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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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Tribe Gen. 49 17. Dan shall be a serpent by the way an adder in the path that biteth the horse-heeles so that his rider shall fall backward which declareth that the power might of this Tribe should not be great but preuaile rather by fraud and deceit 〈◊〉 15 76.18 27. Thus Sampson preuailed against the Philistims and afterward they ouercame the City Laish ●●ctrine 7. ●●d often●●●es maketh ●ise of the ●●kest in●●●ments and burnt it with fire We learne from hence that it pleaseth God oftentimes to chuse and vse the weakest meanest men to bee instruments for the accomplishing of his greatest workes Hee maketh choice of inferiour things to performe his decrees and to do good to his Church and to serue him wheresoeuer hee purposeth to imploy them This appeareth cleerer then the Sun throughout the Scriptures in preferring the younger before the elder in the calling of many Iudges in the election of many Kings in the separating of many Prophets and in the ordaining of many Apostles who were of little reckoning and estimation before their honour and aduancement to verifie that which the Psalmist saith Psal 75 6 7. Promotion commeth neyther from the East nor from the West nor from the South but God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Saul was a seeker of his fathers asses and though hee found not them he found the kingdome Samuel being sent to annoint him 1 Sam. 10. Dauid was the youngest of his fathers house and the lowest among one of the lowest families left with the sheepe in the wildernesse according to that in the Psalme He chose Dauid his seruant and tooke him from the sheepe-folds ●●al 78 70 71 from following the Ewes great with young he brought him to feede Iacob his people and Israel his inheritance And as God chose him from feeding a flocke of sheep to feed a better flocke so he chose some of his Apostles from catching fish to catch foules Peter was a fisherman as before him Amos was an heard-man Thus did God throw downe the strong walles of Iericho not by might of men nor by munition of war but by Rams horns which were blowed by the Priests Iosh 6 20 In the creation he brought light out of darknesse the fowles out of the waters and all things out of nothing Gen. 1 3 20. Heb. 11 3. Christ wrought many of his cures in like manner in healing the blinde man for hee spate on the ground made clay of the spettle and then annointed the eyes of the blinde man with the clay then he had him wash in the poole of Siloam who by and by went his way washed and came seeing Iohn 9 6 7. Likewise in the worke of our redemption the truth of this is more apparant for he wrought by contraries bringing life out of death He came downe to the earth to lift vs vp into heauen Beza Confess chap. 3. art 29. Eph. 2 6. He suffered the punishments of our sinnes that he might make vs free from them Math. 11 28. 1 Pet. 2 24. He perfectly fulfilled all righteousnesse that he might couer our vnrighteousnesse Rom. 5 19. And to the end he might fully satisfie for our sinnes hee was made sinne that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Corin. 5 21. He was bound that we might be loosed hee was condemned that we might be acquitted he was crucified in his body that hee might nayle our sinnes to his Crosse and fasten them there for euer Col. 2 14. He tooke vpon him the curse due to vs that he might appease the wrath of his Father against vs Heb. 10 10. He dyed for vs that we might liue he was buried and laide in the graue that he might ouercome death in his owne cabin and denne Acts 2 24. Lastly he rose againe as a Captain and Conqueror from the dead and could not be holden of the sorrowes of death that wee should walke in newnesse of life Rom 6 4. All these examples of Saul of Dauid of Amos of Peter of Christ of the Patriarkes of the Prophets of the Iudges and of the Apostles serue to teach vs this truth that it is the manner of Gods dealing to make choise of small meanes to effect great matters and to single out weake instruments to worke out worthy enterprises Neither ought this to be maruelled at as Reason 1 strange in our eyes For if there were no other reason to induce vs to beleeue it the only will and good pleasure of God ought to be sufficient as being the highest mouing cause and indeed the cause of all causes His will is a law and who shall heerein controule him of errour or conuince him of folly or condemne him of vnsufficiency If he will let the full rich goe away empty who shall say vnto him Why dost thou so Or who can accuse him of rashnesse This is that which Christ our Sauiour setteth downe Luc. 10 21. In that houre Iesus reioyced in spirit and saide I thanke thee O Father Lord of heauen and earth that thou hast hidde these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes euen so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Where wee see he maketh the pleasure of God to be the stay of himselfe so it ought to be with vs if we once come to know what seemeth good in the eyes of God though we know no more though we can see no farther and though ten thousand reasons as a mighty army may seeme to encounter against it yet we must rest our selues vpon it as vpon a rocke and build our house vpon it as a foundation Reason 2 Secondly this serueth best to make manifest the glory of God when as great things are done by a weake hand Now the weaker the instruments are which he setteth on work the more euidently is his power seene and the better doth his praise appeare This gaue Dauid comfort and assurance being a stripling vnarmed and vntrained to the field to encounter hand to hand in a single combat with a mighty gyant he doubted not to ouercome him but was perswaded in his heart of his helpe that neuer forsaketh his that trust in him and call vpon him that he should smite him with his sling take his head from him with his sword and giue the carcasses of the hoste of the Philistims vnto the fowles of the ayre and to the wild beasts of the earth and he maketh this the reason of all That all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel 1 Sam. 17.46 1 Sam. 17.46 This also doth the Apostle inferre and inforce in another kind speaking of our saluation and redemption and of those that are counted worthy to be partakers of them 1 Cor. 1.26 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29 31. You know your calling how that not many wise men after the flesh nor many mighty nor many noble are called but
and to stand on an heap on the right hand and on the left like mighty mountaines that they did most manifestly see and behold the same with their eies They saw when Moses strake the stony rocke and when the waters gushed out they tasted of them When God bestowed the gifts of tongues vpon the Church they heard the Apostles speak in their owne tongues the wonderfull works of God Act. 2.11 When God would confirme the calling of Moses he cast his rod vppon the ground and it became a serpent his eye saw it or else he could not haue fled from before it Exod. 4.3 Againe at the commandement of God he put forth his hand he touched it and tooke it by the taile and it became a rod in his hand and therefore he must needs see it Psal 106.27 28 29 c. All the miracles wrought in Egypt were sensible Their water was turned into blood the eye saw it the taste discerned it and they could not drinke of it When God sent downe Manna to eat which fell among their tents they tasted of it what it was Whē Christ turned water into wine at the marriage in Cana the taste of the ruler of the feast discerned it by and by Ioh. 2.9 And the Iewes said vnto Christ What signe shewest thou vnto vs seeing that thou dost these things Ioh. 2.18 The reasons First that it might appeare that God would Reason 1 not deceiue his people he dealeth plainely and openly as he speaketh to Thomas Ioh. 20.27 Reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithlesse but faithfull Secondly Reason 2 he holdeth not his in suspense doubting but maketh the truth of his works plaine and manifest When the disciples of Christ were troubled and their thoughts arose in their hearts being sore terrified affrighted supposing they had seene a spirit for he came miraculously among them and stood in the midst of them he saith vnto them Behold my hands and my feete that it is I my selfe handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see me haue Luk. 24.39 The vses remaine From this flourishing of the rod openly Vse 1 shewed we learne what a miracle is to wit a rare worke apparently wrought by the sole omnipotent power of God aboue nature or naturall causes It is no vsuall or ordinary worke but rare and extraordinary and therefore we reade when Christ or his Apostles by him did any miracle the people maruelled and were astonied and amazed and there came a sudden feare vpon them Luk. 7.16 Act. 2.12 Mat. 8.27 and 9.8 and 12.23 We cannot say that repentance or regeneration is a miracle though it be after a sort the raising of a man from death to life and wrought onely in a few mens hearts in comparison of the multitude because it is ordinarily and vsually wrought in all Gods childrē Again it must be wrought by Gods almighty power as we haue declared already Touching the which we must know that the omnipotent power of God cannot be communicated to any creature whatsoeuer no not to the Angels in heauen For as the Lord saith onely of his wisedome iustice and mercy so also of his power that he will not giue his glory to any other Again Esa 42.8 thogh this power might be communicated to any other yet there is no creature capable of it whether in heauen or earth none I say is able to beare it or comprehend it This is euident in the example of Peter when Christ had wroght a miracle before him and thereby shewed the glory of his power which in some sort he saw hee saide vnto him Depart from me O Lord for I am a sinfull men Luk. 5.8 and Esay 6.2 3 4 5. Lastly a miracle is said to be aboue or against nature Nature neuer had any inclination to worke aboue it selfe and so to bring forth a miracle for that were to confound things naturall and supernaturall When at the passage of the red sea the waters stood on both parts nature had a desire to make the waters runne and flow in their course as before therefore when they stood still as on an heape it was contrary to the nature of them True it is there are many strange and wonderfull works in nature which yet are not aboue nature The adamant we see by experience though we know not by what force will draw yron to it selfe though it be heauy and of it selfe cannot possibly mooue from place to place yet if it bee aboue it it will draw it to it selfe which is strange and admirable yet because it is not rare but vsuall and common and wrought by an inherent force in the stone it selfe albeit to vs vnknowne it cannot be accounted neither doth any man account it a miracle So we know the nature and power of some waters to be such that they turne that which by nature is gold as also any other mettall into an hard stone We see this to be true by experience ● Gerard ●ha● in end of it ● cap. 166. that whatsoeuer is put into it purposely or falleth into it accidentally is also turned into a very stone as also there is some kind of earth that will turne stakes of wood fastned into it into stone as our best Herbalists do tell vs. No man can shew any sound reason for this why that water or that earth should doe it more then any other water or earth yet doubtlesse there is a reason of it and therfore though it be strange and wonderfull yet it is vsuall or ordinary and according to the nature of the things themselues and consequently no miracle Vse 2 Secondly this condemneth the lying signes and wonders of Satan which are meere illusions and deceits and no true miracles But cānot Satan work wonders strange things hath he no power at all that way yes Neuerthelesse we must vnderstand that the power of Satan is no way equall or answerable to the power of God it is not so great so strong so large it is euery way infinite lesse forasmuch as there can bee no comparison betweene a thing infinite and finite betweene a creature and the creator True it is it is farre greater then the power of men euery way and yet a limited and finite power a natural power not a supernaturall Otherwise woe were it vnto vs for then doubtlesse none could be saued such is his malice and cruelty 〈◊〉 ledge of and ●e came If any aske wherein it consisteth I answer partly in his knowledge and partly in his actions For a as mans knowledge is such are his deeds and therefore as his knowledge is great so are his workes great also Touching his knowledge and vnderstanding hee attaineth to it many wayes First from his owne nature for he is not flesh blood as we are but a spirit and therefore hath by nature such measure
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
5 Lastly it is the duty of all Gouernors to looke to theyr families and therefore GOD beginneth with them and directeth the commandement vnto them Why the commandement of the Sabbath is directed to gouernors and that for these causes First because they must giue an acount of theyr gouernment to God of whō they haue receyued it who is the high Commander and generall Master in Heauen and Earth and of all theyr soules that are vnder their charge forasmuch as hee will search and enquire not onely how ciuill and iust among men and toward men our gouernment hath beene but how godly and religious Secondly GOD setteth them in the first place to teach them that God requireth at their hands to teach theyr families to command theyr sonnes and housholds to feare God to bring them vp in his faith feare and in true religion Eph. 6 4. Gen. 18 19. Thirdly because they must go before them by good example and practise of all holy duties as Paul wold haue Timothy to do 1 Tim. 4 12 as we look for any comfort at the Lords hand in that great day of his dreadfull iudgement when he will bring euery worke to light with euery secret thing whether good or euil Eccl. 12 12. If we haue beene examples in good things we shall receyue euerlasting life if examples in euill euerlasting death Fourthly the Lord singleth out the father and master in the first place because if they go before and leade the way the rest of the house wil quickly follow after Iohn chap. 4 verse 53. Acts chapter sixteene verse 32 contrarywise if they yeeld not obedience for conscience sake to the duties of the Sabbath they may by the abuse of their authority hinder frustrate the holy endeauours of his children seruants Hence it is that many fathers vrge their children many masters command their seruants to go about their owne busines and send them from place to place at that time when they should attend to the holy commandement of the Lord whereas both of thē might well and lawfully reply to their fathers and masters and say with Christ our Sauiour Luke 2 49 Wist yee not that I must be about my fathers businesse Lastly the Lord layeth this waighty charge vpon them that such as are vnder their gouernment may yeeld willingly and cheerfully to Gods will considering how straight a charge God hath giuen to all gouernours If they should do it of their owne head or lay an heauy burden vpon thē which themselues would not touch with their little finger the charge could carry no authority It is not therefore their fathers or masters that restraine them of their liberty tye vp their wicked and wandring affections but GOD himselfe to whom all obedience is due The father doth shew loue to his children whē he restrayneth them from wickednes the master doth no wrong to his seruants that brideleth them from following theyr owne willes and pleasures So then the poynt to be learned and practised is that we must first keepe the Sabbath in our owne persons and begin reformation within the doores or closets of our owne hearts or else we will be very remisse negligent in reforming of others or if we be forward we shall bee charged and chalenged to be hypocrites while we teach others but doe not teach our selues Rom. 2 21. Secondly we must cast our eyes vpon others and looke to them that belong vnto vs that they may sanctifie the Sabbath as well as our selues It is not enough for vs to come to the house of of God alone but wee must come with the trayne of our families as a Captaine with his army Psal 110 3 and 42.4 The father oftentimes is praying in the Church when his children are playing in the streetes The master many times sitteth in the house of God when his seruant lyeth at the alehouse The wife sometimes goeth with her husband to the sermon when the daughters and maid-seruants eyther are sent or suffered to runne to lasciuious dancing and wanton company whereby theyr mindes and oftentimes theyr bodyes also are defiled as it fell out to Dinah Gen. chapter 34 verses 1 2 and so the saying of Salomon is verified Prouerbs chap. 29 verse 15. A childe left to himselfe bringeth his mother to shame But haply some Masters will alleadge for themselues that their seruants are vnruly Obiect as the vntamed heyffer and will not be ordered by them that they are much greeued they can preuaile no more with them and that they breake out and will not be holden in by them I answer Answer this is not a good plea but a vayne excuse and no better For if thy authority serue to bridle them and keepe them vnder in the sixe dayes how commeth it to passe that thou wantest power to preuayle ouer them on the seuenth day Can wee rule them in our owne cause and can wee not rule them in the cause of God Haue we meanes to enforce them to looke to our businesse and want wee meanes to compell them to do Gods busines It seemeth therefore to me to be rather want of will in vs Obiect then of power If we pretend farther that they be incorrigible and will haue their owne swinge and be at theyr owne liberty that day Answ we haue no warrant to burden our houses with such persons that will neither serue the Lord nor obey vs but rather infect others that liue with them The Prophet Dauid professeth that they should not serue him that were vngodly his eyes should bee vpon the faithfull to dwell with him but the wicked should not tarry in his house Psal 101 6 7. Why then should wee keepe them in our house that loue not the house of God Wee will quickly discharge that seruant which hath no care of our businesse why then will we trouble our selues our house with him that is vnfaithfull toward God Thus then wee see the care that all ought to haue of the Sabbath both master and seruant father and sonne husband and wife But alasse the prophanenesse of our times is so great that the Sabbath is in a manner vtterly contemned we giue him least seruice on that day wherein we are bound to giue him most duty For we see heere vnder the Law how the Lord commandeth that the daily sacrifice which euery morning and euening was offered should bee doubled vpon the Sabbath But our people for the most part performe single seruice and double impiety vpon that day The greatest seruice is done to our selues or that which is worse to the diuell But of the Sabbath we haue spoken before chap. 15. 11 And in the beginnings of your moneths yee shall offer a burnt offering vnto the Lord two yong Bullocks and a Ramme and seuen Lambes of a yeare old without spot 12 And three tenth deales of flower for a meat offering c. 13 And a seuerall tenth deale of fine flower mingled with oyle
Church were many wicked liuers of whom the Apostle saith e 1 Cor 10 5. 1 Cor. 10. With many of them God was not pleased but they were destroyed in the Wildernesse Yea such as were the chiefe among them and excelled in godlinesse aboue the rest as the Cedar doth the low shrub had their failings and infirmities as wee see in Aaron in Miriam and in Moses himselfe as we shall see afterward in this booke Wherefore they are deceiued that seeke for a Church in this life without spot or wrinkle Such in former times were the Donatists and such in our dayes are the Anabaptists whoe shall looke vntill their eyes fall out before they shall finde any company or society wholly separated from al contagion of hypocrites Epicures Libertines and such like loose liuers Christ compareth the Church vnto a draw net cast into the Sea which gathereth fish of all sorts both good and bad Againe heere is comfort for the sincere Ministers of the Gospell to whom the dispensation of the Word and sacraments is committed that they ought not to forsake their calling when they behold the greatest part of their charges and Congregations to take no profite and to receiue no instruction by their ministery but to continue and waite with patience vntil f 2 Tim. 2 26. God wil giue them repentance that they may come out of the snare of the diuell of whom they are holden captiue to do his will Fourthly we learne the vnchangeable loue of God toward his people It is euident by Vse 4 this booke more then by the former how diuersly they prouoked him to wrath by their sinnes as their lust murmuring impatience vnthankfulnesse idolatry and fornication they tempted him in the wildernesse whereby they deserued not onely to be depriued of the Land of Canaan but to bee excluded out of the Kingdome of heauen Notwit●sta●●ing God continued their mercifull Lord still so that his election is immutable g Iohn 13 1. and whom hee loueth he loueth him to the end What then shall we sinne that grace may abound God forbid nay how shall wee that are dead to sinne yet liue therein As his graces guifts are without repentance so they must leade vs to repentance and cause vs to expresse backe againe vnfained loue vnto him who loued vs first Vse 5 Fiftly we haue set before vs many fearefull examples of Gods heauy indignation against sinne and sinners Hee punisheth the murmurings of the people fretting fuming against God in their extremities he taketh vengeance on their idolatry and committing fornication he chastiseth their sedition emulation breach of the Sabboth contempt of authority luste tempting of God and such like wickednesse that thereby wee might learne the feare of God and be admonished to auoide the same sinnes which will bring vpon vs the same or gteater iudgements euen temporall and eternall punishments For God is the same God to them and to vs he will shew himselfe iust and righteous in all his wayes a Psal 5 4. that hee is not a God that loueth wickednesse and that euill shall not dwell with him Hence it is that Paul alluding to these famous and remarkable examples of his iustice saith b 1 Cor. 10 11 These things came vnto them for examples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the worlde are come Let him therefore that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall If his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that trust in him Lastly as wee haue fearefull examples and Vse 6 threatnings of the Lawe manifested in this booke so on the other side wee haue comfortable promises of the Gospell touching our saluation and redemption by Christ Iesus who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification For hee is truely and plainely preached in this booke a type of whom wee haue in the brasen Serpent c Num. 21 9. Iohn 3 14 and 12 32. lifted vp in the wildernesse and healing those that were bitten of the fiery Serpents which Christ expoundeth Ioh. 3 to be meant of his death and lifting vp vpon the Crosse That euery one which beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Likewise the Rocke which Moses did strike yeelding vnto them abundance of water as out of a plentifull Fountaine the Apostle expoundeth of Christ for he saith d Num. 20 10 and 21 16. 1 Cor. 10 4. They did all drinke the same spirituall drinke for they dranke of the spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ The like we might say of Manna of the ashes of the red Cow of the Nazarites besides the sacrifices and ceremonies burnt offerings meat offerings and purifications which were figures painting and pointing out the sacrifice ●nd sufferings of Christ Iesus But because we haue spoken somewhat of them before and more remaineth to be spoken heereafter we will passe them ouer at this time without farther consideration This serueth to confute those which hold that all things were carnall to the Fathers that they had no knowledge of the Messiah but onely a carnall imagination of earthly things These are disciples brought vp in the damnable schoole of Seruetus an arch-enemy to the faith who contradict the Apostles in many places and make the Iewes as Swine fatted in a Stie groueling vpon the earth and neuer lifting vp their heads to a better life The Apostle Peter reasoning against such as taught the necessity of circumcision saith e Act. 15 10 11 Why doe yee tempt God to lay a yoke on the Disciples neckes which neyther our Fathers nor we are able to beare but we beleeue through the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ to be saued euen as they doe Thus wee see Christ was onely the way to Gods Kingdome and that by faith in him the Fathers looked for saluation as well as we Our Sauiour testifieth f Iohn 8 56. that Abraham reioyced to see his day and saw it and was glad So the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes saith g Heb. 13 8. Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same also is for euer As therefore the Couenant of GOD touching life and saluation is for substance one and the same so there is one faith one hope and way to attaine to the Kingdome of heauen for the Fathers in the time of the Law and for vs in the time of the Gospell Thus much of the generall vses of this booke The last point which wee propounded in the beginning to be handled h The diuision of this booke into his parts is the diuision of this booke that we may orderly proceede in the seuerall parts of it Some do diuide it into two parts according to the Chronology or computation of time obserued heerein for in the first nineteene chapters he handleth those things which happened in the wildernesse from the second yeare of their departure out of Egypt to the fortieth yeare
possession of theyr whole hearts and keepe not backe a part thereof Iosiah is commended for walking in all the wayes of God 2 King 23 25. Psal 119 6 and for taking away the abhominations of the land The Prophet Dauid witnesseth that he had respect to al the commandements of the law Moses professeth boldly before Pharaoh that they must carry their Cattle with them into the wildernes to offer sacrifice Exod 10 26 and he would not leaue an hoofe of them behind him Let vs labor after this sincerity otherwise our obedience is stained with hypocrisie for God that made all wil haue all or none at all Fiftly our obedience must bee a constant obedience it must not be by fittes and pangs as the comming of an Ague for a day or a short and set time Such as are sick of an Ague haue a cold fit at the first then an hot with these time-seruers it is quite contrarie they are hot at the beginning and afterward waxe colde at the latter ending But we must continue out to the end There is no promise made but to such as perseuer He that endureth to the end shall be saued Matth. 10.22 and 24.13 reuel 2.10 and if wee bee faithfull to the death We shall receiue the crown of life If we would giue right iudgement of a man how his case standeth with God and what his conuersation is wee must iudge of him by the whol course of his life not by this or that action no nor onely by his behauiour at the houre of death for that is a deceitfull rule and may leade vs into errour If a man in the course of his life yeeld obedience and seeke to approue himselfe vnto God wee haue good and firme hope of such a one that he is the child of God yea albeit at the end of his dayes by violence of some sickenesse and want of naturall rest and distemperature of the braine and impatience of the flesh hee should talke idlely raue greeuously and blaspheme horribly we are to iudge of such a one by the strictnesse of his life not by the strangenesse of his death If his life haue been sound and sincere his vnperfect obedience shall bee accepted and all his frailty shall bee remitted so that an euill end neuer followeth a good and godly life But if the course of a mans life be wicked and his wayes crooked though he die calmely and goe away quietly like a lambe and cry Lord haue mercy vpon me yet he may be a reprobate and goe to the pit of destruction Hence it is that the vngodly are described Iob 21. to say vnto God Depart from vs we desire not the knowledg of thy wayes Iob 21.13.14.15.23.25 who is the Almighty that we should serue him and what profit should wee haue to pray vnto him yet for the most part they liue pleasantly and hauing no bands in their death they die quietly they spend their dayes in wealth and are not tormented with long sickenesse They are not afflicted and affrighted as other men Contrariwise the godly are daily punished and chastened euery morning they die in the bitternesse of their soule neuer eate with pleasure Psal 73.4.14 Eccle. 9.1.2 Who doubteth of the integrity and sincerity of Iob and Ieremie wee know they were iust and eschewed euill yet they cursed the day of their birth and the night wherin it is said Iob 3.1.2.3 Ier. 20.14.15 there was a manchild conceiued And if they had died presently they had been saued vndoubtedly albeit the corruption of the flesh for a time preuailed euen as it fell out with Iacob who wrastled with the Angel but his thigh was so crushed that he halted euer after So may it fall out with many of Gods children the force fiercenes of sharp diseases proceeding from hote causes may so disturbe the head distemper the powers of the mind as that they may breake out euen into blasphemy yea be so distempered and distracted by the violence thereof as that they fare as men out of their wits and right minde yet they may notwithstanding all this remaine still in Gods fauor and die in his feare For they may say and say truely with the Apostle Rom. 7.17.18.19.20 21. It is not I that doe it but sin that dwelleth in me Hee saith his whole desire was to giue himselfe to the seruing of God yet hee was hindred and hampered by his owne nature which was ouerweake so that in striuing against sinne hee ceassed not to receiue many wounds and to take sundry foiles blowes and therefore could not accomplish the good that he desired Let vs all be constant vnto the death then our obedience shall haue his recompence of reward Lastly our obedience must not be delayed from time to time supposing we shall finde a fitter time heereafter to heare the Lord speake vnto vs. The longer we deferre the time of repentance the practise of obedience the more vnfit vnready and vnresolued we shall finde our hearts to be Euery sin helpeth to harden the heart vntill we be turned and transformed into stones Wherfore the holy Ghost saith Heb 3 7 8 and 4 7 To day if ye will hear his voice c The acceptable season is the present time So soone as God commandeth reuealeth his will vnto vs let vs not linger or prolong the time but immediately prepare our eares to heare our tongues to speake Bernard de praecep discipl our feet to walke our hands to work euery part of vs to performe his Commandements Hee loueth such a seruant he accepteth such a seruice Will we regard such a seruant as whē we speake vnto him shew him what we would haue done turneth his back from vs regardeth not our busines or saith he will do it another time when he is at fitter leasure If wee will not take such seruice at his hands or put vp such contempt shall we thinke the Lord will be mocked to his face dalied withal as with a childe When he saith Come shall we answere we will not come When he comandeth vs to heare his voice to day shall wee answere we will not heare it to day but the next day or peraduenture the next yeare When he saith This is the acceptable time shall wee answere I wil find a fitter more conuenient time hereafter If he shall say vnto vs the time of repentance is the present time shall we presume to crosse him and to reply the time to come is the best time which God hath reserued in his own hand is to vs vnknown How many are there that haue neglected the voice of God calling them crying vnto them that were preuented by sodaine vntimely death and thereby taken away in their sins The foolish Virgins delayed so long * Mat 25 10 that the Bridegroome came they were shut out of the Kingdome where they knocked but could not
heauen is not giuen but to those to whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 and 25.34 But election is not of works but of grace and therefore is called the election of grace Rom. 11.5 This appeareth Ephe. 1. Ephe. 1 5.6 He hath predestinated vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will c. No man could be saued except Christ had come and had satisfied the iustice of God for the sinnes of the world by his precious blood for there is no other name vnder heauen wherby we must be saued Act. 4.12 but all his benefites proceed from grace and the euerlasting loue of God toward vs as Ioh. 3. Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the word that hee hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life No man can be saued except he be effectually called to Christ and his Gospel outwardly by the word and inwardly by the Spirit but whence proceedeth this grace but from grace as the Apostle testifieth 2 Tim. 1. 2 Tim. 1.9 Gal. 1.6 He hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was No man can be saued except he hath faith in Christ for the iust shall liue by faith Hab. 2.4 and without faith it is vnpossible to please God Heb. 11. But from whence haue we faith By grace as the Apostle witnesseth Ephe. 2. Ephe. 2.8 By grace ye are saued through faith that not of your selues None can be saued except he be iustified as Psa 34.15 16. The eies of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open to their cry but the face of the Lord that is his anger and indignation is against them that do euill to cut off their remembrance from the earth But our iustification commeth from grace as Rom. 3. Rom. 3.24 We are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus No man can be saued except being iustified by faith he be also sanctified and renewed by the spirit of regeneration for except a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3. But whence haue we this but from the grace of God as the Apostle expresseth Tit. 3. Tit. 3.6 The bountifulnesse and loue of God our Sauiour toward man appeared and according to his mercy he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the holy Ghost which he shed on vs aboundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour No man can be saued without good workes and a carefull and constant endeuour to walke in them for we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath ordained that we should walke in them Ephe. 2.10 But how are wee inabled to performe them but by the grace and free gift of God as Ezek. 36. Eze. 36.26 ●● A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you an heart of flesh and I wil put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and ye shall keepe my iudgements and doe them The like may bee saide of remission of sinnes No man can be saued without continuall forgiuenesse of sinnes for into many sinnes and offences we fall daily Iam 3.2 But this is giuen vs through his grace onely as the Prophet teacheth Esay 43. Esai 43.25 I euen I am hee that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake that is for no deserts of thine but thorough grace and fauour and will not remember thy sinnes and Ephe. 1.7 We haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Lastly no man is saued except he perseuere and continue in faith in loue in Christ in repentance in Christ and in all good works as Matth. 24. he that endureth vnto the end he shall be saued and Reuel 2.10 Be thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life but from what root and fountaine proceedeth this gift and from whence hath it his beginning The Apostles and Prophets tel vs most plainely and directly as Iere. 32.39.40 Ier. 32.40 ● I will giue them one heart and one way that they may feare me for euer I wil put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from me Phi. 1.6.29 and 2.13 God that hath begunne his good worke in his Saints will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Now as we haue said of all the rest so we may say of eternall life Rom. 6.23 that it is the free gift of God and therefore all his giftes and our saluation come not from our our merits but from his mercies not from our deseruings in whole or in part but from his free fauour in Christ Iesus Let vs come to the reasons and consider Reason 1 aright the causes hereof First of all God wil haue the praise and glory of his owne works and will not giue and grant ouer the same to another But if the graces of his Spirit were well deserued of vs and not freely bestowed vpon vs wee had matter of reioycing in our owne selues and of boasting against God The Apostle hauing shewed that the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the Law saith Where is then the reioycing Rom. 3.27 and 4.2 It is excluded And touching Abraham th● father of the faithfull he sayeth If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce but not with God Likewise writing to the Ephesians chap. 2. By grace ye are saued through faith Ephe. 2.8.9 and that not of your selues it is the gift of GOD not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe So then he giueth all his gifts freely that he may haue the whole praise of his mercy But so much as we take to our selues so much hee loseth of his glory Reason 2 Secondly he knoweth we haue nothing of our owne we craue our daily bread and drinke at his hands We are beggers and destitute of all good things and neuer are able to supply our owne wants Our owne penury is such that we haue nothing to boast off but our misery pouerty blindnesse nakednes and wretchednesse We were saith the Apostle dead in trespasses and sinnes ●he 2.1 2. wherein in times past we walked according to the course of this world and after the Prince that ruleth in the ayre euen the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience We are vnable to thinke or to doe any thing it is God must worke in vs the will and the deed it is he must draw vs before we can runne after him or come
by iustifying of vs by sanctifying of vs and by working in vs such like effect Against mans merits and deserts Secondly this doctrine ouerthroweth all merits and deserts of man which abolish the free grace of God Gods mercy is our merit our workes are not neither can bee our merit If our election be by grace then it is no more of workes otherwise grace is no more grace But if it be of workes then is it no more grace otherwise work were no more worke as the Apostle concludeth Rom. 11.6 We are iustified through faith in Christ in him standeth our saluation and by his merits we are made righteous Christ Iesus is the corner stone of the building Ephes 2. he is the foundation of the building forasmuch as other foundation none can lay 1 Cor. 3. he is also the highest stone of the building notwithstanding the mountains Zach. 4-6 that is the strongest opposition of enemies But let vs see what merit is What merit is that our vnderstanding may be the better and our iudgement the sounder touching this matter Merit is a worke vndue to which we are not bound making the reward and recompence that was not due to be due When a debter satisfieth his creditour he paieth that which he oweth him he giueth no more then is due vnto him by Law and equity by reason and conscience neither doth he deserue any thankes but through the fault of men as the heathen knew well enough Terent. in Phorm Act. sc 1. who confesse that such was the corruption of the times that when a man brought to another euen his owne he was to be thanked Christ our Sauiour a better master teacheth vs this more fully Luk. 17.8 Luc. 17.8 9.10 When a man hath a seruant who girdeth himselfe and serueth him till he haue eaten and drunken Doth he then thanke him because he hath done the things that were commanded him I trow nay so likewise ye when ye haue done all those things that are commanded you say Wee are vnprofitable seruants we haue done that which was our duty to doe Wherefore we make a weake plea to plead our owne merits who haue nothing but by the merits of Christ But it will be obiected Obiection that we find in Scripture no mention at all of the merits of Christ I answere Answere It is true concerning the word it selfe Neuerthelesse if they will conclude any thing against the merits of Christ because the bare name in so many letters and syllables is not extant in the word of God they may as well gainsay the Trinity refuse the Sacraments deny the Catholike Church and hold the Sonne not to be consubstantiall with the Father Forasmuch as none of these are expressed there But if they meane and vnderstand the thing it selfe then we haue the merits of Christ plentifully preached vnto vs in the holy Scripture to whom the whole worke of our saluation is ascribed The Apostle teacheth Ephe. 1 14 that our redemption is a possession purchased by him that is purchased by the merit of his death And in the former Epistle to the Thessalonians 1 Thes 5.6 he saith God hath not appointed vs to wrath but to obtaine saluation by our Lord Iesus Christ that is procured vnto vs by his merits So in the twentieth chapter of the Actes Paul in his exhortation to the Elders of Ephesus willeth them carefully to feed the flocke of God Act. 10.28 which hee hath purchased with his owne blood where he maketh the blood of Christ meritorious And elsewhere he saith we are iustified by his blood and reconciled to God by his Sonne and so shall be saued by his life Rom. 5.9 10. Rom. 5.9 1● If then we challenge any thing to our selues we take so much from Christs worthinesse He was not bound in any bond vnto vs who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to bee equall to God Wherefore our workes can challenge nothing at Gods hands for as much as whatsoeuer wee can doe is as due debt vnto him Thus the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. Rom. 8.1 Brethren we are debters not to the flesh to liue after the flesh whereby he vnderstandeth the contrary as a member opposed but we are debters to the Spirit to liue after the Spirit So then our spirituall life is called a debt which is true in many respects First How all the we can doe ● due vnto God in regard of our creation Secondly in regard of our redemption Thirdly in regard of our glorification Our spirituall life is due to God in regard of our creation because it is God that hath made vs and not we our selues we are the worke of his hands who hath created vs according to his image and therby bound vs as by a strong band to know him and worship him Hence it appeareth that Adam himselfe in his estate of innocency could haue claimed nothing of God by merit because whatsoeuer he was he was it by him whatsoeuer he had he had receiued it through his gift so that he should haue paide him with his owne which deserueth no thankes as we heard before True it is man fell away defaced and deformed this image and made himselfe liable to eternall destruction howbeit he could not thus shake off the yoke of his necke nor the fetters from his feet nor acquit himselfe of the debt and obligation when of a debter to God he made himselfe a bondslaue to the deuill A debter riotously wasting his goods and carelesly consuming the stocke and substance that he hath and thereby making himselfe a bankrout is not discharged of his debt but standeth bound to pay it as before God will not loose his right nor let go his hold and therefore albeit we are started backe from him he remaineth the same as he made vs so we remaine obliged vnto him Hence we see what is the reason why God commandeth duties of vs in his Law that neither wee nor our fathers are able to performe ●ow God re●ireth im●●ssibilities 〈◊〉 our hands If a father should require that of his son or a master exact of his seruant that which were vnpossible to doe as to trauell an hundred thousand mile in one day or to flye vp to heauen might he not be thought to be a tyrant But the case standeth not betweene God and vs as betweene a father and his children or betweene a master and his seruants For he chargeth no more vpon vs then hee had inabled vs to doe and had giuen vs strength to performe so that if there be any impossibility to do it the fault resteth in our selues and not in God It is no cruelty in him to require so much of vs as he doth but iniquity in vs that doth disable vs. He abideth the same that he was but we abide not the same that we were so that there is no change in him but the change is in vs so that
in heauen that not one of these little ones should perish Mat. 18 14. He commandeth that not one of these little ones should perish Mat. 18 10. He maketh vs to lye downe in greene pastures he leadeth vs beside the stil water he restoreth our soules and leadeth vs in the paths of righteousnesse for his names sake Psal 23 2 3. Iacob that fed the sheepe of his father in law testifieth touching his care that the drought consumed him in the day Gen. 31.40 and the frost pinched him in the night and sleepe departed from his eyes so that whatsoeuer was torne of beasts or stollen of theeues was required at his hands he bare the losse of it Much more then will the Lord care for the sheepe of his pasture his rod and his staffe shall comfort them and although they walke through the valley of the shadow of death they shall feare no euill Will a king regard onely the chiefe Cities and most populous places of his kingdome and suffer the rest to liue as they list without lawes good orders Or will the master of an house looke to some in his family and not to all If then God be our King if he be our Master he will looke to all his subiects and seruants whatsoeuer they be that they shall haue their meate in due season Secondly such is the grace and goodnesse of God that he would haue all his people Reason 2 come to knowledge Such as know not his will are none of his seruants If then he require the vnderstanding knowledge of his wayes not onely of rich men of great men of learned men and of the Ministers but of all the people of what calling and condition soeuer they be how meane and simple soeuer they be we must hereof conclude that he hath ordained that all of them should haue the meanes of knowledge and saluation offered vnto them and published among them To this purpose the Apostle saith He will that all men shall be saued and come vnto the acknowledgement of the truth 1 Tim. 2 4. And Peter in his second Epistle chap. 3. teacheth that The Lord is not slacke concerning his promise as some men count slacknesse but is long suffering to vs ward 2 Pet. 3 9. not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance This is that which the Prophet Ezekiel setteth downe chap. 18 11 23 32 and 33. Haue I any pleasure at all that the wicked should dye saith the Lord and not that he should returne from his waies and liue Thirdly the word of God was penned for all estates degrees and conditions of men It Reason 3 serueth as eye-salue to cleere the eyes of all persons and to make the simple wise Psal 19 7. and 119 99 100. It cleanseth the way of the yong man if he take heed thereunto with all diligence Psal 119 9. The booke of the Prouerbes of Salomon the sonne of Dauid King of Israel was written to giue subtilty to the simple and to the young man knowledge and discretion Prou. 1 4. The Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn 2 13. wrote to the Fathers because they had knowne him that is from the beginning he wrote vnto young men because they haue ouercome the wicked one he wrote to little children because they haue knowne the Father If then the word do serue for all sorts and sexes and ages whatsoeuer it followeth that all must be taught from the greatest to the least from the highest to the lowest Fourthly all persons whatsoeuer they be haue soules to saue simple persons small congregations Reason 4 little assemblies as well as others that are many in number We consist not only of bodies we must not onely prouide for this present life but we haue also soules to saue and must prepare for the life to come We shall all giue an account of the things that we haue done in this life whether they be good or euill forasmuch as the Lord will reward euery man according to his workes Rom. 2.6 The day of our particular death and the day of the generall iudgement are both of them dayes of reckoning and account and as the soule is most precious so the account to be giuen for it is very great and therefore from these premises we may necessarily deduct this conclusion that it is the will and pleasure of God that euery place and person should be carefully instructed Vse 1 It remaineth therfore that we come to the vses and as from a good tree gather such fruit as groweth from thence First we learne that it is Gods ordinance and appointment that euery congregation should haue a learned Minister to teach them the true religion and feare of God It is not ynough that there be a setled standing Ministery in one place or corner of the land or in euery great citie but he will haue his people in all places whether great or small to be cared and prouided for euery Church haue a sufficient Minister to instruct euery member of it Hence it is that the Euangelist declareth Acts 14.23 that the Apostles Paul and Barnabas ordained Elders by election in euery Church and then they commended them to the Lord in whom they beleeued And in the Epistle to Titus Paul saith vnto him Chap. 1. verse 5. For this cause left I thee in Creta that thou shouldest continue to redresse things that remaine and shouldest ordaine Elders in euery Citie as I appointed thee By euery Church and euery citie in those places we must vnderstand that wheresoeuer there is a body of people gathered together fit for a Congregation there ought a Minister to bee chosen appointed and set ouer the same For whersoeuer a Church is planted and a distinct congregation established there is an absolute necessity of a setled Ministery as we haue shewed before in the beginning of this Chapter so that it is altogether vnpossible that without it religion should prosper or continue The Lord had no sooner giuen his law concerning the erecting of the Tabernacle but Aaron his sons were annointed and the whole tribe sanctified to the office of the Ministery to attend on holy things to teach the people to offer sacrifices to performe such duties as were required of them He knoweth that euery man standeth in as great neede of food for the soule aa he doth of nourishment for the body and that as the body decayeth without sustenance so the soule famisheth and pineth away without the bread of life Wheresoeuer the Ministery of the word is wanting there wanteth one of Gods ordinances one of his speciall blessings Wee see by common and continuall experience when the corne is blasted and the haruest of the field is perished and the labour of the husbandman is destroyed what crying lamentation is made how much more ought we to be greeued to see the famine of the word brought vpon vs and thousands perish thorough want of this ordinance of God
eternall glory we must bee more then flesh blood Thou wilt therfore be ashamed to confesse that thou vnderstandest by flesh and blood that thou art nothing but a lumpe of flesh What then art thou flesh in part spirit in part as thou must acknowledge thy self to be if thou be the Lords Why then dost thou not performe the workes of the spirit Rom. 8.5 They that are after the flesh do sauour the things of the flesh Ver. 6 but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit To be carnally minded is death Verse 7. but to be spiritually minded is life and peace The carnall minde is enimity against God Verse 13. for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be If ye liue after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body Ver. 14. ye shal liue For as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of GOD Vers 8. so then they that are in the flesh cannot please God Thus we see that the flesh and the spirit are alwayes opposed the one to the other so that by this wee may prooue our selues whether we be regenerate or not Let vs not therefore boast our selues that we are flesh blood forasmuch as such as are onely flesh cannot yet assure their owne hearts that they are the Lords Obiect 5 Fiftly it may be obiected that to repulse wrong is a note of courage and fortitude and to put vp wrong a token of pusillanimity and of a faint heart If then I must not reuenge I shall be accounted not onely a foole but a dastard and coward Answer I answere this is no better then the diuels sophistry and openeth a gap to the common practise that is in the world to quarrell for euery word speaking It is no argument of courage to be ready to draw the sword and dagger but rather of rashnes headinesse vnstayednesse and of a ruffian like spirit And it is no disgrace to be of a bearing and forbearing nature Our chiefest honour consisteth in fighting against sin vnto the death and shewing all might and manhood in the subduing of it He is stronger that ouercommeth his owne passions then he that winneth a city We must remember that we are made kings and Priests vnto God the Father and therefore let vs not make our selues slaues and captiues to Satan to sin and to the world This then serueth to meete with three sorts of men Perk. on Mat. 5.39 to condemne their euil courses whose whole life pleadeth for nothing more thē priuate reuenge First they are reproued that for euery crosse word supposed iniury are ready to challenge one another into the field the accepting of that challenge when it is giuen This fighting a single combat is vnlawfull That which the naturall man accounteth valour God esteemeth a vice and therefore it is no disgrace to refuse it but rather true grace in yeelding obedience vnto God For we must set down this as a rule that no man must sinne against God for the sauing of his credit reputation among men And if we did duly consider what sin is against whom it is committed and what punishment is procured therby vpon our selues we would neuer question the former ground set downe vnto vs. Secondly out of the case of challenging the field the common practise of fighting quarrelling is condemned which are no better then forerunners of murther and haue a bloody face in the sight of God The Apostle Iohn saith 1 Ioh. 3 1● Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and ye know that no murtherer hath eternal life abiding in him Many there are that hold it vtterly vnlawfull to giue the first blow but if another strike them then they thinke that therby they are warranted to strike againe If any giue the occasion of a fray they hold him worthy to be condemned but if they be prouoked by another they account themselues to be bound to returne him the like This is directly contrary to the doctrine of Christ whereunto all must submit themselues that wil be the disciples of Christ He would haue vs take many wrongs and not seeke to reuenge our selues And it is contrary to the practise of Christ and of his Apostles When one of the officers of the high Priest smote Iesus with the palme of his hand Ioh. 18. ●● because he held his peace would answer nothing he smote not againe as these men thinke he was bound to do for his honour But this was no disgrace or reproch to Christ how then should it be any shame for a true Christian We will needs be accounted Christians whosoeuer say nay but we scorne and disdaine to follow the example of Christ Act. 23.1 Ananias the high Priest commanded them that stood by to smite Paul on the mouth he reprooueth him fot it but he smote not againe this was no infamy but a glory vnto him Lastly their opinion also is condemned that make it a matter of praise and an argument of valour to turne away his face frō no man This indeed is foole-hardinesse It is the commendation of Magistrates to be men of courage to feare the face of God but not the faces of men They must accept no mans person in iudgement neither decline to the right hand or to the left But a priuate man may turne his backe to his aduersary without any impeachment of his credit or diminishing of his valor or lessening of his honor or slander to his reputatiō But of this we haue spoken sufficiently before therfore we wil proceed Lastly it may be obiected that vnder the Obiect law of Moses when any man had killed his neighbour the auenger of blood might slay the murtherer whensoeuer and wheresoeuer he met him Numb 35 19. If a man had killed any person at vnwares and hated him not before he must flie to one of the Cities of refuge and abide in it vnto the death of the high Priest which was annointed with the holy oyle but if the slayer shall at any time come without the border of the Citty of refuge whither he was fled 〈◊〉 27. and the reuenger of blood finde him without the borders of the City of his refuge and the reuenger of blood kill the slayer he shall not be guilty of blood If then he be not guilty of blood how is it that God aloweth no priuate reuenge but commandeth to render good for euill to pray for them that curse vs and to doe good to our enemies and such as persecute vs I answer the politicke lawes serue not to bring men to perfection such as are made for ciuill gouernment When God speaketh as king of Israel and maketh statutes tending to outward peace and tranquility he aimed not at the spirituall perfection which is contained in the moral law which is the rule of
not Calfe or any Cattell should vndergo the punishment for sinne because the soule that sinned shall die the death Ezek. 18 verse 4. and the threatning must be true that because man sinned he should die Gen. 2. Thou shalt die the death So that it was necessary eyther that all man-kinde by reason of sinne must perish euerlastingly Heb. 9 15. or else Christ the Mediator of a better testament must become a surety for vs and satisfie the wrath of God kindled and conceiued against vs for sinne If any aske the question Question if the blood of Buls Goats could not take away sinne why did God command them to be offered and to what end were they appointed I answer Answer this was not done in vaine but to good purpose For albeit they could neuer take away sinne nor purge the conscience from dead workes yet they serued fitly to shadow out the death of Christ and to assure the heart that it is washed by the blood of the Messiah This was a notable comfort to the people of God from the beginning taught them to looke for redemption through him Obiection If it bee farther said that God speaketh euery where in the Law that the blood it selfe of Buls and Beasts clenseth and purgeth sinne as Leuit. 17 11. The life of the flesh is in the blood and I haue giuen it to you vpon the Altar to make an attonement for your soules for it is the blood that maketh an attonement for the soule I answer Answer that place speaketh not properly but sacramentally as in the new Testament he calleth in the institution of his last Supper Math. 26 26. the bread his body because it is a figure of it so in this place to the outward signe he giueth the name of the thing signified and to the type he ascribeth the proper effect of the blood of Christ which onely is the blood that is able to make attonement for our sinnes Otherwise those offerings of beasts should be called in vaine Heb. 9 24 10 1. the similitudes and shadowes of good things to come As for those heretikes that dreame that those oblations did really and indeed clense away the sinnes of the fathers not by their naturall operation but by the acceptation of God and therefore were not types of Christs sacrifice washing away sinne they are euidently conuinced by the places before alledged and throughout the Epistle to the Hebrewes Obiect If any aske how these can bee figures of Christ seeing GOD witnesseth in his word that he neuer required them When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Psal 40 7. Heb. 10 verses 5 6. If then God would haue none of them how could they be the figures and images of better things I answer Answer God may be said to allow them and yet to disallow them to reiect them and to regard them in diuers senses Hee willed them as he commandeth them and commendeth them as a sweet sauour vnto him performed in faith and as types referred to the comming of the Messiah and the time of reformation Heb. 9 10. On the other side he may be said to refuse and reiect them for these three causes First when the manner of doing is euill doing that which God requireth but doing it in a corrupt manner to wit without faith and obedience as the Prophets in euery place reprooue the sacrifices of hypocrites wicked persons as Esay 1 11 12. I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs who hath required this at your hand Your new Moones and your appointed feasts my soule hateth and the reason of this is rendered in the words following Verse 1● Your hands are full of blood Againe God would not that they should remaine continue for euer but that though they had place in the Church for a time they should ceasse at the coming of the Messiah Therfore Christ being come into the world and manifested in the flesh God willed thē no longer but would haue them abolished And this sense doth the Apostle principally intend in this place that the shadowes must giue place when the body it selfe was come in person Lastly it may after a sort be said that God neuer willed them that is approued allowed of thē as the principall part of Gods worship and as the very price of our redemption the ransome for our sins our reconciliation vnto God albeit he would haue them obserued of his people and vsed for a time as certaine rudiments rites to bring them to Christ to confirme their faith in him Let vs shut vp this with the comparison that the Apostle expresseth Heb. 9 13 14. If the blood of Buls and of Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience frō dead workes to serue the liuing God In these words he compareth the shadow the body the type the truth the ceremony and the substance together Doctrine Christ Iesus hath made a● attonement between G●● and vs by h●● blood Frō hence we learne this doctrine that the blood of Christ taketh away our sins reconcileth vs to God the Father Christ Iesus hath in the performance of his Priesthood freed and deliuered vs from the guilt punishment of our sins This appeareth euidently vnto vs by considering laying before vs the end the parts and fruite of his Priesthood The end of the Leuiticall Priest-hood and of this figured by it was to offer sacrifice for the ignorances Hebr. 9 ● that is for the sins of the people The distinct parts of it are two satisfaction and intercession His satisfaction consisteth partly in suffering and partly in obedience The second part of his Priesthood standeth in intercession in that he is become our perpetuall and perfect Aduocate that therby God might be appeased for them and we reconciled vnto him The fruite thereof is this that we are deliuered redeemed ransomed iustified and freed from the guilt of sin from the burden of ceremonies from the curse of the Law from the wrath of God and from feare of condemnation This truth is taught in many places Ioh 1 29. Iohn seeing Christ coming vnto him saith Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sin of the world And the same Apostle in his first Epistle chap. 2 ver 1 2. If any sinne we haue an Aduocate Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes the Apostle magnifying the mercy of God and setting out the merites of Christ he saith chap. 3 verse
power of Satan to the end wee should intangle our selues againe and giue vp our selues to his seruice who is the sworne enemy of God whereas wee are deliuered out of the hands of our enemies that wee should serue the Lord without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the daies of our life Luke 1 74 75. Labour then to be in Christ and examine thy selfe whether he be in thee or not study to be partaker of the benefits of his passion and to be washed from the filthinesse of our corruption This is a priuiledge belonging vnto the Church of God as the Prophet Esay noteth chap. 33 verse 26. The inhabitant shall not say I am sicke and the people that dwel therein shall be forgiuen their iniquity What then Shall wee continue in sinne because sinne is pardoned Or shall wee turne the grace of God into wantonnesse because grace hath abounded God forbid how shall we that are dead to sinne liue any longer therein Roman 6 2. We are baptized into the death of Christ and are buried with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father euen so we should also walke in newnesse of life Our old man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroied that hence forth wee should not serue sinne The more wee profite by the death of Christ the more wee grow in sanctification and the farther wee proceed in mortification It is one thing to talke of the death of Christ and another thing to feele his death working in vs it is one thing to know that he died and another that he died for vs. It is not enough to reason of his death and to conferre of it except it be as a strong purgation to cleanse vs from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God Holinesse in the soule is as health in the body and peace in the City and marrow in the bones It is the righteousnesse of Christ that giueth life vnto vs so that so farre as we liue we are sanctified The life of an vnregenerate man is no life but rather a death they are twice dead dead in soule and dead in body there is no life of God in their mindes or willes or consciences or affections They may well breath in the ayre as the brute beasts do but they haue no heauenly breath or celestiall motion in them They haue the naturall life but they are vtterly ignorant what the spirituall life meaneth But he that is spirituall indeed and truely sanctified the farther he proceedeth the weaker the motions of sinne are in him euen as the neerer a man draweth to death the lesse motion is in him If we be once in Christ and dead with him the pleasures of the world the delights of the flesh the lustes of the eyes the pride of life and the vanities of carnall men will moue vs nothing at all They that were our familiar companions in sin will be shunned of vs bitter vnto vs and banished from vs. The euill workes wherein before we tooke our whole delight will be greeuous Irkesome vnto vs so that we will by no meanes abide to heare and see the vnrighteous deeds of the wicked which before did minister matter of sport contentment vnto our soule Lastly seeing the death and shedding of the blood of Christ is the meanes of our saluation Vse 4 and free pardon of our sins we are to reioyce at it and to comfort our selues in it aboue all things in the world as that which hath procured the greatest blessing that can befall vs so that if we can find but one drop of his blood to be by the power of the Spirit sprinkled vppon our consciences to purge vs from dead workes it should reioyce vs more then the gaining of a kingdome or the increasing of our corne and cattell If a man should liue in health wealth in honour preferment in fauor and friendship of the mighty in credite estimation of men in the praise applause of the world so that he had no experience of sorrow and sicknes of misery calamity yet if he haue not this principle writtē in his hart that Christ shed his blood for him and nailed his sinnes vpon his Crosse and carried them with him into his graue to bury them in perpetuall forgetfulnesse What comfort could all these things bring vnto him Or what sound delight could hee take in them Or what were he nearer for them vnto saluation But if wee should want all these blessings of honour of riches of fauour of preferment and such like and on the contrary side taste of the cup of affliction in great measure and drinke vp the dregs of it if we should endure pouerty banishment infamy iniury disgrace distresse discredite slanders perilles persecution need nakednesse and all kinde of aduersity yet these could not make vs miserable Rom. 8 39. nor separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. It is he that died for vs yea rather which is risen againe who is euen at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for vs. Who then shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect who haue a discharge giuen them from all their sinnes As for troubles and afflictions they are sanctified vnto them and serue to bring them neerer vnto God and are approued meanes whereby they are broght to a conformity with Christ True it is Iob 2 4. our nature abhorreth nothing more then affliction so that it is greeuous for the present and not ioyous It is well obserued that when Iesus went vp to the Mountaine to preach all his Disciples went with him none forsooke him nor fled from him but when he went to Mount Caluarie to suffer they all left him alone Hee hath at all times many that are ready to follow him by professing but few are willing to follow him by patient suffering Wee are content to goe with him into the Temple but we will not accompany him to the Crosse Peter shewed this too plainely both by his words and by his practise When Christ once made mention of his suffering he said vnto him Math. 15 22. Master pitty thy selfe And when he was in the High-Priests hall was assaulted and tempted for feare of the persecutors and danger of death hee denied his Master Notwithstanding we must feare to sinne against Christ more then to suffer with Christ forasmuch as if we suffer with him we shall also be glorified with him There is nothing can make vs miserable but that which bringeth vs out of fauour with God and separateth vs from him now there is nothing can separate vs from God but sinne nothing can destroy the soule but sinne and sinne is able to do it They therefore are truely happy that haue the power and strength of sinne abolished and are no longer
Ver. 38. Ver. 39. and to let them alone If this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to nought but if it be of God ye cannot destroy it lest ye be found euen fighters against God They agreed vnto him and left off their consultation of killing them and putting them to death and albeit they could not conuince them of errour neyther were able to lay false doctrine to their charges Ver. 40. 4● yet they suffered rebuke and were beaten for the Name of Christ Thus doe the enemies of God deale in all ages with the godly they hate them for no other cause but because they follow goodnesse Psal 38. and will not follow them into all excesse of riot 1 Pet. 4. They can lay nothing to their charge and yet they thinke them worthy of punishment They can accuse them of no crime and yet they ceasse not to accuse them They are not ashamed to cry out vpon them and to speake all manner of euill against them and yet when they haue deuised what mischiefe they can against thē broched what slanders they can and vttered all their malice the greatest fault that they can finde in them is this that they serue God in the sincerity of their hearts and labour to please him with vprightnesse of life When the enemies of Daniel sought occasion against him to bring him out of fauour with the King and into danger of his life they could finde no matter against him in the affaires of the kingdome albeit they desired nothing more so that when after all searching and watching of him they were at their wits end in the end they concluded thus Wee shall not finde any occasion against this Daniel except wee finde it against him concerning the Law of his God Dan. 6 verse 5. This was the hainous crime that they laide to his charge as if he had committed fellony or treason that hee praied to God and made his petition vnto him verse 13. Thus fareth it with all those that are the worshippers of the true God and make conscience of their waies the wicked wretches of this world reuile them and make hue and cry against them as if they were some great malefactors and had committed somewhat worthy of death and yet when all cometh to the vpshot what hath the righteous done or what matter is it that they haue against them Surely no more then the Presidents and Princes had against Daniel the cause they haue against them is concerning the Law of their God they cannot abide them because they are too precise in keeping the Sabbath they will not sweare and blaspheme the Name of God they will not drinke and bee drunke with them they will not runne riot and play the good fellowes with them they are neuer well but when they are reading or praying or reasoning and conferring of the waies of God they are alwaies reproouing vs and finding fault with vs for one thing or other I thinke wee shall do nothing for them shortly To be short they deale with the faithfull as Ahab spake concerning Michaiah 1 Kin. 22 verse 8. There is one man by whom wee may enquire of the Lord but I hate him for hee doth not prophesie good concerning me but euill But did he not speake the truth the King did not nor could not charge him with vttering lies He prophesied euill vnto thee O Ahab because thou wast euill if thou hadst beene good he would haue spoken good vnto thee And this is the cause why the vngodly hate the godly If then wee bee thus dealt withall at any time let it not discourage vs but therein let vs reioyce because wee are made like vnto the Prophets that were before vs wee are made like vnto the Apostles nay wee are made conformable vnto our Sauiour Christ himselfe We must not looke it should goe better with vs then it did with them forasmuch as the world wil alwaies be like it selfe and vnlike to them Secondly no man is to be condemned vpon Vse 2 suspicion onely or vpon presumption or bare surmise or another mans accusation for if it were enough to be accused innocency it selfe cannot escape and the most innocent shall be soonest made away True it is the godly must giue no iust cause to bee euill spoken off but abstaine from all appearance of euill and cut off occasions from thē that seeke occasions howbeit whether occasion be giuen or not euery man may suspect what they list and how farre they list and of whom they list and who can say against them So that it is not enough to condemne a man or to account him guilty to be suspected Some haue such iealous heads and vnsetled braines that they will make occasions of suspicion ●d in Trinū which are no occasions Suspicion is in another mans heart or head therefore we cannot alwaies auoide suspicion except we had the gouernment of their hearts and heads the which thēselues euermore haue not We must be carefull to auoid the fault though we cannot the fame we must take heed of the sinne though we can preuent the suspicion The fault and offence is in our selues 〈◊〉 Ethic. l. 1. suspicion is in another Euen as honour is in him that honoureth not in him that is honoured and as contempt is in him that contemneth not in him that is contemned forasmuch as it lyeth not in our power to be honoured or to be despised so it is with suspicion 〈◊〉 comment Tim. 4. it hath place in the minde of another and it lyeth not in our choice whether we will be suspected or not no more thē it doth in him that is despised who would willingly be honoured The brethren of Ioseph were suspected to be spies and to come to see the weaknesse of the Land Gen. 42 9. True it is he dissembled with them concealed himselfe from them but if indeed he had so conceiued or rather misconceiued and misiudged of thē who could hinder or helpe it or how could they preuent or redresse it as it fell out with the messengers of Dauid that he sent to Hanun the sonne of Nahash King of Ammon for his Princes said vnto him 〈◊〉 10 3. Thinkest thou that Dauid doth honour thy father that hee hath sent comforters vnto thee Hath he not rather sent his seruants vnto thee to search the City and to spie it out and to ouerthrow it This they suspected returned euill for good These messengers behaued themselues vprightly in their Embassage they gaue no more occasion of these surmises to Hanun then Iosephs brethren did vnto him yet who could stoppe them in so doing Who was more innocent then Ioseph that hearkened not to the tentations and allurements of his mistresse nor desired or delighted to be in her company 〈◊〉 9 19 20. yet his ouer-credulous master hearing the words and accusation of his wife not onely held him in suspicion but tooke him as guilty and put
31 13 14. He did not despise the cause of his man-seruant nor of his maid-seruant when they contended with him he grounded himselfe vpon two most notable worthy considerations one from the person of God another from the law of creation From the person of God he vsed mildenesse toward them because with him is no respect of persons What then shall I do when God riseth vp and when he visiteth what shall I answer him If he should not deale mercifully and moderately with them how should he be able to answer it to God who is the Lord both of master and seruant forasmuch as we all serue one common master to whō we must giue an account and as our seruants come to answer before vs so we must come to answer before God Col. 4. It shall one day be said vnto vs Come giue an account of thy Stewardship for wee may be no longer Stewards Luke 16. This consideration if it were duely marked of vs were sufficient to stirre vp all masters Magistrates to iust and equall dealing Againe from the common condition of our creation there is one author of life in him both master and seruant liue and moue and haue their being and both of them must of necessity die and depart out of this life How meane or how high soeuer our place of gouernement be to moderate our affections is a notable vertue in all Gouernors albeit by our authority we may command them silence and stoppe their mouthes and lade thē with stripes yet we should giue them leaue to answer for themselues and to pleade their owne causes and to debate the matter freely with vs. True it is Paul requireth of seruants that they should bee obedient vnto their masters Ti● 1 ● and please them well in all things not answering again howbeit the Apostle meaneth giuing of crosse answers replying againe with vnseemely and firelike words such as stand not with the bounds of their calling but they mutter and murmure with their tongues so that though they be reasonable in their seruice yet they are vnreasonable in their cutted and crabbed answers This is the answering that heere is reprooued in seruants who oftentimes abuse the lenity and mildnesse of their superiours Iob by his owne practise sheweth that there was no pride hautinesse or cruelty in him he abused not his superiority and authoritie ouer them he exercised not tyranny vpon them he did not trample vpon them and cast them vnder his feete as if they had beene dogges or bruite beasts but he mastered his affections and bridled his anger did beare with them with all gentlenesse and lowlinesse of minde And there are many motiues to perswade to this meeknesse and mildenesse toward such as are vnder vs. ●nes to ●ade to ●enesse ●d infe● First we are all of one molde and matter al are of the earth we are no better in reg●●d of our originall then those that are vnder vs albeit heere we be aboue them We are all dust and to dust we must returne The master is dust as well as the seruant When the poore Iewes complained against their oppressours to whom they had morgaged their houses and lands and giuen their sonnes and daughters into bondage they vse this ●eason Nehe. 5.5 Yet now our flesh is as the flesh of our brethren our children as their children To this purpose the Prophet warneth that we hide not our selues from our owne flesh Esay 58.7 Secondly we haue all one common creator he that made the master made also the seruant and he that created the rich created the poore ● 22.2 God is the maker of them both as Salomon teacheth in the booke of the Prouerbes and this we noted before out of Iob who confesseth that he which made him made them and that they had one which fashioned them in the wombe Thirdly albeit we ha●e superiority and soueraignty ouer them yet we must consider wee haue one master in heauen ●s 6.9 to whom wee must giue an account so that as we are masters ouer them so we haue a master ouer vs and as we haue seruants vnder vs so we are seruants vnder God Such then as are superiours ceasse not to be subiects forasmuch as God is aboue all that will iudge euery one according to their workes euen toward those that belong vnto vs. The masters among the Gentiles neuer considered that they were as stewards and must giue an account of their calling and gouernment and therefore they abused it at their pleasure hauing power of life and death ouer their seruants but the Apostle putteth them in minde that the high possessour of heauen and earth ruleth all and will bring all vnto iudgement Seeing then God hath knit such a fast knot betweene mankinde that cannot be loosed to wit that we haue all one matter one common maker one common master surely such as shall cut this knot in sunder deserueth to haue his name razed out of the number of men because he acknowledgeth not the nature which God hath put into vs but thinketh he hath the bridle put into his own hands to vexe and oppresse such as are vnder him True it is he hath a preheminence ouer others and it is meete he should rule as a master and Magistrate in his owne house howbeit such as serue him and are of low degree ought not to be contemned as abiects or accounted as our footstooles Fourthly as there is one master both of masters and seruants so there is no respect of persons with him This is the nature of our heauenly master he will not sit in iudgement vpon men according to their nobility power greatnesse or riches but deale with them according to their workes as 1 Pet. 1 17. If ye call on the Father who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans workes passe the time of your soiourning heere in feare When men of might and power vexe and tread vpon the poore weake and simple that dare not resist or withstand them they goe away with it for the most part euery one is afraid to oppose against them or to defend the cause of the innocent because men are blinded or daunted by the outward glory of their persons and so they dreame that God is like vnto themselues But the Apostle layeth before their eyes Ephes 6.9 or rather vnto their hearts that they should put away threatning and deale mildly and gently toward them forasmuch as God accepteth of no mans person Fiftly they shall receiue themselues great benefite and profit by their seruice This the Gentiles though God suffered them to wander in ignorance knew well enough and the Philosophers vsed to mooue all masters to equity and gentle dealing toward their seruants True it is menseruants and maidseruants in those dayes were not as they are in our times they had them not by couenant for yeeres they serued them not for wages but they were bondslaues to liue and die
dead are there and that her guests are in the depth of hell Such naughty women are called euery where in this booke strangers though they be too familiar and well known and thrust themselues into the company of others because they should be strangers vnto vs and not of our acquaintance There is nothing more common in them then to entice young men by wanton gestures lasciuous words and plausible perswasions to dalliance and delight It is a great fauour of God to be preserued from their baites and kept from their snares yea it is a farre greater mercy to be secured from harlots then to be kept from the pestilence they shew greater wisdome that shun and passe by their houses and company then they that forsake places persons that are infected with some dangerous and deadly disease Euery one is forward to beware hee come not neere any pest-house for feare of his life but if we assemble into harlots houses we run in danger of soule body It is an easie matter to fall into a pit where a man may be drowned but it is not so easie to get out of it The wanton woman is as a deepe ditch and a narrow pit and a dangerous hole whereinto a man may slip hastily at vnwares but he shall hardly come out from thence or deliuer himselfe without the speciall goodnesse of God pulling him as it were out of the fire and setting his feete in safety For as a theefe lurketh in a denne or wood to get a prey so doth she lye in waite and vseth baites to steale away the hearts of men and thereby preuaileth mightily with many in the world Among all dangers this is not the least that Salomon speaketh of ● 2 19. None that goe vnto her returne againe neither take they hold of the pathes of life These words do not absolutely deny repentance to them that are fallē or shut the gate of mercy against them that haue sinned but the meaning is that few yea very few escape destruction returne to saluation because they sildome repent It is a very rare thing to see a penitent adulterer they leaue the sinne when it leaueth them because they can follow it no longer but they do not repent of it they do not sorrow for it they do not flie from it Hence it is that you shall hear many old men whose strength is decaied whose bodies are withered whose feet are already entred in a manner into their graues laugh heartily at the remembrance of their tricks of youth and talke wantonly filthily of the prankes which they haue plaied so that from the abundance of the heart ●h 12 34. the mouth speaketh and their corrupt communication testifieth that they neuer soundly repented of their vncleannesse No maruaile therefore if the wise man peremptorily declare that few or none of those that are giuen ouer to this lewdnesse of life do come to repentance for albeit some few find grace yet in comparison of such as run on headlong liue securely to the end in their wickednes they may worthily be said to be none at all They are so blinded besotted that they cannot see their own filthines they are so dull and deafe that they cannot heare those that admonish them nay they hate those that reproue them The Apostle Paul exhorting the Corinthians to flye fornication ● 6 18. which was most common in those daies ●●es to a ●fornica and esteemed a slight or no sin at all vseth many notable reasons of great weight importance worthy to be considered of vs. One reason or motiue is this that our bodies are the Lords and must be seruiceable vnto him ● 6 13. The body is not for fornication but for the Lord. Wherfore hath he giuen to vs our body but that we should serue him in our body We are not to yeeld our members as instruments of vnrighteousnes vnto sin ●6 13. but we ought to yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and so make our members as instruments of righteousnes vnto him First therefore the Apostle reasoneth frō the end of our creation Secondly the Lord Iesus is ordained appointed to be the Redeemer Sauiour not only of the soule but also of the body therefore he saith the Lord for the body 1 Cor. 6 13. Fornication and sanctification cannot stand together but are contrary one to the other so that they cannot abide in one subiect Christ came into the world to this end that he might redeeme our bodies by his death out of the power of the diuell and sanctifie them by his Spirit If then we giue our selues as seruants to obey the lusts of the flesh wee make void the glorious worke of our redemption wherein mercy iustice and truth kissed one another For herein we see the truth of Gods promise accomplished Gen 3 15. that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpents head and the truth of his threatning fulfilled that man offending shold die the death Herein we may behold the wonderfull iustice of God that because man had sinned man must be punished for otherwise he had not bin a iust God Lastly hereby appeareth the vnspeakable mercy of God toward mankinde who albeit his iustice were such that rather then sin should goe vnpunished he would punish it in his Son 1 Pet. 2 24. Esay 53 12. who bare our sins in his body and made intercession for our transgressions yet found out a way how to redeeme vs when we cast our selues headlong into all misery and made our selues subiect to the greatest thraldome that euer was We are deliuered from the hands of our enemies sin the world and the diuell that we should be holy vnto him that hath called vs. The third motiue is drawne from the glorious resurrection of our bodies as the former was frō the gracious redemption of our bodies If we would haue them liue with him for euer that shall raise thē vp we must abstaine from filthy lusts which defile the body therfore the Apostle saith God hath both raised vp the Lord 1 Cor. 6 14. wil also raise vs vp by his own power The author of this great benefit and wonderfull worke is God which passeth and exceedeth mans reason Hence it is that he putteth vs in minde of his power because he is almighty If it were not vnpossible vnto him to create our bodies out of the dust of the earth why shall it not bee possible to raise them out of the dust againe Nay if he were able to make thē of that which was nothing inasmuch as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 11 3. that the things which are seene were not made of things which doe appeare how much more shall he bee able to giue to euery one his body which he had before Again he teacheth that God hath raised already the Lord Christ frō death to life therefore
would be thought no strange thing to any but a ground whereunto all persons yeeld against which none dareth oppose himselfe howbeit if we come to their workes and examine their waies into which they are entred we shall see it is farre remooued from their hearts and innermost parts We are not therefore to flatter our selues in our sins as though no eye saw vs or no eare heard vs as the maner of the prophane and vngodly is who say who seeth me I am compassed about with darknesse of the night the walles of the house hide me no body can behold me what need I then to feare There is not one of an hundreth that maketh any bones at sinne so he may cary it away cleerely and closely smoothly and secretly from the sight and knowledge of the world They stand more vpon their credite then vpon their conscience and regard more the shame of men then the feare of God But what shall it profit a man to hide his sinnes from men when they lie open to the eyes of God Nay albeit we thinke our selues neuer so sure and secret yet we doe but deceiue our selues forasmuch as our owne conscience as a thousand witnesses will not be bribed to hold his peace but will reply against vs within our owne bosome and say vnto vs I see thee I wil not keepe thy counsell I will accuse thee I wil bring in euidence against thee I will indite thee and condemne thee So long then as we haue a conscience what are we the better though we haue no body priuy to our sinnes for if our owne heart condemne vs God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Ioh. 3.20 The cōscience is as a watchman set ouer vs to marke all our thoughts ●●cond E. that pryeth narrowly into vs that nothing at all can escape him It is as a Scriuener that alwayes holdeth a pen of yron in his hand to write vp all that passeth from vs who doth so firmely ingraue it that nothing shall be able to blot it out It is a faithfull remembrancer to register and record all our actions nothing can escape him that was done or thought or spoken a thousand yeeres agoe This serueth to reprooue all such as thinke to delude God and to hide their dealings from him as the adulterer supposeth to goe in the darke the theefe and murtherer in solitary places but the Lord in his word preuenteth such peeuish and foolish conceits Psal 10.11.13.14 He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten he hideth his face he will neuer see it wherefore doth the wicked contemne God he hath said in his heart thou wilt not require it But thou hast seene it for thou beholdest mischiefe and spite to require it with thine hand the poore committeth himselfe vnto thee thou art the helper of the fatherlesse Thus we see God is not in all his thoughts So in the 94 Psalme 〈◊〉 78. which we cited before bringing in the vngodly to speake thus The Lord shall not see neither shal the God of Iacob regard it he reproueth them in this manner Vnderstand ye brutish among the people and ye fooles when wil ye be wise They then are deceiued that thinke to escape Gods sight and knowledge Salomon complaining of such as speake euill of Princes and those that are in authority Eccle. 10.20 declareth that rather then it shall be kept secret the fowles of the ayre shall discouer it Eccle. 10.20 and that which hath wings shall tell the matter that is it shall certainely come to light and be set in the sight of the Sunne that all men may see it Much more then will God himselfe finde infinite meanes to lay open the thoughts of our hearts so that nothing shall escape him If Elisha by the Spirit of God was able to disclose the secret counsels of the king of Syria that he plotted and contriued in his secret chamber 2 King 6.12 Shall not God then lay open our secret sinnes that we commit or can we hide them from his sight His eyes are in euery corner of the earth He seeth not as man seeth nor looketh vpon the countenance but God beholdeth the heart euen he that formeth the spirit within him Secondly let no man sin with hope of concealement Vse 2 neither thinke to escape when hee hath sinned He saw the sacriledge of Achan though he committed it secretly none of the people could accuse him or detect him God commanded euery family to appeare before him apart and if hee had not taken him and singled him out neither Ioshua nor the Elders of the people could haue knowne him by all their wisedome and gifts of discerning Iosh 7 1. It was God that found him out that tooke the accursed thing it was not in the power and policy of man to bewray the theft He discouered the hypocrisie of Ananias and Sapphira their counterfeit liberality toward the distressed members of the Church They were taken to be most earnest beleeuers most forward professours and most zealous Christians such as gaue example of a good life vnto others seemed to shine as goodly lights in the firmament neuerthelesse the Spirit of God that searcheth all things did make manifest the hollownesse of their hearts and therefore Peter inspired with knowledge from aboue saith vnto them How is it Act. 5.3.9 that yee haue agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord or why hath Satan filled your hearts to lie to the holy Ghost He saw into the treachery of Iudas when none of the disciples could espie it For when they sate at the Passeouer and Iesus reuealed vnto them that he should be betrayed by one of them that dipped his hand in the platter with him they were very sorrowfull and knew not whom to suspect but one said Master is it I and another said Is it I Mat. 26 22. Mar. 14.19 All these were detected of hypocrisie and all these were punished by the hand of God most seuerely Achan was stoned with stones and burned with fire Iosh 7.25 Ananias and Sapphira were both of them stricken with sudden death and had no time of repentance giuen vnto them for they fell downe straightway at Peters feet Act. 5.5 10.11 yeelded vp the ghost and great feare came vpon all the Church and vpon as many as heard these things Iudas when hee perceiued that Iesus whom he had betrayed was condemned brought back again the thirty peeces of siluer to the chiefe Priests and Elziers and cast them downe in the Temple and departed and hanged himselfe Matth. 27.5 Wee see an this present place which now we haue in hand how the Lord vsed the bitter waters of iealousie to find but the adultresse We doe not find throughout the whole Testament the like solemnity in the searching out of any sin no not idolatry or witch craft or sorcery or blasphemy or murther neither was the person suspected compelled to subscribe to certaine words
which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry by reason of their Taske-masters for I know their sorrowes and I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hands of the Egyptians c. He is not ignorant what teares we shead but keepeth them in a bottle of remembrance he knoweth what prayers we poure out for they ascend vp into his presence as incense hee heareth the sighes and grones that come from vs for he vnderstandeth that language The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what wee should pray for as we ought 〈◊〉 8.26 but the spirit it selfe maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And albeit he hold his peace for a time and seeme to winke at their cruell practises as if he saw them not or heard them not or knew them not yet when the appointed time commeth he will no longer keepe silence but shew himselfe to be the deliuerer of his people and the reuenger of his and their enemies We saw before out of the booke of Exodus what mercy he promiseth to his people being in misery He had a feeling of their afflictions and after a sort felt what they felt Behold what words of comfort sweeter then the hony the holy combe he vttreth I haue seene I haue heard I know I am come downe He saw their afflictions he heard their cryes he hath knowne their sorrowes he came downe to deliuer them from their persecuters If the Lord had vsed only one of these words I haue surely seene the affliction of my people it had beene as balme to refresh vs it had beene as marrow vnto our bones and as wine and oyle powred into our wounds but when he vseth foure words it is more then a doubling and a trebling of our comfort to asswage the bitternesse of the crosse so that albeit it be more sharp then vineger more bitter then gal wormwood yet they are sufficient to allay the one the other Reasons why God holdeth his peace in our afflictions God doth sometimes after a sort hide himselfe and hold his peace turne his back from vs whē we are in trouble to manifest the more the greatnesse of his power and mercy in our deliuerance to stirre vs vp to prayer and calling vpon him for helpe to teach vs to remoue all confidence and trust in our selues or in the sons of men to weane vs from the loue of the world to encrease our zeale to try our faith and patience and to harden the hearts of our enemies that he may gaine glory to his great name in their destruction He doth not delay to helpe vs and put off the time to deliuer vs because he hath forsaken vs or forgotten vs it is not because he is not able to restore vs it is not because he cannot represse and quaile the fury of our enemies it is not because he hath cast off the care of vs forasmuch as he knoweth what they practise and what we suffer according to the heauenly saying of the Psalmist Psal 34.11 The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto their cry but the face of the Lord is against them that doe euill to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth Let vs therefore comfort our selues in God while we finde no comfort at all in men Let vs put on the armour of prayer and teares these are our spirituall weapons strong to throw downe mountaines and mighty to preuaile against the greatest tyrants that seeke to deface the trueth and destroy the Church The weapons of the Church are not swords and staues or speares and shields or munition and multitudes of men but as the warfare of it is spiritual and that it wrastleth not against flesh and blood but against principalities powers against the rulers of the darkenesse of this world and against spiritual wickednes in high places so the weapons thereof must be spirituall answerable vnto the battell which we are to make and fit to encounter such aduersaries as oppose against vs. To this purpose doth the Prophet bring in the Church putting their confidence in him Lord in trouble haue they visited thee Esay 26.16 17 they powred out a prayer when thy chastening was vpon them like as a woman with child that draweth neere the time of her deliuery is in paine and cryeth out in her pangs so haue we beene in thy sight O Lord. The like we see in Iehoshaphat when many enemies came against him and his people to cast them out of the possession which God had giuen them to inherit he rested not in his owne power neither trusted he in his owne policy but dependeth vpon God and flyeth vnto him saying O our God wilt thou not iudge them for we haue no might against this great company that commeth against vs neither know we what to do but our eyes are vpon it hee and all Iudah stood before the Lord with their little ones their wiues and their children 2. Chron. 20.12.13 On the other side as this consideration of Gods infinite knowledge and discouery of all secrets ministreth exceeding comfort to the godly that lie vnder the crosse and putteth them in assured hope of future deliuerance so it serueth as a terrour to all their enemies that oppresse them and trouble them they shall not escape him that seeth their counsels though they digge neuer so deepe to hide them hee heareth their slanders and reprochful taunts though they seeke to couer them neuer so cunningly and secretly God that is omnipotent cannot be vniust he will reward euery one according to his works and therefore Elihu saith in the booke of Iob His eyes are vpon the wayes of man and hee seeth all his goings there is no darkenesse nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselues Iob 34.21 22. They thinke they goe closely to worke but alas poore blinde men they see not that God seeth them They thinke they haue a vizard ouer their faces and cannot bee knowne whereas their foule offences are written in their forehead They thinke they are in the darke and couered with the night whereas the light shineth round about them more cleerly then the Sun at noone day This ought to strike a feare of Gods power and presence into the hearts of all wicked men No man is so impudent and past shame to commit euill in the Magistrates sight and before his eyes whom he knoweth to bee endued with authority armed with power and to beare the sword of iustice in his hand to cut off all euill doers Shall wee then dare doe that before God which we dare not doe before men or shall we presume to doe that in his sight which we are ashamed or afraid to doe in the presence of mortall man He is all an eye to see all he is all an eare to heare all he is all an heart to vnderstand all Or shall we be so
we must not forget that the people gaue before this gifts of great price Exod. 35 27. yet heere againe seeing a want they bring more and that freely without coaction or compulsion to finish and perfect fully the worke that was so happily begun The doctrine ●●ctrine ●ood work ●●un must 〈◊〉 be giuen 〈◊〉 from hence is this that a good worke begun especially furthering Gods worshippe is not to bee neglected or intermitted vntill it bee brought to an end and to perfection We see this in the booke of Ezra chap. 5 1 2. the building of Gods house after the returne of the Israelites from captiuity had beene a long time hindred through the malice of their enemies yet now they begin with good courage to set vpon the worke againe being stirred vp by the Prophets and neuer giue ouer vntill it was finished and chap. 6 14. they builded and finished the house of God and prospered The like zeale forwardnesse we see in Nehemiah ch 4 3 4 c. he built the wall which indeed was the first that was throwne downe but the last that was set vp by whose meanes all the wall was ioyned together for the people had a minde to worke When the Iewes had begun to destroy their enemies they did not leaue the worke vnperfect and therefore Ester required that it might bee granted to them ●e 5 13. to do to morrow as they had done that day and that Hamans ten sonnes might bee hanged vpon the gallowes Hence it is that Elisha reproued the King of Israel who smote vpon the ground three times and then stayed saying vnto him 2 King 13 19. Thou shouldst haue smitten fiue or sixe times then hadst thou smitten Syria till thou had●t consumed it whereas now thou s●alt smite it but thrice He began the worke of the Lord well but he did not make a good end 2 Cor. 8 10 11 The Apostle perswading the Corinthians to liberality toward the Saints willeth the readily to performe that which they had willingly begun The reasons are plaine The God of heauen will prosper weake beginnings Reason 1 if there be a readinesse and cheerefulnesse in vs. This should be a great encouragement vnto vs as it was to Nehemiah to arise and build the wall seeing they had the promise of Gods prospering of the worke that was vnder their hands Neh. 2 20. Secondly if we looke backe we are not apt to Gods kingdome Lu 9 62. It is spoken indeed of the Ministery which may fitly be called Gods Plough as the Ministers are the husbandmen the word is the seed the heart of man is the field that is to bee ploughed vp tilled and sowed but it is true also in al good things and euery worke of religion if we giue ouer we lose our labor we misse our reward Thirdly it is better not to begin then hauing begun not to proceed better neuer to lay the first stone in the building then hauing laide a good foundation not to make an end because it will be said to our reproch This man began to build but was not able to finish Luk. 14 30. It is happened vnto such according to the true Prouerbe The dog is turned to his owne vomite againe and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire 2 Pet 2 22. This serueth to reproue such as giue ouer Vse 1 their profession which rest in a good worke begun and in weake and small beginnings They are like Balaam that wished hee might dye the death of the righteous but he would go no farther Or they are like the morning dew which by and by the Sunne dryeth vp or like Herod that reuerenced Iohn did many things when he heard him preach but he would not depart from all sinne and obey whatsoeuer Iohn taught Mark 6 20. and therfore it had bin as good he had done nothing Agrippa was perswaded somewhat to become a Christian when he had heard Paul preach but he would not become altogether such as he was as Paul desi●ed Acts 20 28. The stony ground being by nature hot made the corne spring vp hastily and promise plentifull fruite to the husbandman but when the Sun arose in his strength it was quickly scorched began by little and little to wither away so is it with many hearers they receiue the word with ioy and beleeue for a season but they want roote and in time oftentation they fall away Luke 8 verse 13. A falling backe into sinne is more dangerous then the relapse into an old sicknesse this may endanger the body but that endangereth the soule this may bring a temporall death but that will bring a spirituall nay an eternall death Let vs therefore take the counsell of Christ giuen to the Church of Ephesus Reuel 2 5. Remember from whence thou art fallen and do thy first workes or else I will come vnto thee quickly and will remoue thy Candlesticke out of his place except thou repent Austine saith well to this purpose De Tempo Serm. 182. Redeat homo per quotidiana lamenta vnde corruit per vana delectamenta As man hath fallen by vaine delighting so let him returne againe by daily lamenting Let vs make such a firme league and such a sure promise with religion as Elisha did with Eliah 2 King 2 6. As the Lord liueth and as thy soule liueth I will not leaue thee so let vs say with full purpose of heart with a setled resolution I will neuer depart from the faith I will neuer leaue my obedience I will neuer giue ouer true religion Thus it was with Dauid he stood not wauering in the matters of God or houering vp downe in the winde looking for a change but he had determined what he would do Psalm 119 93 106. I will neuer forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickned me And afterward I haue sworne and I will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements This was an holy oath whereby he bound himselfe as it were in a statute from starting backe that he might neuer entertaine any thought of giuing ouer his profession Let vs set before vs euermore this example let vs be constant and vnmoueable abounding alwaies in the worke of the Lord knowing that our labours shall not bee in vaine in the Lord. Vse 2 Secondly it reproueth such as stand at a stay like the earth that neuer moueth such as neyther go forward nor backward but are alwaies the same men and looke where you left them there you shall be sure to finde them These are earthly minded and sauour onely of the earth yet they thinke themselues to be somewhat and such as deserue highly to bee commended because they do not goe backe nor waxe worse and worse as others do Thus while they compare themselues with those that are worse they are growne into an high conceite that they are most excellent But let them not deceiue themselues they vse false weights
the children of Zebulun did offer 25 His offering was one siluer charger the weight whereof was an hundred and thirty shekels one siluer bolle of seuenty shekels c. Behold heere how the other Princes are not inferiour to the first that offered nor the other Tribes to the Tribe of Iudah Obserue heere that the spirit of God accounteth it not sufficient to set downe what was offered in generall neither in particular what Nahshon the sonne of Aminadab of the Tribe of Iudah offered the first day or what Nathaniel the son of Zuar Prince of Issachar offered the second day but he goeth forward to set downe the speciall offerings according to euery mans name and according to the day assigned vnto him Obiect It may be demaunded what was the cause why these offerings are thus particularly pointed out why are the same chargers the same bolles the same spoones so often repeated might not all these things heere mentioned haue beene more summarily concluded what need more words haue bene vsed when fewer would haue serued I answere Answer we must not account any thing idle friuolous fruitles or superfluous in holy Scripture The Lord knoweth best what is fittest to bee dilated largely and what to be comprehended shortly If there were no other reason then this so it pleased the Lord it ought to content vs and to make vs rest in it The like example we finde Psal 136.1 2 c. Where in euery verse and at the recitall of euery blessing this reason is repeated for his mercy endureth for euer Adde heereunto Reuel 7.5 6 c. where this is repeated according to the number of the Tribes that twelue thousand were sealed of them Hee might haue said briefly of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand but he repeateth the words twelue times so in this place the offerings are repeated twelue times particularly according to the number of the twelue Princes The reasons may be first to teach vs to be content to heare the same things though they be oftentimes repeated as Phil. 3.1 The Apostle saith It is not grieuous to me to write the same things often and for you it is safe Wee are ready to forget the best things and therefore must haue them continually sounding in our eares as many strokes giuen with a hammer to make vs heare Secondly that wee should apply these examples vnto our selues and if wee passe ouer one of them without regard yet we should take holde of the next Thirdly to teach vs that no man shall haue that forgotten to the vtmost of his praise who is any way forward in doing good because he will honor those that honor him but they that despise him shall be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 The doctrine Doctrine from this particular rehearsal and enumeration of the gifts of those Princes is this Euery good worke of gods children is knowne and shall be rewarded that all the good workes of Gods children done to the setting forth of his glory to the aduancement of his worship to the maintenance of true Religion or the good of his children shall be reckoned vp rewarded and come vp in account before him he taketh notice of them all and will neuer forget any one of them As their deeds are here registred in the booke of God so the doers of them are registred in the booke of life Matth 10.42 Our Sauiour teacheth that a cup of cold water shall not go vnrewarded that is giuen to drinke in the name of a disciple to one of these litle ones And afterward it is said Matth. 25.7 A certaine woman came vnto him hauing an alabaster boxe of ointmēt very precious and powred it on his head as he sate at table and because she had wrought a good worke vpon him verse 10. he sayth Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospel shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her verse 13. To this purpose speaketh the Angel that appeared to Cornelius Act. 10.4 Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp for a memoriall before God So then euery thing shall be remembred no one worke shall be forgotten Reason 1 For God is a righteous God giuing to euery one according to his workes Hee is the Iudge of the world Gen. 18. and cannot but iudge vprightly Hereupon the Apostle saith Heb. 6.10 God is not vnrighteous to forget your workes and labor of loue which ye haue shewed toward his Name in that yee haue minstred to the Saints and doe minister He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward for he will reward very bountifully euery good worke If we be not barren in good workes he will not bee behind with vs to recompence vs. Secondly how can they but come into an account seeing he accounteth them as done to himselfe Matth. 25.40 When any thing is giuen to the Saints it is esteemed as done to the Sonne himselfe and when it is bestowed vpon one of the least it is regarded as bestowed vpon the greatest and highest The seruant receiueth it but the Master will reward it Vse 1 Touching the Vses we may first conclude the happy estate and condition of them that leaue this world and depart this life in the true feare of God because we heare their workes shall be remembred and therefore the doings of his seruants be rewarded with eternall glory being done in the loue of God and of his trueth none of them are forgotten but they shall follow them nay goe with them and beare them company This we reade in the Reuelations of Iohn chap. 14.13 I heard a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Write blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the spirit that they rest from their labors and their works follow them to wit at their heels as the word importeth Death cannot cut them off though it be a cruell and mercilesse tyrant and hath as it were a sithe or sickle in his hand to cut downe such as come in his way yea though it cut off riches reuenewes honours pleasures dignities delights wife children houses lands and life it selfe according to the saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.7 We brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out with vs yet it cannot cut off good workes neither bereaue vs of the fruits of a liuely faith which are of such great force and efficacy that they are able to breake in sunder the chaines of death and the strength of the graue and cannot be holden in darknes and obliuion It were therefore a point of great wisedome and good policy so many as would willingly die the death of the righteous as Balaamites and all wicked men will seeme desirous to doe to prouide a goodly traine of good works which death cannot keepe backe they will presse so fast and knocke so hard at heauen
come to the Lords Table when we are farre from it For as God hath his Church so the diuell hath his Chappell and as there is the Table of the Lord so there is the table of diuels We must therefore take heed that we doe not sacrifice to diuels while we purp●se to sacrifice to God and I would not that ye should haue fellowship with diuels ●or 10.20 To conclude let this preparation alwayes go before this holy action let there be a ransacking of all the corners of our hearts and spirits and a cleansing and cleering of them by true repentance Let all gouernours of families prepare these that belong vnto them fit themselues and them of their house to this worke Let vs consider the mystery of the death of Christ to make it the meanes of our life the cause of it our sinnes the merit of it our redemption the ende of it the apprehending of Christ with all his benefites the fruit of it reconciliation to God encrease of faith and newnesse of life Vse 4 Fourthly as no vncleane persons that were defiled Num. 9.6 and no vncircumcised persons whose foreskinne was not cut away Exod 12.48 might eate of the Passeouer so no prophane person vncircumcised in heart and vncleane in his soule and conscience hath any interest in the Lords Supper If he come vnto it and present himselfe at the Lords Table he is like to that guest that came to the feast but had not on him his wedding garment Matth. 22.11 as he followeth him in the sinne so hee shall follow him in the punishment also I deny not but such may partake of the bread but they cannot receiue the body and blood of Christ and they shall not onely beare the losse of the benefit but also incurre the danger of damnation For as no vncleane person might come to the Passeouer of the Lord so no vncleane person may come to the Supper of the Lord. Holy things may not be cast to dogs neither pearles before swine Matt. 7.6 These haue no right to this Communion Children are barred because they cannot examine themselues prophane persons because they do not because they will not And how many are there that come in worse manner then children would doe For if infants and children were admitted it is presumed they wold come with greater reuerence their greatest sinne would be their ignorance Ignorance therefore is a barre against them but are there not many in very many places that presume and present themselues at this Table who besides their ignorance as great and as grosse as that in children doe adde prophanenesse of heart make little conscience of the Sabboth and shew small loue to the word of God and therefore doe shut out themselues from this feast by a twofold barre Lastly we saw before that bitter hearbs were Vse 5 added to the Passeouer it must not be eaten without them which signifieth that as the Passeouer was eaten with sowre hearbes so Christ and the Crosse are neuer seuered one from the other because all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecution 2. Tim 3.12 if we wil be the disciples of Christ we must deny our selues and take vp our Crosse and follow him Matth. 16.24 Euery one would be partaker of the Passeouer but they desire not the sowre hearbs we would willingly taste of the sweet but we care not for the bitter We seeme all ready to embrace Christ but we shun the Crosse it is as bitter vnto vs as gall and wormewood We must all therefore frame our selues to suffer afflictions as the good seruants and souldiers of Christ for the faiths sake and be content to drinke of this cup which he hath begun vnto vs. Paul liued in great credit among the Pharisees before his conuersion but so soon as he was called to preach the Gospel by and by they fought to kill him It is a great comfort to suffer for righteousnes sake A good cause doth sweeten the bitternes of the Crosse Such are pronounced blessed by Christ Matth. 5.10 The Apostles went from the councel reioycing that they were counted worthy to suffer for the Name of Christ Acts 5.41 It is no lesse honor to suffer for Christs cause then to beleeue in his Name Phil. 1 29. Ioh ●5 18.20 and 8.48 Our Master Christ Iesus found no better entertainment the world hated him before it hated vs they called him a Samaritan and said he had a diuel they reproached him to be a glutton Luke 7.34 a wine-bibber and a friend of Publicans and sinners he was despised of men Esay 53.3 4. and esteemed as smitten of God Ioh. 1.11 Luke 23.31 he came to his owne but his own r●ceiued him not If they haue done this in the greene tree what shal be done in the drie The seruant must not looke to haue a better estate and condition then his Lord nor the disciple then his master if they haue persecuted him they will also persecute vs Ioh. 13.16 he that is sent must not looke to be greater then he that sent him It is enough for the disciple to be as his master Matth. 10.25 and the s●ruant as his Lord if they haue called the master of the house Beelzebub how much more shall they call them of his household Gods children shal be molested and aflicted euen in times of publike peace When the enemies of Daniel could find no matter against his person Dan. 6.13 they began to quarrell about his religion To serue God in truth and sincerity is an heinous crime in the eyes of the world who shall in the end giue an account to him that will iudge vprightly Verse 6. And there were certaine men who were defiled by the dead c. Here is a description of the second Passeouer for such as were vncleane vncleane not by any sinfull pollution but by a legal or ceremoniall vncleannesse not by any willing choice of their owne but by an ineuitable necessity and not by comming neere those that were dead in spirit but by touching the dead body of a man In this obserue three things a question a consultation and a resolution The question is of the people the consultation of Moses the resolution of God The people enquire at the mouth of Moses Moses enquireth at the mouth of God and God determineth the doubt and resolueth both the people Moses The question is wherfore may we not receiue the Passeouer with the rest of our brethren wherfore are we kept backe this is amplified by the occasion they were defiled by a dead corpes The consultation is with God which is the second point Moses willeth them to be quiet stand stil vntil he knew the mind of the Lord ver 8. he wold determine nothing rashly but he doubted and held them in doubt vntill he knew of God what was to be done A religious example of modesty humility and wisedome in the matters of God
albeit God had decreed that such should be punished yet he had not declared by any law the kinde of punishment and therefore they asked how hee should be punished as for example whether he should be hanged on a tree or burned with fire or stoned with stones or striken with the sword But this answer cannot satisfie mee for when death is appointed in the Law and the particular kinde not expressed Iosh 7 ● with 6 ● the Magistrate was left free to set downe the same as also when no punishment at all is mentioned Deut. 25 13.14 neither were the people boūd to aske counsell at the mouth of God vpon euery occasion of execution of iustice against euill doers where the manner of punishment is not limited It was the law of God that witches should not liue Exod. 22 18. Saul did wel and is commended by the Spirit of God that he cut them off that had familiar spirits out of the land rooted out the wizards yet he did not aske neither was he bound to aske counsell now or which way they should be put to death though God had not defined the particular Leuit. 20 27. This then is left to the discretion of the Magistrate when hee hath the generall to decree the particular punishment as he thinketh good In sundry places of the bookes of Moses wee finde sundry lawes set downe inflicting death vpon the offenders yet the manner of death is not named Genesis 9. verse 6. Exod. chap. 22 19 20. Leuit. chap. 20. verses 9 11 15 16 17 18. Deut. chap. 20. verse 25. and 24 17. All this were to no purpose if the Magistrate might not proceede against them ex officio without knowing the farther pleasure of God For it had bin all one as if no sentence of death had beene set downe inasmuch as they might as easily and with as little labour know the punishment in particular as when no punishment at all is expressed Neither did the Iewes take thēselues to be bound in that case to enquire of God Leuit. 20 10. Deut. 22 22. Iohn 8 5. Wherefore I rather thinke they consulted with God about the quality of the work then the maner of the punishment God had threatned that whosoeuer did Worke on the Sabbath should be put to death but hee had not followed his handy-worke nor laboured in his calling he had onely gathered a few stickes True it is he had done it impudently yet it was doubt full whether this fact were within the compasse of that law or not and therefore Moses would not call the life of this man in question without certaine direction from the mouth of God For life is precious and blood being spilt is as water poured vpon the earth that cannot be gathered vp againe So then they desired to know whether this fact were worthy of death not by what manner of death he should die And as the Iewes in other things are full of fables so in this they haue deuised of their owne braines that this man was Zelophehad ●ish fable out any ●nd of whom we reade afterward in this Booke chapt 27 3. where it is saide of him that he dyed not in the conspiracie of Korah but in his owne sinne thereby casting an aspersion vpon him and charging him with an imputation which the Scripture doeth not charge him withall of which wee shall speake more afterwards But who it was and what his name was and whether he were one of the Israelites or of the straungers that came with them out of Egypt or what his purpose was it is vncertaine but whosoeuer it were he is put to death for prophaning of the Sabbath Wee learne heereby Doctrine that the Sabbath day ought wholly to be spent in religious and holy exercises The Sabbath day must bee spent religiously It is the end why it was sanctified of God that wee should sanctifie it and spend it in holy vses from morning vnto euening Genesis chap. 2. verse 2 3. Where wee see hee blessed it and sanctified it in the Garded or at least in the time of mans innocency Exodus chap 16 20. Esay 56 verse 2. 58 13. Exod. chap. 20. verse 4. This was the practise vnder the Law continued also vnder the Gospell It was the custome of Christ to preach the gospell in the Synagogues on that day he did it not for once or twice but it was his ordinary and vsuall manner So the Disciples Acts 20 17. and 17 1 2. 1 Cor. 16 1. Reuelat 1 10. The doores of the Temple were kept shut the sixe dayes but opened from morning vntill the euening vpon the seuenth day Ezek 46 1 2. There are many reasons in the fourth commandement Reason 1 drawne from the equity and liberality of God in giuing vs sixe dayes from the example of Gods rest and from the consideration of the end why it was appointed to bee kept holy all these are of great force Exod 20 4 5. Secondly this serueth to preserue men from Reason 2 barbarisme and Atheisme and all irreligions prophanenesse We see notwithstanding this comfortable profitable ordinance of God how much impiety and loosenesse is in the world but if euery man were left vnto himselfe to serue God as himselfe list to his priuat deuotions without this generall obseruation it is to bee feared wee should shortly haue no knowledge no faith no church no religion no order that the greatest part would scarfe thinke of God from one weeke nay from one yeere to another or haue any acquaintance with his word and Sacraments or reade the Scriptures or pray vnto him nay they would scarse know whether there were any Scriptures or Sacraments or not Therefore the Lord saith The Sabbath is a signe betweene mee and you throughout your generations that yee may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctifie you Exod. 31 13 For when doe the greatest part reade or heare or conferre or meditate or pray but vpon the Sabbath Take away therefore that day you take away all these Thirdly Reason 3 Christ Iesus vouchsafed to honour this day aboue the rest of the daies of the weeke after his resurrection and that by his speciall appe●●ings in it as wel as by his rising again vpon it If we obserue and marke it wee shall see he shewed himselfe to his disciples and followers vpon that day especially First to Marie Magdalene early in the morning Iohn 20 1. and 14. Secondly to the other women as they were going to communicate to the Apostles the certainty of his resurrection which the Angels had declared vnto them before at the sepulcher Matth. 28 9. Thirdly to the two disciples going to Emmaus which also was the same day Luke 24 21 For they said it was the third day since these things were done Fourthly the same day at night he appeared to his Disciples Iohn 20 19. Fiftly he appeared for the confirmation of the faith of Thomas in the matter of his
that the Lord hath sent me to doe all these workes for I haue not done them of mine owne mind 29 If these men dye the common death of all men Or if they be visited after the visitation of all men then the Lord hath not sent me 30 But if the Lord make a new thing and the earth open her mouth and swallow them vp with all that appertaine vnto them and they go downe quick into the pit then ye shall vnderstand that these men haue prouoked the Lord. 31 And as soone as hee had made an end of speaking c. In these words see the willing obedience of the people to the former Commaundement They were willed to separate from the Tents of those wicked they doe separate and depart from them by and by they gate them vp from their Tabernacles And Moses doth notably confirme them in their obedience by foretelling both the death Doctrine the maner of the death of these rebels We learn from hence God alwayes warneth before hee striketh that God neuer bringeth any greeuous iudgement vpon any people or nation nor vpon any priuat person but hee doth alwaies first forewarne the same and foretelleth it God alwayes teacheth before he punisheth and hee warneth before hee striketh Amos chapt 3. verse 7. Luk. 13 verse 7. 1 Kings 22 17. We reade that the world was once drowned by water and it shall be destroyed the second time by fire Of the first destruction we finde that he foretold it vnto Noah before euer hee brought it vppon the face of the earth Gen. 6. verse 3. Heb. 11. verse 7. 1 Pet. 3.20 And touching the second destruction of the world by fire GOD hath not left vs ignorant but in diuers places of the Scripture hath set it downe vnto vs 2. Pet. 3 7 10. Reason 1. The Reasons hereof are partly in regard of the godly and partly in regard of the vngodly Touching the first he would not take his owne people at vnawares because hee loueth them and would haue none of them to perish but would haue all come to repentance 2 Pet. 3 9. that so they might preuent his iudgements Amos 4 12. Secondly touching the vngodly and such as are not the Lords they shal thereby be made without excuse their mouths are stopped and the iustice of God is cleared they hauing nothing to answer for themselues or to accuse God of any vniust dealing Iohn 15 22. These men therefore must learne to accuse themselues because they had warning but they would not bee warned he would haue healed them but they would not bee healed Ier. 20 6. 51.9 1 King 22 25. Vse 1 Acknowledge from hence the great mercy and wonderfull patience of God whose maner is alwaies to giue warning before hee send iudgement This the Lord needeth not to doe for vpon our owne peril we are bound to take heed of his iudgements before they come yet so good is our God that hee onely deserueth this title to be called the good Lord as Hezekia calleth him 2 Chron. 30 18. The good Lord pardon euery one that prepareth his heart He wold haue vs preuent his punishments before they fall and to send out our prayers as Ambassadors to God to treate of conditions of peace with him He doth not play the part of a subtil enemy to steale vpon vs at vnawares forasmuch as before he striketh he alwaies forewarneth that thereby he might saue all those that belong vnto him and bring vpon others iust condemnation How graciously dealt he with Korah and his fellowes with Dathan Abiran How often did Moses warne them Who is it then that ought not to confesse that God willeth not the death of a sinner Or who can deny but that these malefactors perished most iustly Vse 2 Secondly when we see any ouertaken with any iudgement we must confesse that God is true as in his promises so also in his threatnings If his desire were not that we should preuent them doubtlesse he would neuer giue warning of them If he had a will and purpose to destroy vs he would not tell vs before hād both that he would bring them and shew vs the way how to auoide them There is no man that can iustly say that the silence of God and the holding of his peace is the cause of his security he causeth a trumpet to sound the alarme before hee set himselfe in battell array against his enemies For his manner is neuer to come with any iudgement but he alwaies sendeth a warning peece before Obiect But some man will say It was thus indeed in the time of the prophets but wee haue no Prophets in these daies to foret l things to come as in former times they had and therefore we haue no such direction I answer these men as Abraham did the rich man in the Gospel An wer that his brethren had Moses and the Prophets among them If they will not beleeue them neither will they be perswaded although one rose from the dead Luke 16 31. True it is that Moses and the Prophets were dead long before but his meaning is they had the bookes of the Law and the writings of the Prophets before them they were read preached in their Synagogues euery Sabbath day Acts 15 21. So I may truly say that wee haue Prophets among vs and all that contemne them shall know there hath bene a Prophet among them Ezek. 33 33. For we haue the holy Scriptures wherein are contained the workes of the Prophets and Apostles and beside these GOD hath giuen vs his Ministers that they should as it were put life againe into the dead Prophets that is that they should open declare vnto vs those things that are doubtful and obscure and therefore if any bee admonished by them that such such iudgments shal come and they threaten plagues according to the generall directions which they haue in the word Deut. 28 15 16. Leuit. 26.15 16. Let vs not withstand the Spirit speaking in them for it is the wonderfull goodnesse of God that he vouchsafeth to send them vnto vs and to tell vs before of his iudgements Lastly it is the duty of euery one to make Vse 3 good vse of the word of God to know that God looketh for attention and obedience at our hands that so he may not bee inforced to proceed against vs in iudgement O happy are they that seek the Lord while he may be found and call vpon him while he is neere Esay 55 6. Such then as reiect the Ministery of the word reiect their owne peace and bring vpon themselues sundry iudgements The word goeth before to prepare our hearts and it is a two-edged sword piercing euen to the diuiding asunder of soule and spirit Heb. 4 12. But if we be so hard-hearted made of mettal tougher then brasse and iron Reuel 1 1 that this sword going out of the mouth of God cannot enter into vs hee
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
and out of which he is shortly to depart Or will he be patching that Tent and Tabernacle which hee hath pitched for a day or two We dwell in earthly Tabernacles as in houses of clay 2 Cor. 5 4. 2 Pet. 1 14. What wisedome then is it to bestow daies and moneths and yeares in plotting plodding for the world for riches and the vanities of this life Let vs also prepare and prouide before hand for the day of our dissolution that such as God hath blessed with this worlds good set their houses and their estates in order as the Prophet in this regard warneth Hezekiah Esay 38 1. Set thine house in order for thou must dye And we may learne this necessary practise of Ahitophel though liuing in wickednes and dying in despaire of whom the Scripture saieth whē he saw that his counsell was not followed he went home vnto his City put his house in order hanged himselfe 2 Sam. 17 23. This duty is to be thought vpon in health as that which deepely concerneth our selues and our posterity When we haue rightly disposed the things of this life let vs prepare for a Nunc dimittis let vs commend our spirits into the hands of God let vs resigne vp our selues willingly to death when we must enter into a particular iudgement For so soone as the soule is departed and separated from the body God holdeth his Sessions to which we are summoned by his messenger death to come into his presence to receiue in part according to our workes whether they be good or euill Euen as we see in the affaires of this life how Iudges and Iustices keepe their sessions and assises wherein malefactors brought out of prison are arraigned so God holdeth his time of iudgement and iustice to reward euery one according to his works We haue all a cause and case to bee tried the greatest the weightiest the worthiest that euer was handled not touching siluer gold not concerning house or land not of titles or inheritances but of the euerlasting saluation or dānation of our soules for euer and therefore it standeth vs in hand to be well armed thoroughly appointed that we come not as the foolish Virgins without oyle in our lampes or as the vnprepared guest without our wedding garment We see in temporall Courts when men haue a cause to be tried and an action to be determined either of goods or good name how carefull they are before hand to reade Euidences to produce witnesses and to search Records that the suite may passe on their sides how much more carefull ought wee to be to answer before the eternall Iudge where no man shall be admitted to appeare by his Atturney but all must come in their owne persons none shall be suffered to put in sureties This wil be a great day whē the whole world shall appeare together at once high and low Prince and Subiect noble and vnnoble according to the description that Iohn maketh I saw the dead both great small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the booke according to their works Reuel 20 12. And was buried there Hitherto of the death of Miriam now of that which followed her death to wit her buriall See heere when life was departed what they did with the body they committed it to the earth The Doctrine from hence is this that it is a necessary duty to bury the dead Doctrine A commendable duty 〈◊〉 bury the dead This appeareth by many examples of the godly which haue practised this duty Gen. 23 4. Abraham the father of the faithfull bought a possession of burial of the Hittites who by the sight and light of nature had their Sepulchers therefore answered Abraham Gen. 23 6. 35 29 50 12 13. Thou art a Prince of God among vs in the cheefest of our Sepulchers bury thy dead none of vs shall forbid thee his Sepulcher but thou maist bury thy dead therein So ch 25 8 9. when Abraham yeelded the spirit and died in a good age and was gathered to his people his sonnes Isaac Ishmael buried him in the Caue of Machpelah in the field of Hephron where Abraham was buried with Sarah his wife The like we see done to Isaac when he gaue vp the ghost being old and full of daies his two sonnes Esau and Iacob buried him Now as Iacob did to his father so his children do to him according as hee had commanded them for his sonnes carried him into the land of Canaan and buried him in the Caue of the field of Machpelah which Abraham had bought The like may be said of Moses Deut. 34 5 6. for albeit the people buried him not neither knew of his Sepulcher lest they shold abuse it to idolatry yet rather then he should want buriall he was buried of God The men of Iabesh Gilead are praised of God and rewarded of Dauid because they buried King Saul and his sonne and aduentured their liues to do vnto him their last duty 2 Sa. 2 5 6. The same might be said of the rest of the Patriarks Prophets Iudges Kings Gouernours and Priests yea of Christ himselfe whose buriall albeit he were able immediately to haue raised and restored himselfe to life is set downe in the Gospel that his death might be confirmed and his farther humiliation manifested These examples teach that it is a christian and commendable duty of the liuing to be performed to the dead of children to bee performed to their parents and of the people of God one to another to commit the body of the deceased to the graue to put dust to dust and so to couer earth with earth And no maruaile For first among all creatures Reason 1 man is most loathsome and vgly when life is departed As in his birth and bringing foorth into the world of all creatures hee is most fraile and feeble without strength to stand without helpe to defend himselfe so being dead he is most fraile filthy and deformed He that a litle before gloried in his beauty comelinesse feature proportion is now become the mirror and spectacle of a deformed and mishapen carkasse Such a confusion and wracke hath sinne wrought and brought into our nature This made Abraham to say to the Hittites I am a stranger a forreiner among you giue me a possession of buriall to bury with you that I may bury my dead out of my sight Gen. 23 4. This is noted in Lazarus who hauing lien buried but foure daies his b●dy stanke Iohn 11 39. Reason 2 Secondly buriall is promised as a blessing from God and the want of it threatened for a plague and iudgement God offereth it as a mercy to Abraham ●5 15. that he should be buried in a ripe age and to Iosiah that he should bee put in his graue in peace ● 22 19 and
Son of God was smitten for the vnnaturall the onely begotten for the adopted the beloued for the enemy greater loue then this could no man shew then to die for his enemies But God setteth out his loue toward vs Rom. 5 8. seeing that while we were yet sinners Vse 1 Christ dyed for vs. The vses follow First we may conclude from hence that no creature shal be able to hurt his people If he haue takē them into his protection loued them with an euerlasting loue who shall by the hatred of thē procure their harme If he be on our side who shall be against vs If he be our friend who shall shew himselfe our enemy What seruant feareth the face of his fellow seruant that hath the good wil of his master Or what mā feareth the hatred of any subiect that hath the loue of his Prince So then the consideration of Gods loue toward vs assureth vs of our blessed condition and of our safety defence from all dangers that may surprize vs. Whosoeuer dwelleth in the secret of the most High Psal 91 1 2 3. shal abide in the shadow of the Almighty hee will deliuer him from the snare of the hunter and from the noisome pestilence This the Prophet concludes Psal 36.10 11. Extend thy louing kindnesse vnto them that know thee and thy righteousnesse vnto them that are vpright in heart Let not the foote of pride come against me and let not the hand of the wicked moue me Let vs labor to haue a true feeling of the loue of God shed in our hearts by the holy Ghost then will he couer vs vnder his wings and we shall be sure vnder his feathers The cause why we feare him that can kill the body is because we are not rooted grounded in the loue of God Vse 2 Secondly hereby we receiue another comfort to our faith for as the wicked shall not hurt vs so we are assured to haue our prayers heard granted Why because God loueth vs as his deare children Comes not that child with boldnesse vnto his father that loueth him in al his need So if once we haue this perswasion setled in vs that God will shew himselfe gracious vnto vs we may aske in faith and not wauer but be assured of the promise of God that he will giue to them that aske and open the gate of mercy to them that knocke This Christ our Sauiour affirmeth Verily verily Iohn 16 23 24 27. I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name he will giue it you Aske and yee shall receiue that your ioy may be full for the Father himselfe loueth you because ye haue loued me and haue beleeued that I came from God What greater comfort can there be then this that God will heare our prayers that we may vnlade al our cares and troubles into his bosome There cannot bee a greater daunting and dismaying vnto any then when God will not respect and regard them though they poure out many praiers yet he wil not heare them as he threateneth those that will not heare his voice speking and crying vnto them in the ministery of his word They shall cry and not be heard Prou. 1 28. Zach. 7 13. So of all comforts that can befall vs in this life this is one of the greatest which cannot be taken from vs though our mouthes should be stopped yet we may safely lift vp our hearts and soules vnto the Lord from whence our helpe cometh Thirdly it is our duty to loue one another Vse 3 as euery one of vs hath a blessed experience of Gods mercy fauour toward vs let vs deale in like measure toward our brethren This the Apostle Iohn exhorteth vnto 1 Ioh 4 1● Heerein is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes Beloued if God so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Iohn 13 3● and 15.12 for heereby shall all men know that we are his Disciples if we loue one another This is my Commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued you greater loue then this hath no man when any man bestoweth his life for his friends Great was the loue of God toward vs as appeareth by many circumstances considerations For he loued vs first not we him 1 Iohn 4 ● Iohn 15 1● as Christ chose his Disciples not they him Heereby God cōmendeth setteth foorth his loue toward vs that he loued vs first and not we him Againe he loued vs when we were not whē we had not our birth or being he chose vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe before the foundations of the world as Rom. 9. Rom. 5 12 Before the children were borne and when they had done neither good nor euill it was said Iacob haue I loued Thirdly he loued vs when we were enemies vnto him he was found of vs when we sought not after him nay when we fled from him and rebelled against him as Ro. 5 6. 10. Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly so as God setteth out his loue toward vs seeing that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. Fourthly he loued vs frankly and freely without any merits or desarts of our owne Ferus An● 1 Iohn 4. but of his owne meere grace and fauour onely Our saluation is wholly of grace We are elected according to the good pleasure of his will Ephes 1 ● Wee are called with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his owne purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1 9. Wee are iustified freely by his grace without the works of the Law Rom. 3 24 28. We haue saluation of grace not of our selues It is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Eph. 2 8 9. Lastly the loue of God is so great that he spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to the death That whosoeuer beleeued in him should not perish ●●hn 3 16. but haue euerlasting life If then the loue of God bee such and so great to his seruants that he loued them first freely when they were not when they were his enemies spared not his well-beloued Sonne for them how great should our christian loue be one to another to promote the good one of another and to releeue the necessities one of another We know the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ that he being rich Cor. 8 9. for our sakes became poore that we thorough his pouerty might be made rich Whosoeuer therefore hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion frō him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Wherefore let vs not loue in word neither in tongue onely as Caine which was of that euill one and slew his brother Iohn 3 17 〈◊〉 19. but in deed and
see in the booke of Kings 1 Kings 1● in Hiel the Betheli●e according to the word of the Lord which hee spake by Ioshua the sonne of Nun. The like we see in Zachariah when resting in the power of nature and the strength of his owne body he beleeued not the Angel be was striken dumbe and could not speake vnto the people Luke 1 20. A memorable example also we haue in the streight siege of Samaria where a Prince answered the man of God and saide Though the Lord would make Windowes in the heauen could it come so to passe 2 Kings ● 19 20. And hee saide Behold thou shalt see it with thine eyes but thou shalt not eate thereof and so it came vnto him for the people trod vpon him in the gate and he dyed The Reasons heere of are euident For first Reason the Nature of GOD is true and vnchangeable Heauen and earth shall passe but one iote or tittle of his word shall not passe but shall bee fulfilled This is that which is vrged afterward in this booke Chapter 23.19 1 Sam. 1● God is not as man that he should lie nor as the son of man that he shold repent Hath he said and shall it not bee done hath he spoken and shal he not accomplish it Seeing therefore God is vnchangeable with whom is no variablenesse or shadow of turning hee will let none of his words fall to the ground he is in one mind and who can turne him yea he doth what his minde desireth Reason 2 Again who can hinder him or say vnto him Why doest thou thus No might no power no policy can withstand him in his workes albeit men rebell neuer so much and resist neuer so mightily against him There is great power in Princes they are able to bring mighty things to passe and to crosse the attempts of others yet sometimes they are crossed and resisted themselues It is not so with the Lord our God 〈◊〉 33. Who is in the heauens and doth whatsoeuer he will He hath the hearts of all euen of Princes in his own hand ●●b 21 1 as the Riuers of waters he turneth them about as pleaseth him This made the Apostle cry out 〈◊〉 11.33 ●5 ●9 19 O the deepnesse of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God! How vnsearchable are his iudgements and his wayes past finding out For who hath knowne the minde of the Lord Or who was his Counsellor Or who hath giuen him first and he shall be recompenced And who hath resisted his will So then whether wee consider the nature of God without change or the weaknesse of man without power wee may safely and truely conclude that all the threatnings which haue bene pronounced and denounced by the mouth of God shal be verified and performed without any altering or diminishing of them Vse 1 Let vs apply this to our selues and gather assuredly from hence the wofull estate of all wicked and vngodly men For seeing he doth not dally with vs or scare vs without cause so that all his threatnings faithfully denounced shall be vndoubtedly accomplished how shal they escape so great condemnation as lyeth at the doore and hangeth ouer their head Howsoeuer therefore they put away the euill day farre from them and liue as if God sate idle in heauen beholding all things but punishing nothing knowing all hearts and thoghts but not regarding the workes of men saying We haue made a couenant with death and with hell we are at agreement 〈…〉 16. though a scourge run ouer and passe thorough it shal not come at vs for wee haue made falshood our refuge and vnder vanity are we hid yet hee that dwelleth in the heauen shall laugh the Lord shall haue them in derision For what followeth Your couenant with death shal be disanulled and your agreement with hel shal not stand when a scourge shal run ouer and passe through then shal ye be troden down by it This is that which the wise man saith Eccles 8.11 12 13. Because sentence against an euil worke is not speedily executed therefore the heart of the children of men is full set in them to do euill Though a sinner do euil an hundred times and God prolongeth his dayes yet I know that it shal be well with them that feare the Lord but it shall not be well with the wicked neither shall he prolong his dayes he shall bee like a shadow because he feareth not before GOD. And to the same purpose the Prophet Ezekiel speaketh Chap. 12 22 23 24 25 26 27 28. where the Prophet reprooueth two sorts of persons open deriders of Gods word as if it should neuer be performed and such as prolong the euill daies as if the plagues were for many yeares and should not come in their dayes But God expressely and directly meeteth with them both and bindeth them together in one bundle declaring and making it plaine to their consciences that when he speaketh the word it shall be done and when hee pronounceth a decree it shall stand Thus in all ages of the Church sat●n preuaileth with the children of disobedience and draweth more to destruction by presumption then he is able to do by desperation Let vs not harden our hearts thorough the deceitfulnesse of sinne Esay 55 6. Let vs seeke the Lord while hee may bee found and cal vpon him while he is neere Secondly let vs ground our faith in the vndoubted Vse 2 performance of those iudgements that are yet to come as that the Lord Iesus at the appointed time will breake the heauens and will come to iudge the quicke and the dead at his appearance and in his Kingdome that the wicked shall rise againe and stand before the barre of Gods throne These things we see not yet accomplished for all things continue alike from the beginning of the creation Hēce it is that Mockers arise which walke after their lusts and say Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 3 3.4 10. But the day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night in the which the heauens shall passe away with a noise and the Elements shall melt with heate and the earth with the workes that are therein shall be burnt vp Yea When they shal say peace and safety 1 Thess 5 3. then shall come vpon them sodaine destruction as the trauaile vpon a woman with child and they shall not escape Thus the Prophet Malachi prophesieth Behold the day commeth that shall burne as an Ouen and all the proud Malachy 4 1. and all the wicked doers shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them vp and shal leaue them neither roote nor branch Thus then we see a day of iudgement is decreed and determined and remaineth for the appointed time but at last it shall come and not lye though it tarry wait for it shall surely come and not stay Thirdly wee must not be dismayed when Vse
continuance of the Church and truth of God that it may flourish after vs and not dye with vs or bee buried in the earth for euer This appeareth by the Apostle Peter I will endeuour alwaies that yee also may be able to haue remembrance of these things after my departure 2 Pet. 1 15. Heereunto accordeth the care of the Apostle Paul writing to Timothy Watch thou in all things suffer aduersity do the worke of an Euangelist cause thy Ministery to be throughly liked of for I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departing is at hand 2 Tim. 4 5 6. This we see many waies in Moses who would not leaue the people without a guide as sheepe without a Shepheard and therefore praied for a fit Gouernor Let the Lord God of the spirits of all flesh appoint a man ouer the Congregation ●●b 27 16 who may goe in and out before them And therefore it is said Deut. 34 9. that Ioshua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisedome For Moses had put his hands vpon him and the children of Israel were obedient vnto him and did as the Lord had commanded Moses ●●ro 2● 9. Likewise Dauid at the point of death exhorteth the Officers of his kingdom and Salomon his sonne which was to sit vpon his Throne to know the God of his fathers and to serue him with a perfect heart with a willing minde assuring him that if he seeke him he will be found and threatning him if he forsake him that God will cast him off for euer Reason 1 And great reason it is wee should haue this care and consideration of the good beauty of the Church For the Church is our Mother who hath conceiued and brought vs forth to liue a spirituall life to God wee haue sucked her breasts and through her we haue here begun our heauen happinesse What vnkindnesse and vnthankfulnesse were this to leaue her destitute who hath trauailed in paine of vs vntill Christ be formed in vs and to withdraw all duty and endeuor from her touching her condition to come Were it not a note of an vnnaturall a lewd a shamefull childe to forsake his owne mother who bare him in her wombe nourished him with her brests dandled him in her lap refused no base seruice for his good cared for him whē he could not care for himselfe in whose eyes he was tender and deare were it not I say a note of great infamy to leaue her in misery or as a prey to the enemy 〈◊〉 19 16 27. We see the Lord Iesus Christ being on the Crosse prouided for his Mother committed her to the care of the Disciple whō he loued In like manner the Apostle requireth this duty 〈◊〉 5 ● 16 If any faithfull man or faithfull womā haue widowes let them minister vnto them And if there be any that prouideth not for his owne hee denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell Whosoeuer therefore hath beene brought vp in the bosome of the Church begotten by the immortall seed of the word nourished at the Table of Christ and taught to looke for an eternall inheritance in the heauens can neuer assure himselfe to bee the true childe of his mother but rather a base and bastardly brood vnlesse he shew it by the continuall care hee hath of the safegard and protection of the Church Gal. 4 2. which is the mother of all the faithfull Besides greeuous and greedy wolues enter Reason 2 vpon the labours of faithfull and painfull Pastours to make hauock of the Church and to seduce the people of God For Satan is neuer idle though neuer well occupied and as a reuerent father once said Latimer he is the most diligent Bishop in his Diocesse he neuer resteth but alwaies compasseth the earth too and fro Iob 2 2. and walketh therein He hath his instruments which he setteth on worke that poison the church with the leauen of false doctrine and sowe the Lords field with the Darnell of their diuellish deuices Therefore the Apostle exhorting the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28 29 30 saith Take heed to your selues and to all the flocke wher of the Holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood for I know this that after my departure shall greeuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Moreouer of your selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to draw Disciples after them Now it remaineth to see the vses heereof Vse 1 First we learne from hence the con●inuance of the Church vpon the earth and the perpetuall remaining of it so long as the earth endureth and so long as the Sun abideth a faithfull witnesse in the heauens Though it bee sometimes driuen from place to place and abideth not in one stay and state like the Moone that sometimes shineth in the full Aug epist 48. sometimes in the wane and sometimes in the eclipse Reuel 12 6. as the woman constrained to flie into the wildernesse where she hath a place prepared of God that they should feed her there and as the reigne of Ahab when Elias thought himselfe left alone as a Sparrow vpon an house top 1 King 19 10. Psal 102 7. yet there alwayes hath beene a Church from the beginning and euer shall bee a Church to the end from Adam the first to the last man that shall stand vpon the earth This the Prophet teacheth Psal 72 5. 102 26 27 28. Let the enemies fret and storme let them rage roare neuer so much they labour in the fire and sweate in vaine they shall perish fall down but the Lord that is able of stones to raise vp Children vnto Abraham holdeth vp the heads of his people that they stand as an house built vpon the Rocke the raine falleth the floud cometh the winde bloweth and beateth vpon that house yet it abideth firmely and falleth not for it is grounded on the Rocke Math. 7 24 25 like the bush that burned with fire but was not consumed Exod. 3 ● Secondly seeing our care must be that the Vse 2 truth of God may liue when we are dead and remaine after our departure It is the duty of all the Ministers of God to preach the word of God in season and out of season 2 Tim. chap. 4 verse 2 3 to be instant in reproouing rebuking exhorting with all long-suffering and doctrine yea to do these things with all their power seeing there is neyther work nor wisedome in the graue whither they go For alas how shall they minde the future good of the Church after their death that mean not the present good of the Church in their life Wherefore let vs take all occasions opportunities to promote the Gospell Act. 20 27 28 Let vs keepe backe nothing that is profitable but reueale to the people the whole counsell of God knowing that
children partakers of his victory And the Apostle Paul confirmeth the same Rom. 16 20. The God of peace shall tread Sathan vnder your feet shortly Wherefore albeit there bee in this life and wicked world many beastly minded men that spread their armes far and neare seeme euen to dazle the eies of others through their riches honors power friends aliance might credite possessions dominion ouer others so that none dare mutter a word against them yet the time is appointed cometh quickly that the godly shall sit in thrones of glory iudge these wicked wretches that haue beene enemies to the Church they shall stand at the bar like poore caitiffes and receiue frō Christ and his Saints the sentence of condemnation as 1 Corinth 6.2 3. Paul calleth the Saints of God to consideration of this prerogatiue and checketh them that they would submit themselues to the vngodly Doe ye not know that the Saints shall iudge the world If the world then shall bee iudged by you are yee vnworthy to iudge the smallest matters Know ye not that we shall iudge the Angels How much more things that pertaine to this life If then the Lord bring the wicked downe and make them stoope to his seruants in these dayes of their pilgrimage wherein iniquity is often aduanced how much more shal we see our desire vppon our enemies when Christ which is our life shall appeare Col. 3 4. 1 Iohn 3 ● for then we shall appeare with him in glory and bee made like vnto him and see him as he is This the Prophet assureth the Church Mal. 4 2 3. Albeit therefore we be persecuted pursued in this life and finde no rest or refreshing any where yet there shall be a sudden change of our condition when we shall triumph with Christ ouer all principalities and powers that lift themselues vp against God who shal ●●ue shame and contempt powred vpon them The coming of Christ shall lighten things hidden in darknesse and make a manifest difference betweene the godly and the vngodly Let vs waite for his glorious appearance let vs hold fast till he come that which we haue that no man may take away our crowne This Christ our Sauiour who hath ouercome the world assureth Reuel chapter 2. verses 26 27. Hee that ouercommeth and keepeth my worke vnto the end to him will I giue power ouer Nations and hee shall rule them with a rod of iron and as the vessels of a Potter shall they be broken And the Apostle Peter assureth vs that the Lord is not slack of his coming as some men count slacknesse but is patient toward vs that we should not perish but come to repentance But the day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night ● 3 8 9 10 in the which the heauens shall passe away with a noyse and the Elements shall melt with heate and the earth with the works that are therein shall be burnt vp Then woe shall be to the wicked then they shall be cast down and neuer be able to rise againe then they shall howle and weepe and lament and neuer bee comforted againe whereas the godly shall lift vp their heads because their redemption draweth neere When it shall be a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation vnto them that trouble you but to you which are troubled rest with vs when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels 2 Th. 1 6. This therefore is a great comfort vnto vs giueth peace to our soules that he will deale with all the vngodly as Ioshua did with the Kings which he had conquered and subdued in battell For he commanded them to be brought out of the Caue where they were hidden and called for all the men of Israel and saide vnto the chiefe of the men of war which went out with him Come neere set your feet vpon the necks of these Kings and they came neere and set their feete vpon their necks and Ioshua said vnto them Feare not nor be faint-hearted but be strong and of a good courage for thus will the Lord do to all your enemies against whom ye fight Iosh 10 24 25. So wil Christ Iesus deale with al our enemies who is the Captaine of the Lords host he will poure shame and contempt vpon them and therefore let vs not stand in feare of them to turne out of the right way and to forsake our profession but be stedfast and vnmoueable abounding alway in the work of the Lord forasmuch as we know that our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. Thus if we be faithfull to the death we shall receiue an incorruptible crowne of glory Vse 3 Lastly obserue and marke how God magnifieth the Ministry and is able to enforce the wicked to the acknowledgement of himselfe and the true Ministers of his word and let this comfort vs in the midst of all contempts and disgraces of our God of our religion of our faith and of our persons Ah we Ministers despised by prophane men let vs marke and consider this and lay it vnto our hearts let vs beare their contempts contumelies thrown vpon vs. In their extremities they shall acknowledge vs they shall reuerence our Calling they shall magnifie our Office our Ministery and Doctrine they shall iustifie vs desire our prayers they shall stoope they shall stoope when it pleaseth God And let this suffice all true Teachers Preachers of the Gospel of Christ that the power of the truth is such as that it maketh the enemy bow the knee vnto it which before seemed to haue no ioynt to bend This is the time which the Lord hath made let vs reioyce and be glad in it when he giueth vs a comfortable experience of this doctrine that the enemies of God and our enemies are driuen to resort and repaire vnto vs and such as made iestes and songs of the word and of the Ministers of the word cry out O Ezek. 33 31. how beautifull are the feete of them which bring glad tydings of good things Rom. 10 15. There is none of vs all poore contemned men that labour in sincerity in the vineyard of God beare the burden of the worke and the heate of the day but sometimes God lifteth vp our heads and honoureth vs in the world that we should not sinke downe vnder the burden and maketh our mortall and greatest enemies beseech vs to be good vnto them and to helpe them in their extremities The people of Israel despised the ministery of Samuel would not hearken vnto him but when they saw the lightning and heard the thunder and felt the raine at that vnseasonable time They feared the Lord and Samuel exceedingly and they saide vnto him Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord thy God that we die not 1 Sam. 8 7 and 12 18 19. Let this profitable meditation of Gods mercy toward vs deuoure and swallow vp all disgracing and defacing of
that they neuer remoue out of the place where they were born but continue at home in their owne houses they are not driuen hither and thither they are not tossed from poste to pillar yet must not they make their resting place in this world looke for heauen vpon the earth but bee alwaies ready to follow the calling of God 2 Cor. 7 5 and know that he hath reserued a better resting place for them in his kingdome Wherefore the Apostle Peter exhorteth Dearely beloued I beseech you as strangers and Pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lustes which fight against the soule haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles This is the beginning of godlinesse and true religion to deny this world and to acknowledge our selues to be but strangers in the same And let vs pray with the Prophet Psal 119. I am but a stranger vpon earth hide not thy Commandements from me Vse 3 Lastly let vs learne to depend and rest onely vpon God who onely dwelleth in immortality and not on the sonnes of men who are nothing but vanity and cannot helpe Who would in danger rest vpon a weak reed which beside the weaknesse is ready to run into our arme All men are fraile and transitory if then we put confidence in an arme of flesh we shall be deceiued This the Prophets of God euery where record Esay 2 22 and 30 7 and 31 3. Ceasse you from the man whose breath is in his nostrils for wherein is he to be esteemed Teaching vs to cast off all vaine confidence in man if God stop his breath but a little he is dead and gone And chap. 30. The Egyptians are vanity and they shall helpe in vaine they are men not God their horses flesh and not spirit and when the Lord shall stretch out his hand the helper shall fall and he that is holpen shall fall and they shall altogether faile To this purpose Dauid exhorteth Psal 62 9 10. The children of men are vanity to lay them vpon a ballance they are altogether lighter then vanity trust not in oppression nor in robbery be not vaine if riches increase set not your heart thereon Let vs set our hearts on our God and the God of our fathers abuse not the fauour and countenance of great men to do wrong for he taketh away the greatest rather let vs pray to him to giue vs wise hearts to number our daies and to thinke often of our vanity thereby to keepe vs from offending against God that our life passeth as a sleepe in the night that it groweth vp as grasse which in the morning flourisheth but in the euening is cut downe and withereth Verse 14. It shall be spoken in the booke of the battailes of the Lord. He declareth that the place mentioned in the former verse should be so ennobled and renowned that the memory of it should neuer die or decay As if Moses should say when the battailes of the Lord shall be spoken off the Riuer Arnon shall bee remembred and the battailes that Vaheb the King of Moab lost Now they are called the battailes of the Lord that were fought by mē For howsoeuer men run together like wilde Beares or wilde Boares and leuy forces of mē yet their armies are conducted and ruled by God From hence we learne Doctrin● All watre● ordered by God That all watres are disposed ordered of God Of all things done here beneath nothing seemeth more casuall or confused and nothing more out of the right course and order then the time of warre when men seeme to run together at all aduentures yet God hath his hand in it he guideth and gouerneth the same as seemeth good in his owne wisedome This the wise man handleth Prou. 21 31. The horse is prepared against the day of battell but victory is of the Lord. This the Prophet confesseth Psal 144 1. Blessed bee the Lord my strength which teacheth mine hands to fight and my fingers to battell No war falleth out in any place or vpon any people but it is sent of God When Abraham recouered Lot his brothers sonne from the enemies of whom he was taken prisoner it was God that gaue him good successe and prospered the worke of his hand Gen. 14 20. When the Israelites reuenged the villany of the Beniamites in abusing a woman vnto death it is said the Lord smote Beniamin Iudg. 20 35. and the children of Israel destroyed them So when Gideon was armed with courage and comfort to encounter with the Midianites to performe the work of the Lord against thē when he was to ioyne battaile hee cryed out The sword of the Lord and of Gideon Iudg. 7 20. Wherefore howsoeuer men do mannage the battaile yet it is ordered at the will of God The reasons are plaine First who is the Reason 1 cheefe Captaine of euery hoast and army Is not the Lord And is not euery battell fought at the discretion disposing of the Generall If then God be the Generall of the field and Captaine of the hoast President of the war let vs acknowledge that all wars are ordered at his pleasure This is the Title giuen vnto God Iosh 5 13 14 15. When Ioshua lifting vp his eyes saw a man come against him hauing a sword drawne in his hand he said Art thou on our side or on our aduersaries And he answered Nay but as a Captaine of the hoast of the Lord am I now come then Ioshua fell on his face to the earth and worshipped him This cheefe Captaine and Leader of the people was the Lord as appeareth by a like place Exod. 3 5 where the Angell appearing vnto Moses in a flame of fire is called the Lord. Secondly all things whatsoeuer are ordered Reason 2 by the appointment and prouidence of God that are in heauen and earth his gouernment ouer all creatures and of all actions is vniuersall nothing can exempt it selfe out of the circuit of his dominion as the Prophet teacheth Psal 113 6. He abaseth himselfe to behold things in the heauen and in the earth And the Apostle saith that of him and through him and for him are all things Rom. 11 36. The vses come now to be considered First Vse 1 this teacheth vs that the victory is not mans but the Lords For if the battell bee the Lords then the victory also is the Lords that the glory likewise may be his It is not the sword nor speare nor horse nor man nor money that can saue or succour these are vain things to rest vpon so that where some trust in Chariots and some in Horses we must remember the Name of the Lord our God Psal 20 7. Therfore the Prophet sheweth Psal 33 17 18 that a King is not saued by the multitude of an hoast neither is the mighty man deliuered by great strength an horse is a vaine helpe and shall not deliuer any by his great strength And this Dauid confesseth whē he was to encounter with
in battell Let vs euery one learne this vse and apply it to our hearts that the wicked man what face soeuer hee set on the matter can neuer haue a good heart but standeth in feare of euery creature in heauen and earth Genes 4 14. like Cain affrighted at the sight of euery thing and thinking whosoeuer findeth them will slay them Doe they looke vp to heauen there they haue God their enemy Do they looke downe to hell there they see Satan their tormenter and his angelles their executioners Would they take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the sea they shall finde euerie creature to fight against them and to conspire their death and euen to grone to bee deliuered from such an vnprofitable burthen ●●●ea● ca●i●●●cked The heauen saith Why do I couer him The aire saith Why do I yeelde him life and breath The water saith Why doe I not drowne him as Pharaoh his hoast The fire saith Why do I not consume him as Sodom and Gomorrha as the Captaine and his fifty The earth saith Why do I beare him and sustaine him and not swallow him vp as Dathan and Abiram His food saith Why do I nourish not choake him His apparrell saith Why doe I warme him The ground saith Why doe I yeeld him increase and bring forth any other crop then thornes and briars then nettles and thistles Death saith Why do I spare him not strike him Hell saith Why do I not receiue him The sword cryeth Why do I not smite him Famine Why do I not pine him The Pestilence Why do I not waste him and make hauocke of him The Sun and Moone say Why do I giue him light His bed saith Why do I giue him rest Thus euery creature is vp in armes and rebelleth against him that rebelleth against God they sound defiance vnto vs and proclaime open warre against vs whē we are not at peace with our God What then Shall he looke homeward turne his eyes toward himselfe There hee findeth and feeleth an accusing conscience as a thousand witnesses against him to whip terrify him Howsoeuer the euill man reioyceth in his wickednesse and glorieth in his owne shame Deut. 29 19. Deut. 29.19 howsoeuer he put away the euil day farre from him and promise peace vnto himselfe yet a man would not haue the heart of a wicked man for a thousand worldes nor possesse his pleasures to haue his paines Thou knowest not the torments of his conscience when he feeleth the strength of the Law the terrors of the Almighty the tentations of the diuel the gripings of death and the flashings of hell fire howsoeuer he seemeth to make a mocke of sinne and foolish men as vaine as himselfe doe flatter him in his sinnes Yet in laughter the heart is sorrowfull Pro. 14 13 14 and the end of that mirth is heauinesse There is a way that seemeth right to a man but the issues thereof are the wayes of death Wherefore seeing the euill man feareth oftentimes where no feare is trembling at the fall of a leafe starting at his owne thought and shaking at his owne shadow we conclude that hee can haue no true might and manhood in him but is a dastard and a coward in regard of true manhood and fortitude which are far from him Secon● y it standeth vs vpon to be at peace with God and learne to leade a godly life For so long as wee liue in our sinnes wee are as a lothsome carkasse and carrion casting out a filthy fauour and stinking in the nosthrils of God A wretched and prophane man lying rotting and rioting in his sinnes is more lothsome to God then any dead body is lothsome vnto our senses So long as wee corrupt our wayes before him the Lord hath a controuersie with vs and will commence an action against vs. And we shal neuer haue true peace with men nor true peace with our selues but shall feele the terrors of our own consciences and be at deadly and dangerous warre with our owne hearts vntill we be reconciled to God But if we be truely godly and religious and be indeed at peace with God we shall be at peace with others and with our selues nothing shall bee able to hurt vs. For whom should we feare or whereof should we be afraid God is become our Father Whom haue we in heauen but him and whom can we desire on earth with him Psal 73 25. The Angels are our attendants they pitch their Tents round about vs to deliuer vs they are charged to keepe vs in all our wayes and to beare vs in their hands that we dash not our foot against a stone Psal 34 7 and 91 11. For are they not all ministring spirits set and sent out to minister for their sakes which shall be heires of saluation Heb. 1 14. The Saints in heauen and earth are our fellow-brethren so that we are Citizens with ●hem of the same kingdome and of the houshold of God Eph. 2 19. The Lord Iesus to whom all iudgement is committed who shall iudge the world with thousands of his Angels is become our Sauiour So that wee shall neuer come into condemation but shall passe from death to life Ioh. 5 24. The creatures are our friends nay as our sworne seruants by the law of their creation to doe vs good and not euill all their dayes The stones of the field are in league with vs Hosea 2 18 and the Beasts of the fielde shall be at peace with vs Iob 5 23. Death shall not be able to hinder or to hurt vs though it be a Scorpion or Serpent the poison is dispersed the sting is pulled out 1 Cor. 15 54 55. The diuels and all the powers of darknesse shall not destroy vs Christ hath spoiled Principalities and Powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them vpon the Crosse as a mighty conqueror in a chariot of triumph Col. 2 15. He hath bruised his head he hath crushed him at the heart so that the Prince of the world is cast out Iohn 12 31. What then Shall tribulations and afflictions or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or the sword separate vs from the loue of Christ and peace with our God Rom. 8 28.35 37. Nay these proceed from a louing Father and end at our own good who sanctifieth all things and maketh them worke together for the best to them that loue God He will couer them vnder his wings and they shall be sure vnder his feathers they shall not be afraid of the feare of the night nor of the arrow that flyeth by day nor of the pestilence that walketh in the darknes nor of the plague that destroyeth at noone-day a thousand shall fall at their side ten thousand at their right hand but it shall not come neare vnto them Psal 91 4.5 6 7. Lastly as they shall feare no danger that can hurt
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
of mortification to prepare them to the kingdom of heauen but follow the fruites of the flesh the lusts of their eyes and the pride of life so they shall finde their owne death to bee farre differing from the quiet sleepe of the righteous who see by faith the heauens open for them with Stephen and know that the glorious Angels are their attendants ready to conduct and to direct theyr soules into glory They know that their Redeemer liueth and that they shall see God in their flesh with the same eyes Iob 19 2● albeit theyr reines be consumed within them for the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous As for the wicked it shall not bee so with them Psalme 73.19 20. They shall sodainly bee destroyed and horribly consumed as a dreame when one awaketh O Lord when thou raisest vs vppe thou shalt make their image despised Their death is full of feare and horror ● things ●fying th●● of the 〈◊〉 man they see three fearefull obiects represented before their eyes dismaying all theyr senses and affrighting all the powers of their soules so soone as they apprehend them thorough all which dying without repentance they must passe without redemption or deliuerance to wit death iudgement and hell the one following the heeles of another They shal know the pangs of death they shall appeare at the day of Iudgement they shall feele the torments of hell and fire vnquenchable When they haue runne out theyr miserable and wretched race they shall sodainely be attached and arrested by death death shall call and cry out for iudgement and iudgement shall take them and throw them into hell and perpetuall perdition If a man in this life that hath liued wantonly bene clad gorgeously and fared deliciously euery day should see these three fearefull spectacles the sword to smite him the plague to touch him and famine to consume him it were able to astonish him and bring him to despayre But all these are nothing in comparison of the former for as it is appointed vnto them once to dye Heb. 9 27. which is the entrance into the next plague so after death commeth iudgement which shall be according to theyr works whē theyr most secret thoughts shall be written in theyr foreheads and grauen as with a pen of Iron to remayne in remembrance for euer and after iudgement commeth hell fire then shame and contempt shall bee powred vpon them then vtter desperation shall seize vpon them then an eternall separation from the comfortable presence of God shall ouertake them fall vpon them and they shall haue perpetuall fellowship with the diuell and his angels This is it which maketh the vngodly so loth to heare of death and so willing to wish in word to dye the death of the righteous They would liue like themselues but would dye like the faithfull But we cannot seuer and diuorce the life and the death of the people of God they must alwayes go together and follow one the other necessarily Thus wee see as there is great difference betweene the godly and the vngodly in their life so there shall be a greater difference betweene them after this life For albeit all sleepe in the dust of the earth shall awake out of their sleepe 〈◊〉 12 2. yet the godly shall inherit euerlasting life but the vngodly shall go into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his angels This appeareth vnto vs in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus there was a great difference betweene them while they liued vpon the earth the one abounded in riches was clad in purple and fed with dainty fare Lu. 16 22 23 the other was cloathed in rags couered with sores and abounded in nothing but in penury and misery here was a maine difference between thē But when they went the way of all flesh and were gathered vnto their Fathers then was the greatest difference of all as if the other were not to be thought vpon For when this poore begger dyed hee was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome the rich man also died and was buried and was carried into the torments of hel to whom Abraham said Luk. 16.25 Son Remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is he comforted and thou art tormented This is that great gulfe and wide space set betweene the godly and the vngodly Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to stirre vp the giftes of God in vs and to take heed we quench not the graces of the Spirit in vs. The gifts of God giuen vnto vs are as a sparke of fire kindled in our hearts our corruptions are as a water seeking to quench them Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to be careful and diligent in kindling this fire and in blowing these coales that the talents committed vnto vs may bee increased and the Lord receiue at his comming his own with aduantage This the Apostle Paul teacheth Timothy who had bene brought vp in the Scriptures of a childe 2 Tim. 1 6. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the grace of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands Christ Iesus compareth in the Gospel the grace of God in the heart to a grain of Mustard seed which is small to see to at the beginning 〈◊〉 ●3 31 ●● 26. but when it is once planted in the fruitfull ground of a regenerate heart it springeth vp incontinently encreaseth speedily spreadeth mightily and prospereth exceedingly If a man at the first beginning of his conuersion haue some little feeling of his wants some weake and faint desire of faith and some small testimonies of his adoption he must remember to be thankfull for these and seeke to increase them by the vse of the Word Sacraments Prayers Meditations Conference and such like helpes that wee may be alwayes proceeding endeuouring striuing asking seeking and knocking to know the heighth depth bredth of the loue of God 〈…〉 we must alwayes grow vpp● 〈…〉 God Psal 143 6. and desire 〈…〉 be giuen vs to supply our weakn● 〈…〉 must long after him as the thirsty l●● 〈…〉 should pant after him as the Hart bray 〈…〉 riuers of waters Psal 42 1. Blessed are 〈…〉 hunger and thirst after righteousnes for t●● 〈…〉 be satisfied Math. 5 6. He will giue to him t●● 〈◊〉 a thirst to drinke of the Well of the water of 〈◊〉 freely If wee haue this appetite vsing all the meanes which God hath appointed and being carefull to honor him for that which wee haue receyued already I am perswaded that he which hath begun this good worke in vs will perfect and finish the same vnto the day of Iesus Christ And let my last end be like his Here is a liuely testimony of the immortality of the soule For if hee had beleeued that man had ended with death and then there had beene no further reckoning nor account to be made it had beene a vaine and
brethren But they proceed by little and little from step to step and from one degree to another till they feare nothing and are ashamed of nothing Therefore in the example of one man heere set before our eies Moses declares to what impudency shamelesnesse they were come that they brought their harlots into the hoast to despite God to anger Moses to corrupt the people to pollute the worship that was set vp by the commandement of the Lord. For this man who is afterward named as if he had beene absolute in power as he was indeed resolute in will dissolute in his whole life brought his whorish woman in the sight of God in the sight of Moses in the sight of the congregation and in the sight of the Tabernacle to shew that he had filled vp the measure of his sinne Doctrine Euill men proceed by degrees from worse to worse The doctrine arising from hence is this that euill men doe not vsually make any stay in euill but proceede from degree to degree to worse worse The nature of sinne is to draw all such as delight in it and follow after it from one euill to another vntill in the end they become most corrupt and abhominable This is it which the Prophet Ieremy noteth in the people of his time when he sayth Were they ashamed when they committed abhomination Nay they were not ashamed no neither could they haue any shame therefore they shall fall among the slaine when I shall visit them they shall bee cast downe saith the Lord Ier. 6 15. The like we see in the 18. chap. following ver 11 12. Speake to the men of Iudah and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem saying Thus saith the Lord Behold I prepare a plague for you and purpose a thing against you returne you therefore euery one from his euill way and make your wayes your workes good But they said desperatly Surely we will walk after our own imaginations doe euery man after the stubburnes of his wicked hart The truth of this hath bin euidēt in al ages of the Church When the Lord was determined to bring an vniuersall flood vpon the face of the earth for the sinnes of man and had giuen them a time of repentance while his patience endured Gen. 6.12 They ceased not from sin neither repented of their wickednesse saying what haue I done Math. 24 38. But euery one turned to their race as the horse rusheth into the battell For in the time that was limited thē their sin increased our Sauior shewing how they were giuen ouer vnto all loosenesse vntill the flood came and swept them all away This the Prophet Dauid noteth if hee were the penner of that Psalme where hee obserueth the degrees and stayres by which men ascend to the heighth and top of sinne first they beginne to walke in the counsell of the wicked then they proceed to stand in the way of sinners lastly they come to sit downe in the seat of the scornefull Psal 1.1 And this we may further obserue in the faylings of the faithfull and in their fallings into sinne No man becommeth extreamely euil at a sudden nor desperately setled and obstinatly resolued to continue in sin in a moment but as he that will climbe vp to the top of an high tower doth ascend step by step and by little litle so he that maketh no conscience of any sinne but walketh in all prophanenesse with greedinesse commeth to that height by degrees one sinne drawing on another the lesser making way for the greater and the greater obtayning passage for the greatest of all Wee see it in Euah when she fell from God first Gen 3 6. she listned vnto Satan secondly shee made a light resistance to his tentation thirdly shee beganne to doubt waueringly of that which God had deliuered absolutely fourthly shee grew in concupiscence the eye liking the heart lusting and both of them desiring the forbidden fruite lastly she fell to flat apostacy infidelity and rebellion This likewise is set before vs in the example of Peter who getting into the high-Priests hall and thrusting himselfe into euill company hath left vs a strong proofe of his owne weakenesse and of his declining from euill to worse First hee answereth faintly and fearefully that he knew not the man Math. 26 70. A dangerous beginning When hee was further vrged and pressed to answere and that he saw his bare and cold denyall would not be accepted hee thought to goe one step farther hee denyed with an oath that he neuer knew him Yea when they were importunate vpon him and would not suffer him to be in rest he began to curse himselfe and thereby to cast himselfe into the depth of sin into the gates of hel and into the hands of Satan The Reasons follow First sin groweth Reason 1 in the heart as the childe doth in the wombe For as the infant hath his increasings and augmentations from a small beginning vntill hee come to the birth proceeding from one degree and age vnto another as Iob setteth foorth our first creation Thou hast powred me out as milke and turned mee into cruds like cheese thou hast clothed me with skinne and flesh and ioyned me with bones and sinnewes Iob 10 10 11 so is it with a sinner his beginnings are small but the further hee runneth the longer he continueth and the deeper hee plungeth himselfe in sinne the more corrupt and abhominable he becommeth As a spring that ariseth out of the earth is first little and shallow but the further it groweth the more ground it floweth and the more streames come into it the greater the riuer is or as a fire which at the first is a little sparke being nourished becommeth in short time a great flame so is it with sin it is little in growth weake in strength slender in appearance at the beginning but being cherrished and fostered in the soule of the sinner it multiplyeth exceedingly and bringeth foorth many children of the same nature whereof we may truely say Like mother like daughter This is that comparison which the Apostle Iames vseth to expresse the fruitfull nature of all the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse Euery man is tempted when hee is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and when sinne is finished it bringeth foorth death Iam. 1 15. VVhere the Apostle sheweth that first a man is tempted to euill then concupiscence conueyeth it after it is in trauaile and bringeth foorth and lastly it doth finish it as a perfect birth This comparison is also vsed by the Prophet Dauid Behold he shall trauaile with wickednesse for he hath conceiued mischiefe but he shall bring forth a lie Psal 7 14. Reason 2 Secondly the wrath of God falleth vpon such as make no conscience to fall into lesser sinnes hee giueth them ouer to a reprobate sence to a slumbring spirit and to hardnesse of heart that
earnest suite that they might bee heires also of that land by right of succession in which as yet they had not the bredth of a foot and therefore the Apostle teacheth that faith is the substance of things hoped for and the euidence of things not seene Heb. 11.1 Thirdly Doctrine We may make our selues guilty of other mens sinnes we see that we may be made partakers of other mens sinnes and therefore we heard before that the people were commanded to depart from the tents of Korah and his partisans lest they should bee defiled by the euils of those euill men Tit. 3 10 11 2 Cor. 6 7. 1 Tim. 5.22 This may bee done many wayes somtimes by counsel and perswasion and thus was Achitophel guilty of the rebellion of Absolon against his father 2. Sam. 16 and Balaam of the whoredome of the Israelites because they committed fornication with the daughters of Moab by his counsel Numb 31 sometimes by commandement as Herod the great sent forth and slew all the male children that were in Bethlehem Math. 2 16 and so did Herod Antipas behead Iohn Baptist in prison Math. 14 22 thus was Dauid guilty of the death of Vriah his faithfull seruant and is therfore himselfe charged to haue killed him with the sword of the Ammonites 2. Sam. 12 sometimes by consent and so was Saul guilty of the martyr Stephens death because he consented to his death Act. 9 1 and they that sate in iudgment to condemne Christ to whō Ioseph of Arimathea would not consent and therfore cleared himselfe from his blood which otherwise he could not haue done Luke 23.51 sometimes by flattery as those that call euill good and good euill Esay 5 such are the ministers that sow soft cushens vnder euery elbow Ezek. 13 and such people as would haue the Prophets to prophesie flattering words vnto them Esay 30 sometimes by receiuing as they that take and lay vp stollen goods or buy them of those that haue stolen them these are as bad if not worse then the theeues themselues and to be punished as they are likewise they that receiue false tales to the hurt of their brethren though they doe not first deuise them Leuit. 19 16 sometimes by partaking with theeues and sharing with them as Prou. 1 they tooke part of that which was stollen sometimes by defending those that haue done euill and iustifying them in their vngodlinesse Rom. 1 sometimes it may bee done by holding our peace and saying nothing at all when we may speake and cleare a matter so is hee a false witnes that will not speake in the cause of the dumbe as well as he that vttereth an vntruth thus also is the watchman guilty that should giue warning and blow the trumpet but becommeth as the dumbe dogge that cannot barke Esay 56 10. Lastly by not resisting or withstanding when we are able Psal 82 4. If God giue vs power we make our selues weake the euill that we suffer shall be required of vs. Likewise in the example of Moses we learne to haue recourse to GOD in all matters of doubt we must not runne on vpon an head but go into the Sanctuary and aske counsell of the Lord. Doctrine Sinne is the cause of death and al misery Lastly obserue that sinne is the true cause of death mortality corruption and all the misery that hath taken hold of all mankinde when sinne entred then entred all plagues and iudgements in this life and after this life Gen. 2 17 3.19 1. Cor. 15 21 11 30 Rom. 5 12 21. Iames 1 16. Hebrewes 9 27 28. Reason 1 For sin is the sting of death that is the power and strength and the very armour of death it is as a sword which hee holdeth in his hand to wound vs withall It is as a stinging serpent 1. Cor. 15 and if remedy be not sought against the biting of it it woundeth soule and body to death Secondly it standeth with the iustice and righteousnes of God which will not otherwise be satisfied Wee see how Magistrates whose breath is in their nostrils do punish malefactors and offenders with bodily death their eye doth not spare them no marueile then if the Lord who is a consuming fire Heb. 12. whose person is of infinite Maiesty take hold of soule and body and punish them both spiritually and eternally and therefore the Apostle iustly calleth death the wages of sinne Rom. 6.23 Thirdly sin hath pestered and poysoned our nature corrupting all the powers and parts in vs our mind our will our memory our affections our conscience Eph. 4 17 18.19 Rom. 6 12 13. It is as a worme that is alwayes gnawing at the root of life vntill tree and all fall downe Lastly sin giueth strength to Satan the prince of darknes without which he could not hurt vs it is hee that hath power ouer death Heb. 2 14. 1. Cor. 15 56 and therefore was the Son of man manifested that he might destroy the works of the diuel 1. Ioh. 3 8. But it may be obiected if sin be the cause of death Obiection how commeth it to passe that Christ dyed who knew no sin in whose mouth was no guile found Answ 2 Cor. 5 21. Answ Though Christ were without sin in himselfe yet he that knew no sin was made sin for vs c. he tooke vpon him the sins of all the faithful as a surety taketh vpon him the debt of another And albeit he were not a sinner by transgression yet he may be said to be a sinner by imputation and therefore he must dye yet so that dying hauing no cause of death in himselfe he might destroy death and him that had the power of death that is the diuel Heb. 2 14 Hos 13 14. Againe Obiect if death be a fruit effect of sin how commeth it to passe that the faithfull which haue in Christ remission of sinnes do notwithstanding dy Answ Answ Albeit they haue forgiuenesse of sinnes yet they haue in them alwayes the reliques of sinne through the corruption of nature though it be not imputed vnto them through the mercy of God The guilt of Adams sin followeth vs as the shadow doth the body it cannot in this life be wholly purged it shall bee at the last cleane put off by death It is necessary therefore that we should dye or be changed at the last day that sin may be vtterly extinguished that we may by death as by a dore enter into euerlasting glory Sin is euery day lessened and consumed in the faithfull howbeit still we beare about vs the body of death Psal 51 5 2 Cor. 12 7 Eph. 2 3. We learne from hence what a horrible and hideous thing sin is that bringeth with it such bitter fruit for sin death are coupled together Rom. 8 2. Sin came not in by creation Eccl. 7 31 but by transgression for from the beginning it was not so Sin hath wroght this confusion euen the first sinne of
Adam which also is our sin Now there are four things that doe continually and distinctly cleaue to sinne Foure things cleaue to sin the fault the guilt the blot and the punishment The fault is the offence committed against God in the action which is the root of all the rest The guilt is an obligation to punishment for the fault and offence which we haue committed The blot or spot thereof is as it were a marke or print set and branded in the soule of him that sinned when he groweth to an hight in wickednes like the marke that was set vpon Cain when he had killed his brother For the multiplying of offensiue actions is the continuall encrease of the blot or blemish of the soule til in the end the light of nature be vtterly extinguished and men come to a reprobate sense and grow to be past feeling through the blindnesse of their mindes and the hardnesse of their hearts Euen as the dropsie man the more he drinketh the more hee dryeth so the more a man sinneth the more he is giuen to sinne As the couetous person alwayes desireth to get more so the sinner alwayes desireth to sinne more and to worke al vncleannes with greedines The punishment it selfe is the wages and iust recompence of all the former which is the first second death The first death is a separation of the soule and body the second a separation of the whole man from God for as the soule is the life of the body so is God the life of the soule Know therefore and acknowledge from hence that it is an irkesome and bitter thing to prouoke him by our sin which driueth away his comfortable presence from vs. Vse 2 Secondly this teacheth that none can escape death by strēgth or policy by friends or fraud or by any occasion in asmuch as all are sinners euen from their mothers wombe vnto the day of their death Psal 58 3. 51 5. Gen. 8 21. Iob 4 17. 15 14. 25 4. It is a fearefull and cruell tyrant an outragious and wasting enemy that maketh spoyle and hauocke wheresoeuer hee commeth sparing neyther young nor old rich nor poore Prince nor people good nor bad Psal 89 48. It standeth vs therefore in hand to account of euery day as our last day and to know that euery moment may cut off the threed of our life so that wee are suddenly gone are no more we must prepare for it continually our whole life should be a meditation of it Againe we must pull out of our hearts this false conceit and imagination whereby euery man naturally blesseth and notably deceiueth himselfe and thinketh though he haue one foot in a maner in the graue yet hee shall not die this yeere but he may liue one yeare longer as the rich man was in a pleasant dreame did forecast for many yeares Luke 12 19. And yet alas we know not what shal be to morrow Iam. 4 14 no nor what one day may bring forth Pr. 27 1 Vse 3 Lastly let euery one labor to take away the power and strength of his own death And to this end we must deale with it as the Philistims dealt with Sampson they neuer gaue ouer till they had learned where his strength lay Iudg. 16 5 6 and then they quickly weakned him and preuailed ouer him who before had preuailed ouer them So ought we to doe we must know wherin the strength of death consisteth that is in sin onely Take this away by repentance from dead works faith in Christ and you shaue off the seuen locks of it that is you shall weaken it that it shall neuer bee able to hurt you So many sinnes as liue and reigne in vs so many stings hath death which serue to wound our soules to eternall death If then we would die the death of the righteous let vs endeauour to the vtmost of our strength to liue the life of the righteous Then we shal lay a good foundation that shall neuer be shaken and build our house vpon the rocke wee shal begin our eternal life in this mortall life and haue our conuersation in heauen while we walke vpon the earth Phil. 3 20. Let vs beware of putting off the time from day to day whatsoeuer we would do at the last gaspe grone when we are dying let vs doe the same euery day while wee are liuing The most wicked when he seeth he is presently to leaue the world will seeme desirous to pray though he neuer prayed in his health and to require others to pray for him and haply those whom before he contemned and derided their prayers also then likewise hee will promise and protest amendment of life make solemne vowes couenants with God Let vs therefore do this daily which these men doe at their last day that when death commeth wee may be found ready and prepared with oyle in our lampes like the wise virgins Math. 25. To conclude he that would liue when he is dead must dye when he is aliue and there is no way for vs to come to life but first to enter by the gate of death 6 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 7 The daughters of Zelophehad speake right thou shalt surely giue them a possession of an inheritance among their fathers brethren c. 8 And thou shalt speake vnto the children of Israel saying If a man die and haue no sonne c. 9 And if hee haue no daughter then yee shall giue his inheritance vnto his brethren 10 And if he haue no brethren then ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his fathers brethren 11 And if his father haue no brethren ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his kinsman c. The deciding of the former question being referred by Moses vnto GOD followeth in these words wherein he returneth his answer consisting of two parts the one special the othe general the one respecting the time present the other the time to come The speciall belongeth to the cause of these fiue sisters God approueth theyr suite requireth that an inheritance should be giuen to them all so much as theyr father should haue inherited if he had liued longer The accomplishment of this designement is afterward related Iosh 17 3 4 c. where hee performeth this Commandement of the Lord. The generall ariseth vpon the former particular case and this belongeth to all the children of Israel wherein God determineth in what order they shall inherite Now these are the degrees First the neerest heyres are the heyres males The law for i●heritances a mans owne sonnes Secondly if hee haue no heyres males his daughters shall be his heyres Thirdly for default of such yssue the inheritance shall go to his owne brethren for after his children his brother is next in nature and blood vnto him therefore if his owne children faile his brother must be his heyre Fourthly if he haue no brother then his fathers
iustly destroy thē They remember not to cast themselues vpon his protection they consider not that he may make their bed their graue and neuer bring them to see the light and the Sunne againe They neuer yet truely learned that in him wee liue and moue and haue our being Acts 17 28. Howbeit we that should continually remember the kindnes of the Lord and pray to him and praise him at all times doe for the most part forget him from morning to euening from euening to morning and one day and weeke and moneth after another and therefore it often falleth out that God giueth vs little rest and quiet Deut. 28 67. But in the morning thou shalt say would God it were euen and at euen thou shalt say would God it were morning for the feare of thine heart wherewith thou shalt feare and for the sight of thine eyes which thou shalt see 9 And on the Sabbath day two Lambs of the first yeare without spot and two tenth deales of flower for a meate offering mingled with oyle and the drinke offiring thereof 10 This is the burnt offering of euery Sabbath beside the continuall burnt offering and his drinke offering Heere is the law set downe touching the solemnity of the Sabbath before we had the daily burnt offering in these words wee haue the weekely offering wherein all things are doubled Euery day wee should set aside a part of it to God and cut off somewhat from our owne businesse to lift vp our hearts to him but the seuenth day should wholly bee spent to his glory Before they offered one Lambe now two Lambes before one tenth deale of flower now two tenth deales c. So then we are to speake of the Iewish Sabbath Doctrine The Ievvish Sabbath and the vses therof to our selves and the vses thereof to our selues This was first prescribed and appointed to Adam in the time of his innocency Gen. 2 2 this was the seuenth day from creation It is repeated in sundry other places of the word of God Exod. 16 26 they might not gather Manna vpon this day Exod. 35 2 3. and 34.21 and 31 13. Reason 1 Many reasons are rendred Exod. 31 why they must obserue this Sabbath First it is a signe betweene God and them that it is hee that doth sanctifie them Secondly it is ordained for theyr benefit and commodity and therfore should be holy to them as Christ farther teacheth Mark 2 27. The Sabbath was made for man not man for the Sabbath Thirdly the necessity of keeping it appeareth because they that did not keepe it should surely dye Fourthly it is consecrated to God it is a Sabbath of rest vnto him verse 15. Fiftly the Lord propounded his owne example for hee created the world in sixe dayes then rested the seuenth See more to this purpose in the vses afterward First this rest prescribed in the law that Vse 1 they must do no manner of worke was mysticall pointing out our spirituall and internall rest and cessation from the works of sinne Esay 58 14 and 66 27. We must not do our owne wayes nor seek our own will we must ceasse from our owne workes to follow after the works of God Thus wee begin a spirituall Sabbath in this life or else we shall neuer enioy the eternall Sabbath in heauen We must begin our Sabbath here we shal finish it hereafter Therefore the Apostle saith Hebr. 4 10 11. Hee that entred into his rest hee hath also ceased from his owne workes as God did from his let vs labour therefore to enter into that rest lest any man fall after the same example of vnbeliefe All sinnes are truly and properly our owne workes because we naturally do them and can doe nothing else and we are Satans house wherein he inhabiteth Math. 12 44 we cannot please God but bring vpon our selues by them all miseries and calamities yea death it selfe So then we keepe a true Sabbath when we abstaine from our euill wayes when wee mortifie the deeds of the flesh when wee are quickned by the Spirit to leade a new life when we do those things that are well-pleasing in his sight For what shall it auaile or aduantage a man to abstaine from the works of his hands and the labour of his calling and in the meane season to nourish sinne and all euill in his heart What comfort on the Sabbath can the day-labourer find in resting from his worldly labours if hee labour nothing at all to deny vngodlinesse and all worldly and sinfull lusts What fruite shall the tradesman finde to cease from the workes of his calling when he maketh a trade and occupation of sin vpon that day to cease from making garments for others and not himselfe to learne to put on Christ What benefit hath the Physician to cease his prescriptions and to abstaine from giuing his receipts for bodily health if himselfe seeke not after the health of his owne soule may it not bee truly said to him Physician heale thy selfe Luke 4 23. What shall it auaile the traueiler to cease his trauell and yet neuer require seeke after the kingdome of Heauen What good shall the Inne-keeper or Tauerner receiue by ceasing from their ordinary victualling if they prouide not for themselues the meat that neuer perisheth and the bread that came downe from heauen but famish and pine away their owne soules Or what profit shal arise to such as wil neither buy nor sell vpon the Sabbath day when in the meane season they neuer go about to buy the truth of Gods word Pro. 23 23 not to sell away of their owne corruptions that hinder them from the best things To what end and purpose do we abstain from mustring training of souldiers if we do not learn on the lords day to fight the lords battels against the world the flesh and the diuell which are the most capital and deadly enemies that we haue not to our bodies onely but to our soules And why do we cease to put on our bodily armour our shield our head-peece our sword if wee doe not put on the whole armour of Goe the helmet of saluation the shield of faith the brestplate of righteousnesse and the sword of the spirit that we may stand fast in the day of tryall Eph. 6 16 17. Thus then wee see who they bee that keepe a good Sabbath euen they that learne to rest from sinne and cease from all their euill wayes Secondly the Sabbath also is Symbolicall Vse 2 in that it is a pledge vnto vs of our euerlasting rest in the kingdome of almighty God as the Apostle sheweth in the Epistle to the Colossians chapter 2 verse 17. The Sabbath dayes are a shadow of things to come and Heb. chap. 4 verse 9. There remaineth a rest for the people of God and farther he proueth it out of the Prophet in Psalme 95 where God promiseth not an outward such as was the ceremoniall rest of the Sabbath
perswaded though one rose from the dead He vnderstandeth heereby the writings of the olde Testament these he opposeth against all visions and reuelations as we also do against all traditions these these I say are sufficient to bring vs to Christ to saluation to heauen These are sufficient to keepe vs from hell and destruction and euery euill way Wherefore whatsoeuer belongeth to doctrine or to good life is found in them we haue direction by them to all things whatsoeuer belong vnto vs to do It is the commendation of a good Law to leaue as little vndecided and vndetermined and out of the compasse of the Law as is possible Such as write of the gouernment of Common-wealths do giue this rule that it behoueth these rules that are well made Arist 1 be● li. ● 1. cap. 4. as neere as may be to determine of all things and to leaue as few as they can to the arbitrement and discretion of the Iudges Men are oftentimes passionate passions hinder iudgment and the finding out of truth The Iewes to whom were committed the Oracles of God were directed by them in the least things they had to do Our estate is not left worse then theirs who beside the same direction that they had haue also the noble addition of the new Testament which were written that we might beleeue and in beleeuing haue euerlasting life Iohn 20 31. Secondly this doctrine serueth to direct informe the Ministers what to teach preach Vse 2 vnto the people and the people what to beleeue wherein to rest whereupon to builde their faith and to settle their conscience The matter giuen them in charge to deliuer and commend to the care and consideration of the hearers is the word of God They are to teach nothing else but what Christ their Lord and Master hath commanded to be obserued Mat. 28 20. We must follow the example of Paul 1 Cor. 11 23 who deliuered nothing to the Corinthians but what he had receiued of the Lord. If they strike at sinne any otherwise their weapon is not sharpe enough to cut it downe for whereas they should draw out the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Eph. 6 17. they giue it a blow with a leaden dagger and whereas they should ouerthrow it with the push of a pike they runne at it with a bulrush It is the word that is mighty in operation and entreth into the soule is able to cast downe euery thing that exalteth it selfe against the kingdome knowledge of Iesus Christ It is the word onely that is the food of the soule and is able to affoord wholesome nourishment Let vs not teach the people our owne deuises which is to feed thēwith chaffe that hath no strength in it Let vs deale as workemen that need not be ashamed diuiding the word of truth aright 2 Tim. 2. And concerning the people they must not affect such teaching as is most plausible but such as is most profitable not that which may please the eare but that which may moue the heart The end of our comming to the house of God must not be to delight our selues but to reforme our liues Neither ought we so much to attend what learning they shew as what sin they reproue that so we may come to repentance The more they open our vnderstandings by the key of the Scriptures the better we are to account of them Thirdly it serueth to reproue those that Vse 3 do rush headlong headstrong in their actions and course of life not caring what they do as desperate men that feare not their flesh or as foolish Marriners that runne their Ship vpon the Rockes and neuer aske counsell at the mouth of the Lord. If any aske how this may be done ●ct and say we desire nothing more then to know the mind of the Lord but how can this be seeing he is in heauen and we are vpon the earth I answer ●●●●er it is not hard or vnpossible for vs to consult with God and to resolue as from God and to know his will We must search into his word for hee yet speaketh vnto vs in the Scriptures When the word speaketh know that God speaketh vnto thee and set it downe with thy selfe as a certaine truth that is surer then the heauens that when thou hearest the word thou hearest him and whensoeuer thou despisest the word thou despisest him The Scripture is as the voice of God and therefore the Prophets so often repeate this to the people in all their sermons ● 1 4 22 ●d 23.2 Heare ye the word of the Lord thus saith the Lord. A man will not aduenture vpon a temporall possession without the aduice of his learned counsell nor a sicke person vpon strange meates without the aduice of his Physition How then shall we dare in matters that concerne our soules and may put vs in hazard of our saluation to vndertake sundry actions without knowledge of the word and so without warrant assurance whether they please God Hence it is that God oftentimes reproueth his people because they did that which he had not commanded the Prophets charge them with this as a sinne against him because they entred vpon those things whereof hee had not spoken and which neuer entred into his heart as Ier. 7 31 32. They haue built the high places of Tophet which is in the valley of the sonne of Hinnom to burne their sonnes and their daughters in the fire which I commanded them not neyther came it into my heart And to that purpose saith the Prophet Esay chap. 30 verse 2. They walke to go downe into Egypt and haue not asked at my mouth c. Neither let any obiect that this is spoken in matters of great weight and importance as in points of faith or of the worship of God without which a man cannot be saued and which the word in other places hath determined for this were great iniury to the word of God to pinne it and pound it vp in so narrow a corner so short a compasse that it should be able to direct vs only in the cheef principall points of our religion and not in matters of lesser moment of our profession This doth mightily shrinke vp the sinewes of the Scripture and binde vp the armes of it which otherwise extend farre and neare Remember that in the booke of Ioshua ● 9 14. the children of Israel are charged by the Prophet that they asked not counsell at the mouth of the Lord when they entred into couenant with the Gibeonites and yet that couenant was not made contrary to any commandement of the Lord. For howsoeuer it seemeth to many that they ought to haue beene put to the sword and to haue dyed the death because they were in the number of those Nations that dwelled in the inheritance of the people of God promised to Abraham and his posterity long before yet if
the matter be well considered it will not be hard to vnderstand that with condition of yeelding themselues to the subiection of the Iewes and of conformity to the true religion of God they might be receiued For what was the cause that they were forbidden to enter into league with them but this that they dwelling among them might draw them to a false worship of God Deut. 20 18. Lest they teach you to do after all their abhominations which they haue done vnto their gods so should ye sinne against the Lord your God But when they offered to yeelde themselues to the Iewish both religion and subiection there was no feare of defiling thē or of withholding and withdrawing them from the seruice of God True it is if they did resist or withstand them as the greatest part of the Canaanites did who came out to meete them and prouoked them to battell and were so farre from submitting themselues to God his people that they stirred vp one another and ioyned their forces together to stand out vnto death it was not lawfull to spare eyther sexe or age eyther women or children eyther young or old If it had beene vtterly vnlawfull and against the expresse word of God to make any league with any of the Canaanites Ioshua and his Princes had done wickedly to haue kept their oath with them after they had vnderstood their fraud and falsehood considering that all oathes made directly against the word of God and his expresse commandement are vtterly vnlawfull and consequently to bee broken lest we adde sin vnto sin The Spies also sent out by Ioshua Iosh 2. had done euill which entred into a league with Rahab the harlot and bound themselues with an oath which oath notwithstanding was solemnely obserued Yea Salomon had done euill who in his best and flourishing state of his kingdome receiued the Amorites which voluntarily yeelded themselues vnto his obedience and that which is more to the obedience of the Lord who notwithstanding grew into one body of the Church of GOD with the people of Israel 1 Kin. 9 20. and ioyned themselues with them freely forwardly in the restoring of the Temple The like wee might say of Dauid whose example we touched before albeit the LORD had expressely reuealed in his word that there should bee a standing place where the Arke of the Couenant should rest and the Tabernacle with the seruice belonging vnto it should haue a certaine abiding and albeit there was no expresse word of God that forbad him to builde the Temple yet the LORD reprooueth his resolution albeit he commendeth his zeale and good affection because he had giuen no commandement concerning the person that should builde it 2 Samuel chapter 7 verse 7 or the time when it should be builded So then we learne by all these examples as well by such as did against the commandement as by those that did attempt and aduenture vpon things without a commandement that they are iustly reprooued that neuer regard the word of God in any of their waies neither aske counsell at his mouth that neuer consider what GOD alloweth and approoueth but rashly breake into the practise of things incident to their life and yet haue no other guide to leade them nor counseller to aduise them nor teacher to instruct them nor warrant to beare them out otherwise then their owne mind and meaning which in matters of God and parts of his worshippe are blinde and peruerse Aske these men what approbation they haue from God or what assurance to their owne consciences that they please him they are able to say nothing at all Let me tell these men that which I would haue them marke and oftentimes to thinke on it vpon their beds euen betweene the Lord and their owne soules as they will answer it before the great Iudge of all the world when they shall appeare before him that whatsoeuer you do though they be good things yet to you that are ignorant and know not what you do to you it is a sinne and in you it is no vertue It is a notable duty to heare the word of God it is one marke of Christs sheepe and one step into his kingdome but if ye come to this ordinance of God Ezek. 33 31. as the people commonly vse to come onely to do as your honest neighbours do and because the law requireth it haue no other knowledge of it your hearing is abhominable in you and no more pleasing in the sight of almighty God then if you should cut off a dogges necke to offer vnto him Esay 66 3. We are commanded to come often to the holy Supper of the Lord and to prepare our selues reuerently and religiously to that action It is a worthy instrument of God which he hath ordained for the confirmation of our faith many of vs come often vnto it all of vs at Easter but if we come vnto it onely because it is a common custome so to do and we are loath to be singular and know not that both God commandeth the practise of it and our owne infirmity cryeth out for the necessity of it his table is made a snare vnto vs and we sin against Christ so that we receiue no more benefit by eating the bread and drinking of the cup of the Lord then the Gentiles that were partakers of the table of diuels 1 Cor. 10 21. and did drinke the cup of diuels and did offer sacrifice vnto Diuels Woe then to all ignorant persons that take vpon them to performe duty and seruice vnto God and yet know not what duty seruice he requireth at their hands Oh that they would or could vnderstand that the best workes which they do performe euen such as God commandeth are no better then sinnes and abhominations in them that doe they know not what as blinde men that shoote at a marke Oh that they would or could pray vnto God to open their eyes to see their own wretchednesse and to consider that the most holy parts of Gods worship which they performe are a sacrifice of fooles that know not that they do euill Then would they learne the difference between things done in knowledge and such as are done in ignorance then would they praise GOD for the light of his truth reuealed vnto them and then would they confesse with all their hearts that they would not stand in the former state wherein they liued if an whole kingdome or all the pompe and glory of the world were giuen vnto them To conclude let them beare this away with them also that God will not be serued with good meanings or good intents which is all that the greatest part can say for themselues we are simple people we are not book-learned we meane well we hope we haue as good soules vnto God as the proudest of them all we do what we can we hope God will beare with the rest This is the religion of such as think
day And if the voice of Christ in the daies of his humility were so fearefull and auailable in the hearts of his persecuters what a dreadfull thunderbolt will hee cast downe against all his enemies and vpon all the reprobate being in glory and sitting at the right hand of his Father when he shall vtter this finall and fearefull sentence Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his angels Math. chapter 25 verse 41. Againe wee are all put in minde that his death is meritorious and the full price of our redemption Thirdly we see that he is Lord of life and death for he raised himselfe by his eternall Spirit and as he had power to lay it downe so he had power to take it vp as appeared euidently at his resurrection Let vs serue him that is able to redeeme from death such as beleeue in him and rest vpon him for their saluation He that restored himselfe to life is able to giue vs life and he that brake the sorrowes of death is able to destroy him that hath the power of death Lastly let vs also endure the crosse willingly following his steps and shewing our selues to be like vnto him remembring that the losse of life for his sake is indeed not a losse of life but a finding of it or a changing of it a temporall life with an eternall Fourthly the heiffer heere mentioned was brought out of the hoast as also other sacrifices were Leuit 4 12 21. this signified Christs suffering out of the gates of the City as Heb. 13 11 12. Iohn 19 16 17 20. This circumstance is not without profite for first it sheweth and signifieth the abolishing of the types and figures of the Law the truth standing in place of the ceremonies and the body instead of the shadowes and therefore such as still serue at the Altar cannot bee partakers of our Altar that is of Christ Hebr. 13 10. Wee haue an Altar whereof they haue no right to eate which serue the Tabernacle The false Apostles taught that the ceremonies were to be mingled with the Gospel but these two cannot stand togegether because the seruice performed in the tabernacle was but a shadow of better things to come Col. 2 verse 17. But the body is Christ Wherefore to obserue them was to deny Iesus Christ and to keep them still in force was as much as to ouerthrow his sacrifice once offered vpon the Crosse They are therfore much deceiued that goe about to bring into vse againe Altars of wood or of stone in the churches of Christians For the Apostle speaketh not of Altars as of many but of the Altar as of one There is but one Altar in all the Church not infinite Altars and by that one Altar hee vnderstandeth the offering vpon the Altar which is no other then Christ himselfe So then wee may as well bring in the Leuiticall sacrifices as the Leuiticall Altars into the Church of Christ forasmuch as these depend one vpon another the sacrifice hauing relation to the Altar and the Altar to the sacrifice Math. 23 verses 19 20. whereas now we haue no more need either of the one or of the other For we haue an Altar and an offering which by offering of himselfe once vp a full and sufficient price for our redemption hath perfected all that are sanctified Againe as Christ was led out of the gates by the Iewes as though he were vnworthy of the society of men and afterward was crucified betweene two theeues as if he were the greatest malefactour of all hauing before preferred a wretched murtherer before him so let it not seeme strange vnto vs if the world cannot abide vs and if wee bee often made a gazing stocke to men and Angels and accounted as the off-scouring of the world and the filth of the earth 1 Corinth 4 verse 9. But howsoeuer the world do iudge of vs let vs appeale from their corrupt iudgement to the righteous iudgement of God saying with Iob Behold my Witnesse is in heauen and my Record is on high Iob 16 verse 19. Hee accepteth of vs as of his children and will admit vs as heires of his kingdome with his Sonne Lastly Christ was turned out of the City to teach vs what wee must account of our selues in this life that we haue heere no place to rest and repose our selues our hope is concerning things that are not seene Hebr. 13 verses 13 14. Let vs goe foorth vnto him without the Campe bearing his reproach for wee haue heere no continuing City but we seeke one to come As then we must bee content to beare part of the Crosse of Christ and to bee reproched as he was reproched for if we wil not beare part of his crosse wee shall not weare part of his Crowne so also wee must account our selues as Pilgrims and strangers in this world that we may enioy his kingdome in the world to come We must bee content to leaue father and mother lands and liues for his sake knowing that we shall finde all againe with a good aduantage Such as refuse to goe out of the Campe of this world to Christ and begin to nestle themselues as if they had heere a sure certaine habitation what other thing remaineth for them but vtterly to perish in the Camp of this world together with the wicked Our hope is in heauē our ankre is fixed fast aboue not in this world but in the next wee seeke not a kingdome vpon the earth for then wee should deceiue our selues God hath not called vs heere to reigne but to suffer Thus it was with all the fathers Gen. chapter 47 ver 9. Hebrewes chapter 11 verses 13 14. The Heathen people accounted this life as it were an Inne to lodge at for a short season Cicero de s●● not an house to dwell in and continue for euer yet those poore soules knew not whither they went but we know whither we goe and the way we know Iohn 14 4. We looke for a City which hath foundations whose builder maker is God Heb. 11 10. Vse 4 Lastly this purging and purifying water sprinkling the vncleane mentioned in this place is a figure of the blood of Christ fit and sufficient as a well of springing water to purge vs from all our sinnes Leuit. 1 13. Zach. 13 1. In that day there shall bee a fountaine opened vnto the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem and for separation from vncleannesse so the words are in the originall in which the Prophet alludeth to these waters of separation in this place Christ is this fountaine flowing of it selfe open and ready vnto euery one that will drinke of it for the cleansing of sinnes And we heard before out of the Apostle that the blood of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purgeth our consciences from dead works to serue the liuing God Now the blood of Christ purgeth our consciences two
waies First by his merit because his death is the propitiation for our sins whereby the wrath of God is appeased and we are absolued Rom. 3 24 25. and 5 8. Eph. 1 6 7. 1 Tim. 2 6. He paid a great price for vs and thereby hath reconciled vs vnto his Father The other cleansing is made by sanctification of the Spirit regenerating our nature and mortifying sinne in our flesh by the power of his death and resurrection Rom. 6 6 7 8. 1 Iohn 1 7. Heb. 1 3. The heathen had their continuall purgations from offences by sacrifices and they had likewise their sprinklings washings with pure water but all these were impure and vnprofitable vnto them because they wanted the inward truth which was the life of them Hence it is that the Poet saith Ter pura socios circumluit vnda ● Aeneid Spargens rore leui et ramo foelicis oliuae Lustrauitaque viros And againe in another place ● Aeneid Donec me flumine viuo Abluero That is they washed themselues and sprinkled themselues and others with pure waters therby thought themselues cleansed But these actions were meere nullities like Pilates taking water and washing of his hands before them all saying I am innocent of the blood of this iust person see ye to it Mat. 27 24. but the blood of Christ did cleaue neerer vnto him then all the water in the sea could wash away or like the circumcision of the Edomites and other Nations they had the outward action but they wanted the inward signification In like manner the Papists haue their holy-water wherewith they sprinkle such as enter into their Churches and defend their practise from this place But this is as much as to abolish Iesus Christ and to bring vs backe againe to Moses it is no better then when we haue the pure fountaine to seeke the myery puddles of our owne inuentions and to digge to our selues cesternes that will hold no water For the Apostle maketh the Iewish purifyings to be a ceremoniall rudiment Heb. 9.19 where he ioyneth the blood of calues and goates with water and scarket wool and hyssope together wherewith the booke and the people were sprinkled Now if they will retaine this hallowed water ground it likewise from the wordes of Moses they must make it also of the same matter that this was made off to wit of the ashes of a red heifer and that heifer must be first burned and also vse the other actions and rites heere named and remembred But as they haue no commandement to make it so they haue no promise annexed vnto it To leaue them and to come vnto our selues though wee haue iustly abrogated the outward sprinkling with this holy water yet wee haue the true water and the true sprinkling First therefore we learne hereby that wee are by nature vncleane and impure from the which we cannot be freed by the strength of our nature but by the blood of Christ represented vnto vs in baptisme by which wee are washed This is no vaine figure but hath his force from the ordinance of God Rom. 6.3 Gal. 3.27 Againe this teacheth vs that wee ought to come vnto God into his presence with all purity and holinesse therefore it is said that God heareth not sinners such as haue sinne reigning in them but if any bee a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Ioh. 9.31 and we must lift vp pure hands 1 Tim. 2.8 Psal 26.6 and 134.2 The Prophet reproueth the Iewes that brought many oblations and offered vp many prayers but they were all reiected because their hands were full of blood Esay 1. And the Lord foreshewing the state of the Church in the time of the Gospel declareth that a pure offering should be offered vnto him Mal 1.11 Lastly we are all put in mind from hence to labour after true sanctification and holinesse of life that we may be cleane within and without We must not vainely boast of any inward purity when none appeareth outwardly for if wee cleanse that first which is within the outside will be cleane also neither should wee foolishly glory of that which is outward when there is none at all within for that is meere hypocrisie and dissimulation This also doeth the sprinkling of the water of separation signifie vnto vs as also in that they which medled with the burning of this red heifer were vncleane vntill the euen and must wash their garments before they come into the congregation verse 7.2 The Apostle setteth downe the trueth heereof 2. Corinthians Chap. 7. verse 1.2 Let vs cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God So that sinne is an vncleane thing like the dung of this heiffer which is commanded to be burned and consumed verse 5. and it maketh vs vncleane and loathsome vnto God Iames 1 21. Rom. 6 19. Reuel 3 18 and 22 11. We see therefore heereby what to iudge of those that liue and delight in their sinnes namely that they are as filthy and polluted persons euen as a man that hath a running sore or issue about him though he be neuer so richly apparelled and haue all the sweet sauours that may bee yet he still remaineth a polluted person so is it with a man that abideth in sinne though he abound neuer so much in riches and pleasures though he bee clad in purple and fare deliciously euery day yet he is filthy odious and abhominable in the sight of God of which we haue spoken before in the 5. chapter Againe this teacheth euery man to be carefull to auoid sinne as a leprosie because it is so foule and filthy and that which will pollute him if he suffer it to continue with him To conclude let euery one bee willing to suffer the word of exhortation and be content to vndergo a reproofe for his sinnes that it may be a sanctified meanes to bring him to be clensed from his filthinesse and so be made a fit vessell to be receiued of the Lord into euerlasting happinesse in his kingdome CHAP. XX. IN the former part of this Booke Moses hath set downe many murmurings of the Israelites against God and against Moses and Aaron the seruants of God through wearinesse of their iourneyes through loathing of Manna thorough the emulation of Miriam through the report of the Spies through the enuy of the Leuites through the indignation and discontentment of the people for Gods iudgements against the rebellious whereby it came to passe notwithstanding they were compassed about with manifold mercies of God as with a wall that they waxed impatient and fretting against God vnthankfull and forgetfull of his former benefits distrustfull disdaining the present blessings they enioyed His right hand had deliuered them out of Egypt his out-stretched arme had diuided the waters of the red Sea and set them on an heap the Cloud had shadowed them the Pillar of fire had conducted them the
manner we vse to inueigh against the Iewes for crucifying Christ and deliuering vp the Lord of glory into the hands of sinners ● 26 27 we accuse the partiality of Pilate the treachery of Iudas the enuy of the Pharisies the malice of the high Priests the villany of the false witnesses the cruelty of the souldiers the taunts of the passengers and the hard-heartednesse of the whole people But we consider not that the same originall corruption is in vs that was in them by the sway swinge whereof beeing all the sonnes of olde Adam we would haue done as they did if we had liued in those times So when we heare or reade of these murmurings and mutinies of the children of Israel we are commonly wont to reuile them to defie them and to account them the vilest people vnder the heauens But wee must ceasse to wonder at them and learne to confesse our owne corruption of heart and pronenesse to yeeld and fall downe in time of tentation vnlesse we be stayed vp by the mighty hand of God For albeit he be most gracious and merciful vnto vs hedgeth vs round about with many blessings and compasseth vs with riches of grace on euery side yet we forget thē all if any one crosse do any way lie vpon vs. If the Lord touch vs with sicknesse as with his little finger with losses with crosses with pouerty or any misery such is our impatiency that we alwaies dwell vpon the meditation of that want we looke vpon it with our eies we handle it with our hands wee tosse it in our mindes and neuer remember the multitude of his mercies the peace of a good conscience the louing countenance of the Lord the seale of our adoption the assurance of our saluation the sweet taste of his loue shed in our harts by the holy Ghost so that one trouble doth more daunt vs and strike vs to the heart then many blessings can comfort refresh vs. But God taking away outward blessings giueth spirituall to his children doth sweeten the bitternesse of the crosse with inward consolation and doth recompence it with heauenly grace whereby wee gaine more in the spirit then we lose in the flesh Secondly we are taught heereby to pray Vse 2 to God in our troubles to hold vs vp and stay vs with his grace that wee fall not from him For seeing at all times and vpon all occasions of want we are ready to repine and murmure against God who can stand by his owne power or by the strength of his owne free will When a man holdeth fast a staffe in his hand so long it standeth vpright as he reteineth it but if he withdraw his hand neuer so little it falleth Carry vp a stone to the top of a Mountaine so long as thou staiest it there it abideth but if thou leaue it it rowleth down of it own strength euen to the bottome So vnlesse the Lord in our calamities and crosses that befall vs do stay vs by his heauenly hand strengthen vs by his Almighty power we break out into vnthankfulnesse forgetfulnesse impatiency grudging against him This made the Apostle after the reckoning vp of the idolatry fornication murmuring and tempting of Christ to exhort them that He which thinketh he standeth must take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10 12. As then we ought all to take speciall notice knowledge of the corruption of our hearts and behold a liuely and expresse image of our nature in the glasse of this people so it is our duty to call vpon God from whom euery good giuing perfect gift proceedeth to put to his helping hand that we may learne to depend vpon him that we may know how to want and how to abound and in euery condition to submit our selues to his heauenly pleasure For we shall neuer be able by our owne strength to subdue our owne corruptions nor to preuaile ouer our owne lustes nor to ouercome the tentations that oftentimes assaile vs vnlesse wee bee assisted from aboue Vse 3 Lastly our corruption of heart prone to murmure and complaine against God whensoeuer he trieth our faith obedience and patience with any misery warneth vs to seeke all holy meanes remedies Remedies against murmuring and distrust to represse this rage and repining against God which may bee as sure helpes to further vs in this way to furnish vs with strength able to hold vs vp in the day of triall First let vs consider the high prouidence of God ruling all things in heauen or earth and ouerswaying all creatures that nothing falleth out without his will pleasure as our Sauiour teacheth Mat. 10 29.30 For who giueth vs our bodies Who clotheth the Lillies that Salomon in all his glory was not like one of them Who feedeth the yong Rauens that cry vnto him Who sustaineth the wicked that are his enemies Who prouided all things for man in the beginning before he was made created Is it not the Lord whose all the beasts of the forrest are and the beasts on a thousand Mountaines So that the resting of our selues vpon this prouidence that he wil feed and cloathe vs and care for vs must take away the greefe of al our wants that ouerpresseth and oftentimes ouercommeth vs. Againe we must learne the benefit of contentation and to grub vp all distracting and distrustfull cares as noysome weeds out of our hearts bearing with patience and meeknes of spirit whatsoeuer the Lord sendeth This minde was in Iacob when he went farre from his fathers house Gen. 28 20. he did not desire siluer or gold house or lands but onely a competent conuenient liuing If God will be with me and will keepe me in this iourney which I goe and will giue me bread to eate and cloathes to put on then shall the Lord be my God So the Apostle teacheth Godlinesse is great gaine 1 Tim. 6 6 7 8 Phil. 4 11 12.13 if a man be content with that he hath for we brought nothing into the world and it is certaine that wee can carry nothing out therefore when we haue food and rayment let vs therewith be content And in another place I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to be content I can be abased and I can abound euery where in all things I am instructed both to be full and to bee hungry to abound and to haue want I am able to do all things through the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth me Lastly let vs set our affections on things which are aboue Col 3 2. and not on things which are on the earth If we beleeue that God doth forbeare and forgiue vs our sinnes not deale with vs according to our deseruings if he sanctifie vs with his Spirit make our bodies Temples of the holy Ghost if he turne vs to himselfe working our conuersion which is as great a worke as at the first to create vs
we may be assured he will deliuer our soules from death Psal 33 19. Rom. 6 ●2 Luke 12 32. preserue vs in famine For if hee spared not his owne Sonne but hath giuen him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Feare not therefore the want of outward things which perish with their vse for it is your Fathers pleasure to giue vnto you a kingdome If he haue promised to giue vnto vs the greater nay the greatest blessings that can be rehearsed or remēbred we may ground our selues on this assured truth that he wil not leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord is my deliuerer I will not feare what man can do vnto me Indeed the iudgement practise of carnall men is otherwise who esteeme earthly things aboue heauenly and preferre their Swine before Christ-like Esau Matthew 8 Heb. 12 16 who prized one messe of pottage aboue the birthright If these men bee a little pained and pinched with famine and suffer a little want of food that they haue not their necessities supplied their bodies cloathed their bellies filled they cry out aloud in the anguish of their spirit What shall we eate What shall we drinke How shall wee liue How shall we maintaine sustaine our selues and our families But alasse though their soules be hunger-bitten and hungerstarued ready to pine and consume away throgh want of spirituall food they are neuer greeued or vexed it troubleth them not at al. Let vs learn better things let vs value spirituall things at the highest rate and set them in the cheefest place If thus we set as our honorable friends all heauenly things in the cheefest place and turne all transitory things with shame into the lowest roome and ranke as saucie aspiring guests vsurping climbing aboue their betters we shall beare all earthly losses and troubles with patience and stay our selues from murmuring at the feeling of them Ver. 6. Then Moses and Aaron went from the face c. We heard before the complaint of the people now let vs see the behauiour of Moses Aaron They do not rage nor reuile thē they do not fret and fume against thē or aske the life of their enemies but possesse their soules with patience and declining the violent rage of the people as a beast with many heads they goe to the Tabernacle declare their causes and cases before the Lord. From this their distresse we learne this truth that in all wrongs iniuries offered vnto vs we must seeke helpe and comfort of God Doctrin● In all wr● and iniuri we must 〈◊〉 to God I say it is the duty of all the seruants of God when they are wronged and oppressed when they are euilly entreated and spitefully handled at the hands of sinfull men to vnlade disburden all their cares into the bosome of God depending for counsell and comfort vpon him alone In the performance of this duty the holy seruants of God haue gone before vs. Reade the booke of the Psalmes as a plentifull store-house and schoole-house to teach this truth as Psal 3 1 2. and 7 1 2. where we see that in his troubles he had recourse to God who smiteth his enemies on the cheeke-bone and breaketh the teeth of the wicked but was a sure Buckler to him not such as men hold vp that can defend one part and in one place onely but a buckler to safegard him round about before and behind And being greeuously accused of some heynous crime by some of Sauls retinue ● 14.10 he flyeth to God he trusteth in him who preserueth the vpright in heart So when Iob had his camels and cattell taken away by the enemies he did not through the greatnes of his affliction and greefe of mind rebell against God but said Naked came I out of my mothers wombe ● 13 17. and naked shall I returne thither the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken it ●●g 19.3 blessed be the Name of the Lord. The like appeareth in Hezekiah when Ierusalem was besieged This is a day of tribulation and of rebuke and blasphemy for the children are come to the birth and there is no strength to bring forth Now therefore O Lord our God I beseeeh thee saue vs out of his hand that all the kingdomes of the earth may know that thou O Lord art onely God All which examples teach vs that when we suffer wrongs or fall into any wrongs or fall into any dangers wee must haue recourse to God and craue of him that the malice of the wicked may come to an end Reason 1 The reasons of this doctrine are first the gracious promise of God who hath mercifully promised to heare and to helpe vs in all our troubles This the Prophet teacheth Call vppon me in the day of trouble ● 50.15 ●h 5.14 15 I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me And the Apostle Iohn This is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs and if we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we haue the petitions that wee haue desired of him Let vs not doubt and wauer like a waue of the Sea tossed to and fro by the violence of the winds but by faith beleeue that God will grant our requests which wee make according to his will and word Seeing therefore he is willing to heare and able to helpe and promiseth to grant our requests our duty is to come when he calleth to aske seeing hee giueth and to knocke seeing he openeth the gates that leadeth vnto his treasures Some put their trust in chariots some in horses and some in Princes but we must remember the Name of the Lord our God who neuer faileth and breaketh promise with these that depend vpon him that feare and trust in his mercy Reason 2 Secondly as he is our helper who deliuereth our soule from death our eies from teares and our feet from falling so whither shall wee turne our selues to find comfort and consolation besides in him When God denyeth to send succour who shall saue When hee refuseth to helpe who shal deliuer When he shutteth who can open If wee looke to men or Angels to heauen or earth to the liuing or the dead we shall be deceiued and deluded The Prophet saith Psal 62.8 9. Trust in him alway ye people poure out your harts before him for God is our hope aboue all yet the children of men are vanity the chiefe men are lies to lay them vpon a ballance they are altogether lighter then vanity Vse 1 Let vs now come vnto the vses First from hence we gather that such is Gods great goodnes to his children that he neuer leaueth them without comfort For if he require of vs to repaire to him in our troubles surely he will not send vs away empty nor cause vs to depart