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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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day And if the voice of Christ in the daies of his humility were so fearefull and auailable in the hearts of his persecuters what a dreadfull thunderbolt will hee cast downe against all his enemies and vpon all the reprobate being in glory and sitting at the right hand of his Father when he shall vtter this finall and fearefull sentence Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his angels Math. chapter 25 verse 41. Againe wee are all put in minde that his death is meritorious and the full price of our redemption Thirdly we see that he is Lord of life and death for he raised himselfe by his eternall Spirit and as he had power to lay it downe so he had power to take it vp as appeared euidently at his resurrection Let vs serue him that is able to redeeme from death such as beleeue in him and rest vpon him for their saluation He that restored himselfe to life is able to giue vs life and he that brake the sorrowes of death is able to destroy him that hath the power of death Lastly let vs also endure the crosse willingly following his steps and shewing our selues to be like vnto him remembring that the losse of life for his sake is indeed not a losse of life but a finding of it or a changing of it a temporall life with an eternall Fourthly the heiffer heere mentioned was brought out of the hoast as also other sacrifices were Leuit 4 12 21. this signified Christs suffering out of the gates of the City as Heb. 13 11 12. Iohn 19 16 17 20. This circumstance is not without profite for first it sheweth and signifieth the abolishing of the types and figures of the Law the truth standing in place of the ceremonies and the body instead of the shadowes and therefore such as still serue at the Altar cannot bee partakers of our Altar that is of Christ Hebr. 13 10. Wee haue an Altar whereof they haue no right to eate which serue the Tabernacle The false Apostles taught that the ceremonies were to be mingled with the Gospel but these two cannot stand togegether because the seruice performed in the tabernacle was but a shadow of better things to come Col. 2 verse 17. But the body is Christ Wherefore to obserue them was to deny Iesus Christ and to keep them still in force was as much as to ouerthrow his sacrifice once offered vpon the Crosse They are therfore much deceiued that goe about to bring into vse againe Altars of wood or of stone in the churches of Christians For the Apostle speaketh not of Altars as of many but of the Altar as of one There is but one Altar in all the Church not infinite Altars and by that one Altar hee vnderstandeth the offering vpon the Altar which is no other then Christ himselfe So then wee may as well bring in the Leuiticall sacrifices as the Leuiticall Altars into the Church of Christ forasmuch as these depend one vpon another the sacrifice hauing relation to the Altar and the Altar to the sacrifice Math. 23 verses 19 20. whereas now we haue no more need either of the one or of the other For we haue an Altar and an offering which by offering of himselfe once vp a full and sufficient price for our redemption hath perfected all that are sanctified Againe as Christ was led out of the gates by the Iewes as though he were vnworthy of the society of men and afterward was crucified betweene two theeues as if he were the greatest malefactour of all hauing before preferred a wretched murtherer before him so let it not seeme strange vnto vs if the world cannot abide vs and if wee bee often made a gazing stocke to men and Angels and accounted as the off-scouring of the world and the filth of the earth 1 Corinth 4 verse 9. But howsoeuer the world do iudge of vs let vs appeale from their corrupt iudgement to the righteous iudgement of God saying with Iob Behold my Witnesse is in heauen and my Record is on high Iob 16 verse 19. Hee accepteth of vs as of his children and will admit vs as heires of his kingdome with his Sonne Lastly Christ was turned out of the City to teach vs what wee must account of our selues in this life that we haue heere no place to rest and repose our selues our hope is concerning things that are not seene Hebr. 13 verses 13 14. Let vs goe foorth vnto him without the Campe bearing his reproach for wee haue heere no continuing City but we seeke one to come As then we must bee content to beare part of the Crosse of Christ and to bee reproched as he was reproched for if we wil not beare part of his crosse wee shall not weare part of his Crowne so also wee must account our selues as Pilgrims and strangers in this world that we may enioy his kingdome in the world to come We must bee content to leaue father and mother lands and liues for his sake knowing that we shall finde all againe with a good aduantage Such as refuse to goe out of the Campe of this world to Christ and begin to nestle themselues as if they had heere a sure certaine habitation what other thing remaineth for them but vtterly to perish in the Camp of this world together with the wicked Our hope is in heauē our ankre is fixed fast aboue not in this world but in the next wee seeke not a kingdome vpon the earth for then wee should deceiue our selues God hath not called vs heere to reigne but to suffer Thus it was with all the fathers Gen. chapter 47 ver 9. Hebrewes chapter 11 verses 13 14. The Heathen people accounted this life as it were an Inne to lodge at for a short season Cicero de s●● not an house to dwell in and continue for euer yet those poore soules knew not whither they went but we know whither we goe and the way we know Iohn 14 4. We looke for a City which hath foundations whose builder maker is God Heb. 11 10. Vse 4 Lastly this purging and purifying water sprinkling the vncleane mentioned in this place is a figure of the blood of Christ fit and sufficient as a well of springing water to purge vs from all our sinnes Leuit. 1 13. Zach. 13 1. In that day there shall bee a fountaine opened vnto the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem and for separation from vncleannesse so the words are in the originall in which the Prophet alludeth to these waters of separation in this place Christ is this fountaine flowing of it selfe open and ready vnto euery one that will drinke of it for the cleansing of sinnes And we heard before out of the Apostle that the blood of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purgeth our consciences from dead works to serue the liuing God Now the blood of Christ purgeth our consciences two
tempted Where we see he beginneth the sentence with the plurall number and endeth it with the singular Wherefore to returne vnto our purpose from which we haue digressed to answere an obiection and to open the interpretation of this Scripture faithfull parents who haue endeuoured to sow the seede of eternall life in the mindes of their children are not to bee censured and condemned because they haue leude and vngodly children that giue euident tokens rather of reprobation then of saluation as if it were their fault and offence for as much as they may bee carefull to vse all meanes of faith and furtherance to eternall life and yet notwithstanding faile of their end If they doe not discharge their duties they shall be guilty of their blood but if they doe teach them they are free they haue deliuered their soules If wee haue vsed diligence and be euill spoken off let vs comfort our selues in the Lord and rest our selues in the cleerenesse of our owne consciences and comfort our hearts in the testimony thereof being well assured that in the great day of account the LORD shall acquit vs when the mouth of iniquitie shall be stopped Vse 3 Thirdly from this ground ariseth great consolation to all faithfull parents who are to comfort themselues in this if among many children and a plentifull issue they haue some fewe of them yea but one onely that appeareth to be the faithfull childe of GOD albeit it bee otherwise with the rest GOD indeede will receiue glory in all though some of them bee reprobates this must preuaile with our natural affections and teach vs to suppresse our greefe and sorrow No doubt it is cause of the greatest griefe and maketh their head as waters and their eyes a fountaine of teares that they make their bed to swimme and water their couch with weeping which striketh neerer vnto them to beholde their vngodly wayes then to see them suffer a thousand deaths Abraham was exceedingly mooued when he was commanded to cast out of his family his sonne Ishmael Gen. 21.11 and 17.18 for the thing was grieuous in Abrahams sight because of his sonne and before this he had saide O that Ishmael might liue in thy sight yet neuerthelesse he yeelded to the will of God who would therein bee honoured So when GOD respecteth vs and confirmeth his couenant toward vs and taketh vnto himselfe any of our seede we ought rather to praise God for this mercy and goodnesse toward vs in sauing one then murmure against him or aske the question of him why he calleth not all If it please God so to deale in mercy toward vs that he vouchsafeth to be both our God and the God of all I say of all our seede we are bound vnto him in so much greater dutie and he requireth of vs the greater obedience and looketh for a sacrifice of greater thankefulnesse Hee dealeth not so with all good men euen such as haue faithfull soules and desire to approoue their seruice vnto him who when they haue giuen them what education they can and heartily craued of GOD his blessing vpon their holy endeauours yet haue found many crosses and such inward griefes as haue beene ready to breake euen their heart-strings and to bring their gray haires with sorrow to the graue Neuerthelesse we must not suffer our ouer-strong affections to preuaile too farre within vs and to swallow vs vp with ouermuch heauinesse when we beholde with our owne eyes the wickednesse of our children that are come out of our owne loynes and are of our owne blood when we see them without hope of being reclaimed and reformed as those that runne into all excesse of riot no though we should see them taken away in the prophanenesse of their hearts For why should we repine at it to consider how God glorifieth himselfe albeit it be in the destruction of some of ours Of this we haue two most notable examples in Aaron and in Eli neuer to be forgotten of vs recorded in the Bookes of Leuiticus and of Samuel Touching Aaron his two eldest sonnes Nadab and Abihu of whom we now speake sinned against the Lord in offering strange fire and seruing of God otherwise then hee appointed which is a thing detestable in his eyes and there came out a fire from the Lord and deuoured them and they dyed before the Lord. Heere was a grieuous sinne committed heere was a grieuous punishment executed vpon them and their father did beholde it with his eyes and how they were carryed out of the campe in their coates Moses tolde him that the LORD would bee sanctified in them that come nigh him and before all the people he will be glorified so that Aaron helde his peace Leuiticus chapter 10. verse 3. So touching Eli when he heard a fearefull iudgement denounced against his posterity he said It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good 1 Samuel 3.18 Thus ought we to doe and not vexe and turmoyle our selues without reason for that which we cannot remedy and redresse All the children of the faithfull are not the children of the promise they that are the children of the flesh are not the children of God Galatians chapter 4. verse 23. All that are the seede of Adraham are not the children of Abraham Romanes chapter 9. verse 6 7. neither are all the Israel of God which are of Israel Heere it may be obiected which the Apostle Obiection 1 Peter speaketh to the Iewes The promise is made to you and to your children Actes 2.39 God is the God of the faithfull and of their seede I answere The Apostle answereth this in the next wordes Answer euen as many as the Lord our God shall call So many as haue God to bee their God shall in his good time be called to the knowledge of the trueth Hence it is that in the promise annexed to the second commandement it is said Exod. 20.6 hee sheweth mercy to thousands that loue him and keepe his commandements Thus hee limiteth the promise of mercy he restraineth it to those that loue him This promise is performed when it holdeth in any albeit a farre off Another obiection ariseth out of Paules words to the Corinthians where the seede of Obiection the faithfull are said to be holy that is sanctified and cleansed The vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by the wife 1 Cor. 7.14 and the vnbeleeuing wife is sanctified by the husband else were your children vncleane but now are they holy If then they be all cleane and holy it followeth they are also vnder the election of grace I answere they are holy touching the outward couenant and generall election Answer as to be of the visible Church to haue right in the Sacraments and to haue interest in the outward priuiledges therof as in the word prayer and such like Thus the whole nation of the Iewes are saide to bee chosen and thus they may bee saide Rom. 11.16 and are saide to bee sanctified They
preuent the danger now I haue alwaies taken you for my friend and therefore let me bee so bold as to aske a question of you wherein I vnderstand and know very well that you are able to resolue me in this and a farre greater matter C. The Minister answered I am no lawyer yet my friend I will do what I can for you and giue you the best counsell that lieth in me G. Sir the case is this There was a Gentleman not farre from vs committed to my custody certaine sheepe to keepe and indeed I cannot deny he gaue me a great charge of them and promised me a good reward for my labour so that I vndertooke the looking to them and the feeding of them But because I had other sheepe of mine owne also so that I could by no possible meanes looke to both flocks I put them out to another who agreed for a certaine stipend couenanted between vs to looke vnto them yet he was carelesse altogether in the businesse so that some of them stragled from the flocke and were lost others starued for want of feeding others were too high of the gall others the worms did gnaw and eate vnto the bones and others dyed of the rot wofull is the state of that flocke To be short and not to trouble your patience any farther the owner of them refuseth to deale with him that suffered the flocke to go to hauocke but commeth vpon me and requireth them at my hands and threatneth to trouble me for them C. No maruaile said the Minister you are bound to answer for them you vndertooke the keeping of them and therefore you are to be charged with them If I commit a treasure vnto you to keepe I must aske it againe of you and not of another If you put out your childe to nurse you wil require it againe of the Nurse that vndertooke the keeping of it G. I confesse answered the other this to be true but by your leaue Sir the case is altered in my matter For there seemeth vnto me small reason in it and little conscience to require that parcell of sheepe at my hands forasmuch as I designed them ouer to another and hee promised before many witnesses to discharge me C. The Minister replied That is no matter it is a plaine case you tooke vpon you to see vnto them and therefore it is great equity and conscience that you make them good This standeth with good reason is grounded vpon the law of God and man I dare assure you the law will passe against you by any verdict of twelue men in England and you will be constrained to pay for them The Gentleman trusted you with them and not your deputy and therefore I know no remedy for you nor any way to helpe you G. I am now satisfied I thinke you haue giuen a right iudgement But good Sir if the case be thus how commeth it to passe that you do the like and yet do not see it or if you doe yet thinke your selfe blamelesse The great Shepheard of the sheepe Christ Iesus hath committed his sheepe to you and you hauing also other sheepe haue committed one parcel to your Curate and Substitute who is careles and vnconscionable and suffereth them to perish how is it then that you who went about to perswade me do not perswade your owne heart that his negligence shall not excuse you but that the master of the sheepe will require them at your hands Is it law against me and not against your selfe Is it equity reason and conscience that I should answer for them that are lost and doth it not stand with as great equity reason and conscience that you shold answer for such as you suffer to perish I may say therefore to you as Nathan did to Dauid You are the man The case is yours and the danger is turned vpon your own head Repent and amend lest Christ say vnto you Thou euill and slothfull seruant Luc. 19 22. out of thine owne mouth will I iudge thee To leaue this parable let vs learne to looke to our seuerall functions with all diligence remembring the great charge we haue taken vpon vs the mainteinance that we do reape from it and lastly the accounts we shall giue of it Vse 2 Secondly it teacheth the Ministers as they desire the saluation of their people whom Christ hath redeemed with his most precious blood so they ought to be diligent in preaching the word in season and out of season that their consciences may beare them witnes that aboue all things they seeke to glorifie God in the instruction conuersion and saluation of the people Great was the care of the Prophets to warne the people of God of their sinnes They stood vpon their watch towers to descry the enemies They attended the flocke committed vnto them We haue a multitude of examples as it were a cloud of witnesses that haue gone before vs in this office but especially let vs looke vnto Iesus Christ the author and finisher of our faith O what diligence vnspeakable appeared in him The Euangelist noteth this out by many circumstances Math. 9 35 4 23. Iesus went about all the Cities and Villages teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the kingdome and healing euery sicknesse euery disease among the people The very word of going about from place to place doth carry with it a manifest signification of painefulnesse He refused to tarry long in one place as appeareth in his answer to the Samaritans Iohn 4. It was his meate and drinke to do the wil of his heauenly Father for therefore he was sent He preached and wrought miracles not only to those that came vnto him or were brought before him but of his owne accord he went about vnrequested Secondly it is a signe of no small diligence in that he offered his trauell not onely to one place but to many not onely to great Cities but also to small townes and to little villages as appeareth in the perambulation or visitation that he made for the instructiō of the soules of the poore people that wandred as sheepe without a Shepheard preaching diligently in euery place as he went Thirdly he leaueth not vnvisited and vnfrequented euery Synagogue or place of publike assembly for the preaching of the word he tooke all occasions and watched all opportunities to do good he taught in the City in the wildernesse in the high waies on the sea-shore in the Ship on the plaine on the Mountaine in the publike Temple in priuate houses in the corne fields and where not Fourthly the matter which in his doctrine he handled namely the Gospel of the kingdome serueth to commend his painfulnesse vnto vs forasmuch as truely and sincerely to preach the Gospel is a worke of much labor wonderfull care and great diligence Fiftly his desire was to doe all good that might be not onely to their bodies but to their soules seeing he did not onely teach them
be as a toy or trifle vnto vs yet at least let vs alwaies haue before vs the iudgement of God vpon our selues and be well assured that the wrongfull and vniust detaining of the Lords portion from the Lords Pastours shall bring such a curse vpon the rest of our substance that it shall be as the eares of corne that are blasted yea it shall kindle such a fire in the middest of our houses that it shall consume them with the timber thereof and the stones thereof The Lord hauing by the Prophet Malachi charged his people with spoiling him in tithes and offerings he addeth this in the next words Ye are cursed with a curse for ye haue spoiled me Mal. 3 9. euen this whole Nation The zeale that Dauid had for the house of GOD was very great so that he professeth it had euen eaten him vp Psal 69 and indeed he sheweth no lesse by his owne practise For when Araunah the Iebusite as a King in the willingnesse of spirit offered to giue to Dauid Oxen for burnt sacrifice and the threshing instruments for wood that he might build an altar and offer thereon he would not accept of it at his hands 2 Sam. 24 24. neither offer to the Lord his God that which cost him nothing as one esteeming in so doing the precious things of GOD light and of small account O how farre are these men from this heauenly affection of this holy seruant of God He accounted nothing too good to giue to God but they account it an happy turne if they might goe away scot-free and pay nothing at all toward the maintenance of the Ministery of the word It is strange to see how bountifull many are and euen prodigall that they care not what they waste and consume in following their owne pleasures pastimes and vanities of their corrupt hearts and yet how backward and pinching they are oftentimes for one halfepeny that is going from them and comming eyther toward the poore or toward the Minister But marke the secret and iust iudgement of God vpon them and tremble at it or rather feare him that inflicteth it and paieth them home in their owne kinde punisheth them proportionably according to their sinne for he detaineth his graces from them and sendeth them poore and leane soules that are ready to famish and perish through want of heauenly and spirituall food Two extremes touching the Ministers True it is there haue beene two extremes in the world both touching the estimation of their persons touching the compensation of their labours In former times the people did so highly account of them that they did sticke and cleaue too much to their persons and therefore Paul saith 1 Cor. 3 5 7. Who is Paul and who is Apollo but the Ministers by whom ye beleeued euen as the Lord gaue to euery man so then neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that gaue the increase but in our times there appeareth not such forwardnesse wherein they are contemned despised This is one extreme Likewise in former times they were ready to giue all and yet they thought al to be too little now they would willingly if they might take away all so that if some positiue lawes did not stay them and restraine them their consciences are so large How the Ministers are dealt withal that they would suffer them well enough to take the corne and feed the Minister with the straw they could be content to fill themselues with the Calues out of the stall and to eate the fattest of them and then to reserue the refuse for the Minister and to giue them the bones to gnaw vpon which they offer to their dogges and yet thinke that too good for them A goodly recompence for their great paines They are not ashamed to share the wool of the flocke among themselues and to cloathe themselues therewith and then to cast the tailes to their Teachers and to stoppe their mouthes with the dung and drauery that is good for nothing Thus are they affected toward religion and the promoting of the word and worship of God they care not though all rudenesse and barbarisme were among vs and the world were become a receptacle of all atheisme like a wildernesse ouergrowne with nettles bryars and all noysome weeds if so be they might get any aduantage by the ruine and ouerthrow of the Gospel In the late daies of superstition which many now liuing can yet remember the people generally were most bountifull to their sacrificing Masse-Priests who fed them with corne that is musty and mouldred or rather with huskes fitter for swine then for the seruants of God and yet they thought nothing too good for them nothing too much to bestow vpon them as the idolatrous Egyptians nourished their idolatrous Priests in the yeares of famine Gen. 47 Gen. 47 22. so that their Land was not set to sale hauing a portion assigned vnto them of Pharaoh and eating the portion which he gaue them Now our people are better taught yet they pay all duties and demands for the most part grudgingly and murmure at all things that go from themselues as if a man did cut a peece of flesh out of their sides or let them blood at the hart veine Then they had a zeale though not according to knowledge and a conscience though it were blinde now indeed by reason of the labours of the Ministers which stretch out their hands all the day long spend their strength among them they haue science but little or no conscience the Gospel would be welcome vnto them at least in word prouided that it do not any way displease them or disease them neither be costly or burdensome vnto thē otherwise if they must depart with any of their morsels they care not for it nor esteeme any thing of it nor will be ruled by it nor order their liues after it 33. Of Merari was the family of the Mahlites and the family of the Mushites these are the families of Merari 34. And those that were numbred of them according to the number of all the males from a moneth old and vpward were sixe thousand and two hundred 35 And the chiefe of the house of the families of Merari was Zuriel the sonne of Abihail these shall pitch on the side of the Tabernacle Northwards 36. And vnder the custody and charge of the sonnes of Merari shall be the boards of the Tabernacle and the barres thereof and the pillars thereof and the sockets thereof and all the vessels thereof and all that serueth thereto 37. And the pillars of the Court round about and their sockets and their pinnes and their cords 38. But those that encampe before the Tabernacle toward the East euen before the Tabernacle of the Congregation Eastward shall be Moses and Aaron and his sonnes keeping the charge of the Sanctuary for the charge of the children of Israel and the stranger that commeth nigh
were to heare the law Exod. 19. Ier. 4.14 O Ierusalem wash thine heart from wickednesse that thou mayest be saued And Iam. 4. Draw neere to God aad he will draw neere to you cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your hearts ye double minded What need God to wash vs will some say seeing we are willed to wash our selues God doth not by these commandements attribute a naturall power and strength to mans will as if they were able to wash themselues but he stirreth them vp to vse the meanes that so they may be washed by him Whensoeuer we vse the instrument of the word which is a pure word whereby the wayes of a yong man are cleansed Psal 119.9 together with prayer and inuocation of Gods holy Name and such like meanes to be washed we may be said after a sort to wash our selues because God doth wash vs by vs and not without vs as also he that made vs without vs is said to saue vs not without vs. For a desire to bee washed is our washing of our selues So the Minister is said to saue himselfe 1 Tim. 4.16 when he deliuereth his soule from the curse denounced against vnconscionable watchmen and vseth the meanes by which God will saue him and them that heare him It is the worke of God alone to wash and to cleanse vs Ezek. 16.9 Where he telleth his people that he had washed them with water and Ioh. 13.8 Christ declareth to his disciples that except he wash them they had no part in him for that which he speaketh vnto Peter he speaketh to them all And the Apostle Iohn teacheth vs that he hath washed vs from our sins in his blood Reuel 1.5 Wherefore we must goe vnto him to haue this pure water and cleere streames to wash our soules We are foule and filthy creatures by nature No leper so foule and vgly We can no more cleanse our selues by our owne power then the Ethiopian or blacke More can change his skinne or the Leopard his spottes This vse hath many branches contained vnder it First we must labour to come to the knowledge of our sinnes and to be touched with a feeling of them For we can neuer be earnest in prayer to God for mercy or haue assurance that our request shal be granted vntil we come to haue a sense of the grieuousnes of sin as they that know not their disease make no haste to send or seeke to the Physitian We must therefore haue our eyes opened to see sinne and to vnderstand what dependeth vpon it that we may preuent it or recouer our selues being fallen into it Hence it is that so many sinne with greedinesse and eagernesse because they doe not throughly weigh and consider themselues what they haue done as Luke 23.34 Iesus said Father forgiue them for they know not what they do And the Apostle speaking of the ignorance that is among men concerning Christian religion saith Doubtlesse if they had knowne it 1 Cor. 2.8 they would not haue crucified the Lord of glory They delight in swearing and blaspheming because they know not how feareful a thing it is to take the Name of God in vaine They make no conscience of the Sabbath because they know not what danger it is to prophane it Secondly we are put in minde to confesse our sinnes and vncleanenesse that so we may be washed by him that purgeth vs. So long as Adam did hide his sins he was not cleansed of them It is not with God as it is with men if we confesse vnto men we are oftentimes taunted for them and vpbraided with them and checked for them But if we acknowledge them vnto our gracious God he will neuer hit vs in the teeth with them 1 Ioh. 1.9 but he is mercifull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse But because we shall haue fitter occasion to speake farther of this point in the next diuision I passe it ouer Thirdly we must know what meanes God vseth to sanctifie vs it is by the blood of his owne Sonne for the blood of Christ purgeth vs from all sinne 1 Ioh. 1.7 and Heb. 9.14 The blood of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himselfe without spot to God shall purge our conscience from dead works to serue the liuing God Naaman the Syrian washing in the flood of Iordan seuen times was healed of his leprosie and had his flesh come to him againe like the flesh of a child how much more then shall we be cleansed from the leprosie of sinne when the Lord shall wash vs in the blood of his Sonne Fourthly we must seeke mercy while it is offered vnto vs when our hearts are terrified for sinne let vs haue recourse to the fountaine of his loue which can neuer be drawne dry This did the Prophet Psal 51.1.2 Haue mercy vpon me O God according to thy louing kindnesse according vnto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sinne And the Prophet Esay calleth the people to repentance cha 55. ver 6 7. Seeke yee the Lord while he may bee found call ye vpon him while he is neere let the wicked forsake his way and the vnrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercy on him and to our God for he will aboundantly pardon God hath his time of mercy when that is gone and past the time of iustice commeth While we haue eares to heare let vs heare when the eares are made dull of hearing we may heare but we shall not vnderstand While we haue eyes to see let vs behold his goodnesse and mercy toward vs when they are once shut and closed vp we may see but we shall perceiue nothing at all While we haue soft and tender hearts let vs humble our selues before him and tremble at his word if once our hearts be hardned as a stone and become past feeling there is little hope of our conuersion that we should turne and be healed Fiftly we must buy of Christ white garments to clothe vs and to couer our deformitie Reuel 3.18 that the filthinesse of our nakednesse doe not appeare True it is there is nothing properly bought and sold betweene Christ and vs but this is spoken by way of resemblance For in bargaining a man that will buy first vnderstandeth his want then he cometh to the place where it is to be bought afterward he cheapneth it and lastly he maketh exchange with money or some other commoditie So he that will come to Christ must first feele himselfe to haue need of Christ and see his owne misery otherwise he will neuer desire him Secondly he must hunger after Christ to be partaker of his merits Thirdly he must prize Christ aboue all other things Phil. 3.8 Lastly he must make exchange he must giue him his sinnes and lay them vpon his shoulders that so we
euery exercise of our religion euery fruite of our most holy faith This is commended to haue bin in Ephraim by the Prophet After that I conuerted I repented and after that I was instructed I smote vpon my thigh I was ashamed yea euen confounded because I did beare the reproch of my youth Ier. 31 18. Hypocriticall confession is no confession Fourthly The fourth property we must confesse our sins with an hatred of them For where there is no feeling of sin there can be no pardon of sin and therefore Christ calleth such to him as were weary and heauy laden and ready to faint fall downe vnder the burden of them Mat. 11 28. The Prophet confesseth Psal 38 4 5. that his sinnes were as a weighty burdē too heauy for him so that he went crooked bowed very sore So long as sinne appeareth vnto men small as a mote light as a feather pleasant as a sport that it groweth to be as common with them as going in the high way drinking iniquity as water and delighting in it as in meat drink it is plaine they know not the nature of it Many hypocrites like Iudas haue confessed their particular sins who said he had sinned in betraying innocent blood Math. 27.4 but it is of custome without conscience or of passion without remorse or of feare without change because they are weary of the punishments that lie vpon them but are not weary of their sins that are the causes of them their plagues seem heauy but their sins seeme light ●e should ●e greeue 〈◊〉 punish●t wheras the sins that are in vs should more greeue vs then the iudgements that are vpon vs. Such men are for the present touched with the stroke of Gods hand but after they haue confessed and the punishment is remoued they are the same that they were before and are found no changlings they returne againe to their old sinnes as the dogge to his vomit and practise that which before they seemed to abhorre Let vs therefore hate sin much more then the punishment lest we be as malefactours that oftentimes cry out for the punishment but seldome or neuer for their offence Sinne is the breach of Gods law and the procuring cause of all punishment If we be carefull to stay the cause we shall quickly and easily stay the effect and if we would iudge our selues we should not be iudged of the Lord. Fiftly ●e fift pro●ty our confession must not be extorted or enforced but freely and willingly performed Many men confesse their sinnes but this is no free wil offering they are forced vnto it by the rigour of the Law or by the anguish of the soule or by violence of sicknesse or by feare of death or by the cracke of Gods iudgement or by the censure of men If we be as forward to confesse them to the glory of God as we were forward to commit them to his dishonour we haue comfort in the performance of this duty and it will worke in vs repentance neuer to be repented of But if necessity compel vs to this as it did Pharaoh and Iudas and Achan while the rod was vpon their backs or God otherwise had found them out it is our crosses that make vs confesse and not our sinnes as Psa 78. When the wrath of God was heauy vpon them so that he slew them and consumed their dayes in vanity and their yeeres hastily then they sought him and they returned and sought God early they remembred that God was their strength and the most high God their redeemer but they flattered hem with their mouth 〈◊〉 78.36 and dissembled with him with their tongue Euery duty must be performed to God cheerefully if it be done otherwise God regardeth it not 〈◊〉 sixt pro●y Sixtly this must be obserued in our confession that we ought not so farre to dwel vpon the meditation of our sins that we forget the mercies of God and faith in his promises and forgiuenesse of our sinnes Iudas confessed against himselfe his owne particular sinne in betraying his master and shedding of innocent blood howbeit this being wrested from him through horrour of his conscience and the fearefull apprehension of Gods wrath he neuer expected any mercy but went his way solitary 〈◊〉 27 5. and hanged himselfe desperately Hee had no beleefe of pardon nor hope of fauour nor desire of repentance and therfore his confession serued to no other end but to acknowledge as on the one side the Iustice of God and the equality of his wayes so on the other side the merit of his owne punishment and the sealing vp of his owne iust condemnation by his owne mouth It was farre otherwise with Peter after he had denyed and abiured his master Mat. 26.75 he repented of his sinne and wept bitterly for the same he beleeued the promise and laide hold on mercy and was saued This confession was ioyned with faith which sanctified it to his comfort Confession ioyned with infidelity is no confession for vnbeleefe is as a bitter root that poisoneth it and maketh it vnsauory and vnhealthfull Seuenthly The seuenth property it belongeth vnto vs and to our confession to ioyne prayer to God for the pardon of our sinnes It is our duty together with our acknowledging of our faults to aske forgiuenes and to pray for mercy to the God of all mercy against whom we haue trespassed without which all is in vaine Thus did not Caine that despaired and cryed out that his sin was greater then he could beare Gen. 4.13 and therefore receiued no comfort nor grace in time of neede How many and great soeuer our sins are let vs neuer giue ouer prayer for pardon It is one of the engines of the diuel whereby he betraieth our soules and he catcheth many in his snare He knoweth that they are holden fast as slaues in chaines and fetters that are perswaded to giue ouer prayer He is in the way to Atheisme that prayeth not at all Psal 14.4 He is forsaken of God that thinketh it needlesse and superfluous as appeareth in Saul when the noise that was in the hoste of the Philistims spred farther abroad hee said vnto the Priest that brought the Arke of God Withdraw thine hand as if he had said 1 Sam. 14.19 There is now no time to aske counsell of the mouth of God Numb 27.21 It is otherwise with the seruants of God though they haue bene ouercome by the strength of their corruption by want of watchfulnesse by the subtilty of sin and by the tentation of Satan yet they would neuer shut vp their mouthes from the inuocation of the Name of God and from calling for mercy at his hands We see this in Dauid both in the booke of Psalmes in other places Psal 51.1 We see it in the penitent Publican Luk. 18.13 and 15. ●1 and in the prodigall son that returned to his fathers house We see it in the Israelites
many of the cheefest among the Iewes withheld the tithes and offerings from them to whom they were due by the expresse gift of God Verse 11. so that the house of God was forsaken he was mercifull vnto him againe and spared him and made him to bee magnified of all the people according to the saying of the Lord 1 Sam. 2 30. Them that honour me I will honour and they that despise mee shall be lightly esteemed Consider with me farther another example to wit touching Ebed-melech The fourth example when as the Prophet Ieremy by false suggestions and accusations was thrust into the dungeon where was no water but mire so that he sunke down and stucke fast in it and must of necessity perish in short time if he were not speedily deliuered this stranger spake to the King for him and was content to take vpon him the enuy of many that he might expose himselfe vnto My Lord the King these men haue done euill in all that they haue done to Ieremiah the Prophet whom they haue cast into the dungeon and hee is like to dye for hunger in the place where he is for there is no more bread in the City Ier. 38 9. So he drew him vp with cords and tooke him vp out of the dungeon What then He that remembred Ieremy in prison hath his owne life giuen him for a prey and he that lifted vp the Prophet out of the dungeon is assured also of his owne deliuerance God doth greatly accept of the compassion he shewed and rewarded it to the full so that Ieremy is sent vnto him with this ioyfull message in those miserable daies when Ierusalem was taken by the enemies the Princes were slaine with the sword Zedekiah the King had his eyes put out his sonnes were slaine before his face the Kings house was burned with fire the walles of the City were broken downe and the remnant of the people were carried away into captiuity in the middest of all these tumults publike calamities I say rhe Prophet receiueth a commandement from God to goe vnto this godly Ethiopian being one of the Eunuches that was in the Kings house and to say vnto him Thus saith the Lord of hosts the God of Israel Behold I will bring my words vpon this Citty for euill and not for good and they shall bee accomplished in that day before thee but I will deliuer thee in that day saith the LORD and thou shalt not be giuen into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid for I will surely deliuer thee and thou shalt not fall by the sword but thy life shall be for a prey vnto thee because thou hast put thy trust in mee saith the Lord Ier. 39 16 17 18. He had done good to Ieremy God doth good vnto him and accounteth it as done vnto himselfe ●ift ex●e The last example shall be out of the New Testament mentioned by the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercy vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when hee was at Rome he sought mee out very diligently found me the Lord grant vnto him that hee may finde mercy of the Lord in that day Where hee prayeth that he might reape as he had sowed and gather as he had scattered and receiue as he had bestowed to wit mercy for mercy goodnesse for goodnesse and kindnesse for kindnesse and no doubt God heard his praier according to his promise and recompenced him that had refreshed the Apostle This is that which the Lord promiseth in the Prophet Malachi chap. 3 10. If they would robbe him and spoile him no more but bring all his tithes into his house he passeth his word toward thē that they should see plenty vpon their labors and a remouing of those meanes that caused famine and misery to fall vpon them and to come among them as before he threatned denounced that as they spoiled God so God spoiled them and as they caused famine to be in his house by keeping backe his portion so he caused scarsenesse of bread and cleannesse of teeth in their houses causing extreme want to bee in the middest of them in withholding and keeping backe his blessings and in sending vpon them his greeuous plagues Now hee telleth them that if they murmure not at the maintenance of his Ministers but pay them truely and sustaine them conscionably hee will satisfie them with good things and remoue from them euill things He would open the windowes of heauen vnto them and poure out a blessing without measure And thus we see how we may finde comfort vnto our selues and strengthen our faith by such examples as the Scripture affoordeth vnto vs. Beside the Ramme of attonement whereby an attonement shall bee made for him In these words we are to consider the last but yet the chiefe and principall meanes of sanctification which also is a satisfaction to God and a putting and purging away of the sinne of defrauding our neighbour And heerein indeed standeth the onely way of expiation blotting out iniquity howbeit set downe in the ceremony For neither can confession of our sinnes to God nor making restitution of our euill gotten goods to man put away our sin we may confesse all the day long we may bestow all our goods to feede the poore and giue our bodies to bee burned and yet our sinnes shall lye heauy vpon vs and presse vs downe to the gates of hell it is onely the blood of Christ as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled that can do it Neither is it enough for vs to say Christ hath washed vs from our sinnes he hath paid a sufficient price for them and therefore it skilleth not whether they bee acknowledged to God or recompenced to men For we haue seene that GOD requireth besides the Ramme of attonement that such as haue wronged their brethren must both confesse and restore or else they can haue no benefit of reconciliatiō to God by the death of Christ We are therefore in this place to marke how our sinnes are purged which is expressed vnder a type figure True it is the blood of Buls and other beasts is not able to take away sinne Heb. 9 12 and 10 4. neither is it possible that the offering vp of guifts and sacrifices could make holy concerning the conscience him that did the seruice Verse 9. and sanctifie the commers thereunto Hebrewes 10 verse 1. For sinne is an offence done to God a breach of the Law and a wounding of the conscience But what is the blood of Bullocks able to do touching the curing of these mischiefes and maladies Will I eate saith the Lord the flesh of Buls or drinke the blood of Goats Psal 50 13. Doubtlesse such things of small account and reckning haue no force or efficacy to appease the wrath of God which is infinite Besides the iustice of GOD required that man himselfe
not Calfe or any Cattell should vndergo the punishment for sinne because the soule that sinned shall die the death Ezek. 18 verse 4. and the threatning must be true that because man sinned he should die Gen. 2. Thou shalt die the death So that it was necessary eyther that all man-kinde by reason of sinne must perish euerlastingly Heb. 9 15. or else Christ the Mediator of a better testament must become a surety for vs and satisfie the wrath of God kindled and conceiued against vs for sinne If any aske the question Question if the blood of Buls Goats could not take away sinne why did God command them to be offered and to what end were they appointed I answer Answer this was not done in vaine but to good purpose For albeit they could neuer take away sinne nor purge the conscience from dead workes yet they serued fitly to shadow out the death of Christ and to assure the heart that it is washed by the blood of the Messiah This was a notable comfort to the people of God from the beginning taught them to looke for redemption through him Obiection If it bee farther said that God speaketh euery where in the Law that the blood it selfe of Buls and Beasts clenseth and purgeth sinne as Leuit. 17 11. The life of the flesh is in the blood and I haue giuen it to you vpon the Altar to make an attonement for your soules for it is the blood that maketh an attonement for the soule I answer Answer that place speaketh not properly but sacramentally as in the new Testament he calleth in the institution of his last Supper Math. 26 26. the bread his body because it is a figure of it so in this place to the outward signe he giueth the name of the thing signified and to the type he ascribeth the proper effect of the blood of Christ which onely is the blood that is able to make attonement for our sinnes Otherwise those offerings of beasts should be called in vaine Heb. 9 24 10 1. the similitudes and shadowes of good things to come As for those heretikes that dreame that those oblations did really and indeed clense away the sinnes of the fathers not by their naturall operation but by the acceptation of God and therefore were not types of Christs sacrifice washing away sinne they are euidently conuinced by the places before alledged and throughout the Epistle to the Hebrewes Obiect If any aske how these can bee figures of Christ seeing GOD witnesseth in his word that he neuer required them When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Psal 40 7. Heb. 10 verses 5 6. If then God would haue none of them how could they be the figures and images of better things I answer Answer God may be said to allow them and yet to disallow them to reiect them and to regard them in diuers senses Hee willed them as he commandeth them and commendeth them as a sweet sauour vnto him performed in faith and as types referred to the comming of the Messiah and the time of reformation Heb. 9 10. On the other side he may be said to refuse and reiect them for these three causes First when the manner of doing is euill doing that which God requireth but doing it in a corrupt manner to wit without faith and obedience as the Prophets in euery place reprooue the sacrifices of hypocrites wicked persons as Esay 1 11 12. I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs who hath required this at your hand Your new Moones and your appointed feasts my soule hateth and the reason of this is rendered in the words following Verse 1● Your hands are full of blood Againe God would not that they should remaine continue for euer but that though they had place in the Church for a time they should ceasse at the coming of the Messiah Therfore Christ being come into the world and manifested in the flesh God willed thē no longer but would haue them abolished And this sense doth the Apostle principally intend in this place that the shadowes must giue place when the body it selfe was come in person Lastly it may after a sort be said that God neuer willed them that is approued allowed of thē as the principall part of Gods worship and as the very price of our redemption the ransome for our sins our reconciliation vnto God albeit he would haue them obserued of his people and vsed for a time as certaine rudiments rites to bring them to Christ to confirme their faith in him Let vs shut vp this with the comparison that the Apostle expresseth Heb. 9 13 14. If the blood of Buls and of Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience frō dead workes to serue the liuing God In these words he compareth the shadow the body the type the truth the ceremony and the substance together Doctrine Christ Iesus hath made a● attonement between G●● and vs by h●● blood Frō hence we learne this doctrine that the blood of Christ taketh away our sins reconcileth vs to God the Father Christ Iesus hath in the performance of his Priesthood freed and deliuered vs from the guilt punishment of our sins This appeareth euidently vnto vs by considering laying before vs the end the parts and fruite of his Priesthood The end of the Leuiticall Priest-hood and of this figured by it was to offer sacrifice for the ignorances Hebr. 9 ● that is for the sins of the people The distinct parts of it are two satisfaction and intercession His satisfaction consisteth partly in suffering and partly in obedience The second part of his Priesthood standeth in intercession in that he is become our perpetuall and perfect Aduocate that therby God might be appeased for them and we reconciled vnto him The fruite thereof is this that we are deliuered redeemed ransomed iustified and freed from the guilt of sin from the burden of ceremonies from the curse of the Law from the wrath of God and from feare of condemnation This truth is taught in many places Ioh 1 29. Iohn seeing Christ coming vnto him saith Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sin of the world And the same Apostle in his first Epistle chap. 2 ver 1 2. If any sinne we haue an Aduocate Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes the Apostle magnifying the mercy of God and setting out the merites of Christ he saith chap. 3 verse
power of Satan to the end wee should intangle our selues againe and giue vp our selues to his seruice who is the sworne enemy of God whereas wee are deliuered out of the hands of our enemies that wee should serue the Lord without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the daies of our life Luke 1 74 75. Labour then to be in Christ and examine thy selfe whether he be in thee or not study to be partaker of the benefits of his passion and to be washed from the filthinesse of our corruption This is a priuiledge belonging vnto the Church of God as the Prophet Esay noteth chap. 33 verse 26. The inhabitant shall not say I am sicke and the people that dwel therein shall be forgiuen their iniquity What then Shall wee continue in sinne because sinne is pardoned Or shall wee turne the grace of God into wantonnesse because grace hath abounded God forbid how shall we that are dead to sinne liue any longer therein Roman 6 2. We are baptized into the death of Christ and are buried with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father euen so we should also walke in newnesse of life Our old man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroied that hence forth wee should not serue sinne The more wee profite by the death of Christ the more wee grow in sanctification and the farther wee proceed in mortification It is one thing to talke of the death of Christ and another thing to feele his death working in vs it is one thing to know that he died and another that he died for vs. It is not enough to reason of his death and to conferre of it except it be as a strong purgation to cleanse vs from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God Holinesse in the soule is as health in the body and peace in the City and marrow in the bones It is the righteousnesse of Christ that giueth life vnto vs so that so farre as we liue we are sanctified The life of an vnregenerate man is no life but rather a death they are twice dead dead in soule and dead in body there is no life of God in their mindes or willes or consciences or affections They may well breath in the ayre as the brute beasts do but they haue no heauenly breath or celestiall motion in them They haue the naturall life but they are vtterly ignorant what the spirituall life meaneth But he that is spirituall indeed and truely sanctified the farther he proceedeth the weaker the motions of sinne are in him euen as the neerer a man draweth to death the lesse motion is in him If we be once in Christ and dead with him the pleasures of the world the delights of the flesh the lustes of the eyes the pride of life and the vanities of carnall men will moue vs nothing at all They that were our familiar companions in sin will be shunned of vs bitter vnto vs and banished from vs. The euill workes wherein before we tooke our whole delight will be greeuous Irkesome vnto vs so that we will by no meanes abide to heare and see the vnrighteous deeds of the wicked which before did minister matter of sport contentment vnto our soule Lastly seeing the death and shedding of the blood of Christ is the meanes of our saluation Vse 4 and free pardon of our sins we are to reioyce at it and to comfort our selues in it aboue all things in the world as that which hath procured the greatest blessing that can befall vs so that if we can find but one drop of his blood to be by the power of the Spirit sprinkled vppon our consciences to purge vs from dead workes it should reioyce vs more then the gaining of a kingdome or the increasing of our corne and cattell If a man should liue in health wealth in honour preferment in fauor and friendship of the mighty in credite estimation of men in the praise applause of the world so that he had no experience of sorrow and sicknes of misery calamity yet if he haue not this principle writtē in his hart that Christ shed his blood for him and nailed his sinnes vpon his Crosse and carried them with him into his graue to bury them in perpetuall forgetfulnesse What comfort could all these things bring vnto him Or what sound delight could hee take in them Or what were he nearer for them vnto saluation But if wee should want all these blessings of honour of riches of fauour of preferment and such like and on the contrary side taste of the cup of affliction in great measure and drinke vp the dregs of it if we should endure pouerty banishment infamy iniury disgrace distresse discredite slanders perilles persecution need nakednesse and all kinde of aduersity yet these could not make vs miserable Rom. 8 39. nor separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. It is he that died for vs yea rather which is risen againe who is euen at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for vs. Who then shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect who haue a discharge giuen them from all their sinnes As for troubles and afflictions they are sanctified vnto them and serue to bring them neerer vnto God and are approued meanes whereby they are broght to a conformity with Christ True it is Iob 2 4. our nature abhorreth nothing more then affliction so that it is greeuous for the present and not ioyous It is well obserued that when Iesus went vp to the Mountaine to preach all his Disciples went with him none forsooke him nor fled from him but when he went to Mount Caluarie to suffer they all left him alone Hee hath at all times many that are ready to follow him by professing but few are willing to follow him by patient suffering Wee are content to goe with him into the Temple but we will not accompany him to the Crosse Peter shewed this too plainely both by his words and by his practise When Christ once made mention of his suffering he said vnto him Math. 15 22. Master pitty thy selfe And when he was in the High-Priests hall was assaulted and tempted for feare of the persecutors and danger of death hee denied his Master Notwithstanding we must feare to sinne against Christ more then to suffer with Christ forasmuch as if we suffer with him we shall also be glorified with him There is nothing can make vs miserable but that which bringeth vs out of fauour with God and separateth vs from him now there is nothing can separate vs from God but sinne nothing can destroy the soule but sinne and sinne is able to do it They therefore are truely happy that haue the power and strength of sinne abolished and are no longer
drawne to adde one sinne of periury to the heapes of their other wickednesse or may easily be brought to lift at an oath for a little lucre and base gaine or make little account to renounce and sell Christ himselfe for thirty pence as Iudas d●d that is for a small aduantage Such then must be sought out to testifie the trueth as are worthy of credit as feare not the faces of men as euermore haue God before their eies As then such are to be chosen so these that can doe nothing with iudgement and discretion with aduise and deliberation ought to be refused of which the Prophet saith Esay 4● Heare ye this O house of Iacob which are called by the name of Israel and are come out of the waters of Iudah which sweare by the Name of the Lord and make mention of the God of Israel but not in trueth nor in righteousnesse Hence it is that the Prophet requireth that our oathes be performed in trueth in righteousnesse and in iudgement Ier. 5. which cannot be expected of vs or performed of them Secondly this doctrine directly meeteth Vse 2 with the common but yet corrupt practise of our times in which swearing is turned into a custome so that euery one garnisheth his ordinary talke with gracelesse and needlesse oathes if this may be called a garnishing and not rather a disgracing That communication is gracious which ministreth grace to the hearers other talke is rotten and retchlesse when men make no conscience of taking the Name of God in vaine This is a greeuous sinne in yong and old in men and women in rich and poore It is accounted a speciall ornament to our speech and we thinke it carryeth no credit nor countenance except it be now and then spiced with an oath It beginneth euery where to be esteemed the part of a gentleman and a note and cognizance to know him and discerne him from others He is iudged a puritane and a precise foole that reproueth it and vseth it not Alas to what height of sinne are we come the measure is filled vp the iudgement is at hand Herein O Lord be mercifull vnto vs and indeed thou art mercifull a God of pittie and patience or else the land were not able to beare vs. The practise of it is of the diuel yet we are not afraid of it few men make conscience of it The children that play in the streetes haue learned to sweare so soone as they can speake and are weaned from their mothers breasts The Rogues and Vagabonds that settle themselues in no family or society take the sacred Name of God in their mouth make it thier occupation to begge with it The chapmen that sell their wares to others are as ready to sell their soules to the diuell to get sometimes one peny He is not accounted a good shop-man that is likely to thriue that doth not burnish and varnish his bad wares with the glorious Name of God he is not reckoned worth a chip that will not sweare at euery word to deceiue those that deale with him and yet God threatneth that he wil cut off as well on this side as on that Zach. 5.3 euery one that sweareth so that the curse shall remaine in the middes of his house and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof But some will say we doe not Obiect 1 sweare by the Name of God we sweare not but by our faith or troth or by our Lady or the Masse or by Saint Mary Bee it so Answer yet euen these also are breaches of the law of God Faith and truth are precious iewels that adorn the heart of a Christian they must be kept there as safely as a treasure Will a man lay a pearle to gage for euery trifle or wil a man defile his best raiment with the worst mire It is to be feared that these haue little faith in the heart that haue it so commonly in the mouth As for the crosse or the masse or the rood and such like reliques they are abominable idols of which the Prophet complaineth ●c 5.7 They haue sworne by them that are no gods This is called a forsaking of God ●os 8.14 The Prophet saith They shall fall and neuer rise againe And the Prophet Zephany declareth that the Lord will destroy man beast because they did swear by the Lord and by Malcham ●ph 1.5 We see hereby what religion and fear of God is in the greatest multitude for not one of an hundreth feareth an oth or refraineth frō swearing Not a day passeth ouer their heads but they breake out this way No occasion is offered vnto them to speake but an oath shall be at one end of their talke They are so far frō striuing against it that they delight in it and make no more conscience of an oath then of a word and vse swearing more then eating and drinking Where the lawes of the land do bridle men there is some abstaining from sin and few in comparison of the rest offend It is true indeed that no punishment will restraine all persons yet notwithstanding the most are terrified by seuerity and sharpnesse as in cases of treasons of murthers of thefts c. There are few in comparison of others that are guilty of these and why because they are looked vnto that offend this way If men were let alone in these also to themselues wee should haue rebellions and robberies and shedding of blood as common as othes For where conscience of sin is wanting feare of punishment and terrour of death must keepe in awe But where the lawes of Princes are most remisse there a flood-gate is set open to all impiety that ouerfloweth the banks and ouerwhelmeth all before it without measure as swearing and blaspheming contempt of the word prophaning the Sabboth whoredome c. These are common this is the broad way and wide gate that many enter into without controlment The causes of this general abuse and common sin of swearing are these foure ●e causes of ●mon ●aring First custome and common vse wherby many thinke themselues excused Tell them of their sin and aduise them to leaue it They will answer I confesse it is naught and I am to blame for it it is a custome I haue gotten Thus they defend themselues by custome plead prescription but in the meane season they hold their wicked and vnreasonable custome stil and wil by no meanes be brought from it And yet if we will speake the truth what is it te pretend custome to countenance sin but to confesse wee doe and speake all things without the feare of God For frō whence proceedeth this custome of sinning but from this root to wit that we commit sin vpon sinne one day after another Muscul comment in Mat. cap. 5. without any reuerence of the Maiesty of God Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to breake this corrupt custome by a contrary custome to
in soule and body abusing our wit our memory our authority our health our liberty our riches our heart our tongue our feete our hands and all other members to infidelity blasphemy swearing lying whoredome cruelty iniury theft gluttony drunkennesse pride wantonnesse slanders and such like making them filthy dungeons and stinking sinkes for the diuell which should be the Temples of God Wherfore we must haue earnest greefe and sorrow and trembling that we haue hereby not onely broken in peeces and torne in sunder by our sinnes all the lawes of God but wee haue also by them crucified vpon the Crosse and put to a shamefull death the Lord of Life We commonly lay the whole and only fault vpon Herod and Pilate vpon the high Priests vpon Iudas and the Iewes who is not displeased with these for their cruelty herein howbeit we shold be more displeased with our selues who are as deepe by our sinnes in this sinne as euer they as we haue shewed before out of the Prophet And here I summon all prophane persons before God that haue no delight in good things and all such as with greedinesse and without shame wallow in all sin and wickednesse giuing by their leudnesse continuall and greeuous offence to the children of God If they dare presume to present themselues at the Lords Table hauing their hearts hands gored with the blood of the Sonne of God I would haue them answere what they promised to God and his Church in their Baptisme and what they now professe They promised to forsake the diuell and all his workes but sinne is one of the chiefe and principall works of the diuell What I pray you could the Lord Iesus haue done for vs that he hath not done and shall we so reward him and requite him for all his paines his agony and bloody sweat If a kings sonne finding vs in a filthy sink or miery puddle should helpe vs out with his hands and wash vs in water and put his precious robes vpon vs and after all this we thrice miserable wretches should presently cast our selues into the same againe what vnthankfulnes were this what indignity Christ Iesus hath redeemed vs from the bondage of sinne and washed vs in his blood Reuel 1.5 shall we defile our selues againe with worse then mire and dung and serue Satan and sin his and our enemies Againe we must seek to approue our hearts and consciences with loue and charity to our neighbours For we can neuer come with a good consciēce toward God except also we shew the fruites of loue to our brethren We must haue peace with all men without which no man shall see God to his comfort Heb. 12.14 We are but one bread but one body 1 Cor. 12.12 There should be a communion among all the Saints of God which also we professe to beleeue We meet al in one place as it were in one house we haue one head we heare one word we eat the same spirituall meat we drinke the same spirituall drinke we are vtterly vnworthy of all these if we be infected and poisoned with the bitter rootes of hatred strife rancour debate contention quarrelling and such like vnfauory vnsanctified fruites which shew that we are carnall and faithlesse men not fit to be called the seruants of Christ whose loue was great euen toward his enemies Verse 13. But the man that is cleane c. and forbeareth to keep the Passeouer euen the same soule shall be cut off c. The meaning is hee shall be shut out from the fellowship of the Saints Whosoeuer through meer negligence and carelesnes did put off this duty and wold not with the rest of the people of God keepe the Passeouer is iudged for it and beareth his sinne that is is guilty of a great wickednes before God Doctrine We learn hereby that they which negligently and carelesly omit the parts of Gods worship and the exercises of religion All that are carelesse in Gods seruice lie vnder his wrath whensoeuer they are celebrated in the meetings of Gods people committeth a great iniquity and lyeth vnder the wrath and iudgements God The vncircumcised male that purposely breaketh the Couenant of God shall be cut off from the people Gen. 17.14 Moses carelesly omitting the circumcision of his sonne was neere to be slaine of God Exod 4.24 He that did not conscionably and religiously keepe the Passeouer was also to be cu● off as we see in this place and afterward he that gathered sticks vpon the Sabboth day was stoned with stones that he dyed chap. 15.32 36. Such then as bring not the offerings of God in their season and are carelesse in his worship lie vnder his wrath and deserue the sentence of excommunication For they neglect the homage and seruice Reason 1 due to God and obserue not the seasons appointed of God as we see in this 13. verse There is an appointed season for euery worke vnder the Sunne God also hath his times and seasons who hath all times in his owne hands which being neglected cannot be recalled Secondly all such as contemne the means are prophane contemners of those excellent things that are offered by the meanes and the contempt of the word is the contempt of God The contempt of this Baptisme is the contempt of the remission of sinnes the Pharisees that were not baptized of Iohn reiected the counsell of God against themselues he that contemneth the Supper refuseth the merits of Christs death and passion and is guilty of the body blood of Christ 1 Cor. 11. and maketh a mocke of the Sonne of God Thirdly such despise the wisedome of God accounting that simple weake and foolish which he in his infinite wisedome hath appointed to be the ordinary meanes of his strong arme and mighty power His waies are not as our waies his wayes are foolishnesse to foolish men 1. Cor. 1.23 and our wayes are foolishnes to the most wise God 1 Cor. 3.19 and that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God Luke 16.15 as that which is oftentimes least regarded of vs is in greatest price and account with him Vse 1 Conclude from hence that the state and condition of al retchlesse hearers of the word and of negligent receiuers of the Sacraments is most wretched accurst Shall we be so sottish and simple to imagine that God hath ordained these things for nothing or that he will see his writings and seales troden vnder foot and not punish these rebels and enemies Is not he that maliciously and contemptibly defaceth the Princes broad seale a traitour against his Prince Are these then any better that reiect both word and Sacrament we see this in Ahaz when he had a signe offered vnto him from the Lord in the depth beneath or in the height aboue to assure him of deliuerance he contemned and reiected the same Esay 7.12 howbeit he neuer prospered after but grew worse and worse 2 Chron 28. True
dangers daily decaies in good things praier is as foode whereby the graces of God are preserued encreased Aarō made an attonement for the people stood between the liuing the dead Obserue in these words that Aaron the high Priest in taking his censer offering vp with fire taken from the Altar incense to God is a notable figure and type of the intercession of Christ the true high Priest of our profession Heb. 3 1. that he maketh for all his elect to his Father The doctrine is this ●rine Christ Iesus hath set himselfe as Mediatour betweene God and men 〈◊〉 Iesus 〈◊〉 Media between and man For Origen saith well hom 9. in Numer that we must ascend vnto the high mystery or signification of this Scripture and consider how Christ Iesus the great high Priest Heb. 4 14. taking our nature vpon him stood as in the midst betweene the liuing and the dead and brought it to passe by his death that death shold spread no farther 1 Tim. 2 5. Iohn 12 32. Rom. 5 11. and 8 34. He maketh intercession for vs not that now he boweth the knee to his Father or lifteth vp his eyes or spredeth abroad his hands or vttereth any voice of praier for his Church being now in the heauens for this he hath already sufficiently performed Ioh. 17 1. Now he presenteth to his Father the merites of his death and passion of his obedience and resurrection which hath the force of a liuely praier and reconcileth the Father vnto vs. Thus then we see that Christ Iesus is the true Aaron the high Priest that maketh attonement between God and vs Heb. 7 24 25. Eph. 1 verse 5 6. Reason 1 The reasons Christ Iesus our Redeemer hath fulfilled all the parts of a Mediatour and left none vnperfected he alone hath trodē the wine-presse of the wrath of his Father Esay 65 5. Hee appeareth before the Father for vs and in our names as we do before the Father in his name he offereth vp our praiers and worketh our saluation Ioh. 17 9. Heb. 4 14 2 15 17. He hath deliuered all them which for feare of death Reason 2 were all their life time subiect to bondage Secondly the blood of Bulles and Goats outwardly sprinkled the ashes of beasts were not false lying signes representing that which is not but true and effectuall signes of purifying and cleansing ● ● 12 13. these did sanctifie the vncleane as touching the purifying of the flesh because such as were shut out of the Congregation for some legall and externall vncleannesse had thereby entrance againe into the assemblies might lawfully come to the worship of God and be partakers of holy things much more thē doth the blood of Christ which is the truth substance of all the former and which indeed is the blood of the Son of God Acts 20 28. purge your consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Heb. 9 13 14 14 24. Vse 1 The vses remaine First this teacheth that we haue no other Mediator in heauē or earth but Iesus Christ who maketh intercession for vs. In the old Testament no praier is made to Henoch though he walked with God or to Abraham though the father of the faithfull or to Moses though God spake to him face to face no praier was offered vp to any Cherubin or Seraphin to any Saint or Angel The Church of Rome therefore is an Apostate Church which hath made so many Mediators and Aduocates for vs in heauen as there are Saints departed and perfected yea which is more absurd they make one Saint Patron for one disease and another for another Comment vpon Philem. so that they haue left nothing for Christ to doe as I haue shewed more at large elsewhere Neither let them obiect that there is one Mediatour of redemption but many Mediatours of intercession But as this is an euill distinction so it is as euilly obserued by themselues And will they beare vs in hand that the simple people simple indeed they are God wot among them vnderstand this difference and can tell how to distinguish betweene these to giue to each his due and no more But what speake I of the simple people of whom I may speake as Ieremy doth Surely these are poore Ier. 5 4. they are foolish for they know not the way of the Lord nor the iudgement of their God I will goe vnto the great ones and speake vnto them The learned thēselues among them doe ioyne with Christ our Sauiour other Mediatours not onely of intercession but also of redemption and saluation Hitherto commeth the praier to the Popes great martyr Thomas Becket of Canterbury Breuiarium ad vsum eccles Sarum in festo S. Tho. Cantuar. who died in the Popes quarrell which he maintained against his souereigne king Henry the second and therefore a false martyr but a true traitor and rebell Tu per Thomae sanguinē quem pro te impendit Fac nos Christe scandere quò Thomas ascendit that is By the blood of Thomas which he for thee did spend Make vs O Christ to climbe whither Thomas did ascend A most blasphemous praier wherein they present not the blood of Christ who gaue himselfe a ransome for vs but the blood of Thomas to bring vs to heauen It were endlesse to shew their idolatrous praiers made to the blessed Virgin desiring to haue her to reconcile them to her Sonne Among the rest consider this one O foelix puerpera nostra pians scelera Iure matris impera redemptori that is O holy mother which dost purge away our sinnes command thou him that is our redeemer by thy motherly authority And touching Peter and Paul they say Ex Rom Breuiar Concede vt amborum meritis aeternitatis gloriam consequamur that is Grant that by the merites of them both wee may obtaine eternall glory Neither shall we need to maruaile at these things although they sound harsh in all Christian eares if we consider what they ascribe vnto the Crosse of Christ Sabb. in Hebd quarta Quandrag I meane to the wood tree to which they make their praier to this day saying O crux aue spes unica Hoc passionis tempore Auge pijs iustitiam Reisque dona veniam that is O Crosse all haile thou that art our onely hope at this time of the passion encrease thou righteousnesse to the godly and grant pardon to them that are guilty Other grosse blasphemies they haue reformed in their Portesse but this which giueth as great and grosse honour to the wooden crosse they haue reserued and reteined What is become now of their distinction that Christ is the Mediatour of redemption but the Saints of intercession when as they ascribe to the Virgin Mary to Peter to Paul nay to a vile traitour nay to a wooden crosse power to purge away the sinnes of the faithfull to grant them pardon and forgiuenesse and to bring them
to saluation Moreouer the Apostle speaking of one Mediatour and naming Christ to be that one 1 Tim. 2 5. speaketh in that place of prayer and therefore euen in praier he will haue vs to acknowledge no Mediatour of intercession but Christ Iesus onely A Mediatour of intercession as it is defined by Austine Aug. contra epist ●arm lib. 2 cap. 8. cannot agree to any sauing to Christ for he teacheth that it is commanded that euery Christian shold pray for others but he who requests for all and for whom none requesteth is the one and true Mediatour Againe they obiect Obiect that the Saints pray for vs and therefore we may pray to them Answ I answer this will not follow What the praiers of the Saints departed are Againe they pray for the perfecting of the body of Christ desire the full gathering together of the Saints they long for the resurrection restitution of their bodies which lye in the dust they wish to see the auengement of the blood of the holy martyrs shed for the testimony of the truth and craue to behold the last comming of Christ to iudgment to restore all things howbeit they know not the particular troubles of Gods children neither vnderstand the inward wrastlings and bucklings with sin and Satan which the conscience sustaineth no more then Eli knew the trouble of heart that Hannah had though she praied in his presence Wherefore let vs content our selues with the onely and all-sufficient mediation of Christ remembring the saying of the Apostle Iohn We haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes 1 Ioh. 2 1 2. And seeing he calleth vs vnto himselfe let vs not refuse to goe to him When he saith Come to me Mat. 11 28. shall we say nay we wil go to some other When Mary called her sister secretly saying The master is come and calleth for thee as soone as she heard that she arose quickly and came vnto him So it ought to be with vs Our master Christ calleth vs why doe we run from him why do we not run to him why do we run to any other Let vs not refuse to come to him who gaue his life for vs that we might liue in him Shall we then depart from him that calleth vs to them that call vs not that know vs not that heare vs not that help vs not that saue vs not Secondly this condemneth the ignorant Vse 2 multitude which through palpable and horrible ignorance rush into the presence of God without any Mediator knowing neither God nor themselues They dream that God is mercifull neuer consider what he is in his owne nature to wit a God of perfection a most iust Iudge and we can neuer reconcile his mercy and iustice but by looking vpon him in the face and countenance of Christ Iesus in whom only he is wel pleased Mat. 3 17. We can receiue nothing at his hands except we come to him in his Son For as he is perfect so he accepteth of nothing that is vnperfect But we can offer nothing to God but that which is tainted and defiled with sin and if God looke vpon vs our wants out of his Sonne wee are no better then the children of wrath he findeth matter enough in vs to reiect our workes and to condemne our persons We haue our praiers heard no other way but in the Name of Christ We are no otherwise accepted but in his beloued Iohn 15 6. Eph. 1 6. Acts 4 12. Heb. 2 14 ● Math. 1● 1 to wit in Christ He is the onely Sauiour of the Church he saueth his people from death and him that hath the power of death that is the diuell He saueth vs from our sins guilt and punishment For sin is the power sting of death an vgly serpent Christ only hath quelled him he hath merited our saluation by his death and passion none else hath done it none else could do it The Saints glorified and all the company of the elect Angels in heauen were too weak and vnworthy to accomplish this work The Papists as we haue shewed make him but half a Sauiour ioyning others with him in the worke of saluation For they teach that with Christs merites we must ioyne the workes of grace in the matter of iustificatiō that with Christs satisfaction of the wrath of God we must ioyne our satisfaction by temporall punishment But we haue shewed before that he will bee a sole Sauiour or else no Sauiour at all Thirdly it behoueth vs in remembrance of Vse 3 this excellent benefite of Christs attonement to be thankfull to God This is the main cause of al thankfulnes The most common blessings which we receiue must at all times moue vs to be thankfull as meat drinke health wealth liberty peace prosperity and the like but this should as it were swallow vp all the remembrance of all the rest and the zeale thereof cōsume vs Ps 116 12 ● What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefites toward me I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. What deadnesse of hart then remaineth in many mē that neuer remember this great worke thereby to be prouoked to obedience and newnesse of life that so we may return our loue to God againe who loued vs first Lastly we must acknowledge what we are Vse 4 in our selues to wit vtterly lost the enemies of God the children of wrath the bondslaues of Satan and the heires of condemnation This we must confesse frō the bottome of our hearts haue a liuely feeling thereof before we can receiue him as our Peace-maker and Sauiour Math. 18 11. and 15 14. Luke 4 18 and 19 10. We must say with Daniel Shame and confusion of faces belongeth vnto vs chap. 9 8. What was due to the people in this place and what might they haue looked for if Aaron had not made an attonement but present death So is it with vs we are borne dead in sinnes and trespasses can looke for nothing but wrath and iudgement and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries Hebr. 10 27. if Christ do not make peace between God and vs. Let vs therefore looke for saluation from him as men hearing of cunning Physitions to cure diseases do seeke and send to thē farre and neere Math. 9 20 21. Iohn chap. 7 verse 37. CHAP. XVII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Speake vnto the children of Israel and take of euery one of them a rod according to the house of their fathers of all their Princes according to the house of their fathers twelue rods write thou euery mans name vpon his rod. 3. And thou shalt write Aarons name vpon the rod of Leui for one rod shall bee for the head of the house of their fathers WEe haue seene in the former chapter how the people enuied Moses in the Camp and
the former And therefore themselues teach that infants baptized though they cannot be tryed yet goe immediatly into heauen and receiue the crowne of life But suppose this were a good conclusion yet he plaieth the notable Sophister in that he prooueth not that sinne is not worthy of death which he ought to haue done before hee conclude that some sinnes are in their owne nature veniall For many sinnes doe not bring death which notwithstanding are worthy of death they doe not bring death through Gods mercy but they are worthy of death through their owne merit Wherefore this place of the Apostle being well vnderstood directly ouerthroweth this distinction of sin from whence it goeth about to seeke shelter and defence Vse 3 Thirdly vnder these types and shadowes heere rehearsed touching the water of separation which was made with the ashes of a redde heiffer without spot wherein no blemish was which was brought out of the host to be killed and the Priest must sprinkle her blood seuen times before the Tabernacle of the Congregation c. I say vnder these shadowes the chiefe mysteries of our faith are handled For there was no way of saluation but by Christ from the beginning ● 14 6. and there shall bee no other new way vnto the end He was euermore the doore by which all enter into the kingdome of God ● 10 9. He is the same yesterday and to day and for euer Heb. chapter 13 verse 8. This the Apostle teacheth vs plainely by alluding to these words Hebr. chapter 9 verses 13 14. If the blood of Bulles and Goats and the ashes of an Heiffer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serue the liuing God Heere the Apostle hath reference vnto the redde heiffer mentioned in this place whose ashes gathered together were sprinkled in the waters of separation and serued to sanctifie touching the purifying of the flesh so that such as were shut from the Congregation being sprinkled therewith had free liberty to come to the Tabernacle The truth of all this was Christ Iesus he is this redde heiffer his blood is the true purging Psal 51 verses 2 7. 1 Pet. chap. 1 verse 2. And as the doore postes of the Israelites were sprinkled with the blood of the Lambe so must our hearts with the blood of Christ Now of this type obserue these principall points of religion First that Christ Iesus is true man found in the forme and shape of man That hee might humble himselfe and become obedient vnto death euen the death of the Crosse Phil. 2 verse 8. This is the cause that hee is pictured out vnto vs in the colour of the redde heiffer rather then in any other to put vs in minde of his death and the shedding of his precious blood Thus also he is described by the Prophet Who is this that commeth from Edom with died garments from Bozrah c. I that speake in righteousnesse to saue Wherefore art thou redde in thine apparell and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine fatte Esay 63 verses 1.2 This is no small comfort vnto vs especially in all tentations thogh our sinnes haue a bloody face before his face though they be red as scarlet yet the blood of Christ hath washed them away These are they which came out of great tribulation and haue washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambe Reuel chapter 7 verse 14. Hee hath a feeling of our sorrowes and is touched with our infirmities being made like vnto vs in all things sinne onely excepted Heb. 2 17 18. and 4 15. Secondly we learne from this consideration that the Heiffer must be without spotte and without blemish that Christ Iesus was a pure and perfect offering without any sinne Hebr. chapter 7 verse 26 he was holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the heauens This is our comfort also and consolation for if he had bene sinnefull we should yet walke in our sinnes as an infant walloweth in his blood and the price of our redemption were yet vnpaid Hence it is that Moses doth so carefully set downe this in describing of all sacrifices burnt offerings meate offerings trespasse offerings peace offerings all oblations brought to God must be without spotte and without blemish thereby to teach the people vs to the end of the world that there was no sinne in him that tooke vpon him our sinne For hee was wounded for our transgressions and hee was bruised for our iniquities Esay 53 5. He suffered indeed for vs but the iust for the vniust 1 Pet. 3 18 and 2 22. Thirdly in that this Heiffer was such vpon whom neuer came yoke Verse 2. it appeareth that Christ being at his owne liberty bound to none offered himselfe freely for our deliuerance therefore when such as were sent to take him told him they sought Iesus of Nazareth hee answered If yee seeke mee let these goe their way Iohn 18 8. Hee gaue himselfe not by perswasion of others not by compulsion from others but willingly euen vnto the death Phil. chapter 2 verse 8. Iohn chap. 18 verses 4 5. Esay chap. 53 verse 12. His death was not by constraint for then it could not be meritorious If it had not beene voluntary they could not haue taken it away from him for they often lay in waite for him and sought to put him to death Iohn 10. verses 17 18. What he was able to doe if it had pleased him hee shewed in the Garden for so soone as hee had told them that hee was the man whom they sought for they went backward and fell to the ground Iohn 18 verse 6. He knew all things that should come vnto him yet he went forth vnto them that were come with Lanternes and Torches and weapons to take him verses 3 4. He had therefore power to lay downe his life or not to lay it downe but how then should the Scriptures bee fulfilled But they had no power of themselues to lay hands vpō him as he telleth Pilate chap 19 11. This also serueth for our comfort that Christ died not against his will but willingly and of his owne accord performing obedience vnto his Father Not that his enemies could ouercome him for he ouercame them cast thē backe to the earth with a word speaking And what words did he speake Were they terrible and dreadfull Were they words of thunder No he rored not as a lyon but spake mildely as a lamb I am he Now if the voice of CHRIST by gentle and amiable were notwithstanding so effectuall to throw them all downe headlong to the ground how powerfull shall the angry voice of Christ be to throw his enemies as with a sudden flash of lightning into the pit and paines of hell at the last
God and to serue him in the simplicity and sincerity of their hearts This wee must do in health this we must do in sicknesse this we must doe in death and so wee shall glorifie God liuing and dying Thus did Abraham teach his children and seruants and for this is he commended of God Gen. 18 19. I know Abraham my seruant that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the vvay of the Lord to do righteousnesse and iudgment Thus said Iacob when he dyed Gen. 49 1 2. this must all of vs be carefull to practise if we will bee the children of faithful Abraham to speake of the lawes of God in our houses 〈◊〉 11 13. whē we walk by the way when we lye downe and when we rise vp Verse 27 28. And Moses did as the Lord had commanded he caused Aaron to strippe off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son Wee see the obedience of Moses to the Commandement of God for Aaron pulled off his Priestly robes and they are put vpon Eleazar to whom lineally the Priesthood did descend whereby we see that there was a personal succession belonging to the Priesthood from father to son from one man to another Hereby we learne ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 Leuitical 〈…〉 from 〈◊〉 that the Priesthood vnder the law passed from one to another The Priesthood begunne in Aaron and continued in his line rested not in one man but continued by succession from age to age This we see euidently proued throughout the old testament for as they were cut off by death so others arose in their rooms that serued at the Altar As Eleazar succeeded Aaron so did Phinchas succeed Eleazar 〈◊〉 6 ●0 so the Priesthood proceeded from father to son and from one generation to another 〈◊〉 ● 16. as appeareth in the genealogies of the Priests This the Apostle to the Hebrewes plentifully prooueth 〈◊〉 23. Many among them were made Priests because they were not suffered to endure by reason of death declaring that the Priestes after the order of Aaron succeeded each other and confirming it by the reason cause thereof because the Leuiticall Priests were taken away by death and could not endure for euer This then we must hold to be one reason forcible and powerfull to prooue the continued Reason 1 succession of the Priesthood of Leui from father to son because they were cut off by death and so not suffered alwayes to execute theyr Priesthood Seeing therfore these Priests were mortall there must be a succession from one to another This is that reason which was remēbred before out of Heb. 7 23. shewing that they had many Priests because they were all subiect to mortality and could not continue through necessity of death Secondly the promise of God made vnto Aaron and to his posterity must be accomplished Reason 2 and performed Hee consecrated Aaron and his sons and made a couenant with them not with Aaron alone not with his children alone but with their posterity Exod. 28 1. hee established it as a testimony in Iacob and as a law in Israel that their posterity might know it and the children which should be born of them shold stand vp and minister before the Lord in the beautiful garments and glorious robes of the Priests Exod. 28 2. Therefore the Lord saide by Moses Exod 29 29 30. Num. 3 10. 18 7. The holy garments which appertaine to Aaron shall be his sonnes after him to be annointed therein and to be consecrate therein That son that shall be Priest in his stead shall put them on seuen dayes when he commeth into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to minister in the holy place So God made his couenant of peace with Phinehas the son of Eleazar the son of Aaron Nu. 25 12 13 confirmed the Priests office to him his seed after him because in the zeale of his Spirit hee had turned away the wrath of the Lord from the Children of Israel This teacheth vs first of all the imperfection Vse 1 and insufficiency of it both of the Priestes themselues and of the Priesthood it selfe It pointed out a better Priest and a better priesthood and directed them to rest not in it but in some other So the Apostle Heb. 7 11 12. declareth that the Leuiticall Priesthood was vnperfect because another Priest is promised a long time after according to the order of Melchizedek If any perfection had beene by the Priesthood of the Leuites what needed it furthermore that another Priest should arise after the order of Melchizedek and not to bee called after the order of Aaron c. Where we see he sheweth to what purpose there must bee a Priest after another rule and fashion not after the order of Aaron euen because perfection is not in the Priehhood of the Leuites nor vnder the Law which was established vnder it so that wee must acknowledge it hath an end forasmuch as with the ceremoniall law the ceremoniall Priesthood was cancelled and abolished Vse 2 Secondly from hence we learne to acknowledge a difference betweene the Priesthood of Christ and the Priesthood of the Leuites This standeth in diuers points and circumstāces as the same Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrewes euidently declareth The Priesthood of Christ is eternall as the Prophet declared long before Heb. 7 17. Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchizedek he was made with an oath by him that saide vnto him The Lord hath sworne and wil not repent But the Priests of Aarons order were mortall Heb. 7 20 21. not eternall they were made by the word of God but without an oath Heb. 7 26. Besides our great high Priest Christ Iesus holye harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the Heauens hath a * Aparabaton Heb. 7 24. Priesthood which cannot passe from one to another wherefore he is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing hee euer liueth to make intercession for them who by his own blood entred in once into the holy place Heb 9.11 14. and obtained eternall redemption for vs purging our Conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God Hebru 10 4. for it is vnpossible that the blood of buls Goats shold take away sinnes Thus we see that the Priesthood of Christ can haue no succession inasmuch as being once performed it hath no imperfection and whereas the Iews in the time of the law had Aaron and his posterity which were but mortall and miserable men we haue Christ the immortall and blessed God who liueth for euer to be our euerlasting Priest Vse 3 Lastly we learne that seeing the Leuiticall Priesthood passed from one to another so as by death they were not alwaies suffred to exercise and execute their Priesthood we see I say that the Church of Rome bringing in againe such a Priesthood such Priests as
〈◊〉 35 ●● and hearkened not to the words of Necho which were of the mouth of God The like we may consider oftentimes in the booke of Daniel when Nebuchadnezzar had dreamed a dreame which was not humane but diuine neyther of a naturall cause but of a supernaturall wherewith his spirit was troubled Daniel saide vnto him Dan. 2 28. There is a God in heauen that reuealeth secrets and sheweth the King what shall be in the latter daies The Reasons are euident First to set downe his great loue and fauour to his Children 〈◊〉 1. For as God did shew himselfe in sundry manners and speake by liuely voyce to the vngodly so in all the manifestations of himselfe vnto thē he had respect and reference to his Church as appeareth in the former examples Heerein therefore appeareth the wonderfull loue of God to his chosen people who hath the harts of all men in his owne hands and turneth thē about as pleaseth him This is that reason which the Prophet pointeth vnto Psal 105 13 14 15 where speaking of Abraham his posterity he saith Albeit they were few in number yea very few and strangers in the Land and walked about from Nation to Nation from one Kingdome to another people yet suffered he no man to do them wrong but reprooued Kings for their sakes saying Touch not mine annointed and doe my Prophets no harme Secondly it pleaseth God to make himselfe and his great Name knowne out of the limits and circuit of the Church 〈◊〉 2. to constraine euen the wicked to cleere him in his proceedings to acknowledge his iudgements to bee iust and righteous to giue sentence against themselues For God is holy in all his wayes and pure in all his works hee causeth their owne consciences to be witnesses against thē to accuse and to conuince them inasmuch as they become vnthankfull 〈◊〉 ● 2● and do not glorifie him as God who is worthy of all glory and neuer leaueth himselfe without witnesse Acts 14 17. no not among the Infidels Thirdly he declareth and reuealeth himselfe Reason 3 to Infidels not because they be worthy but because by the mouth of the very Infidels he will strengthen and confirme his children True it is the cheefe and principall meanes which he vseth is to teach them by his seruants the Prophets and Apostles by Pastours and Teachers which he hath set in his church but he will also vse the tongues of prophane men to his owne glory comfort of his children This we see euidently shewed Iudg. 7 13. When Gideon came to the outside of the hoast of the enemies Behold a man told a dream vnto his neighbour and said Behold I dreamed a dreame and loe a cake of Barly-bread tumbled from aboue into the hoast of Midian and came vnto a Tent and smote it that it fell downe was ouerturned and his fellow answered This is nothing else saue the sword of Gideon for into his hand hath God deliuered Midian and all his host When Gideon heard the dreame deliuered and the interpretation opened he worshipped and returned into the hoast of Israel and saide Vp for the Lord hath deliuered into your hand the hoast of Midian Whereby we see that God made knowne his purpose to these vnbeleeuers for the strengthening of Gideons weake faith and the enabling of him to the worke whereunto he was appointed The vses follow First confesse from this Vse 1 dealing of God not onely that hee is great in ●ion and high aboue all the people but ●hat his Name is great glorious among his enemies He reigneth as King Psal 120.2 1 not onely ouer his Church but ouer all creatures and he maketh them to acknowledge his greatnesse stoop downe vnder his hand ●his we see in the Prophet Daniel chap. 6 26 27 by the decree that Darius wrote vnto all the people nations and languages that dwell in all the world I make a decree that in all the Dominions of my kingdome men tremble and feare the God of Daniel for hee is the liuing God and remaineth for euer and his kingdome shall not perish and his Dominion shall be euerlasting he refuseth and he deliuereth he worketh signes and wonders in Heauen and in Earth who hath deliuered Daniel from the power of the Lyons The like confession Nebuchadnezzar maketh before chap. 3 32 33. I thought it good to declare the signes wonders that the high God hath wrought toward me How great are his signs and how mighty are his wonders His kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome and his Dominion is from generation to generation Secondly we see that God leaueth not men Vse 2 with out excuse because hee maketh knowne his truth vnto them they haue some meanes or other offered vnto them to teach them to acknowledge God and to glorifie him whom they haue acknowledged Rom. 1.20.24 So Christ our Sauiour speaketh to the obstinate Iewes Iohn chapter fifteene verse 22. If I had not come and spoken vnto them they should not haue had sinne but now haue they no cloke nor colour for their sinne Thus was Pilate the Iudge of Iewry conuinced in his owne conscience of wrongfull iudgement against Christ beeing warned of his wife to whom God had reuealed his innocency that he was a iust man as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled For the Euangelist Matthew testifieth that when Pilate was set downe on the iudgement seate his wife sent to him saying Haue thou nothing to do with that iust man for I haue suffered many things this day in a dreame by reason of him Mat. 27 19. This was no meere humane or naturall dreame Eccles 5 2. arising from multitude of busines or proceeding frō an euil constitution of the body or euill digestion of meate or such like ordinary causes as daily befall vs but it was diuine from the speciall instinct of God and the inspiration of the Almighty For as God the Father diuers wayes approued the innocency of Christ that it might appeare he dyed not for his owne offences but for ours for our redemption so did God send terror and trouble vpon the Iudges wife in the night season to discouer his hypocrisie make him without excuse altogether in condemning the Innocent that all the water in the wide sea was not able to wash away the guilt of his sinne much lesse the water he called for to wash his hands before the multitude when he saide I am innocent of the blood of this iust man looke you to it Math. 27 24. The staine of sinne soyleth the soule and defileth the conscience cannot be washed away with water which onely putteth away the filth of the flesh and clenseth the body but cannot enter any further Thirdly seeing God hath shewed and manifested Vse 3 himselfe to wicked men vnworthy of his fauour we may be certaine and well assured that he will neuer leaue his owne children destitute of instruction that call vpon his
being the chiefe Corner-stone do feed men with fancies fond deuices without godly edifying and teach their owne dreames and fables Let the Prophet that hath a dreame tell a dreame and he that hath my word let him speake my word faithfully what is the chaffe to the wheat saieth the Lord Ier. 23 28. And the Apostle chargeth Timothy to stay prophane and vaine bablings for they shall encrease vnto more vngodlinesse 2. Tim. 2 16. Many there are that corrupt the word to please men and to establish their owne errors We cannot content our selues with the ancient faith but loathe the heauenly Manna and waxe wanton against Christ He is not esteemed that preacheth the plain truth plainely in the euidence of the Spirit He is most magnified and made of that can bring in some strange matter against the common receiued faith and we liue in this respect in most dangerous times and perillous seasons as euer were heretofore Others shut vp their mouths and eyther through feare dare not or through flattery and filthy lucre will not reproue sin These are men-pleasers and time-seruers not remembring what the Apostle saith Galat. 1 10. Preach I mans doctrine or Gods Or goe I about to please men For if I should yet please men I were not the seruant of Christ The Ministers of the Gospel must not sowe cushions vnder mens elbowes Ezek. 13.11 Mich. 2 11. nor prophesie to the people of wine and strong drinke they must not apply or fashion their doctrine to the humours and affections of men as if the word were a crooked line or a leaden rule or a shipmans hose but keepe a good conscience Hence it is that the Lord chargeth Ieremy to take away the precious from the vile and to do according to his word Let them returne vnto thee but returne not thou vnto them A father will not alwayes feed the fancy nor follow the disposition of his son that is sicke but will sometimes crosse his minde and restraine his desire Ier. 15 19 and 6 14. So must the Ministers of God which are the fathers of our soules deale with such as are sicke of sin not soothe them vp with sweete words nor dawb with vntempered Morter but giue thē that precious balme that shall not break their head Psal 141 5. Thus dealt Eliah with Ahab Amos with Amaziah Iohn Baptist with Herod though it cost him his head And thus should all the true Ministers of God do without pride or ambition without feare or flattery seeke the glory of God not the praise of men and howsoeuer the people hate him that rebuketh in the gate Amos chap. 5 verse 10 and abhorre him that speaketh vprightly yet they should set God before their eyes 2 Tim. 2 15. and consider they haue to deale with him Lastly they must not preach part of the word onely and leaue another part vntaught but lay before them the whole will of God Some preach nothing but the law some teach nothing but the Gospel both sorts are greatly deceyued if they looke for any great increase by their labors The Law must prepare and make the way the Gospel must follow after The Law casteth downe the Gospel comforteth and raiseth vp The Law reuealeth the knowledge of sinne the Gospel reuealeth the remission of sinne Both these meanes are to be set on worke and applied wisely and discreetly to our hearers Such as are secure and cold in the profession of the Gospel such as thorough presumption or ignorance see not their owne sinnes giue them the Law and apply vnto them the threatnings of the same Such as see and feele their sinnes and are cast downe by a deepe apprehension of Gods heauy iudgements minister vnto them a plaister of the Gospel made of the precious blood of Christ that looking vpon him as it were vpon the brazen Serpent Numb 21.6 they may presently bee cured and recouered of the sting of sinne and the wound of conscience Both these are two necessary meanes that God hath left the one without the other hurteth more then healeth The Law without the Gospel driueth the poore distressed soule vpon the rocke of desperation the Gospel without the Law puffeth vp and aduanceth proud flesh vnto presumption and therefore the spirituall Physitians and Surgeons are so to temper them as that the Church may haue the profitable and necessary helpe of both Vse 4 Lastly it serueth to direct the hearers in the right art of hearing they must submit them selues to Gods ordinance and bee ready to know and heare all the will of God We must not haue itching eares which are not able to suffer wholesome doctrine some as the Athenians delighting in new things and in hearing fables others not abiding to bee reprooued Therefore the Prophet Micha saith Are not my words good to him that walketh vprightly Mich. 2 7. The cause why the word to many men is vnpleasant and vnsauoury is because they delight in euill and desire to continue in sinne growing to so grosse a contempt as to command the Prophets not to Prophesie or to prescribe vnto them what they shall Prophesie or would limit them to their owne liking to serue their owne affections and filthy lustes Many would follow Iohn the Baptist til he required repentance They would heare Christ vntill he spake of taking vp the crosse Herod heard Iohn willingly Marke 6 20. and practised many things but when once hee came neerer to him taught that it was not lawfull to keepe his brothers wife hee enioyned him silence and clapped him vp in prison The Iewes seemed for a time attentiuely to hear the defence of Paul Acts 22 22. but when he touched his Apostleship to the Gentiles which they crossed gainesayed Luke testifies they heard him vnto this word but then they lift vp their voyces and saide Away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not meete that he should liue Thus it fareth with many hearers in our dayes The drunkard delighteth to heare the Minister preach aga●nst oppression and couetousnesse this pleaseth his humor this his stomacke brooketh well enough These men heare the word by parts parcels they giue care till their secret ●●●●es be reproued and sit quietly till their sores bee rubbed and when once they are touched they begin to kick spurne with their heeles against the word and the Ministers of it But we must heare all that is taught vs and not certaine clauses or cantiles onely we must heare constantly continually and vniuersally as well the things that mislike vs and goe against vs as those things that please and content vs as well the iudgements of God thundered out against vs in the Law as the sweete promises pronounced and offered in the Gospel as well the laying open of our owne sins as the publishing of the sinnes of other men This kinde of hearing the Lord commendeth in his people after the deliuery of the Law Deut. chapter
haue the state to haue the title and another the interest to haue the empty shadow and another the propriety and possession Who wold content himselfe with a bare shew of riches of honours of health of profit and to want the things themselues Wee see how all men hate couzeners and deceitfull persons that seeke to deceiue and beguile their brethren but much more odious and abhominable is it to goe about to delude the LORD and to make shew of louing him when indeed wee hate him Saul pretended great zeale forwardnesse in fulfilling the Commandement of the LORD 1 Samuel chapter 15 verse 13. but the kingdome was rent from him for his hypocrisie For there can be no greater dishonour done to God then to seeke to please him with painted worship as if hee were a childe that is delighted with Babies or Rattles or would bee pleased with toyes and trifles which is blasphemy once to thinke of the eternall Maiesty who beholdeth the secrets of the heart Secondly seeing in outward behauior many Vse 2 set goodly colours vpon their actions and pretend great sincerity when the heart is empty it is very behouefull for vs to know them by their fruites and to obserue the notes and markes of hypocrisie whereby in the closest and cunningest carriage it is bewrayed disclosed True it is some by continuall practise are grown to hide the holownes of their harts so deepe that it is hardly discouered yet such is the iudgement of God against them that he layeth them open one way or other at one time or other in one place or other in one cōpany or other vpon one occasion or other and so pulleth off the vizard of hypoctisie from their faces and in the meane season leaueth vs diuers markes to discerne them and to trace them out as by certaine footsteps first of all their cheeefest care is to seeke the pompe and glory of the world to be highly esteemed of others and neuer regard the glory of God or what he esteeme of them This appeareth in Saul who being reproued of Samuel for his sinne 1 Sam. 15 30 thought more of vpholding his owne estate then of turning to God by true repentance and therefore saith vnto him Honour me I pray thee before the Elders of my people and before Israel and turne againe with me This also appeareth in the Pharisies who could not beleeue because they receiued honour one of another Iohn 5 44. and sought not the honor of God alone Secondly hypocrites are sharp-sighted and haue Eagles eyes to obserue the behauiour and looke into the liues of other men but are blinde in regarding and backeward in reforming their owne as wee see in the Pharisie Luk. 18.11 Hee thanked God that be was iust and holy not as the Publican Heereunto cometh the reproofe of Christ Mat. 7 3 4 5. Why seest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye and perceiuest not the beame that is in thine owne eye Or how saiest thou to thy brother Suffer me to cast out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beame is in thine owne eye Hypocrite first cast out the beame out of thine owne eye c. Let vs learne to begin with our selues and to end with others first to looke to our owne wayes and when we feele how hard it is to subdue the strength of sinne in our selues and to ouer-master our owne corruptions we shal be more charitable Iam. 3 1 2. and lesse seuere to others Thirdly they are more curious in the obseruation of the ancient traditions of men of customes of forefathers and of deuices of their owne then of the holy Statutes and Commandements of almighty God Behold the practise of the Pharisies in this point as they are painted out vnto vs in the Gospel as the Euangelist sheweth Mat. 15 where the Pharisies are saide to come vnto Christ and to demand of him why his Disciples transgressed the tradition of the Elders and to complaine against them when they saw them eate meate with vnwashen hands Mark 7 3.4 for the Pharisies and all the Iewes except they wash their hands oft eate not holding the tradition of the Elders and when they come from the market except they wash they eate not and many other things there be which they haue taken vpon them to obserue as the washing of cups and pots and of brazen vessels and of beds They do not charge the Disciples with breaking the lawes of God which might be iustly returned vpon themselues but with transgressing the ordinances of men and making them necessary to the worship of God and therefore are taxed as hypocrites Let vs take heed we do not please our selues in vaine superstition or worship of God fondly deuised by our selues and in blinde zeale which is not according to knowledge Fourthly they are precise in trifles and loose in weighty affaires they stumble at a straw and leap ouer a block they straine out a gnat and swallow a camell they binde heauy burdens and greeuous to be borne and lay them on mens shoulders but they themselues will not moue them with one of their fingers This is the cause that Christ denounceth such woes against the Pharisies Math. 23 23 because they did tythe Mint Annis and Cummin and leaue the weightier matters of the Law as Iudgement Mercy Fidelity these ought ye to haue done not to haue left the other vndone Thus they snared mens consciences and entangled their owne about small things and slender trifles but neglected the greatest things and loosed the raynes in things that were simply euill prouoked the wrath of God They thought it a great sinne to heale the sicke on the Sabbath day to pull and rub eares of Corne on that day to driue away hunger to conuerse with Publicans and sinners They made great scruple of conscience to put the siluer peeces into the treasury which Iudas brought backe and cast downe at their feete because it was the price of blood Mat. 27 6 but their hearts neuer smote them neither counted they it vnlawfull to hyre a traitor to betray his Master and to shed innocent blood So at the time of the passion of Christ their tender consciences suffered them not to enter into the common Hall lest they should be defiled Iohn 18 but that they might eate the Passeouer but they were not affraid to oppresse the Son of God with slanders lies and false witnesses and to crucifie the Lord of glory Such is the holinesse and religion of the Church of Rome standing in outward obseruations Touch not tast not eate not which are after the doctrines and commandements of men which haue indeed a shew of holines but are things of no value Let vs not cleaue to such vanities nor aduance our owne inuentions but make the Law of God a light to our feet and a lanterne vnto our steps Lastly they do all things to be seene of men seeking the praise and applause
they fall to be past feeling and cannot repent The Apostle declareth in the Epistle to the Romanes That such as regarded not to know God hee gaue them vp to their hearts lust vnto all vncleannesse and punished one sinne with another Rom 1.28 For the sinne that followeth is a punishment which went before God forsaketh them with his grace that forsake him by their sinnes and when once God leaueth them the diuell findeth them Whensoeuer God departeth out of any person the vncleane spirit taketh possession for the house is empty swept and garnished and made ready to entertaine him Math. 12 44. This is it which the Prophet declareth concerning the secret iudgment of God vpon sinners that make shipwracke of faith and of a good conscience My people would not heare my voyce and Israel would none of me so I gaue them vp vnto the hardnesse of their heart and they haue walked in their owne counsels Psal 81 11 12. Where hee sheweth that seeing they would not be reclaimed and reformed hee laide the bridle in their owne neckes and suffered them to run their full swinge into all wickednesse In like manner the Apostle describing the sins of the Iewes that hated the Gospel stoned the Prophets persecuted the Saints and crucified the Lord of life sheweth that they had filled vp the measure of their sinnes and that the wrath of God was come on them to the vttermost 1. Thess 2 19. Reason 3 Thirdly sinne is fitly resembled to the fretting of a canker and to the vncleannesse of a leprosie both which goe forward and make no stay vntill the whole body be infected and euery member endangered This is the similitude which the Apostle vseth Their word shal fret as a canker 2. Tim. 2.17 of which sort is Hymeneus and Philetus For as one serpent engendreth another so doth one sinne conceiue and bring forth another It is like vnto the beast that is said to grow so long as it liueth So then lay these things together both that God forsaketh such as make no conscience of sinne and that sinne is likened to the conceiuing of the wombe to the eating of a canker and to the filthinesse of a leprosie wee may conclude that sin being entertained knoweth not stay but rolleth as a stone vntill it come to the Vse 1 bottome Now let vs handle the vses First consider from hence how dangerous it is to giue entertainment vnto sinne at the beginning which groweth to more perfection euery day we cannot stop this streame when we will it goeth beyond the strength of our nature God leaueth vs further to our selues when we begin to leaue his wayes We see this in the example of Cain he was reproued of God checked for his hatred against his brother admonished to repent but he harkened not to the voyce of the Lord but hardened his heart and shed innocent blood euen the blood of his brother Gen. 4 8. This appeareth in Iudas hee entertained couetousnesse in his heart from couetousnesse hee fell to plot with the Pharisies from plotting he proceeded to practising and in the end hee brake out into treason against his Lord and Master and ceased not till hee brake his owne necke Math. 26 15. The like we may say of Saul and trace out his falling from God step by step and the more he continued 1. Sam. 16 14. the more did the Spirit of GOD forsake him so that his hidden corruption brake out into open rebellion against God open persecution against Dauid and open desperation against himself and his owne soule Thus it falleth out with such as sinne against their conscience Some grow to be very diuels incarnate that do euery day giue strength vnto their corruption and adde drunkennesse vnto thirst who being past feeling giue themselues to wantonnesse to worke all vncleannes with greedinesse Some are like bruite beasts that are led onely by sensuality carnall and naturall men which haue nothing in them of the Spirit of God Iude 10. Continuance in sinne bringeth hardnesse of heart Such are in greatest danger and see it not they are in the midst of the fire and feele it not they taste deeply of the iudgment of God and regard it not Lay before them the grieuousnesse of sinne beseech them with bitter teares exhort them by the tender mercies of God denounce all the plagues punishments and iudgments of hell offer vnto them the sweet promises of the Gospel entreate them by the death of Christ and the dearest blood that he shed for them all these they tread vnder their feet and neglect them as things of no price sinne hath bewitched their hearts Sathan hath blinded their eyes and God hath giuen them vp into a reprobate sence For as among all the blessings that God bestoweth vpon the sonnes of men in this world a soft and tender heart is one of the greatest which is soone checked controuled soone made to bleed and raised to repentance and amendement of life Ezek. 11 19 so there can be no greater curse and malediction laide vpon any man then to haue a stony and stiff-necked a rebellious and yron heart which heapeth and hoardeth vp euery day vengeance against it selfe What an heauy punishment was this vpon Pharaoh when his heart was hardened Moses and Aaron came vnto him they laide before him the word of God they wrought miracles in the land of Egypt they called vpon him to let the people go he was visited with lice he was feared with thunders he was plagued with frogges he was tryed with darknesse he was punished with the death of the first borne yet could not all these enter into his heart nor pierce his conscience that was seared with an hot yron so that he proceeded in euill vntill he and his whole hoste were drowned in the red sea Heereunto accordeth that which the Prophet Ieremy sayth Can the blacke Moore change his skinne or the leopard his spots Then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe euill Ier. 13 23. Seeing therefore such as beginne to sinne can haue do stay of themselues we must needs confesse it to be very dangerous and hurtfull to our soules For all such as breake out into this sinne are like to those that runne downe a steepe hill that when they are going haue no power to make any stay or stop vntill they come vnto the lower end Thus it is with those that haue giuen the onset vpon sinne they do as it wer open the flood gates of impiety which are not againe easily shut vp but the violence of the streame beareth all things before it For howsoeuer sinne at the first be entertained of men with some dislike and not without some strugling and striuing against it yet in processe of time and by continuance in sinne they grow shamelesse euen to haue an whores forehead that they cannot nor wil not be ashamed though the Sunne the heauen the earth and men beare witnesse against them they
they haue gone into warre to fight with their enemies they haue called vpon his name and receyued great comfort This we see euidently in the practise of Ioshua who prayed vnto him in the day when hee gaue the Amorites before the children of Israel Ioshua chap. 10. verses 12 14. Sunne stay thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon and there was no day like that day before it nor after it that the Lord heard the voice of a man for the Lord fought for Israel When the Philistines were assembled against Israel the children of Israel sayde to Samuel Cease not to cry vnto the Lord our God for vs that hee may saue vs out of the hand of the Philistines 1 Samuel chapt 7. verses 8 9 10. Samuel cried vnto the Lord who heard him and thundered with a great thunder that day vppon the Philistines and scattered them so they were slaine before Israel And there is a notable example hereof recorded in the first of the Chronicles the fift chapter and the 20. verse touching the sonnes of Reuben of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh They were holpen against the Hagarims who were deliuered into their hand and all that were with them for they cryed to God in the battell and hee heard him because they trusted in him If then God do in mercy heare the prayers of those that call vpon his most holy name going vnto the warre and preparing themselues vnto the battaile wee cannot doubt of the lawfulnesse of the worke it selfe seeing almighty God vseth not to heare those that goe about euill but sendeth his curse vppon them Fourthly the word of God setteth downe Reason 4 the duties of those that manage the matters of the field as of the King of the Captaine of the common souldier which it would neuer do if the callings were vnlawfull For as wee conclude marriage to be lawfull and an honorable ordinance of God because the Scripture setteth forth the duties of maried persons aswell of the husband toward the wife as the wife toward her husband so in as much as we finde the duties of such as go to war aswel of those that are commanders as of those that are vnder commandement described plentifully and fully in the booke of God wee cannot call the lawfulnes of their office in question Hence it is that the Lord teacheth Ioshua the duties of his calling Iosh 1 6 that he should be strong and of a good corage that he shold meditate in the booke of the Law and assure himselfe that he would be with him and not leaue him nor forsake him so that there shold not a man be able to withstand him all the daies of his life So when the soldiers came to Iohn Baptist to bee instructed how to leade their liues and to bee directed how to escape the wrath of God to come Luke 3.14 he said vnto them Do violence to no man neither accuse any falsely and be content with your wages The particular handling and setting downe of these duties inforceth the acknowledgement of the lawfulnes of the calling Reason 5 Lastly we shall see the lawfulnes of warres if wee consider the lawfull causes of a lawfull warre The first is the defence of true religion against the oppugners thereof as appeareth by the words of Ahijah to Ieroboam and all Israel 2 Chron. 13 6. The second is that such as are oppressed for religion may bee freed and deliuered as we see in the histories of the Iudges who raised wars to deliuer the opprested and distressed people out of the bloody hands of the cruell oppressors The third is for the necessary defence of the Commonwealth by repulsing iniuries offred Iudg. 11 13 ● Sam. 10 4. ● Chron. 14 9 1 Sam. 30 18. Genes 14.16 1 Chron. 18.1 by reuenging indignities and assaults and by recouering things lost as their wiues their sonnes their daughters their goods their possessions their cities their substance dominions The ouerthrow of the Commonwealth bringeth the ruine of the Churches peace For as the flourishing estate of the Commonwealth maintaineth and furthereth the Churches peace Ieremy 29 7. so when the Common-wealth is spoiled the libertie and freedome of the Church is diminished as appeareth in sundry places of the Lamentations ●amen 1 4 5. Vse 1 Let vs now make vse of this doctrine and apply it to our instruction First it is required of euery one to haue courage Wee must not grow feeble and faint-hearted we should not feare nor be discouraged but be bold as in the worke of the Lord assuring our selues that the Lord is our strength who teacheth our hands to fight and our fingers to battell Psalme 144 1. When Hezekiah saw that Zaneherib was come and that his purpose was to fight against Ierusalem he said to his Captaines souldiers Be strong and couragious feare not neither be afraid for the king of Ashur neither for all the multitude that is with him for there is moe with vs then is with him with him is an arme of flesh but with vs is the Lord our God for to helpe vs and to fight our battels 2 Chron. 32 7. This appeareth in the exhortation of Nehemiah when Sanballat and Tobiah conspired to come to fight against Ierusalem to hinder the building of the wall he said Be not afraid of them remember the great Lord and fearfull and fight for your brethren your sonnes and your daughters your wiues and your houses Neh. 4.14 The heathen Captaines that carried their men to battel were alwayes wont as we see in prophane histories to put courage into them not to feare to looke the enemy in the face but their onely or cheefest reason to mooue them was earthly glory that either they should liue in wealth or dye with honor It is not so with the people of God they haue greater Reasons to worke in them the gift of valour and hope of victory True religion therfore doth not weaken the hearts of men and make them Cowards It is no enemy to true fortitude and manhood The Reasons why true Religion giueth courage in battel For first it teacheth and informeth the conscience that the cause and quarrell in which the warriour fighteth is good iust and warrantable by the word of GOD which maketh him stand vpon a sure ground without which knowledge in the heart how vgly how foule how sauage how cruell a thing is the effusion and shedding of blood What an horrible and grisly a spectacle is it to see Villages and Townes burned Cities and Castles ruinated Churches and religious places ouerturned bodies dismembred with Ordnance the ayre infected with stench the ground embrued with blood the country wasted grasse and corne troden downe and spoyled and all places with feare and terror filled Is it not to be esteemed rather a practise of all inhumanity then an exercise of manhood Secondly as true religion establisheth the conscience touching the lawfulnes
Salomon was not ignorant but knew well enough what was true honour yet he giueth this counsell not to seeke any honor by reuenge Prou. 24 29. Say not I will do vnto him as he hath done to mee I will render to the man according vnto his worke It is the common sicknesse and disease of the world to requite like for like taunt for taunt and rebuke for rebuke and they thinke they may doe it lawfully and measure to others that measure which they haue measured vnto them whether it bee in word or deede stripe for stripe blow for blow wound for wound But this is a part of our naturall corruption which did appeare in the auengers of blood mentioned in this place Vse 2 Secondly as it reprooueth errors in opinion so it doth likewise errors in conuersation in the practise of life which meeteth with many abuses First here is reproued the common practise of fighting and quarrelling which alwayes beginneth with hatred oftentimes endeth with blood These are they that make no conscience of doing hurt and iniurie vnto others 1 Thess 4 6. 1 Cor. 6 7 8. Many do hold it vnlawfull to strike the first stroke and to offer the first blow and minister occasion of strife but if another strike them and begin the fray they thinke they may lawfully strike againe and return as good as is brought and that with an ouer-plus and aduantage This is to make Magistrates stand for ciphers and Lawes to bee of none effect or to waxe rusty in bookes as a sword in the scabberd Christ reproueth this retayling of like for like both by word and by example By word Matth. 5 39 40 41. Ye haue heard that it hath bene said An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth but I say vnto you resist not euill but whosoeuer shall smite thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also c. By example for when he was smitten before the high Priest he smote not agayne Iohn 18 22 23 but defended his owne innocency So did Micaiah the Prophet 1 Kings 22 24 25 and Paul the Apostle Actes 23 3 they defended their cause by word but smote not with the fist These examples of the best we ought to haue before vs to bee guided by them who were ledde by the good spirit of God But in our daies when men are charged with contempt of Lawes and Magistrates of God himself in pursuing their priuat grudgings and quarrels if they can say Why did he giue the occasion Why did he begin with me Why did he strike the first stroke They thinke they haue spoken wisely and answered the matter very sufficiently But thus might the Prophets and Apostles as well haue pleaded for themselues and giuen as good a reason of their dealing if they had stricken againe yet they stayed their hands and would not giue blow for blow and they are commended in the word of God The Apostle would neuer haue set foorth the patience of Christ for our imitation who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe and when he suffered he threatned not but committed himselfe to him that iudgeth righteously 1 Pet. 2. vers 13 if he might haue done wrong for wrong but he sheweth that Christ suffered for vs leauing vs an example that we should tread in his steps Secondly this condemneth the practise of many masters who doe after a sort nourish quarrels and contentions as much as in them lyeth within their owne doores For if they haue a seruant who being prouoked stricken by his fellow-seruant will not by and by flye in his face and strike again or being challenged the fielde will not take vp the bucklers and answer the challenge they account it the tricke of a coward and esteem such as vnfit seruants to dwell with them For if hauing a defiance giuen him he take not vp the gantlet they thus reason and conclude with themselues If hee will not draw his weapon in his owne cause he will neuer draw it in mine if he will not strike for himselfe being prouoked he will neuer strike stroke for his master if he be assaulted This may be a rule from humane policy but it is no rule in Christian piety neyther is it after the doctrine which is according to godlinesse It is the duty of seruants being stricken to complaine vnto theyr masters and it is no disgrace or reproch to do so except it be a shame and dishonor to submit themselues to Gods word Euery master is a Magistrate within the walles of his owne house to order his seruants family aright Euerie master is a magistrate in his owne house Hee must giue no approbation to priuate reuenge but make peace among them teach them to suffer wrong rather then to offer and prepare to beare a new iniury rather then seek to reuenge an old as we heard before by the expresse commandement of Christ Not that we should vnderstand his words literally to turne the other cheeke to him that hath stricken one or to giue away our cloake vnto him that hath taken away our coat for Christ him selfe being smitten did not so but hee speaketh comparatiuely do so rather then reuenge thine owne cause But as challenges into the field are vnlawfull so none is bound in honor to answer such challenges Neyther let any man thinke it is a disgrace and discredit to refuse a challenge No disgrace to refuse a challenge For besides that true grace and glory standeth in obedience vnto God wherefore I pray you serueth the master in the house and the Magistrate in the common-wealth but to take vp quarrels that arise the one among his seruants the other among his subiects It is a principall part of their office to decide and determine the differences betweene seruant and seruant betweene subiect and subiect And remember this rule that there can bee no credite gotten by sinning against God Vse 3 Lastly we must take notice of this corruption and shew the duties of loue one to another euen toward our enemies Luke 6 33. Esay 11 6 7 9. Matth. 5 44. 1 Pet. 2 21 23. Now the holy Scripture layeth before vs sundry motiues to moue vs to lay aside all maliciousnesse and desire of reuenge Motiues to moue vs to lay downe reuenge and to shew our selues courteous and gentle kinde and tender-hearted one toward another First except we forgiue we can haue no hope or assurance to be forgiuen but iudgment shal be mercilesse to them that shew no mercy Matth. 6 14 15. Iam. 2 13. Matth. 18 35. We shall finde such measure at the hands of God as wee our selues measure vnto others And Christ enforceth the truth of this by doubling of the sentence both for greater certainty of the matter and for deeper impression in the conscience Secondly God hath forgiuen all his children for Christs sake He might haue many iust quarrels and controuersies against vs for our
blood Do not our Gentry for the most part think it their glory to haue their hands embrewed in the blood of innocents What conscience is made of fighting quarrelling for point of pretended honour but in truth for assured dishonour and disgrace vnto them to their names and to their posterity for let thē set what varnish soeuer they please vpon their combates they shall carry the marke of an horrible sinne to their graue God grant it bee not to hell and the place of perpetuall torment and if euer GOD open their eyes they will weepe day and night for it and bee humbled for it all the dayes of their liues Secondly Vse 2 it is the duty of Magistrates especially and of all men generally in their places to make diligent search enquiry when blood is shed by whom the blood hath beene shedde and if the murtherer bee not found they shold craue pardon at the hands of God And touching the Magistrates and others I would commend to them the consideration of two things first that they be carefull that no man dye innocently that they put no man to death without cause Ier. 25 14. of which we shall speake afterward in the end of this chapter Secondly when murther is committed all men must do their endeuour to the vtmost of their power and meanes to detect the authors of that bloody acte Hence it is that God requireth that when a body is found slaine vpon the ground in the Land which he had giuen the Israelites to possesse and it is not knowne who killed him then the Elders and Iudges shall come forth to the dead body and wash their hands ouer a Bullocke whose head was striken off and protest and say Our hands haue not shed this blood neither haue our eyes seene it O Lord bee mercifull to thy people Israel whom thou hast purchased and lay not the guiltlesse blood vpon them and the man-slaughter shall be forgiuen them Deut. 21 7 8 9. Where we see that the killing of one man is a defiling of the whole country and what care the Lord hath of the life of euery man For murther is so hated of God that albeit the dooer thereof be vnknowne yet hee would haue a solemne cleansing and cleering thereof to be made And see what God requireth at the hands of the Magistrates and ministers of iustice It is not enough for them to protest that they haue not committed or supported or fauoured any euill when causes and complaints haue beene brought before them but they must search carefully and enquire diligently of disorders albeit no man sollicite or seeke vnto them yet themselues must be watchfull in their places Howbeit this duty is oftentimes ill obserued and slenderly practised For how many are there that thinke themselues fully discharged and flatter themselues with a fond imagination that they are greatly to be commended when they patiently giue men the hearing and make countenance to helpe them But God is not contented with this he will take an account of them of a farther duty and will not take it for a sufficient discharge to bee able to say though it be truly There was no information giuen no man made any complaint If then Magistrates that haue the sword of iustice put into their hands to cut off euill doers from the City of God shall suffer any wickednesse to lurke in any Citty or corner they themselues are guilty thereof and it is as much in Gods sight as if they had giuen theyr consent to the practising of it These are they that must after a sort answer for the whole body of the people if euill doers be suffered to nustle vnder them through their negligence Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of euery one to beware of all occasions and allurements that may draw vs to this bloody sinne For as there is a murther of the hand so there is a murther of the tongue which is therefore in holy Scripture resembled vnto a Razor to a sword to coales to arrowes to poyson to fire all which kill and are the instruments of death and likewise there is a murther of the heart of which the Apostle Iohn sayeth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him Iohn 3 15. So then we are guilty of this sinne euen by anger and malice in the heart onely and shall haue our portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone If any man haue not a feeling of this in his heart hee is more then dead and if he labour not to repent of it it argueth him to be past all grace and so out of the number of those which shall see God to their comfort For albeit such haue the shape and forme of men yet they haue the hearts of the very beasts If they had the right vse of reason in them and the gouernment of theyr corrupt appetites and affections it could not be but that they would haue a care of the life of their brethren and which is more of theyr owne liues also So then euery man should examine himself and try his owne heart how farre he hath bin guilty of this sinne of murther in euery kinde and branch thereof that so wee may humble our selues Albeit it bee but the anger of the heart yet it is murther in the sight of God is therefore as well to be repented of as the outward acte of murther it selfe To this wee may ioyne the sinne of enuy when men so repine at the good of others that they cannot bee quiet or contented because they want that which others haue and haue not so great a portion as they for this also we should humble our selues and labour continually against it To conclude we see also what crueltie and hard-dealing is oftentimes vsed against poore labouring men that get their liuing by the sweate of their browes and yet many thinke they may vse them as they list eyther with turning of them off with an halfe-peny for a peny or else in exchanging other things for their worke which haply are not worth halfe the money or in keeping backe their wages for weekes moneths or yeares which Saint Iames speaketh of Chapter 5 verse 4. Behold the hyre of the Labourers cryeth and the cryes of them are entred into the eares of the Lord of Sabbath Let vs labour by all meanes to keepe our selues free from bloud and not onely from the outward acte it selfe but from the inward thoughts of the heart as enuy hatred and malice as also from the slaughter of the tongue by cruell and cursed speeches Such a murtherer was Shemei when hee railed vpon Dauid True it is hee charged him to be a murtherer but the murther might iustly and fully bee discharged vpon himselfe for he was the man of blood and a sonne of Belial 2 Sam. 16 7 8. Indeed if a man haue an iniury done vnto him it is lawfull for him