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A91526 Jewish hypocrisie, a caveat to the present generation. Wherein is shewn both the false and the true way to a nations or persons compleat happiness, from the sickness and recovery of the Jewish state. Unto which is added a discourse upon Micah 6.8. belonging to the same matter. / By Symon Patrick B.D. minister of the word of God at Batersea in Surrey. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1660 (1660) Wing P817; Thomason E1751_1; Thomason E1751_2; ESTC R203168 156,691 423

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many c. Or if we render it with others Did not be who is one make it i. e. the covenant of marriage and he hath abundance of spirit still to breath into our seed And wherefore did that one make that order that a man should cleave to his wife but that he might have a godly seed and therefore take heed what you do in putting away your wives and taking others for hereby you offend him that breaths the spirit of life into us Or if we take it as others interpret it their wickedness is still argued to be the greater because they boasted that they were the children of Abraham Now Did that one i. e. the first of your family do so of whose spirit we are the residue and what did that one he sought a godly seed he put not away Sarah though she was barren which to you would seem a just cause nor matched with an Idolater that he might have issue Or if we receive that rendring of the words which the learned De Dieu prefers above all the rest it argues them of great inhumanity and that they had not common good nature in them which makes the sin still greater No one would do thus that had but any reliques of the spirit of God in him and therefore much less they that seek a godly seed as you pretend to do You see that he might well call this covering violence with his garment ver 16. because it was such a wrong to those that by the Laws of God and nature deserved better at their hands To spread ones garment or ones skirts over a woman is a phrase in holy writ for to marry her Ruth 3.9 Ezek. 16.8 By taking therefore of a strange woman into their society which was engaged before to another they did as it were marry to violence and contract a relation with injustice Or as the forenamed author thinks it should be translated Violence covered their garments i. e. when as they ought still to have cast their garments of love and protection over their wives violence and wrong did cover those garments their marriage was an act of injustice and their skirts which they spread over strangers were all over stained with cruelty hard-heartedness and oppression 5. And Zachary tells us by way of prophesie what should be in after times toward the end of this Nation and what manner of Rulers should be over the people He compares their Shepherds i. e. Governours as I have shewn before unto young Lyons who do not use to protect but to devour the sheep Zach. 11.3 And he calls the people the flock of slaughter ver 4. whom he is bid to instruct either because they were to be destroyed by the armies of their enemies or because they were a prey unto their Governours According as it follows ver 5. Their possessors slay them and they hold themselves not guilty Yea to such a confidence were they arrived in these sins that they Bless God for the riches which they had got in this sort They had some devotion you see left though no honesty nor goodness God is intituled to all wicked possessions and acquisitions that he may make them good and defend them against all the clamors of men and the suits of their own conscience And it seems the people were very bad also for ver 6. he threatens them that he would have no more pitty on them then their Rulers had but let them destroy one another by seditions and at last deliver them all into the hands of the King that oppressed them who should be so far from taking any pastoral care of them that he should only slay and devour them as you may read v. ●6 6. And some understand by that King the Roman Caesar to whom they made themselves a prey by such sins as those I have been treating of That long Captivity which indures to this day had its way prepared by their avarice and cruelty as those acquaint us upon whom the spirit of prophecy was again poured forth For our Lord coming and reproving the chief of that generation when he lived for devouring widdows houses for extortion rapine and blood for covetousness and oppression for being without natural affection and the like sins while they made long prayers and pretended a great deal of sanctity and religion He declaring also that faith judgement mercy and the love of God were more to be regarded then their strict observation of dayes and the multitude of sacrifices They out of a great zeal for their religion which they thought he did not speak honourably enough concerning most shamefully put him to death I believe they took themselves to be very religious persons and were zealous in what they did only their zeal was not equally dispensed nor conveyed alike through the whole body of duties that God commanded Their heat was like the flushing in mens faces or the burning in their hands which we do not take to be an argument of a good temper but rather a sign that there are obstructions as the ordinary language calls them in the body so that there is not a free motion of the vital blood in all the parts I mean they spent so much zeal in a few things that they left no warmth of affection for other most necessary duties In those things their heat was staid and stopt which made them of an extraordinary high colour and to have the repute in the world of very great Saints and most vertuous persons Yea they themselves gazed so much upon this flame that they took no notice how cold they were in matters of common honesty but they committed all iniquity in a comfortable belief that they were good men and most beloved of God Their great zeal for the Sabbath and such like matters made them take themselves for pious and devout persons but the partiality and particularity of it whereby it remained there confined made them really to be such as our Saviour calls Hypocrites which appellation they took in such disdain that they conspired his death who would not let such as they pass for godly men 7. And are Christians to this day more reformed who have inherited their promises I wish I could say that we are as free from covetousness rapine and unmercifulness as the Pharises were from Sabbath-breaking and Idolatry R. D. Kimchi upon Hos 2.19 20. hath confessed a great deal of that truth which I have endeavoured to illustrate but I can only wish that the latter part of his gloss were found as true as the former part hath proved He saith those words cannot have a compleat sense till the time of the Messiah and that God uses the word betroth three times because of the 3. captivities after which God doth as it were marry them to himself but in the dayes of the Messiah after a more excellent manner then in former times For when they came out of Aegypt he did not betroth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for
for some water and bid every one of them wash and the Boyes rubbing their faces pretty hard as they used to do but the girls only gently sleeking them over or scrarce touching them with their fingers he easily knew the difference Even so howsoever men may dissemble their natures and put themselves into such a dress of Religion as if they were no less masculine and strong Christians then others yet you will find them to be so tender to themselves in the washing and purifying of themselves from some filthiness or other that they will soon discover their effeminate constitution 6. For Religion consists not only in acts of worship whereby men may smooth their faces and give them a superficial gloss but in the through scowring of their souls from all evil habits which stick so fast unto them It makes us not only to bow our bodies and study the neater and more complementall performances but to undertake the rougher and severer duties to bow our souls before God and to purge our hearts from all that is offensive to his eyes and hinders him from embracing of us Where the Gospell comes in truth saith Erasmus very well it makes people more obedient to their Magistrates In praefat ad suum Ecclesiast more observant of the Laws Lovers of Peace and haters of War Husbands and wives agree better children are more obedient to parents and servants to Masters no workman but performs his task with greater fidelity nor tradesman but doth as he would be done by and to speak in a word all men will become more kind and slow to revenge less greedy of the world and more sober in the enjoyment of it 7. And give me leave from that excellent man to present you with a sum of Christian Doctrine which he would have a learner of Religion to keep alwayes in his eye He must think that Christ was an heavenly teacher De ratione verae Theol. that came to purchase a people that should depend on heaven and not trust in this world as those that were in another manner rich wise noble potent and happy then the world is A people that should by contempt of the world attain a felicity that others seek after by enjoying of it A people of a single eye ignorant of all envy malice and spite That should be void of all lust and meditating an Angelical life in this flesh Not makeing divorces as being a people that could either mend any thing or else bear it That should not swear as not distrusting nor deceiving any That should not seek after money as having their treasures in heaven That should not be tickled with vain glory as referring all to the glory of Christ their Saviour That should not be ambitious as knowing the greater they were the more they should do for Christ and the lower they should submit to all for his sake That should not be angry when provoked or give ill language much less take revenge as being men that must return good for evil That must be of such an innocent life that heathens themselves should approve of them That must be of a childlike purity as being born again That should live like the birds and Lillies from day to day That should perfectly agree among themselves as members one of another That should do all Christian offices one for another helping others in need bearing of their burdens or making them lighter by their officious love That should be so taught by the Spirit so live after the example of Christ that they should be the salt of the earth the light of the world a city set upon an hill To whom this life seems vile and immortality most desirable That should fear neither tyranny nor Death nor the Devil himself trusting in Christ only That should alwayes be ready to die and give an account This is the scope of Christs doctrine and such men we are to labour more and more that we may grow Haec sunt authoris nostri dogmata nova quae nulla Philosophorum familia tradidit These are the new principles of the Author of our Faith which no sect of the Philosophers hath delivered This is the new wine to be committed only to new bottles 8. All this Christ expressed in his life and doth but desire us to follow his Example He was so innocent that the false witnesses who were suborned for the purpose could not tell how handsomely to accuse him He was so meek that he was led like a sheep to the slaughter So free he was from covetousness that he had nothing nor affected any thing that we can hear of He was so humble that he washed his disciples feet So free from ambition that he would not be made a King when the people would have crowned him He stuck not to die the death of the Cross When they buffeted him he returned not their stroaks when he was reviled he reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to the righteous judgement of God And hereunto are we called 1 Pet. 2.21 22 23. because Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps Who did no sin neither was guile found in his mouth All this that I have said from him may be thus reduced into some order by considering that our Religion teaches us to cross all our own desires and to be wholly at the will of our Lord and master To believe what he reveals and to obey what he commands to fear only what he threatens and to hope for nothing but what he promises And our Desires being either sinfull or only natural it teaches us to deny our selves in both To fast as well as to be sober to be content with poverty as well as not to be covetous to bear disgrace as well as not to hunt after vain glory to indure pain patiently as well as to despise unlawfull pleasures to suffer oppressiion as well as to forbear to oppress and domineer over others to put up wrongs as well as not to do wrong to our neighbour to lie quietly on a sick bed as well as not to abuse health to submit to persecution as well as to be innocent 9. The Devil hath no way to hinder those that read the Scripture seriously from minding these things but by making them look upon it as a Book that teaches them to be knowing rather then good to dispute rather then to live And thus the Pharisees cozened themselves who studied this Holy Writ to make them subtile and wise very curious and nice about several cases that might be argued in the ceremonial Law but they did not look upon it as a Book that should make them like to him that made it There they learnt to oppose the Sadduces who denied another life more then they did to attain that life by opposing and subduing all their lusts And so at this day men read the Scriptures to defend their opinions to uphold