haue beene wise and haue serued the Lord against the Whore as it was declared that they should Chap. 17.16 though at the first there were not many Noble yet the truth should so preuaile in time as that the Church should not only consist of the vulgar sort but of Kings and Princes also who are the glory and the most magnificent amongst the nations and as they helpe to constitute the spirituall building in this world so shall they be a part of this new Ierusalem in the world to come when all their worldly glory shall seeme nothing to them to the glory which they shall then partake of for which sense that of the Prophet Esay before alleaged maketh notably Esa 60.3 The nations shall walke in thy light and Kings in the splendour of thy rising And so it is no more than as if it had been said As this City shall be infinitely rich for gold and all the costly pretious stones and glorious like vnto the glory of God so they which seeme most glorious in this world the Kings of the earth that be of the faithfull and not the common sort of people shall ioy to bee made partakers of this glory bringing in as it were and laying at the Lords feet all their temporall honour and glory as nought worth in comparison of this as the faithfull in the Primitiue Church brought in their goods and laid them at the Apostles feet willingly depriuing themselues thereof that they might enioy their blessed and heauenly society in comparison of which they counted all this world as nothing All this then serueth onely to expresse yet more fully the glory of the new Ierusalem The gates of it shall not be shut Vers 25. It is the manner of citizens to shut their gates in the night to preuent danger because the world is full of euill disposed persons by reason of whom they may iustly feare to haue them stand open then but this state here described enioyeth perpetuall day here is no night neither is there any feare of enemies for they that are in heauen dwell most securely in this respect and therefore the gates are set forth to be continually open Yet whatsoeuer is vncleane is not permitted to enter for the Angels stand at the gates to keepe it out O thrice and foure times happy are they which shall partake of this estate Dost thou loue to be rich to be glorious to bee safe from danger to bee for euer free from the assaul●s of enemies and the vexation of such as be of corrupt and filthy conditions then loue the truth and walke according to it and abandon errour for such onely as cleaue to the truth and are constant against all temptations haue a part in this admirable City CHAP. XXII IN this Chapter it is proceeded in the description of other commodities of this City keeping to the allegory of a City wherein as a riuer of cleare water running thorow the midst of it is very pleasant and comfortable to the inhabitants and trees by the riuers side alwayes greene springing and fructifying doe yet adde vnto the pleasantnesse of the place so the heauenly city is set forth For hee proceedeth saying He shewed me a pure riuer of water of life Vers 1. as cleare as Crystall proceeding out of the Throne of God and of the Lamb. And in the midst of the street Vers 2. and on either side of the riuer was there the tree of life which bare twelue manner of fruits and yeelded fruit euery moneth and the leaues of the tree were for the healing of the nations There is a place not much vnlike to this in Ezechiel where waters were shewed vnto the Prophet Ezec. 47. ● 3.5 increasing to a great riuer that issued out from the Temple Vers 7. many trees growing on the bankes on the one side of the riuer and on the other and it was told him that euery thing Vers 9. where these waters should come should bee healed and liue and that the trees should bee all sorts of trees for meat Vers 12. whose leaues fade not and they should bring forth fruit according to their moneths their fruit being for meat and
their leaues for medicine Compare the particulars together and you shall finde an excellent agreement betwixt these places so that I doubt not but in this vision it is alluded vnto that there the graces of the Church militant being represented here the glory of the Church triumphant betwixt which there is a great analogy and correspondency The riuer here is the Spirit of God who is most pure and holy proceeding from the Father and the Sonne who is also as a riuer of liuing waters in the Saints refreshing and comforting them without end The tree of life is Christ for so much as he onely is food to them that liue for euer and hereby it appeareth that this is spoken of the glorified estate of the Church because when a reward in heauen is promised to him that ouercommeth it is vnder these termes To him that ouercommeth I will giue to eat of the tree of life Chap. 2.7 And both in the riuer and this tree it is plainly alluded vnto Paradise out of which a riuer arose and wherein was the tree of life This one tree was manifold both in the midst of the street and on either side of the riuer because there is no want of it to the infinite multitude of Saints but euer ready there to yeeld food vnto them all And to shew the multiplicity of delights that are herein twelue sorts of fruits and fruit-bearing euery of the twelue moneths in the yeere is ascribed vnto it which doth also imply a tree alwayes flourishing neuer fading and the leaues are healthfull to the nations that is not as if sicknesse were now incident vnto them and they needed healing for all sicknesse and paine is done away but to declare their euer healthfull condition there being no lesse vse of medicine to preserue health than to restore it From hence forward all things are easie and need no interpretation vntill v. 10. howsoeuer some expound Iohns falling downe at the feet of the Angell to worship him Vers 8. Brightman vers 8. as an act repeated from Chap. 19.10 and not done the second time but it is plaine that hee was againe to blame herein hauing so soone forgotten himselfe after that admonition whereby we may see what the weaknesse of the best and of the most holy is if they bee not continually propped vp by Gods grace that we all may continually craue it out of an humble acknowledgement of our weaknesse much more and not presume in any case vpon our owne strength Vers 10. But Vers 10. it may bee doubted why Iohn is bidden not to seale vp this Prophecy and what the Angell meaneth by bidding him that is vniust to be vniust still for he saith Vers 11. Let him that is vniust be vniust still c. The common answer here is that sealing being vsed to keepe close writings that they may not be lookt into and read the Lord would not haue this Prophecy sealed because he would haue all his people to looke into it and vnderstand it as setting forth things which were shortly to begin to take effect Whereas Daniel is commanded to seale vp his Prophecy Dan 12.4 it was because it should bee a long time before it should take effect a certaine argument that Antichrist being the chiefe subiect of this Prophecy came long agoe and is not still to be expected Touching the other words Let him that is vniust be vniust still c. they are not spoken as intimating a leauing of euery one to the liberty of his owne will as Popish Writers doe hence collect but come aptly in here after the leauing of this Booke vnsealed mentioned For if it should be thought this will doe more hurt than good the wicked enemies of the truth being rather prouoked against the faithfull professors of it by hauing these things applyed against them the Lord careth not for this for he will soone come to giue them their payment for all so that the faithfull may bee comforted and the more setled in righteousnesse and holinesse● thus some Bullinger Pareus And this indeed doth very fitly agree seeing the Booke left vnsealed to the reading and considering of all sorts is by the wicked but contemned they being no whit the more moued to a reformation Andreas Tho. Aquin. Some will haue these words to be spoken prophetically as if the Lord expected none other euent but a neglect of this prophecie amongst the wicked who would not be reformed at all hereby for thus it is plainly spoken in a like case in the Booke of Daniel Many shall be purified Dan. 12.10 Napier Eccles 11.9 but the wicked shall doe wickedly Some hold it to be ironicall as that in the Preacher Reioyce O young man in thy youth and walke in the wayes of thy heart c. but know that for all this God will bring thee to iudgement It is not amisse to follow any of these Expositions but I preferre the second vnderstanding the words as propheticall and withall I thinke that they haue reference to the former words about leauing the Booke vnsealed sealed for the speech concerneth alike the godly and the wicked and therefore cannot be ironicall Whereas the righteous are bidden to be righteous still Popish Expositors turning it Let the iustified be yet more iustified thinke that they haue a ground here for the increase of iustification after that a man is by faith iustified he may by his good workes make himselfe more iust but for so much as the righteous here is opposed to the vniust spoken of before and the holy to the filthy such righteousnesse must needs be vnderstood as is contrary to vnrighteousnesse viz. righteousnesse in fact and not the righteousnesse which is by faith wherein a man may and ought to grow daily but neither is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus rightly expounded for it is still noting perseuerance herein and not an increase of it for thus this word is vsed Vers 3. There shall be no curse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Chapter 10. the Angell sweareth That time shall not be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 3.12 After this the Lord Iesus being described and they which shall be shut out of this City againe mentioned and the contents of this booke confirmed there is an inuitation to drinke of the water of life made to all that will Vers 17. Vers 1● 17. I am the root and the off-spring of Dauid and the bright morning starre And the Spirit and the bride say Come And let him that heareth say Come and let him that is a thirst come and whosoeur will let him take the water of life freely Christ calleth himselfe the root of Dauid in respect of his Diuinity and his off-spring in respect of his humanity and the bright morning Starre for the light of comfort which wee haue by him before the Sunne of glory ariseth that shall bee reuealed The Bride is the Church the Spirit speaketh in the
Iesus Christ that is because his Resurrection is our iustification who by rising againe destroyed death and went vp into Heauen that we might haue a place there Here growth a great question whether Baptisme which is outward hath any effect to the sauing of the soule or whether all the vertue lieth not in Faith and internall grace sanctifying the soule and conscience But Christ hath cut off all this question by saying He that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued thus ioyning them together so that it is vnlawfull for any to seuer them Baptisme is then perfect and salutiferous when the conscience is baptized there being an inward working of the Spirit to the purifying of the heart by Faith as water is outwardly vsed How is Baptisme an antitype of the Arke and how is it said to haue saued those eight persons by the water Thomas Aquinas hath already set downe fiue things wherein the Arke doth serue fitly to set forth Baptisme August lib. de vnitate Eccl. s cap. 5. Gagneus Augustine hath an Allegory in the pitching within and without holding that this setteth forth charity Gagneus saith that as the waters lifted vp the Arke and so they within were saued in like manner Baptisme lifting vs vp from the earth to Heauen in an heauenly conuersation saueth vs and as the Arke though it were tossed with tempests yet could not be drowned so the Church is saued through many afflictions neither can it bee ouerthrowne He that will may gather other notes of similitude also out of Pererius and Pagnan in Isagoge ad Scripturas Perer. lib. 10. in Gen. disp 11. Touching the sauing of those eight by the water it is meant of their corporall deliuerance for it is a question whether all their soules were saued or no it seemeth Chams was not By the water is expounded by some from the water by others in the water as per is vsually taken as a Ship is said to be safe going in the water and this I take to be the best Of the Angels powers and vertues subiected vnto Christ Vers 22. enough hath beene spoken already vpon Ephes 1.21 Note Note that he which suffereth vniustly doth not finally suffer for Christ suffering thus suffered in respect of the outward man his enemies could not touch his spirituall estate but that herein he liued still and was the more highly exalted and so shall we his members be Note againe Note that Baptisme which is outward is not like the Arke to saue all that come vnto it but euery one that is of discretion must haue an inward worke wrought in him that from a good and sanctified heart he may aske mercy of God through Iesus Christ who is risen againe and ascended into Heauen there presenting the prayers of such before his Father Therefore he that beleeueth not Mark 16.16 1 Ioh. 3.3 Vers 9. saith Christ shall bee damned though he be baptized and he that hath this hope purgeth himselfe and he that is borne of God sinneth not CHAP. IIII. THE Apostle hauing in the former Chapter propounded Christs example proceedeth here to presse it vnto them that as he suffered in the flesh so they being his members should approue themselues to suffer in the flesh by the mortifying of their corruptions and as hee was quickned in the Spirit leading a new spirituall life vers 1 2. First prosecuting that of suffering by the consideration of what they had formerly beene and what some still were for which they should giue account vers 3 4 5. and how the dead of whom hee spake before were not saued but by being iudged in the flesh vers 6. Secondly hee that setteth forth that which might moue them to a new life the end of all is at hand vers 7. and wherein it consisteth viz. in being wise and sober and praying and louing and hospitable c. from vers 7. to vers 12. where he returneth to speake of suffering againe being properly vnderstood by being persecuted and railed vpon as Christ was touching which first hee comforteth them with the glory and ioy after this to come vers 13 14. Secondly he giueth a caueat against doing ill whereby a man commeth to suffer vers 15. Thirdly whereas they might be troubled in thinking that the estate of the wicked was better for so much as they were not so subiect to sufferings he sheweth that the time of the Christians suffering was now but theirs should be hereafter when it would bee much more terrible vers 17 18. Lastly that they might bee without all trouble of minde about their sufferings he directeth them to God to whom they ought wholly to commit themselues in suffering as to a faithfull Creator vers 19. 1 PETER Chapter 4. Verse 1 2 3 c. Christ therefore hauing suffered in the flesh for vs put vpon you the same minde also for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sinne c. FRom Christs suffering death as hee was man Oecumen in 1 Pet. 4. and led a naturall life here hee argueth that we ought to suffer that death which is vnto sinne for him that we might liue vnto righteousnesse and if we be dead vnto sinne or to the world there will be in vs a cessation from sinne 2 Tim. 2. To suffer in the flesh therefore is to be dead vnto sinne as Saint Paul elsewhere expresseth it to bee dead with Christ Some of the ancient Fathers haue expounded this of the Gospell preached to the dead of the dead vnto sinne Vers 6. holding that men are said to bee dead two waies first in sinne secondly vnto sinne and to the world by being made conformable to Christ in his death and these last by receiuing the Gospell are stirred vp to condemne themselues for their former carnall liuing which they doe when they leade a new life To suffer for Christ here Tho. Aquin. Gorran Isidor is either to subdue carnall concupiscence by taming the flesh or else by exposing the body to martyrdome for righteousnesse It is according to Isidor to suffer in the whole man as Christ suffered in the whole man both exteriour and interiour the inner is the soule wherein we suffer by contrition the outward is the body wherein we suffer by macerating it and by suffering both these waies wee cease from all sinnes both carnall and spirituall For this cause it was preached to the dead Verse 6. that is either yee ought not for this cause to regard the blasphemies of the wicked or else for the auoiding of the danger of the Day of Iudgement it was preached to such as are spiritually dead that iudging themselues for such things as they haue carnally done they might escape Gods iudgement and liue as 1 Cor. 11.31 To take the six former verses of this Chapter together Mayer wherein an exhortation is set forth from Christs death considered as I haue shewed in the Analysis Here are three doubts
all earnestnesse in that hee is said first to haue ouercome which argueth thus much CHAP. IIII. IN this and the fifth Chapter the Lord being about to reueale things to come vnto Iohn to the end of the world taketh him vp into Heauen in the Spirit because from hence only can the knowledge of these things bee attained vpon earth it is knowne what is past and present but not what is to come no not by Astrologians or Sooth sayers or idols wherein Deuils spake For let them tell what shall come and say they are gods as speaketh the Prophet Esay Here is first declared in what great state and maiesty the God of heauen reigneth and the Lambe of God the Lord Iesus Christ Quest 1. Who was it that sate vpon the throne Vers 3. and why is he like vnto a Iasper and Sardin stone and what meaneth the rainebow about the throne like to an Emrald Answ It is agreed by all that hee which sate vpon the throne was God the King of all but for the likenesse here mentioned there is great difference Some considering the colour of the Iasper to be greene of the Sardin to be red Ioachim Forbs Brightman and of the Emrald to be a pleasant bright green will haue the holy Trinity here set forth the Father in whom all haue their being and growth by the Iasper the Sonne who was all red by that bloudy death which he suffered for our sinnes by the Sardin the Spirit who is the comforter by the Emrald This doth not so well agree because so the Spirit should not be one with the Father and the Sonne as the rainebow round about the throne and he that sitteth in the throne are notall one Others will haue the two natures of Christ set forth here the diuine by the Iasper and the humane by the Sardin Ambros Am●ber Pareus and the grace and mercy of God towards man in him by the rainebow which was first appointed for a signe hereof but against this maketh that which followeth of the Lambe Cha. 5. for if he were in the same vision sitting vpon a throne in this similitude he could not bee at the same time in the similitude of a Lambe also Others will haue the Father and Sonne set forth by these two precious stones Bullinger and the holy Ghost by the thunder and lightnings proceeding out of the throne but for so much as these are things of terrour and the Spirit the comforter wee cannot vnderstand it thus Others will haue the deluge of water set forth by the Iasper and the fire of the last iudgement by the Sardin Tyconius Beda Primasius Rupertus and the interim of peace and grace between these times by the Rainebow but how the greene Iasper should set forth water I cannot see nor why the Lord should carry a similitude whereby these things may be expressed seeing in heauen he appeareth as he is in himselfe most and not so much as he is in his works and iudgements Lastly not to reckon vp all the expositions but these which may seeme most probable Pareus followeth this though he defendeth that of the Son of God also some vnderstand by these precious stones the excellency of God both in respect of his glory and that singular vertue that is in him which nothing can more fitly expresse than precious stones for colour and appearance admirable no lesse admirable in vertue and operation Viegas And more particularly they may well set forth his mercy by which all things liue and are in their vigour greene and flourishing and his iustice through which hee becommeth fiery red in his anger against sinne Confer Ezech. 1.27.28 The life of all vegetable things is declared by greene and life of sensitiue things by red arising frō bloud it may be that God is here shewed to be the Author of all life Vers 4. Tyconius Beda Primasius Bullinger The rainebow like an Emrald is the reflexion of these colours further declaring the brightnesse of his glory and is a setled signe of peace to all the inhabitants of heauen who shall neuer bee cast out any more as the ambitious Angels sometime were so that it is good being there and great reason there is why our hearts should bee alwayes thitherward that we might behold this glory and be out of that mutable condition wherein we now stand Quest 2. And round about the throne there were foure twenty thrones and foure and twenty Elders c. Who were these Elders sitting vpon thrones round about Answ Some vnderstand the twelue Patriarkes and Apostles as Fox and Pareus relate some the whole Church represented by them seeing the Church vnder the old Testament sprang from the Patriarkes and the Church vnder the new from the Apostles and the Church now is twice as great as of old when it was in twelue Tribes and therefore this number is well doubled Fox some vnderstand nothing but a shew of the dependancy and subiection of all principalities vpon and vnto God because they cast downe their crownes which they haue of gold some the foure twenty books of canonicall Scriptures in the old Testament Grasserus Lastly some vnderstand the most excellent of those which haue beene set vp in the Church of God Richard de Sancto Victore Rupertus Pannonins Ioacbimus both vnder the old and new Testament who sit now as Senatours about the great Emperour in heauen not that there are no more but iust thus many but because a counsell amongst the Iewes did anciently consist of foure and twenty this certaine number is put for an vncertain as the Priests appointed also to serue in the Temple by course in the dayes of Dauid were foure and twenty And this is most probable because to the twelue Apostles are promised twelue thrones and so likewise without doubt all Apostolicall persons shall be likewise most highly aduanced in the kingdome of glory being placed as Counsellers of State neerest about the King As for the other Expositions first it were a great wrong to others more worthy than many of them to hold that they are not as neere vnto God as the twelue Patriarks Secondly it were improper here to vnderstand the whole company of the Church triumphant who are spoken of more particularly Chap. 5. v. 13. Thirdly it doth not agree by Senatours appearing in heauen to set forth all Princes whereof many shall neuer come there And for that of the foure and twenty bookes I cannot conceiue any ground for it at all Quest 3. And out of the throne went thunders Vers 5. and lightnings and voices And seuen lamps of fire burning c. What is meant by these lightnings thunders and voices and what are these lampes Answ I haue already shewed that though these proceeded out of the throne yet the holy Ghost cannot be meant hereby Some obseruing three and three things mentioned here together Forbs Brightman lightnings
that the vertues of this Lambe should be thankfully commemorated It is called a new song in respect of that in the former Chapter there are the praises of the creation which was of old here the praises of the redemption which was new Quest 3. Vers 9. And wee shall reigne on the earth How shall the Saints reigne vpon earth or how is it that being Kings in Heauen they ioy in thinking vpon a future reigning here Answ Forbs Brightman Some vnderstanding all of the Church militant say That reigning vpon earth is nothing else but being in the Kingdom of grace whilst we liue here Others vnderstanding it of the Saints in Heauen Bullinger Pareus say That the reigning vpon earth shal be when at the last day the Iudge descending they shall come together with him in great glory and shall appeare to be the Kings and Priests of God with Christ iudging this wicked world Arethas Mat. 5. Others againe vnderstand by earth that new earth which is promised to the meeke when it is said Blessed are the meeke for they shall inherit the earth And vnto this as the most probable doe I subscribe for there shall be a new Heauen and a new earth Chap. 21.1 and here shall the godly reigne in glory not as the Chiliasts and Turkes hold liuing in earthly pleasures for that is grosse neither is it to be thought that such pleasure is affected by such as are heauenly and spirituall but after the consummation of all at the Day of Iudgement the Saints shall reigne in another world which in allusion to this consisting of Heauen and Earth is called a new Heauen and a new Earth Or else consider whether it may not be vnderstood of the vpper hand which the Christian Religion should get of all false religions when Emperours and Kings should become Christian for being all of one mysticall body when the Christian Church getteth the principality the Saints in Heauen may reioyce to foresee it and say We shall reigne vpon earth that is our company which belong vnto the Lambe and admire and praise him as we doe And it was no small comfort to know this then when as all Empire and dominion was in the hands of heathen men and persecutors it must needs cheare vp the heart greatly to vnderstand what power Religion should haue ouer the Thrones and Scepters of this world and the ancient seruants of God may well be said to reigne vpon earth also because their dictates and instructions are generally receiued and obeyed vpon earth Quest 4. Vers 13. And I heard euery creature in Heauen and in earth vnder the earth and in the sea and all in them saying blessing and honour c. What are the creatures vnder the earth and how doth euery thing speake the praises of God when as all cannot speake Answ Ribera The Papists will haue the soules in purgatory meant by those vnder the earth some the Deuills who are compelled to giue glory to Christ But the best exposition is of the creatures which dwell in subterranean places for both they that are without and within the holes of the earth are called vpon to praise God Psal 148. and doe praise him and the Lord Iesus Christ in their kinde by whom a restauration of the world is attained when the faithfull shall be glorified as is declared Rom. 8.21 and for this cause they serue his prouidence which is their praising of him It is generally signified hereby what a consent there is amongst all things which are in expectation of benefit from Christ in celebrating his praises that we may doe likewise CHAP. VI. HEre is shewed how the Lambe beginneth to open the Seales in order and what followeth vpon the opening of each of them by such things as appeared future euents concerning the Church of God being emblematically set forth as the opening of euery Seale succeedeth one another and after the Seales follow the Trumpets Eullinger Forbs Brightman Ly●a Antonin Ambros lib. adulterinus Fox and after the Trumpets the Vials so some will haue the euents hereby set forth to succeed one another in order in diuers ages to the end of the world And some begin the computation from the beginning of the world by the seuen Seales vnderstanding the seuen ages Some from the foure Monarchies of the Assyrians Medes and Persians Grecians and Romans which they will haue set forth by these foure horses which beginnings cannot stand because Iohn is not taken vp to see things past but to come by which reason also that opinion reckoned vp by Andreas is confuted expounding the first Seale of Christs Birth Andreas ex Methodio the second of his Baptisme the third of his Miracles the fourth of his Arraignment the fift of his Buriall the sixt of his Descent c. The rest which speake more probably beginne the time at the Apostles going out to preach the Gospell in all nations and so apply euery thing to some notable accident as one happened after another from age to age Yet because at the opening of the sixt Seale mention is so plainly made of the last day of Iudgement as that it is but a wresting of the words to expound it any other way and againe at the sounding of the seuenth Trumpet it is so confidently affirmed that time was no more chap. 11. and the time is said to be come of iudging the dead vers 18. which cannot be meant but of the day of Iudgement and againe Chap. 14. the Vintage is cut downe and the Wine-presse trodden and againe Chap. 20. the dead arise and come to iudgement I cannot see how that computing of all things in order to the end can stand because the day of Iudgement which is last of all commeth so often in the way There are therefore that beginning the time at the propagation of the Gospell abroad in the world make diuers periods in these visions holding that within euery period most notable things which should happen to the end of the world are set forth Parcus in the first more obscurely and in euery following period more plainly and yet not alwaies the same but if any thing of note hath beene omitted in the former it is supplied in the periods following neither is euery one so vniuersall as another for some set forth the estate of the Church persecuted by Tyrants flourishing vnder Christian Emperours persecuted by Antichrist shaking off his yoke as the vision of the seuen Seales of the seuen Trumpets of the woman with childe cloathed with the Sunne and of the Angell binding the Dragon being afterwards loosened againe but some set forth that part of the estate of the Church only which was in Antichrists reigne and ouerthrow as the seuen Vials and the vision of the great whore and her destruction And vnto this as being most without exception doe I subscribe the rather because S. Augustine long agoe gaue some light to this method saying
it as a comfort in suffering seeing when a man hath suffered death for Christ he is receiued vnder his wing being conformable to him in being sacrificed they rest and are safe with him for euer Some expound the Altar of Christs humanity Bernard serm 4. Omnium sanct which the faithfull are receiued vnto now it being reserued till the last day to giue them the full fruition of his diuinity also Some by the Altar vnderstand the places of the martyrs buriall or sufferings Ribera Viegas because Altars were wont to be built vpon them and the crying of their soules they will haue to be none other but as the crying of Ables bloud where it was spilt and soules are spoken of by a phrase vsuall so many men being called so many soules But this is a meere Iesuiticall imagination seeing Altars vpon martyrs sepulchres were of a later edition and though so many men be often called so many soules yet when the soules of any that are slaine are named it cannot bee so taken Whereas most stand for Christ meant by the Altar I should willingly incline to thinke so to but that Christ yet standeth as a Lambe and therefore I cannot see how he can at the same time bee represented by an Altar also I conclude therefore as I began that by the appearance of an Altar is represented their sacrificing when they suffered the place wherein they now are being heauen the common receptacle of all faithfull soules but said to bee vnder the Altar to denote the manner of their death neither doth Iohn see them with his bodily eyes but being in the spirit And fidy doe the soules of the martyred appeare after such a number slaine by cruell enemies crying for vengeance not vocally for soules doe not vtter voyces but vertually the destroying and murthering of them hauing a loud cry in the eares of God so that a desire of reuenge in them is amisse surmised to bee from hence who being in the flesh had so much loue as that they prayed for their persecutors and were farre from the spirit of reuenge But they are brought in crying aloud for the terrour of persecutors seeing the cryes of such shall without doubt bee regarded though in respect of many more yet in these times of corruption to bee crowned also with martyrdome a delay to bemade Whereupon it is that their answer is also set forth in this manner And thus I haue briefly resolued the rest of the doubts without delaying the reader by the diuersity of expositions Pareus Brightman Chrysost Hom. in Psal 9. August Serm. 30. detemp some interpreting their cry for reuenge to be onely for deliuerance of the Church from persecutors hauing beene already so long oppressed and some for the taking away of this malice out of mens mindes that there may bee no more persecuting by confounding such Kings and Potentates that they may bee brought to turne vnto Christ The white robes giuen vnto them Bullinger Brightman howsoeuer some contend that they were signes of some comfort and breathing time which the Church should haue and had about this time according to their exposition yet both the plaine speech which is vsed in answering them is against it for they are told of their brethren that must be slaine also and white robes are neuer spoken of in this sense Pareus but to set forth heauenly glory which is not to be thought now first to haue been giuen vnto them but immediatly vpon their departure out of this life when their deaths began first to cry though it was not represented in vision till now so that euen when they cry they are in the midst of heauenly ioyes and without all passion of sorrow onely they are not perfectly glorified till the whole company being made vp at the day of iudgement being reunited to their bodies they shall reigne in heauen for euer wherefore they are bidden rest till their fellow seruants were slaine also And well doth this cry come in after the fourth seale representing the corruptions in the Church fighting against the truth because this persecution hath beene longer than any before it and therefore needfull it was to tell of martyrs which had beene already made crying out and of such as should yet bee made when it might seeme to bee full time to put an end to these miseries that expecting so long a continuance wee might arme our selues with patience Quest 3. The sixt seale being opened Vers 12. there was a great earthquake and the Sunne became blacke as haire cloth and the Moone as bloud c. What is meant by these things and whether the day of iudgement or no Answ Most Expositors hold that the day of iudgment is here described Fox Richard de Sancto victore Pannonius Primasius Beda Rupertus Arethas c. when the reuenge before cryed for is taken vpon all sorts of persecutors of the Church and the words here vsed are nothing else but a periphrasis vpon this day for thus the Lord setteth forth the day of iudgement Luk. 21.11 There shall be great earth-quakes in diuers places Vers 25. There shall be fignes in the Sunne Moone and Starres and vpon the earth distresse of nations with perplexity Vers 26. Mens hearts failing them for feare c. and more expresly Mark 13.24 The Sun shall be darkened the Moone shall not giue her light 25. The starres of heauen shall fall and the powers of heauen shall be shaken The Sun shall be darkened because it shall no more giue light to this world the Moone shall be turned into bloud to shew the great destruction that then shall be the stars shall fall there being no further vse of them when men shall cease to bee here euen as the leaues of the figtree fall off when there is no further need of them to couer the figs. The heauens are as a booke folded vp when they lofe all their light being as it were clapt together whereas now it standeth open That which followeth of the mountaines and ilands remouing out of their places is to shew the greatnes of this earth-quake euen to the destroying of the earth Then all wicked men how great soeuer they haue beene in this world shall quake and feare being vnable to beare the wrath to come vpon them set foorth in their calling to the mountaines to fall vpon them c. Blas Viegas Who also saith that many Doctors expound this thus Brightman Grasser Others will haue these things vnderstood allegorically the great earth-quake of the great persecution vnder Dioclesian being in all parts of the earth at once then say they the Sun of righteousnesse Christ was darkened in his members the Moone the Church appeared like bloud being all bloudy with slaughters the starres the ministers of God many of them fell for feare from Christianity to idolatry the he●uen the Church was folded vp as a booke hiding it selfe for feare at that time and the inhabitants of
and plants of the earth therefore these things are mentioned in particular Neither can I see why by the strong Angell out of the East should bee meant Christ who stood yet as a Lambe in the midst of the Throne and this is not the first time that a strong Angell is spoken of for Chap. 5. a strong Angell proclaimeth Who can open the Booke c. Wherefore as I take it he is an Angell indeed who is said to be strong for so is euery Angell and hee commeth vp out of the East that being the rising place of all heauenly bodies the Sunne Moone and Staries and the lightning is said by our Sauiour to come out of the East and the old manner of worshipping and so their expectation of comfort was from the East as for his commanding these Angels it was not through his owne power ouer them but hauing commission from the highest so do doe and as he had a commission to come with the seale so they were fellow Ministers of God with him which is intimated in that he biddeth them not to hurt any thing till we haue sealed the seruants of God in their foreheads speaking in the plurall number as ioyning them with himselfe I conceiue then that by these foure Angels holding the foure winds are set forth those Ministers of Gods iudgements who for the sinnes of the world should destroy all things euill angels I cannot thinke them to be no more than the Angels destroying Sodome especially because as I haue already said they are associated vnto the Angell with the seale of God Now being appointed to this seruice they beginne to doe accordingly but euen when they put their hands to it they are stayed for a time as those warriors Ezech. 9. Till the seruants of God were sealed in their foreheads in token of Gods singular care ouer them in the midst of those common calamities so as that their saluation should not be hereby hindred though outwardly they did participate with others in worldly miseries yet there was a difference in that they haue the comfort of Gods Seale vnto saluation which others want being left void of all true comfort to the rage of these grieuous troubles And thus one obiection against this exposition is answered that if outward destructions be meant here then the seruants of God are in vaine sealed because they had their share in these as deeply as any other no it is not in vaine but for their comfort and assurance of safety in respect of their best good As for the time when this destruction of things should be made it is not onely at the last when there shall be an end put to all things here but also in all the tract of time from hence till then for by reason of persecutions and sinnes there haue beene many times mortalities and destructions brought vpon the world so that it is not necessary that all must presently be destroied so soone as the seruants of God were sealed because they are bidden to forbeare till they were sealed for hereby rather is set forth that though the Lord being much prouoked is fully bent to execute his iudgements yet the prime and chiefe thing in his care is to preserue his Elect and then secondarily he will see to the taking of due reuenge vpon the wicked world and thus another obiection against this exposition is also answered that it cannot stand because the seruants of God doe reigne with Christ after their sealing a thousand yeeres before the day of iudgement commeth which how should it be if the destroying of all be stayed but till the sealing be past for neither is this destruction to be restrained to the last nor yet doth it necessarily follow because the seruants of God are first sealed and no execution must bee done till then that this execution must needs be done immediatly after but onely it is first prouided for their safety against this time whensoeuer it commeth And whereas it is further obiected that it is not likely that this booke being so mysticall should set forth things so plainely as that by winds should be meant winds c. against Viegas whose obiection this is I oppose the reason of Ribera that yet we must not goe from the letter but in case of necessity when the place cannot beare the literall sense as here we haue shewed that it well may And yet this is not without mystery neither generall calamities in the world being set forth by the holding of the foure winds from blowing Quest 2. And I heard the number of them which were sealed 144000. of the children of Israel Vers 4. c. Is this to be vnderstood of the Isaelites properly and why are not the tribes set left out the number of twelue being yet made vp in Leui and Ioseph and what is this sealing Answ Some vnderstand this of the Israelites properly Ribera Viegras Lyra. Bullinger holding that a great number of euery tribe shall be conuerted to the faith of Christ euen in the dayes of Antichrist but a certaine number of twelue thousand of euery tribe is put for an vncertaine or else they will haue this conuersion in the dayes of Constantine or at some other time vnknowne vnto vs. And they say no order is obserued the elder being preferred before the younger because before God and in respect of their spirituall estate there is no such preeminence in outward regards and Dan they say is left out because Antichrist should come of that tribe and Ephraim because Ieroboam who was of that tribe was the Authour of idolarry and Leui not wont to be numbred when temporall things are spoken of yet now is reckoned for one of the twelue because when the spirituall estate commeth to be spoken of he is alwayes one and the tribe of Ioseph Ephraim and Manasseh is not set forth as two but one viz. the tribe of Ioseph as Deut. 27.12 13. in blessing and cursing and Exod. 28.10 in the brest plate of Aaron the names of the twelue tribes are appointed to be set according to their birth Others vnderstand the children of Israel spiritually and so all the faithfull are called Israel in sundry places Forbs Pareus Brightman Grasserus Fox c. and whereas it may seeme to make against this exposition that the rest of the seruants of God in other countreys and nations are expresly distinguished from these vers 9. It is answered that they are not said to be sealed as these are but onely they stood before the throne so that in them wee are to vnderstand the multitude of Saints glorified in heauen by these sealed ones the Church militant vpon earth To this exposition vnderstanding Israel spiritually doe I subscribe for it cannot bee taken otherwise because these onely follow the Lambe from which God forbid that the faithfull of the Gentiles should be excluded and if it should be vnderstood properly it were against the tenure of all Euangelicall history wherein the
out by the opening of the Temple in Heauen and the Arke of the testimony appearing and the Thunders Lightnings Voices Vers 19. Earthquake and Haile concluding all Answ Some referring that which went before to the times of reformation in sundry parts Brightman Forbs vnderstand by these voices the acclamations of praise in the reformed Churches for diuers Kingdomes comming vnder the obedience of the Gospell as England Denmarke Sweuia and diuers parts of Germany And that the foure and twenty Elders are the multitude of the faithfull following the foure beasts the Pastors who hauing stirred them vp doe more particularly commemorate the time of iudging the dead meaning the Iewes who hitherto lay dead in infidelity but now shall be turned The anger of the Nations is the Popes and Papists indignation striuing to take reuenge for this reuolt excommunicating Princes and absoluing subiects from the oath of allegiance and mouing the Spaniard to come with his great Armado against England ann 1588. And now Heauen is opened and the Arke appeareth by the more cleere vnderstanding of prophesies than in former times But vnto the wicked there is no comfort hereby but matter of terrour set forth in the Thunders Lightnings c. Against this exposition maketh first the fluctuating estate of some kingdomes where the truth hath beene entertained and the holding off of most hitherto whereas the Lord is said after the accomplishment of this to reigne for euer and not some kingdomes but the kingdomes of the world are said to become the Lords by which all kingdomes in generall must needs be vnderstood Againe it is plainly forced to apply the iudging of the dead to the calling of the Iewes for howsoeuer the Iewes bee as it were dead hitherto yet the phrase of iudging the dead will not beare any such sense of comming in grace to any people but rather with reuenge And that which is opposed vnto it of the reward of the godly maketh it more plaine that by iudging must be meant calling to an account and proceeding in iudgement against them Lastly it is contrary to the oath of the Angell who sweareth Chap. 10. that time shall bee no more but when the seuenth Angell soundeth so that to expound this vnder the sounding of the seuenth Angell of things happening in this world it still continuing I cannot see how it may be iustified Some vnderstand by this seuenth Angell the last order of Preachers Gagnaeus and some other Popish after the ouerthrow of Antichrist who shall sound out the comming of the Lord to iudgement when all the world shall for euer be subdued vnto him the wicked being iustly condemned and the godly graciously rewarded But this trumpet is indeed the last trumpet whereof it is said the Lord shall come with the sound of a trumpet For this is the time of iudging the dead and wherein all kingdomes are subiected to the Lord no man ruling any more and Satans kingdome being at an end Beda Rupertus Primasius Andreas Aretas Bullinger Fox Marlorat Tossanus Alphonsus Pareus c. The Gentiles were angry before but now is the time of Gods anger Fox And therefore most Expositors agree in this both ancient and moderne After the fall and slaughter made in the great city before described whereby Heresie and superstition is reiected in all parts none other notable change shall happen more till the Lords comming to iudgement at the last day when iustreuenge shall be taken vpon all enemies of the truth who were angry and had indignation to see it lift vp the head and destroyed such as stood for it and the godly shall bee rewarded according to all their sufferings whether they bee Prophets or Saints and other men fearing God whereby such matter of ioy is ministred to all the heauenly company that they breake out into acclamations of praises of the Lord by whom these things are done Then the Temple in heauen appeareth and the Arke of the Testimony The glory of that place which is yet vnseene and shut vp from all mortall eyes as the Sanctum Sanctorum with the Arke of old was so as that none but the high Priest onely entred once a yeere and did see Aarons rod budded and the pot of Manna preserued shall bee set open to all the children of God to enter and behold and see as they are seene to their vnspeakable and euerlasting comfort but to the wicked as before there were nothing but signes of terrour thundrings lightnings earthquakes c. so now they shall feele these terrours to their euerlasting woe of which they heard before but not beleeuing them hardened themselues still in their euill wayes Some by the Arke of the Testimony here vnderstand the Lord Iesus Bullinger Pareus whom we shall then actually enioy he appearing vnto vs in his glory as he is and by the Temple the Church triumphant the glory whereof shall then be laid open to all men Some by the Arke vnderstand Christs humanity but there being little difference I will not stand to contend Beda Primasius Rupertus but by the happinesse of that time let vs all be perswaded to feare God and patiently beare what the malice of this wicked world shall lay vpon vs and the basenesse of our present condition for then we shall haue a full compensation of most excellent glory such as hitherto hath not beene seene yea which no mortall eye can see or heart conceiue CHAP. XII IN this and the two Chapters following is another period of time contained wherein by new figures are set forth the troubles of the Church by Antichrist and what iudgements shall finally be executed vpon him and vpon all his adherents they shall bee tormented and the smoake of their torment shall ascend for euermore they shall be troden in the wine-presse of Gods wrath by the ministery of his Angels being sent out to gather them together as clusters of grapes are cut down and gathered together to the wine-presse when they are ripe But the figures and passages here are so mysticall as that we need pray much to the father of lights to enlighten vs to goe in a right path of the vnderstanding of these things or else wee must needs bee wildred and lost in this search Trusting therefore onely to this enlightening I thus enter this way Quest 1. And a great signe was seene in heauen Vers 1. a woman cloathed with the Sunne and the Moone vnder her feet and vpon her head a crowne of twelue starres c. What woman is this and what doth this strange kinde of apparell about her signifie What is her being with childe and pained to be deliuered What childe is it that she was about to bring forth that should rule all nations with a rod of iron whom a great red Dragon standeth ready to deuoure hauing seuen heads and ten hornes and with his taile drawing the third part of the starres and casting them to the earth which Dragon is said
to be in heauen also And how is this childe taken vp to God and to his throne from out of his danger Answ Some Popish Expositors by this woman vnderstand the Virgin Mary Ribera Viegas Methodius Primasius Bullinger Fox Pareus c. Hos 1.2.3 but the learned of their owne side Ribera and Viegas and others reiect this as not agreeing if the following circumstances of being pained and hauing other seed which is afterwards persecuted be considered The common streame of Interpreters is for the Church of God which is the spouse of God whom he is said to haue married vnto himselfe And thus without all doubt wee are to conceiue of this woman Quest But how is she said to be in heauen Answ Pannonius To this Pannonius answereth well that howsoeuer the Church hath her being in this world yet she is but a stranger here heauen is her countrey to which she aspireth and from whence commeth her election and being Tertui apolo c. 1. Scitgens Christiana se peregrinā in terris agere inter extraneos facile inimicos inuenire Caelerū genus spem sedem gratiam dignitatem in coelis habere as Tertullian doth excellently declare saying The Christian nation knoweth that she is a stranger vpon earth and doth easily finde enemies amongst strangers but shee hath her stocke seat grace hope and dignity in heauen Touching her apparell here set forth The Sunne is most bright and shining of all the lights in heauen to shew therefore the exceeding great glory of the Church shee is said to bee cloathed with the Sunne A speech much like to this is that of our Sauiour Christ The iust shall shine as the Sunne But this is for her future condition Matth. 13.43 Pannonius Bullinger Parcus Forbs c. for the present Christ the Sun of righteousnesse is her glory for so he is called Mal. 4. hee by faith is put on as a garment couering her round about and beautifying her so all Expositors generally agree except Fox and Brightman who stand and specially Fox for a most illustrious glory hereby generally set forth but hold that it is not intended that this figure should be strained any further by applying all the particulars And indeed for so much as the child in her wombe is Christ as by and by shall be declared I cannot see how it can so well agree in the same figure to hold that hee is both set forth as the cloathing of the Church and the fruit in her body at the same time though in diuers respects he is euer hath been so I hold therfore rather that her glorious estate before God only in generall is here set forth And therefore as worldly glory consisteth in glorious apparell and a crowne of gold beset with pretious stones and an high elated throne that place where all inferiour persons stand being vnder the seet so the Church is said to be cloathed with the Sun to weare a crowne with twelue starres and to haue the Moone which is aboue all this world vnder her sect so high is shee mounted But why twelue starres in her crowne neither more nor lesse Herein I take it it is alluded to the twelue pretious stones in the brest-plate of the high Priest according to the number of the twelue tribes which made this number of twelue familiar in this Prophecie as appeareth by the twice twelue thrones round about the throne Chap. 4. the twelue thousand sealed of the twelue Tribes Chap. 7. the twelue pretious stones in the wals of the new Ierusalem and the twelue gates Chap. 21. Many will haue these twelue starres to set forth the twelue Apostles and the Moone vnder her seet the mutablethings of this world but if that which hath beene already said bee considered I thinke the Reader will not bee of that minde Touching that which shee trauaileth withall there is great difference some vnderstand it of the godly in all ages Andreas Viegas Ribera Parent Forbs with whom the Church trauaileth and is euer at the point of bringing forth but when any are brought forth the enemy is ready to deuoure them in spight of whom they are finally glorified in heauen which is set forth by this phrase hee shall rule all nations with a rod of iron according to that promise Chap. 2.27 And they say that the off-spring of the Church is called a childe in the singular number because though they bee many yet they are but one mysticall body and a male childe as being the more perfect and the heire and of more courage and constancy And of this exposition applied specially to the last times doe the Papals most greedily lay hold as making for them in their doctrine about their supposed Antichrist For the Churches being pained and crying out setteth forth the straits wherein she should be at that time And thus they seeke to draw the Reader from looking at any time past or that now is and to hold him in expectation of the time of Antichrist yet for to come But against this exposition maketh both the distinction afterwards following in the end of this Chapter where it is spoken of the rest of her seed and the description of this childe He shall rule ouer all nations with arod of iron For if all the faithfull bee the seed of the woman here set forth they being taken vp to heauen how can she yet haue a seed remaining vpon earth to be persecuted still And touching this large reigning howsoeuer the faithfull are promised in the place before alleaged that they shall rule ouer the nations yet it is not said as here ouer all nations nor is it spoken of as a dignity to which they were borne but as conferred vpon such as ouercome whereas here the man-childe mentioned is so spoken of as comming to it by right and inheritance The male childe therefore here must be one singular person most remarkable as the first-borne for this his extraordinary power and authority ouer all to which hee is borne Most therefore seeing that there is none other such to bee found in all the world Bullinger Fox Gorian and Pareus deliuereth this first applying it anagogically to the faithfull resolue vpon the Lord Iesus Christ for the history of his birth and ascension doth so answer this description in euery particular as that all things doe most excellently agree if it be vnderstood of him And so the prophecie Psal 2.7 agreeth also I will giue thee the nations for thine inberitance and the vttermost parts of the earth for thy possession thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron c. Thus also there will be a good construction of the rest of her seed after mentioned seeing hee is said to bee the first-borne amongst many brethren Whereas it may seeme absurd that the Church is said to haue Christ in her wombe and to bring him forth when as he is her husband and she hath rather her originall from him for
which cause she is called his body some resolue this by applying this womans trauailing with childe and bringing forth to the conception and birth which is by faith For the old Church by faith longed for and was pained in expecting his comming so long a time and euery man may bee said to trauaile with Christ and to bring him forth when through many inward troubles and much sorrow for sinne he commeth to be regenerate and to leade a new life for then hee liueth not any more but Christ liueth in him Gal. 2.20 Bullinger Gorran as Saint Paul speaketh and this according to Bullinger and Gorran But because this is daily done and here is rather an allusion to Christs corporall birth from which time that which is here figured out beginneth to take place it doth not seeme to mee to agree so well and therefore I vnderstand it rather of his corporall birth by the Virgin Mary as Bullinger doth at the first For although shee were but one particular member of the Church yet that for the effecting of which she was vsed as an instrument herein may well be ascribed to the whole body whereof she was a member and therefore St. Paul speaking of the whole Iewish nation saith Rom. 9.5 of whom Christ came according to the flesh As for other circumstances of being pained and crying out to be deliuered I hold them to be meerely allegoricall and not to be strained to a particular signification but as when a woman is neere her time of being deliuered it appeareth by these signes so they are here mentioned to signifie the neere approaching of the time when the Church of the Iewes should corporally in Mary a vessell chosen to this purpose bring forth our blessed Sauiour And this is one reason also why the Church is set forth by a woman because the head and the chiefe vpon whom all the rest depend was promised by the name of the seed of the woman If there shall seeme to bee a disagreement in the time because the things set forth here were not already past but altogether such as should happen afterwards I answer with Pareus Pareus Bullinger that the intent of this vision is to set forth things to come but for more orderly proceeding if it be begun a little higher euen at the birth of Christ there is no going from the matter propounded viz. to set forth things to come sith it is done onely to illustrate them them the better as was also done before in the opening of the first seale when a white horse issued out that he might the more orderly and with better light proceed vnto the red and blacke and pale horses c. It is said that hee should rule all nations with a rod of iron to expresse his terriblenesse to his enemies and such as rebell against him which are commonly expressed by the name of Nations or Heathen because they knew him not One expoundeth this of Constantine the great but neither was he watched at his birth to be deuoured Brightman but after that hee came to the Empire at what time the childe here spoken of is past all danger if it be vnderstood of his spirituall birth when he became Christian it were preposterously set down for so his birth should follow his being taken vp into the throne neither did he rule ouer all nations Chap. 4. neither can the throne of God be fitly applied vnto him here vpon earth seeing this throne is before described so as that no man can bee said to bee taken vp to it till he be glorified in heauen One will haue Heraclius the Emperour Lyra. who destroyed and succeeded the vsurper Phocas vnderstood here but there is no colour for it Touching the great red Dragon he is set forth plainly v. 9. that he is the Deuill but is called a Dragon in alluding to his first appearance vnto Eue in a serpent when he tempted her he is red through fury and cruelty Ioh. 8.44 hee was a murtherer from the beginning Viegas He is said to be in heauen here according to some for the like reason that the woman is said to be there because he persecuteth her who is said to be in heauen or rather because he had his abiding sometime in heauen and though hee be excluded because he kept not his first standing yet a long time hee had the liberty of appearing there before God amongst the good Angels for hee appeared amongst them to accuse Iob and that it was his common practise is here afterwards plainly intimated Iob 2. vers 10. how hee commeth to bee quire excluded and when we shall see further by and by but still he is said to be Principalities and powers in heauenly places Eph. 6.12 Pareus because hee hath the liberty of the Aerean heauen to this day His seuen heads with crownes vpon them set forth by the common consent the many kings of the earth who are ready as his instruments to execute his will the number of seuen being vsuall in this booke to set forth many his ten hornes his great power by meanes of other states of people who also serue him who are more in number Certainly the largenesse and multitude of his dominions and his manifold power is hereby figured out and how great a Potentate hee is to expresse the more the danger wherein this childe was that the power whereby he was preserued might be the more magnified His taile drawing the third part of the starres and casting them to the ground doth yet more illustrate his stupendious power By these starres I vnderstand the Angels that fell together with Lucifer who as the chiefe drew them after him and therefore hee is said to draw them with his taile because they followed him in sinning and were throwne downe to the ground which was by being depriued of their place and dignity in heauen For there is one Deuill as the chiefe and ringleader set forth the rest of the infernall spirits followed him And this though done long before is brought in here as auailing to a perfect description of him that it might the better appeare how formidable he was Some by the starres vnderstand Parous Viegas as in Chap. 1. the Churches which are seduced vnto Popery and some the Doctors who by worldly preferments and respects are fawned vpon Bullinger Forbs and so drawne away from the truth vnto errour and so by heauen they vnderstand the Church of God by earth the world of the wicked who are set vpon earthly things into whose society they come being thus drawne away But for so much as heauen is a distinct thing here from the Church if the woman be the Church for shee appeareth in heauen I cannot see how by heauen should be vnderstood the Church here and consequently how by the stars should be meant the Doctors and therefore I rest in the first exposition as most naturall and the rather because
they are not only said to be stars but starres of heauen as he himselfe at the first was and therefore is called Lucifer Esa 14.12 Hee standeth ready to deuoure this childe so soone as hee should be borne for he stirred vp Herod to send his executioners to kill all the male children in Bethlehem of two yeeres old and vnder and from the time that he shewed himselfe after his baptisme he neuer left persecuting him and plotting his destruction till that at length he was crucified but euen then in stead of being deuoured nothing befell him but what hee did voluntarily vndergoe and he was soone raised vp againe and taken to the throne of the Father and therefore he is spoken of as missing his purpose herein for so much as Christ by his death gat the dominion Heb. 2.15 Col. 2.14 and euen vpon the Crosse triumphed ouer the Deuill Learne we from hence both of how excellent a condition the Church of God is heauen is her countrey and her glory is heauenly and most magnificent that we may preferre to be members of the Church before all worldly honours and also what a terrible enemy we haue of the Deuill so that we can no sooner become Christians but hee is at hand to deuoure vs neither doth he want power so to doe but he shall not be able to hinder our saluation that we may put vpon vs the armour of God neuer being secure but alwayes making account that we stand in the midst of greatest dangers and therefore continually seeking to the highest power by prayer and out of a confident expectation of being taken vp out of all danger to glory at the last becomming strong in the faith to beare all oppositions without shrinking howsoeuer we be assaulted Quest 2. The woman fled into the wildernesse Vers 6. where she hath a place prepared of God that they may nourish her one thousand two hundred and threescore dayes c. To what time is this fight to be referred what is this wildernesse and how long is this time of one thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Answ This relation commeth in here by way of anticipation as most consent for this very persecution and flight into the wildernesse is more largely described vers 13. and this time is the same onely by a prolepsis it is in short here propounded to satisfie such as would bee ready to inquire what became of the mother after that the sonne was taken vp shee was persecuted and fled c. but in order of time somewhat happened before this and therefore before a full declaration of this persecution that is set forth in the next words And there was a great battell in heauen Vers 7 8. Michael and his Angels fought c. of which we are to consider before we answer this the proper place for this comming in afterwards viz. vers 13. Quest 3. Where is the fight here said to be in heauen what is Michael and the deuils casting out of heauen c. Answ No man doth hold that this is to bee vnderstood according to the letter for it were absurd that there should be a fight in heauen being a place of all peace and comfort and not for any variance Heauen therefore is to be vnderstood as before when the woman is said to appeare in heauen and the great red Dragon against her which was all done here below but represented in heauen as the proper place of the Church which is but a stranger in this world and the place where the Deuill first had his abode and where he was wont to appeare to accuse the godly For so a great fight is said to bee in heauen when as indeed it was in this world because they which doe instigate and stirre vp vnto it are on the one side the holy Angels of God whose abode is in heauen Eph. 6.12 and on the other side the troupe of vncleane spirits who are in heauenly places that is the vpper part of the aire Many stand for the Church that by heauen here the Church is meant but seeing the woman is the Church who is persecuted after this fight and casting down of the Deuill from heauen to the earth I cannot see how heauen should bee put for the Church also But being vnderstood as hath beene before deliuered all things following will excellently agree Michael the Archangell with his Angels fight that is that principall good Angell who is superiour to all the rest as the Deuill is the principall of the euill Angels he with the other good Angels I say standing for the truth stirred vp Christian Emperours and Gouernors to fight for the truth and the Deuill on the other side with his infernall rabble stirred vp Heathen Emperors and Gouernors to fight against the truth Forbs Brightman Mason And thus almost doth Forbs and Brightman vnderstand it for they make Constantine the great and his assistants in his battels Michael and his Angels and Licinius with his assistants the Deuill and his Angels Many will haue Christ meant by Michael Bullenger Grasserus Pareus both here wheresoeuer else this name occurreth because he is said to be the Archangell that is the Prince of Angels and Michael one as God But why may not one Angell bee chiefe amongst the good Angels as well as one Deuill is chiefe amongst the euill Angels And if so it is no whit absurd to say that he is like God being so eminent an image of his maiesty and excellency And therefore some hold Michael to be an Angell indeed Fox as hath beene already said and by the ancients it hath beene generally held to be so onely some question hath beene of what Angels Michael is the chiefe and herein most following Dionysius who wrote of the orders of Angels haue held him to bee the chiefe of the lowest order onely I cannot approue so well of expounding Michael the Archangell of Constantine or of any man or the Deuill of Licinius because there is none other place of Scripture which giueth light vnto such an exposition and the following circumstances agree not seeing Licinius perished when he was ouercome of Constantine neither did hee persecute the Church any more and afterwards this Deuill said here to haue but a short time is also said to be bound vp a thousand yeeres and then to rage as hauing but a short time which can no way agree to that Tyrant Michael therefore fighteth by his pupils Constantine Theodosius Valentinian and other godly Emperours the Deuill by the heathen Emperours before Constantine and Licinius and Iulian and Eugenius who sought to beat downe the Christian religion This fight began soone after Christs ascension and continued till ann 394. in three hundred of which yeeres the Deuill fought so as that by his agents the Heathen Emperours the truth was put in great hazzard but then Michael began his battell so fiercely as that errour and idolatry was put to the worse but by
Iulian the Deuill reinforcing his battell againe a Gratian was raised vp and vnto him was ioyned a Theodosius who when Gratian was slaine by Andragathius a Captaine of Maximus and vsurper being Emperour alone behaued himselfe so valiantly that in his time the Heathen idolatry was quite put downe and the temples of idols destroyed neither were any permitted to sacrifice to idols any more For the Deuill seeing his religion to grow towards a desperate estate thought to put all vpon the fortune of one battell and therefore stirred vp Eugenius with his Captaine Arbogastus with a mighty power to set vpon Theodosius but Theodosius hauing prayed vnto God began the battell against them and being miraculously assisted with a mighty wind blowing in the face of the enemy soone gat the victory and they being slaine Theodor. l. 5. cap. 20. Socrat. l. 5. c. 24. Sozem. l. 6. c. 22. cap. 20. there was no place for the old heathen idolatry any more as both Theodoret Socrates and Sozomen agree in their histories And thus the Deuill was cast out of heauen when as his worship in idols could stand no longer for hee that worshippeth idols worshippeth Deuils Chap. 9.20 and all this time he occupieth heauen as it were which is the place of Gods residency to whom alone this seruice is due when this kinde of worship is put downe he is cast out of heauen And at this fall there is great ioy in heauen the Angels who are ministring spirits about Gods chosen being greatly affected with their prosperity for if when one sinner is conuerted there bee ioy in heauen Luk. 15. then much more when so many thousands are deliuered from so great a sinne as idolatry is And this benefit is further amplified by another epithere of the Deuill Vers 10. the accuser of the brethren who accused them night and day before God He that was so infest an enemy against them hath his forces broken and is not so able to doe them hurt as before And then it is more plainely declared by whom hee was thus brought downe and who were the warriours vnder the guardian of Michael and his Angels viz. the brethren who loued not this life vnto the death and all by the bloud of the Lambe Vers 11. hee is the stronger man armed that cast out this strong Champion the Deuill and by his power razed the temples where hee kept possession before and was worshipped Touching the inhabitants of the earth amongst whom the Deuill is said now to be come and therefore a woe to them is proclaimed in these words Woe to the inhabitants of the earth Vers 12. Bullinger Pareus Brightman and of the sea c. Some expound this of earthly minded men who though they be outwardly of the Christian religion yet there is no power of godlinesse in them but the load-stone that draweth their hearts is the earth with the profits and pleasures therof A woe commeth now vpon them they say by variances and warres happening amongst themselues and by the Gothes and Vandals sent as a scourge vpon them to bring them into intolerable miseries And to this doe I so farre forth subscribe as they apply this to the troubles happening after Theodosius his time which was after ann 400. for till that time the fight before spoken of extendeth when the idolatry of the heathen was vtterly subuerted in all the Roman Empire After this there are great stirres by the instigation of the Deuill by meanes of the Gothes and Vandals Heruls and Longobards by the inuasions of whom what miseries the Roman Empire suffered chiefly for the space of one hundred and fifty yeeres ye may see in their history the briefe whereof I haue already set downe in speaking vpon Chap. 9.3 vnder the fift trumpet And well may we by the inhabiters of the earth and sea vnderstand the wicked Roman Empire euen after the suppression of idolatry both because they were Lords of land and sea and because though there were now a forme of religion yet all was full of cruelty hatred and despight by reason of the heresies which gat head in those times as hath beene shewed before in speaking of the blacke horse Some yet hold Fox Forbs that in this passage is onely a briefe of that which is more largely prosecuted in the verses following about the persecuting of the Church but this were very improper by the inhabiters of the earth to vnderstand the Church which is mortified to the world neither by thus expounding it is there any satisfaction giuen touching the interuening time betwixt the battels end before spoken of and the persecuting of the Church which I thinke ought carefully to be obserued As for the short time which the Deuill is said to haue I assent to those that approue the whole time from hence to the end of the world to be but short according to the Scripture phrase and by comparing it with the eternity to come afterwards It was long agoe said Heb. 10.37 a Pet. 3.8 9. Yet a little while and hee that shall come will come and will not tarry and The Lord doth not deferre his comming as some count deferring for a thousand yeeres with the Lord are but as one day This passage is of singular comfort to the godly of these times who are sollicitous for the truth seeing it in so great danger by the preuailings of the aduersary for as in the Primitiue Church when things seemed to bee most desperate they were neerest a most ioyfull time by reason of the vtter ouerthrow of heathen idolatry which straight way followed so I doubt not but when the truth now professed shall be brought to greatest streights there shall be a way happily set opon to come out of them by the vtter ruine of Popish idolatry which shall then bee euen at the doores for though the Deuill may seeme at the first to haue the best yet Michael shall finally ouercome him but wicked worldlings can neuer haue any comfort of immunity from his rage hee growing still more and more terrible to them euen vnto the end and in the end they must suffer with him vnspeakable torments without end or ease there being none to stand by them to help to auert his rage from them as the godly haue Quest 4. To what time is this to be referred Vers 13. whereof it is said Then hee persecuted the woman that had brought forth a male childe What is her flying into the wildernesse with Eagles wings and the time of her abode there called time and times and halfe a time And what is the floud cast out after her and the earths deuouring it Answ Some referre this time to the Apostles dayes Bullinger when the Church soone after Christs ascension began to bee hotly persecuted and hereupon they tooke occasion to disperse themselues amongst the Gentiles where shee abideth to the end of the world set forth by time and times and halfe a
expressing the same time Pareus resolueth it well Pareus This phrase is borrowed from Daniel 7.25 and c. 12.7 where it setteth forth the time of Antiochus his rage who was the forerunner of Antichrist Brightman that this is done that we might not faint vnder this persecution when we shall see it last long for though being set forth by 1260. daies it may seeme short yet the Spirit of God would haue vs know that it is a long time as we account there being first a certaine space of time and when that is expired times and last of all halfe a time more and Brightmans conceit herein is excellent that haply the Lord by this distinction would haue vs vnderstand that in this time of Antichrists reigne and the Churches being vnder there are three distinctions one of Antichrists rise wherein was the beginning of this womans solitude to bee vnderstood by a time for in this space he came to his height and the Church was brought to the lowest ebbe the second of his holding in that state which is twice as long the third of his declining when the Church shall grow towards her deliuerance which is effected in halfe a time Thus he But I hold me rather to the former resolution as more agreeable to that which I haue before deliuered touching the determination of this time which in all probability will not be till ann 1860. And then the declining time of Antichrist and the rising time of the Church will bee 360. yeeres And thus I haue deliuered what I conceiue touching the time when this persecution beginneth for when we come to expound the time of continuance in the Wildernesse I hold the same with diuers learned Writers on our side before mentioned who make the Cities conculcation when the Witnesses prophesie and the time of this lying hid in the Wildernesse all one Let the Reader consider and iudge of all Touching the floud cast out of the Dragons mouth after the woman Brightman which was by the earth swallowed vp in succour of the woman some vnderstand it of the ouerflowing of Africa and part of Europe by the Goths Vandals Heruls and Longobards by whom the whole Church was endangered as by a floud of being vtterly extinct but these earthly and barbarous people set forth by the earth comming into these parts were brought to the embracing of the Christian Religion though corruptly and so became more milde towards Christian people which is the earths swallowing vp of the floud I cannot see how this doth any way agree both because this incursion by these Barbarians was made about ann 400. long before the Churches desolation here described and if the Church had beene succoured by their growing more gentle it would haue beene said rather but the floud dried vp and not as here the earth swallowed it vp noting some reliefe that came to the Church aliundè Some by the floud vnderstand the Popes endeuours to bring the Roman Catholike Princes into a league Grasser to root out with their ioint forces the reformed Religion which they could neuer effect by reason of the differences amongst them in respect of their earthly possessions this made Clement the eighth of late to excommunicate the Councellors both of Spaine and France and this variance of theirs about earthly things is said to be the earth helping the woman by Gods prouidence who turneth it to the good of the Church Some will haue this Floud to bee the edicts of heathen Emperours against Christians to root them out Fox and the Earth the Famines and Pestilences and Warres that still happening hindered the execution of these decrees but these things being in former times are misapplied here Bullinger And likewise whereas some vnderstand it of the Scismes and Heresies hapning in the primitiue Church and of the troubles and persecutions stirred vp by Satan when the Church was fled amongst the Gentiles against which they were succoured vnexpectedly the earthly ones themselues being oftentimes a meanes to appease these tumults as the Towne Clerke in Ephesus was Act. 19. Pareus reckoneth vp other Interpretations made by some Parcus that this floud is the troubles and afflictions of the Church in all times but this is too generall and more specially the heresies and blasphemous opinions held in the daies of Christian Emperours whereby the Deuill as by a floud sought to drowne all true Religion for the space of 300. yeeres after Constantine which before hee set forth to be the time of the womans fleeing away and herein he resteth The earth hee saith some interpret to be Christ for his stability some generall Councels called from all parts of the earth for the condemning of heresies which is not likely seeing such Councels do rather resemble Heauen Ioh. 3. Christ is said to be from Heauen heauenly in opposition to such as be from the earth earthly He therefore expoundeth it onely in generall of a miraculous preseruation Numb 16. in allusion to the earths opening the mouth and swallowing vp Chorah and his company holding that wee ought not to search any further into any particular meaning But for so much as I haue already gone from the ground of this exposition viz. the reckoning of the time of the womans fleeing to be 300. yeeres and this floud was cast out after her vpon her fleeing and being come into the wildernesse which was in a short time for she was soone chased thither and when she abode there this floud was sent out after her I must needs rather subscribe to them which hold that the time of casting out this floud was in the time here described Grasserus said to bee a time and times and halfe a time and so some great warres attempted by the Popes instigation for the vtter rooting out of the reformed Religion are figured out by the floud And of such warres we shall finde there haue beene many euer since the breaking out of the light in the time of Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prague and before that against the Waldenses and Albingenses and afterwards against the Lutherans in Germany and the Caluinists in France where diuers great men entred a league to root them out But the earth holpe the woman The History of the Bohemian warres is most famous for the illustrating of this for Sigismund the Emperour being stirred vp by the Pope to persecute the Bohemians for cleauing constantly to the Doctrine of Iohn Husse after that it and they were condemned in the Councell of Constance inuaded Bohemia with a great power but his army being ouerthrowne and much wasted by a few scattered troupes of the Hussites Henrici Mutij Chron. lib. 27. the Emperour departed home much discouraged But soone after greater forces are sent against them being led by the Princes of Germany the Duke of Saxony the Marquesse of Brandenberge and the Archbishop of Treuers by the instigation of Pope Martin the fifth They entered in three
great armies but when the Hussites vnder the conduct of Zisca appeared a feare came vpon them all and they fled with all haste casting away their weapons and leauing their Tents well furnished to the enemy And yet againe by the perswasion of Sigismund another Army was sent vnder the conduct of Brandenberge which being also taken with feare before the Hussites came in sight fled away and could not by any meanes be made to stay What was this but a most miraculous preseruing of the Church by Gods owne immediate hand there being nothing but the very earth that affrighted them so soone as they came into that land being taken with an horrible feare against all sense and reason And thus at sundry other times the Church being assaulted in other parts she was miraculously preserued not by any power of her owne but by the hand of God being against her enemies and for her which deliuerance is said to come by the earth helping her in allusion to the History of the lands spuing out of the Cananites before the Israelites or of the earths opening the mouth to swallow vp Corah and his company that Moses and Aaron being indangered by their conspiracy might be preserued Pareus For this seemeth to me the most probable resolution of this saying which was also noted out of Pareus before To this if we ioyne that of the differences hapning betweene Catholike Princes about earthly things Grasserus keeping them from vniting to extirpe the Church at other times it may also further serue to cleare this place the more and in the East the differences of the Persian and Turke being both for Mahomet yet diuided about Haly his successour whereby the Turkes haue still beene hindered from their purposed inuasions of Christendome The Church haue had also other helpe from the Princes of the earth who hath beene stirred vp to fauour and defend the truth as the Princes of Germany and Queene Elizabeth of famous memory who aided the Hollander being at the point of drowning abated the pride of the Spaniard and maintained the Protestant Religion in France That all this passage is allegoricall and will beare such exposition is plaine because it is said as it were a riuer and so it is but as if the earth had holpe the woman against this riuer by deuouring it seeing there is nothing more frequent than by a floud to set forth great armies flowing into Countries to destroy them Note Note that when all meanes faile to preserue the godly yet as long as the earth standeth they shall haue succour though they can see no more likelihood hereof than they that are in the Wildernesse where nothing but the vast ground appeareth to saue them from the deuouring of the wilde beasts Quest 3. What is meant by the rest of the womans seed Vers 17. and the Dragons making warre therewith set forth in these words And the Dragon was angry with the woman and went forth to make warre with the rest of her seed which keepe the Commandements of God c. Brightman Gorran Answ Some vnderstand the Christian people in diuers parts of the world against whom the Saracens were stirred vp about ann 630. when he could doe no good otherwise hee made open warre by them Pareus Forbs Some hold that here is a preparatiue onely to the persecutions raised by the Pope described in the next Chapter these being here first generally spoken of and then more at large described vnder the double beast Some by this seed vnderstand all Christian people which should be begotten vnto God from the time of Iohn to the end of the world Bullinger for the Dragon hath alwaies made warre against them first by the Emperours and then by Antichrist Some vnderstand particular members of the Church Fox who are in diuers Countries laid hold vpon and put to death where Antichrist hath power when as hee seeth that his attempts by warre to extinguish the whole Church are frustrated And to this doe I subscribe as best answering that which was said before of the male childe which the Church brought forth he was the first seed now the rest of the seed are all godly persons who are likewise after all the troubles before described particularly singled out vnto martyrdome for he that heareth and doth the Word of God is my mother Mat. 12.50 my brother and sister saith our Sauiour Christ So that this is added to shew that as the Deuill shall attempt to extinguish the Church by warres so these not succeeding as he desireth he will yet doe what hurt he can by fighting against particular persons and destroying them wheresoeuer his power lieth And this is verified by experience the Spanish Inquisition is a great Engine wherewith the Deuil fighteth and destroyeth many and other Commissions appointed both here in England in the daies of Queene Mary and in other Countries for the finding out and putting to death by fire and fagot the seruants of God which held the testimony of Iesus Christ and who would rather lose their liues than depart therefrom As for the other expositions they cannot hold in regard of the time according to the computation which I haue hitherto followed and shewed to be the most probable We must expect then Note that the faithfull seruants of God shall neuer be free from trouble and danger during the time allotted vnto Antichrist but partly by great armies and partly by particular persecutions they shall euer be impugned that we may stand ready armed with faith and patience comforting our selues in this that the Church shall neuer bee extinguisht when all the forces that can be made are raised against her but she shall still remaine to triumph ouer Antichrist and all her enemies at the last And I stood vpon the Sea shore Vers 18. in the Latine this is read hee stood as if the Dragon were meant but in all Greeke Copies I stood and so Rupertus and Primasius and all ours and amongst the Papals Ribera and Viegas reade it so and it is most plainly a passage to the next vision of the Beast rising out of the Sea for to behold this he sheweth here that hee was placed vpon the Sea shore CHAP. XIII WHat is figured out by this Beast Quest Vers 1. whereof it is said I saw a beast ascending out of the Sea hauing seuen heads and ten hornes and vpon his hornes ten crownes and vpon his heads the names of blasphemy Vers 2. And hee was like to a Leopard c. Answ There is great difference amongst Expositors here some holding this beast to be a figure of the Turke Viterbiensis both because he riseth out of the Sea and waters afterwards are expounded to set forth peoples and Nations Chap. 17.15 for the Turkish Empire consisted of diuers peoples Arabians Turkes Saracens Tartarians c. and the similitudes agree of a Leopard because he hath the Kingdome of the Grecians
follow that it is a vaine thing to search into these mysteries wheras we are in sundry places commanded and incouraged so to doe The third is absurd because they enter into heauen who goe thither in soule as all the godly doe continually whensoeuer they depart out of this life The fift is too particular in applying this entring to the Iewes and both fift and seuenth too much strained in making the smoke a signe of obscurity for as these plagues shall be executed certainly we shall be more enlightened in the mysteries of God here set forth Note Note that the world is deceiued in their common tenent that they can repent when they list let them consider this example and tremble taking time before the smoke of Gods anger for their persisting in sinne become so great that not one of them can enter his Temple The Israelites hardened themselues Heb. 3. wherefore God sware that they should neuer enter into his rest no more shall they that now harden themselues in hope of turning afterwards soone enough to obtaine mercy Againe see a reason why now a long time the proceedings of the reformed religion hath beene almost at a stand little ground more being gained of the Papals It was thus appointed to bee in the purpose and decree of God long agoe whilst the vials are powring out against the Papacy none can enter the Temple But the time shall come when that all these vials being emptied the nations shall thicke and threefold be brought in with vs to worship God aright CHAP. XVI AND I heard a great voyce out of the Temple Vers 1 c. saying to the seuen Angels Goe and powre out your vials of the wrath of God vpon the earth And the first went and powred out his viall vpon the earth Quest 1 c. What are the plagues here figured out and at what times are they or shall they be executed Answ Some hold that the iudgements of God vpon the world for sinne euer since the time of the Gospell Napier are here figured out in seuerall ages 1. From the yeere 71. to 316. when the Roman Empire was iudged diuers wayes 2. From 316. to 561. when the seat of the Empire being translated to Constantinople it was left as a prey to the Gothes 3. From 561. to 806. when Mahumetisme ouerspred the world and became a great plague vnto it 4. From 806. to 1051. when contentions were rife about images and men blasphemed calling them Gods that were no Gods 5. From 1051. to 1296. when Zadock an Emperour of the Turkes inuaded the Roman Empire more and more to the great astonishment of those that were of this Empire 6. From 1296. to 1541. in which time was Ottoman the great Turke who wan Constantinople comming from Euphrates and then by the solicitation of agents on both sides said here to be vncleane spirits they were stirred vp to fight many battels both they of the Popish and of the Mahumetan religion 7. From 1541. to 1791. when all shall either be Papists Protestants or Neutrals being diuided into three parts and in this age the world shall end And thus they parallel these seuen vials with the seuen trumpets before going Others not much differing for they referre these plagues also to this large space of time by the first vnderstand the great Fox plague vpon the heathen persecutors in the dayes of Gallus and Volusianus which was a little before the ten yeeres persecution by Dioclesian By the second and third the destructions of heathen Emperours by violent deaths being as the sea and of subordinate powers vnder them being as riuers By the fourth that extraordinary heat of the Sunne in the campe of Antoninus Philosophus the Emperor about an 162. in his expedition against the Marcomanni when his whole army hauing beene oppressed herewith by the space of fiue dayes together and now ready all to perish a great showre of raine was obtained by the twelfth legion being full of Christians By the fift the ruinating of the Roman Empire by the Gothes Vandals c. By the sixt the iudgements which came vpon the world by the Turkes and Tartarians before figured out vnder the sixt trumpet after which all ioyne together against the truth the Dragon which is the Deuill the beast which is the Pope and the false prophet who is the Mahumetan for though one of these is against another yet in this they ioyne all together that they persecute Christ in his members Iudg. 5.19 But they assemble together none otherwise than Iabin and Sisera did at Megiddo that is to their owne destruction in the end By the seuenth the end of all things Neither of these expositions can stand because the first of these plagues is inflicted vpon such as beare the marke of the beast as is expresly said vers 2. Wherefore they must needs haue all reference to the latter times after that Antichrist had long tyrannized and compelled men to beare his marke putting to death all that refused so to doe Others therefore more rightly apply these plagues vnto the times since that Antichrist began to be discouered by men zealous for the truth of God But yet in the particular declaration of themselues they differ much one from another Some by the first plague vnderstand the French pox the beginning whereof is noted to haue beene ann 1494 in the Neopolitan warre made by the French and Spanish Bullinger by meanes of an whore in their army with this loathsome disease especially the Friers and Nuns of France are plagued who are such infest enemies against Matrimony By the second the pestilence which is caused by the corruption of waters and aire By the third the chiefe Doctors of the Romish religion who are compared to riuers of bloud because such incendiaries of war in all parts of Christendome By the fourth some great drought breeding feuers and hot diseases in mens bodies the cōmon effect whereof is to make them outragious By the fift the obscuring of the glory of the Popish religion by the arising of the light of the truth that being now detested as full of errours abominable which before drew all men vnto it as most venerable By the sixt the taking away of the profits of the Roman Sea which were wont to come from the countreys round about whereby it shall be made weake and feeble and so be quite ouerthrowne by the professours of the truth who are meant by the Kings of the East for they are said to be Kings and Priests vnto God and as Euphrates was to Babylon so the Popes rich reuenues are a defence to his Sea Against this plague the Pope bestirreth himselfe sending out his Legats which are said to bee three euill spirits like frogs because they are euer croaking in the eares of kings and princes of the earth to moue them to warre for the defence of holy Church and they are three that is a full number likely to
most against the professours of the truth assuring our selues that they are neerest their vtter ruine CHAP. XVII IN this Chapter and that which followeth the great City before said to bee diuided into three parts is more particularly described together with her vtter ruine and ouerthrow in respect of the head and fountaine Rome from whence all the abominations of idolatry and superstition haue flowed In the exposition of the particulars there is no great difference nor difficulty so much light hauing beene already giuen and therefore I will the more briefly only touching the diuersity of interpretations come to open euery passage as it lieth in order Quest 1. Which of the seuen Angels is it that sheweth Iohn these things Vers 1 2 c. who is the great Whore whom he saith he will shew vnto him what are the waters called also a beast vers 3. strangely described that she sitteth vpon And why was hee led into a desart place to behold this and touching the more particular description of this Whore and the word Mystery written in her forehead what is meant hereby Answ The Angell is held by some to bee the fift Brightman who powred out his Viall vpon the throne of the beast Pareus Napier But others more rightly hold him to bee the seuenth Angell vpon the powring out of whose Viall the great City was diuided into three parts which is againe more particularly vndertaken here that by the relation of this Angell it might be more fully vnderstood both what this City is and how and by what meanes she commeth to be destroyed Others indefinitely take this Angell for one of the seuen Bullinger c. Touching the great Whore it is agreed almost by all that it is Rome Bellar. lib. 3. de Rom. pont fice cap. 13. yea euen by Romanists themselues Bellarmine saith Wee may say and that better in my iudgement that by the Whore Rome is vnderstood so likewise Ribera and Viegas the Iesuites vpon this place Tertullian of old spake to the same effect Tertul. contra Iudae●s Babylon in Saint Iohn doth represent Rome being as great and as proud of her dominions and as tyrannizing ouer the Saints as euer Babylon was Ieronim 11. qu. ad Algasiam And Ierome saith According to the Reuelation of Saint Iohn in the sorehead of the queane clad in purple there was a name of blasphemy written to wit Rome the euerlasting See more touching this before Chap. 14. vers 8. and how that shift of heathen Rome being meant here is confuted whereunto wee may adde that heathen Rome cannot be meant because then Rome subdued the Kings of the earth by force and not by subtill inticements as this Babylon doth and because the Rome here spoken against shall bee vtterly destroyed for the sins found then therein when the time of destruction commeth but heathen Rome was not so destroyed and if Rome should at the last be destroyed for the idolatries of the Heathen this destruction must come for idolatries put downe many hundred yeeres agone which is contrary to the course of the Lords proceedings against sinfull places As for their last refuge to an apostasie yet to bee expected in Rome in regard of which it is thus spoken of here see also Chap. 14. vers 8. Touching the many waters whereupon this woman sitteth they are interpreted vers 15. to be peoples and Nations and tongues ouer which Rome ruleth by the power residing there And this circumstance of her sitting is varied euery time that it is spoken of Vers 3. Vers 3. She is shewed sitting vpon a beast of a purple colour full of names of blasphemy hauing seuen heads and ten hornes and vers 9. the seuen heads being spoken of are said to be seuen hills whereupon the woman sitteth Vers 9. She is shewed sitting thus diuersly for diuers respects shee sitteth vpon many waters because she ruleth ouer many peoples and Nations vpon a purple coloured beast because the Senators and Rulers of this State vnder the Emperours did weare purple and skarlet clothing ascribing diuine titles of honor vnto their Emperours in a blasphemous manner as the Cardinals by whom the Pope ruleth now doe vnto him being also likewise apparelled and vpon seuen hils because the City was anciently seated vpon seuen hills And this variation maketh it so plaine as that nothing can bee plainer than that Rome is meant by this Whore seeing no City in the world is so seated but Rome onely neither doth that periphrasis whereby this City is described vers 18. agree to any other This is the great City that hath rule ouer the Kings of the earth And this name Whore is chosen to expresse Rome the head of the Antichristian Sect for continuation of the allegory of a woman in the similitude of whom the Church appeared chap. 12. The true Church is a chaste and holy woman who keepeth her selfe only to the Lord to whom shee is married refusing to worship any other or to make any other partaker with him in his diuine titles and attributes The Antichristian Sect is a whorish woman together with the Lord worshipping Images and Saints departed and attributing that vnto the Pope which is proper to the Lord only wherein truly spirituall whoredome doth consist Touching the place the Wildernesse Vers 3. Brightman into which hee was led to see this sight some take Iohn carried hither for a type of such as should be able to see Rome to be the beast and the Pope to be the Whore tiding this beast they should bee obscure persons and such as in whom this light should be little expected euen as in a man liuing and brought vp in the Wildernes there is expected no great matter of learning knowledge Some expound the Wildernesse of Gentilisme wherein Popery indeed appeareth Bullinger for so much as the idolatries and superstitions of the Gentiles barren of good men as the Wildernesse is without people are the very attire wherein Popery marcheth Pareus Some hold that reference is had here to the woman before spoken of Chap. 12. flying into the Wildernesse in the time of heathen persecution being then chaste and beloued of God but now become an Whore by her manifold idolatries Lastly Forbs some hold that hee is carried into the Wildernesse as the fittest place for contemplation and he that will diue into any deepe mysteries must retire himselfe from all worldly incumbrances I hold with this my last Author that there is no mystery in this passage but as vpon other occasions it hath beene vsed Mat 4. Christ was carried by the Spirit into the Wildernesse to be tempted so here Iohn is carried into the Wildernesse to see this mystery onely that in so solitary a place there might be no interruption by the comming in of any man or any occurrence which vnusually hapneth in places more frequented whereunto if we adde that the Wildernesse is in
here mentioned as the boundary of this time as it was of the former Moreouer here were a strange gap opened into an expectation of this world to last yet seuen hundred yeeres which is against all probability That exposition which referreth the thrones to the Pope cannot stand in reason for Satan being bound it is not to bee thought that his Lieutenants the Popes aduancement should be shewed but rather the aduancement of such as withstood him Neither can I subscribe to that of the glorified estate of the Saints departed vnto whom the rest of the dead are opposed who liued not againe till the thousand yeeres expired because some visible alteration is here doubtlesse set forth at the binding of the Deuill seeing otherwise the accomplishment of this Prophecy could not haue beene conceiued of by the faithfull vpon earth for their comfort when as it was without doubt set forth for this end and purpose And as for that exposition whereby these things are applied vnto the Prelates and Rulers of the Church the description of being set vpon thrones and hauing power of iudgement is too glorious to agree vnto them Wherefore I preferre that of the sensible most happy alteration in the state of the world in the dayes of Constantine the Great for then thrones were set for Christians and they had the power of iudging who before were iudged and in this time the soules of the faithfull who had beene put to death for the Christian religion in the time of persecution might well bee said to liue and reigne with Christ because they had beene set forth as lying vnder the Altar and crying for reuenge vpon those that shed their bloud Chap. 6. vers 9. all the time that the Heathen reigned And whosoeuer worshipped not the beast as they departed out of this life they had communion with them in this their erection all these thousand yeres that is the body of the Saints being considered as one but not euery particular member For they all and euery of them liued and reigned in this time of a thousand yeeres though some a longer some a shorter part of it Their liuing and reigning then here spoken of must needs haue reference to their lying and crying before mentioned and therefore as that was spoken of to set forth times of persecution without any appearance of a deliuerer that might reuenge that innocent bloud so here is nothing else set forth but a deliuerance of the Church and a putting of power into the hands of the faithfull to reuenge themselues vpon the heathen as was sometime giuen to the Iewes by thē meanes of Hester Ester 8. and Mordecai For although the soules of the faithfull did liue and reigne with Christ before mmediatly after their separation from the body yet because vnto perfect dominion it is not onely requisite to be in glory and ioy with the Lord but to haue our enemies beaten downe and destroyed they are not said to liue and reigne with the Lord till this accomplished Touching the rest of the dead who are said not to rise againe till these thousand yeeres ended I cannot thinke that it is meant of the dead in sinne and superstition who rise not till then that is neuer because they which were before spoken of are corporally dead for they were slaine and these are plainly a part of them for hee saith the rest of the dead and therefore corporally dead also I suppose then that by the rest of the dead the innumerable company of them that haue died since the beginning of the world are meant the time of whose resurrection is not to bee expected till after these thousand yeeres lest when we heare of some liuing and reigning with Christ and of thrones set and the iudgement giuen we should imagine the generall resurrection and Christs comming to iudgement to be here meant This is the first resurrection Vers 5. Vers 6. Blessed and holy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection c. This may seeme to bee plaine for a bodily resurrection maintained from this place by the Chiliasts because the liuing of the soules before spoken of being here reiterated is called a resurrection which cannot bee taken but for the rising againe of the body seeing the soule falleth not at all But it is to bee vnderstood that these words are metaphoricall and not proper the rising of the Church from vnder persecution to such an estate as wherein the truth is propagated with authority is as it were a resurrection from the dead and therefore is so called and because of the life that vniuersally came then into the world by meanes of the Gospell thus propagated it is called the first resurrection as the conuersion of the Iewes which shall be is called by the Apostle Rom. 11.15 Life vnto the world from the dead which is all one as if he had said with our Prophet here a resurrection They are said to be blessed and holy that haue part in this resurrection that is the faithfull of these times are aboue others blessed in this that they rule and reigne the world being now Christian and are not vnder the dominion of their enemies neither shall the second death seize vpon them as vpon none else that are in the like condition that is by the power of the Gospell and spirit raised vp from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse For of a bodily resurrection it cannot possibly be vnderstood as I haue already proued but being thus vnderstood all things will most excellently agree I saw thrones set and them that sate vpon them c. that is it was represented vnto me how in the time of Constantine the Great the faithfull should begin to rule and reigne in this world And I saw the soules c. that is and at that time it was shewed me by the altered condition of such as had giuen their liues for the truth who before were set forth as crying but now as ruling and reigning in token of an end put to those calamities and a beginning made of prosperity that the case of the Church was altered and this lasted a thousand yeeres This is the first resurrection c. that is this the faithfuls being aduanced to rule and reigne here being a meanes to conuert so many millions in all parts to the truth is as it were a generall resurrection going before that at the last day against which they are well prepared that haue their part in this by being quickened in grace for the second death shall neuer seize vpon such but they shall reigne with Christ a thousand yeeres by the prosperous and flourishing estate which the Church enioyeth here and afterwards for euer by being actually possessed of the kingdome of heauen in body and soule for euermore Note Note that the onely way to be safe from euerlasting destruction in hell is by making a resurrection before the last resurrection that is a resurrection vnto grace