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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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of God Such are ready to say with the Apostle Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feete of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things Dan. 1.3 4. Nebuchadnezzar chose men to waite on him among the Iewes such as were of the kings stocke comely witty and euery way well qualified both for lineaments of body and ornaments of mind he required that the chiefest should attend vpon him he would not haue the refuse to stand in the kings court Shall they then that are to stand vp in the Name of the LORD be of the basest and of the off-scouring of the people If a man haue many sons such is the contempt of the Ministery the eldest he must be the heire if any be more beautifull or personable then the rest he must be a Courtier if any be disfigured or vncomely he is set apart if he list to the Ministery This is not to honour God with our first fruites this is to serue him with the blind and the lame and to giue vnto him such as are not fit for any thing else But of this wee shall haue better occasion to speake farther afterward Secondly The second reproofe this sanctifying vnto God the best thing that we haue serueth to reprooue such as neuer offer vnto God the first and florishing part of their age neither sanctifie vnto him their yong yeeres but as if they were too good for him they will serue sinne and Satan first and afterward when they can follow them no longer then they will thinke of sadder matters Hence it is that yong men for the most part doe thinke themselues exempted and priuiledged by their age to commit sinne with greedinesse and without controlment and that they are free to doe what they list to fetch their vagaries and to runne into all excesse at their owne pleasure But the holy Ghost is so farre from giuing liberty vnto them that he prouoketh them in good time to dispose of their life and euen then especially when their affections beginne to boile in them and endeauoureth to pull them in as it were with the cords of discipline and the Law of God Salomon is so farre from allowing this reason to warrant the loosenesse of young men that is to say We are yet as youths and therefore we may be let alone a while we will bee wiser hereafter that rather with a sharpe but yet iust taunting laughing it to scorne he speaketh to this age Reioyce O yong man Eccle. 11.9 in thy youth and let thy heart cheere thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the wayes of thy heart and in the light of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into iudgement As if he had saide If thou wilt needes goe forward and wilt not be reclaimed be it so take thy pleasure passe on thy dayes in thy delights follow the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eies and the pride of life glut thy selfe with chambring and wantonnesse and take thy fill of daliance yet know that at the last thou shalt be called vnto iudgment giue account for those things which thou hast cōmitted The children that mocked the Prophet and reproched him for his infirmitie were torne in pieces with Beares that came out of the wood 2 King 2.24 Therefore doth Salomon exhort them in another place Eccle. 12.1 to remember their Creator in the dayes of their youth while the euill dayes come not nor the yeeres draw nigh when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them God hath honoured them as his first borne and giuen many gifts vnto them as learning wit knowledge beauty strength health quickenesse and readinesse to doe all things which are not so common to euery age let them not abuse them but honour him with them that gaue them If you spend your first dayes loosely and licentiously and offer your olde age to the LORD when you can follow the pleasures of sinne no longer that endure for a season he will not accept such a seruice and sacrifice at your hands If you would haue God to bee your God in your old age serue him in your youth lest as you regarded not to know him in your youth so he giue you ouer and know you not in your elder yeeres For if an earthly man haue the wisedome and discretion not to admit and receiue into his seruice a doting and decrepid man such a one as can stand him in no stead but will readily answere him Go thy wayes thou art no seruant for me let him that had the vse of thy yonger daies take that fruit of thy old age that thou canst yeeld vnto him Shall not the Lord the most wise God reiect and cast vs off in age if we passe the flower of our youth in seruing sin Satan and the world What assurance can we haue to be accepted when and at what time we list may he not iustly say vnto vs Thou hast all thy life time serued mine enemies of whom I said vnto thee Serue them not and now at last when thou canst serue them no longer commest thou vnto me How often haue I called thee and offered ro be a master vnto thee but thou refusedst to become my seruant now it is iust with me to stopppe mine eares at thy cry Go thy wayes Let him that had thy youth take thine age also let him that had the beginning take also the ending If we spend our strength in vanity and our dayes in folly thus will the Lord answere vs God is the creator of the yong man it is he that hath made him and not he himself he is subiect to death in his youth as well as the olde man in his age the glasse that is newly made is as brittle as the old the Lambe goeth to the shambles as soone as the sheepe And the yong man shall be brought to iudgement for his trickes of youth for God shall bring euery worke to iudgement with euery secret thing whether it be good or whether it be euill Eccle. 12.14 Wherefore to conclude let yong and olde honour the Lord with the first fruites of their increase giue the best things that they possesse yea the more we haue the more he requireth of vs. Such as are rich and haue this worlds good must not be as barren trees and vnfruitfull in good workes Whatsoeuer we enioy we haue receiued it of his goodnesse it is as a streame issuing from his fountaine and therefore we must returne the glory to him and communicate the benefit therof vnto our brethren Vse 2 Secondly another spirituall application of this type and figure of the first borne is that it calleth to our remembrance what we are both by nature and by grace What we are by nature By nature that we are all the children of wrath and destruction without the mercy of God freeing deliuering vs from the
wisedome are oft-tentimes enemies vnto faith fol. 539 14 Things vnpossible in the eyes of men are possible with God fol. 540 15 It is the duty of masters to reprooue their seruants fol. 541 16 Inferiors must shew subiection and vse speeches of reuerence toward their superiors Ibid. 17 Young men are ordinarily rash in iudging and censuring of others fol. 542 18 Enuy is to bee shunned and auoided of all Gods people fol. 543 19 The godly do heartily desire the good growth of the whole Church fol. 544 20 God giueth good things by meanes fol. 546 21 The iudgements of God do often fall vpon men sodainly before they be aware fol. 546 CHAP. XII 1 GOds children oftentimes find great discomfort at their hands of whom they expect the greatest comfort fol. 553 2 Contentions and strife are often in the Church betweene the members of the same body fol. 554 3 Ambition and desire of preheminence are the greatest plagues to the Church fol. 555 4 Proud and ambitious men doe shew themselues most enuious and outragious against the most excellent most painfull seruants of God fol. 557 5 God vnderstandeth all the waies of men how secret soeuer they seeme to be fol. 558 6 Euery man in his owne cause should be meek and gentle ready to put vp wrongs and iniuries fol. 560 7 God neuer bringeth iudgement vpon any but hee searcheth and findeth sufficient cause fol. 562 8 God reuealeth himselfe to one more then to another and giueth greater graces to some then he doth to others fol. 563 9 The Church or faithfull people of God are rightly and truly the house of God Ibid. 10 It is required of all the Ministers of God that they be found faithfull and conscionable in their places fol. 564 11 The wrath of God is iustly kindled and stirred vp against all offenders fol. 567 12 God heareth not their praiers that lie in their sinnes and are not reconciled vnto him fol. 568 13 Wee ought to be humbled for the sinnes we haue committed albeit we feele no punishment vpon vs. fol. 569 14 Albeit Gods children put vp wrongs and pray not against them yet God will not put them vp 15 Such as haue the cheefe hand in sinne are principally subiect vnto punishment fol. 572 16 God doth mingle his chastisements with much mercy and doth not deale with vs according to our sinnes fol. 573 17 None can be free from iudgement hauing sinned fol. 574 CHAP. XIII 1 IT is our duty to vse meanes to further Gods prouidence fol. 577 2 The faithfull must deale wisely in all their enterprises fol. 579 3 Wicked men speake fairest when they mean foulest fol. 580 4 The greatest part are for the most part the worst fol. 581 5 God hath euer had some witnesses of his truth in all ages fol. 584 6 The euill of others though they be many may not be followed of vs. fol. 585 7 It is our duty to exhort and stir vp one another to good things fol. 586 8 Hypocrisie though long couered is at length vncased fol. 588 CHAP. XIIII 1 VVEe are naturally ready to hearken to seducers and deceiuers fol. 591 2 Wicked men adde sinne vnto sinne and proceede from euill to worse fol. 592 3 The faithfull are greeued for the sinnes of others fol. 594 4 GOD is a shield to his but taketh no care nor charge of his enemies fol. 595 5 Such as are Gods seruants shall be euilly intreated fol. 596 6 Among all iudgements sent for sinne the plague and pestilence is one fol. 597 7 Threatnings of Gods iudgment conditional fol. 600 8 The means to cal back iudgments is prayer fol. 602 9 It is a good plea to mooue the Lord to mercy to put him in minde c. fol. 605 10 God is of much patience long-suffering fol. 606 11 The blessings which we enioy c. fol. 608 12 Sin generally entertained bringeth with it a generall destruction fol. 610 13 The Word deliuered not regarded c. fol. 612 14 Sin and the punishment of sin c. fol. 613 15 God visiteth the sins of the fathers on the children fol. 615 16 The chiefest offēders shal be chiefly punisht fol. 618 17 Sin is pleasant in the beginning c. fol. 619 18 Wicked men hauing giuen themselues to sinne doe wilfully run on therein p. 622 CHAP. XV. 1 Of the meat and drinke offering fol. 625 2 The Church is as one body c. fol. 627 3 Whatsoeuer we haue we haue it from God fol. 630 4 Ignorance of Gods word is agreeuous sinne fol. 631 5 There is a difference betweene sin and sin fol. 635 6 Sin is come to the hight c. fol. 636 7 Euery sin is so much the greater c. fol. 638 8 God punisheth for sins of vngodlines c. fol. 640 9 The Sabbath day must be kept holy fol. 643 10 All must haue knowledge in the Scripture fol. 647 Chapter 16. 1 Whatsoeuer euil men do c. fol. 649 2 The Ministers by their office c. fol. 651 3 The greater our meanes are to preuent sin fol. 652 4 To despise and resist the Ministery c. fol. 653 5 Obstinate sinners reuile their reprouers fol. 655 6 Gods children ought to be angry at sinne fol. 656 7 God respecte●h not the workes of euill men fol. 657 8 The Ministers must continue in teaching fol. 658 9 Such as haue society with wicked persons fol. 660 10 God neuer striketh c. fol. 661 11 Conspirators shal come to destruction fol. 663 12 When man sinneth and is punished c fol. 667 13 The workes of Gods iustice c. fol. 668 14 Wicked men will not be warned c. fol. 669 15 Great is the necessity of the Ministery fol. 671 16 The force of prayer is very great fol. 673 17 Christ the mediator between God and mā fol. 675 CHAP. xvii 1 God is very desirous to haue sinners c fol. 678 2 God can worke miracles aboue nature fol. 679 3 Obedience is required of all Gods seruants fol. 683 4 God is better then his word c. ibid 5 God is able to giue life c. fol. 684 6 Gods miracles are wrought openly fol. 688 7 God is to be acknowledged to be iust fol. 691 Chapter xviii 1 Those sins are greatest c. fol. 693 2 A good Minister is a special gift of God fol. 695 3 The The Ministers ought to haue a care fol. 699 4 Ministers must be liberally maintained fol. 701 5 Ministers of meane gifts must be heard fol. 706 6 A sin to reape the profit of any place and not to discharge the duty fol. 709 CHAP. XIX 1 ALL penitent persons shall bee receiued into Gods fauour fol. 713 2 The water of separation the vses thereof fol. 716 CHAP. XX. 1 ALL flesh is subiect to death fol. 726 2 It is a necessary duty to bury the dead fol. 728 3 In all wants we are ready to murmure c. fol. 730
all holinesse and righteousnesse Hence it is that God tollerated many things among his people which he neuer allowed simply as appeareth in the case of diuorcement 〈◊〉 4 1. and many other of like nature So hee suffered the next of kinne to pursue him to death that had slaine his kinsman if he were taken out of the City of his refuge but God neuerthelesse did neuer approue of this to set vpon the person that had done him no harme neither aloweth any to follow the rage of his choler and to execute the malice of his heart so that this law hath no place among vs. For we must marke this as a certaine rule that ciuil gouernment cannot change any thing in the ten Commandements or set downe any thing to the preiudice of them Many things were permitted vnto the Iewes because of the hardnesse of their hearts Math. 19 8. but from the beginning it was not so They then that would put away their wiues for euery cause might as well alledge the law of giuing them a bill of diuorcement as others produce the auenger of blood to iustifie the prosecution of priuate reuenge forasmuch as the one is a breach of the seauenth Commandement the other is a breach of the sixth Commandement And thus much in answer of the obiections Thirdly we are put in mind of this duty Vse 3 that seeing all sin is committed against God we should be afraid to sinne against him and ought aboue all things to take heed of his wrath and indignation We are rather to chuse any course or take any way then runne into his displeasure Thus it was with Ioseph of whom we spake before he was content rather to be slandered vniustly and accused falsely of his leud and lasciuious mistrisse yea to be imprisoned and punished by his ouer-credulous master then he would make a breach in his owne soule sin against God Let a man once perish his conscience the wracke is not easily made vp again It is like a water-course which is not easily stopped It is better to fall into the hands of men then of God for he can make our innocency knowne and the vprightnesse of our cause to appeare that it shall break out as the light and shine as the Sunne at noone daies as we shall shew more euidently in the end of this chapter True it is the greatest sort of men make it a common matter because it is common they account it a small and light matter to sin against God When they heare that by cōmitting euill they sin in Gods sight and prouoke him to anger they regard not much those threatnings they make a mock of sin and feare not the euent of it not considering they play with a serpent that will in the end sting thē vnto death when it hath wrapped them fast as it were in fetters that they can by no meanes escape We must account no sin to be in it owne nature little as a mote but esteeme of it as a great beame albeit there be difference betweene them and some be greater then other This cogitation once taking place in vs How we may vnderstand the greeuousnesse of sin Eph. 5 3. will make vs feare and tremble at the naming of it The Apostle speaking of fornication and vncleannesse and such like euils saith Let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints For the Scripture laieth hold on our straying thoughts and wandring motions of the minde though we neuer giue assent vnto them but labour to remoue and repell them so soone as they arise in vs and abhorre them and our selues for them These first motions and lusts are a breach of the Law Rom. 7. and deserue condemnation how much more therfore the transgressions of our whole life that are much more abhominable Besides we are taught not onely to looke into the glasse of the law to see the heinousnesse of our transgressions but also to consider the punishments due vnto them in this life and the life to come for thereby we are subiect to all woes and miseries and death it selfe as we may see by the examples of our first parents of the old world of Sodome of Pharaoh and his hoste of the Iewes that were carried captiue and many of Gods owne people that by infirmity haue fallen and felt sore chastisements from his hands as appeareth in Moses and Aaron in Dauid in Hezekiah in Iosiah in Salomon and sundry others Lastly we may behold the grieuousnesse of sin in the example of Christ our Sauiour who albeit he were without sinne and none iniquitie was found in his mouth yet bare he in his body our sinnes and felt that burden which would haue crushed vs in peeces and broken all our bones in sunder forasmuch as he apprehended the wrath of God in his soule which caused him to sweat water and blood and to cry out vpon the crosse My God Mat. 27.46 my God why hast thou forsaken me Such then as neuer feare to offend God haue no feeling of Gods iustice no feeling of Christs suffering no feeling of the vilenesse of sin no feeling of their owne punishments that hang ouer their heads shall without repentance seaze vpon them to their finall damnation Let vs awake cut of our deepe sleepe and take care of our saluation let vs take heede we grow not senselesse and hard-hearted Let vs learne to know our selues better and consider what we haue done Let vs feare to offend God and stand in awe of his iudgements so that if we sinne against him we may be well assured to be punished for it But some will say Obiect God is gracious and mercifull he will not plague vs and strike vs though we sin he is not hard as many would make him doth not the Scripture tell vs that he is mercifull and shall we not beleeue the Scripture to be true Let them say what they will I will beleeue the Scripture Answer I answere in saying thus thou doest nothing but deceiue thy selfe and dally with the word of God and indeed doest not beleeue it to be true For if thou diddest acknowledge God to be the author of it thou wouldest submit thy selfe to euery part of it thou wouldest not embrace what thou likest and refuse what liketh thee not Thou mayest as well say in plaine English that part of the word of God is false and there is no trueth in it and I will sinne without controllement of it nay while thou reasonest in that prophane manner thou sayest in thine heart Tush God is not God but an idoll that sitteth still that hath eyes and seeth nothing that hath hands and doeth nothing that hath eares and heareth nothing True it is men are ashamed to vtter these reprochfull wordes and to belch out of their filthy mouthes such horrible blasphemies but if we will rippe vp to the quick their former presumptions we shall find their case and condition to be little better
then Christ is not yet risen from the dead ver 13 15 16. but he is already risen and death shall haue no more dominion ouer him Rom. 6.9 and if the head be risen then the members shall rise also The head cannot be without the members and how can that head be said to haue life in it if all the members should lie couered in the dust and neuer be vnited to the head neither one to another The second reason Againe if no resurrection then of all men the beleeuers were most miserable vers 19. Here they are vexed with sundry enemies Satan the world and the flesh Lazarus heere wanteth and suffereth hunger while the rich glutton is clothed with purple and fareth deliciously euery day Luk. 16.19 The godly weepe and lament while the vngodly reioyce and be glad Ioh. 16.20 At this stone the godly haue often stumbled Psal 73.2 3. Ier. 12.1 2. and from hence the reprobate take occasion to harden their hearts in wickednesse because they thinke there is no God will reward them that seeke after him Mal. 3.14 but they are greatly deceiued Psal 58.11 For woe were it to all Gods seruants if there were no resurrection eternall life But they are not the most miserable because they are pronounced blessed by the mouth of Christ Matth. 5.4 6 10 11. Luk. 16.25 2 Thess 1.5 6 c. The third reason Thirdly if there should be no resurrection of the godly from death to life then the first Adam should be more mighty and powerful then the second so that the second Adam should be impotent and weake if hee should not be able to deliuer them from the iawes of death Adam and Christ are compared vnto two trees Adam and Christ com●red and both of them communicate to Vse 4 their boughes and branches such things as they haue of their owne Adam was as an euill and rotten tree and therefore communicateth so men these properties and no better Christ is the good tree and full of sap and life and he infuseth into his members goodnesse and life and no worse then these It is not possible that an euill tree should bring foorth good fruite or a good tree euill fruit Mat. 7.17 Fourthly The fourth reason all our enemies and the enemies of Christ are to be taken cleane away made subiect to Christ and to vs ver 25 26. All shall be put vnder his feete Psa 8. and he must raigne vntill all his enemies be made his footestoole Psal 110.1 The last enemie of the head and members is death this shall be quite abolished at the last day and not before True it is that Christ himselfe can die no more Rom. 6.9 Heb. 7.25 yet hee accounteth it his enemie because it is an enemie to his children How death is Christs enemy and how ours and he accounteth that as done to himselfe which is done to any of his members Act. 9. And it is our enemie because it daily cutteth off part of our life and seeketh to take hold of it it weareth and wasteth our dayes by his messengers or harbengers to wit troubles and calamities sickenesses sores and aches it bringeth sundry paines and dolours it separateth the dearest and neerest friendes that euer were the body and the soule it leadeth the body captiue and clappeth it vp in a loathsome prison full of wormes and filthinesse and rottennesse it destroyeth that Tabernacle which was at the first a most glorious creature and as farre as lyeth in it it would depriue the body of eternall life and keepe it in ignominy for euer vnder the earth so that it is a most spitefull malicious enemy raging vpon vs without any mercy or compassion Fiftly The fift reason If there were no resurrection to what end and purpose are any baptized for dead if the dead rise not at all Verse 23. why are they then baptized for the dead This place is darke and commonly vnderstood of the Sacrament of Baptisme but then it will not necessarily proue the point for w e it is brought and it is brought to proue the resurrection Wherefore to make the Apostles reason good we must vnderstand it either of the washing and cleansing of the bodies of the deceassed as the word baptisme often signifieth Mar. 7.4 He. 9.10 for this was a common custome among the people of God that first they washed the dead bodies and then annointed them Act. 9.37 yea among the heathen themselues which was a certaine testimony to the liuing of the resurrection of the bodies of the dead To this purpose doth Seruius alledge an old verse of the Poet Ennius Tarquinij corpus bona foemina lauit vnxit Serui. in Aeneid lib. 6. That is A certain deuout woman washed and annointed the body of Tarquinius The like doth Pliny auouch in one place of his naturall histories Pliny as the same Seruius testifieth and expresseth the cause that thereby they might make tryall whether the vitall spirits yet remained in the body or not And Virgil Virgil. Ac●●● lib. 6. declaring how the Trojanes solemnized the funeral of Misenus hath these words Pars calidos latices ahena vndantia flammis Expediunt corpusque lauant frigentis vngunt That is Some brought the waters warm with heat and cauldrons eke appoint The body cold they wash and then with ointments it annoint These witnesses doe sufficiently prooue that the Gentiles did ordinarily vse to wash their dead and then to annoint them and this was a very ancient practise among them Or else we may vnderstand the place of the death and afflictions of the Saints of GOD which they suffer for righteousnesse sake in which they are ouerwhelmed as the body is plunged in the waters and thus the word is taken Luk. 12.50 Matth. 20.22 23. where our Sauiour calleth them backe from their ambitious thoughts of superiority ouer their fellowes and warneth them to prepare themselues for troubles yea for death it selfe This is the cup that all must drinke off 2 Tim. 3.13 Act. 14.22 Baptisme properly signifieth a dipping or plunging into the water and the crosse is a certaine plunging into calamities Thus then the reason is framed If there be no resurrection then should they doe foolishly that would seale vp the trueth of the Gospel with their blood and lay downe their liues for the testimony of God but such as resist vnto blood and suffer persecution for the words sake are not foolish Life is precious and deare vnto them as well as vnto others they would not therefore be so lauish and prodigal of it as to lay it downe except they looked for a better life which the Apostle farther amplifieth by his owne example Matth. 10.39 33. 2 Tim. 2.12 and 4.7.8 1 Cor. 15.30 31. Act. 5.41 16.25 Ioh. 21.19 ●he sixt rea●n Lastly the Apostle reasoneth thus If there be no resurrection of the flesh then the Epicures and Libertines taught well that
said that Aarons rod was laide vp before the Testimony for a token and testimony against those rebellious companies Lastly Moses is said ver 9 to haue taken this rod from before the Lord or from his sight presence where we shewed it was laide vp but we neuer reade that Moses his rod wherby his calling was confirmed Pharaohs obstinacy was conuinced and the red Sea diuided was laid vp before the Testimony So then heere is a charge commandement that Aarons rod budding bearing blossomes shold be taken the people assembled and the Rocke onely to be spoken vnto before the Israelites a promise being added and againe repeated that waters should gush from thence in abundance whereof the whole Assembly should drinke and the plenty of it should flow euen to their beasts and cattell These are the Commandements of God let vs see their obedience with their failing halting in it For it is not perfect and entire wanting nothing as appeareth by the threatning presently denounced and by the punishment afterward inflicted Indeed they gathered together the people as God commanded but they spake not to the Rock as God willed thē they were charged to speak to the Rock only yet by impatiency doubting Wherein Moses and Aaron sinned agains God they spake not to the Rocke but complained against the people and smote the Rock once and againe not commanded So then they that hitherto shewed inuincible constancy in resisting the rage of the people and maintained zealously the glory of God beleeued faithfully his promises and stood as Rockes vnmoueable against all stormes that beate against them now faile in their faith and obedience both in speaking to the people and in striking of the Rocke For they aske whether they should bring vnto thē water out of the Rocke as if it were vnpossible for God to performe what he had promised to make good the word that was gone out of his owne mouth Again he lifted vp his hand and smote the Rocke twice through impatiency and distrust August lib. 16. Cont. Faust Manich. cap. 17 so that albeit he were a notable Prophet and holy man of God and that God gaue this witnesse of him Numb 12 3. that Hee was a meeke man aboue all the men that liued vpon the earth Psal 106 32. yet as the Psalmist teacheth they troubled him with their grudgings and vexed him with their murmurings that he spake vnaduisedly with his lips Col. 3 25. Acts 10 14. Ezek. 33 20. Rom. 2 6. Psal 62 12. Reuel 22 12. But God with whom is no respect of persons who iudgeth euery man according to his waies and works doth openly accuse conuince them of sinne complaineth that they had not glorified his great Name pronounceth decreeth the sentence of death against them that they should not enter into the Land of promise And lest this failing of Moses and fall of the people should be forgotten it is named the waters of Meribah or of strife contention Thus we see their doubting and disobedience is here reproued and threatened and afterward punished which is amplified by the reason because they were so farre from strengthening the people by confirming them in the truth of Gods promises and assuring them of the due accomplishment of them that themselues wauer doubt and dishonour God For as God is much honoured when hee is beleeued and we rest in his word as in a thing vnchangeable so he is greatly dishonored when his power is not acknowledged whē his promise is not beleeued and when his truth is not trusted of vs. Thus much of the meaning of the words as also of the order and circumstances of this history now let vs come to the doctrines that arise out of the same Ver. 1. The people abode at Kadesh and Miriam died there In this first verse where this murmuring for want of water is described by the time and place we see mention is made of the death and buriall of Miriam Micah 6 4. She was an excellent woman in the Church an holy Prophetesse Exo. 15 20 21 one that went before others in singing the praises of God after their deliuerance out of Egypt after their passing ouer the red sea and after the ouerthrow of Pharaoh his hoast yet is subiect to death as well as others Doctrine Death is common to all flesh From hence we learne that all flesh men and women high and low rich and poore godly and vngodly how great soeuer their gifts and graces be are subiect to death and mortality This appeareth Gen. 5. where in the catalogue of the fathers that liued before the flood it is said of them all they died Albeit God multiplied their daies many hundred yeares for the increase of mankinde the spreading abroad of the truth from generation to generation yet after many daies in the end al of them died So Psal 89 48. Heb. 9 27. Iob 17 13 14. ch 21 23 c. One dieth in his full strength being in all ease and prosperity another dieth in the bitternes of his soule and neuer eateth with pleasure they shall sleepe both in the dust and the wormes shall couer them And what shall I say more We acknowledge in words and see with our eies a decay and declining of of all things by experience All earthly things vnder the Sun that haue beginning Seneca de remed fortu●● both haue and hasten to their ending The grasse when it is growne is mowed the fruite when it is ripe is gathered the haruest when it is ready is reaped The trees that florish in the Spring and Sommer haue their declining Autumne and their decaying Winter The Moone set in the Heauen to rule the night hath her wane The Sunne which commeth foorth as a Bridegroome out of his chamber Psal 19 3. reioyceth like a mighty man to run his race yet hath his setting and descending the farther he goeth the more degrees he passeth the neerer hee is to the end of his course The reasons of this Doctrine are these First Reason 1 because all are dust the matter whereof wee are made is the dust of the earth therefore must returne to the dust out of which we are are taken All flesh is as grasse and the glory of man is as the flower of the field the grasse withereth and the flower fadeth falleth away The Sea neuer resteth nor standeth still but euer ebbeth or floweth so is it with the life of man it neuer standeth at one stay euery day cutteth off one part of our daies we are neerer to our end in the euening then in the morning according to the saying of Iob we are consumed from morning to euening we hasten vnto the graue as the Riuers are carryed into the Sea This is that reason which is vsed Gen. 3 19. In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou turne to the earth for out
of it wast thou taken because thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne Where the reason is thus framed Thou art made and taken out of the dust therfore thou shalt returne to the dust Secondly we must all die the death because Reason 2 all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God for the Scripture concludeth al both Iewes and Gentiles vnder sin True it is man was created to immortality and if he had euer loued God and neuer sinned he should euer haue liued without seeing death But whē sinne entred death followed in the world as the wages doth the worke according to the threatning of God Gen. 2 17. In the day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt die the death For as they that are adiudged and condemned to dye ●sost hom ●●en 3. are accounted as dead men albeit they be kept aliue in prison so our first Parents although they did not immediately die yet immediately were subiect to death by desart of sinne So the Apostle Rom. 5 12. By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all men haue sinned Where he proueth the cause by the effect that sinne was before Moses and the Law giuen by him because death was in the world which seizeth vpon young and old infants sucklings whereby euery one is conuinced of sinne 〈◊〉 3 19. euery mouth is stopped and all the world subiect to the righteous iudgement of God Seeing therefore wee are all made out of the dust and carry about with vs this body of sin we haue here no continuing City but are placed in the world for a season as men set vpon a Stage to play our parts then must be gone to giue roome to others according to the saying of Salomon One generation passeth and another generation succeedeth Vse 1 The vses follow First the rich the mighty the learned and men of high degree must acknowledge that there shall be no difference betweene them and the poore the lowly and vnlearned in the graue vnto which all must descend True it is there is a difference and distinction betweene rich and poore high and low great small in their life time in friends in honours in houses in lands in liuings in food in apparell in duties in dignities such like externall priuiledges and prerogatiues which shall haue an end yet all these shall ceasse and all degrees must equally meete together in the graue so that albeit an vnequall life haue gone before yet an equall death shal follow after ●rat oda li. 1. This is it which Iob pointeth vnto chap. 17 which we named before where he sheweth that all worldly prosperity and hope shall faile They shall goe downe into the bottome of the pit surely it shall lie together in the dust And the Prophet Psal 49 9 10 11. sheweth that neither wit nor wisedome neither might nor mony neither fauour nor policy can preuent or put away death that all without difference respect of persons must yeeld to Nature and that all meanes which they can deuise for the continuance of their names shall come to nought For hee seeth wise men die and also that the ignorant and foolish perish and leaue their riches for others Secondly let men of excellent and eminent Vse 2 places liue iustly and deale vprightly in their callings wherein they are set As they are placed aboue others so they are seene marked before others and notwithstanding all their honour and estimation their riches and retinue they must die and depart hence when it shall be said to them ●● 16 2. Come giue an account of thy stewardship for thou maiest be no longer steward The remembrance of death must therefore admonish them of their duties that they dreame not of immortality and they promise not to themselues continuance heere and perpetuity This Dauid toucheth and teacheth Ps 82 2 3 6 7. How long will ye deale vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Doe right to the poore and fatherlesse doe iustice to the poore and needy deliuer the poore and needy saue them from the hand of the wicked I haue saide yee are Gods and ye all are children of the most High but ye shal die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others So then when we are tempted to euill we must remember death and the estate that followeth death Therefore the Apostle chargeth them that are rich in this world 1 Tim. 6 17 18. that they bee not high-minded neither trust in vncertain riches but in the liuing GOD because we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine that we can carry nothing out Thirdly this consideration of the common Vse 3 condition of al flesh must stirre vp our affections from resting relying vpon men whose breath is in their nostrils to depend vpon the eternall God which continueth and liueth for euer Let vs beware of all vaine confidence We are ready to rest vpon creatures and stay our selues vpon an arme of flesh as vpon a broken Reed whereby we deceiue our selues of our hope and rob God of his honour This we learne Psal 146 3 4 5. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the sonnes of man for there is no helpe in him his breath departeth and he returneth to the earth then his thoughts perish Blessed is hee that hath the God of Iacob for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord his God Man is vaine and all his pompe is lighter then vanity If then we make him our stay and staffe we beate the ayre wee labour in the fire we build vpon a weak foundation and rest vpon the vncertaine life of mortall and miserable man Psal 144. who vanisheth as a shadow passeth as a dreame flieth as an Eagle speedeth as a Poste consumeth as a garment and goeth away as a thought that cannot be recalled His life is as a span soone measured as a vapour soone gone as a tale soone told as an hand-bredth soone measured as a winde soone ouerblowne and as the weauers Shuttle quickly sliding Lastly it is our duty to prepare for it before Vse 4 it cometh that we may bee found ready and haue oyle in our lamps whē the Bridegroome cometh For death spareth none it respecteth no person no age no Sexe no State or condition no power can withstand it no wisedome can preuent it no bribe can corrupt it no cunning can ouercome it And albeit we often recouer of some diseases yet in the ende we are taken away The whole life of a Christian should be a continuall meditation of death to teach vs as it were to die daily and to number our daies that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome not to set our whole loue and liking on the world which wee must shortly leaue Will a man bestow cost and charges on an house and tenement in which hee shall not long dwell
round about them yea whithersoeuer they went out the hand of the Lord was sore against them So that the people of God are oftentimes driuen to the wall and constrained to yeeld vnto the violence of bloody and cruell enemies Neither can we maruaile at the Lords doing Reason 1 if we consider First that his owne people sinne against him and therefore God is euen compelled to correct and chasten them howbeit in mercy not in his fury for their instruction not for their destruction This the Prophet teacheth Lam. 1 3 4 5. Iosh 7 1 4. What father doth not correct when he seeth his children run astray though he loue them deerely So God chasteneth his deerest Saints and seruants because they should not be condemned with the world It is the sinne of the godly that causeth him to lay sundry troubles and his heauy hand vpon them ●h 1 6. ●niel 9 5. ●ut 28 41. causing him to correct seuerely euē those that he loueth most dearely as he did Dauid and diuers other of his people that we should repent thereof that God may ceasse smiting of vs. Reason 2 Secondly he maketh the aduersaries preuaile ouer his children that they may learn to rest in God alone to put their trust affiance in him and not to relie vpon vaine man who is lighter then vanity it selfe We are ready to rest vpon our selues vpon an arme of flesh rather then vpon the liuing God ●●●●e 30 6. as Dauid in his prosperity said I shall neuer be moued Some trust in Horses and some in Chariots which are deceitfull helps some in Princes whose breath is in their nostrils it is expedient therfore that God should leaue vs for a time in the hands of our enemies that we may learne our owne weaknesse and acknowledge his goodnesse Chron 33 ● 12. Thus he dealt with Manasseh when hee gaue himselfe to sorcery fell into idolatry shedde much innocent blood with all cruelty when he did euill in the sight of the Lord and caused Iudah to erre and to do worse then the heathen He was led away prisoner into Babilon being put in fetters and bound in chaines But when he was in tribulatiō he prayed to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers He learned that in Babylon which he could neuer learne at Ierusalem profited more lying in prison thē he did sitting on his throne and he got more true godlinesse in his heart in the daies of his captiuity then euer he gained in the time of his prosperity Reason 3 Thirdly to harden the hearts of the enemies that they may run forward to their owne confusion For a little prosperity puffeth them vp thereby they sorget God they grow in malice and madnesse and tip their tongues with the venome of their hearts Sometimes they are lifted vp on high that God may giue them the greater downe-fall So he dealt with the men of Ai Iosh 8 6 after they had smitten many of the Israelites with the sword they rushed headlong out of the City to their owne ruine and destruction So he dealt with the wicked Beniamites triumphing in their victories glorying in their owne strength and saying one to another Surely they are smitten downe before vs as in the first battaile but the iudgment fell vpon their owne heads Iudg. 20 39. Vse 1 The vses remaine First we learne heereby not to measure the Church or the truth of religion by outward prosperity or peace which is a deceitfull measure and a false rule seeing God often humbleth his seruants vnder his their enemies True it is God sometimes giueth vnto his Church a flourishing estate in wealth and peace in glory and visible beauty to giue therby euen a taste of all kind of earthly blessings and that they might haue opportunity to serue him euery kinde of comfort and encouragement in well doing yet he oftentimes altereth the outward estate of the Church in this world and changeth the condition of his seruants from one extreme to another Let vs not therefore measure the fauor and loue of God towards our selues or others by the blessings or aduersities of this life Here the wicked many times flourish and flow in peace when the godly liue in great griefe and misery and on the other side the godly somtimes prosper haue rest and a time of breathing and refreshing granted vnto them whē the wicked are in great distresse This is it which the wiseman teacheth Eccl. 9 1 2. All things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and to the wicked so that no man knoweth either loue or hatred of all that is before them No man can esteeme by any outward estate whether he be loued or hated of God for neither do the righteous alwaies prosper neither are the wicked alwaies crossed and afflicted but the wicked flourish more commonly and more gloriously then the iust and the hand of God lieth heauier and sorer vpon the godly then vpon the vngodly both sorts are subiect to death both are laide in the graue Hierom. in Eccles chap. 9. without any shew or appearance of difference between the one the other The loue of God toward the beleeuers is not discerned by the eye but apprehended and imbraced by faith Secondly we must learne not to publish Vse 2 spread abroad the miseries and calamities of the Church that the enemies may not reioyce in the daies of her tribulation We ought not to blaze bruite abroad the priuate infirmities of priuate persons Leuit 19 16. Pro. 26 20 21.22 lest we kindle coales of hatred and contention take away the good name of our brother much more are we forbidden to divulge the miseries and afflictions of the Church to giue occasion to the enemy to reioyce and solace himselfe in the sorrowes of the Saints of God We know the rage of enemies nothing is more ioyfull to them then to heare of the distresses and desolations therof Therfore Dauid after the slaughter of Saul and Ionathan by the sword of the enemy prouoketh to this duty 2 Sam. 1 19 20. O noble Israel he is slaine vpon thine high places how are the mighty ouer throwne Tell it not in Gath nor pubish it in the streetes of Askelon lest the doughters of the Philistims reioyce lest the daughters of the vncircumcised triumph Where he forbiddeth to tell and declare to the prophane enemies the fall and ouerthrow of the King his sonnes and hoast of Israel lest the Philistims should insult vpon them and scoffe at them and consequently blaspheme the God whom they serued and worshipped The like charge the Prophet Micah giueth speaking of the afflictions that should befall Israel and Iudah Their plagues are greeuous for it is come into Iudah Iudah the enemy is come vnto the gate of my people vnto Ierusalem Declare it not at Gath neither weepe yee in the house of Hophrah roule
the end wee may not deceiue others nor flatter our selues in the good motions of the Spirit wee must carefully obserue these few rules and directions following First we must beginne to cherish in our harts a loathing and detestation of all sinne Not of some few sinnes and retaine others that agree with our corrupt Natures but we must hate all sinne If the olde subtle Serpent get in his taile he wil winde in his head also and after followeth al the body If we giue him scope to possesse vs in any one knowne sinne he will thereby bring vs to dest●uction as wee see in Saul Herod Iudas Ananias and Sapphira Wherefore wee must truly turne to God and repent vs of all sinne Secondly we must be changed and renewed in our mindes and consciences bring forth fruites worthy amendment of life otherwise we may still suspect our selues that sauing grace is not yet planted in the heart Let vs carefully looke to our hearts that the worke of regeneration be truly begunne there If wee haue once giuen our hearts to God all other parts will soone follow Our eares our feete our eyes will not be farre behind where the heart leadeth the way This is it which Salomon teacheth in Prou. 23 25. My sonne giue mee thine heart and let thine eyes delight in my waies One can take no pleasure but where his heart is Thirdly we must not stand at a stay or looke backe wee must not thinke wee haue knowledge fayth zeale and obedience enough therefore the Apostle saith touching his own practise Philip. 3 12. Brethren I count not my selfe that I haue attained to it but one thing I do I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe vnto that which is before and follow hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus And indeed in our Christian race there is no standing at one stay For either we go forward or else we go backward If we do not increase we do decrease like the sea that neuer rests but euer ebbeth or floweth To stand still is the first step to declining and declining the first degree of decaying and decaying the forerunner of a finall falling away and falling away the worker of our confusion and destruction as the water that hath beene heate first waxeth luke-warme afterwards turneth to be key-cold Lastly we must endeuour euery day to grow better and better more strong in faith more constant in hope more rooted in charity more setled in obedience more abounding in all good workes This is made the commendation of the church of Thyatira Reu. 2 19. I know thy workes thy loue and seruice and faith and thy patience and thy workes which are more at the last then at the first So the Apostle Paul exhorteth the Thessalonians in the Lord Iesus that they increase more and more as they had receyued of the Apostles how they ought to walke please God Heereunto accordeth the doctrine of Christ where he teacheth Ioh. 15 2. That euery branch that beareth not fruite in him hee taketh away c. And Peter wri●ing to the dispersed Iewes dwelling here and there stirreth them vp as new borne babes to desire the sincere milke of the word that they might grow thereby c. 1 Pet. 2 2.3 But alas where is this increasing proceeding and perseuering to be found Hee that was ignorant is ignorant stil hee that was faithlesse is faithlesse stil he that was vniust is vniust stil he that was filthy is filthy stil Reu. 22 12. Behold the Lord Iesus cometh shortly his reward is with him to giue euery mā according as his work shall be Vse 2 Secondly seeing the wicked do desire the death of the righteous it is plaine and euident that the godly cannot but dye well theyr end shal be in rest their departure shal be in peace Their sorrow shal be turned into solace their pain into pleasure their mourning into mirth their heauinesse into happines God will wipe away all teares from theyr eyes No man so happy as the faithfull Christian He that liueth well cannot choose but dye well whether he dye sodainly or leysurely whether he bee taken away by a naturall death or by a violent death whether it bee by land or by sea in youth or in age Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints the Lord redeemeth the soules of his seruants and none that trust in him shall perish Psal 116 15. 34 22. Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labors and their workes follow them Reu. 14 13. Let vs solace our selues and comfort one another with these words All men naturally haue a desire of saluation whē God toucheth their conscience and summoneth them to answer at his barre Aske the most wicked and notorious liuer that forgetteth God and contemneth him euery day that neuer thinketh of godlinesse that giueth himself to blasphemy prophaning of the Sabbath whoredome couetousnesse drunkennes cruelty hatred slandering and backbiting his brother aske him I say whether he would be saued and inherit euerlasting life hee will by and by answer It is his whole desire and he will thinke you offer him the greatest wrong that may bee to make a doubt of it But these words are no better then Balaams wish Balaam would dye the death of the righteous but he would not liue the life of the righteous for hee loued the wages of vnrighteousnesse and thirsted ambitiously after the honour of vngodlines and therefore he continued in his sorcery went still to fetch his diuinations So likewise many in these dayes haue the wishes of this Wizard Greg lib. 23. mora cap. 21. they desire the death of the righteous but they neuer regard their life they desire their end but they will not walk in their way they are willing to end with them but not to begin with them they catch for the Crowne but will not come to the Crosse they would taste the sweete but they cannot abide the sweat If wee will liue with Christ for euer 2 Tim. 2 we must here dye with him for a season if we will reigne with him in heauen we must first suffer with him on earth we can neuer dye comfortably vnlesse we be careful to liue vnblameably ●ornard ser in Cantic● 21 If we would finde life and peace in the end of our dayes wee must heere seeke it If we would haue God to bee our God in sicknesse wee must bee his people in our health If we hate and abhorre the life of the righteous they are foolish and vaine wishes of carnall men to desire to dye the death of those that are spirituall For what shall it profit vs to come nere them in our words and to flye from them in our workes Wherefore as the vngodly cannot abide the life of the righteous nor seeke to cut off the least lust nor endure the doctrine
idle thing to desire his last end to be like the righteous We see the vngodly liue and wax olde Iob 21 7 9 13. and grow in wealth their children prosper their houses are peaceable without feare the rod of God is not vpon them they spend their dayes in pleasures and sodainly they goe downe to the graue They are not afflicted with tedious diseases they are not tormented with long sicknesses they go away many times quietly as a Lambe their life is with greater delight their death is with greater ease then the life and death of the righteous But after this life beginneth the trouble and torment of the Reprobate Here they haue receiued their pleasures and the righteous their paines therfore these are comforted and the other confounded They must appeare before the iudgment seate of God they must come after this life to their triall they must all stand at the bar and pleade guilty or not guilty The consideration of this day of account immediately after the separation of the soule from the body made Balaam in this place cry out in the sight and feeling of the blessednesse of the Church Oh let my last end be like his From hence wee learne this principle of our faith Doctrine The reasonable soule of man is immortall That the soule of man is immortali hauing a beginning yet is without ending being seuered from the body it liueth in place either of ioy or of torment either it receiueth the reward of godlinesse or it is plagued and punished for wickednesse This appeareth by many testimonies of the word of God When the Lord had made mans body of the dust of the ground He breathed in his face the breath of life and the man was a liuing soule able to liue of it selfe Gen 2 7 and by it self And afterward it is said Genes 5 24. with Heb. 11 17. Henoch walked with God and he was no more seene for God tooke him away to shew that there was a better life prepared and to be a testimony of the immortality of the soule and the resurrection of the body seeing hee was translated that he should not see death neyther was hee found for God had translated him Hereunto commeth the prayer of Simeon Luk. 2 29. Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word he was ready willing to be loosed from the prison of the body and calleth death a departure from hence Likewise it is sayde in the Parable that Lazarus dyed and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome Luk. 16 22.23 the rich man also dyed was buried and was throwne into the torments of hel And at the passion of Christ hanging on the crosse when the penitent theefe praied Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome hee said Verily I say vnto thee to day shalt thou bee with me in Paradise Luke 23 43. Furthermore when the Lambe had opened the fifte seale Reue. 5 6 9. Iohn saw vnder the Altar the soules of them that were killed for the word of God for the testimony which they maintained Reason 1 The Reasons of this Doctrine are to bee known and considered of vs. First if the soule were not of an immortall Nature the godly of all other should be most wretched their life most miserable vnlesse they did beleeue that a time of refreshing should come from y● presence of God and contrarywise the condition of the vngodly should be most blessed and happy This the Apostle setteth downe 1 Cor. 15 19 20. And if the soule did not remaine after this life being separate from the body all Religion and piety were in vaine our preaching and your faith were in vaine Why are we in ieopardy euery houre and why suffer we affliction for righteousnes sake nay why do we not eate and drink for to morrow we must dye Reason 2 Secondly nothing that is immortall and transitory can cite a man before Gods Tribunall or terrifie for sinne vnknowne to any other But the soule of man accusing him for secret sinnes mak●th him hold vp at his hand at the barre of Gods iudgement seate This we see in Belteshazzer when he saw the palme of the hand that wrote vpon the plaister of the wall of his palace Daniel 5 6. His countenance was changed his thoughts troubled him his knees smote one against another Before he was thus awaked he contemned the true God and blessed his Idols but when God manifested a small token of his power and presence he did shake tremble euery ioynt of him for feare of that sight This is the iustice of God reuenging the sinne of men that they should tremble at his iudgements that wretchedly abuse his mercies The like example we see in Felix albeit he lo●ked for a bribe and set iustice to sale at offer and proffer yet when he heard Paul dispute of righteousnesse and temperance and of the iudgement to come he quaked and quiuered at that discourse and was not able to endure the mention of it Now if the soule were subiect to mortality and to perish with the body it would not it could not thus accuse man nor draw him before the iudgement seate of God Thirdly the soule of man can reason of immortality Reason 3 it is vnsatiable in seeking knowledge and is not changed or altered with the estate of the body it contenteth not it selfe to rest satisfied with any thing in this life The more it knoweth 1 Cor. 8 ● the more it coueteth desireth to know the more it is able to learn It desireth blessednesse and happines it respecteth glory and good estimation after death it hath many actions and operations aboue sense and the naturall appetite of the body as to loue God to feare God to put our trust in him to beleeue in him to imbrace religion to cleaue vnto God with full purpose of hart The senses of the body cannot climbe and ascend so high to know God and to meditate on heauenly things nay they cannot reason define diuide number or order any thing Therefore the soule that performeth these things is a spirituall substance like vnto Angels not subiect to death or mortality Now let vs come to the Vses of this point Vse 1 of Religion and principle of our Fayth First it serueth to confute condemn all Atheists Epicures Libertines Sadduces and the late vpstart family of loue raised out of the ashes of the olde Saduces Ioseph anti● 18 cap 2 ●bel Iudai● cap. 7. which deny the immortality of the soule These defie all Religion and deny any spirits either Angels of God or spirits of diuels or soules of men all which standing at defiance against heauen and bidding battel to the Lord himselfe shall one day know that they had once giuen vnto them immortal spirits when they shall be cast into vnquenchable fire and endure euerlasting torments The Euangelist noteth out this damnable sect of
life Alas saith one how hard are these times we suffer pouerty penury and great misery O woful and wretched times saith another the plague is in such a place it is come neere our dwellings we may looke for it euery day to sweepe vs away how shall we do in these extremities or whither shall wee turne our heads from these troubles Neuerthelesse we must know that a man may be free from all these distresses yet liue in the greatest dangers We may haue peace and plenty we may enioy health and liberty we may abound in riches prosperity yet be possessed and compassed about with a thousand plagues more fearfull What times are most dangerous more deadly and more dangerous then the pestilence sword and famine which trouble vs so much and bring vs to our wits end Let vs take heed of our corrupt iudgement of the times and learne more to feare men that liue in prosperity then such as sinke down into aduersity inasmuch as their tentations are more strong effectuall Prosperity ease peace and riches haue turned through our corruption to be the pests and poison of the Church This the wise man teacheth Prou. 1 32. Ease slayeth thee foolish and the prosperity of fooles destroyeth them It is therefore a great mercy of God when he teacheth his children to stand vpright in this slippery way and that they make them not their bane which are giuen them as a blessing Hee setteth before their eies the dayly changes of all things vnder the Sunne and assureth them that nothing continueth in one estate hee frameth them to the contempt of the worlde and setleth their hearts to desire no more then their most wise and prouident Father thinketh meete for them He teacheth them that the most beautifull flowers do fade and lose the glory which for a time they had They see riches to bee vncertaine and decei●full heal●h to bee changeable our friends and acquaintance subiect to death and al humane things to be transitory vain and soon flitting away By al these meditations it pleaseth God to stay vp his people that they fall not from him in their prosperity Secondly it should teach vs to vse patience Vse 2 vnder the crosse and wisely to beare al the afflictions that God seeth good to lay vpon vs. We see by experience that peace and plenty haue done the Church more harme then wars and bloudy persecutions not that Gods blessings are hurtful and pernicious of themselues but by reason of our corrupt nature which is ready to turne his blessings into curses and his great mercies into so many plagues This wee see in the example of the Sodomites they dwelled in a fruitful soyle like the garden of Eden which God planted and therein placed our first parents but they became exceeding sinners and abused the blessings of God to their owne confusion Gen. 13 10. How farre prosperity abundance make vs to forget God consider in the examples of Nebuchadnezzar Herod Dan. 4 27. Acts 12.22 Haman and sundry others Iob feared that his sonnes in their feasting and banquetting had blasphemed God Iob 1 5. It appeareth in the parable of the rich man that made a feast sent out his messengers to inuite his guests Luke 14 19. that they refused to come and pretended sundry excuses one had hyred a farme another had bought fiue yoke of oxen another had married a wife he could not come wherby our Sauiour sheweth what causes commonly they are that withdraw and withhold mens minds from obeying Gods word embracing the Gospell to wit the cares of the world the commodities of this life the deceitfulnes of riches the pleasures of the flesh the study of earthly things these were such ranke thornes that they choaked all heauenly meditations hindred the growth of spirituall graces these brought a fogginesse vpon the soule and wrought in them a forgetfulnes of God Wherfore let vs not murmure and repine vnder the crosse but stoope down vnder his mighty hand who sendeth his correction for our good that we should not perish and be condemned with the world Heb 12 7. Psal 119 71. 1 Cor. 11 31. He doth not take pleasure and pastime in punishing of vs but as a louing father he respecteth onely our benefit Hee hath many wayes to deliuer vs promiseth that our afflictions shall not bee aboue our strength but haue a good end and an happy yssue We must be content with the Lords doings and know that he will sanctifie the afflictions of our bodies to the comfort of our soules whilest those that flow in earthly blessings and abound in outward prosperity do forget God that made them and runne on in the pride of their hearts to vnthankfulnesse against God Vse 3 Thirdly let vs not be deceiued with sinfull pleasures when the baite is offered and the net pitched before vs to take vs with the hooke and to catch vs in the snare but bee carefull to reiect and refuse whatsoeuer tempteth vs vnto euill Pleasures are of two sorts some are simply vnlawfull and not to be vsed at all being directly contrary to the word of God Such are the pleasures that carnall men take in eating till they surfet and in drinking till they are drunken such are the pleasures that whoremongers take in adultery fornication and vncleannesse Others are of themselues indifferent and in their owne Nature neyther good nor euill but according as they are vsed as hunting hawking and other lawfull recreations and euen these when they take vp all our thoughts and thrust out better things out of the doores are called thorns in the parable of the Sower as wel as vnlawfull pleasures Luk. 8 14. There is nothing doeth so much choake the word of God as the pleasures of the flesh nothing causeth vs so soone to forget it nothing maketh vs so soon weary and loath to heare it as the desire to follow and pursue after our delights so that it standeth vs vpon to cut them vp and to pull them out of the ground of our hearts We see men wil not suffer briars and bushes to spring vp where their corne shold grow much more it is required of vs to rid our hearts of all occasions and allurements vnto sinne The Faith of Moses is commended that hee refused to be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter Heb. 11 24 25 and chose rather to suffer aduersity with the people of God then to inioy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the rebuke of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt for hee had respect vnto the recompence of the reward Let vs therefore shake off al pleasures of sinne not onely such as are in themselues vngodly and vnlawfull but all other whatsoeuer when they become clogs and incumberances vnto vs and hinder vs in the duties of our callings Many indeed are drawn and driuen from the word by trouble and persecution Prosperity is more dangerous
it self who notwithstanding are saued in the day of the Lord. This appeareth in Lots wife Gen. 19 she looked backe contrary to the commandement of the Angel and was turned into a pillar of salt Her offence might seeme little at the first and the punishment to be ouergreat howbeit we must not measure sinne by the outward acte but by the commandement and will of God which is the onely rule of righteousnes This her disobedience seemeth to proceed from infidelity vnthankfulnesse curiosity and the immoderate loue of the world of the substance which they had left behind and therefore she is punished and made as a mirror and monument of Gods iustice which Iosephus testifieth to continue to his time Ioseph antiq Iud. lib. 1. ca. 1● yet we doubt not but her soule was saued and she receyued to mercy The like we might say of Iobs childred they were all sodainly slaine by the fall of the house wherin they were assembled yet they gaue good testimony of their godlynesse in their life for as no euil is recorded of them in the Scripture so it appeareth they were wel taught and trained vp in the feare of God by their carefull father euen in the daies of theyr youth God heard their father when he praied for them when bee sent for them they came dutifully and obediently vnto him if they had despised that God whom their father worshipped he would not haue said It may be my sonnes haue blasphemed God and it had beene a vaine thing for him to speake to them of sanctification Moreouer if their bankettings feastings had bene like our Wakes and reuels which they commonly call Yeauals or drunken feasts of such as call themselues good fellowes he ought to haue forbidden their meetings and not to haue prayed to God to pardon their sins which they might commit in their meetings and thereby suffer them to liue in the continual practise of sin forasmuch as that were to mocke and dally with God not desiring pardon for sinne past but to craue free liberty to sin for the time to come And if the father had doubted of their saluatiō no doubt hee would haue bewailed their destruction Lastly it is to bee noted that they feasted in their owne houses they did not run to Ordinaries or haunt Ale-houses or frequent Tauernes neither did they feast euery day like the rich glutton whose daily dinners were daily feasts for hee did nothing else but feast euery day neither did they keepe companie with ruffians swearers drunkards swaggerers and such like but they inuited one another to witnesse their good will and to continue mutuall loue among themselues The like wee might say of Vzzah that stayed vp the Arke and was stricken with sodaine death because he laid his hand vpon the Arke 2 Sam. 6 7. So was it with Vriah the faithfull seruant of Dauid yet he was slain by the sword of the Ammonites 2 Sam. 11 17. Iosiah that good king serued the Lord from his youth yet dyed hee a violent death and was slaine by Pharao Nechoh at Megiddo and al the people of the land mourned for him 2 Kings 23 29. Reason 1 Thus doth God deale with his owne children oftentimes they are chastised in this world lest they should be condemned with the wicked in the world to come 1 Cor. 11 32. Secondly those whom God loueth hee loueth vnto the end Ioh. 13 inasmuch as all his giftes are without repentance Rom. 11. therefore temporall chastisements cannot alter his loue or make frustrate the gifts that once he hath bestowed vpon his children Thirdly euen his owne people sinne against him for in manie things we sinne all Iames 3 ver 1. and therfore when they sinne against him he chastiseth thē with death as with a rod howbeit his mercie he neuer taketh from them Thus did Iosiah offend he would not heare the word of the Lord which was brought vnto him therefore he was smitten by the hand of God Vse 1 This teacheth that it is a false rule and a deceitfull measure to iudge of the saluation of men by temporall things whereas commonly all things fall out alike to the godly vngodly Eccl. 9 12. Many there are that wil take vpon them to iudge and censure men to bee out of the fauour of God because sometimes they dye sodainly and sometimes strangely and contrarywise if they dye in their beddes quietly and calmely they conclude that they must necessarily bee the children of God for that cause onely But if we haue no better testimony to discerne a childe of God then this note we may soone be deceiued for this may often happen more by the nature of the disease then through any grace in the soul of the diseased The constant course of a mans life is the best witnesse what is in man A man may dye rauing and haply blaspheming and yet be the seruant of God by the violence and rage of some sicknesse disturbing the head and the braine For as Paul sayeth It was not hee but sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 7 15 so I may say it is not they that raue and blaspheme it is the force of their sicknesse to which they do not consent and againe a man may go away like a Lambe and yet dye out of Gods fauour and go to hell as Iob chap. 21. verses 13 14. Vse 2 Secondly this reprooueth the Popish sort that commonly condemne Zuinglius a sound defender of the true and Apostolike faith Zuinglius defended because he died in the field as a good Patriot against the enemies of his country Hee did no more then euery true Minister and faythfull man ought to be ready to do Hee was slaine with the sword of wickedmen but that death was an honourable death Hee exhorted the people to constancy in the faith as the Priest is commanded in the Law to do Deut. 20 23 It is no reproach to dye in a good cause and a iust quarrell If he had dyed as Sanders an arch enemy to the Queene and State dyed in Ireland in the rebellion which himselfe had procured who died distracted and in a frenzy to behold the hand of God gone out against him and all his plots and proiects crossed O what outcries would these men then haue made he died as a Traitor against his lawfull Prince in the Popes quarrel and was in the field against his owne Soueraigne whereas Zuinglius dyed with his owne Cittizens in a good cause and was lamented of all good men Lastly we must take heed we doe not iudge Vse 3 rashly and rigorously of the Churches sorrowes and afflictions albeit they seem oftentimes both strong and strange when God feedeth them with the bread of teares giueth them teares to drinke in great measure Psal 80 5. The dead bodies of his seruants haue the enemies giuen to be meate to the fowls of the heauen and the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth their