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

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and he called the name of the place Taberah Here we see the punishment of their sinne Obserue from hence ●●ctrine that among other iudgements of God 〈◊〉 is one of ●●●s iudge●●●ts fire is to be esteemed as one Thus he destroyed Sodome and Gomorrha Gen. 19.24 and burnt vp both cities and people So a fire went out from the Lord and consumed Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron because they offered strange fire Leuit. 10.2 Eliah the Prophet did call fire from heauen and consumed the captaines with their fifty 1 Kin. 1.10 The like we see afterward chap. 16.35 according to that in the Psalme The flame burnt vp the wicked Psal 106.18 Reason 1 This must be acknowledged to be a greeuous and fearefull iudgement because we say commonly and truely fire and water haue no mercy And we see by neuer failing experience that it is so Secondly it is one of the titles of God expressing his nature that he is called a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 Deut. 4.24 and 9.3 Vse 1 This teacheth vs that if it please God to lay this iudgement vpon vs at any time whatsoeuer the meanes or instruments be whereby it commeth whether by negligence or wilfulnesse or by the immediat hand of God wee must alwayes lift vp our eyes to heauen and submit our selues with patience to him wee must not rest in second causes but acknowledge his prouidence and consider what is said in this place that the fire of the Lord consumed the campe We must therefore no otherwise account of it Vse 2 Secondly it is our duty in this regard to serue God acceptably with reuerence and godly feare 〈◊〉 2.28 29 We must take heed to our selues lest we forget the couenant of the Lord our God we must make no grauen image or the likenes of any thing which he hath forbidden 〈◊〉 4.23 It is reason we stand in feare of him that is able to destroy vs suddenly and to arme his creatures as his souldiers to consume vs in a moment Thirdly it warneth vs that at the last day Vse 3 the whole world shall be consumed with fire and the elements shall melt with heat and the heauens shall passe away as a scrolle Seeing then all these things shall be dissolued 2 Pet 3.11.12 What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conuersation and godlines looking for and hasting vnto the comming of the day of God! Wee neuer read nor heard of moe burning of townes houses thē within these few yeres testified by the continuall collections for the releefe of such persons as haue receiued losse that way It is a lamentable sight and mooueth much commiseratiō to see a few houses consumed to ashes these particular burnings put vs in mind of that generall burning Particular burnings put vs in mind of the generall burning when all things that worldly men so much esteem and for which they labour gape so greedily shal be on fire What should we so much delight our selues in costly apparell bespangled with gold and siluer or why doe we dote and set our affections so farre vpon the treasures of this life which wee know must all be burnt vp like stubble Lastly we are hereby admon●shed of a more Vse 4 terrible fire and ●●ore fearefull spectacle then all the former for they are but as painted fires in comparison of the last fire Esay 30.33 which the breath of the Lord like a streame of brimstone doth kindle It was a fearefull fire fell vpon Sodom which burned their cities to ashes 2 Pet. 2.6 but their soules suffering the vengeance of God in eternall fire was more fearefull Iude ver 7. Matth. 25.4.1 Mar. 9.44 2 Thess 1.8 This is called euerlasting fire which neuer shal be quenched Into this shall the reprobate be cast be tormented in those flames These plagues are infinite vnspeakeable incomprehensible without end without ease without intermission without remedy without profit Other iudgmēts haue some good vse many times bring profit to the sufferers after they haue been exercised by them but these shall bring none at al there shal be weeping gnashing of teeth Againe when the people first murmured God did not punish them as appeareth in the booke of Exodus they had not yet receiued the law but after the law was giuen knowledg shined as a candle in their hearts to direct thē God spared them not but entred into iudgement with them so soon as they sinned against him We learne hereby Doctrine that knowledge the light of Gods word receiued into our hearts encreaseth sin and iudgement Knowledge encreaseth sin and iudgment The seruant that knew his masters will and did not prepare himselfe to do according to his will shal be beaten with many stripes so saith Christ of the Iewes Luke 12.47 If I had not come and spoken vnto them they had not had sin but now they haue no cloake for their sinne For ignorance doth in some sort excuse that is make the sin not to be so great Again Reason 1 all colour and excuse is taken from such as haue the meanes of knowledge Ioh. 15.22 Luke 12 48. they cannot say they knew not Ioh. 12.48 the word shal iudge them at the last day which they haue heard This then teacheth that none sin more greeuously then such as liue in the bosome of the Church heare his word and receiue his Sacraments It had been better for them that they had neuer knowne the way of righteousnesse then after they haue knowne it 2 Pet. 2 22. to turne from the holy commandement deliuered vnto them and the last state of that man is worse then the first Matth. 12.45 Againe marke from hence the cause why iudgment beginneth at the house of God 1 Pet 4.17 1 Cor. 11.32 because here is the greatest light here God hath vouchsafed the greatest mercy heere he hath rained vpon his owne city while other places remained dry and withered As then they haue tasted the greatest mercies so they must be touched with the sorest iudgments Deut. 28.15 Lastly it standeth the Church in hand and euery true beleeuer to walk as wisely in the day redeeming the time Ephes 4 15.16 because the daies are euill If the word do not worke our conuersion it shall further our condemnation and wee make our selues two-fold more the children of hel then others that haue not been partakers of such graces He called the name of the place Taberah God doth not content himself to punish their murmuring but setteth vp a memorial or monument of their sinne tha● others might be taught and instructed by it to feare by giuing a new name to the place where the sinne was committed calling it Taberah that is a consumption or a burning The like we see afterward in this chap. ver 34. Doctrine Learne from these examples The iudgements of God are both punishments and
confounded and ashamed How many came to our Sauiour Christ in the dayes of his infirmity when he liued vpon the earth to be helped and healed yet who returned diseased to his owne house Who came to bee restored to sight and went away blinde Who sought for help turned his back sick who sought comfort went away sorrowfull Who came to him deafe or dumbe or lame and went away without his speaking his hearing his legs and limbes restored vnto him This the Prophet Dauid knew and in the meditation of it found vnspeakeable comfort in the dayes of his affliction when he was in perils among the Amalekites in perils among the Philistims in perils among false brethren in perils in the wildernesse in perils of his own nation he trusted in his God and comforted himselfe in a sweet feeling of his manifold mercies For when the city where he soiourned was sacked and burned his wiues taken prisoners 2 Chr. 30.5 6. and the people intended to stone him he comforted himselfe in the Lord his God The enemies of God in their rage and cruelty may take from vs liberty friends wife children lands possessions and all the substance of our house but they can neuer robbe vs of this treasure our comfort in Gods promises our hope in his mercies and our affiance which we haue in him which are as the Anker of the soule cast in the stormes and tempests that seeke to drowne vs in the gulfes quicksands of despaire vnbeleefe Vse 2 Secondly they dishonour God and deceiue themselues that run to Saints or Angels from the Creator who is blessed for euer to the creature that cannot helpe Psal 73.25 The Prophet Dauid saith Who haue I in heauen but thee and I haue desired now in earth with thee Therfore the Church of Rome is deceiued and deceiueth others making other mediators and intercessors by whō we must haue accesse to God the Father through the multitude wherof the miserable people are so intangled that they know not to which Saint they should turne themselues The Prophet hauing good experience of trouble sendeth vs to God in the day of trouble The Father saith This is my beloued Son in whom I am well pleased Christ Iesus directing vs to pray willeth vs to say Our Father The Apostle teacheth vs that there is one mediatour betweene God and man the man Christ Iesus And Iohn in his first Epistle saith 1 Ioh. 2.1 2. If any man sinne we haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the iust and he is the reconciliation for our sins Ioh. 14.13 14. To like purpose the same Apostle in the Gospel Whatsoeuer ye aske in my Name that wil I do that the Father maybe glorified in the Son if ye shal aske any thing in my Name I wil do it Let vs therefore detest the absurdities and abominations of the Romish Church who masking vnder the blind distinction of mediation and interession seeke to creepe away in the darke that their mischiefe may not bee espied They say a Mediator is of two sorts one of redemption to wit Christ alone another of intercession and so they make al the Saints Thus they diuide seuer these things that indeed are one Let vs acknowledge one onely Mediator of our saluation let thē keepe themselues other mediators of intercession Notwithstanding this distinction is not obserued by themselues For if Christ onely be the Mediator of saluation why do they call vpon the blessed virgine Saue thou all them that glorifie thee Nay why do they teach the people thus to pray Command thy sonne vse thy motherly authority ouer him let him know thee to bee his mother Hard censut of the Apolo part 2. Howsoeuer it pleaseth some to excuse these speeches as spirituall sporting and daliance yet indeed it is most odious and open blasphemie to be detested of all Gods people And why say they thus of Thomas Becket filled with ambition and vanity Guil. Neubri gens lib. 2. cap. 16. O Christ make vs to ascend vnto heauen whither Thomas is ascended euen by the blood of Thomas which hee shed for thy sake Heere he is made more then a mediator of intercession and yet hee dyed for wilfull maintenance of manifest wickednesse to the dishonour of God and to the infection of the Cleargy and to his owne confusion being a false Martyr but a true traitor Now against all these blasphemous trash and trumpery we must know to whom to direct our prayers and in whose Name we ought to pray Wee must pray to God alone in whom only we are to beleeue and therefore Paul linketh prayer and faith together Rom. 10.14 How shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued And this we are taught in the articles of our faith to beleeue onely in God the Father in God the Sonne and in God the holy Ghost But we are not to put our trust in Saints or Angels they know not our thoughts see not our behauior they heare not our prayers they fil not al places thēselues are accepted in heauen for the blessed merits of Christ our Sauiour And as we must pray onely vnto God so prayer must be mace in the Name and Mediation of Christ not of any other creature beside as we shewed before We haue no commandement in the Scripture to warrant vs no promise to assure vs no example to go before vs and therefore let vs renounce all comfort and confidence in man and flye vnto him that is the God of all comfort and the Father of all consolation Vse 3 Thirdly let vs vse no vnlawfull meanes to come out of our troubles but wait on God and depend vpon him in our necessities This the Prophet warneth Psal 62. Trust not in oppression nor in robbery be not vaine if riches increase set not your hearts thereon This we see practised in Ioab when he put the army in aray against the children of Ammon saying to his brother If Aram be to strong for me 1 Chr. 15 1● 13. then thou shalt succour me but if the children of Ammon preuaile against thee thē I wil succor me be strong and let vs shew our selues valiant for our people and for the cities of our God and let the Lord doe that which is good in his sight So when Samuel had told Eli the iudgment denounced against him and his house because his sonnes ran into a slander he stayeth them not he answered 1 Sam. 3.13 It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good This condemneth those that in their losses and crosses seek strange helpe and run a whoring after their owne inuentions digging cesternes that will hold no water and forsaking the liuing God the author of saluation Hence it is that some send out to witches wizards as Saul 1 Chr. 10. ● 14. these cannot say the Lord is my helper and my deliuerer but their refuge and sauiour is the diuill Others in
nor do all these commandements I will appoint ouer you fearefulnesse a consumption and the burning ague the sword famine and pestilence to destroy you and to make you few in number so as your high waies shall be desolate It was the Lord that brought the tenne plagues vpon Egypt ●od 8 24. ●a 11.25 38. ●y 45 7. It is the Lord that smote Nabal that he dyed It is the Lord that formeth the light and createth darknesse he maketh peace and createth euill It is the Lord that doth all these things Finally there is no euill in the City which the Lord hath not done Amos 3 6. All which things agree fitly with this history in hand that God sent fiery serpents among his people and do teach vs that he is the author of all iudgements punishments that fall vpon vs or vpon any of the sonnes of men The reasons hereof are euident and apparent Reason 1 First afflictions come not vpon vs at all aduentures they proceed not from the earth or the ayre or the heauē it is the hand of God that lighteth vpon vs for our sinnes For what can any one or all the creatures of God do of themselues or what power is there in them to be reuenged vpon vs This therefore is our great folly that we vnwise men gaze about heere and there wandring vp and down in our owne imaginations and searching all the corners of our wits to finde out the causes of our calamities out of our selues and yet all the while we perceiue not the true and right cause to be in our selues Whensoeuer a man hath any aduersity he must looke vp to God into himselfe When we see the ayre infected it is not so disposed of it selfe When God sendeth famine 〈…〉 23. and maketh the heauen as yron the ground as brasse it is not so hardened of it owne nature When the earth is barren and vnfruitful it proceedeth not of it owne kind but we our selues are the cause of all Whensoeuer therefore we haue wofull experience and a lamentable feeling of many miseries we must not cast our eyes hither and thither but euery man must enter into himselfe search out his particular sins assuring himselfe that God knocketh at the doore of his heart and thereby prouokes him to consider beter of his own waies This Eliphaz beateth vpon Iob 5 5 6 7. The hungry shall eate vp his haruest and the thirsty shall drinke vp their substance for misery cometh not foorth of the dust neither doth affliction spring out of the earth c. Reason 2 Secondly God worketh out afflictions he claimeth and challengeth them as his own peculiar worke that no man should bee able to controule any thing in this world This the wise man vrgeth Eccles. 7 16. In the day of wealth be of good comfort and in the day of affliction consider GOD also hath made this contrary to that to the intent that man should finde nothing after him The vses of the doctrine are many First we Vse 1 learne in all troubles and calamities on vs and those that are ours to looke vp to God as the chiefe principall author of them frō whence they come and vpon our selues and our owne sinnes from whom they come It falleth out with many as it doth with the dog if a man throw a stone at him hee runneth eagerly and angerly after it he falleth vpon it and biteth it so do men of this world Prou. 19 3 when God any way visiteth them they looke vpon inferiour meanes as the highest causes which they can reach vnto but neuer cast vp their eyes to the Lord whose hand and worke it is wheras we are bound to behold the stroke of God in all our distresses We silly men accuse sometimes heat and sometimes cold sometimes drouth sometimes moysture sometimes the ground and sometimes the ayre sometimes one thing and sometimes another thing to be the cause of our calamitie but cannot bee brought to finde out the true and proper cause True it is the Lord hath secret causes that we know not of sometimes the manifestation of his owne works sometimes the triall of our faith and we must take heed we measure not the greatnesse of the sinne by the greeuousnesse of the crosse Iohn 9 2 3. wherein the Apostles themselues were deceiued Notwithstanding the reuealed and originall cause of all calamity hath his beginning and head-spring from our iniquity insomuch that if we had in vs no guilt of corruption we should not taste at all of the cup of affliction This the Prophet teacheth Lam. 3 39. Wherefore is the liuing man sorrowfull Man suffereth for his sin And our Sauiour warneth the man that had bene diseased 38 yeares finding him in the Temple to consider the cause of his long and lamentable affliction Iohn 5 14. Thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee so that this disease was laide vpon him for his sin He thought himselfe an happy man when he was restored to health Now lest he should rest therein the Lord telleth him hee must change his heart or else God will bring seuen times moe plagues vpon him according to his sins though he had bin afflicted many yeares yet he would make his iudgements vpon him more wonderfull euen great plagues of long continuance and sore diseases of long durance To the same purpose the Apostle saieth The wrath of God is reuealed from heauen against all vngodlines and vnrighteousnesse of men which with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnesse Ro. 1 verse 18. Wherefore euery visitation of God should be a sermon of repentance to put vs in remembrance of our sinnes to admonish vs not to sowe vpon the furrowes of vnrighteousnesse lest we reape the croppe of affliction an hundred fold Let vs desire God to sanctifie the crosse vnto vs that it may consume sinne in vs and prouoke vs to a more holy conuersation Vse 2 Secondly the meditation of this that God is the author of all afflictions must teach vs to haue patience in our troubles not to murmure not to repine not to grudge when we are vnder the crosse For seeing God hath visited me with his hand I must take it patiently as a dutifull childe beareth the chastisements of his father This the Prophet practised as we see Psal 39 9 I spake not a word but held my peace because thou Lord didst it This the Apostle teacheth Heb. 12 5 6. My sonne despise not the chastening of the Lord neither faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth The flesh alwaies seeketh ease and is ready to be impatient if deliuerance come not by and by so that wee must remember from whence our trouble cometh to asswage the sorrow and bitternesse of our affliction For this is a great comfort to Gods children that our sicknesse yea euery pang fit of our
the vncircumcised Philistim that reuiled and railed vpon the host of the liuing God 1 Sam. 17 46 47 and 14 6. This day shall the Lord close thee in mine hands and I shall smite thee that all the world may know that Israel hath a God and that all this assembly may know that the Lord saueth not with sword nor with speare for the battell is the Lords and hee will giue you into our hands It is not hard with him to saue with many or with few he maketh the weake strong hee causeth one to chase a thousand and two to put ten thousand to flight when the mighty God selleth them and shutteth them vp An example we haue 2 Chron. 24 24. when Ioash King of Iudah sinned against God shedding innocent blood and forgetting the kindnesse shewed to him the Aramites came vp against him Ierusalem was besiedged the Princes were destroyed their goods were spoiled and though the army of Aram came with a small company of men yet the Lord deliuered a very great army into their hand because they had forsaken the Lord God of their fathers Giue God the glory of his owne works and let vs not sacrifice to our owne Nets This is the cause why God oftentimes doth not blesse and prosper our warres wee glory greatly in our multitudes of men whereby God is robbed of his glory and constrained to shew vs our owne folly and to chasten vs for our presumption Vse 2 Secondly it behoueth vs to consult with him before we enter into it ●mb 27 21. to pray for a blessing and to depend vpon him touching the successe If nothing ought to be enterprised rashly or taken in hand vnaduisedly then should warres be seriously thought vpon and warily begun and wisely vndertaken The wise man teacheth Prou. 20 18 24 6 that by counsell the thoughts of the heart must be established and by counsell warres are to be enterprised Thus when God promised victory to Ahab by one of his Prophets ouer a great multitude of the Syrians that he might learne to know him to be the Lord Ahab asked of the Lord who should order the battell 1 Kings 20 14 22 5. So we must do nothing before we aske counsell of God to know his will pleasure as Iehoshaphat taught Ahab crauing his helpe against Ramoth Gilead Aske counsell I pray thee of the Lord to day whether he will make our way prosperous When the children of Dan sent expert men to view the Land and search it out Iudg. 18 5 6 they asked counsell of God to guide their feete in the way of peace It is dangerous to be cold and carelesse in co●sulting with him coming to his ordinance for it Good King Ioshua the Pillar of the hand and nursing father of the Church was killed by Pharaoh Necho 2 Chron. 35 22 because he consulted not with the mouth of the Lord but went out to try his owne strength Let vs not in the day of battell think the season lost or the time il spent that is imployed this way now is the acceptable time and it is no wisedome to delay or deferre it This was the wickednesse of Sauls heart when the noyse of the Philistims army came to his eare the Priest had brought the Arke to aske aduice of God he saide Withdraw thine hand 1 Sam. 14 18 19 that is the time serueth not to stand stay counselling and consulting with God haue away these things and let vs draw neere to the enemy an euident testimony that God had forsaken him and taken his Spirit from him that he might runne from one euill into another and so worke out his owne confusion Contrariwise we see that while Ioshua encoūtred with Amalek a malicious and bloody enemy Moses continued in prayer and he preuailed more to the discomfiture and destruction of the Amalekites by the force of prayer then Ioshua by the dint of the sword Lastly let vs not feare the enemies of the Vse 3 Church but be strong and valiant and commit the cause vnto God Thus did Ioab when he entred the battell for the defence of Gods people and true religion 2 Sam. 10 12. Be● strong and let vs be valiant for our people and for the Cities of our God let the Lord do that which is good in his eyes Thus Dauid comforteth himselfe when he fled from his sonne Abso on an● was driuen out of his kingdome by treason treachery Psal 3 6 7 8. I will not be afraid of ten thousand of the people that should beset mee round about O Lord arise helpe me my God for thou hast smitten all mine enemies vpon the cheek bone thou hast broken the teeth of the wicked saluation belongeth vnto the Lord and thy blessing is vpon thy people Be not therefore dismayed discouraged when the enemies breathe out their threatnings against the Church band themselues together against Christ his religion and make their vnholy leagues for the vtter extirpation thereof the Lord that sitteth in heauen knoweth how to vexe them in his sure displeasure and to breake them in peeces like a Potters vessell and therefore blessed are all they that trust in him Verse 16. Assemble the people and I will giue them water So soone as they were remoued from the Riuer Arnon they came into a dry place where they wanted water but haue it immediately supplied of God Somewhat we see they had profited by the former iudgements which brake in as a fire among them consumed many For heere being in need and necessity they do not murmure against God as they had done before nor rage against Mo●es as in former times but they wait the Lords leysure vntil he releeue them render thanks vnto him for his mercy receiued This benefit then is heere amplified by the cause I will giue them water From hence this Doctrine ariseth Doctrine The Lord supplieth the wants of his Seruants that the Lord supplieth the wants of his and helpeth them alwaies in time of neede When we are hungry he feedeth vs when we are thirsty he giueth vs drinke when we are naked he cloatheth vs when we are destitute he succoureth vs when we are in want hee supplieth vs when we are in any necessity he helpeth vs yea hee worketh myracles and changeth the course of Nature rather then forsaketh vs. He sent Manna to Israel when they wanted bread he strooke the stony Rock when they wanted drinke he sent his Angell to Eliah with food to strengthen him He neuer forgetteth those that are his he maketh the raine to fall and the sunne to shine vpon the very wicked and vngodly This the Prophet Dauid handleth Psalm 147 9 145 15 16. The eyes of all waite vpon thee and thou giuest them their meate in due season thou openest thine hand and fillest all things liuing of thy good pleasure He giueth to Beasts their food and to the yong Rauens that cry This the Lord
thy presence is a burden vnto me aske thy reward and wages of thy worke of that God whom thou hast obeyed or of that people whom thou hast blessed to whom thou seemest rather beholden then vnto mee and who I am sure are more indebted to thee for thy paines then I am This is a most shamefull blasphemy of a wretched man whose breath is in his nostrils against the eternall God that made heauen and earth who suffereth with patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction The answer of Balaam followeth to be cōsidered The answer of Balaam who is brought in by Moses excusing himselfe and giuing wicked counsell to Balak to bring the people of God to ruine and destruction The Apology and defence that he maketh for himselfe is this that hee certified the messengers sent vnto him and declared to Balak himselfe that he was not at his owne choise and liberty to speake what the King wished and what himselfe desired but was as it were chained and restrained by the mighty hand of God that he could vtter nothing but what he inspired Thus the false Prophet seeketh to pacifie and appease the angry minde of the King and the hyreling laboureth to recouer his wages that was denyed him as if he should say Lay the fault where it is and not where it is not I haue striuen what I can to do that which thou requirest but the God of the Hebrewes hath hindered thy request and my desire Secondly hee promiseth that being now discharged and ready to returne home hee would giue such counsell which should work out the finall confusion of this people if it were wisely and warily followed For when he seeth he cannot curse them he giueth counsell how to hurt them as if hee should haue saide to Balak I see to my griefe thou perceiuest to thy cost that sorcery will not preuaile and serue the turne yet do not despaire but hold on thy purpose try a new conclusion another way I haue another plot in mine head follow my direction and doubt not but thou shalt bring thy matters to a good passe and destroy that people as they hereafter shall destroy thy people But what this counsell was is concealed and not expressed in this place which was not such as the Prophets of God aduised and perswaded to the people of God but diuellish counsell proceeding from that spirit by which he was guided to open a gap to bring vpon them all mischiefe and misery and to pull downe the wall of Gods protection whereby they were fenced and defended and to let in their enemies vpon thē God being become an vtter enemy vnto them For by the successe and euent in the chapter following it appeareth what this crafty counsell was Numb 25 3. by the peoples falling in fancy and fellowship with the Moabitish women wherby they were drawne into spirituall and bodily fornication And afterward in the one thirtieth chapter of this booke verse 16 Moses speaking of the Midianitish women saieth These caused the children of Israel through the counsell of Balaam to commit a trespasse against the Lord as concerning Peor and there came a plague vpon the Congregation of the Lord. So the Apostle Iohn speaketh writing to the Church at Pergamus I haue a few things against thee because there thou hast them that maintaine the doctrine of Balaam c. Reu. 2 14. Hereby then we see that when Balaam had sundry wayes assayed and attempted to curse the people of Is●ael and yet his purpose fayled him because God crossed his deuices hee told Balak that the last refuge and onely way to preuaile against them was to draw them to sin against their God and so to make a breach betweene him and his people Now according as hee counselled him and gaue him instructions so Balak confederate with the Midianites sent forth the most beautiful women in their kingdomes into the Campe of Israel to entice them to the worship of their Idols to banquet with them at their Idoll-feasts whereby ●hey drew them to Idolatry and fornication sinning against God and kindling his wrath against them But of this we shall speake further in the chapter following Verse 10. Then Balak was very angry with Balaam and smote his hands together and saide I sent for thee to curse mine enemies c. See heere the euent of all the conspiracy against the Israelites they had conceiued mischiefe Psal 7 14 15 bring forth a lye They that trauaile with wickednesse trauaile with the winde and the end is not answerable to the beginning They vanish away in their owne imagination whilst Israel standeth as a defenced City From hence we learne that things practised inconsiderately not with good aduice Doctrine Thing vnlawfully attēpted haue euill ends and attempted vnlawfully with a wicked purpose haue other euents then men thinke of Whatsoeuer wee goe about with a wicked minde hath an euill end in the iust iudgment of God We cannot expect that any euil action should haue a good end Indeed God doth many times suffer euill men causeth them to multiply The causes why wicked men do multiply because our sinnes deserue so many chastisements and scourges as there are wicked men in the world Againe it is requisite that we should all our life long be kept in a continuall exercise of faith prayer patience and repentance Iudg. 2 22. and that they might be as pricks and thornes in our sides Lastly the Lord by suffering the wicked to prosper and proceed doth greatly aduance his owne glory whiles he reigneth in the midst of his enemies Exod. 9 15 16 and preserueth his Church in despite of Satan and his wicked members which daily seeke the ouerthrow thereof Is it not strange that an hundred Sheepe should liue among a thousand wolues not be deuoured It is no lesse wonderfull and to bee maruelled at that any of Gods people should liue vpon the face of the earth being compassed about with an army of wicked men the very limbes of the diuell that open their mouths to swallow them vp and hate them with an vnfained hatred vnto the death Notwithstanding the Lord thus beareth and forbeareth yet in the end hee will cut off the wicked and all euill shall haue an euill end We see this in Pharaoh calling for his Sorcerers they withstood Moses and resisted the truth they turned water into blood and rods into Serpents yet in the end all their cunning was stained and they confessed it was the Finger of God Exod. 7 11. 8 19. Consider the example of those that would builde them a Citty and a Tower to get them a name lest they should bee scattered vpon the whole earth Genesis ch 11. verse 4 the Lord came downe to see the Citty which the sonnes of men builded and there confounded theyr Language that euery one perceyued not anothers speech The Apostle Peter maketh a long rehearsall in his second
couents and cloysters where they had beene mued vp as were easie to be shewed by diuerse examples Secondly from hence euery one should learne to know how to behaue themselues in Vse 2 vowing that they may vse this doctrine lawfully To this purpose we must be instructed in these particulars what a vow is what are the conditions of it what is the right maner of vowing and what should bee the ends of our vowing Touching the first a vow is a solemne promise made to GOD binding our selues to the doing or leauing vndone of some speciall thing that is acceptable vnto GOD. What a vow is Vowes thus taken are not meerely ceremoniall or pertayning to the times of the Law but are a constant and perpetuall ordinance of God to be obserued and practised vnder the Gospel Howbeit seeing the Iewes were tyed to sundry legall obseruations whereby vpon occasion they testified their thankfulnesse wee may not vnfitly hold that vowes were partly ceremoniall and partly morall partly they were abrogated and partly they continue and remaine in full force to the end of the world because the spirituall duties shadowed thereby bind all persons Such vowes I call a solemne promise made to God as appeareth by the vow of Iacob Gen. 28 30 going from his fathers house to auoyde the fury of his brother Esau and of the Israelites who hauing receiued an ouerthrow at the hands of their enemies vowed to God that if hee would deliuer them and ouerthrow those that stood against them they would vtterly destroy their cities and reserue the spoyle to be consecrated to him Numb 21 2 of the which wee haue spoken before Hannah vpon condition of hauing a sonne granted vnto her vowed him a perpetuall Nazarite vnto the Lord 1 Sam. 1 11. Psal 66 12. 2 Sam. 13 8. From hence we gather two things first that in the breach of an holy and religious vow there is a double trespasse because to the obseruation of the vow a man is tyed by a double band both absolutely by duty and respectiuely by couenant and promise and thereby violateth his duty and fidelity vnto GOD. When Dauid sayth to GOD Psal 119 I haue sworne and will performe it who seeth not that he tyeth himselfe to the obseruation of the Law by a speciall band besides the generall that tyeth all others Hence it is that God doth so oftentimes charge and chalenge his people in speciall maner to haue dealt vnfaithfully treacherously with him as false and lying children in whom is no faith vpon promise made to keepe his Lawes Deut. 5 27 32 20. Psal 78 8. Esay 30 9 and 57 4. Secondly it reproueth the superstitious vowes of the Romanists who vow not to God onely but to the Saints of which sort was no practice among the Iewes Psal 76 11 Esay 19 21 no not when vowes stood in greatest force and were in largest sxtent They teach that vowes are a substantiall part of the worship of God and therefore by their owne confession they commit manifest and abominable idolatry because they communicate this honor to the Saints and thereby make them to bee gods making vowes to them of fastings prayers pilgrimages Churches Colledges altars tapers and such like Hence it is that Bellarmine is content to say that when the holy Scriptures were written Bellar. de cult Sanctor cap. 9. the custome of vowing to saints was not yet begunne To God we owe all that is in vs who is the searcher of the hearts and hath power to punish the wilfull breach of a lawfull vow and therefore to him onely wee are to make our vowes He will not giue his glory to any other Againe in the description of a vow we binde our selues to the doing or leauing vndone some speciall thing that is acceptable to God because he alloweth not of our wil-worship Col. 2 23 Math. 15 wherefore wee are not left free to vow what we list for then we can haue no assurance that God will accept them but it will be said to vs Who required these things at your hands Esay 1 12 and againe In vaine they worship me teaching the precepts of men Math. 15 9. The Church of Rome offendeth heerein many wayes and is almost endlesse in theyr errors touching this part or point of vowes I will breefely touch them runne them ouer Obiect Bel. de Monach. chap. 35. First they maintaine that young men and women to wit such as are come to the yeares of discretion may vow single life and that because they must suffer little children to come to Christ Mat. 19 14. As if none could come to Christ Answer but such as can looke through a Monkes coule or as if the kingdome of heauen belonged to none but to professed Monkes and Fryars who haply haue themselues the least part therein Besides the Text speaketh of little children which can haue no tryall or experience of themselues whereas the Apostle appointing widowes to attend vpon the sicke and poore Saints admitteth none vnder the age of threescore yeeres 1 Tim. 5 9 exhorteth the yonger women to marry to beare children to guide the house and to giue none occasion to the aduersary to speake reprochfully verse 14. Secondly they permit children to enter into religious or rather theyr irreligious houses without consent of theyr parents and gouernors and that parents haue not any authority to take away theyr sonnes or daughters out of those dennes Cloysters As this doctrine is most strange so theyr reasons are most weake They pretend that Abraham was commanded of God to go out of his Country Obiect from his fathers house Gen. 12 1. and that Christ sayth Whosoeuer loueth father or mother more then mee is not worthy of me Answ Math. 10 37. I answer the commandement of God to Abraham was speciall and a speciall tryall of his faith and obedience let these shew the like particular commandement to them and then let them follow that example As for the words of Christ our Sauiour they are vnderstood of the times of persecution when we must preferre the loue of Christ before the loue of our best and neerest friends to omit that a man may leaue his parents and kinsfolkes in his affection that is set vpon heauenly things euen while he dwelleth with them in the same house But of this more afterward Obiect Bel. de Monach. cap. 37. Thirdly they permit the husband and wife to separate themselues by mutuall consent to depart one from another and to vow continency so long as both of them shall liue For this they produce and vrge the example of Ioseph and Mary who liued continently all theyr dayes Answ But it is plaine that Ioseph purposed and intended that they should come together Math. 1 18. Againe he is expressely admonished by the Angel to take Mary his wife neyther is it necessary to beleeue it as an article of faith that Mary the mother of Christ liued alwayes a
of God his holy word is damnable that the open prophanation of the Lords day is damnable that the horrible pride whereof our whole nation is sicke is damnable that drunkennes that aboundeth ouer-spreadeth euery where is damnable if this be madnesse we confesse we are mad and God make vs yet more and more mad to lay open these abominations But indeed and in truth if we will iudge aright it is quite contrary for they are the maddemen and the Minister is sober Paul was charged to be madde but who was madde Paul or Festus The mad man laugheth and the Physician bewaileth him euen so it is betweene the Minister and the people they scoffe at him while hee mourneth for them for the hardnes of their harts knowing them to be beside themselues forasmuch as they will not refraine from those things which they reprooue Alas what doe these men heerein but like foolish patients who pull off the plasters which the Surgeon hath laide vpon their wounds and in the mean time lye rotting and festering in their corruptions If these men continue thus resolute obstinate in their euill wayes the time shall one day come O that it be not at hand O that it be not too late when they shall confesse that the Ministers of the Lord were sober and that themselues were the mad men when they shall feel themselues for their iniquities thrust down to the place of the damned and see the Ministers that reproued them among the Saints of God in great glory Vse 4 Lastly learne from hence the great desire that God hath of the good and saluation of his people who thus carefully sendeth his Ministers to call so earnestly and effectually for the conuersion and repentance of sinners The Lord doth not appoint them for a forme and fashion but to deale with power zeale if by all meanes they may saue some 1 Cor. 9. Esay 55 1 would the Lord make so much ado if he were not desirous that the sinner should repent him of his euill wayes that so he might blot all his wickednes out of his remembrance Ezek. 18. A man would be accounted very desirous to sell his wares and vtter his commodities who not onely hath a broker to vent them for him but maketh open proclamation at the crosse or in the market place that he hath such and such wares to be bought and yet all this while he respecteth his own priuate good and gaine onely But when a man will proclaime and say Ho come and buy without money or without money worth doubtlesse this argueth a mans great loue and desire of the good of his brother The Ministers they stand vpon their watch-tower and cry from the house toppes Ho euery one that thirsteth come yee to the waters and he that hath no money come ye buy and eate ye come buy wine and milke without money and without price Esay 55 1. He requireth no more but this to lay downe their vices and to take vp his graces The Physician sometimes giueth strong purgations but the end of them is the curing of the disease and the recouering of the diseased So is it with God when he armeth his Ministers with the two edged sword of his word giueth them courage and boldnesse to open their mouthes against all iniquity It is therefore a token of a desperate heart and a signe of one cast into a reprobate sense when the threatnings of Gods iudgements driue not to repentance Such as hate to be reformed there is more hope of a foole then of them Wherefore discourage yee the hearts of the childron of Israel from going ouer into the land which the Lord hath giuen them This is one reason of the reproofe and why he dealeth so sharply with them they did weaken the hands yea the hearts of their brethren whom they ought to haue strengthened and encouraged This teacheth vs Doctrine ●o man oght ●o discourage ●●hers in weldoing that it is a grieuous sinne to giue offence to others or to do any thing whereby our brethren may be discouraged from walking in Gods wayes or encouraged to the breach of any of his Commandements Heereunto come sundry examples set downe in the Scriptures While the Israelites wandred in the wildernes and were going toward the land of Canaan they had many meanes offered to pull them backe as we haue seene before some of them would haue made them an Electo or Captaine and so returne backe againe into Egypt Chapt. 14 4 the spies that were sent to search the land discouraged the hearts of their brethren saying The people is greater and taller then we the cities are great and walled vp to heauen and moreouer we haue seene the sonnes of the Anakims there Deuter. 1 28. Numb 13 28. Thus it was with the people of GOD when they were returned from captiuity and began to build the altar and the Temple to the Lord God of Israel for the aduersaries of Iudah and Biniamin sought to weaken their hands and to trouble them in building Ezra 4 4. Neither was it any better afterward when Nehemiah came vp to build the wals of Ierusalem and to reuiue the stones out of the heapes of rubbish for Sanballat Tobiah and the rest of that ranke scoffe at them and say Euen that which they build if a foxe come vp he shall euen breake downe their stone wall Nehem. 4 3. The Lord likewise chargeth his people that if there did arise among them a Prophet or a dreamer of dreames that should go about to seduce them and draw them away to serue other gods they should not beleeue the signes nor hearken to the words of that Prophet but cleaue fast vnto God obeying his voyce and keeping his Commandements Deuter. 13 1.3.4 The grounds hereof First such as offend by giuing offence to Reason 1 others and withdraw them from their holy obedience to God are guilty of a grieuous sin yea are partakers of their sins whom they haue terrified and discouraged from obeying the Lord. For whomsoeuer we haue hindred from good things we are guilty of their sins and their blood shal be required at our hands The sinne of the Israelites committing fornication with the daughters of Moab was th● sin of Balaam also because through his counsell they committed that trespasse against the Lord Num 25 1 and 31 16 Secondly such are the seed of that wicked one the children of the diuell they are his instruments and set on worke by him that was a murtherer from the beginning Ioh. 8 44. Hee tempted our first parents in the garden discouraged them from hearkning to the voyce of GOD so are all those tempters that any way hinder the course of their brethren walking in the wayes of God and are stamped in the image of the first tempter and are made like vnto him And therefore when Peter disswaded Christ from the worke of mans redemption for when Christ began to shew to his
to continue for euer namely that they are a necessary good for the common-wealth whereas these damnable heretikes hold them neither necessary nor good but vnnecessary euills that ought not to be planted nor grow among Gods people and where they haue beene planted ought as superfluous branches to be topped and lopped or as noysome weeds to be rooted vp and remooued But the Scriptures of the old and new Testament commend vnto vs captaines in warre and gouernours in peace But those men acknowledge neither the calling of captaines nor the lawfulnesse of warre Rom. 13.1 The Apostles of Christ at what time Magistrates are euill both prophane idolaters and bloody persecutors command euery soule to be subiect to the higher power inasmuch as there is no power but of God The ancient commandement of the morall Law establisheth this as a perpetuall ordinance neuer to be disanulled vntil the vniuersall frame of the heauens be dissolued that we must honour father and mother that is not onely such as are fathers of the family Exod. 20.12 but such as are fathers of the Countrey He that said Thou shalt haue no other Gods but me Thou shalt not make to thy self any grauen image Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery said also Honour the King 1 Pet. 2.17 For as the house cannot stand without gouernors to rule it no more can the Common-wealth And as themselues take vpon them to order their owne houses and exercise authority and dominion ouer such as are vnder their roofe and Regiment so is the Magistrate called to manage the affaires of state and to doe that within the walles of the citie which he doth within the wals of his house The father hath gouernment ouer his son the master ouer his seruants the husband ouer his wife the teacher ouer his schollers and why then not the Magistrate ouer his subiects Neither doth the Gospel subuert the order appointed by God in the dispensation of the Law for Christ Iesus who first preached the Gospel chargeth vs to giue Caesar those things that belong to Caesar and the things that are Gods Matth. 22.21 we must giue to God So his Apostles teach that we must rather obey God then man when their commandements cannot stand together but when God is not disobeyed themselues preached and practised obedience and reprooued and condemned all disobedience Secondly The second reproofe of the Pope and his Cleargy heere the Pope and all the Romish Hierarchy and Cleargy are reprooued who exempt themselues from the authority and iurisdiction of Princes and Magistrates These cal themselues the spiritualty and claime an immunity both in regard of their persons and of their goods wherein they are confederate and ioine hands with their brethren the Anabaptists as wretched enemies to the crownes and scepters of Princes as themselus Only here lyeth the difference the Anabaptists confesse that Magistrats must be obeyed but they deny that there ought to be any in the Church Contrariwise the Pope with all the rabble of his horned Bishops confesse that there ought to be Magistrates but they vtterly deny that themselues ought to be subiect vnto them Now it is in effect all one whether wee take away Magistracy or whether we yeeld not to their authority And if there be any inequality betweene these the Anabaptists seeme to be the better who liue peaceably and obediently vnder them whose power notwithstanding they deny He is an euill child that denieth his father but he is worse that is obstinate stubborne that will not obey him but resist him How many wayes the Popish Religion is enemy to Princes we haue shewed elsewhere In the exposition vpon the Epistle to Philemon I speake not now of the wicked practises of their Assassinates that murther Princes but of their doctrine taught for sound and Catholike by all their schoole-diuines not by some few onely of them For they teach that their persons in causes Ecclesiasticall Ciuill and criminall are exempted from the Courts and Consistories of temporall Magistrates as appeareth in their publike disputations and by the iudicial proceedings of Paulus the fift against he Venetians who were excommunicated and the city interdicted so that their religious men ceased from ministring Ecclesiasticall Sacraments And as they challenge a freedome of their persons so they claime a freedome from paying tributes and like taxes to Princes nd will be bound to them in no respect To the and we may see the truth in these points Obiections ●nswered ●hereby the ●ope and his Cleargy ●laime free●ome from ●emporall Princes be armed against their Arguments let vs see the grounds whervpon they stand and afterward produce sundry reasons out of the word of God to conuince their proud and false assertions First they obiect that the superiour ought not to be in subiection to the inferiour but contrariwise the inferiour must Obiect 1 be subiect to the superiour this is the Law of God and man But the Ecclesiasticall Regiment is distinguished from the Ciuill and politicall state and set farre aboue it by the Law of God Bellar. de cleri lib. 1. cap. 28. as the soule is aboue the body therefore Ecclesiasticall causes ought not to be iudged by temporall Magistrates I answere Answer by distinguishing the seuerall callings for Princes are superiours and inferiours and Ecclesiasticall persons are superiours and inferiours both of them are aboue others in the proper duties of their callings If any reply to be superiour and yet to be inferiour to be aboue and yet to be beneath are contrary I reioyne they are contrary and yet not contrary they are contrary if meant of one and the same thing and spoken in one and the same respect but if they bee diuersly considered in respect of diuers obiects there is no contrariety at all in them To apply this to the point obiected I say that the superiour cannot be subiect in those things wherein he is superiour but he may be and ought to be in those things in which he is inferiour Now the Ecclesiasticall gouernment albeit it be higher then the politike in the essentiall duties belonging vnto it to wit the preaching of the word of God and the administration of the Sacraments yet it is inferiour in those things that belong to Ciuill subiection and obedience Princes must obey so farre as the word of God commandeth in matters of faith and piety neither haue they any authority to inuent and frame a new Religion or to change and alter the Religion set downe in the Scripture or to decide and determine the Controuersies of Religion at their owne pleasure or to preach the word themselues or to dispence the Sacraments of the Church But in respect of Ciuill power ouer all persons they must acknowledge no superiour no equall they are aboue all and vnder none within Obiect 2 their dominions Secondly they obiect It is absurd and vnreasonable that the sheepe should iudge the sheepeheard or
people yet he would haue his children to content themselues to be ranged among the ordinary Leuites though they were not aduanced to be in the number of the Priests much lesse to be the high Priests And note the sincerity of Moses himselfe that he is not ashamed to set downe this in writing and to commit it to posterity so that he cannot be suspected of any shew of ambition or to giue any the least occasion to the vngodly of slandering him Thus do the writers of holy Scriptures deale without all partiality euen in matters that do concerne themselues This we see in Dauid Psal 51 in the title of it who mentioneth his committing of adultery with the wife of Vriah and his repentance for the same The Prophet Ionah Ionah 1 3 17. reporteth his flying from the presence of God and the iudgement that fell vpon him for it in that Prophesie The Apostle Paul spareth not to tell the Church and to leaue it to all posterity that he was a blasphemer a persecutor and an oppressor 1 Tim. 1 13. One borne out of due time the least of the Apostles not worthy to be called an Apostle because he persecuted the Church of God 1 Cor. 15 8 9. Behold therfore the purity of the word of God learne to confesse it and endeuour to finde this effect of it in our hearts Besides we are to obserue and marke from hence that the Tribe of Leui of small and little beginnings did make wonderfull proceedings for whereas he begat three sonnes Gershon had onely two Merari two and Kohath foure who could haue expected so fruitfull a posterity that twelue men in so short a time should swarme into so many thousands Thus doth GOD worke mightily by weake meanes both in the naturall generation and in the spirituall regeneration that his glory might more brightly and beautifully appeare We haue seene and shewed already how God euen when his people were most vexed oppressed did then most of all encrease and multiply them and so manifested his power in their preseruation Likewise also we see in the new Testament he chose out twelue Apostles and sent them into the world not furnished with carnall weapons Erasm praefac in Iraeneum nor armed with the force or fauour or friendship of mortall men By such as were vnskilfull he ouercame the wisedome of the wise by few in number he subdued very many Nations by the weake he vanquished the strong by an vnwarlike company he conquered euery high hold that lifted vp it selfe against God laid it equall with the ground by such as were vnnoble and vnknowne hee dimmed darkned al the glory of the world by silly and simple sheepe he tamed the fiercenesse of roaring Lyons that is the cruelty of bloody tyrants and by innocent Doues hee draue away wily and subtill serpents Last of all albeit Kohath were not the elder brother and consequently the Ruler of Leuies house yet in the common ministery he was preferred before the rest and had the chiefest preheminence and place of honour aboue thē to teach vs that God sheweth mercy from the fountaine of his owne holy will and pleasure euen as he aduanced Moses and called him from feeding his fathers sheepe without any dignity or desert that was found in him Let vs all confesse this when we receiue any kindnesse and mercy from him otherwise we rob him of the glory due to his name But of these points we haue spoken elsewhere and therefore we will come to the doctrines Verse 27. And of Kohath was the family of the Amramites c. Wee are to note that which was expressed before and is repeated againe heereafter but especially is pointed out in this diuision that the office committed to this family is called a charge and ministration they had the charge of the Sanctuary verse 28. Againe their charge shall be the Arke and the Table and the Candlesticke verse 31. And afterward Eleazar shall haue the ouersight of thē that keepe the charge of the Sanctuary verse 32. From hence we learne what the office of the Doctrine Ministery is namely The M●●●●ry is an 〈◊〉 of charge that it is an office of charge It is required of all the Ministers carefully to looke to the Churches and charges committed vnto them and to attend to the flocke that dependeth vpon them The Ministery is a great burden and a work full of employment This doth Peter by way of exhortation teach the Elders Feede the flocke of God which is among you taking the ouersight thereof not by constraint but willingly c 1 Pet. 5 2. Thus doth Paul instruct the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28. Take heed vnto your selues and to all the flocke ouer which the holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood And when he writeth to Timothy he saith This is a true saying If a man desire the office of a Bishop 1 Tim. 3 1 ● hee desireth a good worke So likewise in the same Chapter If a man know not how to rule his owne house how shall he take care of the Church of God And in the second Epistle chap. 4 verse 1 2. I charge thee before God and the Lord Iesus Christ who shall iudge the quicke and dead at his appearing and his kingdome preach the word be instant in season out of season reprooue rebuke exhort with all suffering and doctrine Whereby wee see that the Ministery is an ouersight and the Ministers Ouerseers and the end of their office a caring for the Church of God diligently and vncessantly This may farther be shewed vnto vs by the Reason 1 force of reason First all the titles that are giuen vnto them are as so many goades to pricke them forward or as spurres clapt to their sides I will onely speake of two that they are Shepheards and Watchmen The Ministers are Pastors or Shepheards Ezek. 34.2 Eph. 4 11. Iere. 23 1 the church of God is as a flocke of sheepe subiect to many enemies as the diuell seducers deceiuers heretickes euill dooers euen as an heard is to many wolues and therefore they must be carefully looked vnto Besides they are called watchmen the Church is as a Citty besieged day and night by strong and mighty enemies Ezek. 3 17. Sonne of man I haue made thee a watchman vnto the house of Israel therfore heare the word at my mouth giue them warning from me It behoueth therefore the spiritual watchman to keepe diligent watch Secondly the Ministers are fitly called the Reason 2 Lords committees and therefore they must giue an account for the soules committed vnto their charge Our life must goe for their liues our soule must answer for their soules if they perish through our default This the Apostle declareth Heb. 13 17. Obey them that haue the rule ouer you and submit your selues for they watch for your soules as they that
2 soules not to watch ouer the body only Eze. 33 1 Tim. 5 16. Thirdly the Ministery of the word is the only Reason 3 ordinary meanes to bring to saluation 1 Cor. 15 1 2. Rom. 10 14. If then the necessity and dignity of saluation it selfe be great then ought the Ministery to bee had in great price by which we are made partakers thereof The vses Great should bee the loue of the Vse 1 Pastour toward his people Great shold their care be ouer the sheep and Lambes of Christ for as they loue Christ himselfe the Lord of the sheepe who shed his most precious blood to redeeme them so ought they to loue his sheepe which are after a sort become their sheepe for as the sheepe haue taken charge of them to maintaine them so they haue takē charge of the sheepe to feede them instruct them Our principall endeuour ought to be to procure their good and we must hunger and thirst after their saluation Exod. 32 31 32. They ought to bee our crowne and glory in this life 1 Thess 2 20. if we looke for a crowne of glory in the life to come 1 Pet. 5 4. And as at all times we ought to seeke to winne men to God so especially wee ought to haue a care of these sheepe when they are sicke when they are visited by the hand of God we should comfort the feeble minded and support the weake We see how Aaron the seruant of God when the pestilence was broken in among thē took his censer and ranne in among them stood betweene the liuing and the dead that hee might make an attonement for them Heere the question may be asked Obiection whether it be the Ministers duty to visite those that are sicke of the pestilence other contagious diseases and so much the rather because the example of Aaron seemeth to inferre and perswade no lesse I answer Answ the practise of Aaron in this place is not to this purpose for he was High-Priest and did this as a figure of Christ For Moses Aaron were not so simple as to thinke that the burning of a little incense could stay the plague but this did represent the sweet sauour of the mediation intercession of Christ who made peace betweene God and man Againe the Minister is a publike person and the seruant of the whole Church and euery man hath interest alike in his office and Ministery 1 Cor. 9 19. 2 Corin. 5 5. Wee preach not our selues but Christ Iesus the Lord and our selues your seruants for Iesus sake If then he be the seruant of the whole Church then no one hath so great interest in him as to cause him to endanger his life and so the whole be depriued of him So then before he visite such he ought at least to haue the consent and approbation of the rest of the Church and be assigned by them vnto that office Lastly I do not hold the visitation of the sicke to bee a Ministeriall duty but a Christian duty It is not laid vpon them as they are Ministers but as they are christians For if it were a duty proper to them as it is to preach the word and to minister the sacraments then no man ought to visite the sicke but such as are Ministers of the word I grant indeed it cheefely lyeth vpon thē and is required of them when they are best able to performe it but sometime the faithfull brother is able to do it as wel as the Minister himselfe and according as God hath bestowed this gift so he requireth the practise of it Gen. 48 1. 2 Kings 8 29. and 13 14. Iob 2 11. Psal 41 4. Math 25 37 40. Obiect Iohn 11 3. 2 Cor. 1 4. What then May the Minister at such infectious times forsake the flocke and leaue them to the wide world may he shift for himselfe leaue them without instruction Answer I answer in no wise There is then more cause to call the sounder sheepe together and to pray heartily and earnestly to God for their fellow-brethrē remembring the counsell of the Apostle Heb. 13 3. Remember them that are in bondes as bound with them and them which suffer aduersity as being your selues also afflicted in body Vse 2 Secondly see from hence who are indeede the brazen walles that compasse the land and hold out the enemy not onely the policy and wisedome and counsell of Magistrates but likewise faithfull Ministers are a strength and defence vnto it For though they be oftentimes contemned and despised derided and abused though no account be commonly made of thē yet they are the strength of the strength of the Commonwealth and they are the pillars that beare vp the pillars and they are forcible and notable meanes of keeping out the iudgements of God Hence it is that Elisha said of Eliah when hee saw him goe vp by a whirlewinde into heauen My father my father the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof 2 Kings 2 12. And thus also spake Ioash of Elisha when he wept ouer his face when hee was fallen sicke of the sicknes wherof he died 2 Ki. 13 14. O my father my father the chariot of Israel c. And they may be iustly so called They beate downe sinne which weakneth the Land Sin bringeth all confusion For what bringeth the change of Princes the alteration of kingdomes the ruine of states the ouerthrow of houses the inuasion of enemies and the confusion and desolation of all things but the prouoking of God vnto wrath by sin Sinne is as the breach in a wall that weakeneth the City and openeth a gate to the enemy Let the walles be neuer so well flanked with ditches trenches barricadoes citadels and castles countermures and fortifications sinne maketh them all vnprofitable Hence it is that the people falling into idolatry are said to be made naked by Aaron Exod. 32 25. Obedience is as a strong banke bulwarke that keepeth the flood of vengeance indignation from the city of God No manner of defence can keepe out the enemy if sin be freely entertained within The wall is repaired and the breach is made vp by repentance Thirdly they are in poore and pitifull case Vse 3 for ignorance for wickednesse for perill and danger to perish where yet this benefit is not vouchsafed They are as a land threatned with infinite and innumerable enemies which are without chariots and horsemen without armour and munition A man of necessity must continue languishing in paine hauing a broken member or a bone out of ioynt except he haue a skilfull Surgeon or bone-setter Wee are of our selues as members out of ioynt rent and diuided asunder in opinion and practise one from another which are coupled and knit together between themselues by the Ministery of the word which serueth for the gathering together of the Saints Eph. 4 ver 11 12. When the blinde are suffered to leade the blinde both fall into the ditch The
doe He promised to Abraham to giue him a childe but he gaue vnto him many children for hee had not only Isaac the sonne of promise by Sarah but he had Ismael by Agar Gen. 25 1 2 3 Gen. 16 15 16. and many other by Keturah God therefore is not onely good but much better then his word Reason 1 And no marueile for he is of infinite power and can do much more then he will Mat. 3 9. and 26 53. Secondly he promiseth afore-hand more then we can looke for to make vs ready and willing to obey him as he did to Salomon 1 Kin. 3 12 13. to the end that no man should thinke it tedious troublesome to come vnto him The vses remaine Vse 1 Acknowledge from hence the infinite goodnesse mercy and power of God His louing kindnesse is incomprehensible Hence it is that the Apostle praieth for the Ephesians earnestly with his knees bowed vnto the Father that Christ may dwell in their hearts by faith that they being rooted and grounded in loue may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ which passeth knowledge that they might bee filled with the fulnesse of God Eph. 3 18 19 Thus then wee must learne to magnifie the exceeding loue of God toward vs of which we haue daily experience Vse 2 Secondly from hence we may conclude that much more he will giue vnto vs whatsoeuer he hath promised Hee cannot deceiue nor faile nor alter that which is gone out of his mouth it is God that cannot lie which hath promised Titus 1 2. He is faithfull he cannot deny himselfe 2 Tim. 2 13. As he is not deceiued so he cannot deceiue man is subiect euen the best men both to deceiue and to be deceiued Doubt not therefore of his word that is better then his word Vse 3 Thirdly we haue comfort to goe vnto him in al our necessities and great encouragement to pray vnto him in time of danger He is able to giue vs more aboundantly aboue all that which we aske or thinke Eph. 3 20. We see how men in their suite to their betters commonly aske more then they looke for they cannot looke for more then they aske thinking by that means of asking largely to obtaine somewhat answerable to their expectation But God giueth more then we aske we do not aske more then he giueth as all the Saints of God haue found to their endlesse comfort Psal 105 20 21. Gen. 39 19 20. and 40 14. and 41 14 41 42. Ester 7 10. compared with chap. 9 10. Lu. 15 22. Math. 15 22. Vse 4 Fourthly see the difference between God and man Men for the most part are liberall in promising but sparing in performing It is not so with God indeed he promiseth much but he performeth more hee is a liberall pay-master he dealeth bountifully with his seruants When Iacob was sent away to Padan Aram to his mothers father Gen. 2● ● God prom●sed he would be with him that he would ●●epe him in all places whither he went that hee would bring him againe to his fathers house that he would not leaue him vntil he had done that which he had spoken vnto him of and Iacob himselfe craued no more of God but this that he would keepe him in his way that hee went and giue vnto him bread to eate and raiment to put on Gen. 28 15 20. But God performed a great deale more vnto him for Iacob receiued more acknowledgeth more ch 32 10. I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed vnto thy seruant for with my staffe I passed ouer this Iordā now I am become two bandes Lastly it is our duty to be cheerefull in the Vse 5 duties of our callings the Magistrate the Minister the master the seruant euery one as his place requireth in ruling in teaching in instructing in obeying seeing God will reward so plentifully Let no hinderances or pulbacks discourage vs whatsoeuer we meete withall let vs passe them ouer not regard them Let vs go constantly forward as Moses did there were many hookes baited and laid before him to catch him many snares set before his eyes to entangle him but hee escaped as a bird out of the net of the fowlers Heb. 11 26 because hee had respect to the recompence of the reward God rewardeth abundantly aboue our deserts desires Our deserts indeed are little nay none at all but our desires are great and yet the bountifulnes of God exceedeth our desires though they be often enlarged very far and wide If this will not giue encouragement nothing will Behold the rod of Aaron for the tribe of Leui was budded yeelded almonds Out of these words another point is to bee considered I meane from the flourishing of this rod Doctrin● that is God is abl● giue life to things tha● are quite d● that God is able to quicken giue life to things that are dead withered though they haue no sap no moysture no iuyce in them yet God is able to put a vegetable force into them This we see in Abraham Sarah they were in respect of generation as good as dead for Sarah was aged and barren and past bearing of children for it ceased to be with her after the manner of women Gen. 18 11. and Abraham himselfe was an hundred yeare old Gen. 17 17. yet he was made a father of many Nations euen before him whō he beleeued who quickneth the dead and calleth those things which bee not as though they were Rom. 4 17. This we see euidently in the first creation when out of the earth dead in it selfe he produced liuing creatures and made it bring forth grasse and hearb yeelding seed and the fruite tree yeelding fruite after his kinde Gen. 1 11 and 2 7. So when God had formed man of the dust of the ground he breathed into his nostrils the breath of life man became a liuing soule Againe it appeareth how God in all ages raised some out of the graue and from the number of the dead the dead man that was cast into the sepulcher of Elisha so soone as he touched his bones ●ng 13.21 reuiued and stood vp on his feet This we see among the miracles of Christ When a yong man was carried dead out of the gates of the City the onely sonne of his mother he came and touched the Beere and raised him to life 〈◊〉 7.11 12 ●th 9.25 So he raised the daughter of Iairus for he tooke her by the hand and she arose The like we might say of Lazarus that had beene buried and had layen foure dayes in the graue for when he cryed with a loude voice Lazarus come forth 〈◊〉 11.43.44 hee that was dead came foorth bound hand and foot with graue clothes So did Peter to Tabitha a woman
had numbred the people after God sent him this word and offered him the choise of famine or sword or pestilence he saide I am in a wonderfull streight let vs now fall into the hād of the Lord for his mercies are great and let mee not fall into the hand of man Who had not rather receiue punishment at his fathers hands of whose loue he is assured then to bee punished with the strokes of an enemy that loueth him not but hateth him to the death Men are proud and cruell fierce ambitious but God is full of compassion and his mercy endureth for euer he knoweth whereof we were made Psal 103.14 Psalme 78 39 he remembreth that we are but dust hee considereth that we are mortall yea a winde that passeth and commeth not againe He will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that wee are able to beare Hitherto the Lord hath visited vs with his mercifull and gentle corrections famines sicknesses and strange diseases Let vs behold his gracious dealing toward vs and profit by these fatherly admonitions for if he should deliuer vs into the hands of barbarous and beastly enemies we should soone discerne the difference betweene the louing chasticements of a father and the bloody strokes of an enemy 22 Then they departed from Kadesh and the childrē of Israel euen al the congregation came vnto Mount Hor. 23 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor neere the border of the land of Edom saying 24 Aaron shall be gathered vnto his people for he shall not enter into the Land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel because yee rebelled against my commandements at the waters of strife 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and charge them to come vnto this Mount 26 And cause Aaron to strip off his garments and thou shalt put them vpon Eleazar his sonne then Aaron shall be gathered vnto his Fathers and shall dye there 27 And Moses did as the Lord had commanded for they went vp vnto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation 28 And Moses caused Aaron to strip off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son and Aaron dyed there in the toppe of the Mount So Moses and Eleazar came downe from off that Mount 29 And when all the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty dayes Hitherto of the Ambassage of Moses to the King of Edom These words containe the third and last part of the Chapter to wit the death of Aaron after the people were remooued from the borders of the Edomites For albeit the King did so vnkindly deny them any passage yet Moses and the Israelites doe not oppose themselues against them or attempt to breake through by force of Armes multitude of men and dint of sword but passe by their borders peaceably and fetch a compasse about their land True it is those enuious Edomites were worthy to perish and to be vtterly destroyed for their inhumanity yet because the time was not yet come wherein the Lord had prophesied and promised that the elder should serue the yonger Gen. 25 23. therefore the Israelites commit vengeance to the Lord to whom it belongeth Rom. 12 19. Now in these verses we see how God beginneth to execute the former threatning against Moses and Aaron For heere wee are to consider three things First the death of Aaron Secondly the succession of his sonne Thirdly the mourning of the people The father dieth the son succeedeth the people lamenteth the death of the high Priest If Aaron had dyed without any prediction and foretelling of his death all men might haue thought it had fallen out at aduentures and ascribed it wholy to the decaying of strength wasting of nature but being reuealed to Aaron himselfe and manifested to the whole Congregation both the time when and the place where he should die it appeareth that his daies were numbred and his yeeres limited which hee could not passe As then God had determined the death of Aaron and denounced his shutting out of the land of Canaan so that sentence is heere executed vpon him Deut. 34 4 5. the other concerning Moses is reserued vnto his time appointed of God In this place God commanded both of them what to doe euen to ascend vp to the Mountaine and sheweth that Aaron shall die there for his disobedience whose garments must be pulled off and put vpon Eleazar lest by touching of the dead the holy garments should be defiled After this commandement followeth their obedience agreeable to the same they come vp to the Mountain Aaron is stripped Eleazar is cloathed with them Aaron without feare of death or longer desire of life or prayer for life departeth in peace according to the word of God he is gathered to his Fathers Moses and Eleazar descend from the Mountaine Moses Eleazar and the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron We see heere according to the former threatning pronounced by the mouth of God verse 12. that Aaron cometh not into the land of Promise but dieth in Mount Hor. We learne heereby Doctri● God-thr●nings are 〈◊〉 comp●●●● that the threatnings of God are accomplished Howsoeuer his iudgments are many times deferred and his punnishments prolonged because hee is patient toward vs and would haue no man to perish but would haue all persons come vnto repentance yet in the end all his threatnings shall be verified and fulfilled in their times and seasons Consider this truth in our first parents Ge. 2 17. ● 3 7. God threatned them that if they did eate the forbidden fruite they should die the death we see the effect in them and all their posterity throughout al times and generations Behold other threatnings of God wee shall alwayes reade the execution after the denunciation So when God by the Ministery of Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Peter 2● had threatned to destroy the whole world if in an hundred and twenty yeeres they repented not wee see how he brought in the flood vpon the world of the vngodly swept them away from the face of the earth which they had corrupted with their cruell and vncleane conuersation This we see likewise taught vnto vs throughout the bookes of the holy history of Ioshua The man is cursed before the Lord Ioshua 6● that ryseth vp and buildeth the City Iericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his eldest sonne and in his yongest sonne shall he set vp the gates of it meaning therby that whosoeuer should attempt to builde this City he should pay for it deerely because what time hee layeth the foundation of the wals his eldest sonne shall dye and when hee setteth vp the gates and hath finished it his yongest sonne shall dye When this threatning seemed quite forgotten and consumed with the rust of time God doeth bring it to passe as we
bound to reioyce and praise GOD for their Prince who is as the comfort and consolation of our life and the verie instrument of our peace wee are they Vnder his shadow wee liue and abide as in a place of rest and sleepe quietly in our beddes free from all feare and danger whatsoeuer This we see described in the peaceable and prosperous dayes of Salomon there is no crying and complaining in our streetes We are blessed with earthly blessings we are an astonishment and wonder to our neighbour Nations They haue all deeply drunke of the cup of Gods wrath that hath beene filled with full measure whiles we haue looked on and our soule hath escaped And aboue all the rest we haue all this time enioyed and do enioy the bright light of the glorious Gospel and haue beene most of vs borne vnder the profession thereof to the establishing and continuing of many millions of thousands in the coueuant of grace and eternall life when other haue beene kept in horrible darknes and damnable idolatry to the destruction of their soules We are therefore vnhappy wretches if among all the mercies of God vpon vs this be not remembred as one of the first and cheefest And let vs learne to haue in abhomination from the bottome of our hearts the bloody practises and desperate attempts of all cursed Shemeis ● 15 6 7. who open their mouthes against the Lord and against his annointed with horrible execrations I meane the Iesuites and Priests brethren in euill together with the rest of that damned crew and generation who in stead of prayer and thanksgiuing for our Soueraigne vse falshood practise treasons and deuise mischieuous conspiracies seeking the life of their gracious Prince and labouring to stop the breath of our nostrils ● 4 20. whereas he that curseth the King should dye the death The Prophet Ieremy speaking of the estate of the people after the death of Iosiah bringeth them in thus complaining The breath of our nostrils the annointed of the Lord was taken in their Nets of whom we said Vnder his shadow we shall bee preserued aliue among the heathen Whereby he meaneth that the office of the King as the Superiour Pet. 2 13 14 and of all Magistrates as Gouernours sent of him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that do well is to protect and preserue the people in peace and safety euen as the breath that we draw in at our nostrils giueth life and health to the body Wherefore it standeth vs that are Subiects vpon not onely to be obedient for conscience sake vnto all lawfull ordinances of Princes who are the Lords Lieutenants appointed of him ouer his people for their good ● 82 1 2. but to pray earnestly for them that they may further vs in piety keepe vs in honesty and maintaine vs in tranquility one with another piety in respect of God honesty in respect of our selues tranquility in respect of others This charge the Apostle giueth when Magistrates were Infidels and Heathen that the Church should pray vnto God for them how much more therefore doth it stand vs vpon to practise this duty when as our Magistrates are the children of God and pillars of the Church And thus much of the third part of this chapter 21 Then Israel sent Messengers vnto Sihon King of the Amorites saying 22 Let me goe through thy Land we will not turne aside into the Fields nor into the Vineyards neither will we drinke of the waters of the Welles We will goe by the Kings way vntill we be past thy Border 23 But Sihon gaue Israel no licence to passe through his Border and Sihon assembled all his people and went out against Israel into the Wildernesse and he came to Iaboz and fought against Israel 24 But Israel smote him with the edge of the sword and inherited his Land from Arnon vnto Iabbok euen vnto the children of Ammon for the Border of the children of Ammon was strong 25 And Israel tooke all those Cities therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages thereof 26 For Heshbon was the City it selfe of Sihon King of the Amorites who fought against the former King of the Moabites and tooke away all his Land out of his hand euen vnto Arnon 27 Wherefore they that speake in Prouerbs say Come to Heshbon let the City of Sihon be● built and repaired 28 For a fire is gone out of Heshbon and a flame from the City of Sihon and hath consumed Har of the Moabites and the inhabitants of the high places of Arnon 29 Woe be to thee Moab O people of Kemosh thou art vndone he hath deliuered his sons which escaped and his daughters into captiuity to Sihon the King of the Amorites 30 Their Empire also is lost from Heshbon vnto Dibon and we haue destroied them vnto Nophah which reacheth vnto Medeba 31 Thus Israel dwelt in the Land of the Ammorites In these words and those that follow to the ende of the Chapter is contained the last part of this Chapter to wit the subduing of two mighty enemies in two seuerall battels namely Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan The Amorites were a people that came of Ham the youngest sonne of Noah as appeareth Gen. 10 verses 6 15 16. For Ham begat Canaan who disclosed the nakednesse of his Grandfather and Canaan begat Emori of whom came the Amorites who inhabited the Land of Bashan Mount Gilead This History is more at large recorded Deuter. chapter 2 and 3. ●irst touching Sihon we must obserue two things the iust occasion and aduantage which he gaue to Israel to subdue him and take poss●ssion of his Land For the Lord had hardened his spirit and made his heart obstinate because he would deliuer him into the hands of the Israelites Deuteronomy chapter 2 verse 30. Then secondly the ouerthrowing of him the entring into his Country the possessing of his Citties Hitherto they had compassed the Land of Edom with great danger with much wearinesse and sundry tentations they come to the Land of the Amorites there the King withstandeth them and will giue them no passage but fiercely and furiously encountreth with them Touching the occasion whereby Israel was iustly moued compelled to enter fight with the Amorites it offereth two points to be considered First a friendly and louing request of Moses Secondly a currish and vnkinde deniall made by Sihon Concerning the petition of Moses obserue the Embassage which he sent together with the reasons containing both the ground of his reasonable demand shewing the equity of the petition and laying down most equall conditions of peace because he desired onely passage through his Land without spoyle of the Country in generall or dammage to any person in particular The refusall of the King followeth and albeit the Israelites freely and frankly professed that their purpose was to passe by all
cannot prosper but shall bee confounded This the Prophet Hosea testifyeth chap. 8.8 9. Israel is deuoured now shal they be amongst the Gentiles as a vessel wherein is no pleasure for they are gone but to Ashur they are as a wilde Asse alone by himselfe Ephraim hath hired louers The Vses are in the last place to be obserued Vse 1 First this teacheth that the idol is vaine yea vanity it selfe Howsoeuer the idolater be enamored of it and greatly dote vpon it yet it shall be a broken reed which in sted of staying him that leaneth vpon it breaketh in his hand and the shiuers thereof serue to wound him that leaneth thereon For if it could deliuer any it should saue them th●t haue their hope and confidence in it But such are deceiued and deluded to their destruction This the Prophet Ier. 3 23 24. 10 15. witnesseth at large in sundry places Truly the hope of the hils is but vaine nor the multitude of mountaines but in the Lord our God is the health of Israel for confusion hath deuoured our fathers labor c. Hereunto commeth that saying Esay 44 9 10. All they that make an image are vanity and their delectable things shall nothing profit and they are their owne witnesses that they see not nor knowe therefore they shall be confounded who haue made a god or molten an Image that is profitable for nothing They are not therefore lay-mens books neither haue any profitable vse but an abhominable abuse 〈◊〉 2 18 19 being vanity and the worke of errors in the time of their visitation they shall perish The Assyrians were famous or rather infamous for Idols and great boasters of thē yet the Prophet sheweth they should come to confusion hereupon the vse is inferred what profiteth the Image For the maker thereof hath made it an Image and a teacher of lyes though he that made it trust therein when he maketh dumb Idols woe vnto him that saith to the wood Awake and to the dumb stone Arise vp it shall teach thee behold it is laid ouer with gold and siluer and yet there is no breath in it Thus the vanity of Idols is set out by the destruction of the Idolaters Vse 2 Secondly let them labour to see their own blindnesse It is a great iudgment of God vpon thousands and ten thousands in the world that worship the workes of mens hands and yet thinke themselues wise We see also the preposterous and disordred desire of the children to follow the idolatrous waies of their parents whereupon it commeth to passe that they excuse their sinne by the example of their parents and because they were borne in it they are resolute to die in it neuer examining how their religion standeth with consent of the Scriptures Thus we see that all idolaters are blind and because they say they see therefore their sin remaineth 〈◊〉 9 41. This the Prophet teacheth Esay 42 17 18 19. They shall bee turned backe they shall bee greatly ashamed that trust in grauen Images and say to the molten Images Yee are our gods Heare ye deafe and ye blinde regard that ye may see Who is blinde but my seruant or deafe as the messenger that I sent Who is blinde as the perfect and blinde as the Lords seruant If therefore we would not grope in ignorance as the blindeman that g●opeth in the darke let vs flye Idolatry and keepe our selues from Idols Lastly let vs blesse and praise the name of Vse 3 God whē he deliuereth his people from idolatry to serue him purely and sincerely Let vs euer be mindfull of his mercy and walke as a thankfull people redeemed out of so great a thraldome This sacrifice of praise we see required in the Prophet for hauing set downe the folly vanity of Idolaters who cut down a Tree warme themselues with part thereof roast their meate with another and with a third part make a god and worship it make it an Idoll and bow vnto it pray vnto it and say Deliuer me for thou art my God he acknowledgeth Gods great mercy in forgiuing these sins of the people Esay 44 21 22 23 Thou art my seruant O Israel forget me not I haue put away thy transgressions like a cloud and thy sinne as a mist c. Behold the beastlinesse and brutishnesse of these god-makers not much vnlike the Romish idolaters who knead their dough of one part they make bread and a god of the other If this be the dot●ge of idolaters wee haue great cause offered vnto vs to magnifie the mercy of God toward vs that hath freed vs from such diuellish deuices of the false worship of God He hath restored to vs the true worship of God according to his holy word he hath rooted out the Idols that were set vp to be adored he hath giuen vs the Scriptures in our mother tongue hee hath fre●d vs from the burthen and bondage of the Popes Decrees and Decretals he hath pulled downe the great idoll of the Masse and hath abolished the manifold heresies and corruptions of false Doctrine What shall we now render to the Lord for all these tokens and testimonies of his loue toward vs but take vp the cup of saluation and praise with tongue and heart the name of God acknowledging his only goodnesse in deliuering vs from the bondage of Idolatry and labouring to bring forth the fruites of his Gospel to his glory and our own comfort in Christ Iesus 32 And Moses sent to search out Iaazer and they tooke the Townes belonging thereto and rooted out the Amorites that were there 33 And they turned and went vp the way toward Bashan and Og the King of Bashan came out against them hee and all his people to fight at Edrei 34 Then the Lord said vnto Moses Feare him not for I haue deliuered him into thine hand and all his people and his Land thou shalt doe vnto him as thou didst vnto Sihon the King of the Amorites which dwelt at Heshbon 35 They smote him therefore and his Sonnes and all his people euen vntill there was none left him so they inherited his Land Hitherto we haue spoken of the first Enemy ouercome by the Israelites to wit Sihon King of the Amorites the second enemie which they subdued is Og the King of Bashan an enemy more mighty and terrible then the former For he was one of the race and posteritie of the gyants at whose sight the scoutes and espials sent out to serch the land were afraid and despaired of inhabiting and inheriting of the land and weakned the hearts hands of the people as appeareth in the 13. chapter of this booke Wee came into the Land whither thou hast sent vs and surely it floweth with milke and hony neuerthelesse the people be strong that dwell in the Land and the Cities are walled exceeding great and moreouer we saw the sonnes of Anak there And more plainly and particularly Moses describeth this King
the sonnes of God for this cause the world knoweth you not because it knoweth not him God is become our Father the Sonne is our Redeemer the Holy-ghost is become our sanctifier the Angels are become our attendants the Scriptures are become our euidences the Sacraments are our seales the creatures are become our seruants our afflictions are our instructions This the Apostle teacheth the Church 1. Cor. 3 21 22 23. They are blessed that haue their sinnes pardoned and not imputed vnto them as the Prophet teacheth but God saith to euery beleeuer Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee They are blessed that heare his word and keepe it but the sheepe of Christ heare his voyce and follow him They are blessed that delight in the Law of the Lord and in his Law meditate day and might but the godly make it their counsellour to be aduised by it This vse that now we stand vpon is directly vrged by the Prophet Psal 84. where hauing made his complaint that hee could not haue accesse to the Church of God to make profession of his faith and to profite in Religion hee breaketh out into this passionate exclamation being touched with an inward feeling of the want of those holy assemblies Psal 84 4 5. O Lord of hoasts how amiable are thy tabernacles thereupon concludeth the point which wee haue stood vpon Blessed are they that dwell in thine house they will euer praise thee blessed is the man whose strength is in thee and in whose heart are thy wayes Howsoeuer the vngodly that sauour nothing but of the earth want spirituall eyes to behold the beauty of the Church and account it no part of their happinesse to liue within the compasse and bosome of it yet the children of God haue taken nothing so neere to heart as when they haue bene driuen from the place of his worship The Prophet is grieued that the sparrowes and swallowes had better accesse and freer recourse to the houses of men to build their nests to lay their young and to rest and repose themselues then he had to the Lords Tabernacle and therefore preferreth their condition before his owne We see how the Iewes wept and pittifully lamented by the riuers of Babylon and hung vp their instruments on the willowes saying Psal 137 1 2 3 How shall we sing the song of the Lord in a strange land If I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget to play If I doe not remember thee let my tongue cleaue to the roofe of my mouth yea if I preferre not Ierusalem to my chiefe ioy No doubt they might haue prayed to the Lord in Babylon and in banishment as well as in Iudea and at Ierusalem the Lord heareth in all places and willeth that men pray euery where lifting vp pure hands without wrath or doubting 1. Tim. 2.8 but they mourned because they could not visit the Temple of God in Ierusalem there to make publicke confession of their sinnes and of their faith toward God They therefore plainely testify that they haue no feeling either of the weakenesse of their faith or of the greatnesse of their offences that glory in their owne shame and say they beare as good a soule to God as they which resort so often to the Church and delight to heare the preaching of the word and that they can serue God as well at home as in the Church These are led by another spirit then Dauid was who if he were a man after Gods owne heart Psal 42 1 2 3. hauing such an earnest desire after the seruice and worship of God and saying As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God when shall I come and appeare before the presence of God surely these must needs be guided by the spirit of the diuell who so openly scorne all Religion and are at defiance with God robbing God of his honour committing sacriledge in keeping their tongues from the publick praises of God entring themselues off from the mysticall body of Christ condemning and contemning the congregation of the faithfull giuing offence to others by euill example and despi●●ng the ordinance of God who hath appointed commanded the assembly of his people to meet together to acknowledge their sinnes to confesse their faith to pray for things necessary to praise him for his blessings receiued to heare the word expounded and to receiue the Sacraments deliuered so that such as flye from these doe fly from God himselfe they fly from their owne saluation they seeke a worship by themselues and they imagine an heauen by themselues But let them take heed their worship proue not a false worship and their heauen a false heauen and a true hell Secondly we must all labour to bee members Vse 2 of the Church rather then of any other place in the world We see how carefull men are not onely to be in great societies towns but to be of them to haue the freedome of priuiledged places and incorporations Act. 22 28. Yea to obtaine it purchase it with a great summe of money because it hringeth worldly commodity How much more should wee endeauour to be members of the Church whereby we are made free men and haue interest in the blessings of God yea wee become free denizens of the Kingdome of heauen How doe men esteeme their freedome to be of earthly cities If wee be part of the Church wee haue accesse to the truth Now if wee shall know the truth the truth shall make vs free Iohn 8 32 36. If we be belonging to the Church we haue our interest in Christ now if that Sonne shall make vs free then we shall be free indeed This made the Apostle say Phil. 3 20. Our conuersation is in heauen from whence we looke for a Sauiour If we become limbes of the Church of God wee haue the spirit that beares witnesse to our spirit that we are the sonnes of God now the Lord giueth his Spirit 2. Cor. 3 17 and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Such as are free of cities and incorporations haue diuerse priuiledges that others want obtaine many benefites that others want obtaine many dignities that others desire and haue their names enrolled among the free-men but how much greater is the preheminence of all those that are brought into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God being made parts of the Church which is the freest citty vnder the heauens This city of our God hath the priuiledges of the communion of Saints of the forgiuenesse of sinnes of the resurrection of the body to eternall life and all such as belong vnto it haue their names registred and enrolled in the booke of life What shall it profite thee to obtaine an earthly freedome in earthly cities and to be the seruant of sinne the bondslaue of the diuel and to want the freedome of the sonnes and daughters of almighty
the kingdome nor he in accepting of it inasmuch as they did it not out of any obedience to the will of God but they did it to ease themselues from the cruelty and tyranny that Rehoboam was likely to vse toward them and therefore they sinned because they had no commandement from God Let vs come to the vses First this confuteth Vse 1 the doctrine of the Anabaptists or Libertines that deny all authority as not fitting for Christians to beare They teach their owne dreames that neyther Christians should bee Magistrates nor yet subiect to Magistrates an horrible impiety in them and it would not be worth the time to shew how they wrest the Scripture to defend their owne errour which otherwise they nothing regard Secondly it serueth to taxe Popery and Vse 2 that out of their owne grounds for the Rhemists haue a rule vpon Iude verse 6 that they are heretiques that deny authority and they would father it and fasten it vpon vs because we deny subiection to the Pope But we retort it vpon themselues For neuer was there any that did cast off the yoke of authority so much as they haue done They haue put downe the mighty from their seates and trod vpon the neckes of Princes they haue dethroned Kings and armed the sonne against the father Vnder a colour of the holy warre they haue sent them abroad and betrayed them into the hands of the Sarazens and in their absence seized vpon their Dominions There was neuer heretique did so shrinke vp the sinewes and shake off the yoke of authority as they haue done It is a rule that they haue that Ecclesiasticall men ought to be free from all ciuill authority whatsoeuer and that Cleargy men must be exempted from subiection to the secular powers so that they not we are the heretiques that despise authority As for the Bishop of Rome wee owe him no seruice neyther may he claime iurisdiction ouer the vniuersall Church eyther by Scriptures Fathers Councels or imperiall Constitutions for many ages Vse 3 Lastly this serueth as an information to vs that wee auoyde all such proud and peeuish conceits as these to imagine there shold be no authority and bee prouoked to bee thankfull vnto almighty GOD that we do enioy authority seeing by it wee are freed from confusion and desolation from much mutiny and misery that otherwise would befall vs. For notwithstanding by the great goodnesse of God we haue authority such is the fury and fiercenesse of wicked men that they breake out into strange enormities and commit many feareful things by poysonings by stabbings by cousenages by oppressions by forgery and falsehood and such like mischeeuous and monstrous practises what then would they presume to do if there were no authority to bring them and their doings into question and to call them to an account for their audacious courses A man should alwayes haue his life in his hand there could be no peace or safety in our houses and habitations if there were no authority to rule to controlle to terrifie to punish and therefore how thankfull ought we to bee to almighty God for that authority which he hath set ouer vs and for the peaceable gouernment we enioy vnder our gracious Soueraigne Now this must withall be acknowledged of vs that no man can be truely thankfull for authority that is not willingly and cheerefully subiect to authority It is a friuolous and vaine thing to pretend thankfulnesse and yet not vndergoe the yoke of obedience with cheerefulnesse Verse 11. Notwithstanding the Children of Korah died not What became of Korah himselfe we haue seene before His name was famous in the Congregation but he became infamous through his rebellion and it is called the gainesaying of Korah to this day Iude verse 11. Notwithstanding marke heere that the sonnes of Korah perished not when their father perished and was punished who spake euill of them that were in authorty for it appeareth that they were preserued aliue and became afterward famous in the Church of God and honourable mention is made of them in the booke of Psalmes and of the Chronicles 1. Chronicles chapter 6 verse 22. Psalm 42 and Psalme 44 and Psalme 45 and sundry others afterward as 2 Chronicles chapter 20 verse 19. From hence ariseth this Doctrine Doctrine It is no disgrace for godlie children to descend of vngodly parents that it is no disgrace for godly children to descend and come of vngodly parents Howsoeuer sinne be a reproch to the parents themselues yet it taketh not hold of their issue except they walke in those sinnes Ezek. 18 14. If hee beget a sonne that seeth all his fathers sinnes which he hath done and considereth doth not the like c. he shall surely liue Iephte is commended for a faithfull man that fought the battels of the Lord subdued the enemies of his people yet he was the sonne of an harlot Iudg. 11 1. Heb. chap. 11 verse 32. This farther appeareth in Saul and Ionathan the one of them the greatest enemy the other the greatest friend of Dauid the one sware his death the other his life the father to kill him the sonne to saue him and therefore it was no dishonor to him to haue such a father The like we might say of Ahaz a most wicked man and Hezekiah a most godly King one of the best sonnes of one of the worst fathers yet who accounteth the worse of good Hezekiah because he had wicked Ahaz to his father Ieroboam king of Israel set vp idolatry and caused Israel to sinne and therefore the Lord threateneth to bring euill vppon his house that the dogges should eate him that dyed in the City and the fowles of the ayre him that dyed in the field 1 Kings chapter 14 verse 10 so that they should all be swept away as a man taketh away dung till it be all gone yet God gaue him one good sonne whom in mercy he tooke to himselfe and saued as a brand out of the fire or as a Sheepheard taketh out of the mouth of the Lyon two legges or a peece of an eare Amos chapter 3 verse 12 and therefore it is said All Israel shall mourne for him for hee onely of Ieroboam shall come to the graue because in him there is found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel The grounds of this truth follow First Reason 1 that election might stand wholly by grace forasmuch as almighty God sheweth mercy where and to whom hee will If religion should descend from father to son in a common and ordinary course of generation or propagation without any interruption it might be thought to bee a worke of nature not of grace and to proceede from parents not from almighty GOD. Therefore bee often breaketh off that course so that wicked parents haue sometimes good and godly children and contrariwise godly parents haue wicked and vile children that the purpose of GOD according to election might stand not of works
our owne flesh in the lusts thereof Rom 13 14. If wee should giue the bridle to our flesh it is as a bottomlesse pit that will neuer be filled Secondly such as are planted commodiously in this world must beware that they doe not forget the world to come and they that enioy the earth at will must remember the kingdome of heauen wherein they must onely place the toppe of their happinesse If wee seeke heauen vpon earth we shall neuer finde it in the next life Thirdly let vs vse this world as though wee vsed it not reioyce as though wee reioyce not and weepe as though wee weped not considering that the fashion of this world vanisheth away 1 Cor. 7 30 31. Heere can bee no certainety nor assurance of any thing but in health we haue one foot in sicknesse and in life wee bee at the brinke of death In ioy and gladnesse wee are neere to the house of sorrow and affliction Lastly wee must account of euery day as our last day what is present wee see before our eyes but what is to come wee see not we know not The rich man builded and planted and plotted for many yeares and promised to himselfe a long life vpon the earth but it was saide vnto him This night shall they take away thy soule from thee c. Luke 12. CHAP. XXX 1 ANd Moses shake vnto the heads of the Tribes concerning the chil●ren of Israel saying This is the thing which the Lord hath commanded 2 If a man vow a vow vnto the Lord or sweare an oath to bind his soule with a bond hee shall not breake his word he shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth The contents of this chapt and the diuision of it NOw Moses commeth to speeke of such Lawes as are voluntary that is of vowes whereof he setteth downe two sorts one concerning men the other concerning women and sheweth in what persons they are ratified and in what persons they are frustrated Touching the man which is the head of the woman he is charged not to falsify his word or his oath lest hee prophane the Name of GOD which he hath taken in his mouth but to performe his promise that he hath made as Psal 15 4 he shall dwell in the holy hill of GOD that sweareth to his owne hurt and changeth not Touching the woman she is ordinarily and by the Law of nature vnder the power and authority of another Wherfore touching their vowes we must giue iudgment according to the place which they hold and the calling into which they are entred For the woman that taketh an oth or maketh a vow either is in the power of her father or in the power of her husband or in her owne power or else in the power of one when shee vowed and in the power of another when she is to performe it A woman in her fathers power is bound to performe that which shee hath sworne or vowed but conditionally if the father allow of it eyther by his word or by his silence so that the vow standeth if he approue of it eyther by speaking or by holding his peace Qui tacet consentire videtur For heere the common prouerbe is verified Hee that wittingly willingly holdeth his peace doth closely secretly giue his consent But on the other side if the father dislike and disallow the vow she is freed because she is not free And if the woman be married and at the disposition of her husband it followeth by proportion of the former Law that if her husband approoue her vow eyther openly or secretly directly or indirectly by speaking or holding his peace so soone as he heareth it or heareth of it shee is bound to keepe it but if he consent not but disallow and disavow it her vow is voyde and she is to aske pardon of her rashnesse If she be a widow and set free being at her owne liberty and not vnder the iurisdiction of father that bestowed her or of the husband to whom shee was bestowed in marriage she is bound to performe her vow The Apostle teacheth that the woman which hath an husband is bound by the Law to her husband so long as he liueth but if hee be dead shee is loosed from the law of her husband Rom. 7 2. As shee is free to vow so he is bound to pay that which he hath vowed because the promise was voluntary and free and there is none can make it voide Lastly the widow must not thinke her selfe discharged by her new or second marriage but the time of making her vow to wit in her widowhood must be considered and remembred But such as are cut of the fathers power or by death of the husband set free must pay their vowes to the most High without denying or delaying or diminishing what they haue solemnely and aduisedly vowed From hence we may learne how to answere sundry particular questions touching the vowing of men and women Obiect And first the question may be asked what if it be the vow of a sonne or of a daughter vnder their father or one any way vnder the power of another as of a seruant vnder his Master shall that vow be good or such person be bound to performe it I answere Answ a vow must be of things in our owne power but hee that is in the power of his father and of his master is not at his owne hand his will dependeth vpon the wil pleasure of another and therefore Ionathan telleth his father that Dauid had asked leaue of him to goe to Bethlehem 1 Sam. 20 28 for their family had a sacrifice to offer in that citty If then being the seruant of Saul he would not presume to go before he had obtayned leaue of the Kings sonne doubtlesse such vowes are to be held vnlawfull vnlesse his gouernour confirme it or he that hath vowed ratify it when he commeth to be at his owne hand Againe it may be demanded whether such do not sin Quest as vow being in the power of others in not performing their vow True it is they ought not to haue vowed but hauing made the vow do they not sinne except they performe it Answer I answere they sinne in vowing but they do not sinne in their not performing of it wherefore Moses saith afterward The Lord shal forgiue her he meaneth not her forbearing to performe the vow forasmuch as if she should performe it she should set at nought her fathers power authority which God by no meanes will suffer and consequently adde sinne vnto sinne but God will pardon her rash and vnaduised vow which shee had vttered The doctrine from the first words is this Doctrine Vowes to be made to God lawfully or vnlawfully to be preserued that vowes made to God lawfully are to bee performed Deut. 23.21 Psal 76 11 and 66.13 and 50 14 Deu. 12 17. This is further confirmed vnto vs by sundry examples of the
bound her soule 7 And her husband heard it and held his peace in the day when he heard it then her vowes shall stand c. Now Moses intreateth of such vowes as were made by those that are vnder the authority of others as children vnder their parents concerning which the father hath authority to disanull them Hereby the power of all parents is so magnified and aduanced that a vow made immediatly to God is frustrate there is a meere nullity of it except they confirme it They haue power to make it good and they haue power to make it voide Doctrine Great is the iurisdiction authority of parents ouer their children Heereby wee learne that great is the authority and iurisdiction of parents ouer their children by the Law of God and Nature The very heathen haue this truth shining in their hearts that parents are to be honoured and that their authority should be inuiolable Exod. 20 12. Eph. 6 1 2. Ierem. 35 6 7 8 c. Gen. 27 8 43. and 28. 2. When the father sayth Goe the child goeth when he sayth Arise he ariseth when he sayth Come he commeth Christ our Sauiour giueth testimony of his perfect obedience whom all both men and Angels stand bound to worship and to whom euery knee must bow of things in heauen of things in earth and of things vnder the earth Philip. 2 yet hee was subiect to his parents and went with them Luke 2.51 1. King 2.19 The reasons are euident Reason 1 First the precept of honouring parents hath the first place in the second Table and is set before all other so that next vnto GOD we are bound to reuerence them to whom we are most bound and it is the foundation and band of obedience to all the rest of the commandements that follow For if men doe not stand in awe of the Magistrate the father of the Common-wealth and the Captaine of the people all the other would soone be violated 2 Kings 20 5. Againe the Apostle teacheth that this is the first Commandement with promise Eph. 6 2 it hath a speciall promised annexed of long life Thirdly children receiue great and manifold blessings from the hands of theyr parents and gouernours and likewise are freed from many euils and dangers that otherwise they might fall into Fourthly patents giue life and breath and beeing after a sort vnto them for children receiue all these from thē Fiftly parents are honoured by sundry titles and names the which are giuen to God himselfe Matth. 23.9 One is your father which is in heauen therefore call no man your father vpon earth Obiect 1 Touching this impregnable and inuincible truth sundry questions may be asked and diuers doubts to be remooued As first seeing their authority is so great why doeth our Sauiour speake of hating father and mother as Luke 14 26 If any man come to me and do not hate his father and mother he cannot be my disciple Answ I answer Christ speaketh in that place comparatiuely that is wee must not regard them in respect of himselfe whom wee ought to loue aboue all and so it is expounded Mathew 10 37 Hee that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthy of me To loue our parents next after GOD is piety but to loue them more then God is impiety Wee hate them therefore when we loue them lesse then God in comparison of whom we should hate our liues Obiect 2 Secondly Christ forbiddeth vs to call any man father as we haue heard before Matth. 23. Answ I answere Christ condemneth not the name or appellation giuen to men simply for then he should be contrary to himselfe where he alloweth the title to earthly fathers Math. 7 9. Marke 7 11 and the Apostle should bee contrary to his master 1 Cor. 4 15. Therefore he meaneth that no man is or can be our Father as God is to wit that we should trust in them and make them the authors of our life and the giuers of all good things that come vnto vs. Obiect 3 Thirdly what if our parents be euil persons and vngodly ought we then to obey them yeelde vnto their authority who are by their wickednesse vnworthy thereof Answ I answer It skilleth not whether they bee good or euill touching our obedience For euill parents are our parents and euill Magistrates are Magistrates and euill Ministers are Ministers Seruants are commanded to bee subiect to theyr masters not onely vnto them that are good and gentle but to them that are froward 1 Peter 2 18 so ought children to yeeld obedience vnto their fathers though they be euill Hence it is that God saith generally in the Law Honour thy father and mother not honor them when they are good onely But it will be farther obiected What if they Obiect 4 be excommunicate persons may they then be obeyed or should children then do any dutie to their parents and is not that to set light by that censure I answer Answer Excommunication rightly vsed is indeede the most greeuous iudgement that can bee inflicted in this life both in respect of the soule and of the bodie and is as it were the messenger of death It is a great punishment to be banished from a well ordered City much more to be thrust out of the Church which is the Common-wealth of God and of his Son Christ Dauid did greatly lament his estate and condition when hee wanted the holy assemblies of the faithfull among the Infidels and could not come into the presence of God with his people and did thinke himself driuen away from abiding in the inheritance of the Lord 1 Sam. 26 19. Who would not tremble and be afraid to bee deliuered vp vnto Satan 1 Cor. 5 6. the enemie of God The children of Israel were deliuered ouer to Nebucadnezzar and other wicked tyrants to be afflicted and they bewailed exceedingly such bodily captiuity Psalme 137 1 2 how much more fearful then ought the excōmunicate person to esteeme it to be deliuered vp not to wicked and vngodly men but to satan himselfe The prince that ruleth in the hart of the children of disobedience Notwithstanding all fellowshippe and familiarity with them is not denyed to vs. It is lawfull for the family to conuerse with the gouernors of the family though they be excommunicate persons The wife may not deny due beneuolence nor the childe dutifull obedience if he bid them go they must goe or to come they must come neither are they by such behauiour culpeable or guilty of their sinne of which we see more before chap. 5. Fourthly if the sonne be a Magistrate Obiect 5 the father a priuate man it may bee demanded whether he be to yeeld obedience to his father I answer Answ though the father must obey the sonne as hee is a Magistrate yet in another respect the sonne must obey the father as he is the father so that neytner is the sonne to bee depriued of the honour and
dignitie due vnto his place neyther is the father to bee denyed that duty and respect which is due vnto his person The sonne may bee honoured as hee is a Magistrate and the father is likewise also to bee obeyed as hee is a father And this the Heathen in former times haue both knowne and practised For when Q. Fabius Maximus in Liuy Decad. 3. lib. 4. was on a time sent Ambassadour vnto his son then being Consull he went out to meete his father who was coming to him on horsebacke and albeit the Sergeants reuerencing the maiesty of the father who before had bin Dictator the highest office in the City suffered him to passe yet the sonne commanded him to alight from his horse if hee meant to speake to him And the olde man was so farre from being offended with his sonne or from thinking it any disgrace to himselfe that hee leaped from his horse immediately commending his son and telling him he meant to trie whether hee knew himselfe to bee Consull or not I alledge this out of the Romane history to shew that the Heathen themselues knew how to make this difference Salomon is a notable example of this point for he knew himselfe to be a sonne yet he forgate not that he was also king of Israel and therefore when Bathsheba came vnto him albeit he rose vp to meete her and bowed himselfe vnto her as shee was his mother yet he sat down in his throne againe as be was king and she his subiect 1 Obiection 5 Kings 2 19 yea he denyed her request also It may be demanded farther what if God command one thing and the parents another what are the children to do in this repugnancie whether of them should they obey I answer Answ wee are charged to loue and obey God before and aboue all things and therefore to preferre the precept or pleasure of man before the will of God is no better then to make an idoll of our parents and to honour them as God True it is wee are bound to obey euill parents but we are not bound to obey them in euill If they command and compel in euil they are rather tyrants then parents and wee must answer with the Apostles We ought to obey God rather then men Acts 5 29. So then we see how far children are bound to obey theyr parents to wit while they keepe themselues within their bounds though they be froward and waiward peeuish and peruerse though they be not endued with vertue or wisedom or any other good qualities yet they must be reuerenced honoured and releeued as parents and the instruments of our life and being but if they forget their places and commaund against God it is better to cleaue vnto GOD our heauenly father Obiection 6 Againe if the Magistrate command one thing and the father another heere both are men whether of these two are to bee obeyed by the sonne Nay in this case not only both are men but both of them are fathers one the father of the countrey Answ the other of the family I answer if obedience to both cannot stand together wee must obey the Magistrate because God hath giuen him a larger commission and greater authority then to the fathers of our bodyes so that he hath power and authority to command the fathers their children Againe the Magistrate commandeth for the good of the Commonwealth the father for the priuate good of the priuat house True it is wee may loue our parents better then the Magistrate howbeit wee must obey the Magistrate before our parents As wee may loue a good man which is but poore and needy before or better then an euill or wicked man which is in great power and authority howbeit in respect of his authoritie when he commandeth we must obey him before the other Furthermore suppose a man be a seruant Obiection 7 or an apprentise his master commandeth him one thing his father the contrary whether of them shall he obey in this repugnancie of commanders and commandements which of them shall hee please and to which of them shall hee cleaue I answer Answ he must obey his master For to speak properly the father hath no power nor authority in such a case for it may be said Who art thou that commandest another mans seruant hee standeth or falleth to his owne master as Paul speaketh in another case The father hauing bound his son an apprentise and put him into the seruice of another hath withall by that act put away his authority and as it were resigned vp his owne right to his master And such a son may wish the good of his father before the good of his master and the life of his father before the life of his master howbeit hee must obey his master before his father and endeauour by his diligence labour seruice and faithfulnes the profit of his master before the profit of his father and not seeke the hinderance or losse of his master in one peny to procure aduantage to his father in twenty pound farther then he hath the consent of his master Lastly the question may be asked touching Obiection 8 the daughter of a man giuen in marriage the husband commandeth one thing and the father another whether of these is to be obeyed the husband or the father I answer Answer the husband For as shee must obey her husband before the father so shee is to loue the husband better also and God commandeth the man to leaue father and mother Gen. 2 24. and to cleane to his wife which is also a commandement vnto the woman to leaue parents and to cleaue to her husband for they twaine shall bee one flesh Matth. 19 verse 5. Ephes 5. verse 31. 1 Cor. 6. verse 16 therefore in this case the will of the husband is to be preferred before the will of the father For as it is in the two great lights which God hath set in the firmament the lesser euermore giueth place to the greater and when the Sun shineth the light of the Moone fadeth and vanisheth away so when the greater authoritie of the husband commeth in place the lesser power and authoritie of the father ceaseth Besides his giuing of her in marriage to the husband is a giuing away of his owne right ouer her as well as ouer that portion of goods which he bestoweth with her so that now his authority is abridged nay clean abolished Lastly it appeareth in this chapter that if a married woman had vowed a vow to God her husband onely had power to abrogate and disanull her vow but not her father That which she doth vnto her parents and for her parents must bee by the consent and allowance of her Husband Whatsoeuer is hurtfull or any way preiudiciall to him she ought not to do though it were with a purpose to profit her parents Vse 1 Now we come to the Vses This reprooueth diuers and sundry sorts that fight directly against this ordinance of God