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

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to the Churches for he is the author of al these Epistles and Iohn his penman or scribe Which further proveth the authority of this book for without doubt after Christ had made an end of revealing the mysteries of this booke unto Iohn he faithfully wrote to every one of the Churches according to the commandement of Christ These things saith he that holdeth The first Epistle hath three parts namely an inscription a narration and a conclusion In the inscription Christ is brought in speaking to the church of Ephesus by a description of his person taken from the foregoing vision which serveth both for the authority of the Epistle and to stirre them up unto attention The manner of the stile is propheticall For so usually the prophets in stirring up to attention bring God in speaking thus to the people thus saith Jehovah So Iohn these things saith hee that holdeth c. not simply these things saith Christ but these things saith he that holdeth the starres c. Thus by degrees two things are repeated which he saw before One of the starres another of the candlesticks Which holdeth the seven starres That is which holdeth the seven Pastors of the Churches in his right hand as chap. 1 vers 16. This as we have already shewed may be taken either in the better part that is of Christs loving and caring for his faithfull teachers his governing and preserving of them by the right hand of his power with precious promised rewards Or in a contrary sence it signifies that Christ detesteth and by his right hand suppresseth and rejecteth all slowbellies hirelings and wolves And so much here he threatneth to some of these teachers unlesse they did repent Who walketh in the midst of the candlesticks First he saw him standing but now walking in the midst of the candlesticks signifying hereby that Christ our Lord sitteth not still in the heavens but is present by his providence in the midst of the Church beholding all things proving our faith and obedience and recompencing the same with great rewards disliking our slothfulnesse and other corruptions punishing the ungratefull by taking away their talent from them and bestowing it on others Levit. 26 24. This walking therefore imports Christs gracious presence with his Church according to that promise I will walke among you and I wil be your God So Christ I will be with you at all times unto the end of the world This being so it is our duty to walk reverently in the sight of God and of Christ that so they not being offended may walke and abide with us Ioh. 14 23. according to the promise if a man love me he will keepe my words and my father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him 2. I know thy workes In the narration are five things First their great diligence and constancy is commended for Christ prayseth and rewardeth the labour and faith of his servants because he delighteth therein I know thy workes This he speaketh not onely to this Church but to the rest yea to Laodicea also Here I take workes indifferently to be either good or bad vertues or vices of which as nothing is hidde from him so nothing shall passe without reward or punishment For it is the part of him that is the admonisher and judge to pronounce sentence of nothing but what is well knowen unto him He taketh unto himselfe not onely the knowledge of what is outward but also a cleare and perfect sight of men and all their inward actions the which Iohn often in the Gospel ascribes unto Christ He knew all men Ioh. 2 24 25. Ioh. 21 17. and needed not that any should testify of man for he knew what was in man and so Peter said unto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee But who knoweth all things save God alone for he seeth all things searching the heart and reynes of man So that this is the tenth argument 10 Argument of Chr. deity to be added to the former proving the Godhead of Christ taken from his omniscience or knowledge of all things And thy labour patience The first copulative and is put for to wit thy labour and patience so the like in vers 9.13 18. Moreover he commendeth three sorts of vertues in this Bishop labour in doctrine constancy in suffering Zeale in discipline which vertues he doth in many words commend in this and the following verse by a contrary order First his labour that is his sincere and unwearied paines in preaching the word 1 Thes 5 12. 1 Tim. 5 17. For the scripture in many places cals the office of teaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a labour as being full of wearisomnesse and trouble This is the first and principall vertue and honour of a faithfull Bishop the which Christ attributeth to this teacher But what would Christ now say of the mitred Bishops of these dayes who neither know the word of God and for the most part regard it not But being idle and dumbe are unfit to preach and so spend their time either in warre sports or following of their filthy lusts The second is sufferante that is patience in induring and constancy in overcomming the dangers injuries and afflictions with which they were exercised both by the Iewes and Gentiles for the sake of Christ For the crosse is an inseparable companion of the Gospel 1 Corinth 1 18. and therefore is called the word of the crosse both because it sheweth us the way to salvation through the crosse esteemed foolishnes by the world As also because satan doth stirre up his instruments to hate persecute and put to death the constant professors and teachers thereof as being the greatest opposers of his kingdome All which things the Angel of this Church patiently induring Iam. 1 12. is for the same highly commended of Christ for blessed is the man that indureth tentations for when he is tried he shall receive the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him And canst not beare them which are evill The third vertue for which Christ prayseth him Matth. 18 17. 1 Cor. 5 5. Apolog. 2. Apolog. chap. 39. Treat 35. in Matth. Rom. 7. is his singular Zeal in observing Church discipline namely his strong opposing of such vices as violently brake in upon the congregation and his due administration of Church censures against scandalous persons casting them out of the communion of the Church as Christ commanded And indeed Church censures were in full force in the primitive time to the great good of the Church as Justin Tertullian Origen and others of the ancient writers testifie And hast tried them Now he repeateth and declareth the particulars shewing in the first place who those evill persons were and wherefore he could not beare with them But vehemently withstood the false Apostles seeking to creep into the Church examined their false doctrine by the word of God and manifested and repressed their lyes and deceit For now at this time there were many false teachers among
that the lord is greatly offended with the defilements both of our soules and bodies for he is a pure and holy spirit and requireth the same in them that worship him Hebr. 12.14 And without this no man shall see him 2. The corrupters of the truth shall be grievously punished howsoever they may for a time by subtiltie cover their deceit and draw many into their snares 3. That God is ready to forgive most vile sinners if they truelie repent XVII Arg. of Chr. deity Lastly here we have the seventeenth argument of the deitie of Christ in that he threatneth to punish these wicked deceivers for none but God onelie is able to doe it and therfore it manifesteth his divine omnipotencie That which the hereticke objects concerning Moses striking the Aegyptians with plagues is of no waight neither of Peter his slaying of Ananias Nor Pauls striking Elymas with blindenesse For we know that the Prophets and Apostles wrought miracles not of themselves but by the power of God Wheras Christ threatens to doe this by his owne power Io. 5.19 Mat 10.1 16.17 For whatsoever things the Father doth these also doth the Son likewise Yea the Son giveth power unto others to doe the like things And all the Churches shall know The end and use of Gods vengeance on sinners is to declare both his omniscience of the hidde things of the hart as also his omnipotencie and Iustice in rendring to evry one according to his workes Even as God said to Pharoah Exo. 9.16 Rom. 9.17 And in very deed for this cause have I raysed thee up for to shew in thee my power and that my name may be declared throughout all the earth Thus the lord by threatning cals sinners to repentance by Iudgments punisheth the obstinate and hereby declareth his wisedome power and Iustice unto all Now it is not without cause that Christ attributes to himselfe the knowledge of hidden things for seeing this wicked woman beguiled many by couveringe her uncleane actions under a pretence of holinesse Christ therefore here declares that none of her wayes were hidden from his eyes Hence we observe in the first place that one principal end of Gods exemplarie punishing of the wicked is that all the Churches may acknowledge declare the wisedome power and Iustice of God Thus we se how profitable it is that publike examples are propounded before our eyes to the end we may take notice of the judgments of God beware least by the like wickednesse we stirre up his wrath against our owne soules XVIII Argu of Chr. deity Secondly here is offred unto us the eighteenth argument excellently proving the divinity of Christ For here Christ will be acknowledged to be the searcher of the heart and reynes which the scripture ascribeth unto God alone For the righteous God trieth the heart and reynes Psa 7.9 1. King 8.39 1 King 16 7. Give unto every man according to his wayes whose heart thou knowest Thou alone knowest the hearts of all the sonnes of men see also 1. Chro. 28. Iere. 11.20 and 17.10 and 20.12 Eniedinus the Samosatenian objecteth in the first place that the searching of the heart and reines doth not here signifie a knowledge of the thoughts But rather a most equal and just administration of judgment by Christ and so it proveth not that he is true God I answer The antecedent is a manifest and bold corrupting of the text For the divine attribute which elsewhere is ascribed to Jehova is here without any limitation and in the verie same words applied unto Christ not onely in regard of the administration of his righteous judgments but also as he is the searcher of the heart and therefore must necessarily be taken in one and the same sence But again he objecteth That Christ hath received all his knowledge judgment yea and himself too from the Father as he confesseth Io. 5. Rev. 5.11 here v. 27. as I have received from my Father so that he is not the same God with the Father I answer he deceiveth by an equivocation For Christ receiveth all things from the father two maner of wayes Io 1.14 Prov. 8.25 God the sonne hath received his divine essence from the Father by eternal generation for he is the onely begotten of the Father before the mountaines were setled So that with his divine essence he received his divine omniscience But as he is man he received all his power and glorie in time by his reall exaltation so far forth as consisted with the nature and perfection of his manhood in this latter respect we confesse he is not God notwithstanding it is false to affirme that he is not God in the former for howsoever in this respect he hath received all things from the Father yet whatsoever is divine the Sonne hath it by his owne essence even as the Father Because the Father hath given to the Sonne to have life in himself as the Father hath life in himself See Damascenus lib. 4. Orth. fid cap. 19. Thirdly he objecteth that many Prophets and Apostles knew the hearts of men also Io. 5.26 I answer Eyther this or that of Salomon is false Thou onely knowest the hearts of all men 1 King 8.39 God indeed did reveal some things not al things unto Elisha Peter and Paul but not the knowledge of the hearts To be short none of them did or could say that he was the searcher of the reynes and heart as Christ here saith And all the Churches shal know that I am the searcher of the reynes hearts 24. But unto you I say The fourth part of the narration is an exhortation and here he turnes aside from the Pastor before commended and reproved and from the deceivers threatned and speakes to the rest of the Church in Thyatira and exhorts such as were godly among them and had not harkened unto the false teachers to go foreward and continue in the Apostles doctrine And hence again it appeareth that these Epistles were written not to the officers alone but to all the Churches The Vulgar as also Andreas and Montanus read it without the copulative but to you the rest but the other Greeke copies have it to you and to the rest as if he had said to thee o Pastor and to thy fellow officers and to the res●●f the Church But the sence is the same For the Pastor also was one of those which held not the doctrine of Jezabel although indeed he was to negligent in repressing of the same This doctrine To wit of Jezabel and the Nicolaitans concerning fornication and communicating with Idolaters And which have not knowen This is an Hebrue phrase and signifies who have not approved The depth of Satan So these deceivers called their blasphemies as being deep mysteries and hidden wisedome and things more excellent then ever the Apostles taught Now Christ graunteth they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depths but such as had their original
persecutions yet the Gospell was spread with happie successe far and neere But I rather extend it to the whole time in which Christ by the successors of the Apostles namelie many syncere Bishops and faithfull teachers victoriously set up his kingdome throughout the whole Romane Empire not withstanding the tyrannie of persecutors the wickednesse of hereticks and Apostates untill by little and little the Church decayed in this her puritie And this I take containes the space of almost six hundred years The white horse therefore first comming out of the seales is the primitive Church white and bright in puritie of doctrine and discipline The Apostles were like horses running strongly and with great speed propagating the faith of Christ in the whole earth as their Acts and Epistles testifie after them God raised up Apostolicall men Bishops teachers and Fathers both Greek Latine who firmlie maintained propagated the purity of doctrine delivered unto them against tyrants apostates and hypocrites untill the time of Gregorie the first although even before his dayes the whitenesse of this horse was somwhat changed black spots began to appeare that is corruptions in doctrine discipline and worship The which Egesippus in Eusebius complaines of in these words Lib 3. hist cap. 32. that soon after the death of the Apostles and them which had received the word at their mouth the Church remained not long a pure and unspotted virgine notwitstanding the godly held the foundation of faith and salvation entire viz. Christ the head And he which sate on him This rider is Christ He that sate on the white horse is Christ Act. 9.15 see Chap. 19.11 This rider was caried to and fro in the ministerie of the Apostles and other faithfull pastors and teachers who suffered for the truth this metaphor Christ himselfe useth to Ananias concerning Paul he is a chosen vessell unto me to beare my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel On these Christ rode gloriously entring through their sincere preaching into the verie hart of the faithfull propagating and defending his owne kingdome according to that of the Psalmist And in thy comely honour prosper Psal 45.4 ride on word of truth and of meeknes of justice And he had a bow Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a bow arrowes and somtimes a quiver The word of God is Christ bow The Law and Gospell is Christ bow from whence he sends forth arrowes that is the efficacie of his spirit wounding the harts and minds of the Elect that he may heale and restore them to life but to terrifie and kill the wicked as it is in the same Psalm thy arrowes are sharp peoples shall fall under thee in the hart of the kings enemies And a crowne was given unto him to wit Christs crowne a regal crowne For he is a king crowned with glorie and honour at the right hand of God in the heavens or rather a crowne of triumph because it followeth And he went forth conquering and to conquer The doubling of the words notes his present and future victorie His victory By his death he overcame sin and by his resurrection death hell and satan yea the world also according as he saith in the Gospel be of good cheere Ioh. 16.33 I have overcome the world This is the first victorie with which he went forth conquering It is true indeed he was crucified as he was meere man but he lived againe and overcame by the power of his Godhead Now he went forth to overcome the world and the tyrants thereof diverse wayes His second victorie was in converting the gentiles by the preaching of the Apostles for in that he drew all nations and brought them unto the faith of the Gospel he conquered the world And tyrants in his Apostles confessours martyrs convincing them by the power of the truth For the death of the martyrs is Christs victory seeing in their blood the truth was sealed and the Church propagated The destruction of tyrants was Christs victorie As Julian the apostate blaspheming in his extreme madnesse confessed Thou hast overcome O Galilean Christ overcame when Nero Domitian Diocletian Trajan Maximinus Lycinius Valens and others who had put to death many thousands of Christians thinking thereby to take away the name of Christ were destroyed and brought to miserable perdition while Christ raigned and his Church increased Christ went forth as a conquerour when by the preaching of the Gospel the Idol gods of the gentiles were rejected their worship and temples abolished and overthrowen all men beeing drawen after Christ He overcame when the swarmes of hereticks as Valentinus Basilides Praxeas Manes Martion Photinus Samosatenus and other most bitter enemies of Christ were beaten downe overcome and destroyed by the sword of the spirit To be short Christ overcame when all the East and Westerne Churches were in danger to perish and come to nothing by the pestilent doctrine of Arius two sound ministers beeing then hardlie found in the whole Christian world no not in Rome except Paulinus Hilarius and Athanasius And indeed he that would understand the victories of Christ here intimated must have as in a table before his eyes the histories of the Apostles and the Churches after them written by Irenaeus Clemens Tertullian Eusebius Hierom Theodoret Socrates Sozomenus Evagrius Nicephorus and others for no better commentarie then their histories can be given upon the opening of the first seale And herein I thinke not to passe this by in silence we are more happie then Iohn himself for those events which he saw a far of in types we now by the helpe of former histories and our own experience doe clearely see them written out livelie expressed before our eyes And thus much concerning the first seale Now here perhaps a question will be moved seeing Christ is the Lamb opening the booke how also he can be sayd to goe forth out of the seale For the answere hereof we are to minde what I have already spoken viz. that oftentimes one and the same thing is represented in differing types in a diverse respect Now as Christ sits reignes gloriously with the Father and holy Spirit as God so he is the Lion of the tribe of Iudah beeing the offpring of Iudah according to the flesh He is the immaculate Lamb as he is man and as he was slaine and put to death for us He stands in the midst of the Throne as he is the mediatour he opens the booke and the seales as he is the chiefe Prophet and teacher of the Church the revealer and author of all heavenlie doctrine And to be short he also sits on the white horse as king and conquerour propagating his kingdome by the preaching of his word through the whole earth by which also he reigneth even unto this day in the midst of his enemies Psa 110.2 The opening of the second seale The red horse and his rider having a
the kingdome of God thereby be made conformable unto Christ Therefore the going forth of this red horse ought not to terrifie us For Gods counsell is grounded on causes both just good in consideration whereof we ought to remame constant unto the end Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine coepit Sanguine succrevit sanguine finis erit The Church in blood first founded was In blood beginne did shee It had her spreading forth in blood In blood her end shal be It was established I say in the blood of Christ It began increased in the blood of the martyrs And in their blood it shall continue unto the end Notwithstanding the end shal be the ruin and destruction of the adversaries For then shall cease the blood of martyrs when the blood of the wicked shall come forth of the wine-presse of the wrath of God unto the horses bridles by the space of a thousand six hundred furlongs Chap. 14.20 Secondlie though the divel his instruments mightilie labour to extinguish the Church yet no more can they doe then what is given them from above Thirdly let us not thinke it strange that God doth suffer tyrants thus miserably to afflict his Saintes for he doth it partly for their great good that they might not grow wanton but that their faith and prayer might be exercised under the crosse And partlie according to their just desert for if examination be made we shall find that for the most part as contentions coveteousnes and ambition among the officers so prophanenesse and securitie of the people drew downe common judgements upon themselves See Cyprian de lapsis Euseb lib. 5. hist cap. 2. The opening of the third seale The black horse having a ballance And proclaiming famine 5 And when he had opened the third seale I heard the third beast say Come see And I beheld and loe a blacke horse and hee that sate on him had a paire of ballances in his hand 6 And I heard a loud voyce in the midst of the foure beasts say A measure of wheat for a peny and three measures of barley for a peny and see thou hurt not the oyle and the wine THE COMMENTARIE ANd when he had opened the third seale First I will set downe the opinion of others and afterward my owne The third seale being opened Iohn is called upon by the third beast which had the forme of a man to behold the wonder Our attention is here againe stirred up by this creature as a third herald As for other mysteries in this I approve not A black horse comes forth with his rider holding a ballance Lyra will have this black horse to be the armie of the Romans with which Titus their captaine destroyed Jerusalem killing a multitude of the Iewes and carying the rest into captivitie in revenge of the death of Christ The ballance in his opinion doth note the just judgment of God The weighing of two pound of wheat and barlie sold for a pennie the meanesse of the Iewish captives who were sold for thirtie pence The wine and oyle which the rider is forbid to hurt are the Christians who before the siege left Ierusalem and went over Iordan to Pella there were preserved but this sence is to straight and agrees not with the scope of the historie for the matter here is not by types to cover former things but to reveal things to come Now we know Ierusalem was alreadie overthrowen which Iohn was not ignorant off being banished into Patmos by Domitian the brother of Titus Andreas and others understand here some notable dearth to be prefigured The opinion of Andreas because mention is made of a scale and wheat c. Some take it for the famine under Claudius which happened long before this revelation Besides famine and dearth doth no more belong to Christians who ought hereat lesse to be troubled then others then unto the adversaries whereas it is to be supposed that onely events proper to the Church were prefigured unto Iohn Wherefore Bede Tyconius and others understand more rightlie by the black horse hereticks by the rider the divel stirring them up to make black or darken the doctrine of the Church by the ballance the word of God which hereticks pretend to be on their side and with which they labour to beautify maintain and commend their errours to the end that people may the more readilie receive them which exposition Ribera also approves of for as the Apostles are the white horse because they preached the glad tidings of salvation so the blake horse notes hereticks maintainers of pernicious doctrines and preaching things corrupt and hurtfull I assent therefore to their opinion who thinke the state of hereticks is here shadowed out The black horse is the Church yet in some things the scope is to be applied otherwise For the same horse which first went forth white importing the puritie of the Apostolicall doctrine afterward was red of the bloodie condition of the Church under tyrants And now is blacke in regard of her afflicted condition by wicked hereticks who cloude the light of the truth with their blacke haeresies and bring in such a deformity upon the Church that shee who appeared white before is now blacke By him which sate on the horse I understand not the divel but Christ but after what manner he rides on hereticks we shall understand by and by Now this blacknes came upon the Church as diverse wayes so by certaine degrees even from the time of Iohn until Antichrist How this blacknesse befel the Church In the first two hundred yeares many hereticks made blacke the Christian Church by weakning the verie foundation of religion not indeed in respect of the elect who firmelie embraced the same but in respect of themselves and their followers Among whom was Cerinthus Ebion Valentine Marcion Basilides and many others whose madnesse was recorded and also refuted by Irenaus Epiphanius Augustine Thilastrius others These besides other foule errous blasphemously oppugned the mysterie of the blessed trinitie denying Christ to be God and man and the onely mediatour and saviour who although they professed themselves to be Christians and boasted of the title of the Church yet as much as in them lay overthrew all Christianity and thus by the meanes of these men the white horse was made black Againe in the two following ages diverse hereticks as Photinus Arius Eunomius Macedonins and others did exceedingly darken the doctrine of Christian religion and with their vile errours corrupted manie who otherwise were godly teachers Papias and Irenaeus were Chiliasts or Millenaries Tertullian a Montanist though these three lived in the former ages Origine maintained manie errours The heresie of the Arians beeing mightilie supported by Constans and Valens infected almost all the hast Westerne Bishops in so much that verie few held the whitnesse or puritie of the primitive faith For the principall fathers both Greeks and Latine as Ambrose
waters became Wormewood and many men died of the waters because they were made bitter THE COMMENTARIE ANd the third Angel sounded Andrea● howbeit unfitly takes this falling starre to be Lucifer thrown down headlong out of heaven the Wormwood the torments of the wicked in hell Andreas opinion Lyra conceives it to be Pelagius the third Archeretick Lyraes interpretation who in the dayes of Arcadius Honorius denied original sin pleaded for free will and overthrew the grace of Christ He fell from heaven that is fell away from the Church militant And is called a great Starre because he was a learned and religious Monke Burning as it were a Lampe by shew of holines and learning deceiving many his name is Wormwood because contrarie to the sweet doctrine of true grace he taught that men by the meer help of natural faculties setting grace aside might bee converted and saved with which pestilent doctrine he made bitter and destroyed many Churches with their teachers Ribera desirous to be singular in interpreting the trumpets literally doth verie foolishly apply this to some fiery exhalation falling from heaven and takes all these signes historically Riberaes frivolous exposition But we know that such fierie mixtures doe often happen in the ayre Besides the name of this Starre and the making of the waters bitter doe sufficiently manifest that these things cannot bee properly or literally taken But Ribera perhaps durst not doe otherwise least he should have been forced to applie it to the apostasie of the Romish Antichrist All other interpreters for the most part understand this falling starre to be some certaine eminent heretike Diverse interpretations concerning this falling star one or more But they differ in the persons For some referre it to Simon Magus Others to Samosatenus Manichaeus Arius c. Others againe to Pelagius Novatus Montanus Manichaeus And some unto Origen Now howsoever all these differ and erre in the hypothesis or speciall application yet they all agree in the thesis or generall position neyther as I judge doe they herein erre from the scope For the third trumpes with its apparitions answereth to the third seal and black horse that went out at the opening thereof which signifies as we have before shewed the state of the Church spotted with black and foul heresies from the Apostles time unto the rising of Antichrist and howsoever the Church were thus defiled Christ with the ballance of his word was still present reproving condemning their haeresies by his faithfull teachers yet in the mean time a great famine of sound doctrine much afflicted the Christian world forasmuch as almost all Churches with their teachers were drawne aside to the pestilent errour of Arius Others referre this to Mahomet but they little observe the circumstances of the trumpet For Mahomet beeing a most wicked villaine cannot bee called a starre muchlesse a great starre shining like a Lampe neither fell hee from heaven that is the Church in which hee never was although I confesse hee hath occasioned much bitternes unto Christians My opinion therefore touching the third trumpet is that this great starre burning like a lampe falling from heaven and turning the third part of the waters into wormewood in a generall way denoteth all apostated Arch-hereticks spoken of Chap. 6. Who at the opening of the third seale for the space of six hundred yeeres after the time of the Apostles deformed the Church of Christ by their foul heresies and brought destruction upon the four corners of the earth by their blasphemies errours and tumults as we have before declared For it is plain that by starres the teachers of Churches are signifyed and by falling from heaven their apostasy from the true faith But specially by this starre and his fall from heaven is undoubtedly signifyed the apostasie of the Bishop of Rome not indeed that universall departure The apostafie of the Church of Rome which followed afterward at the full rising of Antichrist but that first defect which three hundred yeers before forcibly occasioned led the Churches both of the East and West by little and little to submit to Antichrist namely from the time of Constantine unto Phocas the intruder For the Bishops of Rome in regard of the great renowne and chiefe honour of that citie it being the seat of the Romane Empire were eminent lights among their fellow bishops hence the starre is called great burning like a torch or lampe Hee fell from heaven not at one instant but by degrees therefore it is said in the Preterimperfect tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee did fall Hee saw him here not quite fallen as in Chap. 9.1 but falling for as yet the Romane sea was onely declining or in the motion of its Apostasie Before Siluester thirtie and one Bishops of Rome for the most part like stars in the firmament brightly shined both in learning faith Pietie and constancie yea they all suffered Martyrdome under the Romane tyrants But after that Constantine had graunted peace unto Christians and enriched the Churches by his too much liberallity heaping wealth and honour exceedingly upon bishops then began this star swelling with pride and ambition like Lucifer to lift up himselfe above his fellow ministers to bee wholy given to voluptuousnesse to fill and burthen the Churches with Iewish and heathenish rites and ordinances so by forsaking the truth of the Gospell altogether to embrace humane traditions Sylyester was the first if histories may bee credited who gave himselfe wholy to the institution of their Masse-priests orders ornaments temples singing-men sacrifices sanctuaries vestments ointments surplises miters embroidered garments and the like Babylonish stuffe bringing all these idle rites into the Church under this pretence partly least Christian religion should seem inferiour in outward lustre and pompe to heathenisme partly that the Pagans by the likenesse of these rites with theirs might bee the more easily drawen to Christianity And this verie thing was afterward pretended by the following Bishops as Gregories Epistle to Serenus testifies Now this Silvester was he on whom Constantine as Platina recordeth in the life of this Bishop imposed an embroidered mitre beset with Gold and Pearles in stead of a Diadem And then this great starre began to fall from heaven unto the earth And upon the third part of the rivers that is as I understand on the Romane Bishops the successours of this Sylvester and others for rivers doe note the teachers of Churches by whom divine doctrines ought to flow and be derived unto others Of these the third part not all for many remained faithfull and sincere but a great number or the third part of them that lived in Europe leaving heaven gave themselves wholie to worldly cares pleasures pompe and foolish ceremonies defiling the Church with many abuses superstitions errours yea grosse heresies also For as Ierom and the Ecclesiasticall history both testifie Liberius was indeed a great starre beeing at the first a great opposer of
Priests Yea Clemanges affirmeth that of old time it was their proper charge to carry the dead and to serve about buriall affaires Thus of carriers of the dead they are become the Lords of the Church The sects of Canons and Monkes arose one after the other out of the earth neither is their originall very ancient as we may see in the History of Hospinian touching the originall of Monkes As for the Jesuites it is certaine they sprung up even in the memory of our fathers Anno 1540. out of the dunghill of the Spanish Souldier As therefore the former Beast did not rise at one instant out of the Sea but by degrees so this riseth out of the earth not all at one time but leisurely and as it best stood with Antichrists necessity and profit and established his kingdom from time to time by sundry instruments Having two hornes like the Lamb This Beast in his hornes is likened to the Lamb or Christ in his speech to the Dragon or the Devill in his power to the former Beast or Antichrist Now what is all this but to teach us that Antichrist should seine himself to be Christ or Christs Vicar which title Gregory VII that most wicked Sorcerer did first assume unto himselfe and by his diabolicall doctrine seduce the world Hornes signifie power The Lamb hath seven hornes Chap. 5.6 signifying his absolute and perfect power The Beast hath two like unto these In the similitude I observe his hypocrisie in that he hath but two his defect of power he arrogates indeed all the power of the Lamb unto himself But he comes farre short of it for Christ remaines infinitely more powerfull then he The which makes much for the consolation of the godly Some understand the two hornes of the Popes double sword which is not amisse For howsoever the Lamb never exercised any secular power but alwaies put it off from him Extra de major o … d. C. unam sanctam yet Antichrist in pretence of the Lamb hath violently taken it unto himself because the Lamb said Behold here are two swords it is enough Like a Lamb In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without an article for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like to the Lamb. Hence some doe thinke that these hornes are not likened to the hornes of the Lamb Christ but indifinitely to the hornes of a common Lamb or Sheep But it hath been shewed before that Christ is called a Lamb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well without as with an article and more examples hereafter follow Let the antithesis here suffice And he spake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a Dragon where the words of the Beast are not likened to a Dragons speech indefinitely as Ribera feineth for Dragons indefinitely taken do not speak but to the speech of that Dragon viz. the Devill which in v. 2. Gave his seat to the Sea-beast And yet it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like the Dragon without an article The likenesse therefore of his hornes to the Lambs signifies not in generall a lam-like hypocrisie that being a goat he should feine himself a sheep But in particular his Christian hypocrisie who being indeed the Antichrist should yet falsly boast himself to be Christ or Christs Vicar To this also we may referre the hypocrisie and fraud of his whole ecclesiasticall fraternity Franciscus they say that Angelicall Monke bore in his body the wounds and marks of Christ Thus also the hypocriticall Jesuites falsly assuming the Lambs name speciously deceive the world c. But let us hear his speech And he spake as the Dragon And for But. In his hornes there is a feined simplicity of the Lamb But his speech bewrayes his guile like the asse by braying was discovered though in the Lyons skin so this Beast had not the voyce of a Lamb but of a Dragon Hitherto we read not that the Dragon spake but gave his throne to the former beast as also his mouth by which the same is governed vers 5. the which the Beast opening spake great things and blaspemies vers 6. The Beast therefore speaking like the Dragon uttereth likewise great things and blasphemies by the instinct of the Dragon that is the Devill for the Dragon is the Devill Chap. 12.9 This is the letter Now the speech of the Beast is nothing else but the doctrine he preacheth as if it were the Lambs but in truth it is the Dragons The Apostle calls it a lye because the Dragon is a lyer and the father of lies his comming is after the effectuall working of Satan with all power and signes and lying wonders that they might beleeve a LYE because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved Antichrists doctrine therefore is false and blasphemous touching the Scriptures justification of sinners of merits and humane satisfactions of the sacraments indulgences jubilees fasts forbidding of meats and marriage to Priests 1 Tim. 4.3 the which the Apostle expresly termes the doctrine of Devils and for this diabolicall language the Beast here is generally afterward called the false prophet as Chap. 16.13 and Chap. 19.20 and Chap. 20.10 12. And he exerciseth all the power of the first Beast before him Thus much of his hornes and speech his power followeth and it is the same with the former Beast Because howsoever this Beast differs in rising and type yet really and in power he is the same Antichrist all whose power no man but himself shall ever exercise Now this power was both to speake great things and blasphemies as also to make war with the Saints and lastly to command every kinred and tongue and nation all which this Beast also exerciseth In that it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before him or in his sight it imports the manner how he exerciseth the same power because he not onely blasphemeth makes war and seduceth immediately by himself but also by the help of his Legates a latere who do all things in his sight that is according to the appointment beck and pleasure of the Beast whatsoever things these do the Beast is said to do Now what is this but that for these five hundred yeares and more as Histories testifie the Legates a latere or Cardinals do all things in Emperours Courts by the authority of the Pope their master determine Councils direct the decrees thereof at his beck and for the establishing of his power Thus also his Inquisitours and chiefe Apostolicall Notaries such like agents execute al wicked acts against the Saints according to the wil of the Pope see Sextus Decret l. 5. tit 2. de Hereticis per totum And causeth or maketh the earth and them that dwell therein Here follow divers effects of his power Six effects of the beasts power which he executeth partly by himself and partly by his vassals He maketh This respects his doctrine that is he preacheth commandeth and forceth viz. by his Emissaries and
sinneth not I answer Christ speakes not here of the common infirmities of the saintes but accuseth this Bishop for his notable hypocrisie and condemnes him not for not beeing fully and absolutely perfect but because he found him not upright in his wayes before him for he was onelie an eye servant outwardly shewing a Zeal to pietie and in the mean-while secretlie a selfe-seeker and one who fulfilled his owne lust not at all caring what became of his flock Now forasmuch as Christ knew this his close and wicked deceit it proves againe that he searcheth the heart so is true God se arguments X and XVIII Before God Montanus Arethas and the old version read it before my God hence some hereticks thus reason If Christ have a God then he is not God himself I answer all other copies read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before God and it seemeth that these by some oversight here added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my taking it from v. 12. But be it granted Io. 20.17 that the text should so be read yet it helpes them not for Christ as he is man hath a God I ascend to my God and to your God now howsoever in this respect he is not God yet as he is the Sonne he is true God and life eternal and coessential with the Father But here we se how manie things approved of by men are indeed verie vile before God who sees all things with eyes of flaming fire Blessed therfore is he Rom. 2.29 who approveth himself sincere not before men onely but especiallie before the Lord. Remember therfore how thou hast received How that is what In the third place he is exhorted to be mindful of the faith delivered and committed to him by the Apostles to preserve the puritie therof in the Church and leave it incorrupt to posteritie For it seemeth that this Bishop was unmindful of the trust committed unto him and named aside from the holie doctrine and way of the Lord. But all our Bishops forsooth and especiallie the Romish are altogether infallible yea incorrigible because unto them alone and not to any other belongeth that promise The spirit shall lead you into all truth Here we are taught that the onely way to redresse the corruptions both of life and doctrine is to have recourse to the rule of Gods word and to set it alwayes before our eyes Thus Paul reproving the Corrinthians for their abuse about the Lords supper 1. Cor. 11.23 cals them back to the first institution therof Cyprian writing to Pompie against the Epistle of Stephen Bishop of Rome illustrates the matter by an excellent similitude If saith he the conduites which before did plentifullie afforde water to the citie should suddenly be stopt would they not go to the fountaine there to take notice of the defect whither the fountaine were dried up or the conduites stopped or the water drawen some other way that so the conduit pipes being mended the citie may enioy the former benefit of the water Even so it becommeth Gods ministers when the truth of God in any thing hath been changed men have been unconstant therin to returne to the first original and Apostolical tradition that the reason of our actions may flow from whence they had their first spring and original And repent The last and chiefest thing required in him is repentance that is to forsake his hypocrisie and sincerely to performe the dutie of his place For then indeed we repent when leaving our evil wayes we order our steps aright and seriously turne to the Lord the which I confesse is not in our owne power to doe but God gratiously effecteth the thing which he commandeth in whomsoever he pleaseth Howbeit they are inexcusable in whom he worketh it not because they willingly disobey the commandement But it may be objected they cannot doe it of themselves It is true indeed but from whence doth this arise for have they not of their owne accord brought this inabilitie uppon themselves and also by a voluntarie obstinacie augmented it wherby they have made themselves inexcusable and self guiltie before God If therfore thou shalt not watch That he might be the more awakened Christ adds to the exhortation a sharpe commination threatning him except he be watchfull to come on him as a thiefe that is suddenlie and unawares to take vengeance on him for his hypocrisie by some horrible Iudgment On thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon thee or to thee not in a good sence as that saying thy king co●●eth to thee to wit for thy good but in an evil sence that is to thy destruction and therfore Beza more significantly renders it Against thee Thus Christ also speakes of himself Mat. 24.43 and Reve. 16.15 Behold J come as a thiefe blessed is he that watcheth c. so Paul 1 Thes 25. which comparison as it is not dishonorable unto Christ in using it so doth it no way countenance or alow thievish courses for the similitude respects not the evil practice of theeves but their sudden breaking and entring in upon men while they sleep securely Math. 24.43 and thus the Lord himself expoundeth it but know this that if the good man of the house c. so here And thou shalt not know what houre J wil come upon thee to wit to inflict punishment on thee for thy securitie Ribera understands it of death when thou least thinkest of it thou shalt dy and be called to judgment The use Christ shewes in the place before cited Therfore be ye also ready for in such an houre as you thinke not the Son of man commeth 4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis The third part of the narration is a commendation of some that were faithful in this Church For howbeit through the negligence of the Pastor most of them were dead or ready to dy yet the Lord stil reserved some unto himself who were upright according as he is accustomed to doe even in such Churches as are most corrupt For example when the ten tribes were fallen away and had publickly set up the idolatrous worship of their Calves and Baal and withall so oppressed the godlie as that Elias verelie thought that al the Lords prophets except himself had been slaine by the sword yet even then God had left unto himself seven thousand who had not bowed the knee to Baal 1 King 19 18. Rom. 11.4 In Pauls time the whole nation of the Iewes seemed to be rejected and destitute of the grace of Christ yet at that present time there was a remnant according to the election of Grace as the Apostle sheweth The like may be said touching the papacie for though in many ages togither both the grace of Christ and his true Church hath been as it were trampled under foot and the same overspread with horrible idolatrie in all kinds yet as the histories of the martyrs doe witnesse the Lord had some few names among them continually who resisted
the publick abuses of the times even unto blood Moreover as this commendation was comfortable to the Godly so it did tend to the great shame of the Pastor Therfore least the faithful should have thought that Christ also was wroth with them they are by name to the others disgrace much commended for their constancie Now what is more dishonorable then that the disciples should in doctrine excel their teacher and the sheep the Pastor in sinceritie of life Names That is persons as Act. 1.15 there were a hundred and twentie names So Reve. 11.13 there were slaine 7000 names A few For manie are called but few are chosen almost in everie congregation We ought not therefore to be offended at the paucitie of the faithfull and the multitude of the ungodly The Papists indeed glory in their multitude and write volumes in praise of the largenes of the Romish Church upbraiding us because of our fewnesse but here we see how in Sardis there were many hypocrites a few names onely who were not defiled Here againe we have a cleare proofe of Christ divinitie in that he is said to know these few names in Sardis the truth is he knowes all the faithful and discerneth them from hypocrites 2. Tim. 2.19 which is a worke onely proper to God for the Lord knoweth who are his see arguments X. and XVIII Who have not defiled their garments Their constant sinceritie is set forth by this Metaphor and by Garments is meant thus much as their bodies were not polluted with the filthie manner and lusts of the Nicolaitans so neither were their soules stained with their impious doctrine Alike Metaphor the Apostle useth 1. Thessa 4.4 That every one should know how to posses his vessel that is his soule and bodie in sanctification and in honour not in the lust of concupiscence for this is the will of God He. 12.14 even your sanctification and without this no man shall see him Now Christ acknowledged them holy and undefiled not as if they were altogither unreprovable but because they persevered in faith and holinesse of life not withstanding the neglect of the Pastor and the manifold evil examples round about them And they shall walke with mee As hypocrites are threatned with punishment so the Godly are incouraged with promises of reward In white What may this bee by this Metaphor is signified a heavenlie triumph a kingdome and glorie to come It is taken from the state of kings the great honour given unto mightie conquerours With such royal apparell Herod was cloathed when he sate on his throne Act. 12.21 and God smote him dead for his pride So in scorne they clothed Christ the king of Glorie Lu. 23.11 It also was ancientlie a custome to cloath the Conquerours with a white garment To be short white garments for their brightnesse were signes of Glorie here then Metaphorically the glorie of the saintes is promised Thus it is said v. 5. He that overcommeth the same shal be cloathed in white raiment Rev. 7.11 White robes are given unto the elect standing before the throne and chap. 19.14 the armies of Christ are cloathed in fine linnen white and cleane But it may be said seeing their garments were now already pure undefiled 2. Cor. 5.2 therefore they needed not to be cloathed in white To this the Apostle answereth we groane earnestly desiring to be cloathed that we be not found naked For the puritie and righteousnesse of the saintes on earth can not abide the judgment of God therefore they must be cloathed with the perfect robes of absolute innocencie ere they can stand before his majestie With me They shal be partakers of my glorie If the raiment of Christ Mat. 17.2 on the mount was white as the light how much more doth he now shine beeing exalted Yet so wil he cloath the saintes for they shall shine as the sunne according to that proportion which is betwixt the head and the members And hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with me may also be translated after me as if he should say ye shal be cloathed in white next unto mee And they shal walke Beza translates it and therfore they shal walke which indeed expresseth the sence but not the words of the text For they are worthie To wit to walke with me in white the argument is taken from the equitie of it Thus doe the messengers of the Centurion beseech Christ to heal his servant because he was worthie Luk. 7.3 But this seemeth to establish the doctrine of merits for dignitie comes by vertue For if we shall walke in white because of our worthinesse then we deserve the same for our workes sake I answer the assumption is false for the scripture no where saith because of our worthines or workes but when soever it mentioneth the judgement of God we are said to receive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to workes but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of workes least we should conceive any opinion of meriting by them which Christ expresly denieth Luk. 17. v. 10. When ye have done all those things which are commanded you say we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our dutie to doe We therfore shal walke in white not because of our worthinesse but according to it for the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for doth not signifie any cause of merit but a qualitie agreeing with the justice of God that is shewing not why but who they are that shall walke with Christ according to that in Mat. 5.3 blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven c. as if he had said because unto such the kingdome of heaven is freely promised But againe though the assumption were granted yet would not the proposition be universally true For dignitie in its kinde doth not alwayes proceed from vertue but somtimes from dutie without vertue So Nero had honour and was worthie of honour in regard of dutie but not in regard of any vertue in him So in particular our worthinesse before God is not because of the worthinesse of our workes but of grace by which he maketh us worthy by calling justifying and glorifying of us As the Apostle plainly teacheth us 2. Thess 1.5 where after he had said that the tribulations of the Godly were a manifest token of the righteous judgement of God that they might be counted worthy of the kingdome of God least this should be misaplyed to a worthynesse of merit he prayeth v. 11. that God would count them worthy of this calling As none therfore deserve or are worthy to be called of God so neyther doth our worthinesse prove any thing for the doctrine of merit If they object from chap. 16.6 For they are worthy that as there the deserved cause of punishment is of themselves so here the meritorious cause of reward The consequence wil not follow from the rule of contraries for the comparisons are not alike
befall the Church by a fatall darkning of doctrine and horrible apostasy both of teachers people from the faith under Antichrist unto the end of the world v. 12.13 following at the opening of the sixt seal And lastly in the fourth Act is shewed the end of the troubles of the Church under Antichrist containing his and all other enemies their utter destruction at the day of judgement v 14.15.16.17 The two latter Acts are not fullie ended in this Chapter but are continued in the following wherin is represented unto us the reformation of doctrine final deliverance glorification of the Church obscurely indeed in this present vision but more clearly in the following Thus we have manifested the parts logical resolution of this Chapter Now we come to consider the vision The I Act of vision II. The opening of the first seale concerning the white horse and him that sate thereon conquering 1 And I saw when the Lambe opened one of the seales and I heard as it were the noise of thunder one of the foure beast saying Come and see 2 And I saw and behold a white horse and he that sate on him had a bow and a crowne was given unto him he went forth conquering and to conquer THE COMMENTARIE 1. ANd I saw when the Lambe opened Hitherto the Lambe held the booke shut untill the heavenly companies had made an end of their himne and harmonie And then he opened one of the seales that is the first of them as appears by the opening of the rest in order as the second third c. For the Hebrewes usuallie put 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 first as in Gene. 1.4 And the evening and the morning was one that is the first day So in the words following And I heard one that is the first of the foure beasts for afterward he heard the second and third c. Opened the seale that is manifested For in opening thereof he revealed unto Iohn and so unto us the counsels of God concerning the future condition of the Church which before were hidden or shut To Iohn indeed he declared the same in types and withall giving him the understanding of them but unto us in types onely concealing the mysteries thereof from us to the end we should be the more exercised in the diligent observation of things both from histories and events One of the foure beasts who had the forme of a Lion Chap. 4.7 We need not here with Lyra and others inquire whither this were Marke Matthew or James the first supposed Bishop of the Church of Ierusalem The other three doe in order invite Iohn to draw neere and behold these wonders for he stood off for reverence sake that he might the more certainly write downe what he saw so that these beasts performe the office of publick cryers whose work it is to call in persons neerer to the throne or judgement seat As the voyce of thunder For such is the roaring noise of a Lion This the other beasts saying unto Iohn and us come and see require hereby great attention and I conceive that herein no other my sterie is contained 2. And I saw and behold a white horse to wit went out as it is in v. 4. also in the words following he went forth conquering But whence came he forth from the booke or seale If out of the booke then this horseman went forth at the very first opening of the margent that is the mysterie of him was there both written and revealed to Iohn giving us to understand that such was the forme of the seales and so set on the margent as they served for the keeping close of the whole booke folded up together according to our manner of sealing letters If he went out of the seale then it seemes these were annexed to the booke like the great seales of princes to their letters pattents the which are usually kept in boxes Now one seale beeing removed some part of the booke was thereby opened in so much as the writing thereof did appeare Behold a great seale out of which went forth an armed horseman But how great then was the booke it self sealed with so many seales how great was he that held so great a booke in his right hand yea how great the Lamb opening it The which may lead us to consider the greatnes of the events and the omnipotencie of God and the Lamb. The generall signification of the seales considered It may also be understood of the time that so soon as the Lamb had opened the seales the spirit caused Iohn to see these enigmatical horsemen and other things Now to speak of the opening of the seales in general Andreas doth justlie reject their exposition who referr all of them to the manner of Christs incarnation as the first seale to his birth The second to his baptisme The third to the signes he wrought after his baptisme The fourth to his unjust accusation before Pilate The fift to his crosse The sixt to his burial And the seventh to his descension into hel seeing saith he all this was alreadie don whereas Iohn speaks eyther of things present or what should come to passe afterward Others more wittilie have distinguished these seales according to the future times of the Church applying the first to the Apostles time and 200 yeares after The second unto the following age viz. the time of Justinian The third unto Phocas the usurper of the Empire The fourth unto Charles the Great when poperie was at the highest The fift unto Ottho under whom the seven Electors were erected The sixt to the counsel of Constans at what time the Church was grievously persecuted by three Anti-popes and the burning of the TWO WITNESSES whereupon the elect were sealed The seventh from that time unto the end of the world during al which time in the diverse cōfusions of the Church the sealing of the faithfull was perfected But it is difficult to define so precisely the moments of the seales Alcasar a new interpreter having numbred up fourteen opinions and rejected all of them at last brings in his own supposing that the conversion of certaine Iewes is praefigured in the foure first seales and the rejection of the rest in the three latter The which interpretation we leave unto himselfe For our part we judge it more safe to refer all to the foure Acts noted in the preface And behold a white horse I see no reason The white horse shadoweth out the puritie of the primitive Church but the common opinion of interpreters is heere to be embraced viz. that this white horse with his rider notes the purity integrity of the Christian Church at first for by whitenes in the revelation purity is signified and the speedie course of the Gospell throughout the whole earth Neverthelesse I binde not this to the first two hundred or three hundred years in which notwithstanding all the cruel oppression
of Christ should be so corrupted through the ambition Luxurie coveteousnes negligence slothfulnes of Bishops the antiēt faith so adulterated by hereticks as that nothing almost should remaine pure sound We know by wheat the elect are signifyed and by tares the reprobate as in Mat. 13.30 Wherfore by wheat in this place I understand either sincere teachers which should be rare precious or els the sound and orthodoxe doctrine concerning God Christ our saviour of which there should be as it were a famine in the earth Neverthelesse with this wheat God would feed his elect however it should be obtained by great difficulty labour yea barly bread should be very scarse that is the comforts of the Gospel not so fullie enjoyed as formerly Such is the darknes the effects thereof when the Church is burdened with the traditions of men This famine of true doctrine was verie great in the dayes of Constans and some Arian Emperours after him The time of the famine here spoken of when the pernicious and pestilent doctrine of Arius was received by all the East and Westerne Churches For after the Emperour Constans by sundrie councils and other meanes had endeavoured to establish Arianisme at last calling together all the Bishops both Arians and others namelie the Westerne unto Arminensis a city in Italie the Easterne unto Seleucia a citie in Isauria he would not admit them to depart till all had consented unto the prescript forme of the Arian heresie whereupon it happened that they being there retained seven whole months and wearied with delay some beeing overcome by intreaty others with threatnings at last they all yea Hosius also subscribed unto it and condemned the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 essence and coessential Hilarius banished out of France onely excepted who as a graine of wheat returning into France restored the puritie of the faith and brought most of the Bishops of Italie unto the right way of Christ as Sulpitius Severus recordeth speaking thus in the conclusion of his booke of this synod which consisted of 400 Bishops the councill held at Arminensis was dismissed whose beginning was good but in the end wickedlie concluded And see thou hurt not the oyle and wine Junius will have the words wine and oyle to cohere with the fore going sentence as if it ought thus to be read three measures of barlie for a peny and oyle and wine where he puts a colon or two points and he renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hurt not unjustly that is verie little wine and oyle shall be given for a denarius or ten pence thou shalt not deale unjustlie understand while thou metest out but a little for a great price But in this he seems to be to courious neyther can the former colon cohere with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a denarie or ten penie worth But hurt not the wine and oyle to wit the orthodoxe faith but some shall maintaine the same and the whole not be obscured by hereticall blacknesse And such were Athanasius and Hilarius in the time of the Arian heresie whom we before mentioned they are called wine and oyle from the effect because as wine cherisheth and oyle purifies so sound doctrine doth glad and cleanse the consciences This therefore is added as a word of comfort least the faithfull seeing heresies to get the upper hand should be discouraged For God will allwayes preserve some teachers of his truth that the elect may not be hurt by hereticks Ribera interprets this of their seven sacraments hence he promiseth the pope a great victorie against the Lutherans But as yet these things appertaine not to the times of Antichrist and vainly he seeks for a garland and comfort in the idle fictions of his own braine Alcasar comes nearer to the marke applying the oyle to the light and true knowledge of happinesse the wine to spirituall joy which the heavenlie voyce promiseth the elect not to be deprived of The opening of the fourth seale The pale horse and death sitting on him with hell following and killing the fourth part of the earth 7 And when he had opened the fourth seale I heard the voyce of the fourth beast say Come and see 8 And I looked and behold a pale horse his name that sate on him was death hell followed with him power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth to kill with sword with hunger and with death and with the beasts of the earth THE COMMENTARIE 7. ANd when he had opened the fourth seale I well approve of the observation of Andreas that the fourth beast hath the forme of a flying Eagle who now calleth Iohn to behold the events of the fourth seale For the Eagle with his quicksighted eyes having spied some things on high with great celeritie flyes thither to it Whereby is signified that the plagues here foretold come no otherwhere then from above For God beeing provoked to wrath and indignation doth justlie send them partlie to revenge the injuries don unto the saintes partlie to punish the wicked who repent not of their evils 8. And behold a pale horse The fourth seale beeing opened there comes forth now a pale horse whose rider is death and hell his follower or companion having power to kill the fourth part of the earth with sword famine pestilence and the beasts of the earth This horse in Gr. is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is of a greenish colour tending to palenesse such as is the colour of leaves in harvest time falling from trees for want of juyce Now interpreters are of diverse opinions what is the meaning of this pale horse and death his rider with hell following and what maner of plagues are shadowed out thereby Lyra supposeth Lyras interpretation that this horse is the people of Rome the rider Domitian named death because he most unjustlie murdered manie both senatours and people and himself afterwad by the Senate was also put to death for his crueltie the horse he understands to be pale because of pale death riding thereon Hell followed him that is he was immediately upon his death cast into hell fire Power was given him to kill the fourth part of the earth that is cruellie to persecute the Christians throughout the whole Romane Empire which was then streatched out over the foure parts of the world With the sword for therewith he killed manie With hunger starving them in his prisons And beasts of the earth because he caused manie to be cast before wilde beasts and torne in pieces And death noting thereby all kinde of punishments Andreas referrs it to the persecution of Maximianus Andreas his interpretation Riberas opinion in whose time as Eusebius writeth lib. 9. cap. 8. such a multitude of men were taken away by pestilence and famine as that the dead could hardlie be buried Ribera will have all to be applied unto the third
mount Sion in Jerusalem shal be deliverance Andreas Caesariensis wel observeth on this place that the crosse and calamities under Antichrist seem to be foretold unto the Church to no other end but that the godly beeing praeadmonished long be forehand might be confirmed in the very time of these trials by Antichrist his ministers for evils foreseen and premeditated on are lesse offensive when they come upon us Thus we have heard whence these prodigious sights are taken what they signifie and wherefore they are foretold Now let us consider them one by one they are seven in number three whereof shall come to passe in the earth viz. The earthquake the trembling of the mountains and the removall of the Ilands Four shall happen in heaven viz. The darkning of the Sun the changing of the Moon into blood the fall of stars and the convolution of heavens The first is a great earthquake This is made by the winds getting into the hollow parts of the earth and violently breaking forth Hereupon the earth shaketh houses towers townes and cities are throwne downe to the ground all things are gashlie to behold Even so Antichrist puft up with base pride lead by an evill spirit hath shaken the Christian world overthrowen the ancient order and discipline of Christ by changing the forme thereof into his Ecclesiasticall Monarchie the which tooke its beginning from the time of Pope Sylvester I. For no sooner were the Romish Bishops by Constantine and the following Emperours raysed up with outward dignitie and riches but they hereupon swelling with ambition forthwith began to domineere and lord it over their brethren as the histories of Sozimus Zaelestinus Leo and others testifie notwithstanding this their great arrogancie was at first a little kept under as by the authoritie of Emperours so by the canon lawes as also the opposition of other Bishops as may be seen by the Acts of the sixt council of Carthage where the Pope of Rome assuming the name of universall unto his chaire by authority as he falsly affirmed of the Nicean council he was convicted of falshood and for that time repressed But after Gregorie this spirit of pride violentlie burst forth in Sabinian his successour and after him in Boniface III. who was as we said before openlie by Phocas declared universal Bishop that is Antichrist was now lifted up on his throne Then began all the bowels of the earth that is of the Christian world to be horribly shaken For now the whole clergie is brought under the yoke of the Pope who at length imposed the law of abstinence from marriage upon them Now the doctrine of the Church both concerning the worship of God as also the faith and free grace of Christ is so corrupted as nothing almost remained sound but the bare name Now the mountaines viz. Emperours Kings and Princes if at any time they displease the Pope are sore shaken yea troden under feet by their buls and excommunications Now the Ilands also that is whole nations escape not as we shall hear by and by It would bee tedious to repeat all the disturbances and grievous calamities which this Romane Antichrist hath brought and yet daily deviseth both against Church and common wealth By this earthquake Steeven the 11. through Pipin wroung the principallity of Ravenna with all Italie out of the hands of the Graecian Emperours from whom also Leo III. with the aid of Charles drew away the whole Empire of the West to settle it as some of them boast among the Germaines We need not insist upon histories seeing our owne daily experience doth sufficiently set forth the meaning of this commotion The Sun became black as sack cloth of hair This is the second wonder Christ the Sun of righteousnes shal be horriblie eclipsed that is the doctrine touching his offices and benefits darkned and utterlie defaced We heard before how the Church lost her whitnesse and became black in regard of the manie foule heresies of that time yet something still remained pure in her by reason of some sound teachers who firmlie maintained the truth of Christ But under Antichrist even the Sun is made black as sackcloth of hair that is most black and hurtfull Not that Christ in himself can so be made but because Antichrist by his profession both teacheth and maketh such a Christ It is thought that the haire of sackcloth here spoken of What this sackcloth of hair is is made of the black hair of goats or horses whereof in former time they made mourning garments as may be gathered from many places of scripture these garments did prick the flesh much paine those that ware them Hence the hypocriticall Monkes as Carthusians Cappuzins and other Antichristian frogs who glorie of perfection weare such garments for the beating down of their flesh but indeed hereby as by a true badge they testifie that they live under the darknesse of the Sun here spoken of But say they Christ the Sun of righteousnes is not darkned unto us How the Sun is obsctired in popery For the Pope professeth Christ to be God and man against all hereticks I answer If he should openly cast off the name of Christ then he could not have brought the Christian Church under his bondage neither suppresse the truth as now he doth But his comming as the Apostle witnesseth 2 Thess 2.10 is with all deceiveablenes of unrighteousnes in them that perish So that by the cunning pretence of Christian profession he hath fraudulentlie overthrowne the Church yea herein he hath mainly opposed Christ in that he was looked upon to be a preacher of his name Contra Auxentium lib. 2. cont legis advers cap. 12. as Hilarie and Austin write concerning him The profession of Christs person and of the trinitie was indeed the maske under which he deceived the Church for otherwise Christians would have shunned him as the devill But of what use I pray you is Christ without his offices benefits the which in popery are troden under foot what profiteth it to beleeve that the Turk is the Emperour of the East from whom unlesse it be by thy own deceit thou canst not exspect eyther good to thy self or others Yea say they Papists beleeve not on Christ as the onely mediatour we also professe Christ to be the mediatour redeemer and onely saviour by beleeving in whose merits we must be saved But we have often shewed that this their profession is nothing but as black sackcloth if they would but see it for if indeed they did beleeve Christ to be the onelie mediatour they would not then have made to themselvs so many thousands of mediatours as they have don For doe they not cry to S. Marie to S. Peter to S. Nicolas c. to pray for them If they did beleeve to be saved by the merits of Christ alone then they would not have forged the merits of saintes neither their owne works of Iustification or
as conquerour on the white horse by which as we have shewed Chap. 6. is set forth the Gospel preached by the Apostles the whitenes of the primitive Churches that is their purity in life and doctrine And there were voyces and thundrings This also by most is taken in an evill sence namely for the plagues of the wicked But it signifies the diverse events of the Church occasioned by the preaching of the Gospell and indeed the very same thing was before set forth at the opening of the first second third fourth sixt seale yet so as in a general way onely The order of the words is here to be noted The old version puts thundrings in the first place and voyces in the second but all Greek copies read voyces first First therefore there were voyces That is the preaching of the Gospel had a blessed successe while the voyces of the Apostles sounded throughout the earth drawing the whole world as it were unto the obedience of Christ agreeable unto this is that before spoken of concerning Christs glorious riding on the white horse Secondly Thundrings this was noted by the red horse whose rider tooke away peace from the earth that is by the preaching of the Gospel raysed up the thundrings of tyrants For looke as thunder shakes strikes and tears the highest mountaines so did the tyrants first terribly rage against the Apostles afterwards by axe and sword slew many thousands of good Christians Thirdly there were Lightnings fyerie flashes which burnt and made pale black the standing come This was shadowed out by the black and pale horse the Church beeing darkned by the lightnings of heresies by the flourishing shewes and deceites of hypocritical monks was brought into an irrecoverable palenes or death To be short there follows an Earthquake to wit that great one spoken of at the opening of the sixt seal meaning that Antichrist should shake the Christian world as Mahomet in the East and the Pope in the West Here we may learn in the first place that Christ our faithfull high-priest doth alwayes appear in heaven before God for his Church and by the golden censer that is by the eternal efficacie of his oblation intercedes for us to the Father makeing our prayers acceptable unto him so that neyther Satan nor Antichrist shall ever be able to destroy the Church whatsoever in their rage they imagine against her Secondly that the prayers of al the Saints both in heaven and in earth are offered up by Christ and by him onely made acceptable to God Therefore it is great impiety to direct our prayers to the Saints as thinking by them to have them offered unto the Lord. In the last place if we see in these our dayes thundrings lightnings earthquakes to follow the preaching of the Gospell let us not be offended seeing John hath foretould us hereof onely let us in such times fly unto Christ our high-priest by prayer and true repentance 6 And the seven Angels which had That which before was shewed in a general way to follow after the casting of the censer full of fire into the earth signifying the powring out of the holy Ghost upon the Apostles and their preaching of the Gospell namely the voyces thundrings c. He now comes to set down in a more speciall way by types indeed for the most part obscure yet not so hard to be understood if we diligently compare them with histories The Angels prepare not themselves to sound before that Christ had cast his censer of fire into the earth Now what is this but the commandement given unto the Apostles not to depart from Hierusalem to preach the Gospell Act. 1.4 untill they had received the holy Ghost For all these trumpettours as before we shewed are the Apostles all other faithfull teachers in the after ages except the seventh last onely which shal be the Archangel himself And as the apparition exhibited to Iohn in the former vision served to unfold the mysteries of all the seales so these here serve for the understanding of the sound of all the trumpets which thing we are principally to observe laying it down for a sure ground that both there and here are signified by a certain analogie partly the same and partly the like events to befall the Church from that time unto the end For Christ intended to reveal no other events unto Iohn There is an analogy betwixt the seales trumpets vials then what he had seen before neyther can there be any question made but that there is a certain agreement betwixt the seven seales seven trumpets seven vials if we diligently consider every particular and rightly attend to the scope of the prophesie Here then we see that they altogether erre from the drift of this historie who applie the seven trumpets to the seven greatest judgements of God which have fallen upon the world since the creation as the first trumpet to note the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrha by fire The second to the drowning of Pharaoh and his army in the red sea The third to the Canaanites beeing destroyed by Iosuah The fourth to the murmuring Israelites in the wildernes The fift to the Israelites falling away from God in the times of the judges The sixt to Ierusalems destruction by the Romanes And lastly the seventh to the everlasting punishment of all the wicked at the day of judgement But these things are altogether besides the matter For wherefore should Christ now again represent that unto Iohn in obscure types which formerly he plainely knew by histories of old Therefore we shall come nearer unto the mark if we observe that these trumpets began from the Apostles time and so shall continue untill the end of the world Now let us hear the trumpets The sound of the first trumpet 7 The first Angel sounded and there followed haile and fire mingled with blood and they were cast upon the earth and the third part of trees was burnt up and all green grasse was burnt up THE COMMENTARIE ANd the first Angel sounded Lyra applies the four first trumpets Lyraes interpretation corrected to the haeresies condemned by the four generall Councils And the first Angel hee understands to be Arius who sounding with the trumpet of great pride and outrage maintained his heresie and infected the third part of the earth that is the whole Christian world For the earth is divided as it were into three parts viz. Iewes Pagans and Christians this interpretation is not absurd and therefore approved of by Bullinger and some others but hence the analogie betwixt the seales and trumpets doth not appear neyther is it likely that the first Angel began not to found till 300 yeeres after Iohns time but undoubtedly it was presentlie upon Christs casting the fire into the earth I therefore doe compare the first trumpet to the first seal The first trumpet answereth to the first seale For as Christ before is said to ride on
death his rider and hell following by sword famine and pestilence devouring the fourth part of the earth by which is signified as we have shewed the state of the Church a little before the rising of Antichrist beeing sick with a mortall palenes and neare unto death accidently occasioned by the overmuch liberallitie and indulgencie of Christian Emperours who thereby corrupted the Bishops and Christian religion but principallie by superstitious Monkes and vaine glorious Bishops who little caring eyther for Christ or his graces onely laboured how they might satisfy and fill their own bellies and establish their Lordly authoritie turning the doctrines of faith into humane Philosophie and Christian religion into a stageplay and horrible idol worship So here againe the very same thing is foretold in this trumpet under different types For as Anonymus and after him Gagnaeus have observed the Sunne shadows out the chiefe Prelates of the Church as Popes Cardinals Arch-bishops Bishops who ought to shine before others by the light of their life and doctrine The Moon which receives its light from the Sunne to be inferior Ecclesiastical orders as curates and religious persons The Stars beeing lesse in light are the laitie but I rather understand by Stars Bishops and other teachers so called as we have seen Chap. 1. Verie fitlie saith Gagnaeus is the third part of the Sun sayd to be smitten in so much that the third part thereof was darkened considering how one part of Praelates doe shine in life and doctrine others but in one onely and a part in neyther of both For many of them neyther burn in charitie nor shine in doctrine and I would it were but a third part of them but the truth is they have onelie an hypocriticall shew of true pastors for after the likenes of this Sunne the third part of the inferiour Clergie and Laiks also were smitten with obscuritie and blindnesse c. Thus he in a general way doth not with out good cause complaine of Popes Cardinals Bishops their great Apostasie But wee are as I have said to applie these things by an Analogie unto the events of the fourth seale This trumpet therefore appertaines unto the darknesse corruptions brought into the Christian Churches during the space of three hundred yeeres viz. from Sylvesters time unto the rising of Antichrist in which time all these things were allegorically fulfilled as histories testifie Yet onely in a third part that is in Europe alone And this againe serves for to mitigate the evils in asmuch as not the whole Sun but onely a third part thereof is smitten with darkenesse For indeed many Bishops in the East and West both Greeks and Latine did still uphold the light in the Church For as yet Antichrist was not lifted up into the chaire of universall pestilence neyther was the Church so neere unto death by a mortal palenes although hell had allmost swallowed up the fourth part thereof Thus we have heard four trumpets of the Angels with the histories thereof 13. And I beheld and heard an Angel by this exclamation the Angel commandeth us to be much attentive to the following trumpets because they shew forth more grievous calamities to befall the Church For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bibles of Montanus read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Eagle so the Latine I saw an Eagle concerning which Eagle many men dispute diversly But all other copies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Angel Now whither wee read it an Angel or an Eagle the matter is not great onelie wee are to be attentive unto his voyce neyther doe I thinke that we should seek for any allegory in it He was an heavenly herauld foretelling farre more grievous calamities then yet we have heard in the foregoing trumpets Neyther will I deny but that by this Angel may be noted Gregorie Bishop of the Church of Rome Antichrists predecessour who in his Epistles to the Emperour Mauritius pointed at him as if he had been then present Wo wo wo This is a voyce of commiseration in regard of the evils that hung over the Church The threefold iteration notes that the three following trumpets are to denounce more horrible fatall evils unto the inhabiters of the earth then the former To the inhabitants of the earth This might be understood of the Church dispersed thorowout the whole world but usually in this prophesie hypocrites and wicked men oppressing the Church are called inhabitants of the earth as we have noted on Chap. 3.10 and 6.10 Wherefore these threatnings are not intended against the Church but against the wicked which serveth for the comfort of the Godly for howsoever they be involved in the publick calamities under Antichrist yet these things shal be mortal unto their adversaries onely CHAP. IX The Argument Parts and Analysis IN this Chapter are described the fift and sixt trumpets with most sad events in which the first Act of this vision is ended and the apparitions of the sixt seale more fully exhibited unto Iohn touching the rising and tyranny of Antichrist both in the West who with smoake and Locusts that is by deceit and devilish instruments And in the East who with horses and armies that is by open warre and violence should horribly afflict the Christian world God by them most justly punishing the idolatrie flagitious life of Christians and hereby calling them to repentance but in vain Now here principally are prefigured the wofull events which befell the Church during the space of nine hundred yeeres or there about both by the Popish Antichrist in the West and Mahomet in the East from the yeere of Christ sixe hundred and sixe untill the Councill of Constans The parts of the Chapter are three The first concerneth the events of the first trumpet unto vers 13. consisting of four members I. The apparition it self which Iohn saw viz. a starre falling down from heaven upon the earth to whom was given the key of the bottomlesse pit vers 1. II. Four effects of this falling starre 1. He opened the bottomlesse pit 2. raysed a smoak out of it 3. with the smoak he darkened the Sunne and aire vers 2. 4. Out of the smoake he brought forth Locusts upon the earth vers 3. III. The locusts are described by diverse adjuncts First from the power they had to hurt vers 3. But limited by God three manner of wayes 1. In respect of the objects that they should not hurt the elect but onely the reprobate vers 4. 2. In the degree of hurting not to kil but to torment 3. In the time not allwayes but for five months vers 5. Secondly from the effect of their hurting which shal be more bitter then death it self vers 6. Thirdly from the forme of the locusts First as touching the bodie they are like to horses prepared to the battel Secondly touching their members and habbit vers 7.8.9.10 And lastly touching their head or king called Abaddon vers 11. IV. An acclamatorie conclusion ending the calamities
king of locusts and impudently professing himself to bee Christs vicar Besides he hath not the key of hell absolutely but of the bottomlesse pit or of the sinke of hel and thence to raise the smoak of his pestilent lies deceit to the damnation of the inhabitants of the earth 2. And hee opened the bottomlesse pit Now John expoundeth the pestilent effects of this power The bottomlesse pit was shut up by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles who pluckt men out of the snares of Satan by leading them unto the living fountaines of Israel it was shut up I say almost untill these times For hetherto the faithfull teachers took heed that this pestilent smoake might not spread it self over their Churches But now Antichrist having gotten the key into his hand unlocked as it were the verie gate of hell which before was shut But what is this surely nothing else but the Popes universal power by which he laboured not to open unto men the kingdome of God but on the contrarie to unloose the verie barrs of hell that so the world might rush headlong into the same Now the Pope opened this bottomlesse pit when by his authority hee established his filthy errours superstitions idols c. and tooke out of the Church the certainty of faith perseverance tormenting infusing into the consciences of men feares doubtings c. This was the porch or entrie into hell he opened therefore the bottomlesse pit for the destruction of all men like as hunters open caves pits whereinto the unwarie deere might fall and be taken This was the first effect of the key And there arose a smoak out of the pit This second effect is an exhalation of a pestilent smoake which necessarily followes the former as when an house of office is uncovered there ariseth a filthy stinke And it is called a smoake because it ascendeth out of hell as smoake doth from fire Moreover it is not a thinne but a verie thick smoke as of a great furnace like to bakers brickmakers smiths or the like This smoake is nothing els but the blacke and smoaky divinity of the Pope His wicked decrees touching images and idol worship his taking upon him to purge sins by masses penance satisfactions pilgrimages almes purgatorie jubilees pardons c the primacle of his Romish chaire his power in heaven and hell to be short the whole volumes of their Canons Decretals together with the inextricable toyes of Scholastick divinity by all which the Pope hath in very deed brought a thick smoake upon the Christian world establishing a mingle mangle of Iudaisme Paganisme in stead of Christianity oppressing the truth of Christ with most grosse darknesse Now the doctrines of Antichrist are compared to smoake from the effects thereof For as the smoake obscures the ayre hurts the eyes causeth such a darknesse that things cannot bee seen as they are and he which walketh in it is in danger to be stiffled or to fall down headlong even so is it with Antichrists smoake therefore it followeth And the Sun and the aire was darkned The Revelation expounds it self The fourth trumpet sounding the third part of the Sun Moon and Stars was smitten But here the whole Sun is darkened and so consequently the aire which is enlightned by the same This signifies the same evil with the former but more grievous For before onely a third part but here a totall defect of the light appeareth Nothing is more sad to behold then totall eclipses as happened in Aegypt at Christs passion For all things then are in darkenesse the day beeing turned into the night Now as Christ is the Sun of righteousnesse so nothing can be signified by this total darknesse but that universall Apostasie from the faith which the Apostle foretold should come to passe under Antichrist Vntill the times of Gregorie the third part of the Sun was smitten that is much darkenesse was brought into the Church by Bishops hereticks hypocrites hermites and monkes as we have before shewed upon the going forth of the black and pale horse as also at the sounding of the the third and fourth trumpet But after Gregorie Boniface at length and his successours sitting on the chaire of VNIVERSAL pestilence a horrible night darkened Christ the Sun in the Church for all places were filled with most grosse darknesse of Popish decrees traditions superstitions ceremonies lies fraud and Sophistrie The summe of all is this The darkening of the Sun which the Apostaticall Star brought in by his hellish smoake of Popish divinity doth exactly answer to that obscurity which happened at the opening of the sixt seal For the Sun was made black like sackcloth of haire the Moon was turned into blood the Stars fell from heaven unto the earth c. by al which as we there shewed is mystically set forth that horrible night of blindnesse which Christ suffered during Antichrists reigne But thou wilt say how can this darkenesse bee applied unto the Papacy seeing they professe the name of Christ beleeve him to be the saviour receive the Apostolicall faith and to be short acknowledge the holy Scriptures of God unto this day Now here I desire the reader to consider what I have before answered unto this faire pretence And what the Apostle said unto the hypocritical teachers of his time who under a shew of preaching Christ brought into the Church Iewish ceremonies and a flagitious licentiousnesse of life they professe that they know God but in workes they denie him The which how fitlie it agreeth to Antichrist the fathers of old as Hilarie Austin and others have wel observed It is true indeed in word hee professeth Christ but in workes he denies him For had he come as an open enemie of Christ he could never have invaded the kingdome of the Church but his comming was as the Apostle hath foretold with all deceiveablenesse of unrighteousnesse Thus we see that Antichrist under the name of Christ should oppose Christ and labour to destroy the faith of Christ out of the harts of men The proprietie of Antichrists name saith HILARIE is to be contrarie to Christ the which is now effected under the opinion of fained pietie This is now preached under shew of preaching the Gospell And indeed Christ while hee seems to be preached is denyed So AVSTIN Hee also is to bee esteemed the SON OF PERDITION who under the NAME OF CHRIST which is the name of God that is making shew of beeing a Christian extolles himself above Christ whence it appeareth that these fathers were of opinion that Antichrist under the name of Christ the faith of Christ should deny both But how is this don by the Papists This hath fully been manifested long agoe They pray unto the images of Marie made of stone wood gold c. Holy Marie queene of heaven heare us save us O thou our onely hope c. In thee O Ladie I trust Into thy hands O Ladie I commend my spirit The
world Now whereas the Lord hath hitherto spared the same it is to be ascribed to the prayers of the godly groaning under the dregs of Antichrist to the reformed Churches who with their whole hart doe loath his idolatrie dissipating to the uttermost of their power the smoake of Antichristian darkenesse by the light of the Gospell that so the glory of Christ and true godlinesse lost among the false Christians may againe be restored and flourish Hitherto hath been treated of the first Act of the third vision concerning the calamities of the Church under the Romane tyrants heretickes and hypocrites and of the Western Antichrist king of Locusts as also of the Eastern Angel with his armie of horses Which Act indeed so far as concerned the king of the Locusts was ended about the time of the Councill of Constans but as for the other namely the Turkish destroyer he shall continue unto the sound of the seventh trumpet which shal be bee heard in the last day Now followes the second Act of this vision as opposite to the former shewing remedies for these so great calamities or comforting the godlie under so long continued afflictions THE X. CHAPTER The Argument Vse Parts Analysis THe first Act of the vision was a declaration of the Churches calamities and a beginning of the amplification thereof during the time of the foure trumpets part of the fift sixt The second Act followes beeing consolatorie and opposed to the former calamities A mighty Angel defcends from heaven holding in his hand a booke open standing upon the earth and sea crying with a loud voyce as when a Lyon roareth insomuch as seven thunders uttered their voyces which Iohn went about to write but was commanded to seale the same The said Angel sweareth by God that the time of so great calamities should continue no longer the end and sound of the last trumpet now being at hand but first Iohn is commanded to cat up the little booke which he received of the Angel to prophesy againe All which are so many mysteries of consolation For the godly are taught that in the greatest disturbances and calamities of the Church which she hath still doth suffer by the Romane tyrants by hereticks and hypocrites and chiefly by both Antichrists that Christ I say will not be wanting unto her but will allwayes hold in his hand the booke of his doctrine open and set the foot of his kingdome upon the earth and sea by the roaring of his lyonlike voyce wil cause some faithful teachers to thunder out their voyces although during the most grosse darknesse of superstitions they shal be sealed and neglected untill at length according to Christs oath Antichristian tyrannie hastening to its end and the accomplishment of the divine mysterie beeing at hand God shall rayse up other witnesses of his truth who shall eat up the booke of the Gospell received out of the hand of Christ and againe strongly prophesying against Antichrist shall labour the reformation of the Church concerning which it followes Chap. 11. Thus the whole Chapter consists meerely of consolations for the afflicted Church the which beeing reckoned are sixe in number 1. Christ descends from heaven unto the Church afflicted by Antichrist therefore she shall not be left an orphant 2. He holds in his hand a booke open therefore his word shal not be suppressed 3. He sets his foot upon the earth and sea therefore both by sea land he will reserve some remnants unto himself neither shall his whole possession ever fall 4. By his Lyonlike roaring he makes the thunders to utter their voyces although they remained sealed therfore he will allwayes raise up some faithfull teachers however for a time they shall profit but little 5. Christ sw●ares that the time sbalbe no longer therefore Antichrist shall not rage perpetually but the calamities of the Church shall have an end 6. Iohn is commanded to eate the booke therfore before the last trumpet sound the Gospell shall againe be openly preached the Church purged from the dreggs of Antichrist The scope of all is that the Church faint not under the crosse but in confidence of the presence of Christ her judge and in hope of an happy issue allwayes rayse up her selfe The Chapter may be divided into two partes 1. TOuching the strong Angel unto vers 8. 2. Of the booke that was eaten up unto the end The first againe hath two parts First the Angel is described by six Epithites v. 1. Secondly foure Acts of the Angel are expounded 1. He holds in his hand a booke open vers 2. 2. He sets his right foot upon the earth and his left upon the sea ibid 3. He roares like a Lyon v. 3. The which is illustrated from the effect of the roaring viz. seven thunders thence utter their voyces as it were an Echo ibid and from a double consequent First Iohns desire to write the voyces and secondly the prohibition not to write but to seale the same vers 4. 4 He sweareth wherein we are to consider 1. The person of the swearer An Angel standing upon the sea and on the earth 2. His gesture He lift up his hand to heaven vers 5. 3. The forme of the oath By the living God the creator of all things vers 6. 4. The two things confirmed by oath That the time of troubles should be no longer ibid and that the seventh Angel sounding the mystery of God should bee consummated vers 7. The other part consists of a divine commandement with Iohns obedience the effect thereof In the commandement note 1. the efficient cause the voyce before heard from heaven vers 8. 2. A double argument that hee should take the booke out of the hand of the Angel ibid and to eate it v. 9. 3. A prediction of the the effect ibid Johns obedience 1. He takes the booke out of the Angels hand v. 9. 2. Having taken it he eates up the same v. 10. The effect of his obedience is twofold 1. internal a sweetning of his mouth but making his belly bitter vers 10. and external a new vocation to prophesie The which is amplified both from the efficient Thou must prophesie and from the forme againe prophesie as also from the object before many peoples nations and kings vers 11. The first part of the Chapter Of the strong Angel holding the booke 1. And I saw another mighty Angel come downe from heaven clothed with a cloud and a rainebow was upon his head his face was as it were the Sun his feet as pillars of fire 2. And hee had in his hand a little booke open and hee set his right foot upon the Sea his left foot upon the earth 3. And cryed with a loud voyce as when a lyon roareth and when hee had cryed seven thunders uttered their voyces 4. And when the seven thunders had uttered their voyces I was about to write and I heard a voyce from heaven
of Christs flesh hiding or covering his divinity Others for the obscure knowledge by which he revealed himself unto the world in the time of the sixt trumpet beeing as it were as yet covered with great darknesse making the sense thus hee appeared clothed with a cloud that is he manifested himself in an obscure or darke way unto the world For my owne part I take it according the manner of the scripture to be a signe of divine majesty For Iehovah was wont to appeare unto the people in a cloud 2 Chro. 6.1 the cloud also leading the people in the wildernesse sheltering them from the heat of the sunne was Christ Therefore he is clothed with a cloud to shew that he is Lord of a heavenly nature And the rainebow on his head The rainebow signifies grace beeing sett by God as a signe Gen. 9.13 that he would not send the floud any more upon the earth Christ therefore appeares crowned with a rainebow as the messenger of grace peace for he is our peace Eph. 2.14 the prince of peace Isa 9.6 This signe was very fit for the time confirming tidings of peace with God to the afflicted Church shortlie to rest from all her troubles and enjoy future happinesse His face was as the Sunne Thus also in Chap. 1.16 it is said Christs face shone as the sunne shineth in his strength that is it was most cleare shining in ful brightnes For hee is the sun of righteousnesse illuminating his Church clearing up the stormes of afflictions For as the sunne in its vigour dissipates the cloudes drives away cold alayes the windes and brings a serenity so Christ by the brightnesse of his spirit of grace will asswage the stormes of afflictions dissipate the tempests of calamities and bring unto the faithfull a quietnesse of conscience in the midst of all their troubles at last by the cleare beames of his countenance will dispell all manner of adversitie His feet as pillars of fire In Chap. 1.15 Christs feet were as fine brasse burning as in a fornace by which metaphor the power and strength of Christ is signified for pillars by their strength underprop support the house Fire consumes chaffe other things so Christ appeares here with such feet who by his power and strength will stand fast against the adversaries Antichrist the Church he will purge defend but consume the enemies like stubble Hitherto we have heard the description of the Angel who doth in this manner shew himself unto Iohn that the Church groaning under the burden of afflictions might know that Christ will come to revenge and relieve her deplorable condition especially under the fift and sixt trumpets for hee will be present with his Church in all her troubles because hee is crowned with a rainbow as also he is powerfull to asswage the tempests of calamities as having a face like the sunne whom the scorpionlike Locusts with their horses and Lyons heads and tailes like serpents shall no way terrifie or overthrow because by his feet as with fiery pillars he so settles his kingdome as it cannot be moved to be short hee easily can destroy Antichrist with all his Locusts arising out of the pit seeing he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mightie powerfull This is the scope and use of the description of the Angel 2 And he had in his hand a little booke open Now follow the Acts of the Angel which tend to the same purpose The first is that he holds in his hand a booke open This booke open is the same which before was shut Here it may be demanded whither this open booke bee the same with the former shut with seven seales I suppose it is the same because Christ under the forme of a Lambe received the booke that was shut unsealed and opened the same neyther doe wee read that he gave the booke being opened to any Now who can better hold the booke open then he that opened it here therfore Christ under the figure of a mighty Angel holds that book open in his hand which before he opened Neither is it any way cōtradictory that there it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a booke but here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little book seeing both words are derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a booke besides the book beeing opened was lesse then when it was shut or els it seemed to be lesse in waight when the seales were taken off or lastly it was lessened in regard many events were now revealed unto Iohn so that it contained not so many secret mysteries as it did before But what may bee the meaning Why Christ holdeth the booke open in his hand that Christ holds this little booke open in his hand The book was written within without within were contained the secrets of future things to bee revealed unto Iohn without was writtē the doctrine of the Gospell before published penned by the Apostles Christ opened the whole booke both because the Apostles were by him inspired and sent forth to preach the Gospell to the whole world as also because he revealed these mysteries unto Iohn Now least it might have been thought that by the great stormes tumults cruel devises of Tyrants Locusts the armies of horsemen the booke of the Gospell had been wrung out of the hands of Christ in regard that almost throughout the whole world the doctrine of free grace justifying faith and the certainty of salvation had of a long time been buried especially under Antichrists kingdom Therefore Christ now appears holding the same open in his hand thereby teaching us first that not withstanding the perfecution of tyrants the superstitions and lyes of Antichrist by which he darkened the doctrine of Gospell yet he held forth in his hand the booke of his word that is raised up continually some faithfull professours and teachers of the truth who maintained the same against all tyrants and Antichrists And indeed the bookes of martyrs and other ecclesiastical histories doe abundantly witnesse that there have been multitudes of such not onely during the persecution of the Romane Emperours and hereticks but also these thousand yeeres many under Antichrist condemned cruelly put to death for heresie But secondly it teacheth us that at last he will also purge his booke from the pollutions of the Locusts dregs of Antichrist by fit witnesses of his truth whom in the last times he will raise up for that end in the midst of Antichrists kingdome And he set his right foot upon the sea The following actions of the Angel illustrate the matter going before For in that he set his feet upon the sea and earth cried as when a lyon roareth caused the thunders to utter their voyces and sware by the living God all this tends to give us to understand that Christ suffered not the booke of his doctrine to bee wrung out of his hand neither by the Romane tyrants
to be approved off yet the eating of the booke doth make nothing for it Andreas and they which follow him perceiving that here is spoken of prophesying to come in the last times have imagined much like to the disciples of old that Iohn is not dead to this day but yet liveth with Enoch Elias in paradise with whom after Antichrist is risen he shall come and prophesie against him Touching whose opinion so much indeed is true viz that here is treated of a future prophesying under Antichrist but the rest is false and refuted by Iohn himself Chap. 21.23 All the forenamed opinions therefore are to bee joyned together and then the meaning will appear to be thus that here is a confirmation of the Prophet that he should not because of his banishment desist from his office but goe on to prophesie and thus the commandement may include a promise of his restitution into his former place Yet the heavenly voyce is further to be applied namely to the prophesying which should be renewed against Antichrist in the last times So that Iohn is commanded to eat up the book againe to prophesie not so much in his owne as in the person of all those witnesses of the truth who lived neer the end of the fift and sixt trumpets the sence is therefore that when Antichrist hath long enough raged then prophesying shall againe be restored against him c. Now to prophesie againe To prophesie againe what it is is to bring to light purge reforme wholy to restore to its former brightnesse the doctrine of the Gospell filthily polluted mangled brought to nought by Antichrists Locusts Againe for although the Apostles Pastors Teachers sincere Bishops had formerly published preached the Gospell yet afterward prophesie was oppressed by Antichrist and therefore it was behovefull it should againe be restored by the faithfull preachers of the word This I say must be don for otherwise Antichrist would have thrust Christ quite out of his possession troaden his Church under foot Therefore for the truthes sake of these divine praedictions that the Church perish not but that Antichrists abominations be wholy rooted out it was needfull that prophesie should bee renewed The Thunders indeed uttered their voyces but they did little good therefore other witnesses must be raised up who shall more strongly strike at assault weaken Antichrists kingdome Thus it is manifest that here is promised a reformation of the Church about the last times which shal be expounded in the following Chapter under the two witnesses who shall againe prophesie against Antichrist Before many people and nations and tongues and kings The successe of prophesie renewed is set forth for hereby many peoples nations and kings who before worshipped the beast shall embrace the Gospell forsake Antichrist The which how far it hath and yet daylie is accomplished both in Germanie France England Poland Bohemia Hungary Denmarke Suetia c. all may clearly see who doe not malitiously shut their eyes Thus wee see that here is a preparation and transition unto the following measuring of the tempie of God The Argument Parts Analysis of CHAPTER XI NOw are described the new combats of the two witnesses prophesie ministerie with the beast their martyrdome and vindication also the triumph of Antichristians because they were killed their astonishment and ruin and at last the seventh trumpet sounding the songs of joy and triumph of the Church in heaven also the last judgement the abolition of Antichrists kingdome with the fretting and punishment of the wicked Who are these two witnesses what events they doe prefigure of whom is very obscure Interpreters indeed every one according to his understanding have learnedly thought upon severall opinions But I hardly find one who satisfies himself and the reader And perhaps all humane understanding doth here faile For mine owne part I willingly confesse that herein I stick come short The obscurity chiefly consists in the defining of the moneths dayes and moments of times the resolution whereof cannot fully be had but by the bright beames of divine revelation Yet notwithstanding I doubt not but by blessing of God the observation of our method will afford us some little light in this mysterie Hitherto the two former Acts of this Vision have been Parallels as answering each to other The first was the proposition of the Churches calamities under the sound of the six trumpets that is under the heathen tyrants hareticks Apollyon the king of Locusts and Mahumet Chap. 8. 9. The second is of the comforts of the afflicted Church under the said enemies Chap. 10. Now followes the third Act Chap. 11. unto ver 15. which is an amplification of the foresaid calamities describing the renewed combats of the Saintes with the Westerne Antichrist The Westerne Antichrist more hurtfull then the Easterne as beeing much more cruell and hurtfull unto the Church then the Easterne considering how the latter tyrannized by open force and warr killing onely the bodies of them who submitted not unto his yoake whereas the other tyrannizeth over the soules with all deceiveablenesse of unrighteousnesse lying signes moreover torments the consciences of them who enslave themselves unto him with torments far worse then any kinde of death as we have heard in Chap. 9. But chiefly it describeth the occasion and cause of those combats namely the purging of the Evangelical doctrine from Antichristian defilements with the reformation of the Church by the preaching of the two witnesses in the latter times of the fift and sixt trumpets as also the successe of the reformation and what should happen both to the witnesses and also to Antichrist Lastly the fourth Act is added by the sound of the last trumpet relating the happie change of all former calamities in the last judgement when as Christ the judge destroying the kingdomes of his adversaries will render a reward unto his servants and punishment unto the wicked Chap. XI from vers 15. unto the end This method beeing observed the reason is plaine why the last judgment is againe treated of in the end of this Chapter now without this we grope in darknesse many imaginarie things are in vain devised The parts therefore of the Chapter are two I. FIrst a prophesie of the reformation of the Church under Antichrist unto vers 15. II. The sounding of the last trumpet from vers 15. unto the end The former part hath a twofold oracle The first general commanding Iohn to measure the temple that is to purge the Church from the filth and corruptions of Antichrist vers 1. To leave out the inward court and shewes the cause thereof vers 2. The second speciall declaring the manner of the future reformation viz. by the ministerie of two witnesses consisting of four particulars I. A description of the witnesses 1. From the time of their prophesie from their habit v. 3. 2. From their dignitie esteem with God v.
I am that they may behold my glory We shall be caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord and so ever be with the Lord. Therefore we shall all follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth not onely virgines or unmarried persons according to the flesh but all the faithfull who live chastly whither in a conjugall or unmarried life for in Christ there is neither male nor female but a new creature The same the old Church professeth in their hymne Gal. 3.28 6.15 O how glorious is the kingdome in which all the Saints rejoyce with Christ and clothed in white robes follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth Away therefore weith the Hieracites who beleeve that onely unmarried virgines shall follow the Lamb. What then It is certaine the chastity of the sealed is commended The chastitie of body and minde is praised And it is twofold viz. of body and spirit and both may be here understood If of the outward the sence will be These are not defiled with women that is by unlawfull copulation for no man appertaines to the company of the sealed but such as are chaste whither in widdowhood married or unmarried estate not that none of the sealed have ever beene defiled as may be seene in Lot Judah David Magdalene c. but because through faith they have purged themselves in the blood of the Lambe before their departure out of this life But if it be understood of spirituall Chastity the sealed are said not to be polluted with women that is with idolatry which is spirituall fornication but they are virgines to wit in spirit and faith Thus Austin interpreteth it They have not defiled themselves with women that is have renounced carnall lusts nor cleaved to idols strange gods heresies errours and wicked workes but are spirituall virgines of whom Christ is the Bridegrome So Ambrose on the words of the Apostle 2 Cor. 11.2 I have prepared you for one husband that I may present you as a chast virgine to Christ he will have them saith he to be virgines in faith such undefiled ones as Iohn in the Revelation doth assigne to Christ in the day of judgement These are they who have not defiled themselves with women for they are virgines these follow c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with women he interprets metaphorically with errours or heresies By women saith he he signifieth errour because errour began by the woman As before in Cha. 3. by the woman Iesabel he understood idolatry by which the manners and verity of faith are corrupted for if thou so understand women to thinke that therefore they are said to be Virgines because they have kept their bodies untouched thou excludest the Saints from this grace who all of them had wives the Apostles Iohn and Paul onely excepted By which he directly refutes Tertullian Jerom and Riberas depravation of this place as being absurd and wicked To whom Alcasar also consenteth understanding virginity here metaphorically of the integrity of life and doctrine and all such to be virgines who defile not themselves with an inordinate love of the creature But the observation of our Tossanus doth much delight me that here is an antithesis betwixt the faithfull and the inhabitants of the earth who have committed fornication with the Babylonish Whore making the sence to be thus These signed ones are not defiled with women that is they have not committed fornication with the great Whore but are virgines persevering in the faith and sincere worship of Christ To all these I adde which notwithstanding comes all to one thing that this title is to be compared with that in Chap. 7. These are they which have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. He speakes I say the same thing here in other words These are they which have not defiled themselves with women for they are virgines Our robes are carnall concupiscences these must be washed and made white in the blood of Christ through the remission of sinnes and white robes put on by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse and sanctification of the Spirit The signed therefore are said not to be defiled with women that is with carnall concupiscence and other sinnes because they have washed and made white their defiled robes in the blood of the Lamb. For they that are washed from their filthines are not defiled And they are virgines because they are made white in the blood of Christ that is justified and sanctified by the merit and spirit of Christ The sence as we see is all one And I doubt not but that the spirit had respect unto that which the Apostle expresseth more clearely And such were some of you but now yee are washed 1 Cor. 6.11 but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God They follow the Lamb whethersoever he goeth The fourth title is their individuall society with the Lamb Their inseparable communion with the Lambe which being referred to the state of their warfare notes the sincerity and constancy of their faith and obedience under Antichrist And it is an antithesis of that which is said Chap. 13.4 The whole earth wondred and followed after the Beast and vers 8. All the inhabitants of the earth worshipped the Beast These sealed I say have not followed the Beast but FOLLOW THE LAMB WHITHERSOEVER HE GOETH that is exactly walke in the precepts and steps of the Lambe whithersoever he leadeth them Now he leadeth them unto the fountaines of living waters Chap. 7.17 These therefore suffer not the decrees and idols of the Beast to be obtruded upon them but wholly cleave to Christ their guide But if we understand it of the sealed in the state of glory then this title must be expounded by that in Chap. 7. vers 15.17 These serve him day and night And the Lambe will feed them and lead them unto the living fountaines of waters In which words the most holy and blessed communion of the faithfull with God and the Lamb and their unspeakable happinesse is noted as we there observed These are bought from among men being the first fruits to God and the Lambe The fift commendation is an amplification of the second Their prerogatives they are the first fruits he said before that they were redeemed out of the earth here from among men the sence is one that is out of the multitude of vile and earthly men perishing under the captivity of Satan sin and death Now he addes to what they are redeemed The first fruits to God and the Lamb for that they may be the first fruits c. It is an allusion unto the first fruits under the Law the first of their ripe fruits being then consecrated to God in the feast of weekes These were most holy so the sealed are most deare to God and the Lambe The first fruits were peculiar to the Priests so these are a peculiar and elect nation a
the Beast he Anno 1371. thundred out the everlasting Gospel in England both in his Sermons and Writings against Antichrist Wickliffes doctrines against Antichrist Balae Cent. 6. c. 6. viz. That in Christs Church there ought not to be any supreme Bishop That the Pope is not the Vicar of Christ but Antichrist that is his priviledges bulls dispensations and indulgences were idle fruitlesse and wicked that ecclesiasticall officers ought not to have civill authority That the Pope and his Clergie had violently taken the Keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven and that neither themselves entred into the same nor suffered others to enter he disproved transsubstantiation Masses offices canonicall houres and other vaine bablings he disallowed the Chrisme in Baptisme and taught that the faithfull were to be baptized simply with water according to Christ example he condemned auricular confession as also the Popish doctrine of poenitence satisfaction and worship of relicks teaching that the Saints ought not to be called upon because they also are servants he utterly rejected the Romish rites new shadowes and traditions he denyed that it was lawfull for any to adde any thing in matters of religion which was not comprehended in holy writ or to make the same more difficult which he complained that the Pope had done He thought that the glorious temples and all the pompe and worship of the Papacy together with the diverse degrees of the Clergie ought to be taken away condemning the orders of Monkes as superstitious impious and very hurtfull to true religion and therefore ought speedily to be forsaken he maintained that the Lords supper ought to be administred in both kindes He wrote as Aeneas Sylvius witnesseth more then two hundred volumes most of them against the Papacy and the wicked life traditions and abuses of Monkes c. To Wickleffe were joyned many excellent instruments in England Richard Killington Robert Langland and others Many in Italy also as Dante 's Marsilius Patavinus Franciscus Petrarcha began to take notice of the Romish Antichrist Wickleffe also left many disciples behind him who after his death which was Anno 1387. manfully opposed Popery A while after the the two witnesses in Bohemia John Husse and Jerome of Prague began more forcibly to oppose Antichrist and plant the everlasting Gospell in the Churches of Bohemia which yet flourish and grow to this day About the same time Nicolaus de Clemangis a man as Trithemius witnesseth excelling in divine and morrall discipline in many Books opposed the Papacy Trithe de scriptor eccles but chiefly in his book of the corrupt state of the Church of yeerly pensions not to be paid to the Pope of the Simony of Praelates c. Adde to these all the witnesses of the truth which are recorded in the Catalogue of witnesses Tom. 2. lib. 19. Now let us consider the actions of this Angell He flyeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the middest of heaven Like to the Angell who Chap 8.13 proclaimed woe to the world but this here is more prosperous for he publisheth not woes but the everlasting Gospell Middest of heaven that is say some through the middest of the Church Others openly so as he might be seen and heard of al like as such things are conspicuous which appear in the middle of heaven For however the foresaid preachers remained in their places and Churches yet their doctrine and writings were spread through the whole Church Brightmans conjecture I dislike not that by this flying betwixt both is signified the imperfection of the doctrine first published by these teachers for however they saw and reproved the grosser sort of errours in Popery yet in many things they clave unto the dregs of earthly rudiments so as they could not with full flight soare up into the highest heaven for as a man being on a sudden brought forth into the light who along while was in darkenesse lookes upon all things with dazeling eyes so they who many ages together were kept in the darkenesse of Popery could not behold the light of the Gospell but with dimme eyes Having the everlasting Gospell The message or thing published by this Angell he sets forth by an excellent title calling it the everlasting Gospell by which is declared the authority effect and constancie thereof Antichrist indeed will condemne this his preaching and writings as haereticall and full of poyson and labour by the authority of Councils to represse and refute them not by arguments but by fire and sword So did he to Wickleffe whom first he greevously vexed by the Masters of Schooles and afterward thrusting him out of England into Bohemia though he were againe recalled by the King he miserably persecuted him untill his dying day Neverthelesse he went on constantly in teaching and writing And after his death the Councill of Constance caused his body to be taken out of the grave and together with his Writings to be consumed with fire The like they did to the two witnesses John Husse and Ierome of Prague condemning oppressing burning them as haereticks with their books and doctrines Now howsoever the Beast affrighted the world with this tyranny and kept the same a while under his yoke neverthelesse he gained nothing by it For there remained some remnants in England and Churches in Bohemia who constantly maintained the doctrine of those Martyrs untill this day The everlasting Gospell could not be suppressed For it was the Gospell brought by the Son of God out of the bosome of the everlasting Father to wit glad tidings of the remission of sin righteousnes and life eternall freely to be given through the faith of Christ The Gospell I say not of yesterdayes rising as Antichrist calumniates but everlasting revealed indeed from the begnining to the Fathers and Prophets but at length fully manifested and consummated by the Son of God and henceforward shall remaine eternally Whatsoever therefore the Beast and his sophisters indeavour and bable to the contrary yet they shall never be able to overthrow and suppresse the same To preach unto the inhabiants of the earth The effects and lawfull calling of these teachers is here maintained The lawful calling of Evangelicall teachers Gal. 1.7 touching which if Antichrist shall plausibly moue any question as from whom they received this new Gospell what Church before them held this faith by what miracles they can prove their calling c The holy Ghost answereth They have the everlasting Gospell The which is one onely received from Christ and the Apostles and of old abundantly confirmed by miracles so that there is no use of new And they have it to evangelize the same that is to declare and preach it to the inhabitants of the earth They have therefore a lawfull calling to teach in the Church To them that dwell on the earth Thus the followers and worshippers of the Beast the adversaries of Christ are continually called First then the difficulty of their charge is intimated they must have to doe with the
inhabitants of the earth grosse and earthly men superstitious maintainers of Antichristian idolatry obstinate adversaries from whom they shall suffer grievous contradiction Secondly the successe of their doctrine is noted not to be very great They shall labour indeed to reforme the Papacy Caecis sabulam canent Aethiopes lavabunt to call the blinde unto the light but according to the proverb they shall sing to the deafe and wash Black-moores because Antichrist will resist them by all meanes possible and labour to keep his kingdome in peace And indeed it shall be so by the just judgement of God For because the world rather loveth lies then truth God shall send them strong delusion that they should beleeve a lie that they all might perish who have not received the love of the truth 2 Thes 2.11 The consideration hereof serves both to illustrate the goodnesse of God who graciously caused the everlasting Gospel to be preached unto the inhabitants of the earth that is the sworne vassals of Antichrist drowned in superstitions and idolatry As also to lessen the scandall that we be not offended at the small successe the Gospel then had at that time For what wonder was it that the inhabitants of the earth received not the same who were accustomed to heare and beleeve nothing but the dreames and lies of Antichrist And to every nation and tribe This partition is taken from Chap. 13.7 signifying that the fame of this Gospell should be spread as farre as the Papacy did extend For however those teachers should remaine in their places yet their doctrine by their writings was made knowne every where and found adversaries in all places Before I goe further let us here take notice of one thing touching the devils subtilty Cyrillus feineth a new gospell We finde by history that a little before God raised up this Angell in England the devill had begun to spread abroad his eternall gospell through one Cyrillus a carmelite Monke consisting of most foule errours and monstrous opinions pretending that it was the everlasting gospell of this Angell And indeed the Monkes under pretext of this prophesie did readily imbrace the same because he confirmed their monasticall rites rules superstitions and fables He taught that the Gospell of Christ was to remaine unto this time but thence forward his new Gospel was to take place in the Church This was a wicked depravation of this prophesie 1 Pet. 1.25 Rom. 10.8 Rev. 2.25 Gal. 1.8 and blasphemie against the expresse word of God The word of the Lord remaineth foe ever This is the word of faith which we preach Hold fast that which yee have till I come If an Angel from heaven preach any other Gospell let him be accursed To this ungodly fiction many learned of that age opposed themselves insomuch that Pope Innocent himselfe was forced by the Lateran Council to condemne this impudent assertion because it also touched the Popes kingdome Some say Joachim the Abbot was the broacher hereof but it is false See Centur. Ecclesiast 13. cap. 5. To discover therefore the imposture of the Devill the Lord began to bring to light in the same age the everlasting Gospell here prophesied of by Wickleffe in England and by other teachers in other places We may easily Iudge which of these two was that everlasting and true Gospell For the one abolished the Gospel of Christ and writings of the Apostles The other brought forth the same out of darknesse The former therefore was false the latter true Saying with a great voice The zeale of the Angell in publishing the Gospell is commended And indeed the foresaid teachers performed their office with unwearied labour and paines both in teaching preaching disputing for when they came into the world the world was in a deep lethargie of superstitions drunken buried in the wine of the wrath of Babylonish fornication So that they were forced to cry aloud so mightily to the end that they might be heard of the drowzy or rather deafe inhabitants of the earth This voice is to be understood not onely of their preaching but writings also by which they manifested the doctrine of the everlasting Gospell Feare God The argument of his preaching hath three parts yet the whole is doctrinall and hortatory The first part is the feare of God which is the beginning of wisdome Here rightly the teachers begin Sometimes by it the whole worship but here properly is signified that part of worship which consists in the true knowledge and reverence of God and it is opposed both to the carnall security of the whole world whence ariseth prophanenesse and the wicked contempt of God as also to the preposterous feare by which Antichrist hath along time kept the world under his yoake Both these I will briefly now expound The Papacy did abound with security and feare Security feare in the Papacy This carnall security was fostered by their bewitching confessions absolutions satisfactions Masses indulgences c. No wicked act how great soever but by money and such remedies might be expiated Hence Gods judgement neither was or to this day is feared in the Papacy as having present remedy for their sins in their confessions satisfactions and indulgences Hence springeth that bruitish security and liberty to sin So againe the feare of Antichrist hath and still doth vex the world because it is held a greater offence to neglect the edicts of the Pope then to violate the commandements of God So that they were easily frighted with the feare of excommunication poenall satisfactions purgatory c. insomuch as Emperours and Kings were forced to kisse the feet of Antichrist yea all both great and smal did tremblinglie submit to his beck Now this Angell recalling the world both from this prophane security as also from their preposterous feare bids them FEARE GOD not the Beast for it is not the Beast but God that can cast both soule and body into hell fire Math. 10.28 And give glory to him Secondly he requires faith and obedience unto the Gospell for then is the glory of Gods truth goodnes and power truely attributed unto him when his word is received by faith and performed in obedience In the former member the Angel prepared the world for the Gospell because without the feare of God that is so long as prophanesse and contempt of God doth reigne there the Gospell findes no place By this other member he instructs them thus prepared to give glory to God by receiving his word in faith and conforme their life according to his commandements And indeed this is all God requires of us So Moses And now O Israel what doth Jehovah thy God require of thee Deut. 1.12 save that thou feare Jehovah thy God and walke in all his waies and love him with all thy heart For the houre of his judgement is come A reason confirming what he had said is taken from threatning of judgement at hand the serious consideration whereof
7.15 They serve God day and night But in a contrary sence for there is noted the continuance of the Saints their joy in heaven here the perpetuall torment of the damned In the meane while it appeares that by the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 day and night is signified alwaies perpetually and without intermission for however there be no light or day in hell but a perpetuall night or darknesse yet the holy Ghost speaketh after the manner of men who have dayes and nights interchangeably Who worship the Beast That the worshippers of the Beast might leave of to say that these torments are prepared for hereticks whom they so terme the holy Ghost doth expresly repeat that they are prepared for them that worship the Beast and his image Touching whom we have before treated And whosoever receiveth the marke of his name This is that large and Catholick symbole of the Romanists for as we heard Chap. 13. the Beasts name in Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lateinos in Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romanus 12. Here is the patience of the Saints An hortatory and consolatory exclamation unto the Saints to stir them up to patience under the trials of Antichrist not to decrease in faith and obedience under the crosse but looke up to the promised reward in heaven This is the summe of the two following verses The first member here is the patience of the Saints is taken out of Chap. 13.10 yet the scope is something different For there it was spoken in respect of Antichrists tyranny the sence therefore was thus seeing Antichrists tyranny is so great the Saints ought to prepare themselves patiently to endure lest falling from their constancy they make shipwrack of salvatiō Here it is spoken with respect unto the torments of the Antichristians Hence therefore the holy Ghost suggesteth an argument of patience to the Saints that seeing so tragicall an end is certainely to befall Antichrist and his followers therefore they ought quietly to endure his tyranny knowing the other are to suffer eternall punishment for the same which horrible destruction of the adversaries ought to provoke the Saints to constancy Here are they that keep A periphrasis of the Saints for they are called Saints not who are canonized in Antichrists Calender but the observers of the commandements of God and faith of Jesus and both is opposed to the false worship of the Beast The faith of Jesus is our confidence in Christ the alone Saviour The keeping of the commandements of God is obedience to the Gospell not according to Antichrists decrees but according to Gods Commandements Both these cohere for without obedience faith is hypocrisie here saith he are they that keep for henceforward they shall or let them keep that is we are exhorted to persevere constantly in the faith of Iesus and obedience of Gods commandements that we may be free from Antichrists punishments 13. And I heard a voice Thus much of the exhortation The consolation of the Saints followeth It is an argument stirring up to constancy taken from the reward of heavenly felicity for to use Brightmans words the last evill which the wicked could bring upon them is the meanes of the present felicity of the faithfull It is opposed to the temptation of anathemaes by which the Pope shall strike the three Angels accusing them as broaching a new Gospell That they were enemies of the Catholick Church and damnable hereticks On the contrary the heavenly voice pronounceth them Blessed c. this is the connexion and scope let us now see the words The particle and is continuative for Then as Beza renders it or causall for therefore be constant in the faith of Jesus and obey God against the Beast because or for I heard a voice The words are Johns declaring with what comfort the Saints should raise up themselves to constancy And whence he hath it I heard a voice from heaven Therefore being proclaimed from heaven it is certaine and true he saith not whither it were a voice of God or an Angell But it is the voice of Christ Ioh. 5.24 Ioh. 8.51 who published the same in the Gospell He that heareth my word and beleeveth in him that sent me hath life eternall and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life And If a man keep my word he shall never see death The heads of the voice are three I. a commandement to write II. The argument of the writing III. The proofe and declaration of the argument Write Before in Ch. 1.19 he had a general commandement to write the Revelation This is a speciall commandement to write the heavenly voice Bel l. 4. de verb. c. 4. touching the blessednesse of such as die in the Lord. Both places teach against the Iesuites that the Apostles were commanded by Christ not onely to preach but to write their doctrine Now wherefore is he bid to write That we might understand the dignity of this doctrine the which the holy Ghost would not have to vanish in the aire but to be set down in tables that it might perpetually serve for the consolation of the Church and that Antichrist might not in any wise be able to deny deprave or suppresse the same Write to wit to comfort the Saints and refute the monstrous judgement of Antichrist touching the godly that they are damnable hereticks to refute also the wicked fiction of Purgatory in which they say that the soules of them that die in the Lord are first to be tormented before they can enjoy felicity Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforward By the second argument of this most comfortable writing the dead in the Lord are declared to be blessed by which is refuted the prophanenesse of Epicures who say that death is the end of things and that the dead are wholly brought to nothing And the wicked opinion of Antichrist touching the unhappy estate of the godly by him accursed as hereticks But the heavenly voice pronounceth them blessed in death Therefore Antichrists beastly thunder-bolts should not terrifie us But let us see who are said to be blessed and when Of the former it is said Who being dead are said to be blessed Mat. 5.11 What it is to die in the Lord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the dead who die in the Lord. Beza renders it which die for the sake of the Lord or because of the Lord according to the saying Blessed are ye when men shall say all evill against you falsly for my sake The which Ribera also approves And so indeed the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Lord do sometimes signifie as Rom. 16.1 Receive Phebe our fister in the Lord as becommeth Saints that is for the sake of the Lord. Salure Amplius my beloved in the Lord. Salute the beloved Persis which laboureth much in the Lord that is for the cause of Christ Thus taken the consolation should onely belong to Martyrs that die in the
not worship the first to be slaine How they overcame the beast how then do they conquer seing they are slaine I answer the victory of the Saints is spirituall They are indeed bodily overcome and slain by the Beast suffering punishments and torments this way yet spiritually they overcome the beast while by refuting and condemning his false and idolatrous worship they constantly persist both in life and death in the true faith of Christ This is the victory of the holy Martyrs and Confessours of which it is said 1. Ioh. 5.4 The victory that overcometh the world is our faith It is bloody indeed and not obtained without great resistance yet it so far excelleth all the triumphs of Alexander and Caesar by how much the Beast is more cruell then those Monarchs They by force of armes brought some part of the world under their power But to this Beast the Dragon gave great power so as the whole world followed and wondred after the same This victory of the Saints John makes as it were fourfold The victory of the Saints foretold I. They got the victory over the beast that is over Antichrist himselfe whose power threatning and Tyranny they despised and contemned cleaving constantly unto Christ II. Over his Image to wit which he caused to be made for him by the Inhabitants of the earth This we have shewed to be that whole Idol worship by which the worshippers of the Beast rage againstall who refuse to adore him and his Image Now to contemne this so great a madnesse and overcome it by their blood is to get the victory over the Image of the beast III. Over his character viz. which the second beast caused to be imprinted in the right hand or foreheads of the worshippers of the first beast Chap. 13. verse 16. This we shewed to be both a common and speciall obligation to the profession and worship of Antichrist Over this Character the Saints and Professours get the victory when they cast off the beasts religion and constantly refuse to be obedient unto him IV. Over the number of his name which in Chap. 13. vers 8. he shewed was 666. being Antichrists nationall name expressed in the Hebrew letters of ROMANVS and the Greek LATEINOS as before we shewed Over this number and name also the Saints get the victory by communicating no more in the Romish Idolatry Latine service Masses c. This is the victory for which the company of harpers sing songs of Prayses to God Whether these harpers are the Martyrs or other Professours But are these harpers the Martyrs in Heaven or the faithfull in the Church Militant Some interpret it of the Church Triumphant others of the Church Militant applying it to the Protestant Churches in Germany France England and other places who are said to have overcome the beast by casting off the yoake of the Pope having obtained the liberty of a more sincere doctrine from their Emperours and Kings For my part I understand it simply to be the same company of harpers who in the foregoing Vision Chap. 14. ver 3. by a new song did gratulate the company of sealed ones standing with the Lambe on Mount Sion Neverthelesse Brightmans opinon is not altogether to be rejected because the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who overcome is in the present tense for if the triumphant Church were onely meant hee would have said in the preterperfect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or in the Aorist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who have or had gotten the Victory The participle therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being put in the present doth also include such who obtain Victory over the beast even in this life Furthermore from this place there ariseth unto us a most sweet consolation touching the spirituall victory we obtaine over the beast by the sincerity and constancy of our faith although the Beast bite kicke persecute and kill us It serves also to stir us up stoutly to resist him Besides it furnisheth us with three things for the true understanding of the foregoing matter The Sea-beast is Antichrist First that the former beast ascending out of the Sea could not be the old Romane Empire but necessarily Antichrist The reason is because these holy harpers sing not a triumphant song for any conquest they had over the Romane Empire seeing they never made war against it for Christians according to the precept of the Apostle were allwayes obedient to Emperours The Sea-beast and that rising out of the earth is the same Antichrist but they celebrate the victory over Antichrist with his sinfull deceits and inventions Secondly that the first and second beast in a divers respect denotes one and the same Antichrist as before we have declared The reason is because one that is the former is onely mentioned who being overcome the latter was so likewise Now the Saints rejoyced and sung because Antichrist was overcome Thirdly Antichrists Kingdome cannot bee straitned to four years that Antichrists Kingdom cannot possible be restrained to the space of foure yeers as the Papists will have it The reason is because many Martyrs and Professours had already gotten the victory over Antichrist before the Plagues were poured out upon the throne and worshippers of the beast Now all the plagues cannot be comprehended within so short a space but must longer torment the followers of Antichrist as we shall see hereafter Therefore it necessarily followes that Antichrist bare sway and made war with the Saints long before those foure yeers forasmuch as here it is said he was overcome by them Thus much touching the persons of the Harpers now let us see where they were I saw as it were a sea of glasse Lyra whom Gagnaeus followeth makes this sea the Sacrament of Baptisme which is glasse that is pure mingled with fire that is with the regenetating grace of the holy Ghost Andreas will have it to be meant of the multitude of them that shall be saved in which sence the sea and harpers should be the same which is not proper Lambertus of the large knowledge of the truth Brightman the doctrine of the Gospell said to be glasse that is perspicuous and clear but mingled with Fire to wit of contentions and strifes which Satan hath raised amongst the teachers of the Gospell But these opinions I passe by Before in Chap. 4. verse 6. John saw before the throne a sea of glasse like to chrystall which is the purest glasse Now here he sees the same sea It denotes the world of wicked men Ribera rightly calls it the multitude following Antichrist for the sea is called a gathering of waters The waters are the wicked nations obeying Antichrist as in Chap. 17. And Ierem. 51.42 Cyrus Army that vanquished Babylon is called a sea comming up upon her and covering her with the multitude of the waves thereof The sea therefore is a gathering of people or the whole multitude of the ungodly that is the world tossed like
councels by whose authority chiefly after the sixt age the Monarchicall power of the Romish chaire was established thus it should be the same Therefore Brightman doth not unfitly as it seemes determine that this sea is the Councell of Trent into which from the yeer 1545. unto 1563. under five Popes viz. Paulus 3. Julius 3 Marcellus 2. Paulus 4. and Pius 4. the Rivers and Fountaines out of all parts of the Antichristian world did unburthen themselves as it were into a Sea that is thither were gathered 9. Cardinalls 3. Patriarchs 33. Archbishops 233. Bishops 7. Abbats 8. Generalls 4. Counsellours at Law 149. Divines 11. Vicars of Bishops in all 467. together with an infinite number of servants Pages and Scullions out of every Nation Tribe and tongue For the Angells going forward to pour out Gods Vialls that former grievous ulcer compelled the Antichristians to flow to the Latine Sea to get remedy for their disease But what was done The waters of the sea became as the blood of a dead man that is corrupted and mortall hence every soule living in the sea dyed for the Decrees of Trent were bloody that is written and so indeed generally they were with the blood of hereticks But being false and destructive by their filthy and deadly savour they killed the soules of all living creatures swimming or seeking for life in this sea CHAP XVI The pouring out of the Third Viall on the Rivers and Fountaines of Waters 4 And the third Angell poured out his Viall upon the Rivers and Fountaines of waters and they became blood 5 And I heard the Angell of the waters say Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shalt be because thou hast judged thus 6 For they have shed the blood of Saints and Prophets and thou hast given them blood to drinke for they are worthy 7 And I heard another out of the Altar say Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy judgements THE COMMENTARY 4. ANd the third Angell poured out This Angell poures out the wrath of God on the Rivers and Fountaines of Waters which became blood Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the old version renders and blood was made but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to bee referred to the Rivers and Fountaines of Waters They to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Waters became blood The sense of this effect the Angel will declare verse 6. Thou gavest them blood to drinke for thou didst shed their blood because they shed the blood of thy servants The turning therefore of the waters into blood denotes a bloodie vengeance on bloodthirsty adversaries Hence it appeareth that this plague is divers from the former although in both there be an allusion unto the first Egyptian plague Now we are to see who these wicked are here signified by the Rivers and Fountaines Lyra thinkes Charles the Great to be this Angell Lyras opinion who poured out the Viall that is the vengeance of God upon the Rivers and Fountaines of Waters that is on the Moores or Hunni who anciently inhabited neer the Poole Maeotis where there are many bublings of waters after the manner of fountaines And they became blood because Charles his army killed many of the Hunni But he erres from the scope Ribera also here urgeth the letter but absurdly For have ever the Rivers and Fountaines shed the blood of the Saints according to the Letter Rib. opinion Or hath God given blood to drinke to the Fountaines Gagnaeus therefore doth more rightly apply it metaphorically to the persecutors of the godly Gagnaeus opinion because rivers and flouds of waters do often in Scripture denote grievous persecutions Now it may bee demaunded who these Persecutours are Foxe understands it of the Romane tyrants Foxe his opinion who by Ten persecutions shed the blood of Saints in abundance to whom likewise God gave blood to drinke because scarcely one of them dyed a naturall death But neither is this to the scope for it is certaine this place intends not the punishment of the adversaries of the primitive Church but the last plagues of Antichristians Others of our Interpreters come neerer to the scope understanding the rivers and fountaines of Waters the f●●se Prophets and false teachers of Antichrist Bullinger Marlorate because Peter calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fountaines or wells without water that is deceivers for as dry wells frustrate the hope of the Traveller 2. Pet. 2.17 who thinkes to find water in them and doth not so false Prophets deceive such who looke for sound doctrine and consolations from them whatsoever they promise or make shew of Notwithstanding these also shew not who are here meant nor do they sufficiently unfold the kind of the plague here signified but keep for the most part to the thesis that to Antichristians the waters become blood that is unprofitable yea deadly to drinke of for as to the godly all things yea even their sinnes do work ●●gether for their salvation so to the ungodly the good creatures of God ●●come a curse and are turned to their destruction This indeed is true but expresseth not the meaning of the prophesie because that which followeth Thou gavest them blood to drinke doth not cohere with this sense for God gave not blood to drinke to these rivers and fountaines that is layd not a cruell punishment on them in regard they had shed the blood of the godly Therefore such false Prophets are not here simply to be understood who onely by their false doctrine kill the soules which the Sea of Trent did by its filthy and corrupt blood killing all that tooke in the same which was the second plague But such cruell false prophets who either with their owne hands or by their bloody counsells and condemnatory sentences shed the blood of innocent Christians But who are they We must keep to the Allegory of the Sea Rivers and Fountaines The sea hath its continuall course and is nourished by the flowing waters of rivers and fountaines so likewise the fountaines and rivers have their moistnesse from the vapour of the Sea hence they are rightly called the breasts of the Sea because they both suck for themselves and give nourishment to the Sea The Sea was the gathering together of Bishops and Doctors in Councill The Rivers therefore and fountaines of Waters who are they but Bishops and Doctors not indeed belonging to the Councell yet chief Antichristian Pillars and Champions for Popery Thus also in Chap. 8.10 the Rivers and Fountaines were Bishops and Doctors of the Church viz. the successours of Pope Sylvester whom he being corrupted through the favour and liberality of Constantine drew with himselfe from Heaven into the Earth and made bitter the wholsome and sweet Doctrine of Christ by the wormewood of humane traditions as there I declared Therefore here also the Rivers and Fountaines are Bishops and Teachers but in time diverse from them Those were made bitter before Antichrists
alas that great City The Merchants shall imitate the howling of the Kings but speak of their merchandize of fine linnen purple scarlet gold pearles and pretious stones the which they be waile not onely as being now consumed in this fire but also because they should never trafficke any more with such like wares 17. And every Shipmaster After the Kings and Merchants of the earth Seamen also shall mourne who are divided into four rankes first Masters or Governours of Ships signifying Cardinals Patriarchs Archbishops of the greater Nations 2. Pilotes or Masters mates being in company and fellowship with the former as the familiars and domestickes of Cardinalls have partners in profit and losse 3. Sailers Bishops of inferiour note and Abbates Gardians Priors Rowers in Peters boate 4. As many as trade or gaine by Sea the whole Clergie as Canonists Regulars Monkes Jesuites Capuzines who helpe forward and live upon the profits of the Romish Court. Shall stand afarre off Not daring to approach for feare like the Kings and Merchants Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Cryed by a propheticall certaintie he rehearseth the thing as if it were done Now they shall testifie their feare and astonishment First in words by crying What City is like to this City from Ezech. 27.32 Till now they boasted that the gates of hell should not prevail against Rome But they shall grievously bee astonished by her unexpected destruction Experience therefore shall be the Mistresse of these fooles Secondly they testifie their feare by gesture of which it followeth 19. And they cast dust on their heads Like unto sad Mourners as Joshua 7. the Israelites mourning for the sacriledge of Achan threw dust upon their heads so did the messenger that brought tidings of the Israelites overthrow 1. Sam. 4. And Iobs friends Chap. 1. But the mourning of these shall be more grievous then the other because the destruction of Babylon will more grievously touch their Kitchings Therefore lamenting they shall sing the same Funerall-Song with the Kings and Merchants bewailing not the sins and abominations of Rome neither their own offences against God but the losse of their riches all occasion of encreasing their treasures being taken away and because they shall no longer furnish the Clergy with their merchandize but be faine to feed on brown bread as the saying is This is a Judas-like repentance for they mourne not because they have sinned but because they may sin no longer The Songs of the righteous sound otherwise Just art thou O Lord and righteous are thy judgements Is made desolate This desolation is again and again inculcated that Rome may not question but that it shall certainly come to passe though she now securely mockes at the same In one hour Suddenly and in a moment so said the Kings ver 10. and in one day ver 8. 20. Rejoyce over her thou Heaven We have heard the wickeds lamentation on earth Now followes the Saints rejoycing in Heaven unto which the second heavenly voyce exhorts them It is an Apostrophe unto the Heaven the holy Apostles and Prophets to Rejoyce over her that is over her destruction Some by Heaven understand the Church By the Apostles and Prophets the Publishers of the Gospell that then shall be But it appeares to be a Propheticall Prosopopoeia as Isa 1 2. Heare O Heavens to testifie the greatnesse of their joy Before Heaven mourned because of Babylons sins heaped up to Heaven ver 5. Now it is bid to rejoyce because so great filthinesse is taken away Or it is a Synecdoche Rejoyce O Heaven for Ye Angels and other heavenly inhabitants Thus I rather take it because of that which followes Chap. 19. ver 1. By the name of Apostles and Prophets are meant the soules of the holy Martyrs slaine by the Romane Tyrants and Antichrist for professing the doctrine of the Apostles and Prophets which we may gather from ver 24. In her is found the blood of the Prophets and yet we read not that any of the old Prophets were slaine at Rome which I mention because of Riberas starting-hole on Chap. 14. verse 8. where he denies that Papall Rome is Babylon because not Popish but Heathenish Rome killed the Apostles Peter and Paul but in vaine saith he should the Apostles and Prophets be commanded to rejoyce over the vengeance of Popish Rome by whom they were not killed but it is false for Heaven and the Prophets also are bid to rejoyce over her although neither Heaven nor the Prophets were slaine by her The soules therefore of the ancient and latter Martyrs to whom requiring God to avenge them before the time were given White robes that they might in the meane while rest content with their felicity are now at length bid to rejoyce because the time of vengeance is at hand yea because God had now avenged their blood and abundantly answered their desire This cause of joy is added For God hath avenged you on her In the Greeke the Hebraisme is very Emphaticall Because God hath judged your judgement on her For both the cause of their Martyrdome is approved that it was a judgement that is righteous and pleasing to God as also the punishment of Babylon is wholly attributed to God the Iudge and the avengement of the innocent blood of the Saints is made the most righteous cause thereof But he seems to command rejoycing over evill not in the least But bids them to rejoyce because the riot and tyrannie of Babylon is repressed and the Church freed from the same as also because Gods glorie is vindicated from the blasphemies of the ungodly Now the deliverance of the Church the suppressing of the wicked the vindicating of Gods glorie and Declaration of Gods righteousnesse in punishing the ungodly are not evill things but excellent and the most just judgements of the Lord. So that the Heavenly Inhabitants are bid to rejoyce not over evill but good things And this is the meaning Psal 58.10 whensoever in Scripture the Saints are commanded to rejoyce over the enemies The righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked where straightway a reason is added A man shall say Verily there is a reward for the righteous Doubtlesse there is a God that judgeth in the Earth Whence it appeareth that this rejoycing of the Godly is opposed to two weightie Tentations I. Least it might bee thought Godlinesse should want its fruit II. Least the Godly might seeme to be quite forsaken of God under the Crosse If therefore thou object To rejoyce over anothers harme is prohibited otherwhere but here the Saints are bid to rejoyce over other mens harmes Therefore they are commanded to doe that which is forbidden in other places The Assumption is false Or there are four termes for to rejoyce over evils as they are evils and torments not as they are a righteous avengement and an illustration of Gods glory is
Popish Rome is the woman sitting upon many waters 443. And the seat of Antichrist 444. Popish idolatry is fornication 456. The Powring of the first Viall on the earth 378. Of the second Viall 380. Diverse opinions about it 381. Of the third viall and divers opinions about it 382. Of the fourth Viall 385. Of the fift Viall 388. Of the sixt Viall 390. Of the seventh Viall 398. Power received from the Dragon 298. Six effects of the Beasts power 308. 309. Preachers of Gods word how they inflict plagues 376. Praedestination must be taught though many abuse this doctrine 584 The Praerogative of being the first fruits to God is an allusion unto the first fruits of the Law 336. Praetence of Antichristian tyranny is false 241. The vain pretence of Idolaters 242. Priesthood common to all the faithfull 14. Priscilla a false Prophetesse 49. Priscillian declared an heretick by the Pope 129. The Prison is put for all kinde of torments 40. Priviledges of Antichrists marked ones expressed in the Bull of Pope Martin V. 314. Promises how far they become debts 250. The Prophets and Apostles wrought not miracles by their own power 50. To Prophesie again 208. To Prophesie is to Preach Propheticall and Apostolicall Doctrine 224. A Prophesie of the future condition of the Godly under Antichrist 121. A prophesie found in the house of the Governour Salezianus 440. The Prophesie why sealed 583. A Proverbiall description of the ungodly despairing 133. Punishments of the wicked 251. 252. Purgatory 357. Puritie of the Saints whence it cometh 90. Q. QVadratus a disciple of the Apostles 64. A Question concerning the order of the Revelation 365. Quintilla a false Prophetesse 49. R. REligious worship of Angels expresly condemned in Scripture 9. Religious worship unto the Creature simply denied 582. It being a most horrible unpiety 486. The Reasons of the Angel against the worship of Angels cannot be taken away by Idolaters 486. The Red horse is the Church of Martyrs 110. On whom Christ is said to ride 111. To Render the double to Antichrist how it agrees with Equitie and Justice 461. 462. Remedie of pride 77. 78. Repentance described 34. 49. If true comes never to late 79. Why it is necessary 387. Representation of the state of the Primitive Church 106. Reprobates divided into Eight rancks 555. 556. The Rest of the dead who 517. The Rest of the womens seed who they are 279. Their Epithetes ibid. The Revealing of future things is proper to God alone 3. The Revelation It treateth of future things 5. How Iohn received it ibid. It was written by the Evangelist John ibid. It is an holy canonicall book of divine scripture 6. Containing excellent doctrines precepts and promises of the Churches deliverance and of the marriage of the Lamb 6.7 It hath many phrases proper to it self and excelling 8. Where John saw and wrote the same how and on what day 18. 19. Whither the whole was revealed in one Lords day 20. Revenge in the Saints how it can stand with piety and charitie 461. 462. Reward due and not due 586. Reward of the just is blessednes of the unjust exclusion out of the heavenly city 591. 592. Reward in heaven or degrees of glory may be different seeing there shall be degrees of punishment in hell 71. Rewards propounded unto them that overcome 72. Of whom there are three rancks 249. Ribera taxed 14. 20. His opinion of the four Angels 137. His argument not solid 138. His litterall exposition cannot stand ibid. His opinion of the Angel with the Censer 153. His reasons answered 154. His salving of Papall Rome 346. His eschappatories answered ibid. His new fiction in the Popes behalf refuted 347. His reasons touching Romes falling away examined 348. He commits crimen laesae majestatis against the Pope ibid. Contradicts himself and actuseth the Pope of extreme negligence ibid. His fiction refuted 409. 410. 411 c. His false opinion of the beast refuted 416. With the common opinion of expositors about the same ibid. His quaere why evill spirits rather frequent the deserts then populous places 455. The true cause thereof laid down by the Author ibid. Ribera refuted 514. He refuteth Bellarmins fiction 535. He confesseth the Pope shall be thrust out of Rome 441. A Ridiculous Etymologie of the word Apocalyps 3. The true Etymologie thereof ibid. Rivers and fountains are the breasts of the Sea 383. Romane Legions of how many soldiers they consisted 132. Romane Merchants buy and sell the souls of men 456. 457. Rome had no Epistle sent her from Christ and why 22. She is the calamity and destruction of the Christian Church 215. Her relapse to Paganisme 347. She must be burnt not before but after Antichrists comming 441. Whether Antichrist shall be abolished at Romes burning ibid. The Ruine of Old and New Babylon set forth by the same type 470. Ruine of the tenth part of the great city 245. The Rule of Articles with the Greeks is not alwayes observed 100. 307. 406. 410. 437. The Rule of finall causes 448. Rupertus opinion of the four Angels 136. He by winds understandeth teachers of Christian belief 138. His opinion of the Angel with the Censer 153. S. SAbinian a proud Bishop 127. Sackcloth of hair 127. Signifies Romane traditions 128. The Saints weaknesse at the beholding of the Divine Majestie 25. How farr the Saints may fall away how not 34. The Saints shall with Christ judge the world 104. How they require vengeance on the wicked 120. They may not be called upon neither do intercede for us 122. nor pray for the Church Militant 147. The Papists transform them into tutelar Idols ibid. How the Saints have right to Christ 591. Saladin Emperor of Egypt 190. Saphyr a Gemme of India 564. Saracens invading the provinces of the Romane Empire 186. Sardica a city of Illyria 54. The Sardine its colour and vertue 87. 565. Sardonix 565. Satan His proper domicile 44. He dwelleth in the children of disobedience ibid. His casting down into the earth is mysticall 266. 267. His Epithetes ibid. His action against the Saints 269. Why he was bound 502. 503. How he must be let loose again 505. 531. His twofold attempt 531. The Scripture must be read of all 583. It s twofold effect 584. The Scriptures are authentick and perfect 596. The Sea of Chrystall is the world 90. Diverse opinions about it 91. Why a third part of the sea was turned into blood 160. The Sea swalloweth up the great mountain 161. The Sea out of which the Beast ascended 288. The Sea of glasse is the world of wicked men 368. Why said to be of glasse ibid. The Sea into which the second viall was powred 381. The Sea renewed 551. The Sea-beast who it is according to Pareus 287. Seales their twofold use 97. The generall signification of the seales 107. The Seal of the living God 140. imprinted on the Elect 141. 142. The Sealed ones distribution according to the severall tribes of
the Churches of Asia as Ebion Cerinthus and others who though they boasted themselves to be Apostles yet in truth were the professed enemies of the Godhead of Christ corrupting true religion and perverting the faith of many Act. 20 29. of whom Paul had forewarned the elders of this Church For it is the duty of teachers to defende the purity of faith and strongly to oppose such devouring wolves so to follow the example of the Angel of this Church who for this cause is greatly commended by Christ our Lord. Vers 3. And hast borne and hast patience He setteth forth more clearly his patience pointing at some special kinde of affliction either imprisonmēt or stripes which he had manfully sustained Before Christ saith he could not beare and here saith he had borne but there is no contradiction for there he spake of his not suffering of impenitent sinners in the Church and here of his patient bearing of afflictions for the Gospels sake And for my names sake hast laboured The vulgar as likewise Montanus doe somewhat differ from these words but without all doubt this is the proper and naturall reading of the place agreeing with the greater and lesser copies of Robert Stephanus imprinted at Paris For it appeareth that his labour and unwearied indeavours in sparing no paines to preach and maintain the faith of Christ is again commended that all might imitate the like diligence and faithfulnes in teaching for in this Angel we may behold a true paterne of a faithfull Bishop But now who would not thinke hearing so great commendations from Christ himself that he had been perfect in every respect and worthy of deserved reward Iob. 15 15 but the following reproofe sheweth the contrary and indeed God the heavenly judge seeth not perfection in the very best of the saincts 4. 2 part of the narration But neverthelesse I have somewhat against thee In the second part of the narration he reproveth him because he had left his former love Ambrose thinketh that he is blamed for a generall remisnesse and omission of his former zeal and indeavour in holy duties For security sometimes doth lessen the zeale even of the Godly so that they have need to be stirred up and provoked to holy duties Andreas understandeth that he is in speciall rebuked for not shewing as he ought● his wonted love and charity to the poore And indeed it seemeth that he began by little and little to be covetous desiring to heap up wealth and so grew negligent of doing good to the strangers and poore brethren now covetousnes is the roote of all evill and most abominable in the teachers of the word for it is one of the principall vertues in a Bishop to be given to hospitality and to be a lover of it 1 Tim. 3.2 Tit. 1 8. And this seemeth to be the reason wherefore the cannon law allowed to Bishops one forth part of the Church revenues to the end they should be liberall the rest was given to the poore other uses It is probable therefore that this Angel otherwise an excellent teacher is here taxed for coveteousnes From whence we first observe that the godly faile in many things and have need to be stirred up by admonitions and reproose specially when either they grow cold in their good affections or are overcome with the cares of this present world and the desire of wealth and honour For the devil doth chiefly labour to ensnare all teachers by such baits and therefore they ought so much the more to take heed least hereby beeing overcome they become a scandall to the Church of God Observe secondly that ambition and coveteousnesse in ministers are the most lothsome vices that may be and therefore they ought to be the more carefull for to avoid the same We have an example of ambition in the disciples For when Christ spake to them of the crosse they were troubled about preeminency asking who of them should be the greatest Ciprian saith wittily that ambition doth sweetly sleepe in the bosome of the ministers of the Church And as for coveteousnes or desire of filthy lucre by how much it is detestable by so much the more it doth cleave and deeply roote it self in their harts hence it is that Creon in Sophocles saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is The whole priestly generation is given to coveteousnesse And certainly all the sacrilegious sale of holy things simony pride and luxurie which reigne in the Romish Church was ingendred by coveteousnes and at length by little and little overthrew the truth of Christian religion according to the Latine proverb Religion begate riches but the daughter deroured the mother For as Ierom wel observeth In vita Malchi after that the Christian Church had Emperors to be members thereof it increased indeed in power and riches but decreased in vertue and godlinesse giving us to understand that where coveteousnes and pride have gotten the upper hand there vertue and religion is cast off and oppressed Observe thirdly though Christ doth commend the excellent workes labour constancy of the Angel of this Church yet he was so farr from acknowledging any merit in him as that on the contrary he sharply reproves him for many grievous evils and threatneth to cast him off except be repent For Christ doth narrowly see and observe all our actions and strictly weigheth all our workes in the ballance Wherefore God forbid we should imagine to merit by any good we doe though indeed hypocrites commonly so thinke whereas the word of God doth testifie that all the workes even of the most holy men on earth are polluted with sinne and all our righteousnesses are as filthy ragges Isay 64.6 if God should enter into judgement with us Besides we can do nothing but what we are bound to doe for we are debrors to the law And therefore can not by our good works Ro. 8.12 to which we are debtors deserve any thing at the hands of God Observe in the last place that it is not enough to begin wel but if we looke for the recompence of reward we must persevere in wel doing unto the end For hypocrites at first seeme very zealous but afterward they grow luke warm and at last are altogether cold and so receive not the crowne of glory at the last day 5. Remember from whence thou art fallen This is the third part of the narration being matter full of reproofe First the teacher is exhorted to consider his fall Secondly to repent of his many evils Thirdly carefully to practise all his former holy workes of love and charity now neglected So that in this exhortation we have briefly the nature of true repentance propounded unto us First to take notice of the sinne committed A description of repentance for how else should we sorrow for
it shall not bee so for the end is neere at hand as Christ swearing by himself confirmes to the end we might no way doubt thereof so that this Oath serves both for the confirmation of his promise and for our consolation also neyther indeed doth Christ use on oath without waighty cause for Antichrist had so established his possession as that it seemed impossible that his kingdom should be overthrown Therefore Christ sweareth that there should bee no more time to wit sad and mornefull unto the Saintes as hitherto it had been under tyrants and especially under Antichrist who onely bearing swaye tyrannized over all insomuch as no man might contradict him unlesse he meant to die for it by fire or sword But there shall follow other times wherein shal be a reformation of the Church the last down fall of Antichrists kingdome The mysterie of God shall be finished When In the dayes of the seventh trumpet that is so soon as it shall begin to blow then shall be the end of the sixt trumpet the end of the Churches calamities the end of Antichristian tyranny Alcasar applies the mysteries of God to the casting off the Iewes and election of the Gentiles But the most on the contrarie understand it of the mysterie of all Israels conversion unto Christ which shal to come to passe neer the last times of which the Apostle Rom. 11.25 seems to treat and indeed the prophets of old have often prophesied of their calling But because in this place the comfort of the Church militant under Antichrist is onely aimed at unto which the calling of the Iewes doth not directly much belong therefore it is rather better to be taken of the resurrection and day of judgement even when the power of tyrants and all adversaries shall be abolished of which mysterie the Apostle speaketh 1 Cor. 15.51 Behold I shew you a mysterie wee shall not all sleepe but wee shall all bee changed in a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last trumpet for the trumpet shall blow and we shall be changed This is that which Christ here sweareth that at the sound of the seventh trumpet the mysterie of God is to be finished the Church delivered and glorified but the enemies eternally to be punished according unto that in the Prophets Isa 24.26.27.66 Daniel 7.11.12 Zacha. 14. Mala. 3. 4. Hence we plainely see that the sound of the sixt trumpet shall continue unto the end of time that is of this world and that at the beginning of the sound of the seventh trumpet an end shall be put to the afflictions of the Church and cruelty of the adversaries The seventh trumpet therefore is no other then that of the Archangel by which the dead shal be raised out of their graves and brought to judgement As in the following Chapter we shall hear so that without all doubt this trumpet respects the end of the world They therfore doe erre from the scope who extend the time of the seven Vialls and of the following visions beyond the seventh trumpet The second part of the Chapter Of the booke eaten up by Iohn 8. And the voyce which I heard from heaven spake unto me againe and said Goe and take the little booke which is open in the hand of the Angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth 9. And I went unto the Angel and said unto him Give mee the little booke And hee said unto me Take it and eate it up it shall make thy belly bitter but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as hony 10. And I tooke the little booke out of the Angels hand and ate it up it was in my mouth sweet as hony and assoone as I had eaten it my belly was bitter 11. And he said unto mee Thou must prophesie againe before many peoples and nations and tongues and Kings THE COMMENTARIE THe other part of the Chapter concerning the booke eaten by John is a preparation to the following Act touching the combat of the two witnesses with the beast about the end of the fift sixt trumpets which yet remaine founding in this present age John as he is commanded eats up the little booke he tooke out of the hand of Christ the which was sweet in his mouth but bitter in his belly And he is commanded to prophesie againe before kings and nations Now what is this but that towards the last times prophesying shall be renewed against Antichrist after which indeed there shall follow new combats notwithstanding Antichrists kingdome shall be greeviously shaken the which beeing donne there shall be no more time that is like the former when Antichrist raged according to his lust and pleasure over the Church This is the summe Now we are well to take notice that this part of the vision is taken out of the prophesie of Ezech. Chap. 3. where an hand from heaven reacheth unto the prophet a roule to eat it up beeing in his mouth as hony for sweetnesse whereupon he is commanded to denounce judgements against the Israelites It shadowed out the heavenly call of Ezechiel as also his readines to obey God in reproving the vices of the people and threatning punishment against them for the same All things are here alike But that Ezechiel felt not the booke as John bitter in his belly that he was sent to prophesie against the house of Israel but Iohn against Antichrist Let us briefly consider who commandeth what is commanded and what followed upon the doing thereof 8. And the voyce which I heard To wit that heavenly voyce mentioned in ver 4. write not but seale the voyces of the thunders c. The same voyce therefore who before forbade him to write doth now command him to eat up the little booke and to prophesie by which is signified the admirable dispensation of the divine grace for Antichrist bearing sway in the Church during the times of the fift sixt trumpets the thunders indeed uttered their voyces that is some faithfull teachers publickly thundered against the idolatrie and tyranny of Antichrist But with little profit The voyces remained sealed and Antichrists power entire yea increased dayly by suppressing those teachers bringing kings and nations under his yoak Now whence came this I answere Christ as yet had not given to John the open booke to eat it up neither commanded him againe to prophesie because he reserved this special grace unto the later times of the fift sixt trumpets Let us therefore acknowledge this singular mercie of God that now unto us the open booke of Christs doctrine is given to be eaten up and prophesie against Antichrist againe revived in the world Take the little booke The heavenly voyce commands two things First that Iohn should take the open booke out of the hand of Christ Secondly eat it up The little booke on the outside contained the revealed written doctrine of the Gospell within the secret counsels of God touching the future
events of the Church For it was written within and without as we heard Chap. 1.7 and Ezech. 2.10 This little booke Christ both opened and held open teaching us that as Iohn so all the teachers of the word must ask of Christ and receive out of his hand the doctrine of salvation which they are to propound unto the Church but not from the hand of Satan or Antichrist Now he exhibiteth a booke open because the holy scriptures doe open and manifestly set forth the mysteries of our salvation Thus we see the decrees of the Romish Antichrist the traditions of Popes and Councils the humane Philosophie and subtilties of Sophisters are to be quite banished out of the Church It is expressely added Of the Angel that stood upon the earth and sea that we might confidently rest on the power of Christ and acknowledge him alone to be the revealer of the heavenly truth and so desire nothing as necessarie to salvation but what we take out of his hand 9. Take it and eat it up This is the other commandement Bookes of paper or parchment are not to be eaten properly as not beeing fit food for man but they are said to be eaten up metaphorically when they are so carefully read and throughly taken notice of that we are able promptly to rehearse and discourse of the contents thereof So a man is said to have devoured Virgil Cicero who is fullie acquainted with them and hath them as it were by heart So Cicero called M. Cato a devourer of bookes because he was an insatiable reader Thus as the Prophet in Ezech. 3. so John here is commanded to eat up the booke he received of Christ that is well to understand and as it were hide the same in the bowels of his heart that so he might deliver no other doctrine unto the Church but what hee had received from Christ Now whether this booke were eaten up trulie or in a vision onely makes little to the purpose the latter is most probable For all these things were don by a vision Here the ministers of the word are taught earnestly to devoure or eat up the doctrine of salvation divinely written received from Christ that is diligently to read understand search meditate as it were to turne it even into their verie moisture blood For such onely can faithfully instruct the Church in the knowledge of the truth who after this manner meditate in the law of the Lord day night On the contrary their sluggishnesse is condemned who though they love to be called Bishops Archbishops Patriarchs of the Church yet in the mean while are little or nothing acquainted with the scriptures of God And it shall make thy belly bitter He preadmonisheth Iohn of a double effect of the booke sweet in the mouth bitter in the belly Sweet things are delightfull to the palate bitter things provoke to vomit Hereby signifying that one effect thereof should be sweet the other troublesome the nature whereof is expounded in the following verse He fore shewes it should be sweet to stir him up the more earnestly to eat up the booke he tels him also that it should be bitter that he might not afterward bee offended thereat but know that this bitternesse should bee recompensed with much sweetnesse Then I tooke the booke He shewes his readinesse in eating the book for neither the difficulty of the command nor the bitternesse of the book dishartens him shewing us that we are readily to submitt unto the command of God not to be dismayed at any hardships or difficulties whatsoever Now he ate the booke not really but in vision onely as I said before signifying that he most readily accepted the worke imposed upon him of which it followeth And it was sweet in my mouth Here the foresaid effects follow This booke being eaten was sweet in the mouth and bitter in the belly the first signifies the sweetnesse of the word as Psal 119.103 How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then hony to my mouth Ierem. 15.16 Thy words were found I did eat them thy word was unto mee the joy rejoycing of myne heart This is the proper effect of the word it brings joy to the heart comfort to the conscience yea by how much faithfull teachers doe feel this sweetnesse by so much the more they preach the Gospell chearfully But the effect thereof is bitter by accident because the preaching of the word occasioneth most painefull grypings of the belly as the hatred of the world persecutions banishments martyrdomes This effect Christ foretold unto his disciples They shall put you out of their synagogues Ioh. 16.2 whosoever killeth you will thinke that he doth God service But what use was there to reveale this in a type unto John seeing it was long before plainely foretold in the written word It was altogether needfull considering that this bitternesse doth not properly denote the calamities already past under the four trumpets but to come in the end of the fift sixt under the kingdome of Antichrist the which we shall heare in the following Chapter namely the combats of the third Act of this Vision He foretold them therefore unto Iohn that he might not bee offended for he had already experience hereof beeing sent into exile by Domitian notwithstanding Christ doth not properly intend this here but praefigures in his person the future calamities of the witnesses of the truth 11. And hee said unto me To wit the former voyce from heaven Thou must againe prophesie This commandement is taken diversly Lyra thou must write downe more prophesies to wit those which follow in this booke But to write more things is not againe to prophesie c. Thomas Rupertus and some others understand it historically of Iohns beeing restored unto his Church as if he had said Thou must after the death of Domitian returne from Patmos the place of thy exile unto Ephesus and preach againe the Gospell or as if it were a promise of writing his Gospell after the Revelation The which Ribera refuteth This saith he I approve not of for to put prophesying in stead of preaching the Gospell is new which reason is not solid he adds another that seeing John was gifted with the fulnesse of the holy Ghost therefore he needed not to eat up the booke eyther for to preach or to write the Gospell wherefore he saith the sense is thus that although Iohn hitherto had prophesied many things concerning the last times notwithstanding there remained as yet many things of the same nature which he was to prophesie of against the gentiles c. The which is one with the opinion of Lyra which Alcasar also with his subtilties doth at last come unto But hee needed not to eat up the booke in this respect seeing before he had received a commandement to write the whole Revelation allthough I grant that Lyras opinion touching the promise of Iohns restitution is