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

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vntill they haue little left or none at all themselues They will not worke vppon the Sabbath nor go to Plough but they will not sticke to go to play and vse pastimes to follow idlenesse and to be ordinarily absent from the holy ordinances of God They scorn to be accounted rebels as too grosse a tearme for them yet they can disobey superiors yea mock and deride those that are set ouer them both Magistrates and Ministers They abhorre the name of a murtherer but they can fight and quarrell braule fret and fume against others forgetting the rule of the Apostle Whosoeuer hateth his Brother 1 Iohn 3 15. is a man-slayer and ye know that no man-slayer hath eternall life abiding in him They will not be Adulterers Fornicators but they break out into wantonnesse and nourish the occasions that engender them surfetting drunkennes idlenesse wanton lookes wanton company wanton daliance and such like They hate the name of Theeues and robbers and those that wil stand by the high way and take a purse but they will couzen and circumuent their neighbour defraud and oppresse him in buying selling and bargaining with him if by any meanes they can goe beyond him neuer remembring either the commandement or punishment set downe by the Apostle Let no man oppresse of defraud his Brother in any matter 1 Thes 4 6. for the Lord is an auenger of all such things as wee also haue told you before time and testified These are they that wil not beare false witnesse but they are inuenters of euill or spreaders abroad of euill reports to the hurt of their brethren make no conscience at all of a lye These are not dutifull children which obey to halfes so faile in their obedience For as the Apostle teacheth Whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law Iam. 2 10 11 12. yet faileth in one point he is guilty of all c. Thus then we see by this doctrine they are reprooued that contemne the worde and will not heare that are content to heare but will not obey and such as obey but it is not fully and faithfully it is so farre forth as pleaseth themselues not regarding to please God to whom they either stand or fall Secondly seeing our duty to ●ods Commandements Vse 2 consisteth in obedience this teacheth that it is necessary for all men to knowe them We cannot call vpon him of whom we haue not heard we cannot beleeue that which we neuer learned wee cannot practise those things which we do not vnderstand A seruant can by no meanes do his Masters will before he knoweth what is his will This sheweth the miserable condition of ignorant people besotted in their owne simplicity and muffled in the mistes of palpable darkenesse none are more grosly misled none more disobedient to God then these ignorant persons none greater enemies vnto the seruing and obeying of God then such as are enemies or hinderers of the teaching and preaching of his word Our Sauiour sending out his Apostles into all the world Math. 28 20. charged them to teach them to obserue all things whatsoeuer he commanded them First then there must be teaching before there bee obseruing so that ignorance is the mother of all disobedience This appeareth in Moses Deut. 4 1. Hearken O Israel vnto the ordinances and to the Lawes which I teach you to doe that ye may liue and go in and possesse the Land which the Lord God of your Fathers giueth you The Israelites were commanded to learne the commandements of God that they might doe them so that there is no doing and discharging of the workes and will of God without knowing them nor no true knowledge wher there is no practise For indeed wee know no more then we make conscience to do performe Wherefore my Brethren bee carefull to learne the waies of God and to know what he requireth that you may bee fitted to doe them and assure your selues that they are the greatest enemies of God and of your saluation yea the most proude and pestilent instruments of the diuell to cause him to be honoured and to erect the kingdome of darkenesse that do disgrace teaching and disswade from hearing And let vs set this downe as a rule that such as are vndutifull to God in the chiefest workes and the highest duties will neuer make conscience of the smaller lesser Such then as any way hinder the publishing of the Gospell and seeke to stop the free course of it from passing among men do ouer-turne all godlinesse and shake the very ground worke and foundation of true obedience The greatest and best workes commanded of Christ are the duties of the first Table to preach and to heare his word to be often exercised in his worship to be religious to visite his Courts where his name dwelleth whereof the Prophet saith Psal 68 16. God delighteth to dwell in it yea the Lord will dwell in it for euer Hee that maketh no conscience this way will make no conscience of the lesser and latter duties to wit of the fruits of righteousnes Hence it is that our Sauiour saith to the Sadduces Math. 22 23 Are yee not therefore deceiued because ye know not the Scr●ptures neither the pow●r of God Marke 12 24. The ignorance of Gods word is the true cause of all error If we did know the Scriptures they would direct vs to all duties necessary for vs both to knowe and practise And as knowledge is the beginning of all obedience because wee must know before we can obey we must learne before wee practise so it is required of vs al to get knowledge and vnderstanding howbeit it is not necessary for all to haue knowledge alike Wherefore that we may be instructed aright and be guided what our knowledge ought to be and what measure thereof should be in vs it is requisite that wee marke and remember these foure rules following all of them being grounded vpon the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles No man must be ignorant no man shall be excused for his ignorance euery man must attaine to some knowledge First our knowledge must be according to our age Rules directing vs what our knowledg ought to be If GOD haue blessed our dayes with manie yeares and long life he looketh for greater knowledge at our hands then hee doth of babes and sucklings This the Apostle pointeth out vnto vs. 1 Cor. 14 20. Brethren bee not children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnes bee children but in vnderstanding be of ripe age In these words the Apostle intimateth a double kinde of knowledge one fit for children for God would haue none brought vp in his Schoole and to belong to him that are non proficients hee would haue children taught and trained vp in the faith and feare of God 2 Tim. 3 15. It is noted of T●mothy that hee had the knowledge of the holye Scriptures of a childe which are able to make him
them might flourish also If they had bin grieuously afflicted the Church must also haue tasted of the same cup in some measure Thus were the people of God commanded to pray for the peace of Babylon the place whither they were carried captiue which was giuen them as a Sanctuary and place of retire Ier. 29. Ier. 29 7 Seeke the peace of the City whither I haue caused you to be carried away captiues and pray vnto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall ye haue peace God giueth the Infidels prosperity and blesseth them with an extraordinary peace howbeit hee respecteth the good of his Church therein Lastly herein we are to consider also the iustice of God For the Lord purposing to execute his iust iudgments vpon the Kings of the earth for their idolatries oppressions violences tyrannies murthers adulteries and such like impieties hath raised vp from time to time some to serue him in the execution of his high iustice against them punishing those that are euill by others as euill as themselues For this cause to make way for the accomplishment of his decrees hee maketh some Nation to grow strong and mighty as the oakes of the forest and to flourish for a while as the Cedars in Libanus that he may vse employ them as a staffe in his hand to chastise the rebellions of the vngodly and when he hath poured out his wrath vpon them and executed his indignation to the full he casteth the rod into the fire raiseth vp another for the consuming of them The Assyrians The foure Monarchies ouerthrowne one another the first Monarchy of the world ruled in a manner all Nations for many yeares After them arose the Persians who subduing the Assyrians obtained the Monarchy and reigned likewise a long space many Kings succeeding one another in that royall seate Then came the Grecians who preuailed against the Persians as they before had done against the Assyrians made themselues Monarches and masters of them and almost of the whole world Last of all all these being cut downe and so grubbed by the rootes that the place of many of them is no more to be known the Romane Empire abolishing the former succeeded in the souereignty possessed the dignity first in Rome and after in Constantinople Thus the sword of one hath bin drawne out against another al hath bin ruled by the iust iudgment of God to punish those that neither loued nor imbraced the truth The like we might say of Tamerlane the Tartarian the scourge or God terrour of the world he was raised vp of God and had his time who whipped the Turks by him as they had serued others All these horrible tyrants prospered in the world but it had a sudden end because it was neuer wel grounded But to leaue them and to come home to our selues let vs learne what maketh vs to prosper what shall make our names great and our families to flourish when all other shall wither as the grasse that to day is greene and to morrow is cast into the Ouen it is the imbracing of true religion Bethlehem was in it selfe little among the thousands of Iudah ●ich 5.2 ●ath 2 6. yet it was notwithstanding exalted and aduanced because out of it came Christ to rule his people Israel The Temple of Salomon was of wonderfull glory and renowne yet the Lord telleth the people after their returne out of captiuity that the glory of the second Temple ●ag 2 9. euen of that latter house should be greater then of that former and in this place he would giue peace by him that is the Prince of peace In like manner hee telleth Iosua that if the book of the Law depart not out of his mouth but that he meditate therein day and night obserue to do according to all that is written therein then hee shall make his way prosperous and shall haue good successe in al his enterprises ●osh 1 8. Do we then desire to be happy Do we wish blessednesse Labour to bee truely religious and to haue the power of godlinesse dwelling in thy heart Aduance it And it shall aduance thee Prou. 4 8. and ● 4. it shall bring thee to honour when thou dost imbrace it This is the way to finde fauor and good vnderstanding in the sight of God and man As for others that make a mocke of religion and doe not chuse the feare of the Lord that neuer regard to set it as a precious plant in their soules and in their houses they may peraduenture builde their nests on high for a time and make their children great vpon earth for a season but in the end their names shall consume as dung their roote shall bee rottennesse and their bud as dust that is suddenly blowne and borne away with a violent winde Vse 3 Thirdly must the ministery be established among all people vnder heauen Then let euery one of vs be careful for our parts to plant it among vs and to bring it home to the places of our abode In the most corrupt and ruinous times of the Church the people were carefull of this duty Micha in the booke of Iudges is saide to haue entertained and maintained a Leuite to instruct him and his family and said Now I know that the Lord will do mee good seeing I haue a Leuite to my Priest Iudg. 17 13. It is noted in the Acts of the Apostles that when Paul and Barnabas were come to Salamis they preached the word of God in the Synagogues of the Iewes they had Iohn also for their Minister Euery place therfore ought to haue their proper Pastour as euery flock their Shepheard and euery City their watchman Dauid was carefull aboue all Princes to settle good order among the Leuites that God might be serued and the people edified He diuided them into certaine orders Acts 13 5. 2 Sam. 6.2 1 Chr. 23 6. that so their labors might be equally indifferently diuided for the benefit of all persons He was zealous in bringing home the Arke of God Iehosaphat sent out Leuites to instruct the people This is a duty that doth neerely concerne vs our families not onely to be content to heare it abroad and to resort to it in other places but to ioyne together to bring it home to our owne doores or parishes that we may haue prouision of food our selues and not be driuen to seek for it elsewhere A point wherin alas we are too carelesse and thereby make little conscience to seeke after knowledge For how many thinke themselues discharged frō hearing the word and attending to the ministery of it because they haue not the word ordinarily taught among them If it were setled among them they could be content to giue the Ministers the hearing but if they haue it not they neuer thinke it any part of their duty to resort to the places where they may be instructed 2 Kin. 4 23. as
thee to haue thy brothers wife Matthew 14. verse 4. They dare not say to the Scribes and Pharisees as Christ did Woe vnto you Scribes and Pharises Matth. 23. hypocrites but they are afraid of offending All these sixe sorts are vnfaithful teachers we haue shewed the causes of their vnfaithfulnesse they are vnfaithfull through their ignorance vnfaithfull through their errours vnfaithfull through their idlenesse vnfaithfull through their vnskilfulnesse vnfaithfull through their scandales vnfaithfull through their flattery Vse 2 Secondly this reprooueth the people that vpbraid the Ministers with too much teaching for it is required of them that they bee found faithfull They must teach instruct in season and out of season but many carelesse hearers aduise them to spare their labours Paul saith Woe vnto me 1 Cor. 9.20 21 22 23. if I preach not the Gospel he laboured greatly that by all meanes hee might saue some Many tell vs we a● too busie and doe meddle with reprouing sinne more then wee need but how then should we be found faithfull in the Lords businesse or how shall wee escape the punishment of vnfaithfulnesse in the great day of account None shall receiue the incorruptible crowne of glory but such as haue beene faithfull and none shall be exempted from eternall iudgement that haue beene vnfaithfull Such men care not how little they heare that thinke the Ministers preach too much nay they could be content to heare nothing at all whose reward shall be according to their negligence Vse 3 Thirdly it is the duty of the Ministers to labour for this vertue and to approue themselues to God in a faithfull and carefull discharge of their callings This is a duty which God so often and so strictly commandeth and by the execution of that commandement we are said to saue men by preaching Ministers are said to saue Iob 33.24 Rom. 11.14 1 Cor. 9.22 1 Tim. 4.16 and to deliuer from the pit of hell This shall also bring vnspeakeable ioy and comfort peace and quietnesse to our consciences when we are desirous to discharge our duties in truth and sincerity Happy are they that haue this testimony of their consciences that they haue this way promoted the glory of God aduanced the kingdome of Christ and furthered the saluation of men Oh how happy were it for vs that it might be said of vs as it is of Moses in this place that we haue beene faithfull in his house and thrice happy shall we be if at the last day our Lord and master comming from heauen as a man that beginneth to take an account of his seruants shall say vnto vs Well done Mat. 25.21.23 good and faithfull seruant thou hast beene faithfull ouer a few things I will make thee ruler ouer many things enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord. If I should stand to set down particularly the parts of this faithfulnesse whereby wee may procure the commendation to ourselues which is giuen to Moses I should stand too long The Ministers must be men of knowledge otherwise how should they teach knowledge they must be men of zeale of painefulnesse and diligence of an holy and vnblameable life of sincerity and vprightnesse They must reproue sinne as God punisheth sinne that is without respect of persons in whomsoeuer they find it they must keepe backe nothing but reueale the whole counsell of God Finally they must take heed to themselues and to the flocke Act. 〈…〉 ouer which the holy Ghost hath made thē ouerseers verse 28. Lastly that which is heere particularly applyed Vse to the Ministers ought to be extended enlarged to all others which haue receiued any calling from God in what place soeuer God hath set vs we must be faithfull in it The Magistrate must bee faithfull in the gouernement of his people Psal 101. ● he must sing of mercy and of iudgement The Iudge must be faithfull in the ministring and executing of iustice Exod. 18. ● hauing courage and hating couetousnesse knowing that they iudge not for man but for the Lord. 2 Chro. ● The householder must be faithfull in ordering and reforming of his family and walke in his house with a perfect heart Psa 101.2 To conclude all inferiours must also be faithfull in their place to yeeld honour and reuerence to shew trust and diligence toward their superiors Ephes 6. ● 7 8. considering that God hath set them in their places remembring that euery man may gaine glory to his Name if he be found diligent how meane soeuer his calling is and knowing that whatsoeuer good thing any man doth the same shall hee receiue of the Lord whether he be bond or free 9 And the anger of the Lord was kindled against them and he departed 10 And the cloude departed from off the Tabernacle and behold Miriam became leprous white as snow and Aaron looked vpon Miriam and behold she was leprous Now we come to the execution of the sentence For when euill doers stand dumbe before the iugde and can answere nothing for themselues but confesse themselues guilty what remaineth but to proceed to the punishment as we see in the example of Achan who confessed he had sinned against the Lord God of Israel and was stoned with stones Io●● 7. ● and of him that came to the feast without his wedding garment so soon as he was taken speechlesse hauing nothing to answer for himselfe the king said vnto the seruants Mat. ● 〈…〉 The o● the 〈…〉 chap●●● Binde him hand and foot and take him away and cast him into vtter darknesse The punishment is partly signified in that the wrath of God by a metaphor drawen from men is said to be kindled so that he would heare the offenders speake no more vnto him declared by the departure of the cloude and partly inflicted she became leprous white as snow that is she was stricken with the most greeuous kind of leprosie because she was the author procurer of this murmuring Leuit. 〈…〉 Howbeit afterward it is in part repealed reuersed wherin we may see both the occasion the mitigatiō of the punishment The occasions are two first the request of Aaron made to Moses not to God ●●quest 〈…〉 who refused to hear him lying in his sin or rather not sufficiently humbled for his sin as also he did Iobs three friends 〈…〉 8. he would not receiue a sacrifice at their hands but Iob must pray for them lest he deale with them according to their folly This request of his is both generall for himselfe and his sister that their sinnes may be pardoned and not imputed vnto them and likewise speciall for Miriam that she might not be a spectacle and gazing stock to the whole hoste and a monument of Gods iustice for euer but might bee healed of that foule and vncleane disease ●rayer of 〈◊〉 The other occasion is the prayer of Moses directed to God his hand had stricken and made
wicked world it is vpon no other ground then because he doth reprooue sinne If he would hold his peace and say nothing or if he would sew pillows vnder mens elbowes or if he would prophesie to them of wine and strong drinke and giue them liberty to doe what they list and then tell them all is well done hee shall euen be the Prophet of this people Mic. 2.11 The true Ministers of the word are neuer loued of the world because they cannot but strike at the head and roote of sinne with the two edged sword of the word wheresoeuer they find it therefore they are made as markes for euery one to shoot at Ioh. 7.7 and if themselues spare them yet they can be content to heare others speak euill of them without defending them and their righteousnesse But howsoeuer it goe with vs it is our duty to preach the Gospel and to go through good report and bad report 1 Cor. 9.16 Eze. 3.17 We haue the charge of mens soules committed vnto vs we bring glad tidings of peace and glad tidings of good things Rom. 10.15 Wee should be welcome vnto our people and therefore it is vnreasonable we should receiue such a recompence of our labours as to be reuiled and euill spoken off But this hath beene the condition of the Prophets of the Apostles of Christ himselfe he was called Beelzebub and charged to cast out diuels by the power of the diuell Let vs wait vpon our Lord and master that hath called vs he will giue vs a better recompence of our seruice Dan. 12. We shall shine as the starres and Esay 49.4 My iudgment is with the Lord and my work with my God Vse 3 Lastly euery one ought to examine himselfe whether he be guilty of this sinne or not and if hee bee to labour to repent of it and to reforme himselfe if not for the Ministers sake yet for our owne sake and the saluation of our owne soules True it is the Ministers are oftentimes forced to speake many things that are not pleasing to the hearers yet should the people suffer the words of exhortion admonition and reprehension considering that in all of them they ayme wholly at their good The Physition is oftentimes troublesome to his patients and the father giueth many checks to his sonnes yet doe they truely loue them and seeke their good euen while they doe molest and trouble them so is it with the Ministers of God albeit they doe greeue and molest the people of God yet it is for their good and saluation and therefore they may say with the apostle If any haue caused greefe he hath not greeued me but in part that I may not ouercharge you all 2 Cor. 2.5 Therefore it is the duty of the people quietly to suffer the word of exhortation and to digest a reproofe thereby to shew themselues obedient in all things for this is the proofe and tryall of our hearts 2 Cor. 2.9 15 And Moses was very wroth and said vnto the Lord respect not thou their offering I haue not taken one asse from them neither haue I hurt one of them 16 And Moses said vnto Korah Be thou and all thy company before the Lord thou and they and Aaron to morrow 17 And take euery one his censer c. 18 And they tooke euery man his censer c. 19 And Korah gathered We see heere how Moses appealeth from them to God the iudge of heauen and earth and referreth the deciding of the controuersie vnto him This is the preparation to the punishment of these men wherein consider first the anger of Moses against them secondly his prayer to God to reiect their offering Doctrine thirdly his words to Korah All Gods children ought to be angry at sin In his anger obserue that it is the duty of all Gods children to bee angry at sinne whensoeuer they see God dishonoured and his ordinances contemned and despised There is a sanctified and holy kind of anger Exod. 16.20 albeit Moses were the meekest man vpon the earth as we heard before Num. 12.3 Yet when he saw their disobedience hee was wroth with them The like we see Exod. 32.19 20. and in Eliah 1 Kin. 19.14 Ier. 6.10 11. it is called the fury of the Lord. All zeale consisteth of anger Numb 25.7 The reasons will farther confirme this point For first in many places of the Scripture it Reason 1 is attributed vnto God Rom. 1.18 Iosh 3.36 But to the nature of God nothing can agree but that which is iust and holy Secondly Reason 2 that affection was truely and naturally in Christ our Sauiour Mar. 3.5 he looked angerly vpon them mourning for the hardnesse of their hearts so Ioh. 2.17 The vses first the affection of anger is not in it selfe vnlawfull True it is there is a Vse 1 corrupt anger which we are to striue against and labour to suppresse 1 Tim. 2.8 Matth. 5.23 Iob 36.18 there is also an holy and lawfull anger when it hath a good ground and is seasoned with moderation Leuit. 10.16 2. Sam. 12.5 and 13.21 Neh. 5.6 Ester 7.7 The Stoikes one of the stricter sects of the Philosophers condemne all anger but this is to make men senselesse and to transforme them into stockes and stones For it was created of God and was in man before the fall and before any euill entred into the world All the workemanship of God was approoued to be very good Gen. 1.31 so that being more ancient then euill it must be holden in it owne nature to be good and lawfull But it will bee obiected that anger in many places is forbidden Obiect 1 and condemned Matthew chapter 5. Answ verse 22. I answer not all anger Matth. 5. ● but all corrupt anger such as are angry vnaduisedly So then he speaketh of this affection not as it was created or renewed by Gods Spirit but as it is corrupted and depraued with originall sin Obiect 2 Againe it will be said that the Stoickes define it to be a perturbation of the mind Answer and therefore euill I answer that perturbation is double somtimes it is moued vpon iust causes and sometimes vpon vniust causes The perturbation of the minde mooued vpon vniust causes is vniust and euill the other is iust and commendable The perturbation is good if the causes be good it is euill if the cause be euill Lastly it will be alledged that Christ Obiect 3 our Sauiour teacheth vs Answer when we haue receiued a blow on the right cheeke we should turne to him the other also Matth. 5.39 I answer the meaning is not that wee should expose our selues to all iniuries but abstaine from all priuate reuenge hauing no calling thereunto Whensoeuer those two come in question together either to reuenge or to receiue a new wrong and a fresh iniury wee must chuse the latter because to reuenge is simply euil in the doer but to suffer wrong is not euill or sinfull in the sufferer Vse 2 Secondly
they haue gone into warre to fight with their enemies they haue called vpon his name and receyued great comfort This we see euidently in the practise of Ioshua who prayed vnto him in the day when hee gaue the Amorites before the children of Israel Ioshua chap. 10. verses 12 14. Sunne stay thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon and there was no day like that day before it nor after it that the Lord heard the voice of a man for the Lord fought for Israel When the Philistines were assembled against Israel the children of Israel sayde to Samuel Cease not to cry vnto the Lord our God for vs that hee may saue vs out of the hand of the Philistines 1 Samuel chapt 7. verses 8 9 10. Samuel cried vnto the Lord who heard him and thundered with a great thunder that day vppon the Philistines and scattered them so they were slaine before Israel And there is a notable example hereof recorded in the first of the Chronicles the fift chapter and the 20. verse touching the sonnes of Reuben of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh They were holpen against the Hagarims who were deliuered into their hand and all that were with them for they cryed to God in the battell and hee heard him because they trusted in him If then God do in mercy heare the prayers of those that call vpon his most holy name going vnto the warre and preparing themselues vnto the battaile wee cannot doubt of the lawfulnesse of the worke it selfe seeing almighty God vseth not to heare those that goe about euill but sendeth his curse vppon them Fourthly the word of God setteth downe Reason 4 the duties of those that manage the matters of the field as of the King of the Captaine of the common souldier which it would neuer do if the callings were vnlawfull For as wee conclude marriage to be lawfull and an honorable ordinance of God because the Scripture setteth forth the duties of maried persons aswell of the husband toward the wife as the wife toward her husband so in as much as we finde the duties of such as go to war aswel of those that are commanders as of those that are vnder commandement described plentifully and fully in the booke of God wee cannot call the lawfulnes of their office in question Hence it is that the Lord teacheth Ioshua the duties of his calling Iosh 1 6 that he should be strong and of a good corage that he shold meditate in the booke of the Law and assure himselfe that he would be with him and not leaue him nor forsake him so that there shold not a man be able to withstand him all the daies of his life So when the soldiers came to Iohn Baptist to bee instructed how to leade their liues and to bee directed how to escape the wrath of God to come Luke 3.14 he said vnto them Do violence to no man neither accuse any falsely and be content with your wages The particular handling and setting downe of these duties inforceth the acknowledgement of the lawfulnes of the calling Reason 5 Lastly we shall see the lawfulnes of warres if wee consider the lawfull causes of a lawfull warre The first is the defence of true religion against the oppugners thereof as appeareth by the words of Ahijah to Ieroboam and all Israel 2 Chron. 13 6. The second is that such as are oppressed for religion may bee freed and deliuered as we see in the histories of the Iudges who raised wars to deliuer the opprested and distressed people out of the bloody hands of the cruell oppressors The third is for the necessary defence of the Commonwealth by repulsing iniuries offred Iudg. 11 13 ● Sam. 10 4. ● Chron. 14 9 1 Sam. 30 18. Genes 14.16 1 Chron. 18.1 by reuenging indignities and assaults and by recouering things lost as their wiues their sonnes their daughters their goods their possessions their cities their substance dominions The ouerthrow of the Commonwealth bringeth the ruine of the Churches peace For as the flourishing estate of the Commonwealth maintaineth and furthereth the Churches peace Ieremy 29 7. so when the Common-wealth is spoiled the libertie and freedome of the Church is diminished as appeareth in sundry places of the Lamentations ●amen 1 4 5. Vse 1 Let vs now make vse of this doctrine and apply it to our instruction First it is required of euery one to haue courage Wee must not grow feeble and faint-hearted we should not feare nor be discouraged but be bold as in the worke of the Lord assuring our selues that the Lord is our strength who teacheth our hands to fight and our fingers to battell Psalme 144 1. When Hezekiah saw that Zaneherib was come and that his purpose was to fight against Ierusalem he said to his Captaines souldiers Be strong and couragious feare not neither be afraid for the king of Ashur neither for all the multitude that is with him for there is moe with vs then is with him with him is an arme of flesh but with vs is the Lord our God for to helpe vs and to fight our battels 2 Chron. 32 7. This appeareth in the exhortation of Nehemiah when Sanballat and Tobiah conspired to come to fight against Ierusalem to hinder the building of the wall he said Be not afraid of them remember the great Lord and fearfull and fight for your brethren your sonnes and your daughters your wiues and your houses Neh. 4.14 The heathen Captaines that carried their men to battel were alwayes wont as we see in prophane histories to put courage into them not to feare to looke the enemy in the face but their onely or cheefest reason to mooue them was earthly glory that either they should liue in wealth or dye with honor It is not so with the people of God they haue greater Reasons to worke in them the gift of valour and hope of victory True religion therfore doth not weaken the hearts of men and make them Cowards It is no enemy to true fortitude and manhood The Reasons why true Religion giueth courage in battel For first it teacheth and informeth the conscience that the cause and quarrell in which the warriour fighteth is good iust and warrantable by the word of GOD which maketh him stand vpon a sure ground without which knowledge in the heart how vgly how foule how sauage how cruell a thing is the effusion and shedding of blood What an horrible and grisly a spectacle is it to see Villages and Townes burned Cities and Castles ruinated Churches and religious places ouerturned bodies dismembred with Ordnance the ayre infected with stench the ground embrued with blood the country wasted grasse and corne troden downe and spoyled and all places with feare and terror filled Is it not to be esteemed rather a practise of all inhumanity then an exercise of manhood Secondly as true religion establisheth the conscience touching the lawfulnes
51. but amongst these there was not a man of them whom Moses Aaron the Priest numbred when they numbred the children of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai for the Lord had sayde of them They shal surely dye in the wildernes and there was not left a man of them saue Caleb the Sonne of Iephuneh add Ioshua the Sonne of Nun Verse 64.45 This muster being taken Moses as his last enterprize appointed out of them twelue thousand to be chosen out to inuade the Cities of Midian Numb 31 5. who together with the Moabites had practised with Balaam to curse Israel Deut. 23 4 5. and to allure them from the worship of the true God to the seruice of Baal-Peor to the rest of their beastly idolatry ouer which Companies Moses gaue the chiefe charge to Phinehas who slew the fiue Princes of the Midianites who were or had lately bene the vassals of Sehon king of the Amorites Numb 31.8 as appeareth in Ioshua chap. 13 21. Thus hauing subdued all their enemies on this side Iordan and none of them being able to stand before them Moses is commanded by God before his death which followed immediately after to charge the Israelites to bound out the land so soone as they were come into it Numb 24 2. and 35 2 and to assigne to the Leuites certaine cities taken out of the inheritance of their possession that there might be no diuision nor contention among them when once they were passed Iordan which haply otherwise might haue disturbed and disquieted them This is the historicall part of this Booke which hath entermingled with it many and sundrie ceremonies of the Leuiticall Law as touching their Fasts and Feasts the yeare of Iubile their feasts of Trumpets and Tabernacles as also of the Passeouer and Pentecost a few chapters whereof I published certaine yeares past which I haue now reviewed and added the interpretation of the whole Booke from the beginning to the ending which I presume to offer vnto your Worships as a testimony of my loue and duty toward you The Iewes in the Gospel commend the Centurion and make it a motiue to perswade Christ our Sauiour to heale his seruant that was deere vnto him being sicke and ready to dye because hee loued their Nation and had built them a Synagogue Luke 7 5 4. So I may truly affirme of you that you loue our nation and are true friends of the church loue the preachers of the Gospel which is so much the more worthy praise and commendation as there are few in these euill dayes especially of your ranke and calling that affect eyther the one or the other It is a true saying as proceeding from the mouth of the author of all truth Them that honor me I will honor they that despise me shal be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2 30. It is the cheefest honor that we can receiue in this world to honour the Lord which is the beginning of that honor which shall neuer decay whereas all other without this is vaine and vncertaine And albeit I confesse you neede not any helpe or furtherance from mee in the race of godlinesse wherein you runne neither is my weaknesse able to affoord any thing that way yet I am so farre from being discoraged hereby to presse into your presence that I acknowledge it as a speciall reason to induce me to this because I offer the same to you that are able to iudge whose learning and sufficiency that way all men know perfectly that know your person in that both of you are well exercised in the Scriptures and in the doctrine which is according to godlinesse so that I nothing doubt but at vacant houres from waightier affaires you will vouchsafe to peruse this Commentary or at least some part of it it being a duty belonging to all high and low rich and poore to search the Scriptuaes in which our hope is to haue eternall life Thus crauing pardon of my great boldnesse and hoping of your Worships good acceptance and praying the Almighty to increase the sauing graces of his Spirit vpon you I humbly take my leaue resting euer Your Worships at commandement William Attersoll A Recapitulation of the particular Doctrines handled throughout euery Chapter of this Booke of NVMBERS Doctrines out of the Preface OBseruations by the way of preface touching the Author of this booke fol. 1. 2 Obseruations by way of preface touching the Writer of this booke fol. 6. 3 Obseruations by way of preface touching the Title of this booke fol. 8. Obseruations by way of preface touching the principall substance and vse of this booke fol. 10. 5 Obseruations by way of preface touching the diuision and parts of this booke fol. 12. CHAP. I. 1. THe people of God may lawfully make warre fol. 16 2 God knoweth the number and names of all such as belong vnto him fol. 20 3 It is our duty to performe obedience to Gods commandements fol. 29 4 The promises of God made to his children shall be accomplished fol. 41 5 It is the office of the Minister to doe the duties proper to his calling fol. 49 CHAP. II. GOd delighteth to haue a comely order obserued both in Church and commonwealth fol. 55 2 Magistrates and rulers are needfull to be set ouer the people of God fol. 63 3 Gods iudgements are alwayes tempered and seasoned with great mercy toward those that be his fol. 71 4 The Tabernacle of the Congregation is placed in the middes of the hoast fol. 80 5 God bestoweth his gifts and graces freely to whom he pleaseth fol. 85 6 Euery one ought to be content with the present condition wherein God hath set him fol. 98 7 God oftentimes maketh choyce of inferiour things to effect great matters fol. 105 8 It is a duty belonging to all Gods children to yeeld obedience to all Gods Commandements fol. 109 CHAP. III. AMong all people vnder heauen the Ministery aboue all other things ought to be established fol. 118 2 Godly Parents haue oftentimes vngodly and disobedient children fol. 130 3 In Gods worship we must not bee carried by our owne deuices but by his direction fol. 137 4 God hath sole authority to ordaine the Officers and Offices of his Church fol. 146 5 The first borne were sanctified to the Lord and the vses thereof to vs. fol. 158 6 The word of God ought to direct all the actions of our life fol. 167 7 God raiseth vp honourable instruments from meane places to do him seruice fol. 175 8 Euery one in the Church hath his proper peculiar Office fol. 179 9 It is the Ministers office carefully to looke to his charge fol. 188 10 God will haue all places and people taught how small and meane soeuer they be fol. 197 11 The Office of the Ministery is an high worthy and honourable Calling fol. 206 CHAP. IIII. 1 THe Ministers must be men of grauity sobriety and moderation fol. 216 2 Euery one must know
albeit many things fell out to restraine the course of liberality as their multitude importunity and ingratitude that are in need yet he could not be hindred by any of them from shewing mercy vnto them ●eut 24 53. considering that if we feed them their bellies shall blesse vs if we cloath them their loines shall blesse vs if we visite them in sicknesse their bodies shall blesse vs nay their soules shall blesse vs albeit their tongues reuile vs and their mouthes be full of cursing and bitternesse Let vs therefore turne our selues from them vnto God who will reward euery good worke euen to a cup of colde water Heereby we shall testifie our religion to be sincere hereby we shall be like our heauenly Father assure our hearts that we are his children hereby we shall be made conformable vnto Iesus Christ our head who being equall in glory with his Father and being in the forme of God made himself poore that he might enrich vs hereby we shall prouide well for our selues by making vs friends with the riches of vnrighteousnesse yea hereby we shall heape coales of fire vpon the heads of all vnthankfull persons doing good for euill and shewing mercy to them that doe not deserue any mercy at our hands 25. The standard of the Campe of Dan shall be on the North side by their armies the Captaine of the children of Dan shall be Ahiezer the sonne of Amm●shaddai 26. And his host and those that were numbred of them were threescore and two thousand and seuen hundred 27. And those that encampe by him shall be the Tribe of Asher and the Captaine of the children of Asher shall be Pagiel the sonne of Ocran 28. And his host and those that were numbred of them were forty and one thousand and fiue hundred 29. Then the Tribe of Naphtali and the Captaine of the Children of Naphtali shall bee Ahira the sonne of Enan 30. And his host and those that were numbred of them were fifty and three thousand and foure hundred 31. All they that were numbred in the camp of Dan were an hundred thousand and fifty and seuen thousand and sixe hundred they shall goe hindermost with their standards We are now come to the last standard expressed in these wordes These three Dan Asher and Naphtali that is the Tribes that descended of them being three of the sons of Iacob doth the Lord in this place cast into the last squadron to make vp the fourth battailion And albeit they were set in the last and lowest company of the army yet wee do not reade that during the long time of their tarriance in the wildernesse which was the space of 40 yeares they opened their mouthes against the ordinance of God or murmured through impatience and discontentment at the order established among them neyther did other murmure at them albeit some of the children of the handmaids were preferred before the naturall sons of Leah and Rahel An hoast of men consisting of great multitudes is like a full or corpulent body that needeth not any external meanes to throw it downe it being ready to ouerweigh and ouersway it selfe through it owne heauines Many estates and kingdomes arising from small beginnings as it were large stoods from little fountains haue proceeded swelled so great Liuy in the Preface to his History that the bignes thereof is comberous to themselues and the puissance of so mighty people hath wrought their own destructiō Thus it fel out in the commonwealth of Rome whose proper power strength wanting a forrain enemy to encounter with all wrought it owne ruine so that it had no greater opposite then it owne too great felicity Epito Flor. But not to trouble our selues with forraine examples let vs briefely touch the example of the Disciples of Christ they were few in number they were a little company like a small boat that might be easily ruled and gouerned inasmuch as they had the best Maister that euer was to stand at the sterne yet they no sooner heard of Christs departure out of the worlde but they condemned parity and contended for superiority Math. 20 20. Thus we see what our nature is one man cannot abide any to be his equall another cannot suffer any to bee before him Wherefore to cut off all occasion of emulation and to teach them the benefit of contentation the Lord assigneth to euery Tribe his standing place and they in humility and obedience rested in the roome ranke that God in mercy appointed for the generall benefit of the whole and the particular good of euery one among them Verse 25 26. The standard of the Campe of Dan shall be on the c. The three combined together in this army whereof Dan was principall the other two Asher Naphtals were assistants are indeed the children of the handmaids inasmuch as Rabel in greefe of her barrennesse giueth her maid vnto her husband who beareth him Dan and Naphtali Leah also following her sisters example giueth him her maid who beareth bringeth forth Asher There can no reason bee assigned by man why they should go march in this order then in any other but onely the good pleasure of God yet they are quiet and striue not one against another being brethren one to another From hence we learne that euery one Doctrine 6 ought to be contēted with his present estate I say Euery one is to be content with the condition wherein God hath set him how meane soeuer our condition be yet God requires it as a special duty at our hands that therewith we be content Hereunto commeth the commandement giuen by the Apostle 1 Corinth 7 20 24. Let euery man abide in the same calling wherein he was called To the same purpose hee teacheth elsewhere that Godlinesse with contentment is great gaine and afterward 1 Tim. 6 8. Hauing food and rayment let vs bee therewith content And as he deliuereth this doctrine by precept so hee sealeth it vp by practise and experience Phil. 4 11 12. I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to bee content I know both how to be abased I know how to abound euery where and in all things I am enstructed both to be full and to bee hungry both to abound and to suffer need It is a great and wonderfull knowledge and very hard to be practised to know to be rich that is to vse riches soberly it passeth our reach vnlesse we haue a speciall and extraordinary grace giuen vnto vs. We must learne also what it is to be poore which is as hard a lesson as the former forasmuch as we are ready to murmure vnder the Crosse whereas though wee should walke naked be hungry and thirsty be afflicted and passe by the sword yet we ought to be patient our trust must not faile which we haue in God who will feed vs in the time of famine Reason 1 The reasons heereof are of great force and carry
giue sleepe vnto their eies nor slumber to their eie-liddes Let the sluggards goe to the Ant and learne wisedome by her waies which hauing no guide ouerseer nor ruler prouideth her meat in the summer and gathereth her food in the haruest Prou. 6 7 8. Thirdly seeing it is required of vs to haue Vse 3 contented mindes it putteth vs in minde of this duty that we auoid couetousnes which is directly contrary to contentation It is a common corruption that taketh hold of our corrupt nature a fruite of the old man which must be mortified of al the children of God and so much the rather because it stealeth vpō vs at a sudden and draweth away our hearts from God and godlinesse This is the vse directly touched and taught by the Apostle Heb. 13. ●●b 13.5 Let your conuersation be without couetousnesse and be content with such things as ye haue The greatnesse of this sinne is such that it causeth a man to be an idolater as Ephe. 5.5 Col. 3.5 This ye know ●●h 5.5 CoI ● that no whoremonger nor vncleane person nor couetous man who is an idolater hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God and of Christ ●ow the co●●●ous are ●dolaters The couetous are idolaters or worshippers of idolles two wayes First because they preferre their riches in their affections before God the gift before the giuer of them depending vpon them as vpon God trusting in them ●●b 31.24 as in God saying vnto them Thou art my confidence as we heard before out of the booke of Iob. Secondly because they account their life to consist in their riches and to rest vpon their wealth rather then to stand on the prouidence of God failing of all comfort and hope and ioy when their wealth faileth them Sathan vsed this bait to bring Christ himselfe to idolatry when he offered vnto him the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them How easily we slippe into this sinne appeareth by the example of the rich man that came vnto our Sauiour when he was bid sell all that he had hee went away pensine and sorrowfull Matth. 19. Hence it is that he saith in another place ●●k 12.15 Take heed and beware of Couetousnesse for a mans life consisteth not in the aboundance of the things which he possesseth We are ready to flatter our selues and to say to our soule Thou hast much goods layd vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merry vntill it be said vnto vs Thou foole this night shall thy soule be required of thee then whose shall those things be ●ouetousnes ●y be in the ●ore as well in the rich that thou hast prouided This is a sinne not onely in the rich but also in the poore True it is such as are in want and necessity do wash their hands as innocent in this matter but they do it as Pilat did touching blood which notwithstanding did cleaue so fast vnto his loynes that all the Fullers earth and all the waters in the Sea could not wash away the guilt and staine therof from him So the poore for the most part put this sin farre from them and thinke it doth not belong vnto them they cry out against the rich because they are couetous as blinde men deceiuing themselues and beholding their owne faces in a false glasse For first of all they vse vngodly shifts and vnlawfull meanes to store themselues which is right couetousnesse They care not how they come by meate money corne or any thing so they may haue it Againe they beare not the burden of pouerty patiently but murmure and grudge at it nay at him that sendeth it but whosoeuer disdaineth his present state because it is not higher richer and better is couetous therefore the poore may be couetous Furthermore they are oftentimes idle and liue by the sweat of other mens browes and breake out into pilfering and stealing and so not onely couet but catch and conuey vnto themselues other mens goods This also is couetousnesse and this is a common sickenesse and disease of the poore For as pride may walke and iet vp and downe in a russet coat so may couetousnesse lodge in a simple and smokie cottage But in whomsoeuer it be whether in the rich or poore it is a dangerous euil it bringeth the couetous man to destruction of body and soule 2 King 5.22 It brought the leprosie vpon Gehazi that coueted the siluer and garments that Naaman offered Elisha refused but he accepted It brought a more heauy plague vpon the soule and conscience of Iudas Matth. 27.5 for when he had betrayed his master for thirty shekels in horror of himselfe and of his fact he went and hanged himselfe Hee was brought vp with Christ and liued with him who had instructed him not to couet after siluer nor gold he heard his doctrine and beheld his miracles yet hee was infected with this disease worse then the dropsie or the hungry euill The description of a couetous man It seeth nothing in another without grieefe and sorrow and is neuer well contented vntill he haue it himselfe and then hee cannot bee satisfied but still hee would haue more The more he hath the more he thinketh he hath not The more full his coffers are the more he iudgeth them to be empty for as much as he wanteth as well those things that he hath as those things that he hath not It is a great blessing of God Chrys in Math. 26. homi 81. that the earth yeeldeth the fat of wheat but the couetous man is not a little greeued that in stead of eares of corne it doth not shoot and send forth leaues of gold that euery riuer doth not runne with streames of gold and that the barraine mountaines haue not gold to bee digged out of them in stead of stones He is oftentimes greeued at the seasonablenesse of the weather at the fruitfulnesse of the seasons at the plenty of all things at the increase of the earth and at the sweet influence of the heauens hee taketh it heauily when there is store and aboundance that there is no want nor crying in our streetes because he cannot fell his corne his cattell and commodities at the dearest rate He hateth all men both rich and poore the rich because he doth not possesse that which they haue and seeth them to abound as well as himselfe whereas he cannot abide that any should enioy any thing and thinketh it lost that passeth by his doore the poore because they craue somewhat of him which he is as vnwilling to leaue as his life and therefore as if he were hurt and wronged with all he is angry and offended with all The more he hath The more the couetous man hath the more he coueteth the more he craueth and coueteth Euen as the drunken man is more vexed with thirst then he that vseth to drinke with sobriety and moderation and is therewith contented so
booke Let that once haue a free passage and none is so simple but he may soone discouer a packe of deuises who are wise in their generation and therefore they suffer none to reade it but such as it pleaseth them Separate some time to this purpose and thou shalt quickly see that to be most true which I say vnto thee ●ct If thou wilt say vnto me I cannot reade the Scriptures I was neuer brought vp vnto it ●er Be it so yet do not alledge this to excuse thy ignorance or to shift off from thee the knowledge of them forasmuch as euery one must know the Scriptures Recompence that want by much study and often meditation Let not the loue of the world thrust out of thy head heart the cogitation of better things Many that cannot reade are more prompt and ready in the Scriptures then such as haue that gift God will blesse them that endeuour to know him and his word and will one way or other supply their wants ● 6 6. Such as hunger thirst after knowledge shall be satisfied and replenished Acknowledge this want mourne for it and if it be possible though thou be old learne to reade It is neuer too late to begin to do well the benefit will easily make amends for the time bestowed vpon it Few there are but euery yeare spend more time in vaine either in grosse idlenesse or in much sleepe or in vaine company or in vnnecessary cares for the world which might this way be better imployed and redeemed The minde is all in all it is not any hardnesse in the matter it selfe that should discourage vs. He that hath once determined to do it hath ouercome the difficulty of it which standeth in resoluing and hath more then halfe attained vnto it But if we cannot or will not striue to come to this gift we must know that ignorance shall excuse no person and he that knoweth not his masters will cannot escape ●e 12 48. he shall be beaten If there be no knowledge of God in the Land he hath a controuersie against it and will cause it to mourne if it will not lament for their owne ignorance he will make them lament for the iudgements that shall fall vpon them Hos 4 1 2. But we cannot pleade ignorance through want of meanes we haue the meanes and are weary of them as Israel was of Manna we make account of it as a light meate and are wilfully blinded we haue the light among vs yet shut our eyes that we should not see Vse 4 Lastly it is needfull for vs to be carefull to take profit by reading the Scriptures that so we may haue direction in all our waies and learne how to please GOD and to abstaine from all things that do displease him It is not the bare hauing of the Scriptures with vs in our houses or a naked reading in them by our selues without farther consideration that will serue to direct vs in all the actions of our life but there is farther required of vs an applying of them an edifying of our selues by them that it may be seene how we profit in them This duty hath many particular parts or branches belonging vnto it Branches of this vse First of all we must haue recourse vnto God the Author of the Scriptures he onely is able to vnlocke them and so to bring vs into the secret chamber of his presence We ought to pray vnto him earnestly that he would vouchsafe to teach vs the way of his statutes to giue vs sound vnderstanding of his will to direct vs in the paths of his commandements We see this by the practise of the Prophet Dauid Psal 119 Psal 119 18. who craueth oftentimes to haue his eyes opened to behold the mysteries of his words and the wondrous things of his law Our eyes naturally are shut and we cannot conceiue them which are spiritually discerned Secondly we must keepe such order in the reading of them as may stand with our calling and state of life and take all opportunity to do it It were to be wished that we would set apart some part of euery day to be emploied in this exercise that so we might read ouer the whole Scriptures oftentimes and if at any time we be hindred by necessary occasions which happen to vs without our searching of them to redeeme the time afterward Eph. 5 16. and so to recompence that which we haue left vndone This is an holy restitution much pleasing vnto God Thirdly we must vnderstand to what ends and vses the Scriptures were written They were penned to teach that we may learne the truth to improue that we may be kept from errour to correct 2 Tim. 3 16. Rom. 15 4. that we may be driuen from vice to instruct that we may be setled in the way of well-doing and to comfort that in trouble we may be confirmed in patience hope of an happy issue Fourthly we are to remember that the Scriptures containe matter concerning all sorts of persons and things which may be reduced to fiue heads First touching religion and the right worshipping of God they teach how to serue him and what to beleeue touching God and touching mankinde That he is one in essence and three in persons Touching our selues that by creation we were made good holy and righteous By our fall we are become wretched by reason of sinne and not able to thinke one good thought or to stirre one foote forward to the kingdome of Heauen By regeneration we are borne againe and made the sonnes of God by adoption and by faith we lay hold on Christ our wisedome our sanctification our righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1 30. our redemption Touching the Church we are instructed by them that it is the company of the faithfull that haue beene from the beginning we are led also by them to know the two Sacraments and what to beleeue of the generall iudgement that shall be of the godly and vngodly Secondly they informe vs touching kingdomes and common-wealths and touching the duties of Magistrates and Subiects how the one ought to rule and the other to obey and neither the one nor the other doe their duties for conscience till the word informe them Thirdly they handle matters touching families and houshold affaires in which are the husband and wife parents and children masters a●d seruants no duty required of them is omitted but contained in them Fourthly touching the priuate life of euery particular person how to behaue our selues in wisedome and folly in loue and hatred in sobriety and incontinency touching mirth sorrow speech and silence humility pride to imbrace the one and flye from the other Fiftly touching the common life of all men we learne in them how to leade our liues in euery estate whether we be rich or poore whether we be high or low we can be in no estate but we shall finde sufficient store of heauenly
transgresse this rule and Reason 2 break those bounds that God hath limited vnto them cannot prosper For as Christ our Sauiour maketh this a generall rule as the ordinance of the eternall God which none must dare to violate Those things which God hath ioyned together let none put asunder Matth. 19.6 So is this also a certaine rule to be obserued to the end of the world That whatsoeuer things God hath separated no man must presume to ioyne and iumble together For as the Lord knew this order of distinguishing offices to be very expedient and good for the Church so he hath not ceassed to punish the breakers and to reuenge the contemners of it most seuerely of what calling and condition soeuer they were This we see verified in Corah Dathan Abiram they presumed aboue their vocation would needs take vpon thē the Priesthood ●ob 16.10 to burne incense before the Lord contrary to the ordinance of God therfore went down into the pit and dyed not the common death of other men for the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them vp with al that they had and fire came downe from heauen and consumed the residue When Vzza supported the Arke being ready to fall for the oxen stumbled the anger of the Lord was kindled against him ●ro 13.10 he smote him because he put his hand to the Arke so that there he dyed before God The like we might say touching Azaria the king of Iuda who was stricken with an incurable and vnrecouerable leprosie because in the pride of his heart he forgate the office of a Prince and vsurped the office of the Priest and went into the Temple ●ro 16.18 to burne incense vpon the Altar All which direfull and dreadfull examples ought to teach vs how acceptable this comely order of seuerall callings is to God both to breed in our hearts a care and endeauour to keepe it and a feare and terrour to breake it Reason 3 Thirdly Christ is as a wise master of the house that fitteth to euery man his standing he is the Lord of the Church he appointeth callings and hath in himselfe fulnesse of grace from which euery one receiueth his measure Ioh. 1.16 Col. 1.19 Hence it is that he is compared to a great Prince who going into a strange countrey called his seruants and deliuered them his goods ●t 25.14 15 to one he gaue fiue talents to another two and to another one to euery man after his owne abilitie and straightway went from home As we haue wisdome skil knowledge and experience giuen vnto vs to deale so God dealeth with euery man A Captaine in warre is carefull to set euery one in his proper place that he may know his Captaine his colours his standard his march out of his standing he dareth not to remoue that he may please him that hath chosen him to be a souldier ●h 5 14. Christ is the Generall of his Church the faithfull are his souldiers all their life is a continuall warfare which costeth them great paines and much sweating sometimes they must resist vnto blood ●b 12.4 striuing against sinne As then souldiers in warre haue and hold euery one his standing place in the sight of their captaine so euery Christian should keepe his seuerall calling in the presence of the Lord of life who hath in great mercy and wonderfull wisedome appointed them thereunto Vse 1 Now the vses remaine to be opened expressed for our edification And first of all it teacheth that distinct callings in the Church and commonwealth are the ordinance of God and his appointment not the inuentions and deuises of men The Apostle saith He gaue some to be Apostles and some Prophets Eph. 4.11 and some Euangelists and some Pastors and Teachers and elsewhere he addeth Are all Apostles 1 Cor. 12. ● are all Prophets are all Teachers are all workers of miracles haue all the gift of healing doe all speake with tongues doe all interpret The like he speaketh of the priuate families and of the duties that belong to euery one therin both to husbands and wiues to masters and seruants to parents and children As then God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke 1 Cor. 7.17 This is ordained to be obserued in all Churches We shall neuer learne to performe our duties to God and to each other except we be perswaded and resolued in this point The husband will be ready to forgoe his authoritie and the wife will presume to step vp into the place of her husband The child will behaue himselfe proudly against the ancient and the base against the honourable Esay 3.5 We shall see folly set in great dignity and the rich sit in low place it will not be strange to behold seruants aloft vpon horses Eccle. 10.6.7 and Princes walking as seruants vpon the earth Hath God placed vs in the calling of a seruant and set masters ouer vs We ought to learne know whence this is and to consider from whom it came It is the Lords doing who can abide no disorder and confusion but will haue some inferiours and some superiours according to his owne law Honour thy father and thy mother Exod. 20.12 This doctrine serueth to establish that commandement and to make it a perpetuall ordinance to remaine for euer God hath not made all men excellent alike he hath not qualified them alike but hath giuen more to one then to another and would haue one to receiue profite from another And herein doth his infinite wisedome wonderfully appeare and diuersly shew it selfe God is in himselfe most excellent worthy of all honour and reuerence and hauing all things vnder his feete he would haue a patterne of that excellency and subiection imprinted in his creatures In the Angels he hath set a difference and made degrees and orders among them one an Archangel other principalities other thrones Col 1.16 other dominions some are called Seraphims other Cherubims and therefore there is a distinction betweene them as he hath made euery starre to differ from another in glory 1. Cor. 15.41 He created man to rule ouer the foules of the ayre ouer the beasts of the earth and ouer the fishes in the sea The Apostle teacheth that in a great house are diuersity of vessels some to honour 2 Tim. 2 20. and some to dishonour There is no man great but he hath his greatnesse from him that is the greatest There is no man made low but he must acknowledg that the Lord hath set him there The seruant must know that God hath put him in that seruice and not seeke to breake the bonds wherwith he is tyed but thereby receiue encouragement in the performance of such duties as lie vpon him Vse 2 Secondly this serueth to reproue sundry errours and abuses of such as transgresse against the truth of this doctrine And first heereby falleth to
make thee ruler ouer many things enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord. Euery calling fitted vnto vs is as a field giuen vs to till We may praise and commend the greater farmes Virg. Georg. lib. 2. Laudalo ingentia rura Exiguum co●to but it is better to husband the lesser forasmuch as our eye may more easily ouersee it and our losse shall be the lesse if we neglect it We shall finde enough to doe in the manuring of a little ground if we will keepe all things in a right order So it is much more in those places wherein God hath set vs the highest calling deserueth greatest commendation howbeit it draweth with it the greatest duties it requireth the greatest gifts and bringeth the greatest account Wherefore the lesser our calling is the better it may be employed and the more easily it may be dispatched If wee looke into the duties of the lowest callings we shall see they require great labour diligence care and faithfulnesse The greater our emploiment of those gifts hath bin which we haue receiued the more shall our comfort be when we must goe the way of all flesh We see this in the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 4.7.8 who being in a maner at the point of death found great ioy of heart in the remembrance of this that he had endeauoured with a good conscience toward God and man to walk in his calling I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand I haue fought a good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept the faith henceforth there is laid vp for me a crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue me at that that day c. Thus it shall be with vs if we walke in his steppes if we bee faithfull in our places we shall find the same comfort in our death and departure out of this world and say with ioy of heart Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace Luke 2. The contrary practise will be most fearefull and terrible vnto vs. He that is a wicked man and an vnprofitable seruant and slouthfull that hideth his talent in the earth or smiteth his fellow seruants and beginneth to eate and drinke and to be drunken perswading himselfe that his master delayeth his comming shall haue his talent taken from him and be cast into vtter darkenesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth If then we would haue this comfort to belong vnto vs and this threatning to be put farre from vs we must be carefull to performe the duties both of our generall and speciall callings If we performe the generall common duties of Christianity and yet faile in the particular parts of our callings we shall want this ioy of heart which we desire to feele in our selues Euery one hath a double calling Euery one of vs hath a double calling and we must shew our selues to be the seruants of God not onely in doing generall duties as in coming to Church in hearing the word in receiuing the Sacraments in following peace and walking in righteousnesse but also by employing our selues in our particular vocations as in being a Magistrate or Minister or housholder or subiect or seruant or child or Artificer or husband or husbandman and such like that so we may please God by bearing our selues in them with good conscience and therby receiue occasion to reioyce before him There can be no comfort vnto them that they belong to God in Iesus Christ that do follow the generall and faile in their particular calling The Minister that liueth in all common duties vnblameable in life deuout in prayer feruent in loue carefull in the fruits of righteousnesse cannot comfort himselfe if hee bee a dumbe dogge and an idle shepheard not able to guide the people of God and to feed them with the wholesome word of life Forasmuch as he is an euill Minister and a fearefull woe pertaineth vnto him 1 Cor. 9.17 The gouernour of a family that regardeth not the education of his children in the feare and information of the Lord and to prouide necessary things for them so farre as God shall inable him with a good conscience is a wicked parent howsoeuer hee seeme otherwise neuer so deuout and religious What we are in truth is better discerned by our carriage at home then abroad in our priuate families then in the company of others Many are religious because the company is so and because they are present with those that doe affect it But we must not be esteemed iudged off by one brunt or pang which may deceiue our heart shall better be made knowne by our ordinary demeaning of our selues among those with whom we haue our callings It was a notable testimony of true piety a religious heart in Dauid when he professed that he would walke within his house with a perfect heart Psal 101.2 Euery hypocrite will talke of religion when others doe so but we must make it our talke and communication within our houses reforming them according to the ordinance of God and instructing them that liue vnder our roofe in the word of God Lastly it is our dutie as we haue receiued Vse 4 a proper and peculiar calling so to walke in the particular duties of our seuerall callings whereunto we are called that so we may serue him that hath set vs in them and receiue occasion to reioyce before him As he hath called vs so let vs walke whether we be Ministers or people husbands or wiues in Church or Common-wealth This is the generall rule often remembred by the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.20 24. Let euery man abide in the same vocation wherein he was called and a little after Let euery man wherein he was called therein abide with God Let vs not stretch our selues beyond the bounds of our calling If the hand through enuy of the greater gifts of the eyes would needes take vpon it to see and by seeing to direct the body or if the eye not contenting it selfe to see for the whole would seeke to speake and vtter a voyce as the tongue if the head would attempt to walke and take vp the office of the feete or if the left hand hauing the same gift with the right would maligne it because it is more apt strong ready quick and able to execute the function belonging vnto it who would not complaine of this confusion as most vnnaturall and monstrous threatning the ruine of the whole body This duty hath many branches First it teacheth that euery one ought to haue a proper and personall calling wherein he is to walke diligently carefully and painefully whether he be high or low rich or poore bond or free all without exception must haue a particular vocation of his owne Christ is called in the Gospel the Carpenter Mar. 6.3 Moses kept his fathers sheepe Exo. 3.1 Psal 78.72 Ephe. 4. ●● Dauid followed the Ewes great with young Euery one must labour working
separated frō it that were neuer of it or in it And touching the elect they can neuer fall from the grace of election the foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. ● ● hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his so that it is vnchangeable Besides such are also engrafted into Christ and cannot be separated from his communion according the saying of Christ Iohn 6 ver 37. All that the Father giueth mee shall come to me and him that commeth to me I will in no wise cast out And the Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn ● ● saieth They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would no doubt haue continued with vs but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of vs. If then the reprobate were neuer of this communion and the elect can neuer fall from this communion it may seeme that none can be said to be truely excommunicated that is to be separated from that spirituall communion which wee haue with Christ and with all the Saints by faith ● hope and loue I answer that which is affirmed of the elect and reprobate is most true neuerthelesse that which is concluded from thence is most false as the learned haue well obserued For first of all touching the reprobate that being hypocrites were once in the Church though they were neuer of the Church neither truely partakers of this spirituall communion of the Saints yet then they are saide to bee separated from it when they are manifested declared to haue beene alwaies strangers vnto it and separated from it as when Dauid praieth in the Psalms that they might be blotted out of the booke of life Psal 69 28. as if he had said declare it shew it plainely that they were neuer written in the booke of eternall election Secondly touching the elect the question is more difficult and yet the knot is not so intricate or intangled but it may be loosed For albeit they cannot be cut off from the grace of election because his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. neither can be wholly and altogether excluded from that communion which they haue by faith with Christ and by loue with the Church both by reason of the stablenesse of Gods promises and by reason of the efficacy force of Christs praier heard of the Father 〈◊〉 ●7 21 ● Luke 22 32. Yet in some sort in some respect they separate themselues as much as lyeth in them when they fall into greeuous sinnes as Dauid when he committed adultery and Peter when he denyed his Master The guifts of the holy Ghost are as a flame of fire kindled in vs such sinnes are as water powred vpon them to quench it and except GOD did grant his Spirit to dwell in them and preserue it as fire hidden vnder the ashes they would lose it wholly be quite and cleane excluded from this spirituall communion Notwithstanding our saluation is sure for his promise sake who hath promised to put his feare in our hearts that we should not depart from him and for Christs praier who praied for Peter all the elect that their faith should not faile Hence it is that he keepeth a remnant of grace in them and cherisheth the fire of his Spirit that it should not goe out so that the flame is slaked and the heat is diminished But in his good time he kindleth the fire and stirreth vp the heat somtimes by his word and sometimes by his corrections and therefore the Apostle willeth Timothy to stirre vp as coales 〈◊〉 1 6. the gift of God that was in him Dauid hauing experience hereof praieth vnto him to create a new heart in him and not to take away his Spirit from him Ps 51 10 11. Thus we see how the faithful are not wholly but yet in some part separated frō the communion of Christ because they are depriued of the sweet comforts that they felt before of the large measure of grace which they finde greatly diminished by the committing of sinne and continuing in it This is the spirituall communion The externall communion standeth in a common partaking together in the word in praiers in the receiuing of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another as Luke speaketh of the Church of Christ after his ascension Acts 2 42. They continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and in praiers Excommunication separateth from all these But some will say Obiect doth excommunication take away all commercing and conuersing one with another May not one in any sort liue with such Or doth it dissolue all bands of nature and pollicy I answer Answer no. There are some bands so firmely and closely knit tied together that nothing can loose them and abrogate them Some duties are naturall some domesticall and some ciuill which no excommunication can diminish or dissolue or dispense withall The Apostle giueth this as a generall precept If thine enemy hunger Rom. 12 20. giue him meate and if he thirst giue him drinke If an excommunicate person be in want and in any distresse we must helpe him and minister vnto him such things as are necessary for his preseruation wee must not cast away all care of him and all loue vnto him forasmuch as God hath made vs keepers one of another Againe it is lawfull to buy of him to sell vnto him and to bargaine with him albeit we should not conuerse and commerce with him as with a friend Moreouer if we owe personall duties to such a one as is in the family with vs we cānot shake them off vnder any colour or pretence of excommunication The wife must performe due beneuolence to the husband the children must obey their parents the seruants must count their masters worthy of all honour and contrariwise prouided alwayes that they do not ceasse to pray for thē to admonish them and to hate their sins and that they looke to themselues that they do not defend them in their wicked courses and ioyne with them in opinion for then we make our selues partakers of their sins Lastly let vs set before vs the ends of excommunication which also haue bin considered in part already One end of it is the good of the person excommunicated that if it bee possible he may be won Tit. 2 11. Rom 1 6. Christ deliuereth the doctrine of saluation the Gospel is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth For wheras Christ Iesus saith of himself Math. 10 34. that he came to send fire and sword into the world and that hee is appointed for the fall of many in Israel Lu. 12 46 2 34. that the Gospel is the sauor of death vnto death 2 Corinth 2 15. Yet this is not the proper end of Christ or the Gospel but as it were beside their purpose
and in many others To this doth the Prophet exhort them Hos 14.3 Take vnto you words and turne to the Lord and say vnto him Take away all iniquity and receiue vs graciously so will we render the calues of our lips Thus we see confession of sinne and asking of pardon must ioyne hand in hand and goe together as friends that are agreed so that we should not hope for pardon but pray for pardon of God Exod. 34.7 whose nature is to forgiue iniquity transgression and sinne that is sinnes of all sorts how great and heinous soeuer they be If we sinne against God and neuer aske forgiuenesse of God we shall neuer receiue forgiuenesse at his hands Lastly we ought so to confesse our sinnes The eighth property as that we haue also a purpose to leaue and to forsake our sinnes We must not thinke to find mercy so long as we haue a desire to continue in them Hence it is that the Prophet saith Esay 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercy vpon him and to our God for he is very ready to forgiue This is true repentance to flie from sinne forasmuch as euery one that nameth the Name of Christ must depart from iniquitie 2 Tim. 2.19 This is a faultie confession of sinne when there appeareth no change or alteration in them that doe confesse We must confesse both some of our sins and all of them Iob 20.12 and keepe none of the sweetnesse of them vnder our tongues as Iob speaketh but refraine from them and be afraid that they will be vnto vs as the gall of Aspes We must cast aside euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on Heb. 12.1 he will bring all sin vnto iudgment and therefore we should confesse all of them if we would haue pardon of all of them We desire to haue them all pardoned so that we must hide none of them nor conceale them for thereby we shut vp Gods mercy and are enemies to our owne peace And shall restore the dammage thereof with his principall and put the fift part of it more thereunto c. The second meanes of expiation of our sins or of receiuing forgiuenesse of them is restitution which is set downe three wayes He that hath wronged his neighbour must restore first the principall secondly the dammage and thirdly he shal adde a fift part thereto to the end that all persons should be terrified from committing this or the like sinne and the owner may haue a full amends and receiue a perfect satisfaction True it is our offences are forgiuen freely without our deserts and certaine it is we cannot make amends and satisfaction to God but we can and may and ought vnto our brethren which are damnified by vs. Now if God had ordained that such as purloyne from men their goods either by open oppression or by forged cauillation or by violent extortion or by colourable circumuention should onely restore the principall portion which they haue taken away it might haue encouraged many in their wicked waies and haue strengthened the hands of the fraudulent dealer For he might reason thus with himselfe I wil enrich my selfe with my neighbours goods and draw vnto me that which is his I will goe closely and couertly to worke it is a thousand to one that euer it be knowne or I espied and if it come abroad to the open light I know the hardest and the worst that may befall he can haue but his owne againe and so though I be no winner I am sure I shal be no looser To preuent this mischiefe and to stop the mouthes of all those that are ready to doe wrong the Lord decreeth that such a one shall restore not onely the principall but he shall repay the dammage that the owner hath sustained by the lack or losse of his goods and besides he shall adde a fift part thereunto whether it be more or lesse that he hath taken away From hence we learne that whatsoeuer is vniustly taken away from the right owners Doctrine Restitutio● i● required or 〈◊〉 such as haue taken any thing wro●●fully ought to be restored vnto them againe It is a duty required at our hands to make restitution to our brethren whensoeuer wee haue wronged them and whatsoeuer we haue taken from them When Abimelech had taken away Abrahams wife while he soiourned in Gerar the Lord said vnto him in a dreame Deliuer the man his wife againe for he is a Prophet and he shall pray for thee that thou mayest liue but if thou deliuer her not againe be sure that thou shalt die the death thou and all that thou hast Gen. 20.7 Abimelech is commanded to restore her againe to him whose by right shee was and to whom onely she pertained Many lawes to like purpose are set downe in the booke of Exodus chap. 22.1 3 4 5 c. If a man steale an oxe or a sheepe and kill it and sell it he shall restore fiue oxen for the oxe and foure sheep for the sheepe c. If a man doe hurt field or vineyard and put in his beast to feede in another mans field he shall recompense of the best of his own field and of the best of his owne vineyard So in the booke of Leuiticus chap. 6.1 c. the Lord ordaineth If a soule sin and commit a trespasse against the Lord it shall be because he hath sinned that he shall restore c. And to this purpose Samuel appealeth to the consciences of the people 1 Sam. 12.3 Behold heere I am beare record of me before the Lord and before his Annointed whose oxe haue I taken or whose asse haue I taken or whom haue I defrauded or whom haue I oppressed or of whose hand haue I receiued a bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you Euery one that hath gouerment ouer others cannot truely say thus but euery one ought to do thus Whereby we see that howsoeuer God commandeth vs to confesse our sinnes which we haue committed vnto him yet that is not sufficient vnlesse we also make actuall restitution to him whom we haue offended This trueth is yet better to be confirmed Reason 1 by strength of reason And first we must know that it is a fruit or signe of true repentance and turning vnto God and of an heart touched with a feeling of his former offences that he which hath stollen will steale no more This we see in the example of Zacheus Luke 19.8 when once hee beleeued in Christ who had as it were lighted a candle within his heart that he began to see his own vnrighteousnesse and so his vnworthinesse to receiue any good thing he stood forth and said vnto the Lord Behold Lord the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore and if I haue taken away any thing from any man by false
peace when there is no peace So then we must know that wee make our selues accessaries to other mens sinnes except we admonish them for albeit we are to conceale their imperfections yet we are not to abstaine from admonitions If any be fallen through infirmity Gal. ● 1. they that are spirituall must restore such a one by the spirit of meeknesse considering themselues lest they also be tempted If any man doe erre from the faith we must labour his conuersion assuring our selues that he which conuerteth a sinner from the errour of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes Iam. 5 19 20. It is our duty therefore to couer their frailties while there is hope of amendment but if by this meanes the sinne concealed bee not reformed and repented of we are bound to proceed farther euen in loue and charity to declare it and make it knowne to those that may correct the persons and amend the sins So did Ioseph deale toward his brethren Gen. 37 2. He brought vnto his father their euil report And Christ saith If he heare not thee take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word may be established Mat. 18 16. 15. Then shall the man bring his wife vnto the Priest and hee shall bring her offering for her the tenth part of an Ephah of barley meale he shal powre no oyle vpon it nor put frankincense thereon for it is an offering of iealousie an offering of memoriall bringing iniquity to remembrance 16. And the Priest shall bring her neere and set her before the Lord. 17. And the Priest shall take holy water in an earthen vessell and of the dust that is in the floore of the Tabernacle the Priest shall take it and put it into the water 18. And the Priest shall set the woman before the Lord and vncouer the womans head and put the offering of memoriall in her hands which is the iealousie offering and the Priest shall haue in his hand the bitter water that causeth the curse Hitherto we haue spoken of the allegation or propounding of the cause which is put in the former words Now wee must goe forward to see the proceeding in it how it is decided and determined wherby it commeth to passe that the same which before was doubtfull vnknowne and vncertaine to wit whether the woman were defiled or not now becommeth plaine and manifest That which from the beginning was knowne onely vnto God and the persons themselues that sinned or else are suspected to haue sinned is made knowne to others both to the Priest and to the whole Congregation This is done two waies first by setting downe such things as goe before the triall secondly by adding such things as are ioyned more neerely with it The things going before are of two sorts to wit the workes or actions that are vsed and then the words that are spoken The actions vsed are in this diuisio● the words of execration that are vttered are to bee considered afterward These workes that are commanded and are here in order rehearsed in the text do concerne either the duties of the husband or of the Priest to whom she was brought First the husband must bring his suspected wife to the Priest with an offering to wit the tenth part of an Ephah of barley meale that is an Omer as appeareth Exod. 16 36. but he is charged to powre no oile vpon it nor to put any frankincense to it forasmuch as it is an offering of iealousie and bringeth iniquity to remembrance either committed or supposed and suspected to be committed Before we proceed any farther we are from hence to answer sundry questions that may be Question 1 asked and demaunded in these words For wherefore is the husband charged both to accompany and bring his wife and to set her before the Priest that triall might be made of her and not rather some other man I answer ●●swer first because he supposeth himselfe to be iniuried and no man else and therefore seeing it most concerneth him it is fittest to be done by him Or if he be not wronged he wrongeth his wife by needlesse suspitions Besides he was to be an eye-witnesse either of her innocency or of her guiltinesse that he might esteeme of her accordingly and know where the fault resteth in himselfe or in his wife Lastly it behoueth that the people of God be free not onely from crime but from suspition of crime and to abstaine not onely from euill but from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5.22 as we shall shew more at large afterward Question 2 Againe it may be asked why hee bringeth barley meale rather then other and why without oyle and incense I answer ●●swer is was an offering of the lowest and meanest graine vsed of the poorest of the people forasmuch as this was a signe that should put the woman in mind to humble her selfe being now brought by her husband not onely into the presence of the Priest but into the presence of the Lord himselfe It must be offered without oyle and frankincense because they haue no affinity or concord with this matter neither was this offering of the nature of others Oyle did signifie the graces of Gods Spirit and therefore it is said that Christ was annointed with the oile of gladnesse aboue his fellowes Psal 45 7. Heb. 1 9. Psal 133 2. Incense was a signe of sweet sauour and delight that we should take in the seruice of God and of Gods acceptation of his guifts and our duty performed vnto him in his Sonne Christ Psal 141 2. where the Prophet saith Let my praier bee directed in thy sight as incense and the lifting vp of my hands as the euening sacrifice so that neither of them did accord or agree with this oblation wherein there was no gladnesse nor ioyfulnes of heart forasmuch as the cause or originall of it was sadnesse pensiuenesse and discontentment And this is the reason rendred by Moses himselfe verse 15. For it is an offering of iealousie not an offering that they could goe vnto with alacrity and cheerefulnesse For wheresoeuer there is either a party suspecting or a party suspected there can be nothing but feare sorrow care and a traine of such like tormenting affections Thirdly heere is mention made of the tenth Question 3 part of an Ephah The question heereupon may be asked what the Epha was a measure much vsed and oftentimes mentioned in the old Testament both in the Law and the Prophets I answer Answer the first place that mention is made of it to my remembrance is at the gathering of Manna when the people were in the wildernes where it is said that euery man was stinted and had an Omer for his allowance and Moses addeth in the end that an Omer is the tenth part of an Ephah Exod. 16.36 If then we learne what an Omer was we may quickly easily and readily know
himselfe teacheth out of the whirlewinde Iob 39 1 2 3. Who prepareth for the Rauen his meate when his Birds cry vnto God wandering for lacke of meate Wilt thou hunt the prey for the Lyon and fill the appetite of the Lyons whelps We know the Lyons other sauage beasts are vnsatiable they are not filled with a morsell of meate they couch not downe in their dens whē they haue taken a little they require much sustenance according to their deuouring nature Now who is it that findeth them this food and prouision but he that is the Creator of all things who saueth man and beast for the Lyons rore after their prey and seeke their meate at God Then let vs come to the comparison which the Prophet maketh Psalme 34. Psalm 104 21 If he feede the Lyons who suffer hunger and seeke their prey with violence how shall hee forget or forsake vs whom he auoweth for his children and hath created after his owne Image The Lyons do lacke and suffer hunger but they which seeke the Lord shall want nothing that is good Psalm 34 9 10. All these things teach vs that God reserueth to himselfe the office and charge of maintaining vs and giuing vnto vs whatsoeuer is necessary and meete for vs. Reason 1 The Reasons may easily and euidently appeare vnto vs. First his prouidence watcheth ouer those that are his for their comfort and benefit as the Prophet teacheth Psal 33 18 19. Behold the eye of the Lord is vpon them that feare him and vpon them that trust in his mercy to deliuer their soules from death and to preserue them in famine This made him say in his old age He saw neuer the righteous forsaken their children begging bread Psal 37 25. This prouident eye can neuer be deceiued or disappointed neither can it deceiue or disappoint such as rest vpon it for their comfort and preseruation Againe he is the Creator of all a mercifull Reason 2 Father a carefull Shepheard a gracious Redeemer a louing Husband to his people Will the Maker forsake the worke of his owne hands Can the Shepheard forget his flocke and the sheepe of his pasture Can the Father forget his childe or the Mother not haue cōpassion on the sonne of her wombe Can the Redeemer cast off his inheritance that he hath bought and dearely purchased Can the husband deny protection and prouision vnto his wife that lieth in his bosome Thus the Prophet reasoneth and from the titles of God assureth his faith that it should neuer faile The Lord is my Shepheard I shall not want hee maketh me to rest in greene Pastures and leadeth me by the still waters c. Psal 23 1. The vses of this Doctrine are lastly to bee Vse 1 stood vpon First we are hence to gather that we ought in all estates to feare God and not to feare want of worldly wealth or transitory things let vs haue our conuersation without couetousnesse which is vnsatiable and enlarged as the graue let vs take heed of diffidence distrustfulnesse touching the things of this life let vs as well in aduersity as in prosperity be ready to rest on Gods prouidence whatsoeuer fall out vnto vs. True it is we ought to labour in our callings and to take paines to get meate and drinke but we must beware of carking and cares and vsing vnlawfull meanes to sustaine our selues If we see not such successe on our labours as we looke for let vs be content if we see his blessing let vs remember to render him thanks This duty the Prophet declareth Psal 34 9 37 5 for hauing declared that albeit the Lyons lacke yet God will nourish those that be his hee concludeth hereupon O feare the Lord ye his Saints for nothing wanteth to them that feare him Commit thy way to the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe Let vs pray to him in our necessities and call vpon him for our daily bread let vs especially bee mindfull of heauenly things and lift vp the eyes of our mindes to that kingdome that is reserued for vs. As for this world 1 Cor. ● 32. wee must vse it and all the things therein as if we vsed them not and as though they were not our owne but anothers according to the example and practise of the godly Patriarkes Let vs vse our houses and dwelling places as strangers doe an Inne wherein they lodge and seeke harbour for a night and then are gone Let vs vse our goods and riches as Pilgrims do other mens goods for a small season but we must take heede wee set not our hearts vpon them Let vs reiect and cast off all things that may clog and hinder vs in the way to the kingdome of heauen like good trauellers that wll burden themselues with nothing that may hinder them in their iourney And let vs all learne true contentation of heart in euery estate of life whether in health or in sicknesse whether in want or in abundance whether in trouble or in peace considering that as we brought nothing into this world so we can carry nothing out of the same Againe seeing God supplieth the wants of Vse 2 the body let vs seeke also at his hands the norishment of our soules and depend vpon him for our spirituall food We see how men being in any aduersity are vexed and greeued how neere it goeth vnto the quicke If they want bodily food and sustenance they compasse sea and land they spare no labour they refuse no charges to haue it supplied How much more should wee double our care for the soule ● ●6 which is of a more diuine nature and commeth nearer to the Image of God The soule of man is the more precious and noble part of a man the soule of a man is truely himselfe the body is but his instrument therefore being of a more excellent substance it is more to be regarded and cared for then the body If therefore a man would leaue country and kindred to prouide for his body hee should be willing to go out of house home yea euen to forsake himselfe to saue his soule If a man be ready to trauaile a thousand miles by sea and land for the increase of his wealth or the bettering of his knowledge or the delight of his body ● 6 33. we should not think much to go ten thousand miles to take any paines for the good of our soule and to get food for the same But the practise of the world goeth cleane contrary the soule is least regarded the health the wealth the welfare the peace the sustentation and preseruation thereof is nothing esteemed They that are of the earth do sauour onely of the earth and will neuer leaue caring for it till their mouthes be full of it As we do tread vpō the earth so let vs tread vnder our feet all earthly things and as wee are borne to looke vpward toward heauen
let vs haue our conuersation in heauen set our affections vpon heauenly things as we aske of God our daily bread so let vs depend vpon him for the daily food of our soules Vse 3 Lastly let vs returne to him praise and glory due vnto his Name We see men looke for this duty at our hands as an acknowledgment of their fauours who are but the instruments of God for the good of his people How much more then ought wee to be carefull to remember the Lord and to lift vp our hearts to the heauens We must not be alwaies groueling vpon the earth like the swine that eate the Mast but looke not to the Tree Wherfore the Prophet teacheth vs this duty I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart yea I will glorifie thy holy Name for euer for great is thy mercy toward me and thou hast deliuered my soule from the lowest graue Psal 86 12 13. If we be not carefull when God hath opened his hand toward vs to opē our mouthes yea our minds toward him we depriue our selues of many other blessings that God would plentifully bestow vpon vs. A skilfull husbandman will not alwaies till a barren soile nor cast his corne in the high-way where it shal neither be encreased nor receiued so if there be found in any of vs a dry and vnthankfull heart we stop the streame of Gods blessings and hinder many good things from vs. So then it is not enough to desire a supply of our necessities to haue a sense and feeling of our own wants we must not be idle beggers alwaies crauing catching what we can out of the Coffers of Gods Treasury and neuer acknowledge what we receiue and from whence we receiue it It is a notable note and token of the childe of God to be often in praises and thanksgiuings If we haue receiued but a litle measure of knowledge or faith learne vnfainedly to be thankfull for that to the end thou maist procure a farther blessing from God and that thou maist grow from faith to faith and from strength to strength Many hypocrites dissemblers nay many Atheists and Libertines in trouble and affliction are ready to aske seeke and knock at the gate of Gods mercy as we see in the Israelites and in sundry others but these praiers proceed from feare not from faith from a feeling of sorrow not from a feeling of sin from a sight of their own necessity not from a sight of their owne misery through want of reconciliation vnto God But we must testifie our loue to God and our zeale of his glory by our acknowledging of his gracious blessings and rendring vnto him the praise of his works of mercy Verse 17. Then Israel sang this song c. The goodnesse of God was great toward the Israelites in those dry and desolate places to send them water reueale vnto them where they should dig a Well Wherefore so soone as they haue experience of his kindnesse they make a song of thanksgiuing and sing a song of praise to remaine vnto all posterity to testifie the acknowledgement of Gods mercy toward them The Doctrine from this place is this Doctrine Thanksgiuing to God is a necessary duty That it is required as a speciall duty to God to offer the sacrifi●e of praise and to pay vnto him the calues of our lips when we haue tasted of his bounty and louing kindnesse We must giue thanks for mercies receiued at his hands Whē the people of God receiued any victory ouer their enemies they returned the glory to him for their deliuerance Gen. 14.20 Exod. 15 1. and 18 10. The Prophet Dauid as he abundantly tasted of the fauour of God so plentifully powreth out praise and thanksgiuing as the 18 Psalme It is a Psalme of praise which he sang in the day that the Lord deliuered him from the hand of all his enemies and from the hand of Saul Likewise Psal 116 12 13. What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefites toward mee I will take the Cuppe of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. This duty we see practised by Melchizedec on the behalfe of Abraham Blessed be the most High which hath deliuered thine enemies into thine hands This we see performed by Moses and Aaron when they saw the mighty power of God ouerturning the Egyptians I will sing vnto the Lord for hee hath triumphed gloriously the horse and him that rode vpon him hath he ouerthrowne in the sea they sanke to the bottome as a stone This duty is not omitted nor deferred by Deborah and Barak in the day of their deliuerance Praise ye the Lord for the auenging of Israel and for the people that offered themselues willingly Iudg 5 1 5. This is it also that the Apostle teacheth Phil. 4 6. In all things let your requests bee shewed vnto God in prayer in supplications and in giuing of thanks Yea Iob fearing God and eschewing euill performed this duty to God after the losse of outward wealth when he had beene bereft of his children robbed of his goods spoiled of his seruants reproched of his wife and tempted of the diuell he said Naked came I out of my mothers wombe and naked shall I returne againe the Lord hath giuen the Lord hath taken away blessed bee the Name of the Lord for euer Iob 1 21. Teaching vs heereby to glorifie God not onely for meate drinke apparell peace liberty Gen. 24 12. and 29 35. 1 Sam. 1 1. health children successe in domesticall affaires and such like but euen for the losses crosses that he sendeth vpon vs which he sanctifieth to the saluation of his seruants Let vs therefore acknowledge that it is a duty belonging vnto vs to offer the sacrifice of praise alway vnto God that is the fruite of the lips which confesse his Name Reason 1 The Reasons remaine to bee considered First we must giue him the praise of his works because it is the will and pleasure of GOD who is so good vnto vs to require it of vs who can giue him nothing else Psal 118 1. For what are we able to require and returne to the Lord for his great mercies Can we deserue them at his hands or glory of any our own merits Without him we can do nothing If then wee can render nothing but this let vs not deny him this duty of praise It is the will of God we should not kill or steale nor commit idolatry or adultery such like few but make conscience of these sinnes because we see the will of God restraining vs and condemning them So it is the will of God we should beware of vnthankfulnesse and open our mouthes in setting foorth his praises for his goodnesse vnto men This reason the Apostle vseth 1 Thess 5 17 18. Psalm 81 4. Pray continually in all things giue thanks for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus toward you
vttered with hir lips wherewith she bound her soule of none effect the Lord shall forgiue her 9 But euery vow of a Widdow and of her that is diuorced wherewith they haue bound theyr soules shall stand against her 10 And if she vowed in her husbands house c. 11 And her husband heard it and held his peace c then all her vowes shall stand c. 12 But if her husband haue vtterly made them voide c. 13 Euery vow and euery binding made to humble the soule her husband may establish or her husband may make voide 14 But if her husband altogether holde his peace c then he establisheth her vowes c. 15 But if hee shall any way make them voyde c. 16 These are the statutes which the Lord commanded Moses betweene a man and his wife and betweene the father and his daughter being young in her fathers house In these wordes Moses proceedeth in the matter of Vowes euen to the end of the chapter concerning the married woman and concerning the widdow The married woman is bound by the Law so long as her husband liueth and cannot vow and if shee vow it is meerely voide and such vowing is pronounced vnlawfull she hath sinned against God her husband howbeit God is mercifull and he will forgiue her From whence we may learn That the Lord is readie to forgiue those that offend But the Widdow that is free and loosed from the law of her husband is at libertie to vow This teacheth that the power and authority of the husband ouer the wife is very great Doctrine The husband hath authority ouer the wife for albeit she bee at liberty to vow in the Lord when her husband is dead yet while hee liueth hee hath power to disanull all her vowes Rom. 7 2. 1 Cor. 7 36. The wife is tied by a strong band and obligation vnto her husband 1 Cor. 14 34. Ester 1 22. This is not I confesse the proper place to handle these duties and therefore I will briefly touch the reasons and the vses The husband is the head of the wife 1 Cor. 11 Reason 1 3. Ephes 5 23 as Christ is the head of the church to rule it to defend it to prouide for it therefore as the Church is in subiection to Christ so ought the wife to be to her husband Againe marke the order and maner of the Creation how it was at the beginning Adam was first formed and then Eue and hee was not deceyued but the woman beeing deceyued was in the transgression and therefore shee ought not to vsurpe authoritie ouer the man but to be in silence and subiection 1 Tim. 2 12 13 14. Thirdly in the Law of creation wee must obserue the preheminence of man which will euidently appeare if wee marke the end of it for man was made to rule the woman to bee ruled for as the man was not of the woman but the woman of the man so the man was not created for the womā but the woman for the man 1 Corinth chap. 11 verses 8 9. Lastly man is the image glory of God wheras the woman is the glory of the man 1 Cor. 11 7. But was not the woman also made in the image of God Obiect and hath not God set the print of his glory vpon her face also I answer Answer the Woman was made in the image of God as well as the man Genesis 1 verse 27. But man was made to this end and purpose the Gods glorie should appeare in his rule and authority on the other side the woman was made that by profession of her obedience shee might the more honor her husband Vse 1 This serueth first for reproofe both of the husband and the wife when they knowe not their places of commanding or obeying the husband losing his honour and the wife vsurping aboue her calling As God in the creation of one made two so in the first institution of marriage hee vnited those two againe into one that the woman ioyned in marriage with her husband might not onely reuerence him as the rocke from whence she was taken but might honor him as her head vnder whom she liueth This order is broken when she wil by no meanes bee in subiection but seeketh to shake off the yoake which God and her calling hath laide vpon her This subiection is made heauier by transgression then it was by the law of creation For that which God made very good satan quickly turned into euill so that the woman instead of an helper became a tempter of the man to sinne and the man instead of a defender became an accuser of the woman to God for sinne Thus satan labored to diuide the house that it might not stand But Christ Iesus our Lord came into the world to destroy and dissolue the workes of the diuell and hath reconciled man and woman with God that now they shold liue together as heires of the grace of life 1 Pet. 3 7. Therefore all women should be content with their places wherof notwithstanding they oftentimes come short and take vpon them to controll their husbands to speake and doe what they list This we see in Vashti mentioned in the booke of Ester when she was commanded by the king to come vnto the feast she disdained and refused to obey and would not come into his presence Ester 1 22 and lest other women should be emboldned by her peruerse example they passed a decree and gaue it the force of a law and a statute and published the same in all the kings Prouinces that Euerie man should beare rule in his own house to wit vnder the same penalty inflicted on the Queene which was to bee diuorced from their husbands Againe it reproueth all husbands that in simplicity are as willing to resigne vp their places as their wiues in impudency are bold to vsurpe them which is as great a shame and reproch to the husband to lose as it is for the woman to challenge it This argueth want of wisedome courage and discretion in the husband and on the other side bewraieth pride selfeloue contempt and disdain in the wife as also forgetfulnesse of her first creation at what time she was made of a bone taken out of his side Gen. 2 21. I say out of his side to bee his companion and therefore as he is not to make her his footstoole to treade vpon her so shee should not make her selfe his head to ouertop him and so treade vpon him Vse 2 Secondly it is the duty of all wiues to acknowledge their duty and to yeeld without striuing the superiour place to their husbāds and to be subiect vnto them without resisting in word and deed This is commended vnto them in the example of Sarah who is set as a glasse before all womens faces to look vpon 1 Pet 3 5 6 to the end that if any obey not the word they may without the word be wonne by the
conuersation of their wiues Againe the Apostle Paul teacheth the wife to feare her husband Ephes 5 33 and Peter teacheth the same Shee must haue her conuersation with feare 1 Pet. 3 2. This duty is seated in the heart and helpeth to set in order all other duties This will shew it selfe in meeknesse of Spirit which is in the fight of God of great price and in obedience in all lawfull things that not by constraint but willingly and readily as seruing Christ without murmuring or gainsaying If they performe these things they shall be christian wiues and the daughters of Abraham and Sarah to their great comfort Such will do their husbands good and not euill all the dayes of their liues Prou. 31 12. Hence it is that Salomon sayeth A vertuous woman is a crowne vnto her husband Prou. 12 4 but she that is stubborne and disobedient maketh him ashamed and is as rottennesse in his bones A good wife is not onely an honour but an ornament vnto her husband and therefore is compared vnto a crowne of gold If shee had beene compared vnto the ring vpon his finger it had bene a great Ornament if to a Chaine of Gold about his necke it had beene a farre greater but behold while shee keepeth her selfe in her place and dischargeth her duty with loue and subiection she is said to be a crowne vnto him then which what greater honour and glory can there be And therefore in another place he saith Houses and riches are the inheritance of fathers but a prouident wife is from the LORD Prou. 19 14. On the other side he sheweth that it is better to dwell in a corner of the house top thē with a brawling woman in a wide house Prou. 21 9. And againe A continuall dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike Prou. 27 15 and 19 13. Lastly it is the duty of husbands seeing Vse 3 authority is committed vnto them ouer theyr wiues and as it were the brydle put into their hands to loue them tenderly to defend them from euils and to cherish them as their owne flesh as Christ Iesus doth the Church Eph. 5. The heathen king could tell Sarah that her husband was as a couering of the eyes Gen. 20 16. It is his duty therefore to dwell with his wife according to knowledge giuing honour to the wife as vnto the weaker vessell 1 Pet. 3 7 as beeing heyres together of the grace of life that their praiers be not interrupted And why are they commanded to dwell together but that the husband should yeeld to her these 4. things first good example secondly instruction thirdly maintenance lastly employment in her calling for his good and the good of his family CHAP. XXXI 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Auenge the children of Israel on the Midianites afterward thou shalt be gathered vnto thy people 3. And Moses spake to the people saying Arme some of your selues vnto the warre and let them goe against the Midianites and auenge the Lord on Midian 4. Of euery Tribe a thousand throughout all the Tribes of Israel shall ye send to the warre 5. So there were deliuered out of the thousands of Israel a thousand of euery Tribe twelue thousand armed for warre 6. And Moses sent them to the warre a thousand of euery Tribe them and Phinchas the sonne of Eleazar the Priest to the warre with the holy Instruments and the Trumpets to blow in his hand MOSES hauing taken order for the Church now commeth to the ciuill plantation and to the inheritance of the Land This had beene promised to theyr fathers Gen. 15 now they begin to preuaile and to receiue as it were the first fruites of it to assure them of the full and finall conquest of the rest Obserue in this Chapter the history of the battell fought against the Midianites The contents of this chapt who combining themselues with the Moabites as we see saw chap. 25 drew the Israelites to whoredome by the counsell of Balaam when they despayred to preuayle against them by the sword By this meanes they defiled themselues with Idolatry also and prouoked the wrath of God to the destruction of many thousands among them The parts of this Chapter are three First of the procuring causes of this warre Secondly the manner how it was followed fought Thirdly the euent and yssue of the whole The first part is in these words wherin we see the Commandement of God and the preparation vsed to accomplish this commandement For Moses sendeth them foorth and with them Phinehas the Priest appointeth souldiers to execute that which GOD commandeth out of euery Tribe Obiect From this arise diuers doubts that are to be discussed First why doth God command vengeance in this place that forbiddeth it else where Rom. chapter 12 verse 19. Deut. chap. 32 verse 35 Answer I answere this may not seeme strange vnto vs neyther should we thinke there is any change in GOD but wee must know the difference and distinction betweene the reuenge of God and of priuate men True it is God will haue his children beare iniuries patiently and to giue place to wrath and to ouercome euill with good Rom. 13 4 yet hee retayneth power to himselfe to execute vengeance against his enemies and neuer disclaymeth that office nay he challengeth it as proper to himself For he wil execute iustice and iudgement by himselfe and his ministers so often as it pleaseth him Numb 25 16. So then albeit the faithfull must bridle the desire of reuenge and not retaile like for like yet when God calleth and appointeth them to be executioners of his wil and wrath he putteth a sword into their hand and when the cause is iust their calling is lawfull Thus we see This is called the reuenge of the Lord verse 3. how souldiers are warranted to shedde blood for they are called to be magistrates onely it is required of such that they be carried kindled with an holy zeale of Gods glory not with priuat hatred grudge and reuenge which make a thing lawful to them vnlawfull Secondly Obiect the question may be asked what is meant hereby that Moses shall be gathered to his people I answere that he should dye Answ the body returning to the earth the spirit to God that gaue it Eccl. 12 7 for with him are the spirits of iust men made perfect Heb. 12 23. So it is said of Abraham Gen. 25 8 he gaue vp the ghost and died an old man full of dayes and was gathered to his people that is to his fathers Gen. 15 15. So then heereby wee must learne the immortality of the soule for Abrahams body was gathered to the body of Sarah onely for he was buried in the sepulcer with her So it is said of Isaac Gen. 35 29 hee was gathered to his godly forefathers and of Moses himselfe afterward Deut. 30 50 as also of Aaron before chap. 20 24. But it will be
that flourish 123 b. why those of the heathens prospered p. 124 a. Communion of two sorts 292 with Christ and one with another 307. b. 508 b. it teacheth loue 749 b. especially that in the spirit p. 750. Company of wicked auoid 163 b. 591 b. 999 1100 the branches of it 163 280 b. in what cases lawfull and in what not p. 281 a. 661 a. Companions with euill men are punished p. 660. Confession of sinnes 805 it is necessary 312 the want of it dangerous 316 the properties p. 317 b Conscience p. 411 a. Contemners of the Gospel p. 32. Contentation required 94 245 530 630 b. 1029 b. how many waies men do faile in it p. 99 100 183 a. Contentions in the Church p. 554. Continency See single life Continuance in sinne dangerous p. 917 b. Corruption of nature 161 the fruites of it p. 162 a. Couetousnesse 103 242 887 it deceiueth many 1027 b. it bringeth nothing home 1028 the euils of it 1114 b. it is idolatry 103 it may bee in the poore ibid. the branches of it 104 b motiues to auoide it p. 1227 b. Couenant betweene God and man p. 499 a. Counsell euil giue not 1003 b. good counsell follow whosoeuer giue it p. 1006. Creatures suffer with men 667 they must bee vsed with thanksgiuing 738 the smallest sent of God are mighty 799 they are weary of wicked men p. 875. Crying sinnes 308 what the cry of sinne is p. 309 a. Curiosity p. 522 a. Cush is not alwaies Ethiopia p. 550. D Dauids sinne how great it was p. 299 a. Death common to all 726 it maketh all equall 727 we must prepare for it ibid. it is the effect of sinne p. 1125. Death cutteth not off good workes 450 a. beeing sudden it is feareful 548 b. how we bring it vppon our selues ibid. the day of it vnknowne 548 and wherefore ibid. Decency what p. 59 b. Defrauding p. 840. b Delay dangerous p. 38 b. Departure out of the Church reproued p. 287. Despaire of no mans saluation p. 52● a 907 b. Deuices of euill men come to nothing p. 1030. Deuils cannot worke miracles 680 how great their knowledge is 988 b. their subtilty to seduce men p. 1037. Difference betweene sin and sin 635. not all equall ibid. between the Priests and Leuites p. 695. Dignity of the ministery p. 447. Discomfort often from such as should comfort pa. p. 553 b Discontentment p. 241 b Diseases of the soule worse then of the body p. 279. Disgrace it is not to godly children to descend of vngodly parents p. 1109. Disgrare it is not to refuse a challenge p. 1242. Doubting p. 170 b. 171 a. Diuinity of the Diuines of Doway p. 1242 b Drunkards defence p. 851 b. Drunkennes 252 b. how it may be knowne 537 b the signes and effects of it p. 538 a. Duels vnlawfull 304 1123 b. causes and effects thereof ibid. Duties of children to parents 1167. of parents toward their children 1168 b. of wiues to theyr husbands 1170. of husbands to their wiues ib. E Earthly things 1002. they are often giuen to the godly p. 453 b. Earthly pilgrim is a Citizen of heauen p. 1215 b. Eate as in Gods presence 631 it must be religious p. 537. Election of God p. 578 b. Election of the Ministers how p. 470. Encouragements in well doing p. 393 b. Enemies of the Church are cruell 763 are Gods enemies 516 b the diuell worketh in them 763 they often preuaile ouer the Church 776 b they are not consumed at once 858 b they leaue no meanes vnattempted to plot the Churches ouerthrow p. 940. Enemies differing ioyne against the Church p. 879 Enuy to be auoyded 543. remedies to keep vs from it ibid. p. 185. Enuy not wicked men p. 547 b. Epha what it is p. 359 b. Equiuocation p. 376 a. Eternall life a rest p. 1141 a. Euill is twofold p. 665 a. Euill actions haue ill successe p. 998. Euill company p. 589. Euill men account the Church as a prison 231 They prolong the time with God 249 b. They feare where no feare is 874 they are Cowards 875 they proceed from euill to worse p. 1061 Euill men rest vpon vaine things 885 they are often constrained to confesse their sins 911. and to giue testimony to the truth p. 923. Euil parents bring a curse on their houses 1081 b good parents a blessing p. 1083. Euill reports p. 776 b. Euill workes shall be rewarded p. 450 b. Examination before the Supper 480 wherein it standeth ibid. Examples what not to be followed 1169 b. of euill do corrupt page 529. they are not to be followed p. 585 Exhort one another p. 86 b. Excommunicate who are to be 264. 290 b. 291 a What duties are to be performed to them 293 265. not to be familiar with such Ibid. Their fearfull estate p. 266. Excommunicate are to be barred from the Worde and Sacraments 275 266 267. they are as Heathen and Publicans ibidem they are to be held infamous ibidem they are deliuered vnto satan 268 they are to be shut out of all christian churches ibidem Princes Lawes against them 269 we must shun their companie 271 275 the children of such may be baptized 291 492. the family may conuerse with them 275. who are to be excommunicated page 290 b. pag p. 291 a. Excommunication 258. it ought to haue place in euery Church 277. the ends of it 293 b. what is obiected against it 258. it is to be vsed vnder a Christian Magistrate 262. what it is Ibid. 290 it is to be executed vpon a member of the Church 263 291 how the Papists abuse it 364. 271 the end of it is the recouery of them p. 266. Excommunication blotteth men out of the number of Gods people 266 the sentence is ratified in heauen ibid. it is to bee denounced with sorrow 276. sundry abuses of it 271 it is not to be executed rashly 272 but when there is iust cause Ibid. it is not of the essence of the Church 273 277. it cannot depriue of temporall possession Ibid. it cannot be executed against such as are not of the Church p. 274. Executioners of iustice 640. why commonly infamous Ibid. Experience of mercy assureth more p. 608 861. F Face of God what p. 422 b Failings of Gods seruants many 538 b. why recorded in Scriptures p. 585 b. True Faith of an applying nature p. 1232 b. Faith is not in mans power 88. a none must sweare by it 373. a how it is knowne to be true 489. required of all Communicants 501. being weake it is auaileable p. 816 b. Faith of the Greeke Church touching Purgatorie p. 714 b. Faithfull that shew mercy receiue mercie 336. they haue often earthly blessings 453 b. they are greeued when kept from Gods seruice 482. they desire others to be equall to themselues 544 b. they must not greeue at it 545. a. they are the wicked mans benefactors 557 b. they are the house of God 563 b. their life is