Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n age_n street_n zion_n 23 3 9.0544 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

which we should account as the life of our liues Seeing therefore on the one side Warre is the iust wages of great sins and on the other side peace bringeth with it many blessings of all sorts spirituall and temporall we conclude that many are the miseries of warre The vses are in the next place to be thought vpon and application ●o be made of this Doctrine Vse 1 First let vs pray earnestly to God and call vpon him faithfully to keep from vs both warres and the rumors of wars and continue peace in our borders with the free publike vse of the Gospel to vs and to our posterities that there may not be the voice of lamentation lifted vp in our streetes weeping mourning and great howling Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted because they were not Mat. 2 18. Ier. 31 15. We liue in a plentifull and well-peopled Land no Nation vnder heauen is more populous This is a blessing of God as Moses declareth Leuit. 26 9. Likewise Prouerbs 14 28 Yet many times we repine at his mercie we thinke the Land will be too little for vs and that we shall not be able to liue one for another Hee can make roome enough for vs if he once send the bright weapons of warre and the glistering sword of the bloody enemy among vs. He can make fewer of vs and turne our Land into bryars thornes and make it a place of Salt-pits and Nettles Then shall a man nourish a yong Cow and two Sheepe Esay 7 21 22. and 4 1. and for the abundance of Milke that they shall giue he shall eate Butter The number of men shall then be so small tha● a few beasts shall bee sufficient to nourish the remnant abundantly Then shall seuen women take hold of one man saying We will eate our owne bread and will weare our owne garments onely let vs bee called by thy name and take away our reproch Let vs therefore in this great encrease of the land and store of people acknowledge his mercy let vs reioyce in the society one of another and pray that wee taste not the bitternesse of war that there be no slaying with the sword no shedding of blood no carrying into captiuity This the Prophet teacheth Ps 144 desiring God to continue his benefites toward his people the fruite of the wombe the filling of store-houses the encrease of sheepe the quietnesse of peace Psal 144 12 13 14 15. That our sonnes being as the plants growing vp in their youth and our daughters being as the corner stones may be the building of the temple that our corners may be full and our Oxen strong to labor that there be no inuasion nor going out nor no crying in our streets O blessed are the people that bee so yea blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. Where we see the Prophet prayeth and directeth vs to pray that there may be no taste of the sharpnesse and misery of warre nor we know the assaulting of our Citties nor going out to warfare that there may be no sorrow of heart no weeping of eyes no wringing of hands no shriking of voices among vs. Were it not a wofull and lamentable thing to see fire without mercy and without quenching consuming houses eating vp all things and sparing nothing How much more to see and heare and feele the affliction of warre when all things are in confusion and combustion For this is one great mischiefe and bitternes of warre that all things are holden to be lawfull and all men make themselues to bee lawlesse There is no regard of right or equity of shame or conscience when many times the souldiers are as hungry as wolues as cruell as Tygers as fierce as Lions as merciles as Bears robbed of their whelpes which spoyle in the euening and leaue not the bones vntill the morning Liberty is oppressed good men feare euill men expect knowing it is best fishing in troubled water if there be any place free from tumult at least there is none void of suspition and free from iealousie few then are to be trusted and none assured all things in confusion violence spoyling blood murthers outcrying and nothing else before our eyes but a lamentable face of all calamities extremities The Prophet Zachary describing the golden dayes of a peaceable life which should be giuen to the Israelites when they were returned from captiuity saith Zac. 8 4 5. There shall yet old men and old women dwell in the streets of Ierusalem and euery man with his staffe in his hand for verie age and the streets of the City shal be full of boyes girles playing in the streets therof Then is the mouth of the people filled with laughter and their tongue with ioy Psal 46 9. When the Lord maketh warres to cease vnto the end of the world he breaketh the bow and cutteth the speare burneth the Chariots with fire But in the time of war and in the day of battaile all things are turned topsie-turuý all things lye open to sacking and pillage to insolencie of souldiers to desire of reuenge and to most horrible accidents Then we are constrayned to see and lament the slaughter of men the rauishing of women the deflouring of virgins the spoyling of goods the robbing of houses the taking of prisoners the breaking of lawes the defacing of iustice the intermission of sowing the innouation of estates the subuersion of realmes the desolation of countries the violation of religion the destruction of Citties the effusion of blood the suffering of famine and sometimes the extreamity of eating children and alwayes the ouerthrowing of all order and honesty Who is able to recount rehearse the great horror and feare the sorow and mourning the weeping and lamentation the seditions tumults outrages villanies insurrections conspiracies calamities dangers difficulties and the miserable traine of infinit miseries and maladies that war bringeth with it No maruell therefore if Dauid preferred the pestilence before the sword 2 Sam. 24 14. desiring that hee might fall into the hands of the Lord because his mercies are great and not fall into the hands of man whose bowels of pitty are instruments of cruelty Let vs therefore pray earnestly and feruently vnto God that wee may not haue experience of these troubles nor endure the violence of this fire and intreat him to continue a gracious God to vs and to our posterities for euer This we see fruitfully and profitably practised by the people of Israel when the Lord for their idolatry threatned to deliuer them no more out of the handes of their enemies and bad them cry vnto the gods which they had chosen that they might saue them in the time of their tribulation they said vnto the Lord We haue sinned do thou vnto vs whatsoeuer please thee onely we pray thee to deliuer vs this day from our enemies Iudg. 10 10 11 12. Secondly let vs learne by the horror of the Vse 2
shall be put to death 39. All that were numbred of the Leuites which Moses Aaron numbred at the commandement of the Lord throughout all their families all the males from a moneth old and vpward were twenty and two thousand Wee haue already handled the numbring of two of the families that haue their foundation in the sonnes of Leui to wit the Gershonites and the Kohathites Now followeth the third and last that is the Merarites touching whom we are to consider sundry particular points as we haue done in the two former diuisions For first the families descended of Merari are named which are two the Mahlites and the Mushites verse 33. Secondly the number of persons the summe of them according to the number of all the males from a moneth old and aboue was sixe thousand two hundred verse 34. Thirdly the Ouerseer or Superintendent of them all was Zuriel the sonne of Abihail Fourthly the place of their abode in the host was on the North-side of the Tabernacle verse 35. Lastly the office and function committed vnto them was the woodworke and the rest of the instruments These things were committed to their charge and custody Hitherto wee haue handled the numbring of this Tribe simply considered in it selfe according to the particular families of it now let vs obserue how it is concluded In this conclusion set downe in the two last verses of this diuision we are to marke two points first the persons that went before the Arke of the Couenant on the East-side secondly the totall sum of the whole Tribe is reckoned vp The persons that were to pitch on the fore-front of the Tabernacle toward the East are these both Moses himselfe as the chiefe Captaine Commander ouer the whole and also Aaron with his sons the Priests ministring vnto God and his Church whereunto is annexed a certaine prouiso that none should dare to thrust himselfe into their office verse 38. Secondly the totall sum of all the former particulars is brought together and the accounts cast vp which are said to amount to two and twenty thousand v. 39. Out of which generall number must be deducted the Priests and the first borne of the Leuites themselues for otherwise the whole Tribe of Leui consisting of the Priests and such as are called by the common name of Leuites amounted to the number of twenty and two thousand and three hundred soules Verse 33. Of Merari was the family c. In this diuision we see more plainely and particularly that which was in part noted before namely the seuerall mansions and situations that these Leuites had about the Tabernacle which being the place of Gods publike seruice they compassed it round about that they might not be farre from any of the people of God but alwaies resident among them The Gershonites pitched behinde the Tabernacle westward verse 23. The Kohathites pitched on the south-side of the Tabernacle verse 29. The Merarites pitched on the north side of the Tabernacle verse 35. Now lest any part should be left vnfurnished and vnprouided Moses and Aaron and his sonnes are commanded to take vp the fore-front of the Tabernacle and to pitch on the East-side GOD might haue put and placed all the Leuites in one corner of the host if it had pleased him but in great mercy both toward the Leuites and people they are seated in the middest of the army and charged to compasse the Tabernacle round about to the end they might serue the better for giuing direction and instruction indifferently to all the rest of the Tribes that were to vse their Ministery Thus we see that neither the Teachers were constrained to go farre to their hearers nor the hearers to take any tedious iourney to their Teachers This teacheth vs that God will haue euery part of his people taught Such is the goodnesse Doctrine 1 of almighty God God wil haue all places and people taught euen the smallest that he will haue none of his seruants vntaught how small soeuer the places be how meane soeuer the persons be None are too high in regard of their great places none are too low in regard of their obscure callings none are too good to be taught whatsoeuer their degrees be We see this most euidently in the Tribe of Leui it selfe To what end and purpose were they diuided in Iacob and scattered in Israel Gen. 49 Gen. 49 7 but that all the Lords people might be instructed from the highest to the lowest and haue their portion in due season alotted vnto them of God This is giuē as a commendation of the Leuites and of Iehoshaphat that sent them 2 Chron 17 9. They taught in Iudah and had the booke of the Law of the Lord with them and went about throughout all the Cities of Iudah and taught the people This we see in the Apostle Paul writing to the Ephesians and setting downe the notable fruites and ends of the Ministery of the word Eph. 4 13. He gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists some Pastours and Teachers Till we all meete together in the vnity of faith vnto a perfect man and the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ Touching the practise of this duty we haue a notable example in Christ our Sauiour in many places of the Euangelists Luke 8 1. It came to passe afterward that he went throughout euery City and Village preaching and shewing the glad tydings of the kingdome of God and chap. 13 22. He went through the Cities Villages teaching and iournying toward Ierusalem The like we reade of the twelue Apostles who walked in the steps of their master going through the Townes preaching the Gospel and healing euery where Luke 9 6. So also it was with the seuenty Disciples the Lord sent thē two and two before his face into euery city and place whither he himselfe would come Luk. 10 1. Seeing then the Priests and Leuites Christ his Disciples went about through all the Citties of Iudah published the Gospel in euery city and village preached euery where and went into all places we conclude that it is the ordinance of God that all places great and small all persons high and low all congregations bigge and little should haue the word of God established and setled among them Reason 1 This will be made plaine and cleere vnto vs by diuers reasons First consider with me the titles that are giuen vnto God in the Scriptures He is worthily called the King of his Church and the Lord Master of his house-Is not he the Shepheard of Israel that leadeth Ioseph like sheepe Psal 80 1. Will a Shepheard that hath any care of his Sheepe or any loue vnto them looke vnto some of them and not to all Or will he not rather if any be gone astray Lu. 15 4 5 6. leaue ninety and nine in the wildernesse and seeke that lost one vntill he finde it So is it the will of our Father that is
to his glory and to the good of others Wee must referre them to him as we haue receiued them of him As all riuers runne into the sea so all our riches should returne to God Thirdly we must be ready and willing to leaue them whensoeuer God shall call for them For hee that bestowed them may he not require them againe when he pleaseth we must leaue them rather then leaue him If we haue this godly resolution then may we perswade our owne hearts that we are thankefull for them Thus it was with Iob 〈◊〉 1.21 when he could say The Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. Fourthly wee must not put our trust and confidence in them and if riches encrease 〈◊〉 10. we must not set our hearts vpon them because then we commit grosse idolatry with them This is a fearefull sinne Many such idolaters it is to be feared remaine stil in great store among vs ●nd albeit idols be banished out of our Churches yet many doe yet set them vp in their hearts This idolatry is so much the more dangerous because it is more close and secret coloured vnder the name of vertue practised by such as detest popery and idolatry and therefore is lesse perceiued and discerned Lastly we must not account these the chiefest riches or the best treasures inasmuch as the vngodly haue commonly the greatest share of them Luke 12. and 16. and therefore we must labour to be rich in faith 〈◊〉 6.11 in loue in righteousnesse in godlinesse in patience in meekenesse and in all good workes Heere is true riches if we adorne our selues with these we shall be truely rich although we be poore Reuel 2.9 and though we haue neither siluer nor gold Acts 3.6 yet he hath giuen vs all things 2 Pet. 1.3 And though we haue nothing at all yet we possesse all things 2 Cor. 6.10 89 And when Moses was gone into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to speake with him 〈◊〉 i● with 〈◊〉 then he heard the voyce of one speaking vnto him from off the mercy seate c. Hitherto of the offerings of the Princes receiued of Moses and giuen to the Leuites Two tribes offered one wagon and euery wagon had two oxen therefore they offered six● wagons and to draw them twelue oxen These were thus distributed ●ret comment in 7. cap. Num. the Ge●shonites had two wagons and consequently foure oxen commited to them the Meratites ha● foure wagons and consequently eight oxen so that they carryed the greatest burdens Touching the Kohathites the third family of the Leuites nothing was bestowed among them because to them were committed the vessels of the Sanctuary which were carryed vpon their shoulders so that they had no need ether of wagons to beare them or of oxen to draw them themselues seruing in stead of them both In this verse we see the oracle of God speaking to Moses We might note heere that God spake diuers wayes to his Church in the old Testament as also that all blessings come from God to vs through Christ the true propitiatory couering our sinnes out of Gods sight and reuealing Gods will to vs that wee should know it and haue benefit by his Priesthood But to passe ouer these we may note that Moses went into the Tabernacle The Tabernacle signifieth his Church There is God to be spoken vnto The doctrine Doctrine is this God is present in a speciall manner in places set apart for his worship True it is God is euermore present wheresoeuer his Church is assembled hee is euery where the heauen is his throne and the earth is his footstoole howbeit wheresoeuer his Church and people are assembled hee is present with his Spirit with his grace and with his blessing and assistance Hence it is that the place appointed for his seruice is called his face Gen. 4.14 This is afterward called the presence of the Lord verse 16. So Psal 46.5 God is said to be in the middes of the City of God And Christ teacheth that wheresoeuer two or three are gathred together in his name he is in the middes of them Matth. 18.20 So then wheresoeuer the place of Gods worship is there is God euer present For first he hath promised to dwell there Reason 1 Where dwelleth the master of the house and where is he readiest to bee found but where he dwelleth as Psal 132.13.14 The Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation this is my rest for euer heere will I dwell for I haue desired it Secondly he is knowne by a speciall worke of his presence sanctifying Reason 2 those that are his by his word heereupon the Prophet saith Psal 87.2 3. The Lord loueth the gates of Sion more then all the dwellings of Iacob glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Thirdly he delighteth in his own ordinances Reason 3 In Iudah is God knowne his Name is great in Israel in Salem also is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion Psal 76.1.2 It is Gods ordinance that we should meete together in one place for this cause hee commanded the Tabernacle to be builded and afterward the Temple these he sanctified for the word for sacrifices and for prayer these doth the Lord loue and in those doth he take pleasure and with them will he vouchsafe his presence This being an euident trueth from hence we must learne so to carry our selues in such places as are sanctified and set apart for his seruice as that wee may call him to bee a witnesse of our sincerity Will a subiect dare to behaue himselfe rudely and vnreuerently in the presence of his Prince or the child in the presence of his father How then ought wee to stand in awe of the Maiesty of Almighty God whose glory is incomprehensible who dwelleth in light that none can attaine vnto Heerepon the wise man saith Eccle. 5.1 Keepe thy foot when thou goest to the house of God and be more ready to heare then to giue the sacrifice of fooles for they consider not that they doe euill No man ought to come before the Lord vnprepared or to set his feete in the Lords house rashly and vnreuerently Were it not vnseemly and vnciuill to enter into a kings pallace with foule and filthy feete defiled with dung and myre or to sit downe at a Princes table with vnwashen hands And is it not more vndecent and vndutifull to come into the house of the great King the King of Kings and to be partakers of his Table before wee haue cleansed and sanctified our hearts This was shadowed out at the giuing of the law by commanding them to wash their garments and to abstaine from their wiues Exod. 19.14 15. Thus they were to be prepared before they receiued the Law Likewise before they could behold the wonderfull workes of God they were spoken to to pull off their shooes because the place whereon they stood was
power Christ Iesus witnesseth that hee would haue gathered the people of Ierusalem by his Ministery but they would not Mat. 23. So God promised to gather together the dispersed of Iudah from the foure corners of the earth Esay 11.12 Secondly he is euermore a present helpe in time of trouble willing to heare them with speed and ready to speak to them with comfort Whatsoeuer they aske of him they shall receiue but if he were not present with vs he could not heare vs in our need nor succour vs in our wants Psal 46.5 Thirdly Satan dwelleth and ruleth in the world He is called the prince of the world Eph. 2. who ruleth in the children of disobedience and blindeth their eyes that they cannot obey the trueth 2 Cor. 4.4 Lastly his loue his special loue is set vpon them and the loue the speciall loue of his people is set vpon him and where should he rest and remaine but among them or how should one be without another The vses This reprooueth all such as haue Vse 1 no care to dwell with God in his Church of which the number is not small in all places These are like vnfaithful seruants that care not for comming in their masters presence or like malefactors that hate nothing more then the face of the iudge So is it with euill men they like no place worse then the Church They take as much pleasure in it as the theefe doth to be in the Iaile who careth not how soone he were out and rid of his fetters The word of God is to the vngodly as bolts and gyues it fettereth and hampereth and holdeth him that he knoweth not which way to turne himselfe The Church is to him as it were a prison it restraineth his liberty he loueth no place worse then it It is otherwise with the godly man hee liketh it and preferreth it in his thoughts in his affections and in his practises aboue al other places because the Lord dwelleth and resideth therein Luk. 19.46 It is the house of prayer where the people of God meet God is neuer absent from hence and they are happy that may dwell there with him Psalme 27.4 And we may pronounce this is a certaine truth that such haue no company or communion with God that delight not to visite his Temple Let such look for no blessing at Gods hand to come vpon them Secondly this proclaimeth woe and misery Vse 2 to come vpon all wicked persons because God is not among them His presence is the fulnesse of ioy at his right hand are pleasures for euermore Psalm 16 11. where he is not there can be nothing but horrour and confusion But he is not in the Congregation assembly of euill persons It will be said Is not God euery where He is with his essence but not with his grace And they shall know he is present with them and they with him albeit they seeke nothing more then to banish him out of their presence and company They haue forsaken the waies of God and he hath forsaken them for their wickednesse Howbeit in the last day when they shall stand before the tribunall seat of the Iudge of al the world they will acknowledge their owne folly and desire to behold one comfortable day of the Sonne of man with the losse of all their pleasures in the daies of their vanity but shall not be able Vse 3 Thirdly hence ariseth comfort to Gods children to know this and to be throughly perswaded of it in their hearts Thus doth Abijah the king of Iudah comfort himselfe against his enemies 2 Chron. 13.12 Behold God himselfe is with vs and likewise Christ his disciples Loe I am with you vnto the end of the world Matth. 28.20 Hee need not feare any thing that hath God to be with him He need not feare the subiect that hath the Prince to stand for him He hath no cause to be afraid of the seruant that hath the master on his side Let euery one therefore comfort himselfe in the execution of his calling God hath set vs in the same and he will beare vs out Vse 4 Lastly it is a duty belonging vnto all men to seeke the Lord as well where he may bee found as when he may be found For as there is a time when he wil not be found Pro. 1.28 Mic. 3.4 Luk. 13.24 so there is a place where he will not be found He resteth not in the tents of wickednesse If God be sought in the society and fellowship of sinfull men hee cannot be found Hee is found in his house and Temple if we delight in his word and worship we cannot be farre from him nor hee from vs. If we shew our selues willing to heare his voyce and to goe no farther from him then that we may euermore bee within the sound of his mouth we shall be sure of his presence There he will be found as in a garden of spices The Lord is said to dwell in the highest heauens and indeed this is the city of the great king Now the Church is as the suburbes and leadeth vs the right and ready way to this citie We can neuer come to it if we do not enter by the gates of the Church Heere God keepeth his court heere we shall be sure to find him All men will seeme in loue with the heauenly Ierusalem but they care not at all for Sion They would rest in the hill of God Psal 25.1 but they desire not to soiourne in his Tabernacle They would haue heauen but they will haue none of the Church They loue to heare Mat 25.34 enter into the kingdome prepared for you but they care not for the feasts of the word and Sacraments prepared for them These doe altogether deceiue themselues and separate those things which God hath ioyned together for as much as we must long after the place of his habitation vpon earth if we looke to be receiued into the place of his habitation in heauen For God hath two houses as his dwelling places one beneath the other aboue the one I may call the lower house the other the vpper house God hath two dwelling places his vpper house and his lower house He that would dwell in the one must also dwell in the other One is the Church the other is the kingdome of glory If we delight in the first house more then in all other places let vs not doubt but be well assured that in his good time we shall haue entrance into the second house But if we will not dwell with him in his Church vpon earth we shall neuer dwell with him in glory in the highest of which Christ our Sauiour saith In my Fathers house there be many mansions Ioh. 14.2 Whereby he meaneth heauen it selfe in which all the Saints and blessed spirits of iust men perfected shall dwell with God for euer in glory and immortality If we be any way in loue with this celestiall house let
shee hath sustained Salomon saith Prou. 20 25. It is a snare to the man who deuoureth that which is holy after vowes to make enquiry but gaine blindeth the eies of the wise Ananias and Sapphira are seuerely punished who with-held part of that mony which was consecrated to God by their owne gift these deteine part of that which neither they nor their fathers euer gaue and yet neither feare it nor are touched with it And who can deny but all tithes are due by vow in the times of the Gospel and that the true and due paiment of them is long before all customes and prescriptions It is a rule of common equity Serm. of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that no man hauing passed his consent and his deed may change it to the preiudice of another Now that which is giuen to the Church is passed ouer to God for his seruice and therefore whosoeuer shall take it away againe without the consent of God whose it is cōmitteth sacriledge against him and dealeth worse with him then he will suffer any man to deale with vs. Obiection But it will be said the Ministers themselues consented to this alienation and therefore beeing willing no iniury can be done vnto them I answer Answ our consent is not sufficient because the vow is made to God and thereby hee is entituled vnto them and hath receiued a right in them by our vow so that consequently they cannot be taken away without his consent The donation of Ananias and Sapphira was made to God for the vse of the poore it lay not now in their power nor in the Churches to reuoke reuerse that grant wherein God became now to be interessed We see this in marriage published in the face of the Church solemnized by consent of parties and parents ratified by the action of the Minister and celebrated in the presence of many friends the knot cannot be vntied no not by agreement of the parents of the parties of the Minister of the friends of the whole Congregation because marriage is not of the nature of a ciuill contract but God is a party and hath a speciall hand in it and whom God hath ioyned together Math. 19 ● let no man put asunder or separate againe without his cōsent The like we may say of the Church-endowments they are not meerely ciuill where God is a party and therefore that which hee hath receiued let no man take away without his alowance Great was the deuotion zeale of the faithfull gained to the Gospel in the beginning our fore-fathers thoght nothing too much for the spreading abroad of the sauing truth of Iesus Christ Many ministred vnto Christ out of their substance 〈◊〉 8 3. which hee kept in a bagge wherein he kept the things that were giuen to supply his owne wants and the wants of others Iohn 13 29. After the death and resurrection of Christ when hee was ascended into heauen many deuoute men solde their possessions Acts 2 45 and 4 34 35 and brought the price thereof and laid it downe at the Disciples feete which communication of all things though it tended and extended to the benefite of all yet was there especiall regard had to the Apostles that they should want nothing For how vnreasonable a thing were it that seeing they ministred vnto the Church all things that pertaine to life godlinesse the Church should not minister vnto them food and raiment and al things belonging vnto this life After the Church was once setled and established among the Gentiles dispersed throughout the world which before was contained within the boundes of Iudea it was better to giue lands commonly now called the glebe as being a more sure and setled endowment then mony which as one merrily ●tem dice●●● quid ● Horat. lib. 1. Sa● but yet truely saith he would haue called the Churches fixt inheritance but that he seeth the same also to be moueable At the first then the church turned their possessions into mony and afterward mony into possessions Thus we see the zeale and feruency of the first times ages of the Church while the blood of Christ lately shedde was yet warme in mens hearts whereby it came to passe that it had very anciently landes and possessions both glebe and houses belonging vnto it wherein they followed the president of God when he appointed Cities for the Leuites to dwell in with a conuenient circuit of fields for the maintainance of their cattell Numb 35 2. But neuer was the zeale of men so hot but now their deuotion is as cold and we are so farre from giuing to the Church that wee liue in a frozen age wherein men striue who shall take most from the Church I haue heard some men affirme who would be thought great friends to the Church but they are such friends to the Church as the East winde is to the fruites of the earth that they are willing to pay so much and they can see no reason why they should pay any more as the soile will naturally yeeld and bring foorth of it selfe without charge of tillage or manuring notwithstanding in the late case of Tithe-wood which groweth out of the ground without their labour or without any great cost no other benefite arising to the Minister from thence haue also refused to pay any wood at all in kinde or any thing else in lieu of it If then these men will allow vs neither the tenth of the earth laboured neither yet the tenth of that which groweth without any labour I would gladly know what they would allow vs Such is the couetousnes of many men that they seeke to make new customes and prescriptions euery day and lay the foundation of many iniurious courses which in time to come will tend to the ouerthrow of religion But let all such consider looke to themselues that be any way authors of deteining tithes and of bringing in prescriptions preiudiciall to the Church for how many soeuer perish for want of food in the places where they liue are guilty of the murthering of so many soules before the tribunal seat of the eternall Iudge as Austine teacheth Lastly seeing God hath prouided that the Vse 4 Ministers should be prouided for and hath taken care that they should bee cared for it is their duty to bee diligent in teaching of the people and preaching in season out of season For as they are worthy of their wages so they must be faithfull labourers and as they must liue of the Gospel so they must preach the Gospel As the people must communicate vnto the Ministers in all good things so it is required of them to teach instruct thē and as they are counted worthy of double honor 1 Tim. 5 17 so they must rule well As the mouth of the Oxe must not be muzled so hee must tread out the corne and they that eate of the milke of the flocke must bee carefull to feede the flocke euen so
of the church rauishing as it were all his senses and so astonishing him that he is not able to finde words sufficient to expresse the glory thereof For heere we see he compareth the happinesse and blessednesse of the Church to the Valleyes Gardens Cedars and such like all to this end to shadow out vnto vs the value and worth of it that it farre surmounteth all other societies and is most precious deare in the sight of God Heereby then wee learne what is the Doctrine true Church The Chur● is more excellent an● precious 〈◊〉 all other ●ces it exceedeth all other societies of men and is most precious and deare vnto God and vnto Christ We see then how from hence we learne that aboue all other companies and fellowships in the world the Church is most excellent and beautifull and of GOD most respected This hath plentifull testimony of other Scriptures The Prophet saith The Kings daughter is glorious within her cloathing is of broidered gold Psal 45 13. Hereunto come the titles and commendations giuen vnto the Church in sundry places dispersed in the booke of Canticles chap. 2 2. and 4 13. and 5 9. Shee is the Rose of the field the Lilly of the valley the fairest among women an Orchard of Pomgranats a Fountaine of Gardens a Well of springing waters the Spouse and Sister of Christ the beauty of the earth the glory of the world and being compared with other societies as a Lilly among Thornes like the Apple among the Trees of the Forrest It is a Citty whose walles and gates are of precious stones and the streetes thereof of gold Reuel 21 2 19. It is compared to a woman cloathed with the Sunne and had the Moone that is all corruptible things which are vnstable and vncertaine vnder her feete As the Doctrine by these euidences is Reason 1 made cleare so by the Reasons whereby it is proued it may be yet made much clearer For first it is more excellent then all other societies as gold aboue all other mettals because in it alone saluation is to be found and no where else When the vniuersall flood came and couered the face of the whole earth what place wouldest thou preferre before the arke in which Noah and his family were saued and out of the which all the world beside was drowned So saluation is taught and receiued in the Church damnation is to be found and felt out of the Church Can there be a greater priuiledge had then to haue our souls saued or a greater losse then the losse of our soules Wee reade in the Scriptures of many great and exceeding grieuous losses Iob lost all his camels and his asses his oxen and his sheepe his seruants and his sons all his goods and riches Saul lost his kingdome and his life But all these are pettie losses and damages in comparison of the incomparable and inestimable losse of the soule which is a perpetuall separation from the glorious and comfortable presence of God according to the saying of our Sauiour Math. 25 16. What shall it profite a man if he winne the whole world and then lose his owne soule Or what shall a man giue for the recompence of his soule The truth of this reason the Lord himself expresseth in the Prophet saying I will giue saluation in Sion and my glory vnto Israel Esay 46 13. The wealthiest country vnder heauen hath not this treasure the greatest Monarke in the world hath none of this merchandice the richest merchant that compasseth sea and land and trauaileth into the furthest part of the earth cannot bring home with him this pearle of vnualuable price it is only to be found in the city of God which is his Church for in mount Sion and in Ierusalem shal be deliuerance Reason 2 Secondly all other sorts and societies of men are appointed and ordained of God to serue and preserue this This is it which the Prophet Esay saith Esay 45 14. It shall be the honour of Kings and Princes to doe seruice to the Church and to promote the good of it It is the end for which God hath lifted vp the heads of rulers and gouernors aboue their brethren to promote the good of the Church and to aduance the glory of God This the Prophet speaketh of in the Psalme Psal 78 71. that God chose Dauid his seruant tooke him from the sheepefold and preferred him before his brethren euen tooke him and from behinde the ewes with yong brought he him to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel so he fed them according to the simplicitie of his heart and guided them by the dis●retion of his hands The like we see in the book of Ester when the destruction of the Church was determined and contriued Mordecai said to Ester Ester 4.14 If thou holdest thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy fathers house shall perish and who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time So what power strength ability or meanes soeuer God hath giuen he looketh for this duty and thankfulnes at our hands to seek the safety of Sion to aduance the glory of Ierusalem and to know that hereunto we are called Thirdly the beauty of all other cities and Reason 3 societies standeth in this that they are parts and members of the Church This is the glory of kingdomes and countries whereby they are beautified in that they belong to the true Church for otherwise all places are as cages of vncleane birds nay as lodges of vncleane spirits and all persons are as dogges swine as Tygers and vncleane beasts Hence it is that the Apostle describing what wee are by nature saith Eph. 2 12. Yee were at that time without Christ aliants from the commonwealth of Israel strangers from the couenants of promise and had no hope and were without GOD in the world If then it beautifie other places and persons it must needes be beautifull it selfe If it giue grace and glory to others that ioyne themselues to it it must needs be both gracious and glorious it selfe For whatsoeuer causeth a thing to be so must needes be so it selfe much more The vses of this doctrine are excellent as Vse 1 the nature of the Church is For first we conclude that they must needs be most happy blessed of God that are members of the Church For howsoeuer the world account them miserable grinning at them with their teeth nodding at them them their heads gaping at them with their mouthes hissing at them with their tongues and euery way contumeliously reproaching them with their words yet they are deare and precious in the account of God and in the reputation of Christ Iesus who bought them at a great price and redeemed them with the ransome of his owne blood 1. Pet. 1 18 19. Behold what loue the Father hath giuen to vs that we should be called