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A55917 A commentary upon the divine Revelation of the apostle and evangelist, Iohn by David Pareus ... ; and specially some things upon the 20th chapter are observed by the same authour against the Millenaries ; translated out of the Latine into English, by Elias Arnold. Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Arnold, Elias. 1644 (1644) Wing P353; ESTC R14470 926,291 661

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of Gods providence namely his vertue charity justice wisdom patience threatnings and wrath Which is a mysterie bringing along with it an inconvenience which he desireth to avoid for he makes question whither sound divinitie wil admit that grace and peace be asked from the seven vertues rather then from the seven created angels yea how grace and peace can be prayed for from menacings and wrath so he And from Jesus Christ In that he wisheth grace and peace from Christ in the the third and last place is neither against the former exposition nor any way derogateth from the dignity of Christ for as the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 doth not derogate from the order of the persons in the trinitie though he put Christ in the first place so here our Apostle for waighty causes sets downe the holy Ghost before Christ because he treateth of him not simply as being the son of God but also as he is the mediatour redeemer and revealer of this prophesie Notwithstanding great reason it is that he should pray for grace and peace from Christ Ephes 2.14 because it cometh by him Iohn 1.17 and he is our peace Who is the faithfull witnesse The following titles are so many reasons wherefore grace and peace is prayed for from Christ and they set forth as hath been shewed in the analysis both his threefold office with the benefit thereof as also declare his eternall Godhead The first title respects his propheticall office that faithfull witnesse which seemeth to be taken from Psal 89.38 witnesse because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of his father the testimonie that is the glad tydings of the redemption of man through his death and from heaven hath opened to us the true knowledge of God and way of salvation faithfull Because he not onely confirmed the heavenly truth by preaching by miracles meekly calling of sinners to repentance to the faith of the Gospel but also sealed the same by suffering on the crosse and by instituting the ministry he gave to the churches Apostles prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers who perpetually should be his witnesses Eph. 4.12 preach the Gospell to after ages for the perfecting of the saincts for the edifying of the body of Christ according to these scriptures Ioh. 17 6. I have manifested thy name to the men thou gavest me out of the world and 18 37. For this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnes unto the truth Io. 1.18 the son which is in the bosome of the father he hath revealed God unto us Who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession The father and holy Ghost are also said to be witnesses 1. Io. 5.7 Ioh. 5.37 there are three that bear record in heaven the father the word and the holy Ghost The father saith Christ himself hath borne witnes of me And of the holy Ghost he saith when the comforter is come c. He shall testifie of mee the Apostles are called witnesses Act. 1.18 And Antipas Rev 2.12 and two witnesses are mentioned called Martyrs for sheadding of their blood for the testimonie of Christ Revel 11.3 But Christ onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of prerogative is called that faithfull witnesse because he first brought with him the witnesse of the truth downe from heaven he first and he onely hath shead his blood for his owne testimonie whereas all other martyrs suffered not for their owne but for the testimonie of Jesus Christ Yea also the witnesse which the father and the holy Ghost gave of him was declared by himself and therefore Christ as by a speciall and proper right is called the faithfull witnes that is the true and constant revealer of the doctrine of our salvation whoever therefore hearkens not to him Deuteron 18.19 can not be saved but who so heareth him shall have life eternall This also confirmeth the authoritie of the revelation because it was revealed to John by Jesus Christ that faithfull witnesse who can notly nor deceive therefore this booke is trulie divine and we may safely trust and beleeve all things contained in it It serveth also to instruct us that if Christ onely be the true witnesse then those are not to be heard but avoyded as Liars which teach the Church such things as dissent from the testimonie of Christ It may also comfort us because Christ the faithfull witnesse will not forsake them who suffer for the cause of his truth but will at length reward them faithfully according to his promise The first begotten of the dead This title concernes Christ his priestly office who died for our sins and was raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 For the word dead shewes that he died and being the first begotten of the dead it teacheth us that he was raysed from the dead And the whole scripture testifies that the end and use of his death and resurrection was not a bare witnesse as Socinus blasphemeth but chiefly a propitiation to purge us from our sins and to justifie us before God Paul calleth him likewise the first begotten of the dead 1 Collo 1.18 1 Corinth 15.20 and sheweth that Christ is become the first fruits of them that sleep But how can Christ be the first fruits of the dead seeing the scriptures testifie that Elias and Elisha raysed up two persons from the dead before the time of Christs manifestation in the flesh Lazarus also with the widows son and Centurions servant were restored from death to life Answer First Christ is the first begotten or first fruites of the dead because he was the first that raysed up himself from the dead by his owne power whereas all before Christ were raysed not by their owne power but Christs alone Secondly Christ was raysed up to an immortall life not to dy any more but the other to an earthly life and became subject to death again He is said to be the first begotten or the first that did rise again Matt. 19.28 Act. 13.13 Rom. 1 4. because the resurrection is a kinde of new birth and so Christ calleth the last resurrection a regeneration And Paul applieth that in Psal 2. of the father eternally begetting the son to his resurrection from the dead and hence he is declared to be the eternall and omnipotent son of God This should greatly comfort us that though we are borne and brought forth in a corruptible condition yet when we rise again we shall be regenerated unto a state incorruptible even while we are in this life we are regenerated but it is spiritually onely and in part but when we shall by the spirit of God be restored to eternall life then we shall be regenerated both corporally and fully to wit when our mortall bodies shall be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ let us not fear therefore though we should suffer death for the testimony of Christ because he who is the first begotten of the dead
the same shall be saved Mat. 24.13 And I will give thee He propoundeth the reward for their greater incouragement unto constancie Souldiers will fight unto the death for a corruptible crowne much more ought we to doe the like for an heavenly crowne which fadeth not away The crown of life here as also in Jam. 1.12 2. Timot. 4.8 1. Pet. 4.5 noteth eternal life and happines It is otherwhere called the crown of justice the crown of glorie by a metaphor taken from runners in a race where there is a crown proposed as a reward to the conquerours Hence let us observe in the first place that the crowne of life is promised onely to such as are faythfull to the death 2. That one the same crowne is promised to all that are faythful no mention being made of any diversitie of reward 3. That the crown is promised not of desert but of grace as a reward freely bestowed on them that are constant in the faith 4. That Christ is the giver therof Which is the fourteenth argument proving his Godhead XIV Argu. of Chr. deity Io. 10.28 For God alone gives eternall life Now Christ saith I give unto my sheep eternall life therfore Christ is God 11. He which hath an eare The acclamatorie conclusion is again repeated He that overcommeth shall not be hurt of the second death The sence is one with the former promises though different in words What is meant by the second death is explained chap. 20.14 Death and hell were cast into the lake of fire this is the second death 21.8 Murtherers c. shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Which is the second death The first death is a separation of the soule from God through sin and was the cause of corporall death Hebr. 9.27 which is common to all as the Apostle speaketh It is appointed unto all men once to dy but after this the Jugement The second death is the casting of soule body into the lake of everlasting fire wherein the wicked onely shall be tormented for to the godly Christ hath promised deliverance for he that overcommeth shall not be hurt c. Some take the first death to b●●neant of the dissolution of the soule from the body and then the meaning is thus he that continues faithful unto the first death needs not to fear the second for he shall not be hurt therewith but enioy eternall filicity but of this more hereafter This great and gracious promise should stir us up with courage to persevere in the fight untill we overcom for then we shall be free from the second death and be partakers of life eternall through Christ Jesus our Lord to whome be glorie for ever and ever Amen The third Epistle to the Bishop of the Church of Pergamus 12. And to the Angel of the Church in Pergamus write These things saith he which hath the sharp sword with two edges 13. I know thy workes and where thou dwellest even where Satans seat is and thou houldest fast my Name and hast not denyed my faith even in those days wherein Antipas was my faithful martyr who was slain among you where Satan dwelleth 14. But I have a few things against thee because thou hast there them that hold the doctrin of Balaam who taught Balac to cast a stombling block before the children of Israel to eat things sacrificed unto Idols and to commit fornication 15 So hast thou also them that hold the doctrine of the Nicolaitans which thing I hate 16 Repent or else I will come unto thee quickly and will fight against them with the sword of my mouth 17. He that hath eare let him heare what the spirit saith unto the Churches To him that overcommeth will I give to eate of the hidden Manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it THE COMMENTARIE TO the Angel in Pergamus The third Epistle to the Pastor of Pergamus or Troy containes two things first they are commended for their constancie in the faith Secondlie reproved for maintaining amongst them the inpure Balaamites and Nicolaitans by threatning are exhorted to amendment of life It consisteth of an inscription narration and conclusion The inscription describeth Christ by an Epithite taken from chap. 1.16 that he hath viz. in his mouth the sharpe-sword with two edges The reason of this attribute appeares from vers 16. where he threatneth to destroye the sinners of the Church of Pergamus with the sword of his mouth that is by the power of his divine word For this sword is the word of God sharper then any two edged sword piercing and dividing asunder of soule and spirit c. Heb. 4.12 Here we have the fifteenth argument of Christs Godhead XV Argu. of Chr. deity For the word of God doth properly proceed out of his mouth and therefore he is God Because the word of God proceedeth from Christ not as the word of another or as it was in the mouth of the Apostles Prophets and other teachers but in speciall as his owne hence he saith v. 16. I will fight with them with the sword of my mouth 13. I know thy workes and where thou dwellest In the narration are three things he commendeth what is prayse-worthy reproveth what is amisse and lasty exhorteth them unto repentance First he saith in Generall that he knew their workes to the end they might take notice that they had to doe with him who trieth and searcheth the hearts and reynes of which se v. 2.2 In particular he commends their constancie in the faith which with courage they maintained and confidently trusting on Christ overcame all such tentations as might any way occasion them to forsake him The prayse whereof is amplified from the danger of their abode I know where thou dwellest namely in a most vicious and wicked city being ful of cruel enemies both Iewes and Gentiles and where Christians like sheep are continually exposed to the danger of devouring wolves Now to live Godly in such a place and constantlie to cleave unto the profession of Christs name is a verie hard thing though it be not so where the condition of the place affords us freedom and libertie the which benefit God of his exceeding mercie hath hitherto granted unto us Where Satans seat is A further amplifying of their constancie is taken from the infamie of the place Pergamus is the throne of the Divel Who in Hebr. is called Satan that is an adversarie so that this citie was full of naughtie and vile persons haters of Christ and his members among whom Satan raigned both in the pallace for it was the abode of king Attalus and in their senate temples forcibly drawing the magistrates and cityzens to horrible Idolatrie and to commit all manner of outrage and wickednes against the Christians Nevertheles Christ had a Church in this evill citie And could
not corporall Therefore it is spirituall The assumption is proved If this Resurrection should be corporall then it could not be called the First because many Corporall Resurrections are spoken of in Scripture before I. The Resurrection of the Son of the Widow of Sarepta corporally raised up by Elias 1. King 17.22 which is the first resurrection mentioned in Scripture II. The Resurrection of the son of the Shunammite raised up by Elisha 2. King 4.35 III. The Resurrection of one put into the grave by touching the bones of Elisha 2. King 13.21 IIII. The Resurrection of a Widows son raised by Christ Luk. 7.15 V. Of the daughter of Jairus Luk. 8.55 VI. Of Lazarus Iohn 11.44 VII The Resurrection of many of those Saints who came forth out of the Sepulchre when Christ suffered on the Crosse Mat. 27.52 VIII The Resurrection of Tabitha raised by Peter Act. 9.41 IX The Resurrection of Eutychus brought from death to life by Paul Act. 20.10 c. And therfore if the Resurrection here spoken of were corporall it should not be called the first but at least the tenth Neither helps it to object that the foresaid Resurrections were onely of a few but that this shall be of very many for the Question is not touching the number of them that are to be raised up but of the Qualitie and Order of the Resurrection and it followeth seeing that is not the first of the same Genus which hath many other before it either that this cannot be called the First Resurrection before which there were many other or else that it is not of the same kind with the other Resurrections that is it is not corporall Secondly This Resurrection being taken corporally and properly must be understood either of the Soules of the Martyrs or of the rest of the dead or of none Of the soules of the Martyrs it cannot be understood both because it is not said of them that they were raised or lived againe But that they sate on thrones lived and reigned with Christ as before was shewed As also because properly a corporall Resurrection is not agreeable to Soules seeing Soules properly die not as not being bodies neither of the nature thereof nor can it be understood of the rest of the dead because of these it is expresly said that they lived not againe Therefore this first corporall Resurrection cannot be true of any at all Thirdly The whole Scripture testifies that ALL I say ALL the dead shall in one Resurrection at the last day be raised by the Trumpet and Voyce of the Archangell some indeed unto eternall Life others unto eternall shame Iohn 5.28 The houre commeth in which ALL that are in the Graves shall hear his voyce and shall come forth they that have done good unto the Resurrection of Life and they that have done evill unto the Resurrection of damnation Iohn 11.24 I know that my brother shall rise againe in the Resurrection at the last day Iohn 6.48 This is the will of him that sent mee that every one that seeth the Sonne and beleeveth in him should have Eternall Life And I will raise him up at the last day From this universall the Martyrs cannot be excepted because they beleeved on the Sonne of God 1. Cor. 15.52 We shall all be changed in a moment in the twinkling of an eye at the last Trumpe for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall bee raised 1. Thess 4.16 At the comming of the Lord they that dyed in Christ shall rise first Therefore the Martyrs also who dyed in Christ shall rise at the comming of the Lord. Iohn also toward the end of this very Chapter describeth the Second Resurrection which shall bee at the last day so universall as that all the Elements shall give up their dead a great part whereof shall bee Martyrs being destroyed by Fire and Water By all which I suppose that no Godly man can or ought to gather any other thing then that all the dead shall be raised together in one Resurrection at the last day but that many millions of Saints should be raised before the last day cannot without errour be beleeved Fourthly the Apostle Paul most exactly describing the whole History and what we ought to beleeve of the Resurrection opens indeed a Mysterie unto us 1. Cor. 15.51 viz. That all shall not die but in a moment in the twinkling of an eye all shal be changed Yet not a word touching the mysterie of the Millinarie Resurrection of the Martyrs before others If thou say that it was not revealed unto him Consider that the Apostle was caught up into the third heaven 2. Cor. 12.4 and heard unspeakable words that is all kind of mysteries especially such as were to bee revealed unto the Church And therefore undoubtedly hee should have heard that also for to reveale the same unto us and would have revealed it if it were true Fiftly from the nature of Opposites So as is the first death so on the contrary is the first Resurrection to be understood For I suppose none will deny but that these two are privatively opposites as being contrary-wise affected about the same subject But the first death was not of the body or corporall The first death what it is but the death of the Soule or Spirituall through fin by which man was first separated from God made mortall and deprived of Life Eternall For by this death Adam was dead in Soule although in the body he lived nine hundred yeeres after But the death of the Soule drew with it corporall death as it were by a necessary consequence and so perpetually drawes the same with it on all the Posterity of Adam by the threatning of God Thou shalt die the death Of this first Spirituall death the Apostle speaketh Through sinne death entred into the world Rom. 5.12 and so death passed upon all men for all have sinned including indeed the Sequell of a corporall death but especially shewing the deliverance from spirituall death through the death and life of Christ Of this death also Austine The soules also saith he have their death in impietie and sinnes according to which death they are dead of whom the Lord saith Let the dead bury their dead and according to this first Death wee are all dead in sinnes no man excepted because it is said of all men when ye were dead in sinnes c. Seeing therefore the First Death was a Spirituall destruction and alienation of the Soule from God and eternall Life through sinne certainely the first Resurrection being an opposite medicine to the first death must bee a Spirituall conversion and restoring of the Soule from sin to God Sixtly If the First Resurrection were corporall and properly belonging to the Martyrs then onely the Martyrs should bee blessed but all others that rise at the last Day should be excluded from happinesse But this is very absurd And therefore the other also The reason of the consequence is because in
death He addes three causes or parts of their blessednesse that have part in the first Resurrection 1. Because the second death hath no power on them 2. Because they shall be Priests of God and Christ 3. Because they shall reigne with Christ a thousand yeers These are either the effects or consequents of the first Resurrection and as it were the priviledges of the regenerate first indeed they are to be referred to the Martyrs but secondly also unto all others that are partakers of the first Resurrection or spirituall living againe For least we should say shall the Martyrs alone live and reigne with Christ in blessednesse he extends the blessed life the Priesthood and Kingdome of Christ unto us also pronouncing us blessed and that indeed by a three-fold name not the Martyrs I say alone but whosoever have part in the first Resurrection that by so many spurs as it were he might stirre up all men unto the desire and studie of the First Resurrection Therefore the first blessednesse of them that live againe shall be an immunitie or security from the second death for they that have part in the First Resurrection on such the second death hath no power that is they can never perish For the second death is the casting of the wicked both in soule and body into hell fire which shall be at the last day as appeares ver 14. Of which our Saviour in the the Gospell Mat. 10.28 Feare him that can destroy both soule and body in hell This otherwhere is called Eternall death because it shall be an eternall losse of life eternall and an everlasting torment in everlasting fire Here it is called the Second to difference it from the First because as the second doth next and certainly follow the first so the second death shall follow the first in order and certainly unlesse the First Resurrection come in between and that deliverance from the First death be obtained by Christ Now before we shewed that the first death is a spirituall perdition of the Soule in sinne drawing with it temporall death as its necessary sequell Rom. 5.12 This death entred into the world through sin and passed upon all men for that all have sinned Therefore it hath power over all men and it is universall yet mutable through the First Resurrection that is true repentance and faith in Christ But the second death shall not have power over all but them only whom it findes lying in the First death for these shall be throwne head-long from death into death or rather the Second death shall be unto them an everlasting continuation of the First death and a horrible increasing in eternall fire But such as through faith and true repentance have risen with Christ from the First death on them the second death shall have no power because according to promise of the Gospell Ioh. 3.36 Ioh. 5.24 they that beleeve on the Sonne of God do not come into condemnation but are passed from death to life Therefore the second death shall not be universall because the First resurrection shall make the particularitie yet it shall be immutable for ever because there can be no redemption from hell but the smoake of their torment shall ascend up for ever and ever Psal 49.8 Rev. 14.11 Cont Demetr For after the departure out of this life there shall be no more place of repentance no effect of satisfaction Here life is either lost or kept saith Cyprian These things ought to awaken and raise up such as lie in the death of sinne And on the contrarie to confirme the assurance of their salvation that are risen with Christ For if the second death hath no power over them that have part in the First resurrection then certainly they need not fear condemnation but may and ought to be certainlie perswaded of their salvation But some may say It is uncertaine who truely have and alwayes unto the end shall have part in the First Resurrection Answ If it be uncertain to thee who hast not tasted hony whether it be sweet or not it is not therefore uncertaine to them who have tasted the same So likewise If the First Resurrection be uncertaine to them which neither have nor know the same it is not therefore uncertaine to them which have it and feele it in their hearts for some apprehend not faith in their hearts Lib. 13. de Trin. C. 2. but others do which have the same saith Austin And how should such be uncertaine of their new birth who dayly endeavour and desire to die unto sin and to live unto Christ They certainely who run on in all wickednesse and as Peter saith walke in laciviousnesse lusts excesse of wine revellings banquettings and abominable Idolatry know that they doe such things yet out of an evill conscience commit the same with great delight And therefore why should not such who by an earnest desire of minde resist the concupiscence of the flesh and labour by good workes to make their election sure know feele and be perswaded the Holy Ghost witnessing the same to their Spirits that they are children of God and have part in the first Resurrection Furthermore they which now have part in the First Resurrection shall allwayes have part of the same unto the end because To him that hath shall bee given Luke 8.18 Otherwise Iohn should have done ill in saying that they are blessed who have part in the first Resurrection which to thinke were blasphemy from the part therefore of the new birth which we have in this life we may and ought certainly to beleeve we shall have part in the life to come that is be eternally blessed Here again by this first priviledge of them that rise againe is ouerthrowne the Chiliasts opinion touching the first Corporall Resurrection as before wee touched For if it should be Corporall and proper to the Martyrs it would follow that the Martyrs alone should bee free from the second death and that all the rest in the Second Resurrection should remaine subject to the same for as much as by this priviledge they alone are exempted from the power of the Second death who have part in the First Resurrection But this is wholly contrary to Faith and Charity But shall be Priests of God and of Christ The second part of blessednesse and the second priviledge of the regenerate is that they shal be Priests of God and Christ XLI Argument of Christs deity Beza in the DATIVE To God and to Christ as it is Chap. 1.6 5.10 in the same sense He distinguisheth God and Christ not to seperate Christ from God or to deny that he is God but because Christ the Mediatour hath made us Priests to God the father Chap. 16. 5.10 Yea hereby he plainely affirmeth Christ to be God in that hee saith wee shall bee Priests both to God and to Christ Now we shall be Priests to none but to God But what manner of Priests Of this
and witnesse of the Conscience Rom. 2 5. which shal suggest to every one the exact memory of his Actions whether good or bad the sentence pronounced shall be most just according to the same and Gods judgements shall bee righteous for the Holy Scriptures containe a most exact written rule of righteousnes unto which most righteously all are obliged and whosoever hath conformed himselfe unto the same shall most righteously be acquitted whosoever hath swarved from it Orat. in Plag gran shall most righteously in the day of Iudgemen bee condemned The Booke also of every mans conscience is of such exact righteousnes as it deceives no man doth injury to no man for the conscience saith NAZIANZENVS is a domesticke and true Tribunall And the Poet siath well Prima haec est ultio Iuven Sat 13. quodse Iudice nemo nocens absolvitur improba quamvis Gracia fallacis prae oris vicerit urnam This vengeance takes if judge it bee None that are guilty quitt doth hee Though that the Praetor through falle Grace Sometimes puts wicked men in place How much more therefore shall the conscience in the day of Iudgement bee a righteous rule to judge by The holy Scriptures are the rule of truth righteousnesse By the way observe If God will then judge according to the written word how much more doth he require that faith and our works be now done according to the said rule of Holy Writ According to their workes Good or evill This shall be the other infallible rule of righteousnesse for it is a righteous thing with God to render rewards to the righteous and tribulation to the wicked Every one therfore shall righteously receive either good or evill according to what he hath done It is observeable that here and every where in Scripture it is said Iudgement shall be according to workes we shall be judged 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to workes never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for our workes no man therefore shall be saved for good workes notwithstanding the wicked shall be damned for their evill workes because there is a different reason between good and evill workes Evill workes are the wages of or merit death Eze. 184. Rom 1.28 Good works merit not life eternal for the Soule that sinneth shall dye And It is the judgement of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Good workes merit not life because all are due to God the Creator and Redeemer But no debt comes under the notion of merit I passe by that the best workes of the Saints are imperfectly good polluted with many blemishes so that if God did judge them to his severity they would be found to be nothing but unrighteousnesses as the Church of old confesseth Isa 6.46 We are all as an uncleane thing and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags Therefore we pray forgive us our trespasses Wherefore least Hypocrites should be bold to inferre if the wicked shall be condemned for evill workes therefore the Iust are saved for good workes The Holy Ghost would have it no where written that the judgement shal be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for workes which might signifie the meritorious cause but alwayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to workes which signifies the condition But why not according to Faith or infidelity Why the Iudgement shal not bee according to faith infidelitie because Faith and infidelity are hid to the eyes of men But workes whither good or evill flowing from the same shall be conspicuous and open unto all Therefore in that open judgement Christ the Iudge shall alledge the cleare rule of righteousnesse that it may appeare unto all that the wicked are justly condemned having done evill and the Godly righteously acquitted who have done good this is a great encouragement to good workes that we follow after them and touching evill workes that we should shun them because according to them we shall all be judged 13. And the Sea gave up her dead AVGVSTINE by the Sea doth not unproperly understand the world Lib. 20. de C. D. c. 15 which like to the tempestuous Sea is alwayes tossed with waves By the dead is meant wicked men dead in sinnes as is the greater part in the world or all men having mortall bodies Notwithstanding I thinke it is more proper to the sense to understand it of such as perished or were drowned in the Sea or Rivers or whose burnt bodies and ashes were cast into the same in times of persecution For humane reason judgeth it very absurd that the bodies of such as have been devoured by the fishes of the Sea or torne by wild Beasts and eaten by wormes on land should be restored John therefore saw what shall come to passe when all the Elements through the power of God shall render up the consumed Carkeises The Sea shall vomit up as it were out of a Sepulchre the dead she swallowed up The same Death and Hell shall doe that is the Earth which hath received in Sepulchres all the bodies of the dead as it were in her lap or bosome and opening her mouth hath swallowed downe some alive also By death here AVSTIN understandeth the dead bodies of the Godly which the Earth shall render up By hell the damned soules of the wicked which thence shall be brought forth to Iudgement Ribera extends it unto the bodies of such as Hell swallowed downe alive as Corah Dathan and Abiram The summe is by what kind of death soever they perished in this life whatever became of their soules after death all are seen by John as brought forth to Iudgement The Soules therefore of the Saints shall return from Heaven with Christ the Iudge the wicked shall be called forth out of Hell to Iudgement All mens bodies shal be raised up to life and being restored to their own soules shall stand before Christ to be judged 14. And death and hell In a few words hee toucheth the execution of the sentence pronounced against the ungodly The state of the Godly he more largely Treats of in the following Chapters First he sees hell and death to bee cast into the Lake of fire and soone after all that were not found written in the Booke of Life that is reprobates in which again is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or inversion for first the wicked shal bee cast into torments Afterward the last enemies viz. death and hell by which names AVGVSTINE thinks here is signified the devill himselfe as being the Author of death and hellish punishments and the whole company of devils which very thing he had said before by an Anticipation And the devill was cast into the Lake c. So death should be put for the devill causing death 1. Cor. 15.54 1. Cor. 15.26 Hell for the devill drawing men to Hell As by a like metonymia it is said Death is swallowed up in victory And The last enemie that shall be destroyed is
hands even so doth Christ lift up Iohn who was sore amazed first by laying his hand upon him and afterward speaking comfortably unto him Hee toucheth Iohn with the same right hand in which hee held the seven starres For by his divine power and love which never faileth hee upholdeth all the Churches with their teachers and every one of the faithfull Fear not I am the first and the last Hee biddeth him not to fear because feare disturbeth the minde unfits men for instruction and therefore the admonition at this time was very seasonable And that he might comfort Iohn the more and lift him up hee expoundeth in order unto him the whole vision First who he is Secondly what he would have him to do And thirdly unfolds the mystery of the starres candlesticks He sheweth him who hee is to the end he might know that he saw no fancie or spirit but Iesus Christ his redeemer He again calleth himself the first and the last that is God eternal as in vers 8 11 which is a seventh argument of Christs divinity Isay 41 40 44.6 48 12. as wee have already expounded For that which the prophet ascribeth to God alone Christ in this chapter three times assumeth unto himself But some heretikes object that Christ is called first as being the first of the Church under the new Testament But I answer that all the adjuncts disproove this glosse For Christ doth absolutely call himself the first and the last by which very words the prophets declare the eternity of Iehovah God Yea Christ saith that hee was not onely before the Church of the new Testament but also before Abraham Ioh. 8 58. 18. I am hee that liveth and was dead These words do clearly manifest that neither man nor Angel but Christ alone is represented here in this vision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the living or he that liveth Christ taketh unto himself not onely the glorious life of his humanity Ioh 5.26 but the essential also of his divinity of which hee speaketh in the Gospel as the father hath life in himself so hath he given to the son to have life in himself For chiefly he calleth himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him that liveth because even then whe he was dead he lived Therefore he saith not I did live and afterwarddy for then there would not have been any thing remarkeable in such an expression for no man can bee said to be dead who formerly hath not been alive but hee saith J living and was dead that is both together for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was is but once in the text is referred to both words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 living and dead In which great and admirable expression he doth openly declare his twofold nature affirming that he lived 1 Pet. 3 18. as he was God was dead as he was man at one time According to that of Peter Christ was mortifyed in the flesh but vivifyed in the spirit that is both dead in the flesh and alive in the spirit together And this is the true meaning of that place which is the same with that common tenet that Christ being dead in the flesh raysed up himself by the power of his divinity This is also confirmed by the following words Behold I am alive for evermore Hee saith not and I lived again but behold I am living or alive by the particle behold hee attributes to himself an admirable divine and everlasting life to distinguish it from that life which he received again after his suffering in the flesh Therefore he saith hee liveth for evermore that is both before his death in his death and after his death which I have expressed in these verses Vivus eram sed eram crudeli morte peremptus En vitam sine fine per omnia secula duco J was alive and did a sore death suffer Yet lo I live and so I shall for ever This is the eight argument 8 Argument of Chr. deity of the Godhead of Christ because he was dead and liveth for evermore Eniedinus the heretike objecteth that Christ is not God because he died and so ceased to be whereas God dieth not neither can he cease from being God But it is a childish objection For though God cannot die as hee is God yet Christ as is he God ●●nlfested in the flesh 1 Pet. 3 18. suffered death according unto the scriptures mortifial in the flesh Again God hath p●●●sed the Church with his owne blood Wherefore this onely doth follow that Christ is not God according to the flesh in which hee sunffered which indeed it true although it bee opposed by the Vbiquitisis who therefore have need to consider how they wil answer to what is here by the here●ike objected Further more all this that Christ doth attribute to himself is for the comfort of the Godly For Christ liveth yea is life it selfe that wee also might live through him according unto the prom●● Joh. 6 he that eateth me even he shill live by me and again Ioh. 16 28 I give lowy sheep eternall life and they s●●ll never preish And have the keyes of hell and of death That is I have power to cast the enemies into hell Keyes are a signe of power the which Christ Matth. 10.28 doth ascribe unto God fear not them which kil the body c. but rather fear him to wit God which is able to destroy both soule and body in hel This power Christ here assumeth by which he declares himself to be God and Lord of hell and death 9 Argument of Chr. deity This therefore in order is a ninth argument proving the Godhead of Christ Vers 19. Write the things which thou hast seene If this commandement be restrained to the first vision by a threefold division of the things which he had stene which were and which should come to passe then by it the arguments of the seven following epistles are signifyed but I rather refer it to the whole revelation for he is required to write some things already past which he had seene and somethings present the things which are and some things which shall be heerafter So that the matter of the revelation is distinguished in●● a threefold order by Christ himself some things he had seen already from the beginning of the Gospel under Nero and the following Emperors unto Domition some things he now saw but the greater part he was yet to see namely the things that were to come afterward To these three heads we must have regard all most in every one of the following visions The Latine version hath which must be in stead of which shall bee But the Gr. constantly readeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which shall come to passe Moreover this proveth again the divine authority of the revelation forasmuch as it is written by the commandement of Iesus Christ But why did he commande it to bee written questionlesse that the whole Church at
to be approved off yet the eating of the booke doth make nothing for it Andreas and they which follow him perceiving that here is spoken of prophesying to come in the last times have imagined much like to the disciples of old that Iohn is not dead to this day but yet liveth with Enoch Elias in paradise with whom after Antichrist is risen he shall come and prophesie against him Touching whose opinion so much indeed is true viz that here is treated of a future prophesying under Antichrist but the rest is false and refuted by Iohn himself Chap. 21.23 All the forenamed opinions therefore are to bee joyned together and then the meaning will appear to be thus that here is a confirmation of the Prophet that he should not because of his banishment desist from his office but goe on to prophesie and thus the commandement may include a promise of his restitution into his former place Yet the heavenly voyce is further to be applied namely to the prophesying which should be renewed against Antichrist in the last times So that Iohn is commanded to eat up the book againe to prophesie not so much in his owne as in the person of all those witnesses of the truth who lived neer the end of the fift and sixt trumpets the sence is therefore that when Antichrist hath long enough raged then prophesying shall againe be restored against him c. Now to prophesie againe To prophesie againe what it is is to bring to light purge reforme wholy to restore to its former brightnesse the doctrine of the Gospell filthily polluted mangled brought to nought by Antichrists Locusts Againe for although the Apostles Pastors Teachers sincere Bishops had formerly published preached the Gospell yet afterward prophesie was oppressed by Antichrist and therefore it was behovefull it should againe be restored by the faithfull preachers of the word This I say must be don for otherwise Antichrist would have thrust Christ quite out of his possession troaden his Church under foot Therefore for the truthes sake of these divine praedictions that the Church perish not but that Antichrists abominations be wholy rooted out it was needfull that prophesie should bee renewed The Thunders indeed uttered their voyces but they did little good therefore other witnesses must be raised up who shall more strongly strike at assault weaken Antichrists kingdome Thus it is manifest that here is promised a reformation of the Church about the last times which shal be expounded in the following Chapter under the two witnesses who shall againe prophesie against Antichrist Before many people and nations and tongues and kings The successe of prophesie renewed is set forth for hereby many peoples nations and kings who before worshipped the beast shall embrace the Gospell forsake Antichrist The which how far it hath and yet daylie is accomplished both in Germanie France England Poland Bohemia Hungary Denmarke Suetia c. all may clearly see who doe not malitiously shut their eyes Thus wee see that here is a preparation and transition unto the following measuring of the tempie of God The Argument Parts Analysis of CHAPTER XI NOw are described the new combats of the two witnesses prophesie ministerie with the beast their martyrdome and vindication also the triumph of Antichristians because they were killed their astonishment and ruin and at last the seventh trumpet sounding the songs of joy and triumph of the Church in heaven also the last judgement the abolition of Antichrists kingdome with the fretting and punishment of the wicked Who are these two witnesses what events they doe prefigure of whom is very obscure Interpreters indeed every one according to his understanding have learnedly thought upon severall opinions But I hardly find one who satisfies himself and the reader And perhaps all humane understanding doth here faile For mine owne part I willingly confesse that herein I stick come short The obscurity chiefly consists in the defining of the moneths dayes and moments of times the resolution whereof cannot fully be had but by the bright beames of divine revelation Yet notwithstanding I doubt not but by blessing of God the observation of our method will afford us some little light in this mysterie Hitherto the two former Acts of this Vision have been Parallels as answering each to other The first was the proposition of the Churches calamities under the sound of the six trumpets that is under the heathen tyrants hareticks Apollyon the king of Locusts and Mahumet Chap. 8. 9. The second is of the comforts of the afflicted Church under the said enemies Chap. 10. Now followes the third Act Chap. 11. unto ver 15. which is an amplification of the foresaid calamities describing the renewed combats of the Saintes with the Westerne Antichrist The Westerne Antichrist more hurtfull then the Easterne as beeing much more cruell and hurtfull unto the Church then the Easterne considering how the latter tyrannized by open force and warr killing onely the bodies of them who submitted not unto his yoake whereas the other tyrannizeth over the soules with all deceiveablenesse of unrighteousnesse lying signes moreover torments the consciences of them who enslave themselves unto him with torments far worse then any kinde of death as we have heard in Chap. 9. But chiefly it describeth the occasion and cause of those combats namely the purging of the Evangelical doctrine from Antichristian defilements with the reformation of the Church by the preaching of the two witnesses in the latter times of the fift and sixt trumpets as also the successe of the reformation and what should happen both to the witnesses and also to Antichrist Lastly the fourth Act is added by the sound of the last trumpet relating the happie change of all former calamities in the last judgement when as Christ the judge destroying the kingdomes of his adversaries will render a reward unto his servants and punishment unto the wicked Chap. XI from vers 15. unto the end This method beeing observed the reason is plaine why the last judgment is againe treated of in the end of this Chapter now without this we grope in darknesse many imaginarie things are in vain devised The parts therefore of the Chapter are two I. FIrst a prophesie of the reformation of the Church under Antichrist unto vers 15. II. The sounding of the last trumpet from vers 15. unto the end The former part hath a twofold oracle The first general commanding Iohn to measure the temple that is to purge the Church from the filth and corruptions of Antichrist vers 1. To leave out the inward court and shewes the cause thereof vers 2. The second speciall declaring the manner of the future reformation viz. by the ministerie of two witnesses consisting of four particulars I. A description of the witnesses 1. From the time of their prophesie from their habit v. 3. 2. From their dignitie esteem with God v.
that unto us a certaine deliverance is here shewed but confusion to the adversaries Let us therfore patiently suffer his tyrannie for it shal neither dure long nor hinder our salvation For being overcome we conquer Euseb lib. 4. histor cap. 12. This caused Antoninus the Emperour to forbid the governours of Asia to draw the Christians before their tribunals and punish them because saith he by dying they overcome for they rather choose to die for Christ then to live After three dayes That is as Rupertus saith well After a little while although it seem long see v. 9. First the miraculous vivification glorification of the witnesses is described Secondly the effects following upon the enemies For the first The spirit of life That is their vital spirit by an Hebraisme or life that is the soule or ghost which they gave up at the hour of death is said to enter into them from God that is by a divine miracle and that they stood upon their feet which phrases seem to be taken out of Ezech. 37 and shew both Gods omnipotencie by which he restores the dead to life as oft as he pleaseth as also the immortalitie of the soule which though separated from the bodie yet is not killed by tyrants but doth live with God shal return from him into its own bodie againe Now to the sense The Papists take it for the miraculous restauration of the two witnesses Enoch and Elias from death to life after three dayes Papists opinion touching the vivification of the two witnesses And Ribera disputeth how the raising and glorification of the witnesses agrees with that of Hebr. 11. That without us they might not be consummated or perfected But their fabulous opinion touching Enoch Elias hath often been refuted the which is here also manifestlie contradicted in that the two witnesses are said to have tormented the inhabitants of the earth Now it is absurd to imagine that two poore prophets should torment all the tribes peoples nations and tongues of the whole earth in the space of three yeeres So that this dualitie of the witnesses so to speak cannot be restrained to two individuals or unto two precisely Now however the vivification of the witnesses shall literallie come to passe in the end of the world yet unto that the spirit here hath no respect at all But by this vivification is signified a perpetuall restoring of witnesses unto the Church militant viz that in stead of such whom Antichrist puts to death the Lord will raise up others to hold forth the testimonie of Christ and strongly oppose the Beasts kingdome For when Antichrist shal thinke that all Christs witnesses are suppressed then others restored to life shall renew againe the battle against him As therfore Elias is said to have lived againe in John Baptist not by a Pythagorean 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or transmigration of the sowle out of one bodie into another but in condition or nature of office because John came in the power and spirit of Elias preparing the way for Christ So the two witnesses As for example John Husse and Jerome of Prague being killed by the Beast they lived againe after three dayes an half in Luther Melanchthon others c. And to this purpose that of Husse being led to his martyrdom doth excellently serve At the end said he of an hundred yeeres which before God are scarsly three dayes yee shall answer to God and to mee He said also now indeed ye burn a Goose for Husse in the Bohemian tongue signifies a goose but out of his ashes shal arise a swanne which yee shall not be able to rost Foretelling that which afterward came to passe for just so many yeeres after Husse was burned Luther begane to oppose Popish pardons which was the beginning of reformation and bringing down of Popery This restoring of the witnesses to life serves for the consolation of the Church militant feeing there shall alwayes notwithstanding all Antichristian persecution be some faithfull professours of the truth who shall strongly fight for the glorie of Christ So then if Antichrist kill the two witnesses God will againe vivifie them and make them to stand upon their feet by raising up others in their place That which is added touching the Glorification of the witnesses serves also to comfort us For to whom Antichrist shall deny the fellowship of men to them God will vouchsafe a heavenly fellowship such as he shal exclude out of the world God wil receive them up into paradise they whom here he will not admit to be honourablie buried them God will crown with the glory of everlasting life This is that which followeth v. 12. 12. And they heard a great voyce from heaven saying unto them Come up hither And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud and their enemies beheld them 13. And the same houre was there a great eartquake and the tenth part of the citie fell and in the earthquake were slaine of men seven thousand and the remnant were afrighted and gave glory to the God of heaven 14. The second woe is past and behold the third woe commeth quickly 12. And they heard a great voyce Not the enemies but the witnesses restored to life heard this voyce This shall be Christs voyce who according to his promise will call his witnesses unto him into glorie It shal be Great because of the power thereof for it shal bring the witnesses to glorie and strike a terrour into the adversaries Come up hither To me into my glory that where I am yee may be also Ioh. 17.24 And they ascended up into heaven in a cloud After Christs example who ascending into heaven was taken up and received by a cloude 1 Thess 4.17 And often the cloudes are called Gods chariot Christ also shall return in a cloude to judgement And we shall be caught in the cloudes to meet the Lord in the aire Now to seek for other allegories in this cloude is needlesse Moreover this glorification of the Martyrs begins presently at their departure out of this life when their spirit goes unto the Lord but shall be comsummated in the last day the which was shadowed out before in Chap. 6. under the fift seale Moreover this also serves for the honour credit of the witnesses that the Lord will wonderfully preserve their doctrine though condemned by Antichrist as hereticall and propagate the same far and neere in spite of all adversarie power whatsoever Thus the world shall know that they were no deceivers but the true witnesses of Iesus Christ And therefore in this place the spirit doth animate the professours of the Gospel least being terrifyed by the tyrannie of Antichrist they should prophesie the more remissely If he labours to put them to death God wil restore them to life If he cast reproach on them in this world God will crown them with glorie in heaven For blessed are yee when men persecute you rejoyce for great is
as that he could not seduce or hurt none at all neither by his Emissary Angels or by other his instruments as Tyrants Hereticks Antichrist but onely as it is expressed in the Text that he should not deceive the Nations any longer that is uphold Paganisme and hinder the course of the Gospell among the Gentiles Thus I have laid downe my judgement agreeing with other most learned Interpreters before me as Bullinger Junius c. not that I do tye any man unto it but leave it to consideration but they who begin the thousand yeeres from Christs nativity as Aretius or from his Resurrection as Chytraeus or from the time of universall Christianisme under Constantine the Great as Brightman Napier c. although they differ a little in the termes yet all have this common with us that the first thousand yeers from Christs birth is to be ascribed to Satans imprisonment and that the Dragon is now long agoe loosed out of prison There are two other opinions of them who referre the thousand yeeres unto the last times as if they were not yet begun One of the old Chiliasts of which I will speak afterward in verse 5. The other new of certaine learned brethren that these thousand yeeres are not to begin till after the casting of the Beast into the Lake of fire that is after the overthrow of the Papacy Then they thinke that he shall be bound a thousand yeers in the bottomlesse Pit and that the Martyrs which have beene slaine by Tyrants and Romish Popes shall then corporally live again and reigne with Christ in Heaven those thousand yeeres and then at the end of these thousand yeeres shall be the Resurrection of all the rest of the dead and the last Iudgement Now what I thinke in this opinion to be wanting I will here touch onely in a generall way reserving the rest to its place First I cannot approve that these thousand yeeres are not as yet begun nor past because two false Hypotheses are supposed One that Satan hath not as yet bin bound that he should seduce the Nations no longer in Paganisme the which is repugnant to the History The other that the world should yet continue a thousand yeers after the overthrow of Papacy which is repugnant to the divine oracles touching the abolishing of ANTICHRIST by the brightnesse of Christs coming after which to expect a thousand yeers in this world to me feemes very absurd They object that the Oracles of the Prophets are not yet fulfilled Ierem. 30. and 31. Mich. 4.3 unto 8. Mich. 5.9.15 the answer of Christ Act. 1.6.7 Mat. 23.28 Rom. 11.25 But in all these not to be tedious I would first desire them to seeke their thousand yeers Secondly that they diligently consider whether those Oracles spoken of in verse fourth are Prophesies touching the Kingdome of the Martyrs in Heaven or not rather of Christs Spirituall Kingdome and State of the Church of the Gospell on Earth partly already fulfilled and partly not but in time to bee accomplished Secondly that opinion contradicts it selfe For it propoundeth that the Pope before these thousand yeeres shall be cast into the Lake of fire and that Popery shall be abolished and withall that the Pope during the thousand yeeres shall by little and little gather his strength and at the end of the said yeeres joyne himselfe with Pagan Kings to make warre against the Saints But how shall the Pope doe this being in the Lake of fire They answer that the same Pope indeed that is cast into the Lake shall not reassume strength but there may bee some other after him who shall not bee abolished till the brightnesse of Christs comming But this is to dally in a serious matter The ruine of the Papacy in which they fixe the beginning of the thousand yeers we understand not to be the casting of one or two of the Popes into the Lake for many are already cast away but the overthrow of the whole Papacy Here then let them explaine themselves whether they understand it of the overthrow of Papacy in part or totally If they understand it onely in part they must say that Satan hath bin bound above an hundred yeers because since that time Papacy hath gone to decay in Germany and some other Kingdomes which thing Bellarmin also confesseth for saith he Bell. Lib. 3. de P.R. Cap. 21. from that time since you affirmed the Pope to be Antichrist his Empire hath beene so farre from encreasing that it hath alwayes more and more decreased If of an universall or totall overthrow how then shall the Beast gather strength by little and little especially while he is in the lake of fire Thirdly they take up another absurdity against the Text viz. that in the beginning of the thousand yeeres the Martyrs shall corporally live againe and reigne with Christ a thousand yeers whereas the Text expressely speaketh of their soules not of the bodies of the Martyrs neither saith it that they lived again or were raised up from death but that they lived of which in ver 4. Fourthly they frame another absurdity in pretending a two-fold resurrection of the dead One of the Martyrs after the overthrow of the Papacy the other of the rest of the dead after the thousand yeers reigne of the Martyrs the which is contrary to an Article of our Faith I beleeve the resurrection of the flesh that is of all the dead at the last day and it is refuted by experience Again if they understand the overthrow of the Papacy in part seeing this hath bin accomplished more then an hundred yeeres agoe they must shew that the first bodily Resurrection of the Martyrs is also past If totall seeing this shall not bee but by the brightnesse of Christs coming to Iudgement they cannot deny that then the Martyrs also shall be raised with the rest of the dead Fiftly I know not how they can make their opinions hang together for they say that Christ shall come to Iudgement a thousand yeers after the overthrow of Papacy and that after those thousand yeers Gog and Magog shall make warre against the Christians What shall this warre be taken in hand after Christs last comming to Iudgement Lastly this opinion doth fully agree with the errour of the Chiliasts long agoe condemned by Christians of which I will speake by and by viz. in this that the world shall remaine a thousand yeers after the abolishing of Antichrist directly contrary to the Apostle 2. Thess 2.8 affirming that Antichrist shall bee overthrowne by the brightnesse of Christs comming And in that it imports two particular Resurrections contrary to the Scripture touching the resurrection of all the dead together at the last day Onely herein it differs Lib. 20. de C.D.C. 7. that it makes not the thousand yeeres reigne as they Earthly but Heavenly although Augustine confesseth that there were also among the Chiliasts some who beleeved that the spirituall delights in that Sabbath should come
corporally raised Therefore these also Answ I. The Antecedent is denyed for neither doth that type speake of a corporall Resurrection according to the Letter but of a successive living againe as was there shewed II. They who confound them with these shew that they are but strangers to the Revelation for these Martyrs and Confessours belong to the first ten Ages from Christs birth The other two unto our last times in which the Temple was to be measured or the Church purged from Popery Objec VIII The Prophets and many Martyrs came forth out of their Sepulchres at Christs death on the Crosse Mat. 27.53 according to the Prophesie of Daniel Chap. 12.2 Neither was that corporall Resurrection any way derogatorie to the Article of Faith touching the future universall Resurrection Therefore also these Martyrs lived againe corporally neither is it any way derogatorie to the universall Resurrection of the dead Answ Whether those Saints whose bodies came out of the Sepulchres and appeared to many after Christs Resurrection to testifie the efficacie of his Death were Prophets or Martyrs appeares not from the Text neither is it a point of Faith to know the same However the Prophesie of Daniel cannot without wresting bee applied to these which expresly speaketh not onely of the Resurrection of such as shall be saved but of the damned also that is of the last Vniversall Resurrection But that speciall and corporall Resurrection of those Saints is certainly to be believed because it is written neither can it be derogatorie to our beleefe of the universall Resurrection seeing the Scripture doth plainely except this from that But this Resurrection of the Martyrs a thousand yeers before that is not to be beleeved because it is not written but onely as we have shewed sought to be maintained by wresting the words of this Prophesie yea it derogates from the Faith because he that beleeveth this cannot beleeve the other viz. that there shall be a universall Resurrection at the last day Objec IX Christ promised it should be so Mat. 19.28 Luk. 22.28 In the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory ye shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel c. Answ These indeed are most sweet promises of our Saviour touching the singular rewards of the Apostles in Heavenly Glory and touching the large recompence of their labours and losse of all things which here they sustained for the sake of Christ But it is erroneous to beleeve that here any thing is promised touching a corporall resurrection of the Martyrs that shall be before the rest of the dead and of a golden Age to continue a thousand yeeres before the last day in which the Martyrs reigning with Christ in Heaven the Iewes beeing joyned to Christians and freed from the yoke of all adversaries shall as the opinion of some is serve Christ in all manner of prosperity and peace Let such I say see too least they erre and diligently consider Act. 3.21 that those rewards are promised to be fulfilled in the regeneration or restitution of all things at the last day promised also Mark 10.30 with persecutions which things are plainely repugnant unto the Millenary Resurrection and peace before the last day Lastly they pretend that it were greatly for the comfort of the Martyrs if they knew that a little after their martyrdome the thousand yeers being near at hand they should rise againe and ascend both in soule and body into Heaven and reign with Christ a thousand yeers before the rest of the Faithfull Answ To seek for comfort in a doubtfull thing is to feed upon the wind in a false thing to mock with ones selfe and with God neither is it without impiety how pleasing soever it seems to humane wit forasmuch as faith cannot be had in a doubtfull or false matter such as is this Corporall Resurrection and so no solid consolation But this is solid and double comfort to the Martyrs if from the sure word of God they do beleeve that their Soules as soone as they goe out of their bodies shall live and reigne with Christ in Heaven and that at the last day when their brethren and fellow servants who are to be slaine on earth shall be fulfilled their bodies also being raised up by the Son of God Rev. 20.4 Ioh. 6.40 Rev. 6 11. Rev. 22.5 they shall reigne with him for ever and ever in Heaven TOVCHING THE OPINION OF THE OLD CHILIASTS HAving expounded and vindicated the true meaning of this Prophesie it remaineth in the last place to lay downe and weaken the false opinion of the Old Chiliasts who understanding this Prophesie corruptly according to the Letter and not according to the Analogie of Faith did thence invent this Jewish Fable which Austin hath set forth in these words Lib. 20. de C. D. C. 7. That as the world was created in sixe dayes and the seventh was a Sabbathisme so the world should continue sixe thousand yeers and afterward should follow a Sabbathisme in the last thousand yeers namely by the Saints that shall rise and celebrate the same which opinion he saith might be somewhat tollerable if it were beleeved in that Sabbathisme some spirituall delights should come to the Saints through the presence of the Lord. For we also were sometime of this opinion but seeing they affirme that such who should rise againe shall enjoy carnall Feasts and eat and drinke beyond measure and modesty these things cannot be beleeved but by carnall men and therefore such as were spirituall called them that believed these things CHILIASTS being a Greek word and by us may be rendred MILLENARIES The first Author of this opinion Papias author of the Chiliasts opinion as Eusebius recordeth Lib. 3. Hist Cap. 33. was Papias whom Irenaeus and Hierom at which I wonder make to be a hearer of the Apostle Iohn where as Papias himselfe in the Preface of his worke confesseth that he never heard or saw the Holy Apostles but saith that he received this tradition from the Elders of the Apostles Now Eusebius also writeth of this Papias that being pious yet too credulous and of little soliditie he tooke up many Fables for Apostolicall truths because he understood the Apostolicall Interpretations amisse and that he became ringleader of the Chiliasts error unto many who followed his traditions among whom also was Irenaeus Hence almost all the Elder fathers Many of the fathers held the opinion of the Chiliasts following the antiquity of the tradition and authority of so great a man who was accounted a Disciple of the Apostles became Chiliasts IUSTINUS Martyr dial cum Tryphon Judaeo IRENAEVS Lib. 5. Cap. quinque extremis not long since published at Paris and annexed as a filthie clout to his workes but it had bin better they had buried the same in eternall oblivion then to uncover the secret shame of so worthy a Father NEPOS a Bishop of Aegypt whom DIONYSIUS ALEXANDRINVS
death In my judgement this Prosopopoeia serves to the dramaticall Vision neither is it to be pressed according to the Letter according to which neither Hell can bee cast into the Lake seeing the Lake is in Hell nor Death seeing death is a meere privation of Entitie or Being as Albertus M. calleth it The summe is whatsoever was deadly noisome hurtfull and contrary to happinesse shall all be cast into the lake of fire so as nothing shall remaine to hurt the New Ierusalem Which is the Second Death That is Eternall of which Christ And the wicked shall goe into Everlasting Fire This shal be the last separating of man from God through eternall damnation as the first death was the seperation of him from God through sinne See verse 5. CHAPTER XXI The Argument Parts and Analysis AFter the Capitall adversaries with the rest of the ungodly were judged and cast into the Lake of fire here is exhibited unto John the renovation of the world that shall bee as also the Heavenly glory of the godly under a two-fold Type viz. of a Bride gloriously attired and of a most magnificent City The illustration of which Type this whole Chapter so sets forth as that the wit art hand or tongue of man is able to expresse nothing more beautifull more magnificent more glorious and sumptuous then this structure For whatsoever may seem to conduce to the glory and comlinesse of an Earthly City in respect of wals gates foundation figure streets Temples Air and lastly wealth of the Citizens ornament and pleasantnesse of life all this Iohn sees here to be most eminent and glorious in this Heavenly Ierusalem By which allegorie the holy Ghost would in some measure shadow out that unspeakable glory and felicity which the Church now militant on Earth shall after the end of her wearisome labours in this warfare receive in the Heavens the which eye hath not seene eare hath not heard nor hath entred into the heart of man This Allegory is continued unto the 6. vers of the following Chapter The Chapter may not unfitly be divided into two parts in the former of which Iohn recordeth what he saw and heard in a generall way after the judgement of the ungodly in 8. verses In the latter what he saw in particular thence unto the end In the former hee generally rehearseth FIrst what he saw two things 1. The renovation of Heaven and Earth and overthrow of the former world ver 1. 2. The New Jerusalem which he sets forth from the adjunct holinesse and its heavenly originall comming downe from Heaven and the adjunct ornament which he amplifies by a metaphor of a Bride adorned for her Bridegroome ver 2. Secondly what he heard both a great unknown voyce from Heaven As also him that sate on the Throne speaking The great voyce proclaimes the heavenly blessednesse of the godlie Behold c. consisting in two things I. the abundance of good things which God will bestow upon the Godlie The tabernacle of God is with men c. v. 3. II. The absence of things evill all which God will remove He shall wipe away all tears v. 4 The sitter on the throne 1 testifies the renovation of the world wrought by himself v. 5. Behold I make all things new II. He confirmes the blessednesse of the Godlie erewhile proclaimed I. By a command of writing Write II. By a serious asseveration that the words of the great voyce are true v. 5. III. By an asseveration of a thing so certain as if it were alreadie done It is done IIII. From his nature that he is eternall and cannot lie I am Alpha and Omega 5. By a promise taken out of the Gospel I will give to him that is a thirst III. He sheweth to whom the blessednesse belongs and what it shall be Ioh. 7.3 7. He that overcommeth v. 7. IIII. By an Antithesis he amplifies what punishment is laid up for the ungodly whom he sets forth by eight fowle Epethites v. 8. But the fearefull c. In the latter part he expoundeth what he saw particularlie I. The occasion by which he saw the same the speech of the Angel Come hither I will shew thee v. 9. II. The manner and place of the Vision He carried me to a great Mountaine c. ver 10. III. The Vision it selfe He shewed me a great City ver 10. the magnificence whereof he againe declareth first generally secondly specially Generally 1. From the greatnesse A great City 2. From the Sanctitie Holy 3. From the originall and architect Descending out of Heaven from God ver 10.4 From its glory Having the glory of God ver 11.5 From the splendor or light which he illustrates by comparing it to a Jasper cleare as Chrystall v. 11. Specially he describeth 1. The magnificence of the structure both outwardly and inwardly ver 12 c. 2. The excellency of the light v. 23. 3. The felicity of the inhabitants v. 24 c. In the externall structure he commends chiefly the wall gates form and matter The wall he commends from the greatnesse and height vers 12. And had a wall The gates 1. From the number There were twelve 2. From the keepers At the gates were twelve Angels 3. From the inscriptions Which are the names of the twelve tribes c. Ibid. 4. From the situation or coast On the East three ver 13. The greatnesse and strength of the wall he commendeth from the number and excellency of the foundations upon which it is built It hath twelve foundations and in them the names c. vers 14. Touching the form of the citie he sheweth 1. Whence he learned the same from the Angel measuring Whose instrument A golden Reed and purpose he sheweth To measure the Citie ver 15. 2. The Figure it is four square equall in length and breadth ver 16. 3. The distance on every side 12000. Furlongs The whole Citie containing 56000. furlongs verse 16. The height of the wall he sheweth by the measure to be 144. Cubits ver 17. and the matter of Iasper ver 18. The matter or substance of the City was pure gold like unto clear glasse ibid. Returning to the foundations of the wall he sets forth every thing by the excellency and variety of the matter that is of precious stones which he saith are twelve The 1. Iasper 2. Saphir 3. Chalcedonie 4. An Emerauld 5. Sardonyx 6. Sardius 7. Chrysolite 8. Beril 9. A Topas 10. Chrysoprasus 11. A Iacinct 12. An Amethyst ver 20. The gates also he commendeth from the like matter being cut out of so many pretious stones ver 21. Thus much of the outward building Touching the internall structure hee commendeth 1. the street or Market-place from the matter and clearnesse thereof Pure gold c. ver 21. II. The Temple which 1. he denyes to be externally materiall Neither saw I a Temple therein 2. What kind of Temple it was The Lord God himselfe verse 22. III. The light of the
and quarrels shall be farre from thence but on the contrary we shall sing to God everlasting Songs of joy Nor paine Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Labour which may be taken for any kind of trouble and metaphorically for Griefe as BEZA renders it after the Greeke Phrase Sophocl in Antig. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 griefe by griefe brings griefe But then there shall be no labour trouble paine or griefe of body or mind occasioning teares death sorrow or crying There shal be no cause of evill but on the contrary everlasting joy and pleasure at Gods right hand For the former or first things are passed away That is the miserable state of this present life in which all those evils doe abound because of sinne Then they shall passe or vanish away There shal bee a new heaven and a new earth A new state full of joy and happinesse Vnto the illustration of this place that in Chap. 7.15 helps very much where in the end of the second Vision one of the foure and twenty Elders explicated the Heavenly felicity of the Saints almost in the same words They are saith he before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them they shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sunne light on them nor any heat for the Lambe that is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes This place doth plainly confute their opinion who hold that here is treated of the state of the Church Militant in this world for it is certaine that this removall of all evils from the Church neither is nor shall be in this world neither is any such happinesse to be hoped for in this life but it is reserved for the Church in the world to come These things therefore cannot be applied unto the state of the Church on earth gathered of Iewes and Gentiles Neither do the Futures will dwell will take away contradict what wee say For these are retained emphatically out of the Prophesie as if he should say the things which Isaias foretold should come to passe shall bee then fulfilled the which the Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are passed away in the Praeter Tense doth easily evince 5. And he that sate upon the throne Here followeth the voyce of the Sitter on the Throne of whom above Chap. 4. where wee shewed it was either the Holy Trinitie or the Son of God gloriously reigning at the right hand of God in Heaven because he saith I am Alpha and Omega which above in Chap. 1 8. was the voyce of Christ I am Alpha and Omega the First and the Last Now he confirmeth unto Iohn the things before seen and heard All things were new a New Heaven a New Earth a New Ierusalem Least we should doubt or aske whence this innovation should come Behold saith hee I make all things new This innovation of things shal be effected by the divine power Neither speaketh he of the spirituall renovation of the Church which began long agoe by the grace and power of Christ but of the super-naturall change of the whole universe which shal be at Christs last coming 2. Pet. 3.13 as Peter sheweth And hee saith to mee write The Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith in the present Tense being the proper stile of the Evangelist Iohn argues that he was Authour of this Booke He is commanded to write this Vision of the future renovation and in speciall the most sweet voyce of Gods eternall abode with men and the future blessednesse of the godlie that it might allwayes remaine extant to future times for the Churches consolation for Christ knew that the Churches condition should unto the end be mournefull by teares death sadnesse paines c. Least therefore she might faint in her warfare the Lord would have this most joyfull Catastrophe of all evils to be set down in Holy Writ For these words are true and faithfull Above Chap. 19.9 after a like Commandement of writing Write blessed c. He annexed a like reason These words are true Here he addeth faithfull that none should doubt of the future happinesse Hee understands by WORDS here Gods future dwelling with men as also the eternall rewards of the faithfull and everlasting punishments of the wicked 6. And he said to mee It is done Above Chap. 16.17 the Angell of the seventh Viall in the same phrase proclaimed the end of Babylon and the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IT IS DONE It is a weighty asseveration that the thing is as certaine as if it were already accomplished I am Alpha and Omega As above Chap. 1.8.11 I will give unto him that is a thirst Hee confirmes eternall rewards unto the faithfull out of the Gospell For this is the voyce of Christ Ioh. 7.37 whence he that sate on the throne is knowne to bee Christ the Author of this Prophesie To them that thirst he promiseth the water of life freely that is everlasting joy without any desert of ours But then no man shall thirst any more But these Future Verbes I will give shall inherit and as before shall wipe away seeme to make against our opinion but they doe not as erewhile I shewed For because it is a Prophesie of future things he rightly useth Verbes of the future Tense He therefore that thirsteth to wit after righteousnesse in this life to him Christ will give the water of Life now in a beginning onely then fully as if hee should say then I will truely fulfill the Evangelicall promise of which I now grant a tast to the faithfull He that overcommeth shall inherit all things Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receive it by inheritance Not therefore of merit but freely All things As it were an only Heire that possesseth all the substance of his Parents But all the Elect are heires and yet every one shall receive the whole inheritance Therefore this shall not be after the manner of other inheritances Now the inheritance is promised to him that overcommeth to wit the world the Beast and Satan because before the victory there must needs be a fight Therefore the Faithfull are here exhorted to fight couragiously against all their Adversaries See Chap. 2.10 And I will bee his God From 2. Sam. 7.14 He then at last promiseth to them that overcome the fulfilling of the promise of adoption which now by faith they possesse in hope Now are wee the sonnes of God but it doth not yet appeare what we shall bee but we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as hee is This is Johns owne most true interpretation of this divine voyce 1. Ioh. 3.2 8. But the fearfull and unbeleeving From the contrary he extols the felicity of the Godly because contraries being set one by another
Israel is not to be taken litterally 143. The Sealed ones who they were 329. diverse opinions about them 330 The Sealed in Chap. 7. and Chap. 14. compared together 331. The Second death 42. 528. The Second trumpet answereth to the red horse 160. How long the sixt trumpet was to sound 205. Securitie and fear in the Papacy 341. Seducement by signes 310. What it is to Seduce ibid. Separation from the Papacie commanded by God 459. Serpents have Venome in their head and tongue 191. The Seven Churches to whom John wrote 7. The Seven spirits who 9.54 The opinions of Andreas Lyranus and Ribera about the same 9. Seven is a perfect number 10. The Seven stars what they note 25. the Seven sounding Angels 152. 153. Seven put for an indefinite number 202. The Seven Mountains of Rome are the heades of of the Beast 420. 421. The Seventh ttumpet forerunner of the last judgement 247. The seventh trumpet what ibid. It puts an end to the Churches calamities 205. The Seventh viall answereth to the Seventh trumpet 398. The Seventh Angel 246. 247. The Sharp Sickle what it noteth 360. How it was thrust into the Earth by Christ 361. Shortly how to be expounded 4. The Short time of Antichrists reign how to be understood 121. 271. 272. The Sight of God is the Saints happinesse 251. A Signe what it is 364. Signes of assured peace 570. Silence for an half houre in heaven what it denoteth with diverse opinions about it 152. Sinnes reaching up to heaven 460. Romes sins do reach to heaven 461. Even small sins come to heaven that is unto Gods knowledge which refuteth the distinction of Veniall and Mortall sins 460. Sinners repenting in this life have an assured promise of pardon 50. The Sitter on the Red horse and on the Black horse with his ballance is Christ 111. 111. 113. the Sitter on the throne who he is described 87. Six distinct visions 84. the Sixt viall truely interpreted 392. 393. Sixtus V. Endeavoured to thrust Charles IX king of France and Elisabeth queen of England out of their dominions 130. The Sixt vision unto what times it belongs 402. 403. Slaughter of Antichristians 245. Smyrna a city of Ionia 21. The Smoke out of the bottomles pit is Popish Divinity humane decrees 172. the Smoak of punishment 353. Whither there be Smoak in Hell ibid. the Smoak of prayers ibid. Smoak a Symbole of Gods wrath 372. Socinus his blasphemous fiction 13. The Son of perdition destroyeth the earth 251. The Son of Man denoteth Christ 359. The Son shall deliver up the kingdome to the Father how 578. Songs of the Revelation 369. The Sounding of the fourth Angel 164. Diverse opinions about it ibid. The Sounding of the second trumpet how farre to be extended 161. The Souls of the Martyrs departed this life are with Christ 119. How John could see their Souls they being invisible 513. How they lived and reigned with Christ 515. Whither they reigned all together at one time ibid. They cease not to reigne after the thousand yeeres are expired 516. How the Souls do fall rise again 520. The Soul of signes is the word 470. The Souls of the Saints departed must not be worshipped 105. Spirituall fraternity betwixt Christs members is the bond of love 18. Spirituall famine of Orthodox doctrine in the dayes of Constantius and other Arian Emperours 114. 115. Spirituall life of the Souls with Christ 514 515. The Spouse and Wife how differing 480. Ornaments of the Spouse 481. To Stand and not stand in judgement what it signifieth 134. To Stand before the throne 146. To stand before God 543. The Standing of the four Beasts what it denotes 92. Stars falling from heaven who they are and when they fell 129. The Starres falling signifies Apostacie from the true faith 162. 261. Stars are teachers and Bishops of Churches 162. 170. why teachers are compared to Stars 25. The Strong wind blowing down the Figs is the Papall Authoritie 129. Structure of the old temple 213. The Subject of the Revelation 4. The Succession of the Romane Church 408. The Summe of the fourth vision 252. It s foure Acts 253. The Sunne Christ wholy darkned in the Papacie 173. Sun and heat diversly interpreted 385. 386. The Susian women were beastlie harlots 407. To Swear by the creature is a horrible impiety 204. The Sword proceeding out of the mouth of Christ our Captain with which he smiteth the wicked is spirituall 491. The Synecdoche in the 1000. yeers of the Martyrs reigne 509. is proved 516. The Synod called Sardicensis took its name of Sardica not of Sardis 54. The Symphonie of the heavenly inhabitants is perpetuall 147. T. TAbernacle of God is the Church 299. To Take of from the prophesie what it is Tamherlan his huge armie 189. The Temple of God is the Church 212. The Ten kings are to be differenced from the seven former 432. Who the Ten kings are 433. Ten dayes what they signifie 41. The Third part of men slain by the Turks 191. The Third Act of the second vision hath two parts 124. The Third universall vision 150. in what it differs from the former ibid. Its beginning and ending ibid. Third Act of the sixt vision 476. Third Angel 350. The Thousand yeers of Christs reigne and the Dragons binding are the same 531. these yeeres are not indefinitely to be understood 507. in histories and in the prophets they are never indefinitely taken ibid. wher they begin end 508. 531. how they agree with the 42 months 509 they cannot be referred to the last times 510. Why they are defined 516. the condition of the godly during these 1000 years 511. What Satan is said to do at the end of these yeares 530. Threatnings of punishment in Scripture are to be taken with a condition of repentance either expresly or tacitely 36. What the Threatning of the Harlots children teacheth us 49. 50. Three a number of perfection 394. The Three dayes and an half what they signifie 241. The Three Legates how they proceed out of the mouthes of three 394. Why they are said to be three impure spirits ibid. Who they are 395. Three books attributed to God in scripture 60. 96. The Threefold distinction of time what it noteth 276. Theodoretus his opinion of Gog and Magog 535. The Throne of Christ 83. The Throne of God denotes his dominion over all things 87. The white Throne of Christs glory 542. Thrones why set up 512. The Throne of the Beast is the Romane Sea according to Lyra 388. Diverse opinions about the same 389. Thyatira a citie of Lydia 22. Time times and half a time what it signifieth 276. The Time of Antichrists rising noted 316. 317. 318. The Time of betroathing and marriage 480. Timothie no Bishop of Ephesus in Johns time 30. The Title of the Revelation answereth unto the titles of the ancient Prophets and confirmeth the authority of the book 3. The Titles of the witnesses are not to be litterally