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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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diverse qualitie of both Priest-hoods The Priest-hood which is everlasting and abideth for ever is more excellent than that which is momentany and continueth but for a time Christs Priest-hood is eternall the Leviticall Priest-hood lasted but for a time ergo This Argument hath two branches the comparison betweene them 23.24 and an effect 25. the comparison is in the number and continuance That the Priest-hood of the Levites was temporarie is evinced by the relatives If the Priests continued but a time then the Priest-hood but they continued but for a time which is illustrated by the number of them and the reason of the number And they verily being many were made Priests And why were they many because they were forbidden by death to endure Death would not suffer them to continue long therefore it was necessary that there should bee many of them one to supply the roome of the other There were not onely many inferiour Priests but many high Priests not at one and the same time but successively After Aaron came Eleazar after him Phinees c. for the same cause there be many Kings one King succeedeth another because death will not suffer them to live death forbids them to abide He brings an inhibition against their continuance I command thee here to stay and to goe no further and all Kings Priests Lawyers Physitians must obey him A paucity is a greater argument of perfection then a multitude The kingdome is better governed that hath one King then that which hath many that house is better ruled that hath one Master then many the world is better with one Sun then if there were many the Phaenix is the most famous of all birds because there is but one of them at a time God being but one is farre more glorious then man being many So is it betweene the Priests of the Law and CHRIST they were many but CHRIST is but one which remaineth alwayes therefore his Priest-hood is more excellent than theirs But why were they many because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death As it is here said of the Levites So it may be said of us all A man walking in London streets or in a corporation is on the suddaine arrested by a Sergeant and commanded to stay so as wee are walking in our race in the world comes death as the LORDS Sergeant and bids us stay here yeeld up thy life I will not suffer thee to tarry any longer Adam was the ancientest man that ever was the first that breathed on the earth yet hee was not suffered to endure by reason of death Methusalem was the longest liv'd man that ever was he lived almost a thousand yeeres yet dyed Sampson a mighty strong man with the jaw-bone of an Asse he slew a thousand Philistims he carryed away the great Gates of the Citty on his Shoulders yet he was arrested by death Saul a goodly tall man higher than any of the people Absalom a faire beautifull man not a blemish in him from the Crowne of his head to the soale of his foote Salomon the wisest man that ever was Saint Paul a learned man he spake with tongues more than they all a profound divine taken up into the third heaven a painfull and powerfull Preacher he converted a great part of the world to Christ yet they were not suffered to continue by reason of death This is the condition of us all high and low rich and poore learned and unlearned none of us all can bee suffered to endure long by reason of death Death is a cooling Card in all our mirth and jollity that comes at length with his Axe and cuts all downe Kings are not suffered to endure by reason of death there is a succession of Kings as well as of other men Dukes Earles Lords Knights Gentlemen are not suffered rich Merchants Lawyers Divines Physitians are not suffered to continue by reason of death The Physition that hath saved the life of many in the end surrenders his life into Deaths hands none of us can endure here long by reason of death The Priests of the Law dyed and the Ministers of the Gospell must dye none but CHRIST endures for ever therefore seeing Death will not suffer us long to tarry here let us so live the little and uncertaine time wee have in this world that wee may live eternally with Christ our everlasting Priest and Saviour in the world to come VERSE 24. HEre in the Priest-hood of Christ there is but one Priest and why because hee is not mortall and taken away by Death as they were but immortall and endureth for ever Indeed in respect of his humanity he dyed but hee continued not long in that death not past three dayes and three nights After he rose againe sitteth now at the right hand of God and lives for ever whole Christ both God and man Rom. 6.9 whereas the Priests in the Law shall not live againe for ever in their bodies till the day of judgement And our Saviour Christ in respect of his deity endureth for ever continually and therefore hee hath an everlasting Priest-hood intransibile which passeth not by succession from one to another as the Leviticall Priest-hood did but continueth for ever in the person of one man Chrysost. expounds it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee hath not a succeeding Priest-hood In the time of the Law there were many sacrificing Priests but now in the time of the Gospell there is but one sacrificing Priest and that is our SAVIOUR CHRIST which offered one sacrifice once for the sinnes of the world This cut●eth off the whole rabble of the massemonging Priests Indeed spiritually wee are all Priests Apoc. 1.6 to offer spirituall sacrifices to God but there is no Priest to offer an externall sacrifice for sin but Christ. The Iesuites chafe at us for this collection yet it is firme VERSE 25. THe eternity of Christs Priest-hood is illustrated by an effect that ensueth thereupon As he is willing so he is able Also which necessarily is inferred on the other To save all that belong to him Thence hee hath his name Iesus because he saveth Matth. 1.21 This is amplified 1. By the manner how he saveth us 2. By the description of them whom he saveth 3. By the cause why he is able to doe it For the manner wholly omnino leaving no part of our salvation to be accomplished by others Acts 4. Verse 12. he needs not the helpe of the Virgin Mary of Thomas c. he can save us wholy of himselfe They that are saved are such as come to God by him not by the Virgin by any Saints or Angell in heaven The reason why because he ever liveth to make intercession for us he discharges the office of a Priest for us still in heaven Romans 8.26 it is said that the Holy Ghost maketh intercession for us yet the HOLY GHOST is not our Mediatour hee doth not in our nature pray for us as Christ doth but
Gospell of Christ are now changed they now receive Mahomet for their God and Saviour England which was once rude and barbarous is now become civill and religious The time was when Church-men were the greatest men in this kingdome now the Lawyers carry all away but that naile of the Cart wheele which is now aloft may hereafter be in the dirt Daily experience teacheth us what changes there be in townes and citties A towne that had many wise and grave governours in it hath now scarce any that will looke to the government of the towne A towne which a whyle agoe was wealthy a great number of rich men in it in the turning of an hand becomes poore and beggarlie Men themselves change sometimes they love sometimes hate sometimes they are whole sometimes sicke one while in their thousands as Iob was shortly after scant worth a Groat Here is nothing but changing The Leviticall Priest-hood was changed and there shall be a change of the Ministery of the Gospell too the time shall come when as there shall be no Churches to goe to no Scriptures to read over no Ministers to preach to us and shew us the way to heaven for when wee be in the celestiall Ierusalem what need shal we have of the Ships and Charrets that carry us thither when we be in heaven we shall not need the ladder of the Ministery to climbe up into heaven Nay there shall be a change of the world it selfe the earth whereon wee tread shall bee changed this earth shall be burnt with all the workes thereof the Sunne the Moone the Starres the goodly firmament over our heads shall be changed they all waxe old as doth a garment and as a vesture shalt thou change them yet here is nothing but labouring for these changeable things these reeds feathers weather-cockes these fading flowers are the chiefest things wee seeke after there is moyling and toyling for these men are at daggers drawing for them all our striving and contending is about them as for the favour of God in CHRIST the blessed hope of our election and salvation in the kingdome of heaven few strive for them Peradventure wee wish to bee in heaven as Balaam did but we strive not for it as we ought to doe all that we hunt after is silver and gold houses and lands the trash of this transitory world but we seeke not for that which is unchangeable and lasteth for ever In other things wee cannot away with change we would not willingly take a piece of Cloth which wee know will change the colour We all know that this miserable world will change colour the glory thereof will fade away yet we are most greedy of it Who will buy an house that hee knowes will change and that speedily that stands to day and is ready to fall to morrow Such an house is this world yet there is nothing but beating our braines about it all things in this world are changeable therefore let us love them and use them as if we loved and used them not Let us especially long after that change when Christ shall change our vile bodies and make them like his glorious body where wee shall remaine with him without change for ever and ever VERSE 13. THe law being taken away with the Priest-hood hee comes againe to proove the change of the Priest-hood à pari The Tribe is changed therefore the Priest-hood The Leviticall Priests were all of the Tribe of Levi this is not of that Tribe but of another To whom these things are referred as to their scope and marke Spoken in the Psalme that is the promised Messias for the Iewes themselves confesse that the Psalmist speakes this of him Matth. 22. ver 46. Is partaker of another Tribe As the Levites did None of that Tribe did therefore he could not Did so much as draw neere to the Altar gave themselves to the Altar medled with the Altar Temple or Ceremonies All the Priests in the time of the law were of the Tribe of Levi Our Saviour Christ is a Priest as the Scripture testifieth of him thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedec yet he is not of the Tribe of Levi therefore that Priest-hood is abolished and Christ's Priest-hood is to continue another Priest is risen up that is not of the order of Aaron Christ pertaineth to another tribe whereof none served at the Altar The Altar being a principall part of the Leviticall service is put for the whole All the lawfull Ministers of the Old Testament were of the Tribe of Levi this is an axiome in this place Sundry of the Pharises which were interpreters of the Law were not of the Tribe of Levi. Saint Paul was a Pharisee yet of the tribe of Benjamin notwithstanding our Saviour wills the people to heare them therefore though Ministers are not such sometime as were to be wished yet so long as they preach sound doctrine they are to be heard that by the way What though he appertaine to another Tribe yet he may be a Priest after the order of Aaron nay for none of this tribe served at the Altar Every one in the Common-wealth of Israel might not bee a Priest though the Messiah came of the Tribe of Iudah yet none of that Tribe might serve at the Altar In an armie every one must keepe his station the common Souldier must not bee a Captaine unlesse he be called thereunto a Bow-man must not be a Bill-man unles he be appointed thereunto So is it in a well ordered estate every man must not presume to expound Scripture to Minister the Sacraments to bee a Preacher unlesse hee bee called as Aaron was Vzzah put his hand to the Arke when it was in danger of falling but hee was stricken with sudden death Vzziah being a King presumed to offer incense but he was a Leaper for it all the dayes of his life Then what malepart boldnesse is it for a private man to step up into the Pulpit and to take upon him without warrant to be as GOD's mouth to the people Yet some in a jolly humour have done it whom God hath punished one way or other None of the Tribe of Iudah served at the Altar Let every man abide in that calling wherein God hath set him Let us serve in those places which GOD in wisedome hath allotted to us But though they served not at the Altar yet they served in other functions none of what Tribe so ever of what condition soever must bee idle wee must all serve God in some place or other Some serve as Kings it is a service to be a King The Philosopher calls a King Servum publicum and the Lord himselfe calls David his servant when hee was a King Nebuchadnezar that mightie Monarch was Gods servant Some serve as Counsellours to the King for the good of the common-wealth some serve as Iudges some as Lawyers some as Merchants Clothiers Weavers Husbandmen c. We must all serve
cannot agree with any thing that went before Some say it is an enallage of case the accusative put for the dative Some will have it to agree with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the first Verse and all the rest to bee included within a parenthesis as Iunius but that should be a wonderfull long parenthesis Rather something must be supplyed as it is usuall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of correction Not as if any thing were amisse simply evill in the ceremoniall Law A reformation properly to speake is of abuses there was no fault no abuses in the Law it selfe it was a good and an holy thing for the time but it is said to be reformed by Christ because hee did perfect that which was wanting in the ceremoniall Law hee actually introduced the justification and sanctification of the faithfull which the ceremoniall Law could not effect of and by it selfe And it may be termed the time of reformation because Christ abolished those old Ceremonies and sacrifices and brought better in their roome namely the sacrifice of his owne body once offered which was a thousand times more effectuall for the redemption of mankinde then all the sacrifices in the Law This is that blessed reformation which the Gospell bringeth All things have their time The Ceremoniall Law had her time and the Gospell hath his time Wee our selves have but our time some threescore yeeres and tenne and then we are gone Let us use our time well here that wee may live with Christ time out of time The Gospell is a time of reformation Christ then reformed the Law for our sakes and all things that were in the Old Testament old things are passed away and shall wee our selves remaine unreformed As Christ hath reformed the Law for our salvation so let us suffer him to reforme us Let all things now bee reformed among Christians Let us reforme our drunkennesse uncleannesse pride malice contentions our negligent comming to Sermons and all other vices that be among us that when the great time of reformation comes at the day of judgement we being thus reformed may enter into the holy Hierusalem and remaine with Christ for ever There is a formation a deformation and a reformation The formation was at the first Creation of the world then God put all things into a good forme and order he beheld all that hee had made and loe it was good yea exceeding good after that came a deformation by the fall of man and that put all out of order againe upon that a reformation was made 1. By a generall deluge that purged all the earth 2. By the Patriarcks after the floud 3. By Moses when the Law was published in writing 4. By our Saviour Christ and that is double the one at his first comming the other at the second The spirit of God here entreateth of the first So that the time of the Gospell is the time of reformation Now especially ought Christians to endeavour a reformation Every one will take on him to reforme the Church Weavers and Taylors will enterprize that The Church is out of order let that be reformed I but true reformation must begin at our selves there is a ruinated house to be repaired and reformed where will yee begin at the top or at the bottome will ye goe to the tiling of it before yee look to the ground selling of it if yee doe so you may quickly bring an old house on your heads He that will repaire an house must begin at the foundation so if yee will have a reformation reforme your selves first and in the reformation of your selves begin with the heart cast out the uncleane lusts the pride envy malice covetousnesse that lye lurking in the corners of your hearts afterwards reforme your eyes tongues hands and all the members of your body first wash the inside of the Cup and platter then the outside else yee will be but whited tombes and painted Sepulchers as the Pharisees were this is the best order in reforming First let every man strive to reforme himselfe the vices whereunto himselfe is given In the next place let him reforme his family after that let every one in his place labour to reforme the Towne wherein hee dwells to rid it of drunkards of idle persons to establish good orders in it for the credit of the Gospell professed by us This is the time of reformation let us all in the feare of God reforme our selves there shall not be a haire amisse in our head but we will reforme it if we have a spotted Coate or garment we will reforme it and shall wee our selves remaine unreformed while the time of reformation lasts let us reforme our selves death may seaze on us ere wee bee aware and then it will be too late to reforme Let us reforme our selves here that we may be Citizens of the heavenly Hierusalem hereafter Now followes the application of the type with all the particular branches of the same Wherein all of them are applyed to our Saviour Christ he is the marke at the which they all aimed the scope whereunto all must bee referred hee is the true High Priest prefigured by him in the time of the Law his body is the true Tabernacle by the which he entreth into the Holy of Holies the Sanctuary or holiest of all is heaven his bloud is the true bloud shadowed out by the bloud of all the sacrifices in the time of the Law Thus Christ is the end of the whole ceremoniall Law it was but as a Schoolemaster to send us to him But in this application to observe some order that might bee a light to us all in it two points are propounded to us 1. An application of the Tabernacle à Verse 11. to 21. 2. Of the rites belonging to it à 21. ad finem The Tabernacle is applyed to Christ. 1. As he is a Priest reconciling us to God ab 11. to 15. 2. As he is a testator making a gracious Will and Testament for us à 15. to 21. 1. The dignity of his Priest-Hood 2. A confirmation of it Verse 13. the dignity is set forth by the object Tabernacle Sacrifice In the application of the Tabernacle as he is a Priest there bee three points 1. The verity and truth of the Tabernacle 2. The service of it 3. The use and end of it VERSE 11. BBeing come farre excelling all the High-Priests in the time of the Law To us in the flesh manifesting himselfe to the world hee was an High-Priest in Gods eternall counsell from the beginning but now at his first comming into the world hee shewed himselfe in all his Spirituall pontificalibus to be an High-Priest Of what not of things present and before their eyes as they were Verse 9. but of things to come shadowed out by them Hebr. 10.1 of Iustification Sanctification and eternall Glorification in the life to come of these good things to come were the ceremonies of the Law
come on it what will O the magnanimous spirit of a right heroicall man resurrectio mortuorum fiducia Christianorum It is the principall pillar that Christians have to leane upon if we had hope only in this life of all others wee were most miserable Therefore let our faith bee firmely grounded in the resurrection as was the faith of Abraham the Father of the faithfull We have strong inducements thereunto 1. Is potentia dei idoneus est reficere qui fecit hee that made our bodies of nothing at the beginning can remake them when they are consumed to nothing 2. Is bonitas dei I am the GOD of Abraham of Isaac and Iacob that was spoken after they were dead though they were dead yet he was their God the God not of their soules only but of bodies too Absit ut Deus manuum suarum operam ingenii sui curam afflatus sui vaginam liberalitatis suae haeredem testimonii sui militem Christi sui sororem Spiritus sancti templum in aeternum destituat exitium Bee it farre from God to forsake the worke of his owne hands the care of his owne witt and invention let us make man after our Image the bladder or sheath whereinto he breathed the breath of life they heyre of his liberality the Souldier of his testimony that hath fought for him as well as the soule the sister and member of Christ the Temple of the Holy Ghost Be it farre from God that hee should leave this in eternall destruction As the soule and body have beene consorts in labours in this life so shall they be in rewards in the life to come 3. Exempla resurgentium the examples of them that have risen from the dead in the Old and New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo which was the daughter of Iairus the other in feretro on the beere the widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro in the grave which was Lazarus when he began to stincke These are praeludia nostrae resurrectionis forerunners or pledges of our resurrection 4. Dulcis titulus mortis a sweete description of death It is but a sleepe I would not have you ignorant concerning them that are fallen asleepe Those that sleepe in IESUS will GOD bring with him LORD said they of Lazarus if hee sleepe hee shall doe well enough The dead are but asleepe they shall doe well enough Philip slept securely while Antipater was awake and the dead sleepe safely while God is awake the keeper of Israel that neither slumbers nor sleepes Therefore let us be firmely perswaded of the Resurrection as Abraham was hee believed that God was able to rayse up Isaac from the dead and let us believe that GOD can rayse us all from the dead Abraham was a good considerer At the first when God promised Isaac he considered not his owne body that was dead Now when he is to loose Isaac he considers that God was able to raise him up O heavenly consideration in all extremities let us consider the power of God as Abraham did Art thou grievously sicke yea even to death is there but a step betweene thee and death yet consider that God if it be his pleasure can set thee on thy legges againe Art thou fallen to poverty of a mighty rich man art thou become an exceeding poore man as Iob was yet consider that God is able to raise thee up againe Is thy Sonne or thy daughter dead is thy Wife or thy Husband dead is thy friend dead that was as thine owne soule Weepe not over much consider that God is able to raise them up from the dead they bee not amissi but praemissi they are gone into heaven before and we shall follow after Doest thou thy selfe dye is thy body layd in the grave doth it there putrifie to dust and ashes yet consider that God is able to raise thee up againe Say with that holy man I am sure my Redeemer liveth The consideration of Gods power must comfort us in all calamities We have had the Tragedy now to the Comedy Hereupon followed a joyfull event he did not receive him in a parable but truly and indeed he received him from the dead that is from the state of the dead in a parable he was not deceived in his expectation In a parable that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a figure sayes Chrysostome in a darke and obscure figure or as hee unfolds it more plainely afterwards 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an example in similitudine quadam as Henry Stephen expounds it quodam modo as Beza after a sort as it was in the translation before this In a parable in a similitude for all parables are similitudes Neerenesse to death is a lively type and figure of death whereupon it hath the name of death 2 Cor. 1.10 blessed be God that hath delivered us from so great a death Yet Saint Paul did not dye then So the neerenesse of death wherein Isaac was was a similitude of Death the Altar was built the wood laid on the Altar Isaac bound on the wood the fire was ready the knife was comming to his throat to kill him Therfore Abraham received him from the dead in a similitude Old Father Iacob received his Sonne Ioseph as it were from the dead he verily thought he had been torne in pieces by wild beasts yet at that time he was alive and ruler of the land of Aegypt Hezekiah received his life in a similitude from the dead for sentence of death was pronounced against him by Gods own mouth The Iewes in the provinces of Ahasuerus received their lives in a similitude from the dead The Kings letters were sent by Posts into all quarters to roote them out kill and destroy them all even Men Women and Children in one day S. Paul and all that were in the Ship with him received their lives in a similitude from the dead For all hope that they should bee saved was taken away Act. 27.20 The King and Queene and Prince that then was the Lords spirituall and temporall the Gentlemen of the lower house in them wee Protestants in England received our lives in a similitude from the dead at the powder treason Thirty seven barrels of Gunpowder were cunningly couched under the vault of the Parliament house Vaux the same morning had his match in his hand to set them on fire we were in the mouth of death in a manner as neere as Isaac but by Gods miraculous providence through the quicke apprehension of the wise and learned King wee were delivered as Isaac was which deliverance requires hearty thankesgiving to God Gods tryalls begin with a tragedy and end with a Comedy The Psalmist sayes of the faithfull Psal. 126. ult they went out weeping and carryed precious seed but they shall returne with joy and bring their sheaves with them So Abraham poore desolate Father went out weeping with his precious Sonne Isaac to be offered up but hee returnes
hearts bee on a better world that in the end wee may depart in peace with Simeon and reigne with CHRIST for ever in the world to come Ioseph had beene a brave Courtyer trained up and bearing sway in Pharaohs Court many yeeres together abounding in all wealth honour pleasure and prosperity yet all this while hee forgets not God he lived well and dyed well he is heavenly minded at his departure out of the world he is not now talking of his honours as Haman was the day before he dyed not talking of the injuries which his Mistris offered to him in casting him into prison and taking order for the revenge of it he is not now conferring with his brethren about the solemnizing of his funerall with what pomp they should carry him to the grave but now he is talking of matters belonging to the kingdome of heaven Though we live in never so prophane a place as irreligious as Aegypt as full of carnall entisements as Pharaohs Court yet let us keepe our integrity as Ioseph did let not the pleasures of the earth pull us from the joyes of heaven Obadiah kept his zeale and sincerity in Achabs Court Daniel in Nebuchadnezars Palace Nehemiah in the Kings buttery and at his table and there were rare and excellent Christians in Neroes house most of all they of Caesars house-hold they were more mindfull of the poore Saints of Philippi then others Let us not condemne them that be in heathenish and irreligious places GOD can preserve his pearles even in dunghills his roses among thornes hee will have a Rahab in Iericho a Lot in Sodom a Ioseph in Aegypt wheresoever wee bee let us keepe our selves unpolluted of the world 2. Here we are taught what must be the object of our talke of what matters we must be talking when death approacheth not of worldly matters but of heavenly as Ioseph was Elias was talking with Elisha about profitable matters when he was taken from him into heaven as they were walking and talking the fiery Charriot tooke him away Our Saviour was talking with his Disciples about matters belonging to the kingdome of GOD till the cloud tooke him away and Ioseph here dying is speaking not of those things appertaining to the earthly Court but to the Court of heaven Navita de ventis de tauris narrat arator every man for the most part both in his life time and in the time of death is speaking of those things which hee most mindeth the things that be most in the heart are most in the tongue A covetous miser is talking of his gold and silver houses and lands of the trash of the world even when he lyes on his death bed A drunkard will then bee talking of drinke an adulterer of fayre and beautifull women but a godly man will be talking of Gods matters as Ioseph was It is very like that Ioseph ere this time had made his will and set his outward estate at a stay therefore that doth not trouble him now his minde runs about better matters it is not good to deferre the making of our wills till we see no other way but death the last thing we talke of should be celestiall not terrestriall things 3. Wee must not bee too scrupulous about the place of our buryall Now no land is a type of heaven as the land of Canaan was before the comming of CHRIST Out of any Country on the earth yea out of the bottome of the Sea out of the Lions mouthes out of the fire wherein we are burnt to ashes for the name of Christ we shall have a comfortable passage into the kingdome of heaven yea our buryall with the wicked shall not prejudice our entrance into heaven Saint Peter sitting at the same table with Iudas when he was alive was not hurt by him much lesse should he have beene hindred out of heaven if hee had lien in the same grave with Iudas Though wee bee buryed among Thieves Traytors Idolaters Drunkards Murderers Adulterers c. If our lives have beene good that cannot keepe us out of heaven Yet if conveniently it may be superstition being avoyded as we lived with the godly so let us be buryed with them as we were companions with them in their life so let us be in death if it seeme good to the prouidence of God Ruth sayes to Naomi where thou art buryed I will be buryed and Ioseph would have his bones to lye with the bones of Abraham Isaac and Iacob So wee shall give notice to the world how deere the Saints were to us when they were alive Yet let not the place of our buryall trouble us at our dying day as some take too much thought for that wheresoever wee be buryed God will send his Angels at the latter day to gather our bodies from all the ends of the world and to carry them up into heaven Hee gave no commandement touching his flesh he knew that would be consumed before Then why should we pamper this flesh so much that is so soone brought to dust and ashes caro mea inimica mea onus meum laqueus meus paramus escam vermibus Let us subdue our bodies lest like horses they overthrow their Riders His bones were durable therefore hee gives a charge of them If hee had not looked for the Resurrection of those bones hee would not have beene so carefull for the translating of them into the land of Canaan Psal. 34.20 Ezek. 37.1 The bones of a dead man are scattered hither and thither tumbled out of one grave into another yet these shall rise and come to their place againe Bucers bones were burnt in Queene Maries dayes yet the same bones shall rise againe and be a witnesse against the enemies of the truth Not our bones alone but our flesh every part and member of our bodies shall be restored to us againe with these my eyes shall I see him the very palmes of Iezebels hands that were eaten up with dogges shall rise againe Let us not sing the Epicures song let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall dye Let us not give our selves wholly to pampering of our flesh and the fatting of our bones but let us employ all our members to GODS service in this life that we may be partakers in soule and body of his eternall glory in the life to come VERSE 23. BEfore of the Patriarcks now of the Lawgiver Where wee have 1. The commendation of his Parents faith 2. The commendation of his owne faith The faith of his Parents is commended by a worthy act of theirs the preservation of their Child which is amplified 1. By an attractive cause that drew them to it the beauty of the Child 2. By a retractive or disswasive cause that might have withdrawne them from it 1. The Kings commandement which in an heroicall magnanimity they feared not Moses Exod. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catachresticè he useth this word because his