Selected quad for the lemma: earth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
earth_n day_n lord_n sabbath_n 7,508 5 10.6028 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of sores at his gate ever under one Crosse or another If there were no resurrection where this should be righted that sentence of the Psalmist might bee inverted verely there is no reward for the righteous verily there is no God that judgeth in the earth The third pillar is the Solemne funeralls that be in all nations All which are so many glasses wherein wee may behold the resurrection When we goe to a buryall we goe to a sowing the seede that is sowen lies covered in the earth all winter in the spring it shoots up againe and a goodly harvest ariseth of it So the body is sowne in corruption it rises in incorruption more beautifull then ever it was before The fourth pillar is that which Saint Paul urgeth to Christians 1 Cor. 15.12 Christ is risen therefore we shall ryse As Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly So Christ was three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth on Thursday he kept his Maundy he eate the Passeover and supper with his Disciples on good Friday he suffered and was crucified all Saturday being the Iewes Sabbath he lay in the earth on Sunday morning the first day of the weeke the Lords day the Lord Iesus rose triumphantly from the dead and this is the day of his resurrection on this day hee rose victoriously from the dead This is the day that the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and hee glad in it for Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours The first fruits are in heaven therefore the second fruits shall be there the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be there The Husband is in heaven therefore the Wife shall bee in heaven also we shall mee●e him with joy in the clouds and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever After the resurrection comes judgement it is appointed to men once to dye and then commeth the judgement Death were nothing if there were no judgement The Assi●es were nothing if there were nothing if there were no Gallowes no execution but as we must arise so wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it be good or bad Let us all thinke seriously of this eternall judgement It is called eternall judgement 1. Because it is of things eternall eternall life or eternall death 2. Because the sentence of that judgment is eternall the force and power thereof remaines ever both to the elect and reprobate they all goe eternally to the place appointed by the Iudge 3. Because the Iudge is eternall 4. Because the persons judged are eternall Some are to enjoy eternall happines some to suffer eternall punishment The judgement it selfe is not eternall that lasteth not ever but the fruit and event of it is eternall Oh that the cogitation of this judgement were deeply fixed in the harts of us all A great number even in the lap of the Church laugh at it in the closet of their hearts the Preachers talke much of a generall judgement that shall be after this life but if God let us alone till that day we shall doe well enough GOD grant we may escape the judgements here a flie for that judgement Yet Felix himselfe trembled at 〈◊〉 when Saint Paul spake of righteousnesse and the judgement to come though he were a judge himselfe he quaked at it Let us all feare this eternall judgement after an holy and religious manner and tremble at it In these judgements we may have Lawyers to plead for us then none shall be for us all against us especially our owne consciences as a thousand Lawyers and witnesses if our sinnes are not washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Therefore let us judge our selves here that wee bee not judged by the Lord hereafter let us bewaile our sinnes here that wee come not into the place where is weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for ever Let us remember this eternall judgement that it may bee as a bridle to restraine us from sinne That godly Father St. Hierome professed of himselfe whether he did eat or drinke or whatsoever he did this trumpet rang alwayes in his eares surgite mortui venite adjudicium When wee goe to bed in the evening when wee arise in the morning when we are about the affaires of our calling when Satan provokes us to stealing lying coofening purloyning c. Let us remember this eternall judgement let us call our selves to an account for our sins in this world repent seriously of them let us cast away our sins not as we do our coates when we goe to bed and put them on againe in the morning but throw them away and have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee shall have fellowship with Christ both in this life and in the life to come then we shall not need to feare this eternall judgement The Iudge is our SAVIOUR our elder brother our head our husband to whom we are married therefore we may lift up our heads at that day because our redemption is at hand we may rejoyce at his comming for we shal sit on the bench with him and judge the world and reigne with him for ever The Iesuits collect from hence that the Christians had a Catechisme delivered to them by tradition which they learned before they were acquainted with the Scriptures If every one should pick his faith out of the Scripture there would be madd rule Indeed if they had such heads as the Papists have that are bold to call the Scripture a nose of Wax But to answer 1. These Hebrewes to whom St. Paul writeth were exercised in the Scripture for Rom. 3.2 Vnto them were committed the oracles of God 2. Here is nothing in this Catechisme but is derived out of the Scripture 3. How shall men picke their faith out of the Pater-noster Ave-Mary c. being in an unknowne tongue Here wee have a short Catechisme consonant to the Scripture that was used in the Primitive Church Such as is at this day the Lords prayer the ten Commandements and the Articles of our beliefe These be profitable points but we that professe the Gospell must not always be in these they are to be propounded continually in the Church unto Children to them that bee rude and ignorant but Christians must not dwell in these wee must bee carryed to perfection till wee come to a ripe age in CHRIST IESUS wee must be able to answer all Heretickes and gaine-sayers and to defend the sacred truth of Christ his Gospell against them all VERSE 3. LEst hee should seeme to have presumed upon his owne strength when he said let us be lead forward to perfection here he referreth all to God that must be the leader of us all hee must give us feet to walke to perfection by Wee both we that are to teach and you
hath borne the sinnes of us all therefore let us not feare death 2. It is but a sleepe Lord if hee sleepe then shall hee doe well enough Men are refreshed after sleepe so we after death Apoc. 3.14 13. There bee two benefits which wee shall receive by death 1. Wee shall rest from our labours Here wee are like Noahs Dove wee can finde no rest either day or night wee shall rest from the workes of our calling Now indeed wee are early up in the morning sit up late at night and eate the bread of carefulnesse all the day long but then wee shall rest from that toiling and moiling wee shall rest from the workes of piety and Religion All that wee shall doe then will bee to sing Hallelujahs to our blessed redeemer Wee shall rest from sinne wee shall no longer cry out like tyred Porters Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death We shall rest from all miseries and sicknesses cry out no more my head my head nor complaine of troubles in our selves Wives Children or servants Wee shall rest from weaknesses and infirmities Now wee eate drinke sleepe c. but then wee shall eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God and never hunger or thirst any more 2. Their workes follow them our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. The almes of Cornelius the garments of Dorcas the Centurions Synagogue a Cup of cold water given in CHRIST 's name shall be rewarded so that we may sing like a Swanne before our death as St. Paul did 2 Tim. 4.8 henceforth there is layd up for mee a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give mee at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing 4. Comfort against death is a glorious resurrection Iob 19.25 26.27 Phil. 3. Christ's glorious body Our bodies putrifie in the earth yet there is not an end of them We have praeludia in the Old and New Testament the Widow of Sareptas Son raysed up by Elias the Sonne of the Shunamitish Woman by Elisha In the New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo Iairus daughter the other in feretro on the Beare the Widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro that was Lazarus which had lyen foure dayes and began to stincke all which are pledges of our resurrection The same God that raised them up will raise us up at the last day Death goes not alone there is one that followes her and that is judgement Iudgement either of absolution for the godly come yee blessed of my Father or of condemnation for the wicked goe yee cursed into c. If there were no judgement after death the godly of all others were most miserable and if no judgement the ungodly were the happiest men But let us know that after death comes a judgement one way or other salvation or damnation We must all appeare before the judgment seate of Christ c. The drunkard must give an account of his drunkennesse the covetous man how he hath imployed his riches we must give an account of our oppressions thefts secret or open of our negligent comming to Church and contempt of the Word of God Let this cause us with a narrow eye to looke into our lives let us judge our selves in this world that wee bee not condemned hereafter Yet there bee a number in the Church that thinke it a scare Crow and make a mocke at this judgement as the Athenians did at the resurrection Acts 17.32 they will believe the Assizes at Bury and in other places but count this a tale of a tub Felix though a wicked man trembled at it Let us all tremble at the naming of this judgement Let it be a meanes to pull us from sin and to make our peace with God in this world that we may stand without trembling before the Sonne of man Iudgment followes upon the neck of death either come thou blessed or goe thou cursed The good thiefe the same day he dyed was with Christ in Paradise that was his judgment the rich man the same day he dyed was in hell in torments that was his judgement Wherefore whilest wee have time let us repent while God giveth us a breathing time on the face of the earth for when death commeth it is too late then there is no mercy but judgement to be expected While we be alive Christ knocketh at the doore of our hearts with the hammer of his Word if we will open to him he will sup with us and we shall sup with him in the kingdome of glory but if now we shut him out and will not suffer him to enter he will shut us out and though we cry Lord Lord with the foolish Virgins he will not open to us VERSE 28. AT the which offering he dyed To take away not existentiam peccati but reatum dominium paenam Of many Matth. 26.28 he dyed for all sufficienter What is CHRIST dead and gone then wee shall never see him againe Yes he shall appeare in the heavens with his mighty Angels Without sinne Why the first time he appeared without sinne for He knew no sinne I but then hee came with his fraile body to offer up for sinne Verse 26. Now he shall appeare with no more sacrifice for sinne Then he came as a Lamb to be slaine for sin now as a King and a Lion Then he came as a Priest with a sacrifice to offer now as a Iudge to sit on the Throne To the salvation of the godly but to the damnation of wicked and reprobate men Here is another argument against the Masse Men may as well dye often ordinarily as Christ be offered up often As this is an unmoveable truth that a man ordinarily dies but once So this is a firme position in Divinity that CHRIST can be but once offered properly But to whom shall the day of Iudgement be comfortable to them that are weary of the loade of sin and looke for their deliverer Phil. 3.20 Tit. 2.13 2 Pet. 3.12 The mother of Sisera looked out at a window for the comming of her Sonne So we the spirituall mother brethren and sisters of Christ must looke out at the window of our hearts for him A Woman lookes for her Husband and we look to our money our Sheepe and Oxen but we looke not for Christ. It is to be feared if he were a comming we would entreat him to tarry still and say with the devills why art thou come to torment us before the time hee is our deliverer let us looke for him as faithfull servants for their masters and say come LORD IESU come quickly The second comming of CHRIST is here notably described 1. He shall come potenter because it is said he shall appeare 2. Innocenter without sinne 3. Finaliter to them that looke for him 4. Vtiliter to salvation He
thou not often looke upon it The world is the admirable picture of God Almighty in whom the treasure of all wisedome is hidde therefore let us behold it with admiration If the Tabernacle were now to bee seene which was of Aholiabs and Bezaleels making or if the goodly Temple that was of Salomons setting up were now to bee seene we would runne and ride many a mile to take a view of it The frame of the world set up by the wise high and eternall God surpasses them all yet we goe through it we looke upon it and it never carries us to the contemplation of the wisedome and power of GOD. The reason is because it is so common and ordinary a sight They that come first to London and looke on Pauls and Westminster upon the faire Tombes and costly ornaments that be in them are ravished with the sight of them but if they have beene there long they passe by them and regard them not So is it with us because we see the Sunne Moone and Stars the glorious curtaine of the heaven the birds of the ayre fishes of the Sea beasts of the field the goodly coate of the earth dayly which is better arrayed than Salomon was in all his royaltie because these are common they are not esteemed of us Let us remember they be the handy worke of God a glasse wherein we behold the everlasting God-head and in that respect let us view diligently and bee brought to the knowledge the feare and love of God by it that hath made all these things for our sakes VERSE 11. AS CHRIST had no beginning so he shall have no ending The heavens shall decay but not he Thus CHRIST is eternall without beginning and ending who as he is the beginning of the world being before it had a beginning So hee is the end of it who shall continue when it hath an end 2. He is immutable They are young and old so is not Christ he remaines alwayes in the same estate and condition All garments in the world in the end waxe old Deut. 29.5 So the whole fabricke of the world there is not that cleerenesse of light in the Sunne and Moone that there was not that force and strength in the Starres the earth is not so lusty and lively Old things are not wont to be had in any price or estimation who cares for an old paire of shooes that bee not worth the taking up Who regards an old Coate that hath no strength in it but is ready to be torne in pieces Who will give much for an old house the timber whereof is rotten and it is ready to fall on his head Now is the last age of the world it hath continued many thousand yeeres it is now as an old house an old garment that cannot last long therefore let us not be too much in love with it There was some reason why in former times when this building was new and strong when the coate and garment of the world was fresh faire and of good durance that men should set their affections on it but now when the beauty and strength of it is gone why should we be enamoured with it Let us use it as if we used it not and let us long for that day when both the heavens and the earth and we our selves likewise shall be changed and be translated with CHRIST into the kingdome of glory the heavens are most fitly resembled to a garment Observe the similitude and dissimilitude 1. A garment covers a man So doe the heavens 2. The substance of a garment must be before as Silke Velvet Cloth else you can make no garment but CHRIST made the heavens of nothing 3. A garment must have a forme or fashion So has this an excellent one 4. A garment stands in need of mending we need be at no cost nor labour in mending of this garment but CHRIST by the power of his providence upholds it VERSE 12. NOw this vesture of the heavens is spread abroad and cast as a mantle about us then it shall be folded up Esay 34.4 And all the host of Heaven shall be dissolved and the heavens shall be rolled together as a scrole and all their host shal fall down as the leafe falleth from off the Vine and as a falling figge from the figge-tree but CHRIST yesterday and to day the same for ever there is not a shadow of turning in Him He is the same both in respect of His essence and promise Properly to speake CHRIST hath no yeeres In the first or fortieth yeare of such a Kings reigne but CHRIST reigneth without yeares This is spoken onely for our capacity Such a King reignes so many yeeres and in the end hee dyes but Christs yeeres never faile The world it shall be changed Plato lighting on the bookes of Moses affirmed that it had a beginning but would not grant it should have an ending which opinion of his Aristotle confuteth for Omne genitum est corruptibile Democritus Empedocles and Heraclitus held that it had a beginning and shall have an ending yea some of them did speake of two destructions of the world the one by water the other by fire There shall not be consumptio but mutatio renovatio mundi 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praeteribunt Marc. 13.31 Non peribunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transit 1 Cor. 7.31 Non interit 2 Figura mundi non natura 1 Cor. 7.31 the fashion of this world passeth away 3 As the old world perished by water so shall the new by fire 2 Pet. 3.6 but the substance of that perished not no more of this 4. It shall be delivered onely from corruption for the which it sigheth 5 There shall be new heavens and earth 2 Pet. 3.13 Apo. 21.1 6 As our bodies shall not perish but be changed of corruptible made incorruptible 1 Cor. 15. And as it is in the little world of mans body so it is in the great world Vid. Aug. lib. 20. de civ Dei cap. 14. 16. CHRIST remaines ever without any change or alteration either in respect of His promise or essence which may cause us both to put our trust in Him to believe whatsoever He hath sayd and to depend on Him as a strong and unmoveable pillar Kings and Princes dye our friends dye our fathers and mothers that were our stayes are taken out of the world but CHRIST the King and protectour of the Church continues for ever King Henry the eight is dead who banished the Pope out of England That worthy Prince Edward another Iosiah and favourer of the Gospell is dead Queene Elizabeth that famous Queene the wonder of the world while she lived a carefull and loving nursing mother to the Gospell is dead King Iames of Blessed memory a great Patron of the Church a just and a peacefull Prince is dead Yet CHRIST lives still His yeares faile not and He will alwayes provide for his Church and children When we heare any ill
them they were not personally united to them as ours are Otherwise there is no great difference no not betweene the Angels and us How are wee to magnifie God that hath so highly exalted man The consideration hereof should cause us to lead a life in some acceptable measure worthy of that honour whereunto we be advanced We are not much inferiour to the Angels yet a number of our lives are as ill nay worse than bruit beasts The Oxe knowes his owner the Asse his masters crib but wee will not know love and feare that God which feedeth us A Dogge will love his Master that makes much of him wee will not love no not those that deserve well at our hands A Dove will keepe her selfe to her owne mate many of us will not keepe our selves to our owne Wives bring an horse to the water to the sweetest water in the world he will drinke no more than will doe him good we are excessive and more than brutish in drinking all places ring of this sinne this beastly sinne of drunkennesse what a vile thing is this How doe wee forget our selves Hath GOD made us but a little inferiour to the Angels and shall we live like bruit beasts and give over our selves to all uncleannesse How doe we disgrace that worthy estate whereunto God hath advanced us As we draw neere to the Angels any kinde of wayes so let us so farre as is possible lead an angelicall life with the Angels in this world that we may remaine with them in the world to come Thou crownedst him He shewes wherein our excellency doth consist he hath made him a King and set a Crowne on his head With many glorious gifts that are a wonderfull honour to man both externall and internall especially with the knowledge of CHRIST wherein consists eternall life One part of that glory is that he hath a Soveraigntie and dominion over all creatures which was given him at the creation Genesis 1. renewed and ratified by GODS seale after the floud Genesis 9. enlarged no doubt to the faithfull by CHRIST 1 Cor. 3.21 VERSE 8. VNder his feete This agreeth to all men in generall to the faithfull in speciall whom God hath made Kings and Lords over all his creatures by CHRIST But principally it is to be understood of our SAVIOUR CHRIST who is the chiefe Lord of the world the King and mediatour of the Church he hath all power in heaven and earth All things yea even the Devils themselves are put in subjection under his feete God hath given him a name above every name that at the name of IESUS every knee should bow Phil. 2.9 We also by him because wee are members of his body and his brethren we have an interest to all creatures all things throughout the wide world are ours The heaven the earth the birds the beasts the fishes the trees the flowers are ours Death is ours the very Devill himselfe is our slave and subject God hath put him under our feet 1. Here we may behold the dignity of Christians all things by IESUS CHRIST are under our dominion O what a bountifull GOD is this that hath given us so large a possession Let us sound forth his praises for it and use his liberalitie to his glory As God said to Peter arise kill and eate when the sheete full of all kinde of creatures was let downe to him from heaven so doth hee say to us all we may freely eate of all creatures whatsoever but let us not abuse GODS creatures to his dishonour and our destruction Let us use them soberly religiously to make us more cheerefull in the service of our God 2 Let us not stand in a slavish feare of any creature of the stars the windes no not of the Devils themselves for all are put in subjection under our feet by Iesus Christ that loved us and hath given us a superiority over all we shall be conquerers over them all a singular comfort to the faithfull Satan may tempt and assault us but God will tread him under our feet 3 For this dominion let us thanke the Lord Iesus Christ. Of our selves we are worth nothing starke beggars in CHRIST and by CHRIST we have all that we have Let us magnifie him for it Then he concludeth from the generall to the speciall If all things be subject to him then nothing is exempted from his Dominion no not the Angels themselves To the former the adversaries againe replied thou talkest of a glorious Empire Rule and Dominion whereunto Christ is advanced but it is an imaginary conquest for we see not all things subdued to him The Kings and Princes of the earth cast away his yoke and submit not themselves to the Scepter of his Word Satan and his instruments rebell against him sin and death still play the tyrants and are not subdued to him VERSE 9. TO that he answers 1. Though we see it not yet all things may be subject to him we see not God yet there is a God we see not our owne soule yet we have a soule Here it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is a difference betweene videre and cernere wee doe discerne so as it cannot be denied a man may see a thing and yet not discerne it 2 He answers it by a distinction of submission or subjection The one is externall conspicuous to the eye of the world the other internall seene by the eye of faith Christ's kingdome is not of this world it is not temporall but spirituall all things are subdued to him though he suffer his enemies for the triall and exercise of his children to tyrannize over them for a time A Beareheard may have a Beare under his rule and authority though he suffer him now and then to range abroad so hath Christ the Devill Yet we see Iesus that was made a little lower than the Angels through the suffering of death to be crowned with glory and honor These words Through the suffering of death may be referred to that which goes before or followes after after he had suffered death he was crowned with glory as Phil. 2.9 But rather refer them to the former he was made a little lower than the Angels through suffering of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little while refer it to the time that is during his death passion continuance in the grave 3. dayes and 3. nights all this while he was inferior to the Angels not at the time he lived upon the earth for Mat. 4.11 The Angels Ministred to him as servants to their Lord. But in his Passion and Death the Deity withdrew his power and the humanity was left alone then he was lower than the Angels the Angels are immortall and dye not Christ was mortall and died in that respect he was inferior to them But he was afterwards exalted to all glory and dignity placed at the right hand of God and so superior to the Angels We that are the faithfull see him
with all reverence Secondly a strengthning of the charge by an argument which he disputeth by the example of their fathers Where first the sinne of their fathers then the punishment of the sinne Their sin is set downe first generally then particularly with the circumstances belonging to it of the place where it was committed the persons by whom the nature and quality of the sin amplified by the meanes they had to call from it the time how long they continued in this sinne The punishment is double 1. GODS wrath and displeasure 2. A definitive sentence proceeding from it an exclusion of them out of his rest VERSE 7. SEeing we have such a rare and excellent Prophet as is not as a servant but as the Sonne in the house of GOD let us attend to him and for so much as faith makes us to be of this house and hope is as a pillar for the susteining of us in it let us beware of infidelity that pulls downe the house and shuts up the doore against this Prophet that he cannot enter in into us Now because hee was to make a commemoration of the stubbornnesse and contumacie of the ancient Israelites which in time rejected this Prophet and would not heare him very wisely for offending of the Hebrews he delivers it in the words of the Holy Ghost rather then of his owne They would peradventure have kicked against his reproofe but they durst not spurne at the reprehension of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost long agoe by the mouth of David provoked the people to lysten to CHRIST the true Prophet of the Church therefore let us all attend to him The Author of this Epistle was not ignorant that David was the penman or Authour of this Psalme for he himselfe affirmeth Hebr. 4.7 yet he doth not say as David speaketh but as the Holy Ghost saith whereby he gives us to understand that the Holy Ghost the third person in the glorious Trinity speaketh in the Scriptures the whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 this heavenly spirit did breath them into those worthy instruments which he used Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The Manichees sayd that the evill GOD was the Author of the Old Testament and the good GOD of the new yet the Holy Ghost spake in the Old Testament This then is the prerogative of the sacred Scripture above other wrytings In other books men speake but in this God speaketh In other writings Tullie Seneca Plato Aristotle Plutarch speaketh who indeed were wise and learned men but in the bookes of holy Scripture the Holy Ghost speaketh which is the fountaine of all wisdome In them the servants speake in this the LORD speaketh In them the subjects in this the Prince The Holy Ghost speaketh in the bookes of Moses of the Psalmes of the Prophets in the bookes of the New Testament yet such is the blindnesse of our understanding and the corruption of our nature that we preferre humanity before Divinity the writing of men before the writings of God the Moone before the Sunne wee had rather be reading of humane Authors then of these heavenly books wherein the HOLY GHOST speaketh to us Now if yee will heare his voice as God hath commanded you to doe Deut. 18.18 Then harden not your hearts Thus it is as cleere as the noone day that the Spirit of God gives an evident testimony of our Saviour CHRIST To day In the time of the Gospell The law was as the night this as the day While he speaketh to us 2 Cor. 6.2 CHRIST spake in Moses time in Davids time he spake in his owne person on the earth and he speakes in the Ministerie of the Gospell to the worlds end The Gentiles that were not as yet of CHRISTS fold heare the voyce of CHRIST Ioh. 10. but CHRIST is now in heaven therefore the voyce of the Preachers is the voyce of CHRIST He doth not say to morrow post it not off till to morrow but heare it To day while it may be heard VERSE 8. WHat then He doth not say stop not up your yeares we must not doe that neither but it is in vaine for the eare to heare if the heart bee hardned therefore first he beginneth with the heart God opened the heart of Lydia The heart is the principall thing which GOD requireth in the hearing of the Word In vaine doe wee heare with our eares if our hearts bee not opened therefore sayes the Holy Ghost harden not your hearts GOD hardeneth the hearts of men and men harden their owne hearts He hardned the heart of Pharaoh and Deut. 2.30 GOD hardneth not only permissivè but also activè the LORD hath a kinde of act in it his providence is in it He gave up the Gentiles unto their owne lusts Rom. 1.24 Hee sendeth the wicked strong delusions to believe lies He did not only suffer Pharaohs heart to be hardned but he hardned it indeed How Not infundendo malitiam by infusing evill into our hearts for they be as pots full of all impiety already GOD needs not nay GOD cannot it is repugnant to his nature to put any evill into us yet hee doth not harden onely subtrahendo gratiam though that bee one meanes but by having an operation in the action yet so as he is free from the least imputation of sinne As hardnesse of heart comes from GOD it is a punishment of sin of our former contempt of his grace and mercie offered to us as it proceedeth from our selves it is a sinne yea an horrible sinne To conclude we first contemne that grace which should soften our hearts and then God hardens them We our selves properly to speake are the hardners of our own hearts GOD gives us his sacred word as a trumpet to waken us out of sinne he sends us his Ministers and Preachers as bells to toll us to the kingdome of heaven they will us in GODS name to believe in CHRIST to forsake our sinnes be they never so neere or deere unto us we for all that harden our hearts that those heavenly admonitions cannot enter into them Let God say what hee will let him preach by his Embassadours we will still continue in unbeliefe and dwell in our sinnes we say with them in the Gospell we will not have this man to reigne over us Sinne shall be our King Lord and Master CHRIST IESUS shall not rule us by his word and Spirit This is the hardnesse of heart that is in us by nature Oh Hierusalem how often would I have gathered thy children together and yee would not Matth. 23.37 The LORD sent his Prophets early and late 2 Chron. 36.16 and in Zach. 7.12 there is a wonderfull example to this purpose This hardnes of heart reigneth exceedingly at this present day yea even in those townes where there is most plentifull preaching Therefore let us intreat the LORD to give us a new heart to take from us
come out then they murmure against God despaire of his providence and are ready to exclaime against God This was the Israelites fault and thus often times they tempted God in the wildernesse If they wanted water to quench their thirst withall then they must needs dye God was not able to provide them water If they wanted bread So they did likewise and in a pelting chafe were ready to stone Moses and Aaron Then they would back againe to Aegypt then they wished themselves dead as if the same God that had miraculously beyond the expectation of men provided for them heretofore was not able to doe so still So when some told them of the walled townes that were in the land of Canaan of the mighty Gyants that were in the Country in comparison of whom they were but Grasse-hoppers then they brake forth into this exclamation God is not able to bring us into this land wee and our Children shall perish in this wildernesse They had seene with what a strong hand God had brought them out of Aegypt how miraculously he divided the red Sea that the waters stood as a wall on both sides till they safely passed over yet for all that when they were in any difficulty then God was no body of no power or willingnesse to doe for them This was a vile tempting of God which highly displeased him But there is no reason why we should thus tempt God casting off the hope and confidence we have in him He is subject to no changes yesterday and to day the same for ever Men may change but God changes not a man may be strong to day and weake to morrow whole to day and sick to morrow rich now and poore afterwards alive now and dead a while after a man may love us this houre and hate us the next as Amnon did his sister therefore we may make a question of the helpe of man But God is one and the same continually not a shadow of turning in him his arme is never shortned the welspring of his mercy and goodnesse is never dryed up Therefore in all distresses let us trust in him though all worldly meanes fayle us in sicknesse and health in poverty and wealth in death and life let him be our pillar to leane upon The Prince that would not believe the plenty that GOD had promised was troden to death 2 Reg. 7.17 and the carkasses of these men that thus tempted God fell in the wildernesse therefore let us beware of incredultie As Faith is the best vertue so infidelitie is the greatest vice CHRIST could doe nothing among his owne kinsfolke because of their unbeliefe Shall any thing bee impossible with God Indeed that which he wills not that he cannot doe it is his will that CHRIST in respect of his humanity should be in heaven till the day of judgement therefore he cannot doe this make his body to be here on the earth The Papists set Gods omnipotency on the tainters and stretch it too farre as some bad clothiers deale with cloath But if God have once given us his faithfull promise to doe this or that let us believe it though all the world say nay to it God had promised to bring them into the land of Canaan though there were never so many blockes in the way they should have depended on this promise So God hath promised us the kingdome of heaven feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome Luke 12.32 though now and then through weakenesse we fall into sinne though Satan and his instruments rage though we be sicke dye be buryed our bodyes consumed to dust and ashes yet let us certainely know wee shall have this kingdome This is amplified by an excellent meanes which they had to pull them out of this infidelity which was a continuall view and contemplation of the wonderfull workes of God although they saw my workes in the Hebr. they saw the Aegyptians drowned in the red Sea and themselves safely walking through it they saw the cloudy pillar conducting them day and night water gushing out of a stonie rocke Manna descending from heaven that the clothes on their backes and shooes on their feet did not waxe old many yeares together they might have felt with their hands the power and goodnesse of GOD protecting them yet they would not believe in him whereas the sight of Gods former workes should strengthen our faith in all future calamities That use did David make of the workes of GOD. The LORD delivered mee from the clawes of the Beare and pawes of the Lion therefore hee will deliver mee from this Philistim GOD was gracious to mee in such a sicknesse therefore hee will be in this GOD provided for mee when I was a child and could not shift for my selfe therefore hee will provide for me being a man growne GOD preserved mee in such a plague and pestilence therefore I will depend on him still when I was in such an extremity GOD helped me therefore he will helpe me still God delivered England in the yeare one thousand five hundred eightie eight therefore if England serve him hee will deliver it still When Queene Elizabeth the mirrour of the world was taken away we looked for a wofull day yet God gave us a joyfull day after it therefore alwayes let us trust to him let the sight of his wonderfull workes dayly before our eyes be as oyle to nourish the lampe of our faith that it never dye The last circumstance appertaining to this sinne is the time how long it continued they tempted and proved him 40. yeares though they saw his workes These words in the Hebr. are coupled with that which followeth 40. yeares was I grieved with that generation Yet there is no jarre betweene Paul and David for these two are convertible and depend the one on the other They be both true they tempted God 40. yeares and he was grieved with them 40. yeares If they tempted him 40. yeares then he must needs be grieved with them and if God was grieved with them 40. yeares then they tempted him so long so that the one cannot be separated from the other They dwelt in this sinne a long time and would not bee plucked out of it VERSE 10. THe punishment of the sinne Gods wrath was kindled against them In the end after hee had borne the burden of their sinnes many yeares together his wrath did breake out against them for it They were irksome and tedious to me I could beare them no longer after that I had striven with them fortie yeares when there was no remedy I cast them off God is grieved similitudinariè That rebellious that obstinate generation Hee was not grieved with their Children but with them The Children doe not smart for the fathers faults if they make not their fathers sins their own sinnes Their Children went into the land of Canaan though they did not Least it should seeme to be a griefe or anger without reason
many soft pillowes feather-beds and beds of dowlne to rest our selves upon many pleasant Orchards and Gardens faire and beautifull houses wherein we may rest but nothing comparable to that rest the bosome of Abraham where the soule of Lazarus resteth We must not thinke to goe to heaven without study bare wishing will not serve the turne It is not enough to say with Baalam O that my soule might dye the death of the righteous and my last end be like his Num. 23.10 We must first studie to live the life of the righteous It is not sufficient to say oh that I were in heaven but we must study to goe to heaven Now in all studying these things must concurre 1 There must be the party that studieth and that is every Christian high and lowe rich and poore of what estate or condition so ever The King and the subject the Ministers and their people the Master and the servant the Father and the childe the Husband and the Wife the Merchant and the clothyer the Gentleman and the Yeoman the Divines Lawyers Physitians Husbandmen c. all must study to enter into this rest 2 There must be a closet or a place to study in that is the chamber of our owne hearts Enter into thy closet sayes CHRIST We must goe often into the chamber of our owne hearts call our selves to an account examine what sinnes we have what courses wee take whether wee bee in regia via or not that leadeth to heaven 3 There must bee a booke to study on every Student must have his bookes There can be no workeman without his tooles nor no Scholler without a library Now the LORD will not trouble us with many bookes as CHRIST sayd one thing is necessary So one booke is necessary the booke of bookes the sacred booke of holy Scriptures Let us study that throughly and learne the way to heaven 4 There must bee a light to study by no man can study in the darke either he must have day light or candle light The light whereby wee study is the light of GODS Spirit who must enlighten our eyes that we may see the wonders of GODS Lawes and direct us to this heavenly rest Let us therefore pray to GOD that His Spirit may be with us in all our study as Acts 8.31 Lord take not thy Holy Spirit from mee let him accompany mee continually 5 There must bee diligence in study every Student must be diligent Learning is not gotten without paines The students in the Vniversity study day and night So doe the Lawyers at Innes of Court if they aspire to any fame in the Law So we that be Christians must bee diligent and painefull in our study 2 Pet. 1.10 use all diligence We must not study by fits a start and away but we must lie at it if by any meanes we may come to this rest 6 There must be a time to study in Now this time is the terme of our life from infancy to old age from the cradle to the grave so farre as is possible Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth Wherewithall shall a young man clense his wayes Psalm 119.9 A young man said of the tenne Commandements all these have I kept from my youth upwards Mark 10. Young men may die in the flower of their yeeres as Absalom did therefore let young men even in the flourishing time of youth study to enter into this rest And let old men likewise study it In matters concerning the world there bee emeriti milites a man at sixtie yeares of age is exempted from warfare aptissima arma senectutis artes exercitationesque virtutum The Levits were priviledged from the service of the Temple at fifty and some Schollers are so old that they can studie no longer not so here wee must all studie so long as we live yea in the time of old age hic opus est animo magis quàm corpore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cato learned Greeke when he was eighty yeeres old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solon So though we be fifty sixty eighty a hundred yeeres old yet we must alwayes be studying to enter into this rest And it is worth our studie 1. We shall rest from sinne here we sinne daily the best of us all the just man falls seven times a day Sinne makes the godly to cry out like tyred porters ô miserable men that we are who shall ease us of this burden Then we shall be like the Angels in heaven and sin no more 2. Wee shall rest from the workes of our calling The Merchant shall bee no more tossed upon the Sea the clothier bee no more riding up and downe for Wooll nor in the sale of clothes The magistrate shall be no longer molested with hearing of causes from morning to night as Moses was The Father no more caring for his Children c. we shall have all things without care and labour O happy rest let us study for it 3. Wee shall rest from all griefe paine and misery No more sicknesse crying and weeping all teares shall then bee wiped from our eyes Oh blessed rest who would not study for it Notwithstanding it is a wonder to see how this study is neglected We study to get money to hoord up gold and silver to buy houses and purchase lands Some will studie to get to great preferment how to climbe to this or that office but the maine studie of all is set aside What advantageth it a man to winne the whole world and loose his owne soule therefore especially study to enter into this rest where our soules and bodies shall remaine in happines for ever One Pamb was studying the first Verse of the thirtie ninth Psal. 19. yeeres and yet studied it not enough We must be studying this lesson to enter into this blessed rest the terme of our whole life and yet all little enough we must studie as they that feare to bee deprived of a thing Verse 1. If you are afraid to be deprived of your house and land by some false pretended title you will study hard to defend your selves even so doe you study for heaven that yee be not defeated of this rest Let us study earnestly to enter into his rest that when the few and evill dayes of our Pilgrimage bee ended wee may rest with Christ in the world to come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayes Chrys. and without wee cannot be saved yet that alone is not sufficient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If they could not get earth without much diligence how shall we heaven Especially 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indifferenter ac socorditer 1. Reason or spurre to prick us on to this heavenly and earnest study and meditation is taken from a terrible example as good men as we in outward appearance have fallen from this rest therefore let us take heede that the like happen not to us If you fall as they did you shall sinke into the same bottomlesse pitt that they
darke night wee may imagine a tree to bee a man but when the day comes it is easily discerned So the Word of GOD is the bright day and glorious sun-shine whereby we discerne truth from false-hood sound doctrine from that which is corrupt and hereticall Therefore let us exercise ourselves in Gods Word continually that we may discerne betweene the purity of the Gospell and the impurity of Popery and all Errours and Heresies whatsoever that being enlightned by the candle of the word we may see and take the way that leadeth to the kingdome of heaven CHAP. 6. BEfore wee had Saint Pauls objurgation that they were so great non proficients in the Schoole of Christ. Now follows an exhortation to pricke them forwards to greater perfection in Religion Where 1. The substance of the exhortation 2. The pressing and urging of it by foure arguments 1. A ridiculo 2. Ab exemplo 3. A Deo 4. A periculo 1. From a ridiculous absurditie set forth by a comparison 2. From an enumeration of the chiefe rudiments which they are to leave 3. From the efficient cause of the spirituall progresse which they are to make namely God 4. From a fearefull danger that will ensue if upon a carelesse neglect or contempt of the heavenly doctrine they stand at a stay and goe not forward by that meanes they may goe backeward and at the length may fall into the sin against the Holy Ghost Therefore it stands them in hand in feare and humility to aspire to perfection dayly more and more VERSE 1. THe exhortation hath two branches 1. What they are to leave 2. What they are to contend unto 1. Terminus à quo 2. Terminus ad quem Seeing it is a shame alwayes to be babes let us as men growne seeke after stronger meat The principles .i. that which begins us and enters us into Christianity leaving that How Not casting it for ever behinde our backes suffering it quite to slip out of our memories never thinking of it any more we must remember even the principles of Religion to our dying day but wee must not insist in those and set downe our staffe here but as good travellours goe on forwards As if one should say to a Grammer Scholler leave thy Grammar and goe to Logick Rhetoricke Philosophie to more deepe and profound points of learning his meaning is not that hee should leave his Grammar quite and never thinke on it any more but that he should passe from that to greater matters As if one should say to a Traveller going to London that sits eating and drinking at Colchester leave Colchester and goe on to London So leave this doctrine of the beginning of Christianity leave your A. B. C. be not alwayes beginners but proceede till ye come to some maturity Let us goe on to perfection with all cheerefulnesse and celerity Both we that are the teachers and you that are to be taught by us that we may aspire to perfection dayly more and more Wee cannot goe of ourselves we must be led namely by the hand of GOD Almighty as little Children cannot goe unlesse their mothers and nurses lead them Let us therefore intreat the Lord to lead us forward by the hand of his spirit to perfection dayly more and more Wee cannot climbe up to the highest staire of the ladder of perfection in this world we must be climbing all the dayes of our life Saint Paul was rapt into the third heaven yet he professed he was not yet perfect We know in part we believe in part and we must be as Schollers learning of our part so long as we live Though with Moses wee have beene brought up in all the learning of the Aegyptians though wee bee as perfect Scribes in the law of GOD as Ezra as eloquent and mightie in Scripture as Apollos though wee have as many tongues as Saint Paul who spake with tongues more than they all did yet wee must bee carryed on still to perfection wee must be as Travellours that are ever walking and going on and on never resting till wee come to our journeys end which will not bee till death it selfe shall come Our SAVIOUR himselfe as hee was a man did grow up in wisedome and shall any of us thinke our selves so wise that wee neede not to grow in wisedome Let us all goe on forwards to perfection every day more and more The first reason is taken from a ridiculous absurditie set forth by a comparison Not laying againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because foundations are layd exceeding deepe in the earth All men laugh at those builders that are alwayes laying the foundation but never set up the Walls lay on the roofe tyle and glaze the house c. but every day are laying the foundation Those bee foolish builders So we that be Christians must not always be laying the foundation of religion but wee must build up ourselves as a glorious house to the Lord. Then hee sets downe the particular stones of this foundation which wee must not ever bee laying hee reckons up the chiefe points of the Christian catechisme which all ought to have at their fingers ends which it is a shame to be ever learning Of these some concerne this life some the life to come they that appertaine to this life are private or publike 1. Repentance which is illustrated by the things we are to repent of There be living workes which we doe when CHRIST liveth in us these are not to bee repented of but to be practised by us and there bee dead workes which be sinnes and are so called 1. Because they come from dead men that are dead in trespasses and sinnes 2. Because they tend to death and destruction the wages of sinne is death All sinnes are dead workes covetousnesse malice pride drunkenesse uncleannesse lying swearing c. are dead works therefore let us have nothing to doe with them Men are afraid to touch dead bodies or to come neere them we flye away from a dead and stinking carkasse Every sin is a dead carkasse that sends up an unsavory smell into the nostrills of God therefore let it be abhorred by us all let us turne away our eyes and hearts too from all dead workes Repentance hath two parts th● mortification of sin and vivification to newnesse of life Isa. 1.16 Zacheus repented him when he left his peeling and griping and became a liberall man made restitution to those whom hee had defrauded and gave the one halfe of his goods to the poore Peter repented of his denyall of Christ when he did not only weepe bitterly for it for a time but stood in defence of Christ to the very death Then an adulterer repents of his adulterie when hee leaves quite his Whores and harlots and possesses his vessell in holinesse and honour Repentance is a forsak●ng of the sinne and an imbracing of the contrary vertue It is not the laying aside of sinne for a time
in token of that his voluntary service But hee could not have his eares prepared for the doing of the will of his Father unlesse he had a body Therefore the Seventie to make it more cleere sayes a body hast thou prepared for me wherein I should doe thee service and suffer for mankinde And because all the Sacrifices in the Law could not take away sin therefore was this body of Christ prepared by the Lord that should be sacrificed for the sins of the world No other sacrifice was able to make satisfaction to Gods justice for the sins of men Verse 10. There is joy when any man child commeth into the world but much more have we all cause to skip for joy at Christ's comming into the world Vnto us a child is given to us a Sonne is borne behold I bring you tidings of great joy sayd the Angel to the Shepheards when Christ came into the world The Angels sung at his comming which needed not to be redeemed by him and shall not we men sing for his comming for whose redemption he came into the world it had beene better for us we had never set a foot into the world if he had not come into the world Therefore let us praise God all the dayes of our life for his comming into the world When he commeth into the world that was the maker of the world For by him all things were made nay that which is more when hee commeth into the world that was the Saviour and redeemer of the world that reconciled the world to God and yet found no kind entertainment in the world he was rayled at spitted on buffetted whipped crucified he came into the world but the world received him not And shal we that be Christians imagine to find any kindnes in the world it hated the Head and wil it love the members no we must look to have a step-mother of the world as Christ had we must looke for crosses and afflictions in the world as he had As Christ came into the world so in the time appointed by the Father he went out of the world again and so must we There is a time to be borne and a time to dye as we came into the world so we must go out of the world Where we came we may know but where we shall go out we cannot tel Let us glorifie Christ while we be here that at our departure out of the world we may live with him in eternall glory He saith not so soone as he came into the world when he lay in the cratch but he said in the time of his humiliation in the world And how came he into the world after a base and ignominious manner borne of a poore woman affianced to a Carpenter that was brought to bed in a stable in the Inne where hee was laid in a Manger wrapped up in meane swadling clouts This was the manner of his first comming contemptible in the eyes of the world But his second comming shal be most glorious when he shall come in the clouds with all his holy Angels attending on him Now he came as a Lamb to be killed therefore he came meanely then he shall come as a Lion and a King to reigne for ever Therfore that shall be a glorious comming it shall be terrible to the wicked but most comfortable to us that be the wife of the Lord Iesus A true body made of a Woman the fruit of her Wombe as ours is not an aerie or phantasticall body as some Heretickes dreamed A body in all substantiall things like to ours differing only in one accidentall thing and that is sinne him that knew no sinne did God make sinne for us God ordained him a soule too The deity did not supply the office of his soule as Apollinaris did imagine he had a true soule too as we have wherein he suffered for our sakes my soule is heavy to the death But because the body is conspicuous so is not the soule and because he was to dye in his body he could not dye in respect of his soule therefore the spirit of God nameth that God hath ordained a body for every man but a more speciall and excellent body for our Saviour Christ a body conceived not by the conjunction of a man and a woman but extraordinarily by the Holy Ghost that being a most pure and sacred body not infected with the least spot and contagion of sinne it might be a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the world Ours are most wretched and sinfull bodies that because they are poysoned with sin must one day see corruption and bee consumed to dust and ashes Lazarus body did stincke when it lay foure dayes in the earth Ours in regard of sin are stincking bodies but Christ's was a most glorious body and for that cause saw no corruption Absalom had a beautifull body yet a wretched body Saul had a comely body yet a miserable body The body of the fairest Lady on earth is a vile body only Christ's was a glorious body The Martyrs bodies that were burnt for the profession of the Gospell were in some respect to be honoured because they were the Temples of the Holy Ghost and sealed up the truth of the Gospell with their bloud yet all their bodies joyned together nor the bodies of all the holy men in the world could make satisfaction for one sinne therefore God ordained Christ a body for this purpose to be offered up for the sins of us all As for our bodies let us labour to offer them up as a lively sacrifice to God in all obedience to him in this life that Christ may change them and make them like his glorious body in the life to come VERSE 6. THe reason why thou hast prepared this body for me is because in burnt offerings and sinne offerings thou hadst no pleasure These would not content thee therefore I come with my body into the world Supply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here he reckons up two other sacrifices used in the Law which God likewise rejected Loa shealta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sense is all one VERSE 7. FReely of mine owne accord as 1 Reg. 22.21 Isai. 6.8 as an obedient child sayes to his father loe I come father if it be to preferment a man will say loe I come but if it be to the Gallowes for another who will say loe I come Why because in the beginning of thy booke that mooved him to it that the things written of him might be performed Hebr. Bimgillath in volumine in the scrowle For the Bible with the Iewes as it is at this day was wrapped up in a scrowle not printed as it is among us Megillath of Galal volvere The Seventie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath bred diversity of interpretations Some referre it to the beginning of the Psalmes Psalm 1.2 whereas that is spoken of all the godly others to the first verse in all the Bible In the
imprisonment till yron entred into his soule hee tryed Iob with the losse of seven thousand Sheepe three thousand Camels five hundred yoke of Oxen and she Asses he tryed him with the death of seven Sonnes and three daughters at a clap after a fearefull manner the house fell on them as they were banquetting and they were crushed in pieces he tryed him with boyles in his body from the Crowne of his head to the sole of his foote The arrowes of the Almighty stucke in his soule he tryed him to the full Others have had their severall tryalls but Iob had all tryalls yet he stood immoveable in them all he tryed Lazarus with extreame poverty hee desired crumbs and could not get them hee tryes some women with churlish Husbands as he did Abigail he tryes some with froward Wives as he did Iob he tryes some with stubborne and disobedient Children that make them weary of their lives as he did Isaac and Rebeccah with Esau he tryes some by taking away their Children one after another on whom their greatest delight was fixed he tryes by taking away our goods by fire water thievs gatherings for fire almost every weeke hee tryes some by tedious sicknesses and diseases that continue long together a wearisome tryall hee tryes us by malevolent tongues that cast aspersions upon our names He corrects every Child So he tryes every Child GOD hath many wayes to try us that the tryall of our faith being more pure than gold may be more illustrious in this world and we made more fit for the celestiall Hierusalem in the world to come Let us entreat him to strengthen us by his holy Spirit in all tryalls As hee seemes to cast us downe with one hand so let us be suiters to him to uphold us with the other that we may stand stedfast and immoveable in all tryalls and temptations to his glory and the salvation of us all Let that suffice for the author of the worke Now to the exequution of it Where 1. A bare narration of the worke then an amplification of it Offered up Isaac Nay bate me an ace of that Offerre caepit or offerre voluit Voluntate he did it though non re intentionaliter though non actualiter He pretermitted nothing on his part for the offering of him up therfore God accepted of it as if it had beene done Gen. 22.16 he extolls it to the skies There be Martyrs desiderio facto Origen was a Martyr in desire when he was a Child If his mother had not kept away his Cloathes hee had gone to bee burnt with his father So Abraham Conatu desiderio offered up Isaac David built the Temple in will and desire hee made a great preparation for it three thousand Talents of gold seven thousand Talents of fine silver 1 Chron. 29.4 So Abraham made all ready for the offering of his Sonne The wood was ready the fire was ready the Altar was ready the knife in his hand was ready to cut his throat which hee would have done if GOD by his voice from heaven had not stayed him therefore he might well be said to offer him up There is an amplification of it ex parte patris on the Fathers behalfe and ex parte pueri on the Childs behalfe Not only he that begat Isaac but that had received the promises concerning Isaac that in him all the Nations of the earth should he blessed he had not only heard of these promises but received them into his brest and bosome locked them up as precious Iewels in the closet of his heart there keeping and nourishing them yet he that had received the promises must kill him that was the foundation of the promises a great shaking of his faith 2. Ex parte pueri not a servant but a Sonne Not an adopted Sonne but begotten of him the fruit of his body and his owne bowels Not one of many but all that he had begotten in lawfull Matrimony and to whom alone the promises were tyed Ishmael was his begotten Sonne too but he was begotten of his maid Isaac was his only begotten Sonne of his Wife in lawfull marriage 2. He was his only begotten Sonne ratione promissi the promise was made to Isaac and to no other quantùm ad istam conditionem hee was anigenitus Lyra. VERSE 18. THat which hee said of the promises he confirmes by Scripture To the which Abraham his father it was said of him Gen. 21.12 This hee heard not from others but with his owne eares and that from the mouth of God that cannot lye The promised Messiah shall come of Isaac yet hee must bee offered up Then what shall become of his seed and the salvation of the world God here seemes to bee at variance with himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith warres with faith one Commandement warres with another and the Commandement warres with the promise as Saint Chrysostome well observeth That promise was that in Isaac should his seed be called and that the Saviour of the world should come of Isaac yet now Isaac must be slaine before he had any seed A strange tryall Againe the Law of nature written in Abrahams heart said love thy Child preserve thy Child especially such a rare Sonne as this is rarely borne and endewed with rare qualities This Commandement crosses that and saies kill the Child What a contrariety was this how did this perplex Abraham and cast him into the bryars but faith did reconcile all and all these obstacles set aside hee offered him up A most worthy and unmatchable example The like is not to bee found againe in the whole world As Ioel saith of the Grasse-hoppers and Caterpillers in his time hearken ô yee elders heare all ye inhabitants of the land whether hath such a thing beene done in your dayes or in the dayes of your fathers so may we say of this hearken all yee that live on the face of the earth though yee be as old as Methusalem whether hath such a thing as this beene done in your dayes for a Father to offer up his only Sonne at the commandement of GOD Manasses caused his Sons and his Daughters to passe through the fire to his Idols so did other Idolaters but they offered them up to devills not to God contrary to the will of God in a blind superstition at the instigation of the Devill that was a murderer from the beginning and delights in bloud but Abraham did it in a pure devotion to testifie his obedience and love to God at the commandement and provocation of God to glorifie him withall Those Idolaters it may bee were not present at the offering of their Children or at least they offered them by others Abraham with his owne hands offered him himselfe Wee reade of a Woman in the Maccabees that saw seven of her sonnes cruelly tormented before her eyes because they would not eat swines flesh yet she was not the tormentour of them herselfe Mauritius that good yet unfortunate Emperour
that comforts us with the promises of the Gospell Therefore our righteousnesse should exceed theirs I beseech you by the mercies of God sayes S. Paul not by the terrours of GOD. Gods mercies have beene wonderfull therefore let us serve him more cheerfully than they have done the love of Christ ought to constraine us As he hath died for our sins and shed his bloud for them so let us dye to them continually Let us serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life that when this life is ended wee may raigne with Christ for ever They had short winter dayes that were full of shadowes we have summer dayes the Son of righteousnesse shineth forth brightly to us they had the bloud of Goats Lambes Calves Oxen as a representation of the bloud of Christ we have Christs bloud actually shed on the Crosse for us they saw Christ afar off Your Father Abraham saw my day and was glad we see him already offered on the Altar of the Crosse for our sinnes and crucified before our eyes in the preaching of the Gospell Happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Kings and Prophets desired to see them and could not Let us walke worthy of this kindnesse of the Lord. Now followes the use we are to make of it which is double the one negative that we despise not our Saviour Christ the Mediator of the New Testament the other affirmative that we serve and honour him Vers. 28. He disswades us from despising him by two arguments the one from the worthinesse of the person 25. the other from the dignity of the Gospell the thing it selfe VERSE 25. FOr the caveat hee doth not simply say despise him not but with a watch-word looke to it the danger is great if ye doe Christ is despised two kinde of wayes openly and secretly openly by refusing to heare him at all as they in the Gospell wee will not have this man to raigne over us How often would I have gathered you together and ye would not some will not come to Church to heare CHRIST they had rather heare a Fidler than heare a Preacher 2 When as men heare yet contemptuously as the Pharisees did Luke 16.14 these are open despisers of Christs speaking The other are close and secret despisers They doe not peremptorily say they will not come but they make excuses for not comming I have bought a yoke of Oxen sayes one a Farme sayes another I have burling in hand spinning in hand I have a journey to take on that day I cannot come This is a despising of Christ speaking as the word importeth The other secret despisers are carelesse and negligent hearers we will give him the hearing but if we were out of the Church we would not thinke of it againe They looke themselves in the glasse of the Word see many spots but have no care to wipe them away This is a kinde of despising the voice of Christ and it shall be required at our hands despise not him that speaketh any kinde of way but heare him with all reverence He is worth the hearing 1 He speakes vera nothing but the truth for he is the Truth it selfe 2 Suavia that which is sweet and comfortable to us all sweeter than the honey or the honey combe Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavie laden I will give you rest 3 Vtilia that which is profitable he tels us of a Kingdome prepared for us 4 Manifesta he speakes plainely evidenter that any may understand him there be no aenigmata no riddles in his speech 5 Efficacia he speakes efficaciter powerfully with authority never did any man speake as he doth 6 Sublimia heavenly things therefore despise not him that speaketh but receive the honey drops of his speeches to the joy and comfort of you all Why what though we despise him the matter is not great yes there is great danger in it If they escaped not who refused him that spake on earth namely Moses yet tanquam ex divino Oraculo which revealed the Oracles of God to them on the earth They that rejected him were severely punished The man that with an high hand gathered sticks on the sabbath-Sabbath-day contrary to the Law of Moses was stoned Corah Dathan and Abiram that murmured against him were swallowed up by the earth they that tooke their parts were destroyed Num. 16.49 Some vengeance or other wil light on us if we turne him away and refuse him that speaketh from Heaven But how doth Christ now speake from heaven Surely by the mouthes of his Embassadours he that heareth you heareth me Will ye have an experiment of Christ speaking in me When a learned Ezra standeth up in the Pulpit to speake to the people Christ speaketh The wicked will reply on Christ at the day of judgement and say Lord when saw wee thee hungry and gave thee no meat So some will say O if we might heare Christ speaking from heaven we will sit with reverence and heare attentively When any of his Stewards and Ministers speake He speaketh therefore beware how ye despise him that Moses's ministery and shall they escape that despise Christs ministery Many heavie judgements will light upon the contemners of Gods Word Manasseh though a King was carried into captivity for it Pelatiah died Ierusalem that would not heare Christ when he clocked to her as a loving Hen heard the cry of the Romanes to their destruction If we at this day turne away our eares from hearing Christ speaking to us from heaven the sword of the enemie famine pestilence tedious Agewes not heard of before some plague or other will fall on us If they escaped not that despised Moses shall they escape that despise Christ speaking from heaven VERSE 26. THE second reason is taken from the dignity of the Gospell Then at the delivery of the Law The voice of God did but shake the earth Exod. 19.18 Now at the exhibition of the Gospell It shooke earth and heaven too The which he proveth out of Hagge where we have 1. an Allegation of the Text then a Commentary on the Text. The people mourned that the second Temple was not so glorious as the first GOD comforts them promising to make it more glorious not in sumptuous building but by the comming of the Messiah into it Before he did shake but the earth when the Law was given now he will shake heaven and earth heaven and earth was moved with the comming of Christ when he was borne Herod and all Ierusalem was shaken Wise-men directed by a Starre came out of the East to worship him At the Passion of Christ the earth shooke the graves opened many dead Saints came out and appeared Heaven also was shaken at his comming the Angels in great multitudes came from heaven and sung for joy at his comming the voice of the Father was heard from heaven at his Baptisme This is my beloved Son c. At the passion of
require it we eate that which is on the Altar the Altar it selfe we cannot eat Therefore it is a figurative speech Which serve the Tabernacle that be servants unto it The direct meaning of the place is this we have a Sacrifice on an Altar Iesus Christ that was sacrificed on the Altar of the Crosse for us whereof they have no authority to eate that are still wedded to the Tabernacle and the rites of the Ceremoniall Law The Tabernacle and Christ cannot stand together If ye will needs retaine the shaddow still ye have no right to the Body If in this cleere light of the Gospell when Christ the end of the Law hath appeared ye will keepe the Law still then ye have no interest to Christ no benefit by him Gal 5.4 Therefore away with the Ceremonies of the Law The like may bee affirmed of the observation of any thing with Christ for the obtaining of eternall life either have Christ alone or have him not at all VERSE 11. THE confirmation of this proposition Where first the type secondly the thing signified by it They that served at the Altar could not eat that which was burnt The bodies of the beasts representing Christ were burnt without the host therefore they could not eate of them no more can they that now cleave to the Tabernacle eat Christ. VERSE 12. THE thing signified is Christ. Whereof the bloud of the beasts was but a type Not within the Citie of Ierusalem but without in the place called dead mens skuls as malefactors at this day for the most part suffer without the Towne and Citie the Gallowes stand without They that thinke to bee sanctified by any other thing than by Christ cannot have the benefit of his passion Iesus the Saviour of the world the Sonne of the High and eternall God Which otherwise could not be sanctified The bloud of Goats would not serve the turne It must be his owne bloud After a most base and ignominious manner he was crucified betweene two thieves He humbled himselfe to the death yea the death of the crosse O the wonderfull love of Christ Christs love should constraine us that as he hath dyed for our sins so we should dye to them We are redeemed from our old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Iesus the Son of God Let this constraine us to forsake our sins David would not drinke of the water for the which the Worthies ventred their lives and shall we drinke of the water of sinne which cost Christ his life Christ shed his bloud for our drunkennesse and uncleannesse pride malice c. And yet shall we wallow in them We lay not to heart the price of our redemption We forget the Lord that hath bought us Wee are bought with the bloud of God Acts 20.28 Therefore let us not serve the devill but him that hath bought us We are Christs not our owne he hath paid deerely for us even his owne bloud therfore let us serve him VERSE 13. THE Vse is double 1. A departure out of the world Without the Campe of this miserable world where wee have so many enemies This is enforced 1. By the example of Christ. When Christ went out of the Campe he bore reproach he bore his owne crosse a while till he could no longer for faintnesse he was nailed to the crosse shamefully reproached many wayes A Crowne of thornes in derision was set on his head because he said he was a King All that went by mocked him We goe out of the world two wayes actu at our dying day affectu in our life-time We are in the world but we are not of the world We are Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem therefore our conversation must be in Heaven Let us goe out of our faire houses sweet gardens pleasant pastures Let us goe out from our sheepe and Oxen gold and silver wives and children Let us so use them as if wee were ready to depart from them The time must come when I must leave you all Therefore in the meane season let us goe out of them Let us set our hearts on nothing in the world but on God alone Let us use this world as if we used it not for the glory thereof fadeth away Yet for all that we are loth to goe out nay we dwell in the world continually we are in the world all the weeke long yea even on the Lords-day too We are like them Phil. 3. Whose belly is their God which minde earthly things the world the world nothing but the world Let Heaven goe whither it will If it were possible we would make our Tabernacles here as S. Peter would have done in the Mount Goe out of the world that is an hard saying who can abide it Let us follow Moses in refusing a Kingdome Monica whose song was volemus in coelum How must we goe out of the Campe of the world not dreaming to live in a paradise here but preparing our selves for afflictions being content to be reproached as Christ was We must not thinke to goe to Heaven in a feather-bed to sayle alwayes with a faire wind through many tribulations we must passe thither and be tossed with the winde of many reproaches by the way Christ was reproached and shall we imagine to goe to heaven without reproaches Let us arme our selves for the bearing of reproaches and let us in a manner glory of them I beare in my body the markes of the Lord Iesus It is better to have Christs markes than a purple gowne on our backs or a triple Crowne on our heads as the Pope hath and let this be a comfort to us our reproach if it be for Christs sake is Christs reproach If men mock us they mock Christ if they imprison us or kill us for his Gospell they kill Christ and let us suffer with him that we may be glorified with him VERSE 14. 2 IT is inforced by an argument taken from our estate and condition in the world If we have no time of continuance here then let us be content to goe out If a Tenant know that his lease is expired he must be willing to goe out Wee have not so much as a lease no not for a yeere moneth weeke day nor houre therefore let us be willing to goe out But why should we goe out of the Campe of the world The world is a warme nest and we have a long time to continue in it Nay we are deceived the Cities themselves are of no continuance the windes blow them downe the enemy may sack them and make them even with the ground waters may overflow them fire consume them many goodly Cities have beene burnt At the furthest they shall all downe at the day of judgement then the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt with fire We our selves have no time of continuance in them The Major of a Citie dyes the Aldermen dye the Citizens dye there is dying of
house and Temple Remember that our God is a God of peace let us be peaceable Wee have had the Title now to the effect the raising up of Christ from the dead elementia in collatione pacis potentia in suscitatione filij The party raised is set forth 1. By his Sovereignty 2. By his Name 3. By his Office For his Sovereignty He is our Lord. Ye call me Master and Lord. Not every one that sayeth to me Lord c. He created us He redeemed us He hath marryed us to Himselfe therefore we are to call Him Lord as Sarah did Abraham For His Name it is IESUS the onely SAVIOUR of the world There is no other name whereby wee can be saved but by the Name of IESUS Moses was the giver of the Law yet not he but Iosuah brought the people into Canaan So they be not the workes of the Law but Christ alone that carryes us into heaven the celestiall Canaan For His Office Hee is the Shepheard of the sheepe Cyrus my Shepheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where observe 1. What manner of Shepheard he is 2. How hee comes to bee our Shepheard If ye will know what manner of Shepheard he is he is a great one There be little Shepheards as the Rectours Curates of every Congregation but Hee is the great Shepheard 1. Great in the extent of the flocke the universall Shepheard of the whole Church throughout the world the Shepheard of Iewes and Gentiles so is none but he 2 Great in authority The sheepe are His Hee ownes them Simon feede my sheepe feede my lambes Peter as other Pastors feede them but the sheepe are Christs Iob had 7000. sheepe he had many Shepheards that kept them yet the sheepe were Iobs So Christ hath many thousands of sheepe in Christendome in the world Sundry Shepheards he places over them yet the sheepe are Christs not ours 3 Great in the charge which hee hath taken on him hee is the Shepheard of soule and body too the great Shepheard of our soules 1 Pet. 2. ult He hath care of body and soule too 4 Great in humility the King of Kings yet hee abased himselfe to be a Shepheard 5 Great in knowledge Iohn 10.3 6 Great in love and kindenesse Hee gave Himselfe for the sheepe 7 Great in power none can take them out of his hands All the Divells in hell all the wicked men on the earth cannot cozen him of one sheepe Be thankefull to God for this great Shepheard Of whom of the sheepe that is the righteous They are most fitly resembled to sheepe 1 Sheepe are humble Learne of Me I am humble and meeke 2 Sheepe are harmelesse be as innocent as Doves as harmelesse as sheepe 3 Sheepe are profitable for backe and belly 4 They are ruled by their Shepheard So whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe 5 Sheepe are lead into pastures and folds 6 They are obnoxious to many dangers to Wolves Briers Theives Dogges So many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of all Happy are the sheepe that have such a Shepheard But how came He to be Shepheard Sayd the chiefe Captaine with a great summe of money obteined I this burgeship But it cost Christ a greater summe even His bloud whereby the everlasting covenant is confirmed Acts 20.28 The wine in the Lords Supper is a lively representation of this bloud The wine is red So was the bloud of CHRIST the wine is powred out into the cup So the bloud of CHRIST was powred forth for our sinnes The grapes are pressed before there is any wine So was CHRIST Wine comforts a man hee hath given him wine to make him a glad heart So the consideration of the bloud of Christ that was shed for the remission of our sins is a singular comfort to the soules of Christians By this bloud He came to be the Shepheard of the Church and this is that bloud that ratifies GODS everlasting Covenant The Covenant I am thy GOD and the GOD of thy seede is an everlasting Covenant Such as the man is such is his bond and word It is good dealing with honest men A man may be bold to build on their word And such as GOD is such is His Covenant an everlasting GOD and an everlasting Covenant of His Kingdome there shall bee no end and of His Covenant there shall be no end As He is our GOD now So he will be for ever Let this stay us up when we are ready to faint in all distresses This is that great Shepheard of the sheepe which GOD hath brought againe from the dead But was hee not able to bring himselfe from the dead Yes verily He raised up this Temple Himselfe He presented Himselfe alive Acts 1.3 Yet in respect of His humanity GOD is sayd to have brought Him from the dead which He did after a glorious manner the Angels waiting on the Sepulcher the earth trembling the graves opening sundry of the Saints rising with Him and appearing to many Our Saviour truely dyed on the Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the breath went out of His body it was wrapt up in linnen cloathes layed in the Sepulcher there it continued three dayes and nights yet God brought Him againe from the dead Hee was seene of His Apostles and others fourty dayes together they beheld the print of the nailes in His hands and feet they eat and dranke with Him and looked on Him when Hee went into Heaven Even so the same God shall bring us againe from the dead The Head is risen therefore the members shall rise the first fruits are in the barne of Heaven therefore we that are the second fruits shall be gathered thither The husband is in Heaven therefore the wife shall be in Heaven Where I am they also that believe in mee shall bee there Hee brought CHRIST from the dead the third day there was an extraordinary reason in that because His Sacred body might see no corruption Our bodies corrupted with sinne must lye putrifying in the earth till the day of Iudgement Adventus Domini clavis resurrectionis then wee shall meete CHRIST in the ayre and bee translated with Him into His Kingdome of glory Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours VERSE 21. WEE have heard of the person to whom he prayes now to the thing for which he prayes It is perfection in all good workes the which is first set downe then amplified It is comprised in these words make you perfect c. Hee doth not say in faith but in workes workes are a demonstration of faith shew me thy faith by thy workes Except your righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Their righteousnesse was to say not to doe Matth. 23.3 ours must be to say and doe too else wee shall not set a foote into the Kingdome of heaven Not every one that sayeth unto mee Lord Lord c. Therefore