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A71123 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy by ... Mr. Richard Stock ... ; whereunto is added, An exercitation upon the same prophesie of Malachy, by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation vpon the prophecy of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing T1939; ESTC R7598 653,949 676

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comparison of that which makes a man a beast which is worse sayth Saint Chrysostome then to bee a beast because istud naturae illud culpae est which some small difference from them cannot make But say it were greater yet doth it not therefore dissolve the knot or relation betwixt them for it is not in the greatnesse of the sinne but when such a sinne can be given that doth breake the relation for instance Idolatry is a greater sinner then adultery yet this not that breaks and dissolves marriage Because that not this meets in cominter-position with the knot of marriage In that they being and becomming one flesh with another 1 Cor. 6.10 and so cutteth himselfe from her he was knit to before in this they are onely one spirit with an Idol and cease to be one spirit with the Lord. So this It is not heresie for his greatnesse that can dissolve this naturall bond which is perpetuall for it cannot make that he had not his essence and being from his father and the duty depending upon this obey thy father that begat thee hath he begotten thee it is no matter what he is thou must honour him Then impious are their positions but no marvaile if they teach rebellions and diobedience and murthering of Princes if they allow dishonouring of parents Vse 2 To teach every child to performe this honour his Parents whatsoever he is whatsoever they are Art thou higher and richer and wiser than they yet must thou doe them honour and by it shalt thou have these the more Looke upon Joseph Solomon and Christ and no thing can be in thee that can give thee freedome from it when they did it the two first ex debito Christ ex placito to fulfill all righteousnesse and give us example Though then thou be married or advanced or howsoever yet still they are thy Parents and thou must not deny but performe honour unto them for thou hadst thy being from them and till that be dissolved thou owest them still the duties the bonds remaining yea whatsoever infirmity is in them no sinne dissolveth the bond it makes not an annullity of the duty for as Gold is Gold though it be smeared over with durt and filth so are they thy Parents whatsoever their lives and manners be Thinke with thy selfe how their love made them beare with many naturall infirmities of thy Childhood and not to neglect thee for the many untoward carriages of thy youth and not to cast thee off from them And thinke what duty now should bind thee unto if they for their perfect love and upon some hope of comfort many yeares after did passe over all how much more thou in duty and in lieu of thankfulnesse for that which thou enjoyest from them Children must not be like Flies as Plutarch which slip along the glasse where it is smooth but catch hold of it where there are any scratches or flawes They must turne away their eyes from their infirmities and forget their hard usage if it have beene any and not be undutifull for that because they have their being and education from them Take heed of Chams curse and seeke Shems blessing by not seeing their infirmities but covering and performing duty to them accounting it to be a sin to be repented of when they cannot find their hearts so cheerefull in their duties as they ought because of their Parents infirmities A servant his master The second rule of nature the ground or other pillar of Gods reason against this people For the meaning 't is plaine the duties here required are in the generall the same for the most part with the former though not in every particular The first is reverence and this both inward and outward To joyne them together Doctr. Servants must give all reverence unto their Master all inward good affection and estimation of them and all reverent respect in gesture and speech Eph. 6.5 1 Tim. 6.1 Eccles 10.20 It may be applyed to Masters for the King is but a great Master and the Master a little King The outward in words as not replying unreverently Titus 2.9 not speaking their infirmities to others as 1 Sam. 25.17 giving them all reverent speech and submissive gesture as 2 King 5.13 not despising them as Hagar did Sarah Reas 1 Because God hath made them reverent in that he hath communicated unto them part of his excellency and dignity that is his Lordship and Dominion making them his Vicegerents and Lords over their family therefore they ought to reverence them Reas 2 Because his Commandements are spirituall and reach to the inward man and without it were all outward but hypocriticall and counterfeit which is abhominable And this without the outward is imperfect if it may be supposed it may be without it and so cannot be acceptable Vse 1 This is to let servants see their sinnes past or present when they have or doe carry themselves unreverently towards their Masters in heart and outward man in eye and tongue to their faces and behind their backs they are all guilty of the breach of the decree of the most High and indeed all for where shall we finde a servant any thing neere performing the carriage he ought to his Master and Mistris that he hath a base thought opinion and estimation of him appeares by his speech and carriage his speeches so void of reverence nay his answers full of contempt his eye and carriage so full of scorne and disdaine Hagar despising Sarah looking scornfully upon her which must needs argue unreverence in the heart for by these things many a man well knows what is in the privy Chamber of the heart and by this outward pulse thus beating may we discerne how the inward parts are affected For he that will speake so frowardly and looke so scornfully and doggedly as many will it must needs shew he hath no reverence but his heart is full of despight and contempt and he that will speake so to his face and in his presence what will he to others behind his back and in his absence Where is the feare and trembling Paul calls for Where is all the honour Peter exacts when ye will thus bourd them often thus disdaine them when ye will answer them frowardly or murmuring when their backs are turned when you tell their weaknesse not to your fellows but to neighbours servants whereby their estimation is impaired Thinke you the Apostles call for these in vaine or shall such things goe unpunished Assuredly no for when the Apostle saith to servants to encourage them that are good Eph. 6.7 8. with good will doing service as to the Lord and not to men knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free did he not meane the contrary and would have you to understand that whatsoever evill thing a man doth that shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free so expect it in this
particular see then that unreverent and contemptuous servants expect you to receive from the Lord some fearefull thing and let it be a restraint in you of such irreverence in the things spoken of or the like But of this sin Masters are often the causes of it and they that bring it upon themselves First because they have beene such servants to their Masters and so have lived in it ever since without repentance even then when God recompenceth them home yet they will not remember their owne sinne but are still brawling with their servants and so it is Gods just retribution whereas if they would repent of that they should better reforme this Eccles 7.21 22. Take no heed to all words that are spoken lest thou heare thy servant curse thee for oft-times also thy owne heart knoweth that thou thy selfe hast also cursed others It may be applyed to this though it carry somewhat more That a Master when his servant revileth him or useth him irreverently should remember even this sentence to make him penitent and moderate Secondly because they have remitted of that ancient severity in their government which we heare men that can remember times that are past speake of not having those strait eyes nor hard hands over them as they ought not so sharply correcting them as the offence and nature of a servant requireth so that they little reverence them for they feare them not because they forget that of Prov. 29.19 A servant will not be corrected by words for though he understand he will not answer Thirdly because they bring them up too liberally for diet and apparrell and so when the belly is full and the back fine the Master is not so regarded A servant is like in this thing to a Horse full fed and pampered he will cast his rider like to Bucephalus Alexanders Horse while he was bare-backt he would carry any man but if once he had his trappings and furniture none or hardly Alexander himselfe It is the complaint of many that servants are thus insolent to themselves and others many though not all are the causes of it themselves somewhat there is in the nature of a servant and other things for they bring them up so delicately as Prov. 29.21 He that delicately bringeth up his servant from a child shall have him become his sonne at the length Whatsoever their fare is their apparrell is farre exceeding a servant going better than a man of his Masters place and wealth did some few yeares agoe And though they will not allow it themselves yet they can be content their friends or themselves if their fortune be allotted unto them should provide it for themselves And if when they are thus gay without they use them as Hagar did her Mistris when she was bigge with child is it not just with them A great cause of this is taking of Apprentices with great portions and so as Mulier cum dote is imperiosa so they and their friends The cause you must have such portions with them more than in former times is this because they must thus be maintained more than in former times But better it were that you had lesse and kept them more meanely better for you you should have more reverence and respect better for them for thus you bring sin upon them for the present and in future time just contempt as they have contemned you Vse 2 To perswade servants to use their Masters with all reverence and good respect that may be they must feare them and reverence them Nature it selfe hath taught it and heathen servants have performed it as in Naamans servants how much more should religious Christian servants and the more Christian or religious the more they ought to performe this duty not onely not to contemne and despise but to reverence them with all the reverent carriage and speech that may be and that not outward onely but inward for God requires more than Nature his Law is spirituall and he will have all inward and outward respect the heart as well as the tongue and the outward will not be or not continue or if so yet not accepted of God yea he that wants this it can never be expected the other of obedience c. and let him who lookes and hopes to be one day a Master and to have his servants such as he would be now such a servant as he should Ephe. 6.8 knowing that whatsoever good any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free The second duty of servants is obedience for whom men feare them they obey Doctrine Servants must give unto their Masters and governours all obedience hence it followes because they must feare and whom men feare them they obey when they command this proved Ephe. 6.5 Col. 3.26 Titus 2.9 And this obedience if it be such as Christians ought to performe it must neytheir be clipt nor counterfeit not in some things onely nor in shew to the eye for the first Col. 3.21 in all things that is in all lawfull things whether they be liking and tasting unto him or otherwise though never so disliking for he must pleasure his master Titus 2. q. for the 2 Ephe. 6.5 6. Col. 3 22. singlenesse of heart is required and eye service forbidden Reas 1 Because they are bound either by Indenture or condition c. then they must obey Reas 2 Because they are maintained by them and learne and get that under them they may live by hereafter Reas 3 Because if in onely things they like they obey themselves not masters as in obedience of children Reas 4 Because in this obedience they serve God and Christ Ephe. 6.5 6 7. who lookes in the heart and singlenesse of it And though outward and eye service may be for thy master and may bleare his eyes yet not the Lord who as he cannot endure hypocrisie or imperfect serving immediately so not in that which is mediate to man Vse 1 To let servants see their sinnes past or present not obeying and doing the things their masters command but onely such things as they please and when they please and when they doe they clip their service and performe it by halves and doe it in hypocrisie and to the eye and so go no further then nature who teacheth a man onely to save himselfe as neere as he can from any harme that may ensue when his master is displeased or to seek to get somewhat if he have hope of ought by seeking of his favor and so seeming willing to doe any service unto him but they must know that as Barnard si in hoc obedimus non autem in illo fractus est nummus This obedience is like clipt coyne and will not passe for good payment before God though thy master let it passe and be content to put it up yet God will call thee one day to an account for it and though thou canst keepe it close from the one yet thou canst
not doe without But he may doe it unlawfully when he hath no such occasion yet thou must doe it and may so he imploy thee not about servile workes on that day and in that time The reason is because the Lords day may be sanctified privately and publique exercises are not of absolute necessity in the sanctifying of it for then prisoners and sicke persons and such as lye lame should not be able to sanctifie it They onely are of necessity when they can be had without apparent breach of some other commandements and yet maist thou make this unlawfull to thee when if thou be left at home thy Master and Mistris are gone to Church but thou art with a child in thy armes or without gazing at the dore or gadding abroad or having thy companions comming to thee and spendest thy time prophanely when thou oughtest so much as may be to spend it in reading the word meditating on that thou hast heard in the forenoon or former time or such like And in this thou must take heed how thou setst God and thy master one against another another instance thy master commands that is unlawfull for him to bid not for the thing but his affection thou must obey having first wisely and humbly sought to turne thy master from such a sinne As betwixt David and Joabs numbring of the people 2 Sam. 24.2 3. But the thing he commands is unlawfull as well as his affection I meane not simply but by circumstance or consequent yet thou mayst obey as being an Officers Clerke to receive more fees then is due being extortion or a Noble mans bailiffe his extreame racke rents providing that in humility thou shew thy dislike of it seeke to reforme it or doe it with sorrow and griefe while thou art bound to it and get thy self rid of such a service so soone as thou may But if he command thee any thing simply that is sinne as to sweare for his gaine to lye for his commodity to deceive to steale or any such things thou mayst not obey and yet not rebell but suffer Quest 2 If the Magistrate and my Master command divers thing whether must I obey Answ The Magistrate ut supra and for the reasons there besides if it carry not any excuse neither is it any plea in law my Master bids me doe it It must needs follow that the Magistrate must be obeyed It would not excuse Absolons servants their Master bade them kill Amnon for which he was glad to flee for the power of the master is but subordinate to the Magistrate thy obedience then to thy Master hath this restraint because it cannot be lawfull But say the Magistrate commands me that which doth marvellously redound to the hurt of my master whose good I am bound to procure If it be very profitable to the Common-wealth a publique good must be preferred if not prejudiciall to it so there be no contempt of the Magistrate and his authority he being content to beare the penalty if it be executed and exacted from him I see not but he may preferre his master before as in the case of Children and instance of Ester Quest 3 My Master and my Father are opposites whether must I obey Answ I answer as before in Children there is somewhat besides in those who are borne servants Exod. 21.4 Quest 4 My Master and my Husband as the case may fall out in the meaner sort who are to be instructed as others or my state requires this of me wife and children but my Master another Answ I answer his Master the Master is to be obeyed because he ought Psal 15.4 not to change though he swore to his hurt The equity of it stands for any covenant that must be preferred before his profit and if before his owne then his wives or husbands for the man see an example in Jacob who would not labour for his owne family but obey his Master Gen. 30.30 For the woman if she be a servant borne and given in marriage as the manner was still she was to obey her Master Exod. 21.4 If she be a servant by covenant and consent of her Husband during the time of her covenant she is to obey and keepe the conditions of the covenant for he for the time hath remitted his authority The third duty of servants is submission that is to their reproofe and corrections for those men whom they feare they will suffer both at their hands Doctr. Servants must submit themselves unto their Masters to be controuled and corrected by them whether they doe it justly or unjustly whether deservedly or not they must feare them and therefore suffer from them When God allows the Master to reprove and correct his servant as he doth Prov. 29.19 then it must imply that his servant must suffer it 1 Pet. 2.19 for this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience toward God endure griefe suffering wrongfully Tit. 2.9 not giving crosse words one for another Hence is that Gen. 16.9 And the Angell of the Lord said unto her Returne to thy Mistris and submit thy selfe under her hands The example of Abrahams servants is commendable Gen. 17.23 his servants submitted to Circumcision and by proportion the example serves for this purpose Reas 1 Because if it be for well doing in conscience it is thanke-worthy and if it be borne with meeknesse the Lord shall give a man the more reward 1 Pet. 2.19 20. Reas 2 Because they are called to this 1 Pet. 2.21 this is the Crosse that Christ hath called them to take up and beare after him this is the Crosse that God hath annexed to their calling as every calling hath some crosse or other and for the wrong that is offered them God as St. Paul saith Coloss 3.25 will right and revenge them c. Vse 1 To reprove many and most servants amongst us who goe not so farre as nature it selfe would teach them few so farre as Religion doth teach them for some cannot so farre subdue their crooked natures to submit themselves to their masters so farre as they can doe no otherwise because it is in vaine to struggle with the yoke when a man cannot slip it nor shift it off But if some come to this yet can they hardly suffer with patience hard measure though they suffer deservedly when as naturall equity condemneth him that doth otherwise And be it that some can thus subdue themselves yet is it no more than the Heathens and Publicanes will doe it is but Canina patientia a dog-like enduring saith Bernard such as God will not accept when either he dare not whine or hath done some foule fact and deserved it But if they have not or thinke they have not deserved it how ready are their answers how soone will they turne upon their Masters and take the rod by the end and if they be rebuked they murmure if they be corrected they either will resist or clamorously complaine or wickedly seeke revenge Let these know and
never be forgiven him Many for the sicknes times have in Gods Rols long Records against them yea great inditments they must plead guilty to for which some of their fellows have answered already for if he that deceives another or defrauds and oppresseth him shall not escape he lesse that deales so with his master But say he spends it not but convert it to his owne use and inrich himself by it he is more bound to make restitution or let him suspect that of Augustine shall be true * Non remittitur peccatū nisi restituitur ablatum August The sinne is not pardoned unlesse the theft be restored and as long as he keeps it he keeps Gods curse with it prosper he never so well for a while and if he leave it to his that it will be a sparke to burne up his house and substance in his sight he shall leave the curse of God with it to his wife and children when he is burning in Hell for it and other sins yet if many be free from this kind of unfaithfulnes yet how few can wash their hands from the other not upholding encreasing their masters state and condition the Apostle forbad not only stealing and pilfering but commands all good faithfulnesse that they by all meanes possible should encrease it by all their diligence skill and speech when as they have beene sloathfull and negligent when they have by their carelesnesse lost their master somewhat which might honestly have been had or not prevented some losse by their wisdome and forecast if they saw it comming yea when they have murmured to breake their sleeps or mend their pace to beare the heat in the day and the frost in the night for their Masters speciall advantage and honest gaine they have not performed this faithfulnesse in all these things looke upon your reckonings your guilty consciences and know you that if God will recompence your wrong to your master Col. 3.25 he will much more recompence you for them if you repent not Now the cause of this unfaithfulnesse to say nothing of Gods retribution and servants corrupt hearts is to be found in some because they doe not take strait accounts of their servants but do it negligently or seldome by which he is imboldened to spend or inabled to shift when his account is to be given Secondly in others because they passe over apparent unfaithfulnes in some of their servants without due correction and punishment and so other of their fellows themseves are heartned to the like when they have no feare of God nor feel nothing from their Masters after their deserts Thirdly from parents that allowed them to spend and brought them up idly before ever they bound them from many a master who would be content his eldest servant should keep good fellowship and company and spend of his owne to bring them customers by which the rest have their teeth set on edge in their corruptions and Gods hand is against them to punish them by others when they had no care of the former Fourthly because they had no care to take such servants as are religious and towardly and such as know how to be faithfull nor yet to teach them any religion when they have them that they might learne to be faithfull of conscience and not for other sinister respect and so when they have no care with Abraham to teach their servants to be faithfull with God no marvell though they be unfaithfull to them in their states bodies children and in all things Vse 2 This may instruct and perswade servants to perform faithfulnesse to their masters for the time to come and to repent make them recompence for that is past if they see their sinne if in mis-spending their masters goods at home or abroad if by negligence losing him commodity or by hindring of it or for want of diligence not advancing it sorrow and mourne for that is past as it is a sin against God and man and make thy master amends by a double care and diligence in thy service else make account that thy sinne stands upon the score against thee for a judgement to come And if thy unfaithfulnes hath been so great that thou hast appropriated his goods unto thy selfe looke whether thou be in his service or out that thou make him recompence and give him his owne againe make him restitution or else all shall not be accepted of God while thou hast his goods in thy hand looke how many pence or pounds so many witnesses against thee yea so many as call for a curse upon the rest of thy substance thou either hast or may have And for other servants let if not conscience restrain them yet this that thou must make restitution or never have remission before God besides the guilt and gall of thy conscience if thou go not asleepe to hell finally let servants in all things shew all good faithfulnesse specially such as have any taste of religion that you may adorn the doctrine of Christ that you make not the wicked scoffe at your profession and the good justly tax you of hypocrisie Chrysost Hom. 16. in Tim. hath these words If not otherwise yet as servants obey and respect their masters so let us the Lord. They expose their lives for their ease it is their work and study to care for their masters the things of their masters they care for all the day but a little part for their owne would God we could this exhort upon as good ground true sure it is so it should be and thus faithfull should every one be and if you be look for Gods blessing by like servants and a reward hereafter with the good servants if you be such of conscience and for the Lord. His Master As we have seen the duty and feare so we must see the parties to whom it is due to be performed To their Master whatsoever he may be so he be their Master it skils not to him must they performe it Doctrine Servants must give this feare and performe all these duties to him that is their Master be he what he may be or let them be what they can be yet while they are servants and they Masters they must performe it say he be in birth in parts in graces in religion inferiour to them say he be cruell and churlish a very Nabal say he be prophane and irreligious an Atheist or Hereticke yet they must feare and in feare performe these duties to them this is that the Apostle speaketh 1 Pet. 2.18 and 1 Tim. 6.1 To what servants speaketh the Apostle to such as did beleeve and were come to the knowledge of the truth of what masters such as yet were enemies to God and his truth loved not knew not had not tasted of the truth Laban was an Idolater yet did Jacob give him faithfull service and all duty yea a churlish and deceitfull unconscionable Master Potiphar was an heathen yet Joseph feared him and served
as hainous and displeasing unto God so as more hainous those which are against the main end of his calling wherein God hath placed him As the Minister must labour against ignorance idlenesse suffering his gifts to decay not increasing his talent and he must endeavour to search and beat out the simple and sincere sence of Gods word and will and impart it unto the people to bring them to life eternall for it is a hainous sin for him to be ignorant or to handle the word deceitfully or corruptly as Saint Paul speaks or to wrest the sense of it as Saint Peter speaks to their purposes And so as it is Isaiah the 3.12 They that lead thee cause thee to erre So the lawyer must not use unfaithfulnesse or cunning dealing he must search out the proper grounds of the law to direct his client to proceed warrantably to see his wrongs redressed or recover his right for for him to spend his time in devising quirks and distinctions which may serve to obscure the truth and make contentions and suits rather then end any or to delay his clients cause when he may well haste it and bring it to an issue and as many doe use their cunning to this purpose it is the greater sinne in them so a Physitian and a Surgion must imploy all his skill to cure for him to deferre and somtimes to help forwards and then pull backwards againe to make gaine of his patient and empty his purse and hurt his body is very hainous both of them worse then theeves by the high-way making Gods ordinance a cover for their theft not so punishable by humane laws but as culpable before God and shall as severely be punished So if a sonne omit the honour due to his father or a servant the feare due to his master is a greater sinne for others to doe it to the same men is not so hainous so t is the duty of a wife to be a helper that she must indeavour in all things For for her to be as Eve who was given as comfort to make Adams life more joyous for her to be a broker to bring death she that was taken from him as part to be shot at him as a dart to the wounding and murthering of his soule as Basill speaketh or for her who was taken out of his side to guard and hemme in his heart to be a ladder to the Devill to scale the heart of her husband as Gregory speaketh of Jobs wife was more hainous then when the Serpent and Devill did it who were professed enemyes and so now being directly against the end of her creation and calling and so of all they are thus to thinke of their sinnes and thus to avoyd them That despise my name The sinne they are accused of is contempt of his worship not the omitting of it or the nor doing of it at all but the doing of it corruptly carelessely and contemptuously The name of God signifies First himselfe Secondly his properties Thirdly his commands or his authority Fourthly his workes Fifthly his word and worship which is here meant and which they not only omitted which might be through ignorance or some forcible temptation but contemned or despised for many could not pretend ignorance and at this time there was no persecution to compell them to dishonour God but many did it out of a base conceit they had of Gods majesty thinking any kinde of service would serve the turne the word signifies to trample under feet as we doe vile things Math. 5.13 2 Kings 9.33 but did the Preists doe thus Ribera answereth things are oft said to be done which are intended to be done because nothing is wanting in them why it should not be done who have a will to have it done Doctrine Contempt of Gods name that is when men doe indeed the works of Gods worship and service but doe them negligently carelesly and contemptuously thinking if the deed be done it is enough but how for the manner it matters not greatly it is a grievous sinne Manifest that it is here made the grand sinne of this people and these Priests for which the burthen is threatned in the beginning and many particulary judgements afterwards This people did the work of the Lord brought their Sacrifices but they did it carelesly and contemptuously brought any thing as thinking it good enough This was one difference betwixt Abel and Cain though faith was the main yet how carefull the one was that thought the best was bad enough the other the worst would serve for he brought a Sacrifice Gen. 4.3 4. Hence are the qualities of the sacrifices described in the Law God requiring not only Sacrifices but such as were perfect without blemish Levit. 22.20 21 22 23. Deuter. 17.1 But why this but to shew how he requires the manner of doing aswell as the deed and that he cannot endure corruption here Hence Saul laboured to lessen the fault because they saved the chiefest for the Lord. 1 Sam. 15.15 Hence is that Malach. 1.14 which we shall see hereafter Reas 1 Because this argues a great contempt of God and as we may speake of his person for when any man is respected either for love or feare there the offices and duties that are performed about him are done neither negligently nor carelesly but with all diligence The Wife that loves her Husband the Child that honours his Father the servant that feares his Master doe their duties with all diligence and care Where the duties are done of course and coldly there is not the respect of the person that should be so it is in our carriage towards God Reas 2 Because it is grosse hypocrisie when men doe thus performe the act and yet their hearts and affections are farre remote and so are no living sacrifices but onely dead carkasses such as must needs stinke in the nosthrils of God yea and thus honouring him they doe dishonour him Isaiah 29.13 St. Salvian speaking of such as worship God corruptly saith Non tam inanis criminis fuisset ad Templum Domini non venire quàm sic venire quia Christianus qui ad Ecclesiam non venit negligentiae reus est qui autem venit sacrilegii minoris enim piaculi reus est si honor Deo non deferatur quam si irrogetur injuria ac per hoc quicunque ista fecerunt non dederunt honorem Deo sed derogaverunt De gubern Dei lib. 8. Vse 2 This being such a sinne argues the age we live in guilty of a great deale of sinne before the Almighty his worship is performed but yet contemned marvellously amongst us As they brought the sacrifices so doe we the workes but so corruptly and carelesly that he speaks to us Ministers and people Ye despise my Name The Word is preached and heard prayers are made Sacraments are delivered and received but alas so carelesly cursarily and customably that it is but the contempt of them and the contempt of God in
dignity of the flesh so to heare their prayers and to accept their service is he not moved by any dignity of person any vertue of place or office nor by outward priviledge if faith and holinesse of life be wanting here it is apparent in these Priests not accepted for all the dignity of their office Cain was the first borne and had that priviledge yet for all that God received not his offering but Abels Gen. 4. so betwixt the Pharise and publicane Luke 18.10 c. as betwixt the rich men and the widdow Marke 12.41 42 43. Reas 1 Because he is no accepter of persons Acts 10. that is for any outward thing for he accepts for inward It is borrowed from Judges who being corrupt are swayed not with the uprightnesse of the cause but with the person his place his honor his riches and such like which being denyed in God shewes why he accepts not the wicked Reas 2 Because he looks not as man looks upon outward things Vse 1 This will serve to check a corruption in our times and not in ours onely but that which hath ever beene in all ages great men nobles and Princes wealthy and worshipfull personages perswade themselves so are soothed up by their flatterers that a little thing from them is greatly accepted of God a few cold prayers a little devotion a carlesse hearing shall be accepted from them though they never trouble themselves for the true feare of God and to worke righteousnesse whereas first in reason there is more due to God where he hath given more But why should he accept lesse from them because they are great as if he were an accepter of persons or as if they were or could be great in respect of him Vse 2 Let no estate hinder a man from this service for the best excuseth not the meanest makes us no lesse acceptable VERSE X. Who is there even among you that would shut the doores and kindle not fire on mine Altar in vaine I have no pleasure in you saith the Lord of Hosts neither will I accept an offering at your hand WHo is there among you Here is the rejecting of them and their sacrifices threatened which is the maine point in the verse but in the former part as divers of the learned doe so take it he returnes unto his former expostulation reproving the priests for their ingratitude and corruption of his worship And then it will be read who is there among you that will shut the doores or doe you kindle fire on my Altar for nothing And some expound it that the Priests would not so much as shut the doores till they had their wages payed others that they did nothing in Gods service but they were rewarded for God arguing their unthankfulnesse to him by his bounty to them But others take the words as they are here read both more agreeable to the originall as also more squaring to the present matter to shew how he rejected them and their sacrifice when he wisheth that some body would shut the doores of the Temple or that they would offer none at all and so keepe out the Priests that they could not come to sacrifice any thing upon his Altar which he did so distaste and dislike and so it is I would rather you should not offer at all then as you doe For the particular words And kindle not fire upon mine Altar q.d. that yee might not come to offer upon mine altar kindle not my altar so in the originall a Metonymia In vaine id est to no end the word signifieth freely Job 1.9 for nothing so unjustly without cause Psal 69.5 so scotfree without punishment Prov. 1.11 to no end or purpose Job 2.3 Pro. 1.17 so here I have no pleasure in you The former is a wish this is the reason of the wish All is in vaine and to no end because I like not you and will none your sacrifices he shews that he esteemed not these offerings not from the nature but from the minde of him who did offer them If he were indued with piety and holinesse God would accept his offerings and service If otherwise God would take no delight in them for all their offerings Neither will I accept an offering at your hands These offerings he simply refuseth not being things he had commanded but because they were offered by them qd I am so farre from accepting at your hands these corrupt and imperfect sacrifices that if they were never so perfect and agreeing to the lawes of men prescribed yet I would not accept you please me not your gifts and offerings cannot be accepted of me here is first a wish and the reason of it he wished that they would offer no sacrifices to him at all rather doe him no service then doe it as they did Doctrine The Lord had rather have no service done unto him of the sonnes of Men then to have it done carelessely and negligently corruptly and not as he hath commanded it So is it manifest from this place as from that Isaiah 1.11 12 13 and 58.1 2 and 66.3 Math. 7.22 and 6.1 5 16. Reas 1 Because this argues contempt of God and as we may speak of his person yea often times more contempt then not to doe the works of his service at all for where any man is duly respected either for love or feare there the duties and offices to bee performed unto him are done neither negligently nor carelesly as the child that honours his father the servant that feares his master doe with all diligence and care their dutyes Where they are done coldly or cursarily there is not the respect of the person that should be Againe dutyes may be omitted without contempt as of ignorance not knowing what a man ought to doe of infirmity or an erronious conscience because hee thinks he may not doe that which he can not doe in all perfection But to doe them carelesly and that wittingly with corruption can have no such excuse and so more contempt Reas 2 Because the Lord hath no need of the sacrifice and service of men a man cannot be profitable to him as hee may be to his neighbour It is nothing to him that thou art righteous that thou prayest or performest any other service unto him Job 22.2 May a man be profitable unto God as he that is wise may be profitable to himselfe therefore he as a rich King values not the gift but the mind of the giver he looks more to the manner of doing than the deed he respects more the heart than the hand the inward affection than the outward action No marvell then if he had rather have nothing than carelesly and corruptly done And this made him esteeme more of the Widows two farthings and mytes than of the rich mens treasure * Deus puram magis conscientiam exaudit quàm preces August contr lit Petil. Donat. lib. 2. cap. 53. God rather heares a pure conscience than prayers Object Phil.
1.15 16 18. better Christ be preached any wayes than not at all Sol. It is better in regard of others who have the benefit of it and to whom by such leaden and stony conduits God conveyeth the water of life as a Gardener doth water to his plants but it is not better in regard of them who doe it for it maketh their condemnation more grievous Judas preached condemnation to himselfe and yet no doubt converted some as the rest did Noah was glad he could get some to build his Arke himselfe and his sonnes being no workmen fit for it but it profited them not a whit that built it as good never have done it Vse 1 This may teach us what to judge of our Church-Papists who for feare of law avoiding of losse for escaping of imprisonment doe resort to our congregations without conscience and care they are worse than those who doe refuse to come than open recusants for if to come to Church for a shew to prophane Gods worship and to doe it rashly for sinister respects and in hypocrisie be worse than not doing then they are greater offenders in comming than others in abstaining The Shechemites were greater sinners with Hamor and Shechem his sonne in taking the Sacrament of Circumcision for profit and satisfying their pleasure and to make a prey as they thought of Israel Gen. 34. than the other Gentiles who refused it So in this they come to Church for advantage or profit or saving of that they have then is it better they should not come at all Nay not so but it is lesse evill not more good The goodnesse is that they labour to be instructed in that they ought and to know how they ought and to endeavour to come with care and conscience as is required In the meane time hee that abstaines and comes not is lesse evill than he that doth come carelesly c. Object Why then should Magistrates compell men to the service of God when he shall make them sinne and sinne more than if they abstaine Answ The Magistrate may not compell any man to doe evill that is a thing simply forbidden of God but hee may compell a man to doe that which he may sinne in doing of it Things that men doe are of three sorts good and commanded evill and forbidden indifferent and neither commanded nor forbidden of God In this last the Magistrate ought to have a speciall and tender respect to the conscience of his subject though it be erronious specially when they are things of no moment the doing of them little profits the Church or Common-wealth and the omitting of them doth prejudice it nothing at all For the other Ad fidem nullus est cogendus invitus sed per severitatem inio per misericordiam Dei tribulationum flagellis perfidia castigari August contr lit Peril lib. 2. cap. 38. And againe Si quae igitur adversus vos leges constitutae sunt non bene facere cogimini sed malè facere prohibemini Ibid. he is not to respect the erronious consciences of men as not to suffer them unpunished for evill doing though they should pretend conscience in it so is hee not to abstaine from compelling them to that which is good for that evill is adjoyned to it it is not his fact that commandeth but comes from their infidelity and corruption who are commanded of which he cannot be accused when he hath carefully endeavoured that they be duely and rightly instructed and informed for when he may say the things I require are commanded in the Scriptures I have done my best endeavour that you may know the truth and not perish and I will not cease for hereafter to perswade and exhort and command you doe you need the Scriptures conferre with the Ministers pray God to open your eyes he hath then done his part Vse 2 This teacheth the fearefull condition of such as onely doe and performe the service of God but marvellous carelesly and corruptly they heare the Word they make prayers they receive the Sacrament but they are no more acceptable unto God than if they did them not at all God saith unto them as a Father to his Child and a Master to his servant seeing them scambling over their duties and businesse without care and respect I had as leefe you did them not at all Now what would we think of him that should never pray never heare the Word never receive the Sacrament would not every one thinke hee is an odious man to God verily such and more odious if it may be is every one that doth these but without care of course without conscience they heare the Word but without profit God had rather have them away than come to Church to deride his Word to sleepe or talke there to prophane his worship So they pray but not with their hearts but with their lips their hearts are taken away with their pleasures profits and delights As Hosea 4.11 he esteemes of them as well when they pray not they receive the Sacrament but without preparation without understanding what they doe most unworthily they intrude themselves to the Table of the Lord God had as liefe have them away their roome were as acceptable to him as their thronging as his without the wedding-garment at the feast of the King Matth. 22. This is their fearefull condition he that heares is as though he heard not he that prayes as though he prayed not he that receiveth the Sacrament as though he did not and so of all the service of God he is as acceptable to God in not doing them as he is in doing and è contra as odious Object Then a man had as good not doe at all and so while you reprove one thing you open the gap to another from carelessenesse to prophanenesse Answ If any man doe gather so it is his collection not my assertion he like a Spider or Toad gathered venome and poyson from sweet flowers and wholesome herbs If a Master should tell his servant doing his businesse negligently that he had as lieve he did it not will he reply then he will not if he doe shall he not for such contempt be beaten with more stripes Nay a servant that would avoid that and receive any wages and reward will seeke to correct his errour and reforme his corruption so in this Vse 3 This ought to instruct us that have any desire to be accepted in our service of God and not to be rejected as if we did neglect it altogether to doe it with all care and diligence and in the best manner that may be doe we must And then not to lose our labour and have no respect nor reward we must endeavour to doe them as they ought to be done heare with an honest heart to profit pray with a fervent spirit to prevaile use the Sacraments in knowledge and due preparation for them these and all other parts of his service as he requireth else we are in a
An evill man may be a good Citizen we may say Good men are evill Citizens Masters c. which blemisheth much their private graces in the sight of God and good men And upon many hath and doth and will bring particular and temporall judgements from their families and servants c. For this is a grand cause why good men fathers of families have such gracelesse children and corrupt servants Ministers such untoward flockes Magistrates such people Vse 2 This may admonish and instruct all that have the faith and feare of God to joyne with it this care of the duties of their place whatsoever it is that they must have because these duties though they be profitable for the common good yet are they not acceptable from him As he saith Cypriansec de zela livore that performeth holy things and is not a consecrated Priest doth things in respect of himselfe childish and unprofitable though they may be good to others So he that doth things without faith and the feare of God they are unprofitable yea wicked and damnable sinnes howsoever they may benefit others so may I say of these but yet this had will not beare out nor excuse the negligence and not doing the duties of his place It may make the infirmities of them passed over but not defend the omitting of them Therefore to be accepted of God men must also be carefull of that Masters c. The excuses that commonly are pretended will not goe for currant servants will not abide with me if I instruct correct and restraine them as duty and reason requireth First see whether thou art not the cause why they are so untractable either not seeking by prayer a blessing upon thy government or dealing hardly and passionately in thy government as if thou hated them rather then loved good things or thy servants see thee doe contrary to that thou directs them for if none of these God will perswade them to be tractable and bend their hearts or else know that he would have thee purge thy house of them as David said and did his of his said lewd servants lest us God prospers a bad houshold for a good servant so he curse a good houshold for a bad servant Ministers excuses of the untractablenesse and unwillingnesse of their people which may happily come from their former negligence or indiscretion or if God doe not blesse his labours to them his reward shall be never a whit the lesse nor he lesse acceptable so he doe his duty Magistrates and Officers that they shall be accounted busie officious and pragmaticall and it may be when they are out of their office they shall have actions against them for this and that usage they may happily be justly so accounted because they follow and doe things in humour not in conscience If they doe not they neede not doubt of Gods protection and of good successe and should rather feare an action from God then men besides the losse of the good they may have by doing it But to all I say as she said to the Heathen King doe me justice or else cease to be my King So let them either doe the duties of their places or else never take them or speedily give them over and leave to be masters c. Or else they must know that if God will not justifie he will condemne The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and word of God and nothing but that and that wholly Doctrine The Minister of God must deliver to his people the law of truth and it onely onely the word of God and nothing else Rev. 2.7 heare what the spirit saith The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and nothing else but the truth and the whole truth all the truth not keeping any thing from them Doctrine The Minister must deliver to his people the whole truth of God all his will and counsell whatsoever he hath commanded and revealed Levit. 10.11 Deut. 5.27 Mat. 28.20 Acts 10.33 and 20.27.35 Reason 1 Because else he cannot be free from the blood of his flocke that is the perishing or slaughtering of them sanguinis i. caedis saith Chrysostome upon Acts 20.26 For if Paul be free from their blood and from their murther because as he said Acts 20.26.27 I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men For I have kept nothing backe but have shewed you all the counsell of God Then will this by the contrary follow Reason 2 Because else they should not be faithfull neither to him that sent them nor to them over whom they are set for what fidelity can there be when for their owne pleasures or respects they shall not deliver the whole he commanded and might be profitable to them 1 Cor. 4.2 And as for the rest it is required of the disposers that every one be found faithfull Vse 1 This will crosse their opinion who affirme many things in the word are unfit to be delivered and taught to the people and are ready to scandall and stumble at it when at any time they are But if the Minister must deliver the whole truth If Rom. 15.4 Whatsoever things are written aforetime are written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope If Deuter. 29.29 The secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever that we may doe all the words of this law Why should they nor be taught It is certaine that many things ought to be spoken wisely discreetely in their fit and due times but yet all things must be delivered That which Hierom counselled Laeta for her daughter that the booke of Canticles she should read last of all the Scriptures when without danger she might lest in reading it in the first place she should be wounded when she was not able to discerne spirituall things and spirituall love under carnall words It may be a rule for all things of the like kind for as Hilar. Psa 134. As an unskilfull man comming into a field abounding with wholsome hearbs passes by all as of no more use then the grasse but a skilfull one otherwise So of the Scriptures * Vt imperitus in agrum salubribus herbis divitem venerit omnia inutilia promiscue genita existimans praeteribit peritus contra Ita de Scripturis Hilar Psal 134. And as Bernard Why may I not draw a sweet and wholesome repast of the Spirit out of the sterile and insipide letter as grain from out the huskes as the nut from out the shell as the marrow from out the bone And as Basil * Quid ni dulce eruam ac salutare epulum spiritus de sterili insipidâ literâ tanquam granum de palea de testa nucleum de osse medullam Bernard in Cant. serm 73. All bread affoords nourishment for health but of no use oft-times
see their sin and looke for a recompence from the Lord for saith St. Peter they have lost their thankes it is not thankes worthy if they had suffered for evill what when they will not undoubtedly let them looke from God which rewardeth every man they shall have their recompence from him if they repent not it may be in this life with the like if not in the life to come with wicked and lewd servants But of this sinne if we may enquire the causes of it we shall find in many to come from the Parents and friends either in their education bringing them up cockeringly never using them to reproofes to the rod and to the yoke but as my young Masters and such as never should come to serve so that when they must to it by no meanes they can apply themselves unto it but in it endure and suffer nothing not so much as sharpe words but no blowes deserved or not But this is not all their fault for it is seconded with as bad when they are in service and find some hardnesse and as they onely thinke sharpnesse they remembring the fondnesse of their affection complaine to them who doe not as they should correct them soundly and send them home againe but goe to their Masters and expostulate the matter for them extenuate the fact aggravate the Masters hard dealing upbraid him with what he gave him with his friend or child and so animate them that they will be in nothing sufferers after or never without grudging and repining Another cause is in the master either because he was such and is such because he hath not repented and so it is Gods retribution ut ante or because he hath beene too remisse to let faults many and little escape without reproofe and correction that when he would for greater he cannot subdue them or passed by some greater faults in some other of his servants for some sinister respect as because he would not be accounted cruell and severe which in the justice of God and the cankred nature of another servant is payed him home because he never feared to be accounted cruell of God and such an one as hates his servant for that will hold in servants Prov. 13.24 He that spareth his rod hateth his sonne but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes and so being ashamed in a licentious and corrupt age to be accounted hard and strait he hath shame laid upon him by a rebellious servant as we may apply Prov. 29.15 The rod and reproofe giveth wisedome but a Child left to himselfe bringeth his mother to shame A third cause is in the Magistrate to whom the master complains as he may and must in a desperate cause who by the servants friends or meanes he makes to him will either reprove and checke the master which he ought not to doe though there be some small cause nor if great cause yet not before the friends or face of the servant and little or not at all reprove or not severely correct that servant by which not onely he is made more bold against his master but even other servants are animated against theirs and the masters utterly discouraged to seeke any helpe from them To admonish all servants to subject and submit themselves unto their masters to be reproved or corrected by them as well unjusty as justly not answering crosly or rejecting their stripes If they suffer justly it is not thank-worthy for a Christian when a naturall man will doe the same for nature teacheth that it is no hard dealing when they suffer evill that have done evill before Then as Christ except your righteousnesse exceed c. so except your subjection exceed that which a naturall man will performe you shall have no thanke from God no reward How then must you exceed it if not onely this but even when you are wrongfully afflicted reproved and chastised in truth or in your apprehension of things if for conscience sake towards God you endure griefe 1 Pet. 2.19 * Insipida insulsa omnis tum obedientia tum patientia nisi omnium quae agimus vel patimur ipse sit causa Bernard Obedience and patience are unsavoury unlesse God be the cause and it be for conscience But how farre must we suffer I answer So long as he kils not or dismembers not but if wrongfully he be corrected he may expostulate and defend himselfe in humility and meeknes his master giving him leave as Job 31.13 The fourth duty of servants is faithfulnesse for those whom men feare to them are they faithfull if they trust them with any thing Doctr. Servants must performe all faithfulnesse to their masters that is they must not themselves diminish or hinder their estate neither suffer it so much as possibly they can withstand to be hindred by other but by all meanes uphold maintaine and increase it to the utmost of their power This is manifest Titus 2.10 not purloyning but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things Where as faithfulnesse is expresly required so the contrary is forbidden and manifested wherein that doth consist by the contrary in maintaining and not diminishing his masters state and condition This Christ teacheth by the faithfull and evill servant Math. 24 45.48 c. As also in the parable of the worldly wise but wicked steward Luke 16.2 Thus Jacob played a good servant Gen. 37 38 39. In this he was a good servant though faulty otherwise 1 Sam. 25.14 15 17. Joab also Chron. 21.3 Reas 1 Because the commandement requires it of every man one to another in common justice Thou shall not steale not diminish another mans substance nay maintaine and increase it in the affirmative then much more a servant Reas 2 Because the masters family is as a little common wealth as that is a great family Now as all subjects are members and ought to labour for the common good and be faithfull to the Prince so every servant is a member and must bee faithfull unto the whole body Reas 3 Because they are put in trust often with part or his whol state where there is trust treachery is intolerable Reas 4 Because by this meanes they shall adorn the doctrine of Christ which they professe Titus 2.10 Vse 2 To let servants see their sinnes that they have not been faithfull but unfaithfull to their Masters unfaithfull first by hindring his profit and diminishing his state either spending his Masters goods riotously at home with his fellow servants as he Mat. 24. or abroad as the prodigall sonne upon harlots and wicked persons playing and dancing drinking and dycing and such like The former of servants accounted no sinne the latter but a small sinne and yet neither of them inferiour to robbery by the high-way and in divers circumstances greater And such a sinne without recompence to his master and repentance in the sight of God shall have his just recompence from God and shall
him faithfully The Prophet never forbade Naaman his service to his Master after he was become a Jew that is a servant of God He speakes to those who are free not to bind themselves to such 2 King 5.23 hereto may we apply that 1 Cor. 7.20 21 22. not to deny service but to alter the manner of service before for feare of Masters displeasure now for conscience of Gods command before their Masters onely now Christ in their Master Reas 1 Because as was noted in Children out of Chrysost it is due to their place not person as Non principi sed principatui so Non magistro sed magisterio The feare is due not to his person and so good or bad high or low gentle or churlish but to his place and authority as a master which he may be of what quality or condition soever he be and from them as servants whatsoever their persons and quality and gifts may be Reas 2 Particularly for such as are religious that they bring not dishonour upon Gods Name and Doctrine 1 Tim. 6.1 but may honour him Reas 3 For both because it shall be more respected of God the lesse it is deserved by any thing in thy master for then it is done of conscience and for God as a good worke ought to be Vse 1 This will condemne the Doctrine of the Church of Rome howsoever bragging it selfe to be Apostolicall yet holds it but few of the Apostles doctrines which it hath not either corrupted or taught something to the contrary And in this point most directly to Peter and Paul forbidding feare and faithfulnesse to be performed of servants to their masters and them who put them in trust Symacha saith Instit Cathol Tit. 46. sect 74. that all keepers of forts and all other vassals and slaves are freed from the oath of subjection to their Lord and Master he being an Heretick affirming that by it he is deprived of his civill power he hath over his servants the ground of the unfaithfulnesse of Sr. William Stanly in yeelding up Daventer an act approved and commended by Cardinall Allen how unlike are these spirits to the spirit of Saint Peter and Saint Paul who will have faithfulnesse to the good and bad to the Infidell aswell as the beleever shall not that be verified of them Math. 5.19 But they will say Heresie is a greater sinne then infidelity first I answer not as they make Heresie ut ante secondly be that true of August Sanata vulnere infidelitatis sed gravius percussa vulnere Idololatriae yet all Heresie is not Idolatrie neither can this if it be destroy the knot and bond of this duty which is not faith nor the foundation of divine religion but a politique title having force and strength from the law of nature which is not to be dissolved by Heresie not contrary to it And the Apostles reason will be here aswell as in Infidelity it will make the name of God and his doctrine ill spoken of But the truth is this is but a shift of theirs for they teach no faith to be kept with such and so no faithfulnesse with such as are heathen or Infidels If we may gather the lesse from the greater Vladislaus he was I take it the King of Hungary and Poland in a battaile against the Turkes Amurath the second of that name had the better hand so that the Turke offered to yeeld to any conditions whereupon Vladislaus and the Turke swore to Articles of Agreement but presently a Legate came frome the Pope and urged Vladislaus to set upon the Turke againe Eugenius 4. neere vanquished already telling him that the Pope had power to dispence with his Oath which he attempted though sore against his will Then the Turke cryed out O Crucifixe crucifixe vide gentem tuam perfidam Oh thou crucified thou crucified take notice of thy treacherous people And so bestirred himself that he overthrew Vladislaus which hath ever since turned to the greatest detriment of all Christendome out of this by proportion we may see it is but a colour of their distinction of Heresie and Infidelity Vse 2 To reprove all such servants as thinke they owe no feare nor duty or lesse feare and duty to their Masters because of some defects in them or some excellency in themselves if he be base borne and they of worshipfull Parents if he be irreligious and they have somewhat or more taste of piety if he be poore so when they came to him or impoverished after c. But they must know that none of these will dispense with omission of any duty Is he their Master If they give him not all respect they sinne against his place and dominion and so against God that hath given it him If God had allowed only rich men or religious men or good and courteous Men to be his Vicegerents in the family then it were somewhat but he hath given this to the rich and the poor alike he hath lightned both their eyes the good and the bad hath the seale of the Commission alike therefore they who doe not alike reverence their masters one as other are guilty of sinne before God and shall have no reward from God because he doth it not in conscience to Gods Commandement but for sinister respect for which they may receive their reward from men but a heavy one from God Vse 3 To perswade servants to feare and doe all duty to their Masters whatsoever they are one or other he that is well borne must forget his father and his fathers house and looke not upon his master whence he came but what he is he that is religious remember he must adorne his profession and looke not upon his master what he is of himselfe corrupt and prophane but what God hath made him his owne Vicegerent and his master and thinke what unworthinesse soever be in thy master yet that thou art most unworthy to doe him any disgrace or to deny him any duty Remember that what is due to him it is not to his person but place indeed not to him but God and to him in Gods stead and the more unworthy he is of any duty the more readily thou perform'st it the more reward thou shalt have from God yea for the present it is a speciall proofe of true grace in the heart For as it is Rom. 5.7 8. so every one will obey a great and a good master but that is true obedience when the master is neither great nor good or great and not good or good and not great for so have good servants and holy men done in times past unto their masters If I be a father where is my honour Here is the application of the former ground and rule to himselfe and them not speaking in generall but applying it particularly teaching in his example what is the best and most profitable kind of preaching when application is joyned with doctrine Vide Heb. 12.1 If I be a
of the Tabernacle of Jaacob and him that offereth an offering unto the Lord of hostes 13 And this have ye done againe and covered the altar of the Lord with teares with weeping and with mourning because the offering is no more regarded neither received acceptably at your hands 14 Yet yee say Wherein Because the Lord hath beene witnesse betweene thee and the wife of thy youth against whom thou hast transgressed yet she is thy companion and the wife of thy covenant 15 And did not he make one yet had he abundance of spirit and wherefore one because he sought a godly seede therefore keepe your selves in your spirit and let none trespasse against the wife of his youth 16 If thou hatest her put her away sayth the Lord God of Israel yet he covereth the injury under his garment sayth the Lord of hosts therefore keep your selves in your spirit and transgresse not 17 Ye have wearied the Lord with your words yet ye say wherein have we wearied him When ye say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in them Or where is the God of judgement VERS I. And now O yee Priests this commandment is for you THE parts of this Chapter are Curses and Judgements threatned against 1. the Priests 2. the People In the first verse is noted the preface to the Priests He applieth his doctrine to the Priests Doctrine It is the dutie of the Minister not onely to teach generall doctrine but to deliver that which may concerne every man and every state and condition of men specially being his auditory charge to apply things to severall estates of men So is it here as Rom. 13.7 So reproofe to whom reproofe judgement mercie encouragement or terrour to whom it is due and belongs Ezech. 3.17.18.19.20 Reason 1 Because he is the Lords Steward of his houshold to dispose to all his servants their due portion 1 Cor. 4.1.2 Let a man so account of us as of the Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the Mysteries of God Moreover it is required in Stewards that a man be found faithfull Reason 2 Because if they deale thus faithfully their reward shall be great at the comming of their Lord and Master If otherwise their recompence shall be fearfull Luk. 12.42 to 47. Vse 1 To condemne those who teach onely generall things generall duties of Christianity or generall points and speake as it were in the clouds never applying the Doctrine to any particular to no men no conditions no state who deale so as civill honest men would be ashamed to do defraud men of their portion In the ages whersoever they lived they would be accounted the best Ministers and the onely men but being unfaithfull servants Luke 12.46 The Lord of that servant will come in a day when he looketh not for him and at an houre when he is not aware and will cut him in sunder and will appoint him his portion with the unbelievers Vse 2 To stop their mouths who say The Minister is beside his text if he speake and apply any thing in particular to mens particular states and callings It is a strange thing men can endure that for the body they cannot for the soule nay that which for the body is complained of as dishonest and unfaithfull when it is not done they cry out of it if it be done to the soule In the body for the health of it men can endure not only prescription but application of Physicke yea of sharpe bitter and biting things If they send for a Physitian who feeles their pulse discerneth their urine and conceiveth of their disease and yet fall onely to discourse of the excellentnesse of Physicke and other diseases and never come any thing to theirs at all they would happily judge him a great Scholar but no wise man nor fit for a Physitian and happily call in question his fidelity But for the soule if the spirituall Physitian apply any thing if it have any sharpnesse in it if being with them and living among them and seeing their estate he touch them and apply it to them he is accounted no wise man hapily a busie and indiscreet fellow The Physitian takes not the way to save their bodies and he is cried out on the Minister takes the way to save their soules and he is cried out of The Physitian that will prescribe and see his patient take it and come to see how it workes with him is much commended for his honesty care and fidelity But if the Minister do the like he is busie and medling but he that will please men is not the servant of Christ and these must know when he deales with their particular sinnes out of a generall text he hath his warrant enough such as shall acquit him Vse 3 To teach the hearer to endevour to apply that he heareth delivered to himselfe and to learne what is for him and that to apply to himselfe for if the Minister 2. Tim. 2.15 must study to approve himselfe a workman that needeth not to be ashamed dividing the Word aright then shall the hearer approve himselfe a workman that needeth not to be ashamed receiving the Word aright They must therefore apply it to themselves The Ministers application may discharge himselfe but not profit them unlesse they will apply and keep it The Patient if he take not and endevour to keep the potion prescribed and brought by smelling of vinegar or the like labouring against the bad humours of the stomacke shall have little profit by the Physick but rather hurt So it is in this they must heare all and labour to retain all but learne that especially which concernes themselves places and conditions One man should not so greedily receive that which toucheth another man and let passe that which is to him or apply that to others which is to himselfe but every man that which is for himselfe He never proves a good Scholar which is busie to learne other of his fellowes lessons and neglecteth his owne nor he a good Christian that can take out other mens duties and not his owne not know what is for him O yee Priests It may seeme he goeth too farre in dealing with the Priests who were the greatest men the time had except their Ruler who then was no King and Malachy but a mean man as other the Prophets were and yet he dealeth with the Priests not excepting the high Priest himselfe Besides this corruption was the personall fault of the people and the Priests might excuse themselves as not to be reproved for other mens faults yet he deals with them This commandment is for you The reason why they are reproved because the charge hereof was by God laid on them God had commanded them to look to this he is thought by this to cut off every excuse which might be made against his reproof either why they have not done it or why hereafter they should not do it As for
but had a morall equity Now how can they have an example of greater authority and more worthy to be followed Againe because it affoordeth competent sustainance for the one when he shall live of the tenth and not of the twentieth or fifteenth part which were too little and not grieving and oppressing to the other when he hath the nine parts reserved to himselfe Because the Ministers lives are subject to the same wants that other mens lives are it is fit and convenient that what they provide for themselves thereof they should affoord a part to him that laboureth in another great worke for them Because 1 Tim. 3.2 he must be given to hospitality which shall be performed better of him if he have things in their kinde and so have his provision Because when the Minister should receive all good things for his maintenance and necessity and that as Galat. 6.6 It might bee a present and palpable admonition to him that hee also should Minister in their wants in spirituall things committed to his charge Because that as the blessing of God was upon the people their lands and labours or denied to them he also might be partaker of their aboundance and want to abound with them and to want with them for where much he was to receive much and where little the lesse alwaies proportionable to them Num. 18.27 that out of this fellow feeling he might praise God with them or pray more earnestly for them Now as for Cities where there are few or no things titheable there the maintenance is and must be such as the law hath provided if it be sufficient to maintaine a Minister that laboureth amongst them in such sort as he may not be distracted with want or burdened with cares or his Ministery disgraced by his poverty which if it be not either by reason of his charge or the hardnesse of the times there ought to be an addition according to mens abilities and in places where the law hath provided little or nothing there are the people bound to provide their labourers their hire not upon charity or almes but as a matter of justice according to that 1 Cor. 9.1 As he that goeth to warfare may of duty and justice require his wages of those for whom he fighteth he that planteth a vineyard may of duty chalenge to eate thereof or he who feedeth a flocke may of duty chalenge to eate the milke of the flocke Then the Minister doing all these may chalenge his maintenance of duty and they in justice are bound to give it him yea part of their goods being due to the Lord as a homage or quit rent of all their goods acknowledging that they hold and have all things they possesse and enjoy from him and therefore owe all service honour and obedience unto him Now tseeing he hath no need of these things himselfe but hath given hem to others his Ministers by whom he will receive them and communicate by them spirituall things also not taking his own for nothing these must know that though no law of man binde them yet are they bound to give of their goods and with some proportion of the tenth for a better rule they cannot have to the maintenance of the Ministery Vse This accuseth and convinceth all those of sacriledge and impiety who have their hands defiled with the spoile of the Church and of God al which we may reduce to these two heads that they are such as doe it under the covert of law or without law First such as have impropriations or appropriations the one arguing that they are improperly theirs the other that they are taken from the right owners and appropriated to them call it what you will it is apparent sacriledge specially in those places where an hundreth pounds is taken away and but ten pounds left for the Minister And so no man of parts and sufficiency will take the place but an unlearned Minister that the people perish for want of knowledge and here I would have them consider whether they having the provision shall not assure and give account for those soules that perish for want of spirituall foode which comes by their meanes of which I make no doubt but they shall As Dan. 1. And will they buy their sweet morsells thus deare if they pretend the law allowing them if I were before the law-makers I would say somewhat to it but to them I say if it be jure fori it is not jure poli as Saint August in another case and we shall all appeare before such a Judge as no law but the law of the highest can be pleaded And all the lawes of men shall lye in the dust as themselves To these may I adde donatives which at the suite of these parasites the Pope would give to one man or moe the fruit of the Church to be used at his pleasure yea reserving nothing for the Church but left the care to his devotion if he could get a man for forty shillings or a canvas doublet yea of this sort are these leases allowed by them to be let by the patron Bishop or incumbent to alienate these things from the Ministery and then rob the Church spoile the Lord. To these I may adde portions pensions immunities priviledges customes and prescriptions which also came from them have crept into reformed Churches All which are their kind and measure guilty of this sacriledge but there are other without pretence of law which rob God and the Church As patrons who taken for the defence of the Church who thinke they may bestow the living of the Church as they thinke best and therefore lay them to their houses for provision and get a Chaplaine like one of the knights of the post that cares not for an oath Vpon hope of better preferment to swear he is free from simonie when he hath agreed for a living of an 100. pound per annum as the Levite Judg. 17.10 which ariseth from either the blindnesse of their minds or the love of wordly things or envy and evilnesse of their eie and heart but whatsoever the cause is the fact is no lesse then sacriledge and they to answer as before such also as abuse their Ministers by fraud or cunning or power to detaine part of the due or for the quality of the tith to pay the worst and vilest unto them VERS IX Ye are cursed with a curse for ye have spoiled me even this whole nation YE are cursed with a curse This verse containes the event Gods curse upon them for that they had done as a proofe they had sinned else had not such a thing come from the just God he cursed them with penury and want and famine they pinched him and he them yea they had thought in the famine to have kept the more to themselves and they had the lesse for keeping from him that which was his for spoiling him he justly and worthily spoiled them and so by their owne
craft bad they deceived themselves and diminished their store when they thought to have increased it And so he points them out the cause why this was befallen them Even this whole nation The subject of the punishment the same who were the subject of the sinne even all rich and poore high and low from the highest to the lowest had spoiled God and therefore he laid his plague as large and with as full extent The judgement and curse of God upon this people was a famine as the verses following shew And they having pinched him he doth deale so with them paies them home in the same kind In the generall thus Doctr. 1 It is a just and no unusuall thing with God to punish men in the like kinde as they have offended either against himselfe or men Vide Cap. 1.5 Your eies shall see it Now for the particular that the curse and this curse is upon such as spoile the Lord and his Church we observe Doctr. 2 God will justly punish with his curses and specially with famine and scarcity all such as do spoile him and take the Ministers maintenances from them which as it is affirmed here so that of Ananias and Saphira Acts 5.1.2 c. doth proove it the curse being upon them for withholding that from the Lord they had voluntarily given unto him for the curse was not for the lie and dissembling though it were the heavier for that they having bound two sinnes together like to this though not in all things the same is that Hag. 1.6.9 Ye have sowen much and bring in little ye eat but ye have not enough ye drinke but ye are not filled ye cloth you but ye be not warme and he that earneth wages putteth the wages into a broken bag ye looked for much and loe it came to little and when ye brought it home I did blow upon it And why saith the Lord of Hoasts Because of mine house that is wast and ye run every man unto his owne house And Deuter. 26.12.13.15 when they have given the tithes to the Levites they may pray and expect a blessing it seemeth therefore to teach that without that the curse must be upon them Reason 1 Because it is just with him to curse those who hinder his worship and are principall meanes either that it cannot be attended upon or not as it ought If he cursed Elies sonnes for making his sacrifices to be abhorred Sam. 2. how then by whom they are hindred from being performed at all Reason 2 Because he will curse those who withold the hire and just wages of such as do but reape their earthly harvest and worke that worke for them Jam. 5.1.4 How much more them who withhold the duty from those who do labour in the spirituall harvest Reason 3 Because it is just with God to deny men food for the body when they deny food to the soule to famish the body when they do the soule which they do who withdraw from the Minister his maintenance for wanting this he cannot attend the worke of his calling Vse 1 Hence we may observe that Ministers maintenance is not of alms free gift or voluntary when Gods curse shall be upon them who with-hold them neither ever was it so no not in the Apostles times saving the judgement of some for the reasons of the Apostles served in their times as well as in ours if any difference more principally in theirs all which urge a duty and justice not alms Besides that the Apostle S. Paul professeth that he took wages 2. Cor. 11.8 though he oftentimes holily boasteth with the Corinthians that he preached freely and tooke but what was voluntarily given as likewise others did lest if they should have demanded the tithes and Priests livings they might have been thought that gaine was rather sought by them then the glory of God and salvation of his people And therefore the Apostle Paul wrought with his hands before he would give any such scandall having gifts that were extraordinary that without study they were able to preach Besides that similitude of Chrysost is not without sense That as a new Physitian comming unknown into a City at the first will administer to all and heale all gratis that he may be knowne but his skill being known will after take wages so Christ at first in his disciples preached freely but after when he had begot faith in men then he tooke his due specially extraordinary gifts ceasing that they did all things with extreame labour for the good of their people neither in reason can they be almes because they are wages or a reward of their labour 1. Tim. 5.18 The labourer is worthy of his reward and almes do exceed the desert of the beggar or almsmen but not in these things seeing 1. Cor. 9.11 If we have sowen unto you spirituall things is it a great thing if we reape your carnall things And there is no comparison betwixt spirituall and carnall things but specially seeing Gods curse upon them who do withhold it from them Vse 2 To teach men as they feare and would avoide the curse of God so to give the Minister his due and not to withhold or withdraw any thing from him lest they draw the curse of God upon them and if they have any thing already to restore it lest though they think they are not yet cursed for it yet abusing his patience he do accuse them with a curse And are not many accursed both Patrons and people that they have not a man of gifts and wisdome but they perish for want of knowledge seeing their prophesie must needs faile And many that are the great spoiles of the Church and gather much by it yet the curse of God is upon them that they are alwaies in want and needy their wealth melting away as snow before the sun they being many of them given over to such sinnes as wast both body and goods so that Male parta male dilabuntur And if curses be not upon many yet as Jam. 5.1 they shall come upon them and God will take as much from them another way as they do this way from him Let me use the words of August The Lord saith give me tithes else if thou wilt not give me the tenth I will take away the nine parts And doubtlesse many men if they could discerne this as well as other things whereby they have sustained losse they should find that they have gained little at the years end by keeping the Lords due from his Ministers but have lost a great deale more by it For ye have spoiled me even this whole Nation The repetition of the cause of the curse shewing how justly he had generally sent this plague and curse upon them because they were generally thus corrupted Doctrine When sins are growne generall it is usuall and just with the Lord to send a generall punishment Mal. 1.4 VERS X. Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse that there may be
liberally their due and competent maintenance So much is promised here and so much was performed to Obadiah 1. Kings 18.13 To the widow of Sarepta Cap. 17.15 And to the Shunamite 2. Kings 4.8 For to this may we apply that Matth. 26.13 Verily I say unto you wheresoever this Gospell shall be preached throughout all the world there shall also this that she hath done be spoken of for a memoriall of her This is that Nehemiah had and prayed for Nehemiah 13.14 Remember me O my God! herein and wipe not out the kindnesse that I have shewed on the house of my God and on the offices thereof Reason Because by this they honor the messengers of God 1. Tim. 5.17 And by the contrary poverty makes contemptible as in the Magistrate so in the Ministery Now if Princes honour those who honour their followers and speciall favorites much more will God Reasons 2. and 3. vide 1. and 2. in the promise of plenty Vse 1 If this be so that honour is their due from the Lord who honour him in his Ministers what honour can they looke for who thinke every thing well gained that is got and kept from the Church and thinke it well spared when they have pared them of any thing making them contemptible by poverty and contemning them when they have done and bring the contempt of many others upon them for by want they either preach not or they preach unfaithfully pleasing and not wholesome toothsome not saving things and either will bring contempt upon them and so utterly hindering the glory of God and the salvation of his people Doe they thinke then to have honour of God many can be content to entertaine Ministers in their houses at their tables specially strangers rather then their owne painefull Pastors but with Sauls humour 1 Sam. 15.30 not to give them honour but to honour themselves Many are heard glorying that they have a Minister in their house and they give him twenty pound or thirty pound per annum when their hearts tell them that they deprive him of eighty as due to him as the rest they enjoying the impropriation being a thing for ought I can see under correction of the law against right or reason both in respect of the people that they should have their tithes for nothing performing no duty or service unto them and in respect of the Minister who doth the labour and they enjoy his wages And these men thinke to be honoured before the people for them and by them but if that be due to such as deale liberally with them which is rather in giving them more then their owne then in keeping any thing backe from them if they by this dishonour them let them looke for dishonour from him when they thus provoke him If the Prince be offended to see one of his common souldiers disgraced and pinched of their wages if one of his Guard and nigh attendance wherein the safety of his person consisteth his anger would exceedingly be kindled but if his sonne saith Cyril I would apply it if himselfe his owne homage and tribute denyed him would he honour such Vse 2 To perswade men to give unto the Ministers who watch over them and for them when they sleepe and study for them when they play and weepe for them when they laugh and in all things and by all meanes seeke their salvation and good to give them I say their due and competent maintenance if other things move them not if the commodity and profit promised doe not move them yet this that is better then riches and gold and to be desired above it Prov. 22.1 All nations shall call you blessed They should be honourable and famous for their outward prosperity besides the generall doctrine we may observe some particulars Doctrine The Lord sometime makes his Church famous and honourable in the eyes of the world and wicked men for outward peace and prosperity and plenty as here is promised So was it with this people for the most part in the dayes of Ioshua and divers of the Judges then their victories taking the land here their often deliverances and forty yeares peace and plenty together witnesse the bookes of Judges In the times of David and Solomon his son that they came from farre to see the plenty and prosperity and so of divers others of the Kings times Amongst other that is specially markeable and of speciall note when they were in captivity yet for deliverance famous Ester 8.17 In all and every Province and in all and every City and place where the Kings commandedement and his decree came there was joy and gladnesse to the Iewes a feast and good day and many of the people of the land became Iewes for the feare of the Iewes fell upon them Reason 1 Because God hath promised such things unto them while they feare him and walke in his waies and keepe his ordinances and judgements therefore they doing he will not be wanting Reason 2 Because wicked men should see that which they will hardly confesse that even in this life there is a reward for the righteous or to shew his power in preserving it as Moses bush * Dum persequitur floret dum c. Hilar. de Trinit cap. 7. while it is persecuted it flourishes while it is contemned it encreases while it is wronged it orecomes while it is opprest it growes and then stands when it seemes throwne downe Now in this I say the Lord doth oftentimes thus blesse his Church not alwaies for even under the law when this was more specially promised to them under the Gospell and when they were led more by these because of their child-hood and infirmity they had them not alwaies then lesse under the Gospell Besides Jer. 12.1 Psal 73. 2 Tim. 3.12 John 16. ultimo 20. Heb. 11. Israel in Egypt in Canaan by Philistimes Ammonites Midianites Babylonians Persians The Primitive Church for 300. yeares after Christ after it was persecuted by the Arrians Gothes Vandals yea after that it had Christian Princes yea and much misery the Church hath felt from the Turkes All which shewes this is but sometime not alwaies This may be because it is with the Church as Salvian once complained * Ipsa Dei ecclesia quae c. ●alvian D. l. 3. de Imber The very Church of God which in all things ought to please God and to appease him what is it or doth it else but imbitter or provoke him or besides a very few who flye from evil what is almost the whole society of Christians any other but a very sinke of sinnes Vse 1 Against the dreame of Anabaptists who thinke a man cannot be a religious man and a rich man but that one overthrowes the other It is true it often falls out by the corruption of men that as the leane Kine devoured the fat in Pharoahs dreame so in this and that the mother is devoured of the daughter but yet this sentence
it encreaseth sin b 147 Liberality of Idolaters b 213 214 Long life a blessing b 29 30 Love the causes of it b 77 Love of God to his Church a 19 M Magistrates when they neglect to punish God will do it b 94. How they are to give judgement b 185 186 how to be obeyed a 63 82 Maintenance of Ministers b 215 216 221 224 225 226 227 232 233. What it is b 216 218. How necessary b 227 228. A blessing to such as maintaine them b 231 232 Marriage how children to submit to their parents in it a 69 God is the witnesse of marriage b 115. The description of marriage b 121 122. The author of it b 132. The end of it b 133 Marriage with contrary religion b 90 91 92. Vnfaithfullnesse in marriage is sinne against God b 112 Married persons their duty b 120 Masse whether one may be present at it a 157 Meditation of the word b 7 Mercy of God only keeps off judgements b 203 204 Mighty men cannot withstand God b 273 Mincha what it signifies a 199 Ministers must put difference between godly and wicked a 129 130. They sinne if censure not the wicked a 132. Contempt of Gods Ministers and his worship goe together a 214. Best Ministers most contemned a 216 They must apply doctrine b 2 3 what their care must be concerning Gods worship b 8 9. A speciall Covenant is made with them b 24 25. They deliver whole truth b 39 they must not corrupt the word b 41 they must be holy b 42. They must preach so as to convert men b 45 they ought to be learned in the Scriptures b 48 It is a great corruption when they occasion men to sinne b 67 when they are contemned and hated justly b 70 71 what they are then to doe b 74 they are Gods Messengers b 166 to defraud them of their maintenance is sacriledge b 215 216 219 220 221 225. Ministery of man ordinarily used by God a 12 13. How to be esteemed a 13 14. None may take it upon him without a calling b 26. The efficacy of the Ministry b 291. N Nature teaches not to wrong any b 79. O Obedience due to God in all things b 4 5. How far due to parents a 62 63 64 66. How far due to Masters a 80 81 82. How far due to Magistrates a 63 82. Old men their duty b 30. Omission of duties b 208. 209. Oppression God not pleased with sacrifices of it a 222 224 225. Oppressors not heard of God b 110 Originall sin b 126 280. P Papists plea of bounty b 214 Parents to take care of childrens soules b 127 128. Passion a 25. Patience under affliction a 4 5. Patience in injuries b 108 109. Peace only to the upright b 45. People of God may be punished a 8 9 10. Their priviledges a 27. Person must be accepted before his praiers are a 189. Perfection whether in this life b 14. Perfididiousnesse a great sin b 82 83 Piety brings prosperity b 250. Plenty promised to the obedient b 31. promist to paiers of tithes b 231 232 233 Polygamie b 122 129 130. Popes may and have erred b 61 62 their Church robbing b 228. Portion how children to submit in that a 67. Poverty of Ministers b 226 227. Power of God a 37. Praise God to be praised for deliverances a 55. Praier not heard how great a judgement a 169 170. When the season of praier a 170. How we must pray a 172. What to pray for a 173. Praier to Saints departed a 175. Praiers of wicked not profitable a 178. Where to pray a 197 198. All need the praiers of others a 174. Praiers of Gods people accepted b 181 182. Preferring man before God how hainous a 160 163. Preist how the word used a 203. Professors their sin most hainous a 210. Prophanesse of heart how knowne a 145. Prophets 3. sorts a 12. Christ our prophet b 172 173 Prosperity b 158 159. Prosperity promist to piety b 250. No note of true Church b 241 242. Providence of God not to be questioned b 160. To deny it is pride against God b 244 245. Whence it is that men doubt of it b 247 248. Gods providence and protection a bond of service a 105. Publicke worship to be attended b 52 53. Punishment Gods owne people punisht a 8 wicked oft doe escape unpunished long b 256. Purgagatory b 178 179 235 R. Redemption of the elect b 277 Regenerate their workes holy a 205 Reigning sinne what b 278 Religion teaches to do no wrong b 80 81 Remembrance God remembers our waies b 262 Repentance onely removes judgements b 6 210 211 Reproofe a 133 134 Revenge the desire of it a 49 Reward to obedience b 33 Riches the way to attaine them b 32 234 whether fit for Ministers b 226 227 Wicked oft encrease in riches b 254 255 Righteousnesse cannot be without religion b 268 269 Righteousnesse inherent b 276 S. Sacraments their efficacy a 142 the Ministers of them b 28 Sacrifices of N. Test a 144 what Sacrifices required of Christians a 202 Sacriledge b 212 215 219 220 221 239 240 Sanctification of Gods elect b 275 276 Scoffing speeches whether lawfull a 167 Sencelessenesse under judgements a 3 4 Separation may not be from a Church for the abuses of it a 177 180 Servants their duty a 76 78 83 86 89 Service of God must be with best a 150 183 Sicke service a 159 T. Temple people not bound to it in prayer a 197 Tempting of God what b. 230 231 Tithes whether still in force b 216. 217. 218. Thoughts are known to God a 138 Toleration of Papists a 179 Truth all of it to be delivered b 39 V. Virginity how to be esteemed of b 136 Vowes to be observed a 234 235 Vsury b 85 W. Wages of hirelings not to be detained b 195 Wards the abuse b 198 199 Watchfulnesse required of us b 260 Widowes not to be opprest b 196 197 Wicked though flourish shall be destroyed b 272 273 Wife is husbands companion b 117 choice a of wife b 144 145 Witches not to be sought unto b 189 190 Word of God how to be preacht a 6 7. How to be heard a 7 must be applyed b 2 3. must be all delivered b 39. it must be heard publikely b 51 52. It must be sought after b 54 55 All things are good or evill as they are with or against the word b 84. Wicked not able to abide the preaching of it b 174 Workes no cause of justification a 189 Worship of God must be holy a 127 Where that is abused God is abused a 138 Worship of God removed for contempt a 229 Worship of God furthered by maintainance of Ministry b 227 228 Wrath of God a 44 45 Z. Zeale a 159 FINIS AN EXERCITATION VPON THE PROPHECIE OF MALACHY Wherein The Context is illustrate by a cleare Analyse The originall Text is examined Most translations extant are conferred The