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

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it were brought downe to reside and remaine among vs. So long as the word which is the scepter of his kingdome is with vs we shall not need to feare he will goe from vs neither shall be constrained to make long iourneyes to seeke him out When once his word is departed and the Gospel gone his standard is remoued and he is quite turned from vs. It is in vaine to dreame to find him when we cannot find him in his word Hence it is that Abijam telleth Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne that God was gone from them seeing he had driuen away the Priests of the Lord the sonnes of Aaron and on the other side he ioyneth together the presence of the Lord and the preaching of his word saying Behold this God is with vs as a Captaine 2. Chron. 13.12 and his Priests with the sounding trumpets to cry an alarme against you This then is a speciall token of Gods speciall presence when he sendeth his word as a gracious raine vpon his inheritance and thereby watereth the dry furrowes of the barraine hearts of his people Thirdly we haue the promise of his presence and the seales thereof in his Sacraments whereby we are at one with him and he with vs. Whensoeuer we meditate of our baptisme the Sonne of God doth witnesse vnto our spirits that we are cloathed with his righteousnesse as with a garment Gal. 3.27 for all such as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ Whensoeuer we receiue the Supper of the Lord hee sheweth vs that he is our food and that the bread which we eate at our tables and in our houses doth not nourish vs better then we be nourished by his substance at his heauenly table insomuch that we liue in him by him and through him according to the testimony of Iohn Ch. 6. Ioh. 6.54.55 Whosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day for my flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed Thus we are spiritually one with him and mystically he is one with vs so that we haue a communion with him as the members haue with the head so that we must receiue it as most true which the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 10. 1 Cor. 10.16 The cuppe of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the body of Christ the bread which we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ for we that are many are one bread and one body because we all are partakers of one bread Fourthly when we come together in the Church to call vpon his Name he is neere vnto vs and most familiar with vs. For our LORD Iesus Christ assureth vs that he is there among vs whensoeuer we are assembled in his Name and by lifting vp our eyes and holding vp our hands toward heauen wee shew that our coming thither is to present our selues in the sight presence of our God To this purpose our Sauiour saith Math. 18 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the middest of them so that we must consider that we are heere not onely before the Angels of heauen but also that the Sonne of God both seeth and heareth vs. True prayer doeth ascend vp to Heauen as Incense and lifteth vs vp to talke familiarly with God and bringeth downe his blessings vpon vs except we vse this heauenly exercise whereby we speake to him he is a stranger to vs and we are strangers to him Lastly he dwelleth among vs whensoeuer he preserueth vs from euill and deliuereth vs from our enemies If the fauour of GOD were not a shield buckler about vs to preserue and protect vs from our enemies wee should lie open to ten thousand dangers and deaths If our Lord had not a continuall care ouer vs and stood not mightily for our defence we should bee a prey to the iaw of the Lyon and should perish euery minute of an houre We are of our selues ouer-weake and haue no meanes to deliuer our selues this is our comfort that God is on our side dwelleth among vs. Let vs also take heed we walk in feare before him and doe not prouoke him to wrath and indignation against vs by committing euill in his fight who can abide nothing that is prophane or polluted as Deut. 6 15. The Lord that is in the middest of thee is iealous beware therefore that his wrath kindle not lest thou be rooted out of the Land which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee To this purpose the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 6. 2 Cor. 6 16 17 Yee are the Temple of the liuing God as God hath saide I will dwell among them and walke there and I will be their GOD and they shall be my people wherefore come out from among them and separate your selues saith the Lord and touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you and I will be a Father vnto you and ye shall bee my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty This sheweth that we ought to walke alwaies as in Gods presence and to consider euermore that his eye is vpon vs. Our bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost for him to dwell in If then we shall defile them and make them as swine-styes we greeue the holy Spirit whereby our adoption and redemption are sealed and driue him from vs and chase him away out of our hearts Vse 2 Secondly albeit the placing of the Tabernacle in the middest of the host be gone and past long agoe and were verified among the Iewes vnder the shaddowes of the Law yet it serueth to teach vs to what end God hath instituted ciuill States and Common-wealths in this world to wit to be staies and proppes to the Church to vphold and strengthen the same that the people of God may assemble together in peace and quietnesse and be free from all dangers of malicious enemies that labour to do euill to the Sanctuary To this purpose the Prophet teacheth Psal 102 2● 22. and 122 3 4. that The Name of the Lord shall be declared in Sion his praise in Ierusalem when the people shall be gathered together and the Kingdomes to serue the Lord. And Psal 122. Ierusalem is builded as a City that is compact together in it selfe whereunto the Tribes euen the Tribes of the Lord goe vp according to the Testimony to Israel to praise the name of the Lord. Heereby we are put in minde of three notable duties First of all let all persons Princes and people high and low do good to the Church of God and imploy their best endeuours to promote the glory of God and the safety of the Church For wherefore was the Tabernacle taken and pitched in the middest of all the host not placed in a corner nor set in the skirts of that mighty army but was inuironed round about with the strength of Israel but to
feare of troubles that may come vpō her True it is the Church of God hath many enemies that threaten the ruine thereof and imploy all their wiles and fetches to worke the subuersion of it as if an huge and heauy milstone were cast at it or as if a mighty tempest were fallen vpon it or as if a sudden flood of waters did ouerflow and ouerwhelme it Neuerthelesse the Church is set in a safe place they shal not be able to hurt it it hath a safe keeper that neither slumbreth nor sleepeth they shall not be able to destroy it the gates of hell and the power of the deuill are set against it but they shall neuer haue victory ouer it They may well assault this City of our God cast their trenches against it build Forts and Barricadoes against it yet they shall neuer winne it but their losses shall be greater then their gaines Let vs comfort our selues in this that it is vnpossible the Church should fall being borne vp and vpholden by so strong a pillar For as when we become the enemies of God despise his maiesty he is able quickly to consume confound vs so whē we be in his safe keeping he wil maintaine defend vs in such sort as the Lyons aspes the dragons wild beasts wherof we are most afraid shal not be able to destroy or annoy vs. Therefore the Lord speaketh Deut. 7. Deut. 7 21 22 Thou shalt not feare them for the Lord thy God is among you a God mighty and dreadfull he will root out all these enemies before thee by little and little First hee willeth them not to be afraide of their enemies and afterward he addeth the reason because God is among them We are all of vs as in the Tabernacle and tuition of God let vs put on the shield of faith to repulse all feare he will not leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord my deliuerer I will not feare what man can doe vnto me Let vs hold our selues to his promises and assure our selues of his succour Vse 3 Lastly this situation of the Tabernacle serueth to conclude the full and finall happines of the faithfull which is begun in this life but shal be consummated in the end of the world Then will God dwell with vs and we shall dwell with him then we shall bee admitted into his presence and neuer be cast out then no euill shall touch vs or come neere vs and no good thing shall be wanting vnto vs that we can desire Heereunto the Apostle alludeth Reuel 21. Reuel 21.3 I heard a great voice out of heauen saying Behold the Tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himselfe will be their God c. Consider heere the blessednesse of that people that shall euer enioy the immediate presence of such a God as is the fountaine of all happinesse True it is God doth dwell among his people in this life and he is not farre from euery one of them inasmuch as they haue their spirituall life and birth from him howbeit it doth not appeare to others nor sometimes to our selues what we shall be The Tabernacle of God seemeth now to be remoued out of our sight and to be set in a darke corner where it lyeth hidden We are heere subiect to many temptations of sinne to many sicknesses and sorrowes to many paines and aches to many losses troubles which often cause vs to sigh and lament we haue not hearts of yron and steele nor bodies of stone or oake that cannot be touched with any feeling We must all passe through these afflictions and tribulations as the children of Israel passed through the red sea But when the Lord who is an infinite and endlesse treasury of all good things shall bring vs into his heauenly Tabernacle in the new Ierusalem we shall stand in need of no good thing wee shall stand in feare of no euill thing in both which consisteth true felicity The olde Ierusalem though it were called the holy City and place of Gods worship had many vncleane persons dwelling in it the Tabernacle of the Testimony though it figured the coniunction of God with his Saints had many prophane persons resorting to it but in the heauenly Ierusalem and the heauenly Tabernacle which is the Kingdome of glory there shall be no vncleane thing there shall rest no vile person all shall be holy and pure indeed In them shall be no confusion no disorder no broiles no tumults no turmoiles no tempests no sinne no sinfull thing no effect of sinne The Apostle saith We looke for a new heauen a new earth according to his promise 2 Pet. 3 13 wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Then we shall weepe and lament no more there shall be no more death nor sorrow nor pain nor crying the teares which we shed shal be wiped away the sinnes which prouoke God shall be blotted out the kingdome of the diuell shall be throwne downe and the kingdome of Christ set vp death and hell shall be cast into the lake of fire and whosoeuer is not written in the Booke of life long white robes shall bee put vpon vs we shall hunger and thirst no more neither shall the Sunne shine vpon vs neither any heat come neere vs Reuel 7.17 For the Lambe which is in the middes of the throne shall gouerne them and shall leade them vnto the liuely fountaines of waters c. This is the dignity vnto which we are aduanced by Christ our Sauiour we shall dwell with God the great king of glory Now wee are tossed with many stormes and tempests Sometimes we are persecuted and banished from our countrey sometimes we are imprisoned and destitute of things necessary poore hungry thirsty naked weary cold faint and feeble yea subiect to a thousand mischiefes and dangers miseries and encombrances In the middes of this boysterous sea of confusions this is our comfort that God will rid vs and release vs out of them all and bring vs into the quiet hauen of rest and happinesse Why then should we be cast downe in our tentations or why should we thinke that God hath forsaken vs Wee shal shortly be with the Lord and the Lamb which taketh away the sinnes of the world he will feed vs with all heauenly and spirituall dainties Here we assembled together in tabernacles and Temples and Churches for the performance of diuine duties where God vouchsafed to be present according to his promise Matth. 18.2 Where two or three are gathered together in my Name there I am in the middes of them There were the Sacrifices and Sacraments there was the Law and the Gospell taught These were worthy and notable signes of Gods presence But the heauenly Ierusalem the mother of vs all hath neither tabernacle nor Temple nor materiall building nor place of instruction nor sacrifices nor Sacraments nor signe of the presence
enemies to their brethren they draw an heauier enemy vpon themselues to wit God himselfe Before we passe from this so necessary a duty it shall not be amisse for vs both to obserue such motiues as may stirre vs vp to the practise of it and to answere such obiections as may hinder vs from yeelding obedience vnto it First of all let vs lay before vs the example of Christ the author and finisher of our saluation who had greater wrong offered vnto him then he had who was more innocent then he that was as a sheepe dumbe before his shearer and opened not his mouth and therefore the Apostle Peter saith chap. 2.22 Christ suffered for vs leauing vs an example that ye should follow his steps who did no sin neither was guile found in his mouth who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but cōmitted himselfe to him that iudgeth righteously This farther appeareth vnto vs in that he prayed for his enemies that persecuted him He had power in his own hand to haue resisted their force 〈◊〉 34 reuenged his cause He could haue praied to his Father he would haue giuen him more then twelu legions of Angels yet notwithstanding he suffered patiently 〈◊〉 ●6 53 the iust for the vniust 〈◊〉 18. that he might bring vs to God If any thinke or alledge that this example is too high for vs aboue our reach and too eminent in regard of his person who is God aboue to be worshipped let vs set before vs the examples of the faithful seruants of God that haue liued in all ages in the time of the law and vnder the Gospel ●ed mo● that this may be another motiue vnto vs. How often did the children of Israel murmure against Moses and Aaron and sometimes went about to stone him yet he neuer sought reuenge against them albeit he had bin able to right his own cause by force When Miriam Aaron spake against him by reason of the woman of Ethiopia 〈◊〉 12.2 3 and said What hath the Lord spoken only by Moses hath he not also spoken by vs Moses held his peace and gaue not taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke he was a very meeke man aboue all the men that were vpon the earth Thus was it with Dauid a man indeed after Gods owne heart though he were a king and wanted not seruants to execute his will yet he would not himselfe reuenge neither suffer any other to take reuenge on Shimei albeit he cursed the king with an horrible curse Saul sought his life 〈◊〉 16.9 and preferred him to be his son in law for no other cause but to lay a snare before him when Dauid had his life oftentimes in his hand to saue it or to destroy it ye he was so farre from seeking reuenge 〈◊〉 26.9 〈◊〉 24.5 that his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of his garment When Stephen had made a worthy defence for himselfe and his own innocency that the enemies could take no iust exception against him their hearts brast asunder and they gnashed at him with their teeth ran vpon him violently all at once 〈◊〉 60. but he kneeled down and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sin to their charge The Church of Rome are not ashamed to teach thereby to strengthen the hands of traitors rebels that rise vp against Princes that Christians of old deposed not Nero and Dioclesian and Iulian the Apostata and Valens the Arrian and such like persecutous and heretikes 〈◊〉 de Rom. ●●b 5. c. 7. because they wanted temporall power and if they had had power they would haue done it If this be true all their patience was perforce and is not thanke-worthy But they testifie in many places that they had power sufficient but held it vnlawfull to resist and rebell They had filled all places Cities Ilands castles boroughes tents tribes bandes palaces ● Apolog. the Senate and Court not excepted so that they wanted neither number nor strength to make their party good They professe that albeit they be equall in power yet with them it is more tollerable to be killed then to kill They affirme freely God forbid that his religion should be maintained with fire and sword They acknowledge no other weapons to be put into their hands but praiers tears Arma nostra sunt pre●es lacrymae Tert. They neuer practised any reuēge against their persecutors and those that hated them One night with a little fire would haue serued and sufficed them largely to be reuenged of their enemies but they accounted it vnlawful to requite euill with euill But to leaue this consideration to another occasion let vs come to a third motiue A third motiue that is the office which is proper vnto God to whom it belongeth peculiarly to take vengeance and is therefore in holy Scripture called the God of vengeance Psal 94.1 O Lord God the auenger O God the auenger shew thy selfe clearly It is a grieuous sin to sit down in Gods seat and to rob him of his right and royalty Let the enemies of God and his people know that he is the God of reuenge as well as the God of saluation and that he wil as wel right their causes as saue their soules He is a iust God wil recompense tribulation to all that trouble those that are his and therefore hath said Deut. 32 3● Vengeance and recompense are mine but he neuer said to priuate persons Vengeance is thine neither did he euer put the sword into their hands A fourth motiue A fourth motiue to perswade vs to lay aside priuate reuenge is drawn from the gracious promise that God hath made vnto vs namely that he will take our causes into his hand and pay them home that do oppresse vs. For God doth not restraine vs as it were tye vp our hands to expose vs to all iniuries and to leaue vs as a prey in the iawes of the Lyons but because he hath passed his word vnto vs I will repay Rom. 12.29 saith the Lord. So then we must know that God is called the authour and executer of vengeance not only because the power and right belongeth vnto him that he is able to take vengeance of all our enemies how many and mighty soeuer they bee but because he hath vsed this power executed this office from the beginning of the world and as yet vseth it and will vse it to the ful in the great day of the general iudgement He knoweth best of all the greatnes of the iniury that is done vnto vs because he searcheth into the thoughts of the heart and vnderstandeth not only what is done but the manner how it is done Seeing then he hath promised to pay them home into their bosomes that wrong vs it were a fruit of infidelity in vs not to beleeue him at his word
point required to make a good worke is that it bee done to Gods glory 1. Cor. 10.31 If we haue any other by-respects ayming at our owne glory or the applause of the world or the satisfying of Gods iustice or the merit of eternall life or any such corrupt and crooked ends wee lose all our labour our works cannot come vp in account before him It is the common and corrupt iudgement of the common sort that Papists abound in good workes but let vs try them by these rules we shall quickely and easily find them what they are failing in the matter and manner and in the maine and principall end of well-doing Now to conclude euery one must doe these good works euery one must be as a tree planted in the garden of God and bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse that he may be glorified Esay 61.3 It is a receiued opinion among many that none can doe good works but rich men as if there were no good workes but almes for they haue no taste in any thing else but that which is giuen them Thus doe the poore cast off all doing of good works from themselues vpon the richer sort that so they may receiue somwhat True it is almes are one good worke but yet not the only good work nor yet the chiefe and principal For the poore may do good works nay must do them as wel as the rich The workes of the first Table are the best works the greatest works these they may doe as well as others To haue a care to know God to beleeue in him to loue him aboue all to feare him to hope in him to stay our selues vpon him to approue our selues in his sight to worship him with the heart to confesse him with the mouth to pray vnto him earnestly to heare his word attentiuely to receiue the Sacraments reuerently and such like diuine and deuout exercises are all of them good workes great workes gracious workes approoued of God and these may the poore performe And that the Scripture auoucheth and God alloweth these for good works appeareth in the example of Abraham mentioned by the Apostle Iames. chap 2.21 Was not Abraham our father iustified by works when he offered Isaac his sonne vpon the altar He shewed himselfe to be a iustified man by his good workes and was called the friend of God ●●●se 23. ●●●se 12. Thus did his faith worke together with his workes But what were his good works were they his almes-deeds and shewing mercy to the poore no he performed a good duty to God and preferred his loue to him before his loue to his sonne his onely sonne euen Isaac whom he loued the sonne of promise the sonne in whom the nations of the world should be blessed Thus must all men doe good workes thus the poorest sort are not exempted or priuiledged from shewing forth these good workes and testifying their faith by these fruites So then when we heare of the necessity of the dignity and value of good workes let no man thinke it belongeth nothing to him but euery man be encouraged to set vpon the doing of them ●●th 5 16. that our light may so shine before men that they seeing our good works may glorifie our Father which is in heauen 84 This was the dedication of the altar in the day when it was annointed by the Princes of Israel twelue chargers of siluer twelue siluer bolles twelue spoones of gold 85 Each charger of siluer c. We shall not need to stand to speake particularly of euery Princes offering because as we noted before the same things are repeated the offerings are the same the matter is the same the forme and ende the same the price and value the same the difference standeth onely in a description of the time when they were offered and of the person who offered described by his name by his father and by his tribe Nowe in casting vppe the value of all these offerings and setting downe the totall summe appeareth the greatnesse of their riches For had they not beene much blessed that way they could not haue continued to bestow so bountifully vpon the Tabernacle These they attained vnto partly by their own labour and partly by entring into the labours of others For at their departure out of the land of Egypt Exod. 12.36 they borrowed iewels of siluer and iewels of gold and rayment at what time no doubt they carried with them the chiefe wealth and treasure of Egypt spoyled the Egyptians which God gaue to his people as a recompence of all their troubles The doctrine Doctrine from hence ariseth to bee this that the blessings of this life are oftentimes bestowed vpon Gods children Earthly blessings are oftentimes in the possession of gods children He giueth them riches honours dignities preferments house land peace and prosperity at his owne pleasure We haue the examples of Abraham Lot their substance was so greatly encreased that they could not dwell together the heardmen of their cattell stroue and contended one against another Gen. 13.7 and Abrahams seruant sent to take a wife for Isaac Gen. 24.35 telleth that the Lord had blessed his master greatly and had giuen him flocks and heards and siluer and gold men seruants and maid-seruants and Camels and Asses Gen. 24 35. Iob was a iust and an vpright man one that feared God and eschewed euil and this man was the greatest of all the men of the East cha 1.1 2.3 and 31 24 25. his wealth was great and his hand had gotten much The like we might say of many godly kings as of Dauid Salomon Hezekiah Iehoshaphat Iosiah of Mordecai and Ester of Ioseph and of Iacob And in the New Testament mention is made of Ioanna the wife of Chuza Herods steward and Susanna and many others who ministred vnto Christ of their substance Luk. 8.3 Of Lazarus the friend of Christ and Mary who entertained him often in her house Luk. 10.38 Of Ioseph of Arimathea a rich man Matth. 27.57 an honourable counsellour Mar. 15.43 he was a good man and aiust Luk. 23.50 which also waited for the kingdome of God Of Onesiphorus who often refreshed Paul was not ashamed of his chaine 2 Tim. 1.16 and many other of all estates some rich some noble some wise some mighty and of great account 1 Cor. 1.26 For hereby the Lord sheweth what he can Reason 1 do so often as it pleaseth him to bestow them True it is sometimes he denieth euen to those that are most highly in his fauour these outward and earthly blessings howbeit it is not because he is not able to enrich them For as Moses prayeth the Lord to spare his people lest the enemies should say he destroyed them in the wildernesse Deut 9.28 Exod. 32.12 Num. 14.13 because he was not able to bring them into the land of promise so he bestoweth many times wealth and substance vpon his children lest the enemies should say it was
the body of man euery member hath his proper function so that if one should vsurpe to doe all or all to doe one onely there would follow the destruction of the body for the hand laboureth for the whole the eye seeth and the eare heareth for the good of the rest of the parts the mouth receiueth meate and deliuereth it to the stomacke the stomacke employeth it to all the rest so should it bee in the Church euery member must doe his owne duty and employ himselfe to the common profit and edification of the whole But to omit these obserue that the Leuites are saide to be giuen of God to Aaron and his sonnes to assist them and consequently for the good of the whole congregation From whence learne this doctrine that a good Minister is a speciall gift of God Doctrine A good Minister is a speciall blessing of God and a speciall token of his fauour which hee bestoweth vpon his Church The Lord is many wayes gracious vnto his Church and powreth out many blessings vpon it howbeit none more excellent or worthy then to giue this blessing which now wee speake off to send faithfull teachers Deuteronomy chapter 18. verse 18. I will raise them a Prophet Esay chapter 66. verse 19 31. Ieremy chapter 3. verse 14 15. Matthew chapter 23. verse 34. When God beganne to plant a setled state of Religion among his people hee commanded that the Tribe of Leui should be sanctified to bee the publike teachers of the Church to instruct them in the will of God shewing thereby that Religion would not be vpholden without some speciall meanes and instruments to direct the people therein The reasons are euident First they are his onely gift because hee is Reason 1 the Lord of the haruest as also he is Lord of the Sabbath wherein they exercise their gifts Who then shall reape downe the corne when the fields are white vnto the haruest Iohn chapter 4. verse 35. and gather it into the barne but such labourers as hee shall set on worke Matth. 9.37 Secondly he onely is able to furnish them Reason 2 with sufficiens gifts for the worke of the Ministery Therefore when the Lord Iesus ascended vp on high he gaue gifts vnto men in the day of his triumph when he rode in his chariot as a glorious conquerour and led all his enemies euen captiuity captiue as it were in chaines of yron Ephes 4.11 12. Hence it is that the functions and gifts for the Ministery are particularly named in the most gracious promises which God hath made of the best things to bestow on the Church vnder the kingdome of Christ Esay 59.20 21. Ioel 2.28 29. Reason 3 Thirdly the Ministery is the ordinary meanes which God hath left to bring vs to saluation for how shall wee beleeue without a Preacher Roman 10.14 For the Apostle sheweth that hearing is necessary to faith faith to prayer and prayer to saluation and therfore also it is necessary that there be preaching that so men may heare Vse 1 The vses follow First as good Pastors are tokens of Gods loue to his people which doe good in their places and labour to turne many to righteousnesse so on the contrary to haue euill and ignorant Pastors are tokens of Gods wrath and iudgement as Saul was giuen to the Israelites in iudgement to bee a plague vnto them These win soules to Satan and encrease his kingdome For an euill Minister is the diuels collector An euill Minister is the diuels collectour he gathereth soules for him but he scattereth them from God Or else I may call them the diuels shepheards whom he hath appointed to keepe his sheepe For as God saith I will giue you Pastors according to my heart which shall feed you with knowledge and vnderstanding so the diuell saith I will giue you idoll Pastors according to my heart that shall fill you full of ignorance and blindnesse These supply the places of true Pastors but they can doe nothing for the sheepe of Christ cannot feede in their pastures they are so bare and so barren that they cannot liue vpon them and therefore they that liue vnder them cannot thriue Happy it were for the sheepe if either such sheepeheards were remooued from the sheepe or the sheepe from such shepheards Such drones seeke nothing but their owne ease who neuer consider that the Ministery is a calling of great worke and labour These may be Ministers for the diuels tooth or after mens hearts but they cannot be after Gods owne heart They are blinde guides which run before the Lord send them he taketh no pleasure either in these silly sheepeheards or in those foolish people that are contented with them These are such merchants as gaine many soules to the diuels coffers by doing nothing Other merchants gaine by compassing sea and land Matth. 23.24 and trauelling farre and neere by labouring and taking great paines but these sit idle all the day long they labour not in the Lords vineyard and yet by their ease and idlenesse they enrich the diuels kingdomes and bring him in many thousand soules These are the diuels factours Idle Ministers are the diuels factors by them he getteth and groweth rich The diuels trafficke is all for soules he careth for no other merchandise now the idle and ignorant Minister is his factour who sendeth them in these Wares by heapes and by throngs hee shippeth them with great pleasure and putteth himselfe in the same bottome and then ship and all go to the diuell who sitteth ready in his counting house to receiue them all and to giue them such entertainement as he hath to giue Woe vnto such factours woe vnto such people woe vnto such deceiuers woe vnto them that are so deceiued Neuerthelesse it is strange to consider now the greatest part of the people are enamored of them though they bee the greatest most dangerous enemies that they haue because howsoeuer they may otherwise make much of them yet indeed they withhold all succour and sustenance from them and consequently starue them and kill them Secondly there is great punishment attending Vse 2 vpon the contempt of this excellent gift Deut. 18.19.10 11. 2 Chro. 36.15 16. 2 Thes 1.7 8 9. and 2.9 10 11 12. This meeteth with sundry abuses that sauour rankely of the reiecting of this great mercy and therefore let such take heede that God doe not also reiect them Woe then to the Anabaptists the Family of loue and such like Enthusiastes who refuse the Ministery vnder the pretence of reuelations whereas the Lord hath reuealed vnto vs the dignity of the Ministery and therfore the word hath reuealed that their reuelations are diuellish delusions whereby they are seduced to bring them to destruction Woe also vnto the common sort of besotted Christians who thinke their home deuotions enough and their owne reading sufficient to bring them to heauen not considering that in their reading they want a guide to interprete The
had numbred the people after God sent him this word and offered him the choise of famine or sword or pestilence he saide I am in a wonderfull streight let vs now fall into the hād of the Lord for his mercies are great and let mee not fall into the hand of man Who had not rather receiue punishment at his fathers hands of whose loue he is assured then to bee punished with the strokes of an enemy that loueth him not but hateth him to the death Men are proud and cruell fierce ambitious but God is full of compassion and his mercy endureth for euer he knoweth whereof we were made Psal 103.14 Psalme 78 39 he remembreth that we are but dust hee considereth that we are mortall yea a winde that passeth and commeth not againe He will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that wee are able to beare Hitherto the Lord hath visited vs with his mercifull and gentle corrections famines sicknesses and strange diseases Let vs behold his gracious dealing toward vs and profit by these fatherly admonitions for if he should deliuer vs into the hands of barbarous and beastly enemies we should soone discerne the difference betweene the louing chasticements of a father and the bloody strokes of an enemy 22 Then they departed from Kadesh and the childrē of Israel euen al the congregation came vnto Mount Hor. 23 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor neere the border of the land of Edom saying 24 Aaron shall be gathered vnto his people for he shall not enter into the Land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel because yee rebelled against my commandements at the waters of strife 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and charge them to come vnto this Mount 26 And cause Aaron to strip off his garments and thou shalt put them vpon Eleazar his sonne then Aaron shall be gathered vnto his Fathers and shall dye there 27 And Moses did as the Lord had commanded for they went vp vnto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation 28 And Moses caused Aaron to strip off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son and Aaron dyed there in the toppe of the Mount So Moses and Eleazar came downe from off that Mount 29 And when all the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty dayes Hitherto of the Ambassage of Moses to the King of Edom These words containe the third and last part of the Chapter to wit the death of Aaron after the people were remooued from the borders of the Edomites For albeit the King did so vnkindly deny them any passage yet Moses and the Israelites doe not oppose themselues against them or attempt to breake through by force of Armes multitude of men and dint of sword but passe by their borders peaceably and fetch a compasse about their land True it is those enuious Edomites were worthy to perish and to be vtterly destroyed for their inhumanity yet because the time was not yet come wherein the Lord had prophesied and promised that the elder should serue the yonger Gen. 25 23. therefore the Israelites commit vengeance to the Lord to whom it belongeth Rom. 12 19. Now in these verses we see how God beginneth to execute the former threatning against Moses and Aaron For heere wee are to consider three things First the death of Aaron Secondly the succession of his sonne Thirdly the mourning of the people The father dieth the son succeedeth the people lamenteth the death of the high Priest If Aaron had dyed without any prediction and foretelling of his death all men might haue thought it had fallen out at aduentures and ascribed it wholy to the decaying of strength wasting of nature but being reuealed to Aaron himselfe and manifested to the whole Congregation both the time when and the place where he should die it appeareth that his daies were numbred and his yeeres limited which hee could not passe As then God had determined the death of Aaron and denounced his shutting out of the land of Canaan so that sentence is heere executed vpon him Deut. 34 4 5. the other concerning Moses is reserued vnto his time appointed of God In this place God commanded both of them what to doe euen to ascend vp to the Mountaine and sheweth that Aaron shall die there for his disobedience whose garments must be pulled off and put vpon Eleazar lest by touching of the dead the holy garments should be defiled After this commandement followeth their obedience agreeable to the same they come vp to the Mountain Aaron is stripped Eleazar is cloathed with them Aaron without feare of death or longer desire of life or prayer for life departeth in peace according to the word of God he is gathered to his Fathers Moses and Eleazar descend from the Mountaine Moses Eleazar and the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron We see heere according to the former threatning pronounced by the mouth of God verse 12. that Aaron cometh not into the land of Promise but dieth in Mount Hor. We learne heereby Doctri● God-thr●nings are 〈◊〉 comp●●●● that the threatnings of God are accomplished Howsoeuer his iudgments are many times deferred and his punnishments prolonged because hee is patient toward vs and would haue no man to perish but would haue all persons come vnto repentance yet in the end all his threatnings shall be verified and fulfilled in their times and seasons Consider this truth in our first parents Ge. 2 17. ● 3 7. God threatned them that if they did eate the forbidden fruite they should die the death we see the effect in them and all their posterity throughout al times and generations Behold other threatnings of God wee shall alwayes reade the execution after the denunciation So when God by the Ministery of Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Peter 2● had threatned to destroy the whole world if in an hundred and twenty yeeres they repented not wee see how he brought in the flood vpon the world of the vngodly swept them away from the face of the earth which they had corrupted with their cruell and vncleane conuersation This we see likewise taught vnto vs throughout the bookes of the holy history of Ioshua The man is cursed before the Lord Ioshua 6● that ryseth vp and buildeth the City Iericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his eldest sonne and in his yongest sonne shall he set vp the gates of it meaning therby that whosoeuer should attempt to builde this City he should pay for it deerely because what time hee layeth the foundation of the wals his eldest sonne shall dye and when hee setteth vp the gates and hath finished it his yongest sonne shall dye When this threatning seemed quite forgotten and consumed with the rust of time God doeth bring it to passe as we
77.20 Hee led his people like sheepe by the hand of Moses and Aaron So long therefore as we haue a voyce so long as we haue an heart to lift vp to God and can poure out the meditations therof before him we haur comfort and assurance to be helped When the poore infant is fallen into danger of fire or water or other misery if he can cry that the father may heare his voyce there is hope of safety and deliuerance So if wee can call vpon God the Father in Iesus Christ in our distresses our heauenly Father will not leaue vs nor forsake vs in our dangers Secondly albeit the faithfull fall into many Reason 2 afflictions and their enemies make long surrowes vpon their backs yet God will not alway suffer them to bee oppressed lest they should sinke deepe and shrinke downe vnder the burthen so turne from their obedience and forsake the faith which they haue professed according to the saying of the Prophet The rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous ●al 125.3 lest the righteous put forth their hand vnto wickednesse He knoweth whereof we are made he spareth vs in our infirmities hee will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our strength he seeth our weakenesse and how vnable wee are to resist and therefore he will not giue vs ouer to perish in our afflictions inasmuch as our light afflictions which are but for a moment Cor 4.17 cause vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory so that albeit the righteous fall seuen times yet he riseth againe as the wise man teacheth ●ou 24.16 Vse 1 To apply this vnto our selues wee learne first that the deuises and practises of enemies albeit they be neuer so secret or malicious are vaine and frustrate The people of God shall be preserued howsoeuer they bee euer plotting and banding themselues together as wee see in the dayes of the Apostle ●ct 4.27 Herod Pontius Pilate the Priests and people the Iewes and Gentiles conspired together yet wee shall alwayes haue assurance of safety and all shall worke for the best to them that feare God whose loue no powers no principalities no Potentates shall be able to remooue as the Prophet teacheth Reioice not against me O mine enemy ●c 7.8.10 though I fall I shall rise when I shall sit in darknesse the Lord will be a light vnto me then she that is mine enemie shall locke vpon it and shame shall couer her which said vnto mee Where is the Lord thy God mine eyes shall behold her now shall she be troden downe as the myre of the streets This serueth notably to daunt and dismay the wicked and vngodly who insult ouer the righteous and seeme wise in their owne eyes considering that The faithfull escapeth out of trouble ●rou 11.8 ●sa 8.9 10 and the wicked shall come in his stead This truth the Prophet Esay confesseth and confirmeth Chap. 8. Gather together on heapes O ye people and ye shall be broken in pieces take counsell together but it shall be brought to nought pronounce a decree yet it shall not stand for God is with vs. So then if the faithfull be not euer forsaken nor stand continually vnder the strokes of their enemies but God will put to his hand and his helpe to deliuer them we see that all their deuises and all their consultations against them and insultations ouer them shal be brought to nothing Vse 2 Againe it behooueth vs in all the time of our distresse to rely vpon him whatsoeuer tentations come though we should walke by the gates of the graue and passe by the gulfe of death Many indeed are our infirmities feares cares sorrowes and troubles yet in them all we must say with the Prophet ●al 42.5.11 ● 43.5 Why art thou cast downe O my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Waite on God for I will yet giue him thanks he is my present helpe and my God Let vs not therefore despaire in the day of trouble When the snares of death compasse vs and the griefes of the graue take hold vpon vs ●al 116.3 4. when we find trouble and sorrow to pursue vs and ouertake vs let vs call vpon the Name of the Lord to deliuer our soule who is mercifull and full of compassion Pro. 18.10 The Name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth vnto it and is exalted This is the surest and safest refuge of the godly against all troubles Lastly let all such learne as lie not vnder Vse 3 the crosse to commend the common cause of their brethren to God as if themselues were in affliction For wherefore doth God promise to free his from the oppression of the enemy and to restore them to the ioy of their saluation but to moue vs to this duty of praying for them pittying their distressed estate and seeking by all lawfull meanes the comfort and continuance of the Church This the Apostle setteth downe 2 Cor. 1.3 4. Where wee see he vrgeth the Church at Corinth to thinke of this point to be mindfull of the miseries of others and to comfort them that are in discomfort as God hath comforted vs. This is taught by Moses Thou shalt not doe iniury to a stranger Exod. 22.21 neither oppresse him for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt And heereunto the Apostle accordeth Heb. 13.3 Remember them that are in bonds as though ye were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if ye were also afflicted in the body Where he would haue vs so much to bee touched as if their misery were our owne This duty it is needfull to thinke vpon Wee know not what troubles may fall vpon our heads When wee take our selues to bee freest and farthest from all dangers then we may bee neerest vnto them and suddenly fal into them as a bird into the snare of the fowler Wherefore let vs remember them to God that suffer afflictions that so we may be deliuered if wee fall into any troubles But if we harden our hearts in the miseries of others and haue no feeling of their sorrowes others shall bee as vnmindfull of vs and vnmercifull vnto vs as we haue beene to them Matt. 7.2 For with what iudgement we iudge we shall be iudged and with what measure we meat it shall be measured to vs againe Nothing is more greeuous vnto a man then to be scorned in his misery and to be insulted vppon in the day of his calamity The affliction it selfe is bitter and yrkesome to the flesh but the derisions mockings of the enemy serue to double the crosse and to adde to the measure and manner of our misery If then we shall see with our eyes and heare with our eares the lamentable condition of the Church and laugh when the people of God weepe and lament the iustice of God shall ouertake vs and make vs a
Israel that hee had done great things for them saying How great things hath the Lord wrought This is the substance of this Prophecy now the conclusion followeth shutting vp the whole with an admiration and commendation of the power and glory of Gods people whose courage and happinesse shal be so great in subduing and subuerting their enemies that as the Lyon resteth not till he hath gotten his prey so they shall not put vp their swords and dwell in peace vntill they haue sheathed them in the bowels of their enemies and seene the destruction of them before their eyes The meaning of the words is not that they should be cruell and rauenous or to stir them to be barbarous and beastly in shedding mans blood and spilling it on the ground as water that cannot he gathered vp againe but to declare and assure that their harts were valiant and victorious so that they should be able to withstand all that did stand against them This was performed and accomplished in Ioshua and Dauid Psal 60 10. 2 Sam. ● 2 ● who fought the battels of the Lord and trod downe their enemies Iosh 23.10 One man of them did chase a thousand for the Lord their God fought for them as he had promised them but especially it was verified in Christ Reu. 5.5 who as the Lyon of the Tribe of Iuda rose from the dead led captiuity captiue and hath put all things in subiection vnder his feete Verse 18. He vttered his parable and said Rise vp Balak and heare hearken vnto me thou sonne of Zippor This is the entrance of the Prophecy wherein he mooueth Balak to attention by three words rise hearken heare And when hee chargeth and commandeth him in the Name of GOD to rise vp he requireth of him to giue eare with meeknesse and reuerence This wee see in the booke of Iudges when Ehud appointed to bee a deliuerer of the people saide to Eglon King of the Moabites I haue a message vnto thee from God Iudg. 3 2● then he arose out of his throne So when Samuel was to annoint Saul King ouer Israel to be gouernour ouer Gods inheritance he saide vnto him Bid thy seruant goe before vs but stand thou still now that I may shew thee the word of God that thou maist heare it with reuerence 1 Sam. 9 27. To the same purpose it is noted 2 Kings 23 2 Chro. 34 that when the Law of God was read Iosiah stood by the Pillar and made a couenant before the Lord. The like wee see in the booke of Nehemiah when Ezra the Scribe read the Scriptures to the people and gaue the interpretation of them All the people stood vp in token of their reuerence and attention Neh. 8.5 So in this place Balaam requireth Balak to rise and stand vp when he was to speake vnto him in the Name of the Lord as if he should say Albeit thou be a King and sittest in the throne yet I come vnto thee from the King of Kings thou rulest ouer thy subiects but thou must bee content to suffer God to rule ouer thee thou requirest silence and subiection to thy selfe but thou must hold thy peace hearken with all reuerence respect when he speaketh From Doctrine hence we learne All reuere●● and atten●● is due to t●● Word S●craments whatsoeu●● the speak● be that the Word of God is alwaies to be heard with great reuerence wonderful attention Whensoeuer wee come to the exercises of Religion we must come with humility and humblenesse of mind albeit they be deliuered and brought vnto vnto vs by wicked vngodly men The truth of this doctrine is confirmed vnto vs by diuers precepts proued by many promises and sanctified by sundry examples out of the Word of God Touching precepts when Moses exhorted the people without adding or diminishing to obserue the Law he saith Deut. 4 1 34 12.13 Now therefore hearken O Israel vnto the ordinances and to the Lawes which I teach you to doe that ye may liue and possesse the land And afterward Gather the people together men women and children and the stranger that is within thy gates that ye may heare that ye may learne and feare the Lord your God and keepe obserue all the words of this Law and that your children which haue not knowne it may heare it and learne to feare the Lord your God This Salomon teacheth Eccl. 4.17 Take heede to thy foot when thou entrest into the house of God and be more neere to heare then to giue the sacrifice of fooles for they know not that they doe euill Hereunto accordeth the saying of our Sauiour so often vrged Mat. 13 9. Reuel 2 17 9 and 3 6. He that hath eares to heare let him heare Touching the promises made to such as come with such an affection we may reade in the Prophet Esay chap. 66 2 5. To him will I looke euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my words And againe Heare ye the word of the Lord all ye that tremble at my word Lastly touching the examples of the faithfull that haue gone before vs in the performance and practice of this duty wee haue a cloud of witnesses recorded vnto vs. The Israelites after their returne from captiuity are commended Neh. 8 2 3. that when Ezra the Priest brought the Law before the congregation both of men and women read therein from the morning vntil the mid-day the eares of all the people hearkned vnto the booke of the Law So when Samaria was called conuerted to the faith of Christ by the preaching of Philip Acts 8 5 6 10 11 it is said that the people gaue heed with one accord to those things which he spake hearing and seeing the miracles which he did as before they had giuen heed from the least to the greatest to the enchantments of Simon the sorcerer And in the sixteenth Chapter ver 14. the Spirit testifieth that Lydia heard the Apostles diligently whose heart the Lord opened that shee attended vnto the things which Paul spake The Apostle Peter writing to the dispersed Iewes testifieth this 2. Pet. 1.19 We haue a sure word of the Prophets to the which ye do well that ye take heed as vnto a light that shineth in a dark place vntill the day dawn the daystar arise in your harts All these precepts commanding promises assuring and examples confirming this doctrin do teach that it is our duty to stirre vp our attention and to be forward to learne Gods wil with all reuerence and readinesse when it is reuealed and deliuered vnto vs. Reason 1 The reasons heereof are plaine and euident For first it is God that speaketh vnto vs so often as his word is preached among vs. He is a most mighty and terrible GOD whom wee worship and in whose presence we stand hauing all power and Maiesty in him who is euen a consuming and deuouring fire
our God hath such a watchman as neyther slumbereth nor sleepeth But the Church which is Gods commonwealth hath a gouernour and guardian which is all an eye to see their dangers all an eare to heare the counsels all an heart to vnderstand the deuices of theyr enemies and all an hand and strong arme to scatter them and to defeate them This happines we heard before verse 10 how Balaam praised and desired He confesseth alowd that the death of the Iews was more to be desired thē the life of all other men because GOD held them for his people Though he were a wretched idolater and sought to turne the truth of God into falshood yet standing as it were vpon the racke hee was inforced to vtter this speech as if he had sayde Who is it that can doe any thing against Israel seeing they remaine in the fauour of their God Let vs learn to magnifie the Lord for his mercy and walk worthy of this our happines which the men of this world do want They haue no protection from God but lye open and naked vnto dangers of soule and body and haue to defend them not so much as a poore fig leafe Thirdly let vs seeke to bee at peace with God and labour to be reconciled vnto him If God be against vs what creature dare stand vp for vs to helpe and comfort vs nay what creature shall not fight against vs to destroy and confound vs For the subiect though neuer so noble honorable that hath the King against him shall finde few others to succour him or shew him any countenance as we see in the booke of Ester Ester 7 9. so soon as the wrath of the King began to be kindled against Haman by and by they couered his face and helped forward his execution So if wee sinne against God the King of Kings and prouoke him to wrath who shall dare to pleade for vs On the other side if God be on our side who shall be against vs or what creature shall hinder our peace This the Prophet Hosea declareth as a benefite belonging to the Church Hos 2 18. In which words the Lord promiseth that hee will so watch ouer his Church by his prouidence that they shall haue rest and securitie from all dangers of enemies and be deliuered from the rage of beasts and the violence of men But how will some say can this bee Obiection Seeing the vngodly that haue God their enemy yet haue the world and the men of the world smile laugh vpon them and the godly who haue God their friend yet haue the world for their enemy I answer Answ This seemeth to be so to those that iudge of things after the flesh according to the outward appearing but if we will iudge righteous iudgement and behold them with the eye of Fayth wee shall finde it to be otherwise whether wee respect the end or the inward feeling of the soule and Conscience Touching the end and issue of things if we waite with patience but a while and looke with a single heart vpon the euent we shall see that the vngodly who haue God set against them haue al things to work their destruction and to further their condemnation not onely their troubles but euen the most holy ordinances of God the exercise of prayer the hearing of the word the partaking of the Sacraments The things are in themselues and their owne nature the sauor of life to life 2 Cor. 2 16 but to them they become the sauour of death to death Contrarywise the godly who haue God reconciled to them in Iesus Christ haue all things to further to finish the saluation of their soules and to seale vp their eternall peace Rom. 8 28 inasmuch as all accidents that befal them tend to bring them to glory and immortality and work for the best vnto them that loue God euen vnto them that are called of his purpose not onely prayers and praises not onely the Word and Sacraments which are as the life of their souls and the breath of their nosthrils but all crosses calamities and afflictions are sanctifyed for their good and happinesse Secondly in respect of the inward feeling of the soule and conscience For the vngodly who feele the wrath of God for their sinnes as it were the flashings of hell fire doe finde rest and refuge in nothing but account all the creatures for their enemies and alwayes stand in feare of them as of Gods hoast and army set in battell array against them and as of his instruments to bring them to destruction The heauens are prepared at the commandement of God to be as brasse as in the dayes of famine to punish them 1 Kings 17 1. the clouds to poure down showres of raine vpon them as vpon the olde world Gen. 7 11 the waters ready to drowne them as the hoast of Sisera Iudg. 5 12 the fire to consume them as it did Sodom and the other Cities of the plaine Gen. 19 24 the aire to poyson and infect them as in the time of pestilence Ezek. 5 12 the earth open to swallow them as it did Dathan and his followers Numb 16 32 the Beares to deuoure them as they did the two and forty vngracious children that mocked the Prophet 2 King 2 42 the Lyons to destroy them as they did the Idolatrous Samaritanes 2 King 17 25 Fiery serpents to sting them as they did the murmuring Israelites in the wildernesse Num. 21.6 the basest and meanest creatures are armed with power and will to bidde battell against them Flies and Frogges to annoy them as they did the Egyptians Exod. 8 6.24 Lice to eate them as they did Herod a bloody persecutor of the Church Acts 12 23. Thus do the vngodly feare all the creatures of God cannot be secured from any one of them An example whereof we haue in Cain who wandered vp and downe in the earth and feared that euery creature that found him would kill him Gen. 4 14. And no maruell for the wicked flyeth when no man pursueth him Prou. 28 1. But the godly who feele Gods fauour and mercy toward them and haue him for their friend do find by blessed experience all Gods creatures as it were his souldiers to stand for them and therefore doe not stand in feare of them but can say with a feeling faith Rom 8 38. I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things to come nor heighth nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. For when the wayes of a man please God he will make euen their enemies at peace with them Prou. 16 7. All this appeareth in the example of Adam as in a glasse before he fell into sinne Gen. 3 8. he walked in the garden without feare he talked and communed with God without feare all things were subiect to him that was
hurt losse and damage may by them redound to the commonwealth in such sending of them The way to be rid of them is to execute iudgement against them and to cut them off by the sword of the Magistrate for theyr euill deeds Lastly from hence we should learne much more to be watchfull in the spirituall warrefare Eph. 6 10. 2 Tim. 2 4. We are all souldiers and we are to fight against principalities and powers and spiritual wickednesse in high places and therefore it behoueth vs to put on the whole armour of God and to bee strong in the Lord knowing that we shall stand in his might and be able to put to flight these enemies 7 And they warred against the Midianites as the Lord commanded Moses and they slew all the males 8 And they slew the kings of Midian besides the rest of them that were slaine namely Eui and Rekem and Zur and Hur and Reba He was the father of Cozbi whom Ph●nehas slew Numb 25 15. fiue kings of Midian Balaam also the sonne of Beor they slew with the sword 9 And the children of Israel tooke all the women of Midian captiues and their little ones and tooke the spoyle of all their cattell and all their flockes and all their goods 10 And they burnt all their Cities wherin they dwelt c. 11 And they tooke all the spoyle c. This is the second part of the Chapter wherein we see the manner obserued in managing this warre and in performing obedience to the Commandement of God and his seruant Moses Wherin we may see the slaughter that they made first set downe generally They slew all the males then particularly Fiue of their Kings and also Balaam Secondly the captiues that they tooke to wit al the women and their little ones Thirdly their booty they tooke the spoyle of their cattell flocks and goods Lastly they set their Cities on fire and consumed theyr goodly Castles to nothing Heere a question may be demanded concerning Balaam Obiect how he came to be among these Midianites forasmuch as we reade before that he went his way Numb 24 25. I answer Answer some vnderstand the words of his purpose resolution to returne home but that he stayed in the way among the Midianites through whose Country he must necessarily go and so was slayne among them And indeed it is certaine he was present in the battell but it is more likely and credible that he went home and afterward hearing of the destruction of so many thousands of the Israelites 1. Drusij comment in loca diffic Num. cap. 125. procured through his diuellish counsell that hee returned vnto Madian hoping to receyue the wages which had beene promised vnto him seeing the matter succeeded according to his theyr desire and thus indeed hee receyued a iust reward and recompence as the wages due vnto him for he was slaine by the sword And hence also it may not vnfitly bee concluded that he was no true Prophet of God but a Prophet of Satan for then doubtlesse the Israelites would neuer haue put him vnto the sword Eucher in Gen. pag. 102. Some there are that too highly magnifie him and esteeme better of him then is cause and thinke that he was the same who in the booke of Iob is called Elihu howbeit this is a blinde conceit Some of the Hebrew Doctors obserue that he could be no Prophet because it is said God opened his eyes and he saw the Angel of the Lord standing in the way c. because this is noted of others as of the seruant of Elisha 2 Kings 6 17 and of the Syrians verse 20 as also of Hagar Gen. chapter 21 verse 19 but it is neuer spoken in the same manner of any of the Prophets Other of them say he was damned with Doeg Gehazi and Achitophel but the things that are secret belong not vnto vs the truth he knoweth that knoweth all things it is not for vs to iudge before the time But to leaue this and to come to the doctrines We saw before the sinne of the Midianites chap. 25 and how God threatned them hitherto they escaped well enough and might say as Agag did that had beene spared with the fatter Oxen and the better sheepe 1 Sam. 15 32. Surely the bitternesse of death is past notwithstanding wee see God maketh good his word and suffereth no part of it to fall to the ground Doctrine Wicked men are suffered long yet in the end are punished We learne heereby that wicked men howsoeuer they may bee suffered long in theyr sinnes and God prosper them in theyr wayes and bring no temporal iudgment vpon them yet at last he meeteth with them and bringeth his plagues and punishments vpon them Psalm 73 verses 12 17 18 and 37 35 36. Iob 21 17 18. Ierem. 12 1 2 3. Hab. 2 3 5. Psal 50 21. The Scripture is full of these examples Reason 1 And it must needs be thus because God is a iealous God visiting iniquities and transgressions Exod. 34. he is angry with the wicked hateth them his soule abhorreth and detesteth them and therfore must needs bring iudgment vpon them Rom. 1 verse 18 and 2 5 8. Deut. 9 8 20. Mal. 1 2 3. Not that GOD hath any passion of anger but because hee is saide to do that which men do when they are angry that is he will take vengeance and punish them for theyr sinnes and offences Secondly because the Lord hath set a stint to the wicked he seemeth for a while to put the bridle in theyr neckes and to let them run at liberty but they haue theyr appointed time which they cannot passe hee hath set downe how farre they shall go and how long they shall liue and the measure of theyr sinne to what height they shall grow so that though they desire to proceede neuer so much they shall not be able they cannot go any farther he wayteth till they haue filled vp the measure of their sinnes Gen. 15 verse 16. Math. 23 ver 32 and then he will not spare to bring his iudgements vpon them Vse 1 The vses First this teacheth vs to acknowledge the iustice of God He oftentimes holdeth his peace and men thinke him to be like vnto themselue● howbeit hee will manifest to all the world that hee is a iust and righteous God and holy in all his wayes Hence it is that the Apostle saith He will reward euery one according to his works Rom. 2 6. Psalm 62 12. For as God neuer forgetteth to be mercifull neyther shutteth vp his kindnesse in displeasure Psalm 77 9 so hee cannot forget his iustice except he should forget himselfe No man forgetteth his owne name Iustice is Gods essentiall attribute This is his Name for euer and this is his memoriall to all generations True it is the faithfull themselues do many times conceiue amisse both of the mercy and of the iustice of God but they confesse that this is their
all that go foorth to the warre in Israel Whereby we see in this particular numbring who are excepted and exempted to wit first all that were strangers from the Children of Israel Moses did not meddle with them Secondly women for he was charged to take account onely of the males Thirdly such as were vnder twenty yeare old Fourthly olde men that were not fit for Shielde and Speare or to draw the sword Fiftly such as were maymed or impotent or sickly diseased are also essoined by this Law and haue as it were a pasport giuen vnto them beeing cashired and discharged from seruice and left out of the numbers that are enrolled and recorded Question 1 In this diuision two questions arise which are to bee answered First touching this numbring whether it were the same which is mentioned in the Booke of Exodus I answere Answere there is a threefold numbring of them described by Moses first that in Exodus chapt 30. The second is in this chapter the last is afterward in this book chapt 26. These summes were taken vpon seuerall occasions at seuerall times for seuerall ends and differ much in the number of such as were accounted as may appeare by the seuerall comparing of one of them with another Secondly it may be demanded for what Question 2 cause God commandeth a particular account summe to be taken of his people to whom they were well knowne I answere Answere not because God would vnderstand whether they wer sufficient for number or able for strength to buckle and encounter with their enemies forasmuch as nothing is vnknowne to him nothing is hard to him or vnpossible for him to bring to passe who is able to saue as well with a few as with many The causes are these First for order sake that there shold be no occasion of contention for primacy or precedency but that euery Tribe and family should know his place and time when to remoue and when to stand still when to fight with their enemies and in euery point what to doe Secondly that such things as were to be paide for the vse of the Tabernacle might the more easily bee collected and gathered when they were separated according to their Tribes and the Tribes according to the families the families according to the household man by man Thirdly to make manifest the truth of his promise and the power of his hand his truth in performing his promise made long ago to Abraham Gen. 15. that he would increase his posterity in power partly in multiplying the people so greatly in so short a time and partly in feeding and sustaining them in the wildernesse without haruest or husbandry without planting or tilling without sowing of Corne or without feeding breeding of Cattell Fiftly to testifie his exceeding great loue toward them and speciall care ouer them Such things as are deare vnto vs we delight oftentimes to looke vpon them and to take the number of them lest any of them should be lost A faithfull shepheard will many times tell the sheep committed vnto him lest any of them should be missing So in this Commandement to haue all his people numbred is set foorth an infallible token of his care and prouidence toward them Lastly they are seuerally and distinctly numbred euery Tribe by himselfe that in time to come it might bee certainely knowne and perceiued of what Tribe family Christ Iesus the promised Messiah should be borne for as much as according to the ancient promise vttered by the mouth of Iacob and other Prophets he should be borne of the Tribe of Iudah and of the house of Dauid to whome also he is often promised Now let vs come to the doctrines of this diuision Verse 2 3. Take the summe of all the Congregation of the Children of Israel c from twenty yeare old and aboue all that go foorth to the warre in Israel c. We see in these words who is the Author of this numbring of the people not Moses not Aaron not the heads of the house of their Fathers but God alone who hath sole authority both ouer Princes people From hence we might obserue that God is the directer commander and instructer of his people and therefore wee should depend vpon him and aske counsell at his mouth But wee will not stand vpon euery particular circumstance nor examine euery word heere let vs marke who they were that God would haue numbred not women but males not children not old men not impotent men but such as are able to handle the sword and to draw the bow and to fight against their enemies for their liues for their wiues for their children and for the maintainance of Gods worship Doctrine 1 This teacheth vs that a godly man may lawfully be a warriour A godly man may lawfully be a warriour If war were not in it selfe lawfull God would neuer take order in this place to haue a muster taken of such as are able to beare armes True it is euery good ordinance and profession may be abused and nothing is so well instituted but by mans corruption it may bee wrested and the right vse thereof ouerturned We see in this place in this Commandement of God that his Church and people may lawfully take vp weapons and make war against their enemies Abraham is saide to bee the Father of the faithfull and the faithfull to be carried into his bosome and to sit down with him in the Kingdome of Heauen Yet hee made warre Gen. 14 14 18 and ouer threw the enemies that had spoyled Sodome and carried away the riches of it as a prey and was not reprooued of Melchizedech the Priest of the liuing God but refreshed together with his army The like we might say of Moses Ioshua the Iudges and other godly Kings 1 Sam. 17 47 and 2 Sam. 25 28. who fought many battels by the commandement of the Lord. The Scripture teacheth that Dauid a man after Gods owne heart did fight the battels of God and the people of God standing in battell aray against the Philistims are called The hoast of the liuing God When the Souldiers heard the preaching of Iohn the fore-runner of Christ they came vnto him and asked of him what they must doe he did not disswade them from warre or perswade them to cast away their weapons but gaue them directions how to behaue themselues in that honourable profession Doe violence to no man neither accuse any falsely Luke 3 14. and be content with your wages Neither did Peter being sent for to come to Cornelius a captaine of the Italian Band a deuout man and one that feared God command him to follow a new trade of life Neither did Paul perswade Sergius Paulus the Deputy Acts 10 3 4. and 13 7 12 a prudent man to renounce that calling which no doubt they would haue done if the profession of Chiualry had not stood with the profession of Christianity The Apostle in the
Math. 13 23. when he commendeth the sauing hearers and compareth them to good ground he saith He that receiued the seede in the good ground is he that heareth the word and vnderstandeth it which also beareth fruite and bringeth forth some an hundred fold some sixty fold and some thirty fold The ground that yeildeth thirty fold is little in comparison of thar which yeeldeth the increase of an hundred fold not halfe so much yet it is accounted good ground All ground is good in Gods account that is not altogether vnfruitfull and euery one receiueth praise and commendation from him who hath a good heart albeit it be mingled with many wants and much imperfection This must not make those that are weak and simple to please themselues in their weaknesse and simplicity nor cause them to be puffed vp with enuy toward such as haue a greater measure and better portion of giftes then they haue but seeing God hath appointed his word to giue vnto the simple sharpnes of wit it must stirre them vp to do their best to striue with all their strength to bee led forward to perfection and to craue a continuall supply of Gods grace which in the middest of all their infirmities and imperfections shall be sufficient for them Then it shal come to passe that albeit they behold a double portion in others and a poore pittance in themselues yet they may truly say vnto the Lord Thou wilt require no more of thy seruant then thou hast giuen him To this end speaketh the Apostle writing to the Philippians Phil. 1 6. and 2 13 I am perswaded of this same thing that he which hath begun this good worke in ●ou will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Chr●st for it is God that worketh in you both the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure The fourth Rule touching our knowledge is that we must all labour to haue so much as that we may be able to giue an account of our faith when we shall be lawfully called thereunto It is not enough for vs to say wee beleeue as well as the best and then cannot declare how we beleeue neither is it enough for vs to haue the implicite faith of the church of Rome to beleeue as the Church beleeueth then cannot tell how or what the Church beleeueth This is the Colliars faith not the Christian faith this will not shielde vs from the darts and deuices of the diuell but layeth our hearts open to all his fiery tentations The ancient Christians that beleeued in the Sonne of God were able not onely to make confession of their owne faith but to defend and maintaine the true faith against their enemies and persecuters as all histories doe declare Hab. 2.4 Ro 1 17 Gal 3 ●1 Heb 10 38. The Prophet teacheth vs That the iust shall liue not by anothers but by his owne Faith We are al taught to say I beleeue not we beleeue and therefore it is requisite that we be indued with true faith and haue such a certaine and particular knowledge of the cheefe and fundamentall points of our religion that we be both able and ready to render a reason thereof which cannot be vnlesse wee haue lerned the principles of the doctrine of Christ Hence it is that the Apostle Peter exhorteth to this rule 1 Pet. 3 15. Sanctifie the Lorde in your hearts and be ready alwaies to giue an answer to euery man that ask●th you a reason of the hope that is in you with meeknesse reuerence The practise hereof we haue in Stephen and Peter and 4 19. and 7 2. and 22 1. and 26 2 3. and Paul and others in the Acts of the Apostles Acts 2 15. and 3. chapt who made confession and profession of their Faith with boldnesse and cheerefulnesse so often as the glory of God did require it Now albeit the Apostles teach that wee must bee enabled to confesse our Faith and to shew before all men how we haue profited hauing a good conscience that when they speake euill of vs as of euill dooers they may bee ashamed which slander our good conuersation in Christ yet he doth not require such exactnesse and perfection to be able to dissolue all doubts to answer all questions and to vnloose al knots which is not to be looked for at the hands of the teachers themselues but as we must know the fundamental points of true religion wherupon our Faith is builded so wee must bee strengthened and grounded in them that we may be able all of vs both yong and olde to shew in whom we haue beleeued what we are by creation what by reason of our transgression and what by Faith in Christ and by the fruites of regeneration No man must bee ignorant of these substantiall points that wee may vnderstand what title and interest wee haue to the inheritance of the heauenly Kingdome Vse 3 Lastly seeing obedience is so necessarie a duty without which we cannot please God let vs labour to performe our obedience vnto him aright to which end we are to be carefull to obserue these rules of ordering and directing our obedience that it may be approued in his sight First of all we must be assured that we do these things that are warranted in the word of God and that they be done according to his will He will not be serued of vs by good intentions or humane traditions or blinde superstitions but he will bee worshipped according to his owne pleasure This the Prophet Esay expresseth chap. 29. verses 13 14. This people come neere to mee with their mouth and honor me with their lips but haue remooued the●r heart far from me and their feare toward me was taught by the precept of men This our ●auiour teacheth to bee a vaine and ydle seruing of him Math. 15 8. If our obedience bee framed to the doctrine of man not of God it is foolish and without vnderstanding Such is the Religion for the most part of the Church of Rome where mens inuentions are set vp and many times magnified aboue the ordinances of God There are many great feares wrought in the consciences of the poore people from the impositions of men as heauy burdens laid vpon them to obserue and keepe as eate not Col 2 21. taste not handle not vpon perill of condemnation and there are many faire promises offered to men for their zeale in running on pilgrimage honouring of Reliques visiting of Idols inuocation of Saints saying of Masses offering for the dead Dirges and such like dregs which are not in the word nor according to the word but beside the word nay against the word Col. 2 23. which things indeede haue a shew of wisedom in voluntarie religion humblenesse of minde and in not sparing the bodye which are things of no value sith they perta●ne to the filling of the flesh All these therefore are false feares false deuotions false dangers false promises false prayers
Ministers and to make them labour more conscionably then they haue done so it should stirre vp the people to seeke after knowledge which is as the light of the eye or as a candle in the house whereby we may see what we do and how we serue God whether truely or falsely and whether we goe right or wrong It is enough with the greatest sort to do as most doe and to practise that manner of the worshippe of God which is countenanced and continued by authority albeit they can giue no reason of it neither know how to warrant it It belongeth vnto vs not only to professe the truth but to bee able to maintaine the truth which we professe against all gainsayers and such enemies as seeke to rob vs of it It is a duty required of vs not to content our selues to doe as the rest of our neighbours do but to be ready alwaies to giue an answer to euery man that asketh vs a reason of the hope that is in vs with meeknesse of spirit 1 Pet. 3 15. ●et 3 15. Euery man presumeth he hath the truth and therefore they neuer enquire farther into the matter nor labor to satisfie their own harts vpon what grounds they stand They doe as their honest neighbours they think it no good manners to differ from them they account it folly to seeke to be wiser then their fore-fathers so they iumpe with the Church of Rome that teacheth her Disciples to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they can yeeld no reason how the Church beleeueth Whereby it appeareth that albeit all men are worshippers of God yet the greatest sort know not how they worship God so that we may say vnto them as Christ spake to the woman of Samaria Ye worship ye know not what Iohn 4 22. ●●●n 4 22. Let all such know that they want true comfort in their worshipping forasmuch as they know not whether they please God or not They are like men that shoote at a marke which know not whether they shoot short or shoot beyond the marke or whether they shoot wide or how much they are wide or whether they hit the marke Thus it fareth with ignorant worshippers they are wholly ignorant whether they go astray in the matter or in the manner of his worshippe whether they doe that which God requireth or that which hee condemneth For this is no otherwise nor no where learned but by the word so that all such as are ignorant thereof are in a wretched case and wofull condition and not farre from destruction whatsoeuer they doe esteeme of themselues or others iudge of them 5. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 6. Bring the Tribe of Leui neere and present them before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him 7. And they shall keepe his charge and the charge of the whole Congregation before the Tabernacle of the Congregation to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 8. And they shall keepe all the instruments of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and the charge of the children of Israel to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 9. And thou shalt giue the Leuites vnto Aaron and to his sonnes they are wholly giuen vnto him out of the children of Israel 10. And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sonnes and they shall waite on their Priests Office and the stranger that commeth nigh shall be put to death 11. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites from among the children of Israel in stead of all the first borne that openeth the matrice among the children of Israel therefore the Leuites shall bee mine 13. Because all the first borne are mine Exod. 13 1. Leuit. 27 26. Luc. 2 23. for on the day that I smote all the first borne in the Land of Egypt I hallowed vnto me all the first borne in Israel both man and beast mine they shall bee I am the Lord. Hitherto of the first part of the Preface consisting in a description of Aarons sonnes and in a relation what became of them part of them dying in their sinnes and part succeeding in the Priests Office Now followeth the second part in these words which is a presentation of the Leuites before him Touching this whole Tribe we must obserue that it was diuided and sorted into two rankes whereof the first is the Priests and the second the rest commonly called by the common name of Leuites who were not admitted into the former order as appeareth more euidently in the 16 chapter following as also in the 18 chapter Touching the Priests they are of two sorts Of the high Priest the one was as the head the other as his hands one was the chiefe aboue all the rest the other were inferiour as assistants vnto him The chiefe was the high Priest Sigon de rep Heb●ae li. 5 c. 2. of whom the Scripture setteth downe foure things First his consecration he was brought before the Altar he was washed with water he was cloathed with those holy garments that God had appointed he had the sacred oyle powred vpon his head lastly sacrifice was offered on the Altar for his sanctification and his garments were sprinkled with the blood of it Secondly the things that were required in him being consecrated in the former manner which are cheefely these hee might not be defectiue or deformed in body his wife must be a virgin of his owne people he might not vncouer his head rent his garments nor go in to mourn for any that was dead though it were his father or mother Thirdly the Scripture setteth downe his imployment which was to goe daily into the Sanctuary to light the Lampes to burne Incense and euery weeke to prouide the shew-bread on the feast daies to offer the peoples sacrifices with the other Priests and once in the yeare on the day of expiation to enter into the Holiest of all to make prayer for himselfe and the people Fourthly his attire or holy vestiments in which he was to perform this seruice of God which were these six in number a brest-plate an Ephod a Robe a broidred coat a miter a girdle Of the inferiour Priests Touching the Priests of inferiour condition they had the same kinde of consecration which the high Priest had in sacrificing they were like vnto him and in the seruice of the Sanctuary in burning incense in prouiding the bread of proposition and in preparing looking to the lampes and lights This was the difference in these betweene him them that he was the chiefe and they were helpers he was the directer they were directed and guided by him Besides this was peculiar to the high Priest that hee consulted with God by Vrim and Thummim Exod. 28 30. Leuit. 16 30. and entred into the holiest place to make attonement to cleanse and hallow it from the sinnes of the people Their vestiments were the same sauing that the high Priest onely
God Thirdly Touching the vow of single life touching continency and single life which they call chastity they all praise it but not many practise it They think this vow to be very rightly and religiously obserued and that they haue fulfilled it to the ful if they leade their life out of marriage and renounce chaste wedlocke for when they speake of the vow of continency they vnderstand nothing else but single life They suppose it and both openly and odiously defend it The Iesuites teach it to be a lesse sinne to liue in fornication then to marry a wife to be a more heinous sinne for any of the Cleargy to marry a wife then to haue the company of an harlot and to embrace the bosome of a stranger Costerus the Iesuite maintaineth to whom others assent that a Priest that is married sinneth more grieuously then he that keepeth a concubine or committeth fornication The time was when it was made a capitall crime worthy of no lesse punishment then death for a Cleargy man to marry but when the same Law was vrged to be established against such also as entred into stewes and brothel-houses and kept harlots it could not passe but was nipped in the head as the greene hearbes with a frost Thus while they forsweare and forbeare to haue wiues of their owne Vide Epistol Iesuit Dan. Chamieri to auoide fornication they do not abstaine from whoredome and vncleanenesse Thus they preferre abominable whoredome before honourable wedlocke strange flesh before the bed vndefiled and the lawes of men before the commandement of God For no man can vow continency but he to whom it is giuen from aboue to be able to containe and continue a single life as our Sauiour hath taught Matth. 19.11 12. He that can take it let him take it And he sheweth that all men cannot receiue this saying saue they to whom it is giuen So the Apostle to the same purpose saith I wish all men were as my selfe But euery man hath his proper gift of God one after this manner and another after that 1 Cor. 7.7 We haue not in our owne power the things that are Gods the gift of God is one thing the power of man is another againe to be willing is one thing and to be able is another The gifts of others are not in our power but the gift of continency is the gift of another to wit of God Therefore it is not in our power Againe the Scripture commandeth them to marry that cannot abstaine without burning as 1 Cor. 7.2 9. They that cannot containe let them marry Also he saith To auoide fornication let euery man haue his owne wife It is better to marry then to burne And he writeth to Timothy 1 Tim. 5.14 I will that the yonger women marry c. giuing none occasion to the aduersary to speake reprochfully Nothing must be vowed against the commandement of the holy Ghost but they which cannot containe and yet vow continency sinne against the commandement of the holy Ghost Therefore such persons ought not to vow continency Lastly this sort of votaries is a new doctrine or rather dotage For neither vnder the Law of nature nor vnder the Law of Moses did euer any vtter or minister such a vow of virginitie albeit we reade many lawes concerning vowing Leuit. 27. Numb 6. and 30. Deut. 12. and 23. Yet nothing concerning any such matter In the Law of nature it was said Encrease and multiply Ge. 1.28 In the garden of Eden euen in the time of mans innocency God the authour of marriage said that cannot ly It is not good for man to be alone Ge. 2 18. Christ himself thogh he liued most purely and perfectly yet made no vow of continency The like might be said of the Apostles To conclude it is the property of heretikes and the very doctrine of diuells to forbid marriage 1 Tim 4.1 3. and for religions sake to dissolue it Thus did Marcion and the Manichees and therefore are condemned Vse 4 Fourthly we learne from hence a notable comfort hauing assurance that our calling is of God Let euery one looke to the Lawfulnesse of his calling and to the warrant of his worke and be able to approue it to his owne conscience The word of God is able to giue vs peace and comfort We are sure if we doe our duties to meete with many enemies and oppositions How often did the people murmure against Moses was not Eliah esteemed the troubler of Israel was not Ieremy borne as a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth was it any better with Christ himselfe and his Apostles The LORD of life was hated and persecuted and crucified being deliuered into the hands of sinners The Apostles were made a spectacle vnto the 2 Cor. 4.9 world and to Angels and to men being sent forth as men appointed to death It fareth not much better with the Ministers of the Gospel who succeede them in the gouernement of the Church they are slandered and reuiled they are mocked and misused and accounted as the off-scouring of all things We shall neuer goe through with the worke of the Lord that is in our hands except we rest in God who hath called vs to the Ministery Thus did Dauid comfort himselfe in the Lord when they would haue stoned him 1 Sam. 30.4 The like we see in the Apostles when they were threatned and commanded to speake no more in the Name of Christ they answered that they could not but speake the things which they had seene and heard Actes 4.19.20 and professed that they ought to obey God rather then man Actes 5.29 The consideration of their calling warranted vnto them from God put comfort into them and gaue them all boldnesse to set themselues against their enemies and made them pray earnestly to Christ Iesus the Lord of the haruest and the great Shepheard of the sheep to stand by them and to bee present with them in the busines he had committed vnto their charge Wherefore whensoeuer we see the trueth of God oppugned and our Ministery any way resisted let vs comfort our selues from hence that we are not vsurpers or intruders into this office but hauing our calling sealed vp vnto vs let vs boldly proceede and goe forward to make known the trueth of God to the consciences of all men That which the Lord saith of the first borne in this place that they are his may bee saide of all the Ministers of the Gospel that succeede them and therefore he will succour and sustaine them If then we finde this in our owne soules that we entred into this calling not as theeues that come in at the window to steale and to kill and to destroy Ioh. 10.10 not as souldiers that seeke their prey and booty to enrich themselues not as idle drones that seeke to liue at ease and in pleasure but to worke in the Lords vineyard and to labour in his haruest we
the conscience They haue not their names in vaine they are not idle sounds of vaine words but they offer the signification of some duty to be performed and leade to the consideration of some thing to be practised as Shepheards call to their remembrance to be busied in feeding watchmen to proue to them that they ought to haue a vigilant care of the City of God and to be on their watch tower Messengers that they must not doe their owne businesse but his that sent thē So they are called Elders 1 Tim. 5 verse 17 19. 1 Pet. 5 verse 1. Acts 14 verse 23. and 15 2. and 16 4. and 20 17. to imprint and engraue in their hearts the cogitation and consideration of the care wisedome sobriety and stayednesse that ought to bee in men of that calling all which gifts are for the most part proper to that age for dayes shall speake and the multitude of yeares teach wisedome Iob 32 verse 7. And therefore they are resembled vnto them not because they are so alwaies in age but because they should bee like vnto them and haue the properties and qualities of them Reason 2 Secondly the Ministery is an high calling of great weight and worthinesse of great excellency and importance standing vp not only in the place of the people to offer vp their praiers but in the roome of God to declare his will to the people If then the worke bee so worthy if the office be so weighty if the calling be so honourable then it followeth by a good and necessary consequence that such ought to bee well fitted and filled with wisedome grauity and sobriety that vndertake it This is the reason vrged by the Apostle 1 Tim. 3 1 2. He that desireth the office of a Bishop desireth a worthy worke a Bishop therefore must be vnblameable vnreproueable Who is it that mindeth to build an house but hee will looke out a fit workman for his purpose Or who will commit the gouernment of his family to an vnwise Steward that knoweth not how to mannage the affaires thereof to giue euery one his portion in due season Thē much lesse ought the Church of Christ to be committed to vnwise vnlearned vndiscreete men that are ignorant both how to rule it which way to reforme it Thirdly such as are called to this office Reason 3 must be carefull to looke vnto their waies that their calling be not blemished and their Ministery reprehended so that they ought to beare themselues worthily and wisely Euery one in the profession must labour to adorne the Gospel and walke vnblameably in the middest of a naughty and crooked generation Philip. 2 15. It is required of wiues to be chaste and keepers at home that the word of God be not blasphemed Titus 2 5. and of seruants to count their masters worthy of al honour that the Name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken off 1 Tim. 6 ver 1. Much more then ought the Ministers to magnifie their office to beautifie their calling to watch in all things and to make full proofe of their Ministery 2 Tim. 4 verse 5. They ought to shine as bright and burning candles and as Christ saith they must bee lights of the world Math. 5. being set as a City vpon an high hill which cannot be hidden Hence it is that the Apostle saith Giue no offence in any thing 2 Cor. 6 3 4. that the Ministery be not blamed but let vs in all things approue our selues as the Ministers of God in much patience in necessities in distresses c. If onely our persons should be blamed and receiue a checke the matter were the lesse but the Ministery it selfe shall be reproched and the ordinance of God reuiled and therefore we ought to looke more carefully circumspectly to our waies that haue the eyes eares tongues of all men turned toward vs. Their eies are fixed vpon vs to behold our actions their eares are prepared to heare whatsoeuer they can of vs their mouthes are opened and their tongues vnloosed to speake euery where of vs so that we are set as vpon a stage can by no means couer our persons or our practises from the sight and knowledge of all men Lastly the Ministers is to vtter the word Reason 4 of wisedome whereby both himselfe and his hearers shall bee made wise vnto saluation The Apostle putteth Timothy in mind that he had beene brought vp in the Scriptures of a childe which are able to make him wise vnto saluation 2 Tim. 3 verse 15. and Psal 119. the Prophet thereby was made wiser then his teachers then his enemies then the auncient Hereupon the Apostle Paul saith 1 Corinth 12 verse 8. To one is giuen by the Spirit the word of wisedome to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit And in the first chapter of the same Epistle verse 23 24. Wee preach Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling blocke and to the Grecians foolishnesse but vnto them which are called Christ the power of God and the wisedome of God Seeing then wee are to vtter the words of wisedome so called both because they are the words of the most wise GOD and because they are able to teach vs the truest wisedome we are to speak them as it becommeth them to be spoken to the end that in nothing we may be blamed or ashamed To conclude these reasons and to binde them all in a bundle together forasmuch as the Ministers of the Church are Elders both in name and nature and wee are to vtter the words of wisedome forasmuch as the Ministery that we haue obtained is a weighty and worthy calling and that it ought no way to be blotted and blemished of vs by any vndiscreete and vndecent carriage it followeth that such as are set apart to this work must be men of wisedome moderatiō of experience and excellent gouernment of themselues of their words of their gestures and of their waies whether they be publike or priuate whether they be open or secret whether they be at home or abroad Vse 1 We will now proceed to set downe the vses of this doctrine that we may be benefited and instructed by it First it serueth to reproue diuers sorts of persons that goe against this rule who albeit they be ready to receiue this truth and to approue of it in iudgement yet they transgresse it and crosse it notoriously in their practise The first reproofe Childrē made Ministers in the Church of Rome And here we are to meete with the shamefull abuse and detestable corruption that is too common in the Church of Rome where children and boies haue beene admitted and ordained to Ecclesiasticall dignities before they had any vnderstanding what the office requireth or how it can be discharged Thus hath the Byshop of Rome that challengeth to be the high Priest of the world the Vicar of Christ and the successour of Peter prophaned this calling and promoted
the high Maiesty of God Is not euery other word almost an oath can they speake without it Is it not become in the opinion and practise of the most sort a grace and ornament to their speech and a gentlemanlike exercise Are they not accounted fools and Puritanes that vse it not themselues or seeke to reprooue it represse it in others Some wil say It is a foolish custome that I haue gotten and I cannot leaue it but I meane no harme or hurt by it to any man Thus doe men goe about to excuse sinne which they haue no purporse to forsake but rather a desire to continue in it Doe you call it a foolish custome nay it is a vile wicked custome Giue it his true name and disguise it not name the child aright call it with Christ a diuellish custome it commeth of that euill one Matt 5 3● This is so common a sin among men and women among old and yong hath taken such deep roots that the axe of Gods word and of his iudgements cannot cut it downe The fathers infect their children and one learneth of another vntill the greatest part are become licentious and abominable Let vs come to the sanctification of the Sabboth the more many heare of it the oftner the commandement is vrged vnto them and pressed vpon them the more dissolute and disordered they grow in the prophanation of it They cannot be ignorant that they ought not to follow their pleasures on that day but to call the Sabboth a delight 〈◊〉 8.13 and honour him on it not doing their owne wayes nor finding their owne pleasure nor speaking their owne words but when this holy day of the Lord cometh they forget all their pleasures so round them in the eare that they runne madding euery one after his owne vanities and the least occasion draweth them from the exercises of religion as if they meant to bid defiance to God and to prouoke him to battell which they doe against their owne soules For are we stronger then he or able to make our party good against him No no we deceiue our selues we are no fit matches to deale with him who is able to arme the smallest weakest creatures to our confusion Vse 5 Fiftly we haue al need of patience without which we shall neuer be able to goe through with our obedience It is no easie thing to yeeld obedience We haue many enemies and oppositions that stand in our way to hinder vs. We haue many corruptions within vs we haue the world a thousand allurements without vs all of them set in battell aray to encounter with vs. We are like ground that yeeldeth nothing of it selfe but thornes and thistles without much labor and paines without often ploughing and tilling and turning vp Hence it is that the Apostle intreateth the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 13.22 and beseecheth them to suffer the words of exhortation We doe not easily brooke and digest the word but with great difficulty It is hard meat lying heauy vpon the stomack and will not soone concoct To mortifie sinne is to deny our selues and as it were to cut off the right hand and to pluck out the right eye Mat. 5. It is not done without great greefe and anguish It is almost death to the Swearer to obey this exhortation My brethren sweare not at all Iam. 5. It is as painefull to him as if you cut off a peece of his tongue or sewed vp his lips or dashed out his teeth It is in effect to strike off a limbe to tell the drunkard he must liue sober and not run into excesse and that drunkards shall not inherite the kingdome of God he iudgeth it so hard a doctrine as if he were in danger to die for thirst Seeing therefore obedience to the word is painefull wee haue need of patience to stay vs vp that wee shrinke not away and goe cleane backeward Besides we do not by by enioy the promises that God maketh vnto vs they are for an appointed time he will try vs in waiting for thē So he dealt with Abraham he had promise of a sonne but it was not immediately accomplished he was faine to expect long time for it So the Psalmist speaking of Ioseph confirmeth notably this point He had sundry dreames which were predictions and presages of his future aduancement yet after this he was solde for a seruant his feet were hurt with fetters Psal 105.19 and he was laid in yron vntil the time that his word came the word of the Lord tryed him Wee must bee faithfull vnto the death and then we shall receiue the crowne of life God tryeth vs all at one time or other and one way or other wee see not his promises by and by performed vnto vs let vs wait for them with patience and put on the hope of saluation as a shield for surely they wil come and he that hath spoken the word cannot lie Lastly we must here endure sundry afflictions and shall meete with many scornes and scoffes of wicked men seeking to turne vs from our due obedience to God and his word and therefore we haue need of patience to hold vs constantly in the faith without wauering Heb. 10.36 Christ Iesus forewarning his disciples what troubles hanged ouer their heads that they shal be persecuted and deliuered vp to the Synagogues and into prisons and be brought before kings rulers for his Names sake giueth them this exhortation Luke 21.19 In your patience possesse ye your soules As Ismael persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit euen so it is now and euer will be Gal. 4.29 Many haue turned backe from the trueth through these tentations They cannot abide to be reuiled though it be for righteousnesse sake Let vs not thinke the Christian mans life to bee an easie and lazy life nor the way to it pleasant nor the gate that leadeth and openeth to it broad and wide it is a continuall warfare 2. Tim. 2 3. suffer affliction as a good souldier of Iesus Christ Heerupon we are charged to striue to enter in at the streight gate Mat. 7. There is no saluation without striuing we must suffer many a blow and endure many a wound We must be content to beare many showers and sharpe stormes The husbandman suffereth much labour before he reapeth We must not dreame of the victory before the battell Our Sauiour speaking of the good and sauing hearer of the word such as all of vs ought to be describeth him by these notes Luke 8.5 that with an honest and good heart he heareth the word keepeth it and bringeth forth fruit with patience This is so excellent a vertue that God vouchsafeth to be called the God of patience Rom. 15. When once wee beginne to yeeld obedience to the word and to frame our liues according thereunto and to bring forth the fruits worthy amendment of life when we are freed from the tyranny of Satan and made citizens of
to all Churches therefore hee reprooued them because they neglected an ordinary duty Secondly he commandeth them that themselues should take him away saying Put him out from among you but it had beene vnreasonable to require a myracle at their handes which he knew they were not able to worke Thirdly if he had intended such a miraculous action as they performed against hypocrites and enemies of the truth what neede had there beene of a solemne assembly and consent of the Church But in putting of him out the Congregation had an interest ver 4. When ye are gathered together c my spirit with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ ●r 5 4. Fourthly this appeareth also by the ende for which he was to be deliuered to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus ●r 5 5. that is that he may repent of his wickednesse in this life and so be saued in the life to come This also is noted to be the end wherefore he deliuered Hymeneus and Alexander to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme that is that they might renounce their heresies and imbrace the true faith and so repent of their former impiety and iniquity Therefore hee would not haue him smitten with sudden death and taken out of this life and so the time and gift of repentance to be cut off from him Fiftly what it is to deliuer to Satan and to take away the Apostle expresseth in other places keepe not company with them with such eate not purge out the old leauen that they may blush and be ashamed so amend their euill waies Sixtly if this had beene meant of such extraordinary punishments the Apostle might haue done this by his Apostolicall authority and needed not to haue troubled the whole Church with it Seuenthly that which the Apostle heere commanded the Church no doubt practised but they did not take him away out of this world by any myracle neyther deliuered him to bee possessed and punished bodily by the diuell but rather proceeded against him with the censures of the Church as appeareth in the second Epistle where he willeth them to comfort him being afflicted ●or 2 6 7. to receiue him being penitent and to cure him beeing wounded Lastly if he had willed them to kill him he had willed them to rush into the Magistrates seate which he would neuer doe for this is proper to the Magistrate alone that beareth the sword Seeing therefore we haue the commandement of Christ and the practise of the Apostle to warrant the sentence of excommunication there shall alwayes bee place for it in the Church euen where the Christian Magistrate is setled established Paul would haue them assemble together in the Name of Christ ●or 5 12. that is by his will commandement and afterward hee sheweth that the Churches office is to iudge them that are within albeit the Magistrate haue a sword put into his hand by the ordinance of GOD. What then There is a twofold sword materiall and spirituall he taketh vp the materiall sword and striketh with it The Church handleth the spirituall sword which is the word of God so that the Magistrate taketh away the wicked one way the Church another way The Magistrate killeth and taketh away life if the cause require the Church medleth not with corporall punishment and shedding of blood The Magistrate proceedeth directly according to the Lawes against offenders albeit they repent because he respecteth the execution of iustice and the reuenge of the dishonour done to God The Church proceedeth not in that order but obserueth the degrees appointed by Christ Math. 18 15. If thy brother shall trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene him and thee alone c and if the offenders repent they are ready to forgiue thē For this is the marke whereat excommunication aymeth and the end whereto it tendeth that the sinners being ashamed may be brought to repētance that such as liue in the church might not be corrupted forasmuch as a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe Lastly it may be said that we should rather Obiection 3 labour how and which way to bring more into the Church then to exclude any out of the Church Men are ready to goe fa●● enough out of it but they returne slowe enough to it We are to endeuour to call men to the Sacraments which are encouragements to godlinesse rather then to keepe them frō them for their wickednesse It is a signe we lacke charity toward them when wee hide from them that which should do them good I answer Answer it is our duty to do both of them to wit both to encourage them to godlines and yet to keepe them from them so long as they lye in open wickednes not repented of not the first without the latter nor the latter without the first lest wee bee compelled to giue that which is holy to dogges Did the Lord himselfe want charity toward Adam whē he sent him forth from the Garden of Eden Gen. 3 22. lest he put foorth his hand and take also of the Tree of life and eate liue for euer The Sacraments of God cannot profite or helpe wicked men The Supper of the Lord is onely auaileable and comfortable vnto them which come worthily to wit with true repentance with sound faith and with vnfained charity touching others it turneth to greater iudgement and condemnation This doth the Apostle teach 1 Corin. 11 27. Whosoeuer shall eate this bread and drinke this cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Is it not a worke of charity to stay his course that is running into dāger and like to hurt himselfe to hinder our brother from such an action as that he eateth iudgement to himselfe and maketh himselfe guilty of horrible sinne This were a strange kinde of charity to suffer a man to thrust himselfe through with his sword or to cast himselfe downe headlong from a steepe Rocke when we may hinder him from so doing The Apostle Iude giueth vs other direction in his Epistle that we should haue compassion of some making a difference and others saue with feare Iude 22 23. pulling them out of the fire Wherefore there is no wrong done to impenitent persons if they be excommunicated and consequently barred from the Supper but rather a great benefit is bestowed vpon them and their saluation furthered by this means Neither let any say Obiect that the Church vsurpeth vpon the Magistrate and taketh from him his office For if this were a good reason Answer it was neuer lawfull neither euer shall bee for the Church to excommunicate any offenders because it belongeth to the Magistrate as his duty to punish offences whether he be a Christian or no Christian How then is it that wee take away this authority from the Church in the time of a
Ver. 38. Ver. 39. and to let them alone If this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to nought but if it be of God ye cannot destroy it lest ye be found euen fighters against God They agreed vnto him and left off their consultation of killing them and putting them to death and albeit they could not conuince them of errour neyther were able to lay false doctrine to their charges Ver. 40. 4● yet they suffered rebuke and were beaten for the Name of Christ Thus doe the enemies of God deale in all ages with the godly they hate them for no other cause but because they follow goodnesse Psal 38. and will not follow them into all excesse of riot 1 Pet. 4. They can lay nothing to their charge and yet they thinke them worthy of punishment They can accuse them of no crime and yet they ceasse not to accuse them They are not ashamed to cry out vpon them and to speake all manner of euill against them and yet when they haue deuised what mischiefe they can against thē broched what slanders they can and vttered all their malice the greatest fault that they can finde in them is this that they serue God in the sincerity of their hearts and labour to please him with vprightnesse of life When the enemies of Daniel sought occasion against him to bring him out of fauour with the King and into danger of his life they could finde no matter against him in the affaires of the kingdome albeit they desired nothing more so that when after all searching and watching of him they were at their wits end in the end they concluded thus Wee shall not finde any occasion against this Daniel except wee finde it against him concerning the Law of his God Dan. 6 verse 5. This was the hainous crime that they laide to his charge as if he had committed fellony or treason that hee praied to God and made his petition vnto him verse 13. Thus fareth it with all those that are the worshippers of the true God and make conscience of their waies the wicked wretches of this world reuile them and make hue and cry against them as if they were some great malefactors and had committed somewhat worthy of death and yet when all cometh to the vpshot what hath the righteous done or what matter is it that they haue against them Surely no more then the Presidents and Princes had against Daniel the cause they haue against them is concerning the Law of their God they cannot abide them because they are too precise in keeping the Sabbath they will not sweare and blaspheme the Name of God they will not drinke and bee drunke with them they will not runne riot and play the good fellowes with them they are neuer well but when they are reading or praying or reasoning and conferring of the waies of God they are alwaies reproouing vs and finding fault with vs for one thing or other I thinke wee shall do nothing for them shortly To be short they deale with the faithfull as Ahab spake concerning Michaiah 1 Kin. 22 verse 8. There is one man by whom wee may enquire of the Lord but I hate him for hee doth not prophesie good concerning me but euill But did he not speake the truth the King did not nor could not charge him with vttering lies He prophesied euill vnto thee O Ahab because thou wast euill if thou hadst beene good he would haue spoken good vnto thee And this is the cause why the vngodly hate the godly If then wee bee thus dealt withall at any time let it not discourage vs but therein let vs reioyce because wee are made like vnto the Prophets that were before vs wee are made like vnto the Apostles nay wee are made conformable vnto our Sauiour Christ himselfe We must not looke it should goe better with vs then it did with them forasmuch as the world wil alwaies be like it selfe and vnlike to them Secondly no man is to be condemned vpon Vse 2 suspicion onely or vpon presumption or bare surmise or another mans accusation for if it were enough to be accused innocency it selfe cannot escape and the most innocent shall be soonest made away True it is the godly must giue no iust cause to bee euill spoken off but abstaine from all appearance of euill and cut off occasions from thē that seeke occasions howbeit whether occasion be giuen or not euery man may suspect what they list and how farre they list and of whom they list and who can say against them So that it is not enough to condemne a man or to account him guilty to be suspected Some haue such iealous heads and vnsetled braines that they will make occasions of suspicion ●d in Trinū which are no occasions Suspicion is in another mans heart or head therefore we cannot alwaies auoide suspicion except we had the gouernment of their hearts and heads the which thēselues euermore haue not We must be carefull to auoid the fault though we cannot the fame we must take heed of the sinne though we can preuent the suspicion The fault and offence is in our selues 〈◊〉 Ethic. l. 1. suspicion is in another Euen as honour is in him that honoureth not in him that is honoured and as contempt is in him that contemneth not in him that is contemned forasmuch as it lyeth not in our power to be honoured or to be despised so it is with suspicion 〈◊〉 comment Tim. 4. it hath place in the minde of another and it lyeth not in our choice whether we will be suspected or not no more thē it doth in him that is despised who would willingly be honoured The brethren of Ioseph were suspected to be spies and to come to see the weaknesse of the Land Gen. 42 9. True it is he dissembled with them concealed himselfe from them but if indeed he had so conceiued or rather misconceiued and misiudged of thē who could hinder or helpe it or how could they preuent or redresse it as it fell out with the messengers of Dauid that he sent to Hanun the sonne of Nahash King of Ammon for his Princes said vnto him 〈◊〉 10 3. Thinkest thou that Dauid doth honour thy father that hee hath sent comforters vnto thee Hath he not rather sent his seruants vnto thee to search the City and to spie it out and to ouerthrow it This they suspected returned euill for good These messengers behaued themselues vprightly in their Embassage they gaue no more occasion of these surmises to Hanun then Iosephs brethren did vnto him yet who could stoppe them in so doing Who was more innocent then Ioseph that hearkened not to the tentations and allurements of his mistresse nor desired or delighted to be in her company 〈◊〉 9 19 20. yet his ouer-credulous master hearing the words and accusation of his wife not onely held him in suspicion but tooke him as guilty and put
him into prison and Ioseph could by no meanes satisfie his master nor blot out the wrong opinion he had conceiued of him The like we might shew touching Saul toward Ionathan his sonne and Dauid his seruant that were notwithstanding loyall faithfull vnto him He conceiued in minde that all had conspired against him 1 Sam. 22 8 29 4. yet there was none would shew him that his sonne had made a league with the sonne of lesse there was none sorry for him or sheweth vnto him that his sonne had stirred vp his seruant against him to lie in waite to take away his life from him These two innocent men had made indeed a league together but not against the King their father a league of amity not of conspiracy neither had they giuen the least cause of suspicion to be so hardly cēsured and sinisterly iudged off yet who could remoue out of his minde that iealousie or perswade him that they intended no hurt or mischiefe against him In like manner dealt the proud men with Ieremy Ierem. 43 3. they charged him to haue spoken falsely and that the Lord had not sent him to charge them not to goe downe into Egypt they suspected that Baruch had set him on against them to deliuer them into the hand of the Caldeans that they might put them to death and carry them captiues into Babylon This was the deuise of their owne braines the imagination of their owne harts yet what could Ieremy doe against it or which way could he stay them from suspecting thus Whē as Paul hauing appealed to Caesar had escaped shipwracke and was come safe to Melita the Barbarians seeing a viper fastned on his hand Acts 28 4. said among themselues This man surely is a murtherer whom though he haue escaped the sea yet vengeance suffereth not to liue Thus we see that albeit we do not commit any crime worthy to be accused or censured yet we cannot hinder those that are credulous from misdeeming and mistrusting of vs. It lyeth in vs wholly to giue no iust cause of suspicion but lyeth not in vs wholly to preuent suspicion For euil persons may suspect what they please without ground and foundation without reason and occasion The Magistrates censured Paul to be a troubler of the Citty Acts 16 20. the Iewes traduced him to be a polluter of the Temple Acts 21 28. and a Preacher against the Law Tertullus accused him to be a pestilent fellow and a mouer of sedition among all the Iewes throughout the world and a ring-leader of the sect of the Nazarens Acts chap. 24 verse 5. Thus he is suspected and how could he auoide it Wherefore good men depend not vpon the opinion of other men but stand vppon their owne innocency they do not rise or goe downe stand or fall as it shall please other men to conceiue of them for that were to walke vpon other mens feete or to leane vpon the staffe that resteth in another mans hand that may deceiue thē but they builde their house vpon the foundation of their owne vertues and haue or at least ought to haue matter enough within them to commend themselues It must not seeme strange to the godly when they feele the bitter fruits of these suspicions It hath euermore fared thus with them This then ought not to make vs wauer or to weaken vs in our profession but rather encourage vs to walke through good report and euill report and to furnish vs to passe through fire and water life and death knowing that God is able and will in the end bring our cause into the light and make the innocency of our persons and the iustice of our cause manifest to the glory of his Name to the comfort of our hearts to the confusion of his and our enemies as we shall shew afterward Thus he dealt with Ioseph after he had tried his patience by suffering for well doing Psal 105 18. Gen. 3● 21. for though he were laid in irons and his feete hurt with fetters yet the Lord was with him and shewed him mercy gaue him fauour in the sight of the keeper of the prison to whom no doubt he shewed his vprightnesse and cleered himselfe of that wickednes which was laide to his charge So also he dealt with Dauid with Ieremy and the rest of the righteous This doth Dauid intreat oftentimes when he was laden with the reproches of his enemies when he was bitten with the teeth and smitten with the tongues of the malignant Psal 7 3 4 5 6 Thus we see if suspition were cause sufficient to condemne and censure any no man could stand in iudgement but equity should be turned into iniquity truth into falsehood innocency it selfe should receiue a checke and counterbuffe Let not then the wicked triumph as if they had gotten the victory and giuen the godly a foile when they can alledge against them how many waies of how many persons they are suspected for that as much may bee suspected of them when as nothing at all can be proued by thē It is not the suspicion or the accusation or the condemnation or the execution that maketh a man guilty of euill or to deserue death but the offence that is committed worthy of punishment If then they be free from crime they are happy when they are iudged vnhappy and may reioyce and be glad when their enemies haue cause to weepe and waile Vse 3 Lastly let Magistrates and all that are in authority whether in the common-wealth or in the family put this in practise For seeing euery one should be tried before he be censured and that examination must goe before condemnation let them not receiue euery cōplaint and accusation but let them do iustice and iudgement defend the poore and fatherlesse releeue the weake and oppressed rid them out of the hand of the wicked Let this be the end of their gouernment to sing mercy and iudgement and diligently to consider the causes that come before them To this purpose there is required of them two things wisedome and patience without which they shall neuer proceed aright in taking away euill but sometimes plucke vp good corne instead of weedes or suffer thistles to grow instead of wholesome herbes Wisedome is required to finde out particular offences to know the number the nature the measure the proceeding in them the encrease of them and all circumstances as we see Eccl. 7 20 21. This will teach vs when to correct and when we may deferre correction in hope of amendment it being the discretion of a man to deferre his anger Prou. 20 30. And albeit the blewnesse of the wound clenseth away euill yet a man ought not to giue scope to his anger neither yet exceed measure Secondly there is required patience that we be not too hot and hasty vpon those that haue offended but to quiet our mindes and heare their answers what they can alledge for themselues as Iob
which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry by reason of their Taske-masters for I know their sorrowes and I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hands of the Egyptians c. He is not ignorant what teares we shead but keepeth them in a bottle of remembrance he knoweth what prayers we poure out for they ascend vp into his presence as incense hee heareth the sighes and grones that come from vs for he vnderstandeth that language The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what wee should pray for as we ought 〈◊〉 8.26 but the spirit it selfe maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And albeit he hold his peace for a time and seeme to winke at their cruell practises as if he saw them not or heard them not or knew them not yet when the appointed time commeth he will no longer keepe silence but shew himselfe to be the deliuerer of his people and the reuenger of his and their enemies We saw before out of the booke of Exodus what mercy he promiseth to his people being in misery He had a feeling of their afflictions and after a sort felt what they felt Behold what words of comfort sweeter then the hony the holy combe he vttreth I haue seene I haue heard I know I am come downe He saw their afflictions he heard their cryes he hath knowne their sorrowes he came downe to deliuer them from their persecuters If the Lord had vsed only one of these words I haue surely seene the affliction of my people it had beene as balme to refresh vs it had beene as marrow vnto our bones and as wine and oyle powred into our wounds but when he vseth foure words it is more then a doubling and a trebling of our comfort to asswage the bitternesse of the crosse so that albeit it be more sharp then vineger more bitter then gal wormwood yet they are sufficient to allay the one the other Reasons why God holdeth his peace in our afflictions God doth sometimes after a sort hide himselfe and hold his peace turne his back from vs whē we are in trouble to manifest the more the greatnesse of his power and mercy in our deliuerance to stirre vs vp to prayer and calling vpon him for helpe to teach vs to remoue all confidence and trust in our selues or in the sons of men to weane vs from the loue of the world to encrease our zeale to try our faith and patience and to harden the hearts of our enemies that he may gaine glory to his great name in their destruction He doth not delay to helpe vs and put off the time to deliuer vs because he hath forsaken vs or forgotten vs it is not because he is not able to restore vs it is not because he cannot represse and quaile the fury of our enemies it is not because he hath cast off the care of vs forasmuch as he knoweth what they practise and what we suffer according to the heauenly saying of the Psalmist Psal 34.11 The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto their cry but the face of the Lord is against them that doe euill to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth Let vs therefore comfort our selues in God while we finde no comfort at all in men Let vs put on the armour of prayer and teares these are our spirituall weapons strong to throw downe mountaines and mighty to preuaile against the greatest tyrants that seeke to deface the trueth and destroy the Church The weapons of the Church are not swords and staues or speares and shields or munition and multitudes of men but as the warfare of it is spiritual and that it wrastleth not against flesh and blood but against principalities powers against the rulers of the darkenesse of this world and against spiritual wickednes in high places so the weapons thereof must be spirituall answerable vnto the battell which we are to make and fit to encounter such aduersaries as oppose against vs. To this purpose doth the Prophet bring in the Church putting their confidence in him Lord in trouble haue they visited thee Esay 26.16 17 they powred out a prayer when thy chastening was vpon them like as a woman with child that draweth neere the time of her deliuery is in paine and cryeth out in her pangs so haue we beene in thy sight O Lord. The like we see in Iehoshaphat when many enemies came against him and his people to cast them out of the possession which God had giuen them to inherit he rested not in his owne power neither trusted he in his owne policy but dependeth vpon God and flyeth vnto him saying O our God wilt thou not iudge them for we haue no might against this great company that commeth against vs neither know we what to do but our eyes are vpon it hee and all Iudah stood before the Lord with their little ones their wiues and their children 2. Chron. 20.12.13 On the other side as this consideration of Gods infinite knowledge and discouery of all secrets ministreth exceeding comfort to the godly that lie vnder the crosse and putteth them in assured hope of future deliuerance so it serueth as a terrour to all their enemies that oppresse them and trouble them they shall not escape him that seeth their counsels though they digge neuer so deepe to hide them hee heareth their slanders and reprochful taunts though they seeke to couer them neuer so cunningly and secretly God that is omnipotent cannot be vniust he will reward euery one according to his works and therefore Elihu saith in the booke of Iob His eyes are vpon the wayes of man and hee seeth all his goings there is no darkenesse nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselues Iob 34.21 22. They thinke they goe closely to worke but alas poore blinde men they see not that God seeth them They thinke they haue a vizard ouer their faces and cannot bee knowne whereas their foule offences are written in their forehead They thinke they are in the darke and couered with the night whereas the light shineth round about them more cleerly then the Sun at noone day This ought to strike a feare of Gods power and presence into the hearts of all wicked men No man is so impudent and past shame to commit euill in the Magistrates sight and before his eyes whom he knoweth to bee endued with authority armed with power and to beare the sword of iustice in his hand to cut off all euill doers Shall wee then dare doe that before God which we dare not doe before men or shall we presume to doe that in his sight which we are ashamed or afraid to doe in the presence of mortall man He is all an eye to see all he is all an eare to heare all he is all an heart to vnderstand all Or shall we be so
called the fiery darts of the diuell and the very poison of the soule whereby we make shipwracke of faith and of a good conscience If we do not pray that God may be our Sauiour and protector from these we cannot be kept safe but lye open as a prey to all these enemies Vse 1 We may conclude from hence somewhat for the strengthening of our faith and for the encrease of our obedience As first of all we must confesse that our helpe commeth onely from the Lord seeing we are directed to goe onely to him to seeke protection who neither slumbereth nor sleepeth Psal 121 2 3 4 91 1 and 3 8. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide vnder the shadow of the Almighty he is our shield and buckler he is our rocke and refuge he is our fortresse strong tower the righteous flye vnto it and are saued Be it that they be many times and many waies afflicted yet they shal not be able to hurt them no euill shall come neere vnto them Psal 91 10. So then we are taught to assure our selues of the Churches safety and to confesse that saluation belongeth to the Lord and that his blessing is vpon his people Psal 3 8. and therfore we pray vnto him But praier must bee grounded vpon faith faith vpon the promise the promise vpon the word and the word vpon God True it is the gates of hell are set against the Church but the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it Vse 2 Secondly this doctrine of the diuine protection is a meere priuiledge of the Church and appropriated to Gods seruants onely The vngodly haue no promise of his protection neither can they expect preseruation from his hand The Lord is no preseruer of thē he hath made no promise of defence vnto them but leaueth and forsaketh them in euill without comfort without succour without deliuerance The Prophet vpon this sure ground concludeth that euill shall slay the wicked and that they which hate the righteous shall be desolate Ps 34 20 21. For hauing shewed that God deliuereth his out of all their troubles keepeth al their bones so that none of them is broken he addeth that doubtlesse the vngodly shall vtterly perish they lye open to the wrath of God and haue none that can deliuer them Vaine is the helpe of man and weake is the strength of an horse and foolish is the confidence in defenced places they are not able to saue a man Vse 3 Thirdly feare not the rage of mighty enemies albeit they rage neuer so much and dig neuer so deepe with their deuises to destroy the Church though they bend all their force and fury to vndermine it and turne it vp by the rootes that it grow no more in the earth though they take crafty counsell together against the chosen people of God and consult against his hidden ones yet they are hid vnder the shadow of his wings and kept as the apple of his eye Psalm 17 ver 8. and they are therefore called his hidden ones because he hideth them with himselfe as his precious and peculiar treasure Exod. 19 5. and keepeth thē safe and sound from all iniuries and inuasions that would do them hurt True it is the enemies encourage one another say among themselues Psalm 83 4. Come and let vs cut them off from beeing a Nation that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance howbeit the Lord shall do vnto them as vnto Sisera and as to Iabin at the brooke of Kison which perished at Endor and became as dung for the earth verse 9 10. How then should wee stand in feare of them that doe not stand in feare of God nor of his threatnings and yet haue their persons open to all his iudgments to be made like vnto a wheele as the stubble before the winde As the fire burneth a wood and the flame setteth the mountaines on fire so shal they be persecuted by thy tempests and made afraid with thy stormes so that their faces shall be filled with shame ver 13 14 15. This vse is concluded and collected out of the Psalme 27 1 3. The Lord is my light and my saluation whom shall I feare The Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid Though an hoast should encampe against me my heart shall not feare though warre should arise against me in this will I be confident Seeing then we haue such precious promises and such worthy examples to stirre vs vp to bee bold in the Lord building our house vpon the sure rocke of his defence it argueth great infidelity weaknesse wauering feeblenesse faintnesse to stand in feare of euery scar-crow or of euery storme of raine or blast of winde or force of tempest or waue of the sea that shall threaten to fall vpon vs. Vse 4 Lastly wee are from this consideration bound to loue the assemblies of the Saints and labour to be in the number of the members of the true Church To be a member of the visible Church is not enough to make vs to bee a member of the Catholike Church which we professe to beleeue in the Articles of our faith The Catholike Church is the number of the elect and chosen seruants of God In the visible Church are many hypocrites as chaffe among good wheate which when the fan of God cometh shal be blowne away The parts of the true Church are as a small remnant gathered out of the multitude Esay 1 9. as a little flocke of sheepe gathered into the sheepfold out of an heard of wolues and goats and as a chosen generation called out of the rest of the world For these two are as two Cities one contrary to the other the one euermore at warre with the other the Church and the world They that are of the true Church haue made a diuorce from it and are enemies to the world and they that are of the world haue no interest or priuiledge in the Church and therefore Christ saith to his Disciples Iohn 15 19. Because ye are not of the world but I haue chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Now as he sheweth that he had chosen them out of the rest of the world so he hath done all the faithfull that belong vnto him If then we would assure our selues to be in this number we must make much of the assemblies of the Saints otherwise we can neuer earnestly commend vnto God the protection of his Church if wee loue not the beauty of Sion and long not to dwell where the Lord dwelleth We see that so soone as any certaine knowledge of Christ was entred into the hearts of the two Disciples that came vnto him by and by they followed him and said vnto him Master where dwellest thou Iohn 1 38. So must it be with vs we must dwell with him in his house and abide with him in his chamber
because hee is not able to encrease and enrich them Thus then by giuing vnto a few he sheweth that he can store and replenish all the rest if it pleased him Secondly to releeue his owne seruants in time of need to deliuer their soul from death and to keepe them aliue in famine Psal 33.19 He knoweth well enough that the very mercies of the wicked are cruelty Prou. 12.10 they are handfasted and hard-hearted and they are least of all mooued to pitty Gods people he therefore prouideth for the welfare of his seruants by making one Christian brother able to releeue another as we haue plentifull examples in the acts of the Apostles chap. 4.34 35 36. Thirdly he maketh them many times to inherit the labours of wicked men and of such as are their enemies as we see his people had the treasures of Egypt Exod. 12. Psal 44.3 The Egyptians would not recompence them therefore the Lord doth recompence them Fourthly they are in Christ heires of the world for all that are sonnes are also heires Rom. 8.17 the heires of God and ioynt-heires with Christ Hence it is that some recouer their possession though al cannot according to their right and title God made all things for his friends not for his enemies who are no better then vsurpers Vse 1 The Vses follow First it reprooueth the beggerly vow of voluntary pouerty vndertaken by the Popish Order No such vow is found in the old Testament whiles vowes were most in vse and in force This is accounted a vow of perfection but it hindreth the doing of much good because it is better to giue then to receiue Act. 20.35 Wherefore the begging Fryars are boasting fooles proudly glorying in perfection when they may worthily be ashamed of their imperfections They think they deserue heauen by it when indeed they are in danger of hel For it is one thing to haue riches and another to trust in riches whereas they will seeme to cast them away vnder a colour of feare lest they should cast them away But may any among them compare with sundry of Gods seruants who kept their goods and did much good with them to Gods glory and the good of others may they euen the best of them parallell themselues with Abraham in faith with Iob in patience with Ioseph in chastity with Lot in piety with Lazarus in hospitality with Zaccheus in liberality with the godly women in charity whatsoeuer they pretend to the contrary Prou. 10.22 And as riches giuen by the blessing of God condemne no man so it is certaine pouerty can saue no man neither can it merit life and saluation as the cloystermen dreame Vse 2 Secondly obserue that riches are not euill of themselues or in their owne nature neither are they any way hinderers of Gods kingdome the fault is in the person and in the abuse of them And the best things are abused as well as riches yet we may not thereupon conclude that the best things are bad But it will be obiected Obiect that Christ saith It is hard for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of God Mat●h 19. euen easier for a Camel to goe through the c. I answer Answer we must compare Scripture by Scripture as it is said Tremel in 〈◊〉 h●m 8. the Leuites did expound the meaning and gaue the vnderstanding by the Scripture it selfe The Euangelist Marke repeating this history expoundeth it plainely For Christ hauing said How hardly shall they that haue riches enter into the kingdome of GOD and the disciples being astonied at his words he addeth by way of explication Children how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdome of God! then this followeth It is easier for a Camel c. where we see he distinguisheth of rich some are such as trust in God not in their riches some trust in their riches not in GOD. Of these that make their riches their God and their Mammon to be their hope and heauen it is true that a Camell shall sooner goe through the eye of a needle then such rich men get into the kingdome of God Mar. 10.23 24. Mar. 10.23.24 But they are thornes and snares thornes to choke Obiection and snares to catch and entangle the soule so they are called in the parable of the sower Luke 8. and by the Apostle 1 Tim. 6. I answere Answ It is true but the fault is not in the nature of the riches but in the corruption of the rich man not by the vse but through the abuse of them For if they were euill of themselues then should all rich men be choaked and snared by them drawn into euill which by the former examples and by present experience we know not be so Obiect But Christ willeth the rich man to sell the things he did possesse and giue them to the poore by this it should appeare to be vnlawfull to keep them I answere Answer this is a particular commandement giuen to him to try him and prooue what was in him to discouer his pride and hypocrisie pleasing himselfe in a false opinion of his strength sufficiency and ability to keepe the Law that so if it were possible his eies might be opened to see his owne weakenesse and himselfe to be wretched and miserable and poore and blinde and naked For in that he went away sorrowfull and submitted not himselfe to the voyce of Christ hee declared plainely that he made more reckoning of his wealth then he did of Christ and that he had more mind to follow the world then to obey the word deliuered vnto him Thirdly wee must learne when we haue Vse 3 these blessings to be thankefull to God that gaue them and to lift vp our eyes to him of whom we receiued them For albeit these earthly blessings bee common to the godly and the vngodly yet are they not common to all the godly inasmuch as they are giuen vnto some but denyed vnto other bestowed vppon a few but withholden from many This duty hath many branches First wee must acknowledge from whence they come The bran●● of than●●●nesse and that we haue receiued them of his meere grace Woe then to those that sacrifice to their owne nette and ascribe the blessings of God onely to their owne labour and industry For except the Lord build the house the labour of the builder is in vaine and except the Lord keepe the City the watchman waketh in vaine it is in vaine for you to rise vp early to sit vp late and to eate the bread of sorrowes it is God that giueth his beloued sleepe Psal 127.1.2 True it is God hath laid vpon vs this duty to labour and requireth that euery man eate his bread with the sweat of his browes for no promise is made to the idle yet wee must depend vpon him for a blessing vpon our labours or else we are not thankefull vnto him Againe we must be carefull to vse them
He did not glory to haue in his owne breast an oracle to answer all doubts nor challenge any power of freedome from errour as the man of sinne in the pride of his owne heart boasteth of himselfe The third part is the resolution and determination of God deciding the question and making some lawes extending to them and their posterity first if any were vncleane they had respit giuen them vnto the second moneth they haue not liberty vntil the next yeare but to the next moneth they are dispensed withal Secondly the man that is cleane and refuseth to come he shall be cut off that is excommunicated from the people Thirdly if a stranger desire to be partaker of the Passeouer he must embrace the true religion be circumcised Exod. 12.49 and then he may come Touching the question and the occasion thereof it appeareth that those good men which were shut out from this part of Gods seruice by reason they were defiled by touching a dead body were much greeued at heart and troubled in mind that they were barred and as it were banished from the Passeouer hauing as great a desire as others to come vnto it Hence it is that they make earnest moane and complaint to Moses for their separation and therefore desire to be eased and releeued by him The doctrine Doctrin● from hence is that it is a great cause of sorrow and griefe to Gods deare children Gods chi●dren are greeued 〈◊〉 they are 〈◊〉 from his ●●●uice when they are by any iust occasion or by the hand of God vpon them withheld and kept back from the parts and exercises of his worship We see this in Hezekiah in his sicknesse Esay 38.1 his chiefe lamentation and complaint was that he should not see the face of the Lord in his Temple Dauid often complaineth and lamenteth that he was driuen by his enemies from his worship He maketh the condition of the sparrow swallow better then his Psal 84.3 42.1 and 5. and 137 which might come neerer to the altar then he his soule panted and thirsted after God The Church wept by the riuers of Babylon when they remembred Sion and the songs they had sung in the Temple and in another place the Church being by captiui●y depriued of the Temple of their Synagogues of their sacrifices of their Sacraments and of the exercises of their religion maketh bitter complaint to God O Lord and 74.7 they haue cast thy Sanctuary into the fire they haue defiled thy dwelling place The incestuous Corinthian being by excommunication put from the fellowship of the Saints and the vse of the Ministery became comfortlesse and was almost swallowed vp with sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 And can it be otherwise The godly find Reason 1 such sweetnesse such comfort such spirituall ioy in the presence of God where the exercises of his worship and religion are performed as nothing in this life is more pleasant and delightfull vnto them The Prophet cryeth out as if he were rauished with an holy contemplation of the excellency of this Psa● 8● 1 1● 10 an● 8. and 14 How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of hostes my soule longeth yea euen fainteth for the Courts of the Lord c. The word is sweeter to them then the hony and the hony combe and more to be desired then much fine gold They feed vpon the bread in the Sacramēts as vpon the fatnes of his house drink of the cup as of the riuers of his pleasures they offer vp praiers as sweet incense and lift vp their hands as the euening sacrifice How then can it be but that the losse want of al these brought vpon thē should strike them to the heart and minister matter of much greefe and mourning vnto them Secondly the great loue and mercy of God toward his people doth appeare in the exercises of religion and the place of his worship to them that are not altogether blind and deafe and past all sense and feeling of good things then in all other things throughout the whole world besides Prou. 9.1.2 And indeed a man or woman that hath once tasted the comfort of his adoption and saluation in Christ taught in the word and confirmed in the Sacraments will think it one of his greatest losses to lose and leaue these exercises and the greatest plague to be depriued of them and by them of the pledges of his goodnesse and fauor Thirdly when these are gone they know and consider the greatest stayes and helpes of their standing in the grace of God are vtterly taken away from them therefore they haue cause to lament as Psal 74.9 We see not our signes there is no more any Prophet neither is there among vs any that knoweth how long When he taketh away his word he lifteth vp his standard and goeth away And can there be greater cause to mourne then when God departeth from his people Vse 1 This reprooueth such as can lament bitterly and mourne heauily for the least earthly losses and troubles but neuer trouble themselues for losse of spirituall things It was not so with the wife of Phinehas she had many causes of mourning met together by heauy tidings that were told vnto her her father in law had broken his necke her husband was killed the hoste of God discomfited and the Arke of God was taken howbeit among all these none went neerer none so neere vnto her as the taking of the Arke and therefore she doubleth this which she could not put out of her mind and did after a sort put out all the rest ●●m 4.22 The glory is departed from Israel for the Arke of God is taken But there are many in our daies that account it no losse at all to lose Sermon after Sermon Sacrament after Sacrament and one meeting in the house of God after another they can do this easily and neuer mourne for it Nay they are vexed and tormented as if they were vpon the rack that they are constrained to come so often to the word to the Sacraments and to the house of prayer See herein the great diffrence between the godly and vngodly It is the voyce of the faithfull When will the Sabboth come but the vnfaithfull say When will the Sabboth day be done Amos 8.5 It is the voyce of the faithfull Blessed are they that dwell in thy house Psal 84.4 but the vnfaithfull hold it a misery and bondage to be tyed so strictly and straitly to the publike exercises of religion It is the voyce of the faithfull 〈◊〉 42.2 and 7. 120.5 When shall I come and appeare before God but the vnfaithfull say When shall we depart out of Syon it is time we be gone It is the faithful mans voyce complayning Woe is me that I soiourne in Mesech that I dwell in the tents of Kedar but the vnfaithfull think thēselues vnhappy that they must soiourne in the Tabernacle of God and dwel in his house If
barbarous enemies vsing a barbarous tongue which shall bring vs into slauery and subiection For it is iust with God if we refuse to heare him speaking to vs in a knowne tongue ●●scal obs●ru in 〈◊〉 or 14 21. to compell vs euen against our willes to heare another speake to vs in an vnknowne tongue to the encrease of our misery and to the danger of our soules as he dealt with his owne people for their vnthankfulnes whom he vpbraideth that they vnderstood not his speech ●●hn 8 43. and therefore armed the mercilesse Romanes against them that spake to thē in a tongue which they vnderstood not and scourged them by that abhomination of desolation the which chastisement continueth vpon them to this day Vse 5 Lastly these siluer trumpets seruing to sound the alarme in the eares of the people put vs in minde of the last day when all people shall be gathered together and arise out of the earth at the sound of the last Trumpet of God For God will also haue his Trumpet These were blowne by Aaron and his sonnes the last Trumpet shal be blowne by the Archangell Of this we reade in many places of the new Testament of which Christ himselfe speaketh ●●th 24 ●1 and the Apostle in his Epistles The Euangelist sheweth that the Sonne of man shal send his Angels with a great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather together his elect from the foure windes euen from one end of heauen to another And Paul speaking of the generall resur●ection at the last day saith Behold I shew you a mystery we shall not at all sleep but we shal al be changed in a momēt in the twinkling of an eie at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible and we shall be changed 1 Corinth 15 51 52. Likewise the same Apostle teacheth that the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the trumpet of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first 1 Thess 4 verse 16. In the giuing of the law many fearefull signes and tokens of Gods glorious presence appeared that made the people flie away cry out among the rest they heard the noise of the trumpet Exod. 20 18. which sounded long and waxed louder louder chap. 19 1● This was so terrible that Moses said Heb. 12 19 21 I exceedingly feare and quake but at the day of iudgement when God wil requi●e an account of the law and how we haue walked in the obedience of it when euery one shall be iudged according to his workes the Trumpet shal be much louder and the sound of it farre shriller for the dead sh●ll heare it arise out of their graues This shall cause a greater feare in all then was at the giuing of the law Christs comming to iudgment shall be fearefu●l because his coming to iudge the quicke and the dead shall be sudden vnlooked for powerfull and glorious When men shal promise to themselues peace and safety then sudden destruction shall come vpon them as trauaile vpon a woman with childe and they shall not escape 1 Thess 5 3. And as it was in the daies of Noah and Lot when they gaue themselues to a generall security and neuer knew any thing till they were destroied one sort with water and another with fire so shall the coming of the Sonne of man be Mat. 24 37. It shall be also powerfull his first coming was in much weaknesse but this with great might able to sweepe away all his enemies to hell Lastly it shall be glorious for he shall be accompanied with thousands of his Angels that shall attend vpon him as seruants vpon their master ready to execute his will Iude 14. And this his coming shall haue a three-fold effect A threefold effect of Christs comming for there will follow immediately a gathering together a separation and then a iudging First al must be gathered together at the sound of the trumpet both the dead and the liuing they shall rise out of their graues some to euerlasting life some to shame euerlasting contempt Dan. 12 2. After this gathering there shall be a separatiō Christ sitting in his throne of glory Math. 24 31. the elect shall be set at his right hand the reprobate at his left Thē shall follow the iudgment it selfe Math 25 33. the Iudge of all Iudges giuing a most iust sentence calling the elect to inherite ●he kingdome prepared for them from the foundations of the world Math. 25 32. Math. 25 41. casting the reprobate into euerlasting torments prepared for the diuel his angels Ver. 11 12. And it came to passe on the twentieth day of the second moneth in the second yeare that the cloud was taken vp c. Here we haue the remouing of the Israelites from the desert of Arabia the stony which bordereth vpon Mount Sinai where they abode for the space almost of an whole yeare during which time the law was giuen the Tabernacle was builded the Priests were consecrated the whol worship of God established In this remouing we must obserue three things the forme and manner of it the care of Moses in preparing prouiding a guide to leade them and the praiers that he vsually and ordinarily made at the beginning of their march and likewise when the Arke rested Touching the first all the people of Israel remoued from their encamping at the foote of the Moun●aine Sinai toward Paran the army or great squadron of Iuda led by Naashon taking the Vauntgard followed by Nethaneel and Eliab Leadcrs of the Tribes of Issachar and Zebulun after whom all the rest marched as we haue seene in the beginning of the booke From hence we learne that GOD would haue order obserued among his people Doctrine in all his ordinances Order is to be obserued in all the ordinances of God The Apostle setteth it downe as a precept 1 Cor. 14 40. Let all things be done decently and in order He was glad of the comely order obserued among the Colossians ch 2 5. We saw before how the Lord appointed the Tabernacle to be placed in the midst of all the Campe and the Leuites to attend round about and all these to be compassed on euery side with the rest of the Tribes And if we will cast backe our eies to the first times marke the creation of the world from the foundation of it together with all the parts of it the earth the water the aire the firmament and the heauen of the blessed who can expresse the goodly order which they possesse keep For as they are placed one aboue the other so they are pure subtile simple and notable And as this exquisite order sheweth and shineth foorth in the Elements and the Heauens so doth it in the Angels for as one starre differeth from another in glory so doth one Angell
power Christ Iesus witnesseth that hee would haue gathered the people of Ierusalem by his Ministery but they would not Mat. 23. So God promised to gather together the dispersed of Iudah from the foure corners of the earth Esay 11.12 Secondly he is euermore a present helpe in time of trouble willing to heare them with speed and ready to speak to them with comfort Whatsoeuer they aske of him they shall receiue but if he were not present with vs he could not heare vs in our need nor succour vs in our wants Psal 46.5 Thirdly Satan dwelleth and ruleth in the world He is called the prince of the world Eph. 2. who ruleth in the children of disobedience and blindeth their eyes that they cannot obey the trueth 2 Cor. 4.4 Lastly his loue his special loue is set vpon them and the loue the speciall loue of his people is set vpon him and where should he rest and remaine but among them or how should one be without another The vses This reprooueth all such as haue Vse 1 no care to dwell with God in his Church of which the number is not small in all places These are like vnfaithful seruants that care not for comming in their masters presence or like malefactors that hate nothing more then the face of the iudge So is it with euill men they like no place worse then the Church They take as much pleasure in it as the theefe doth to be in the Iaile who careth not how soone he were out and rid of his fetters The word of God is to the vngodly as bolts and gyues it fettereth and hampereth and holdeth him that he knoweth not which way to turne himselfe The Church is to him as it were a prison it restraineth his liberty he loueth no place worse then it It is otherwise with the godly man hee liketh it and preferreth it in his thoughts in his affections and in his practises aboue al other places because the Lord dwelleth and resideth therein Luk. 19.46 It is the house of prayer where the people of God meet God is neuer absent from hence and they are happy that may dwell there with him Psalme 27.4 And we may pronounce this is a certaine truth that such haue no company or communion with God that delight not to visite his Temple Let such look for no blessing at Gods hand to come vpon them Secondly this proclaimeth woe and misery Vse 2 to come vpon all wicked persons because God is not among them His presence is the fulnesse of ioy at his right hand are pleasures for euermore Psalm 16 11. where he is not there can be nothing but horrour and confusion But he is not in the Congregation assembly of euill persons It will be said Is not God euery where He is with his essence but not with his grace And they shall know he is present with them and they with him albeit they seeke nothing more then to banish him out of their presence and company They haue forsaken the waies of God and he hath forsaken them for their wickednesse Howbeit in the last day when they shall stand before the tribunall seat of the Iudge of al the world they will acknowledge their owne folly and desire to behold one comfortable day of the Sonne of man with the losse of all their pleasures in the daies of their vanity but shall not be able Vse 3 Thirdly hence ariseth comfort to Gods children to know this and to be throughly perswaded of it in their hearts Thus doth Abijah the king of Iudah comfort himselfe against his enemies 2 Chron. 13.12 Behold God himselfe is with vs and likewise Christ his disciples Loe I am with you vnto the end of the world Matth. 28.20 Hee need not feare any thing that hath God to be with him He need not feare the subiect that hath the Prince to stand for him He hath no cause to be afraid of the seruant that hath the master on his side Let euery one therefore comfort himselfe in the execution of his calling God hath set vs in the same and he will beare vs out Vse 4 Lastly it is a duty belonging vnto all men to seeke the Lord as well where he may bee found as when he may be found For as there is a time when he wil not be found Pro. 1.28 Mic. 3.4 Luk. 13.24 so there is a place where he will not be found He resteth not in the tents of wickednesse If God be sought in the society and fellowship of sinfull men hee cannot be found Hee is found in his house and Temple if we delight in his word and worship we cannot be farre from him nor hee from vs. If we shew our selues willing to heare his voyce and to goe no farther from him then that we may euermore bee within the sound of his mouth we shall be sure of his presence There he will be found as in a garden of spices The Lord is said to dwell in the highest heauens and indeed this is the city of the great king Now the Church is as the suburbes and leadeth vs the right and ready way to this citie We can neuer come to it if we do not enter by the gates of the Church Heere God keepeth his court heere we shall be sure to find him All men will seeme in loue with the heauenly Ierusalem but they care not at all for Sion They would rest in the hill of God Psal 25.1 but they desire not to soiourne in his Tabernacle They would haue heauen but they will haue none of the Church They loue to heare Mat 25.34 enter into the kingdome prepared for you but they care not for the feasts of the word and Sacraments prepared for them These doe altogether deceiue themselues and separate those things which God hath ioyned together for as much as we must long after the place of his habitation vpon earth if we looke to be receiued into the place of his habitation in heauen For God hath two houses as his dwelling places one beneath the other aboue the one I may call the lower house the other the vpper house God hath two dwelling places his vpper house and his lower house He that would dwell in the one must also dwell in the other One is the Church the other is the kingdome of glory If we delight in the first house more then in all other places let vs not doubt but be well assured that in his good time we shall haue entrance into the second house But if we will not dwell with him in his Church vpon earth we shall neuer dwell with him in glory in the highest of which Christ our Sauiour saith In my Fathers house there be many mansions Ioh. 14.2 Whereby he meaneth heauen it selfe in which all the Saints and blessed spirits of iust men perfected shall dwell with God for euer in glory and immortality If we be any way in loue with this celestiall house let
fall into the nets be caught in the snares which they lay for vs. Seeing then this is so necessary we learne Vse 1 that a wise and vnderstanding heart is a great blessing of God Indeed a simple minde and a single heart is good in godlinesse that so wee may be innocent as Doues Mat. 10 16. Neuerthelesse we must be wise also as Serpents So force and strength are great gifts howbeit the greatest ornament that GOD giueth which as salt seasoneth euery action is when he giueth a wise and vnderstanding heart so as he enableth vs to preuent euils and to disappoint our enemies as Christ promiseth Luke 21 14. and therefore Gods children haue asked this aboue other 1 Kin. 3 9. Vse 2 Secondly be wise in our generation that they goe not beyond vs. It is most true that he which maketh himselfe a body of Christal that all men may looke through him and discerne all the parts of his disposition doeth withall make himselfe a tame asse and thereby teacheth others either how to ride him or how to driue him But wise men though they haue single hearts in all that which is iust and honest yet they are like coffers with double bottomes which when others looke into beeing opened they see not all that they hold on the sodaine and at once For we haue enemies though they often make faire weather toward vs yet are full of subtilty and pollicy they are we see in their generation wiser then the children of light Luk. 16 8 They are euer watchfull dealing by meanes whether iust or vniust lawfull or vnlawfull and malice against Gods seruants carrieth them so farre that they make conscience of nothing so they may betray thē We may say of such as Paul doeth of Elimas the sorcerer Acts 13 10. O full of all subtilty all mischiefe thou childe of the diuell thou enemy of all righteousnesse wilt thou not ceasse to peruert the right waies of the Lord Especially let vs labour in things of the best nature to prouide things needfull to saluation The vniust steward is commended by his Lord for proceeding preparing wisely for himselfe If then there be any true wisedome in vs let vs prouide things honest heauenly in the sight of God for in vaine is he wise that is not wise toward God and for himselfe Lastly seeke to feare God for that is the Vse 3 beginning of wisedome Psal 111 10. Prou 1 7 and 9 10. and let vs haue his word dwelling in vs plentifully powerfully The word is the wisedome of God and it should be our wisedome because it is able to teach vs wisedome Psal 119 98 99. It is able to make vs wiser then our teachers then our enemies thē the ancient If this be not in vs to guide vs we shall vse vngodly and vnlawfull shifts wicked deuises and leud inuentions These cannot prosper long with vs for God will catch the crafty in their owne craft 1 Cor. 3 18 19 20. 26. And they went and came to Moses and to Aaron and to all the Congregation of the children of Israel vnto the wildernesse of Paran to Kadesh and brought backe word vnto them vnto all the Congregation and shewed them the fruite of the Land 27. And they told him and said We came vnto the Land whither thou sentest vs and surely it floweth with milke and hony and this is the fruite of it 28. Neuerthelesse the people bee strong that dwell in the Land and the Cities are walled and very great and moreouer wee saw the children of Anak there c. The second part of the chapter is the returne and report of the spies Albeit they went to search out the weaknesse of the land yet hauing warrant from Moses nay from God they prosper and his hand was with them in their going and in their returning Touching the report they make and the account they giue of their trauaile and perambulation it is double first to Moses and then to the people To Moses they dare not plainely deliuer the poison of their hearts For howsoeuer this report may seeme at the first The rep● 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 to be the generall speech of all the twelue yet by the words following both in this and the next chapt it will plainely appeare to be the report only of ten of them Caleb and Ioshua being excepted who spake better things and conuinced them For the other ten they vnder glorious and goodly words coloured and couered the wicked purpose and pretence of their prophane hearts thinking to corrupt the people with the leauen of their owne rebellion to turne them away from attempting to conquer the Land and to bring them to despaire of possessing the same Wherefore though they do not openly professedly disswade them yet they speake lies through hypocrisie they doe not deale faithfully and sincerely but hauing two tongues in their heads intended to stirre vp the people to mutiny and murmuring against Moses by laying before them the difficulty nay the impossibility of the enterprise Thus then we see they performe their Embassage subtilly not sincerely fraudulently not faithfully for they praise the Land with a loud voice but their hearts are hollow and they speake the truth to deceiue Their praise is short but the doubts that they cast into the mindes of the people are many The doctrine Wicked men do oftentimes then speak fairest Doctri●● Wicked 〈◊〉 speake f● 〈…〉 when th● meane 〈…〉 2 Sam 2● when they intend the greatest mischiefe and cloke their euill hearts with soft words Ezr. 4 2. Ps 12 2 they speake with a double hart So did Cain Gen. 4 8 so did Ioab 2 Sam. 3 17. For first they haue beene brought vp in the schoole of a very cunning master Satan Reason can transforme himselfe into an Angel of light as when he came to our first parents he wholly pretended their good and made himselfe carefull to aduance them to a better estate Gen. 3 4. 2 Cor 11 3. Secondly thereby they know they shall insinuate themselues more closely and deceiue more easily Open enemies are better preuented Ps 55 12. false brethren hardly discerned this is the way to catch the simple and vnwary in their snares Math. 22 16. Vse 1 Learne from hence a property of mans hart that it is very deceitfull Ier. 17 9 10. It is the nature of wicked men to suppresse the euill which they purpose vntill they can see their fit times according to the saying of the Prophet They will deceiue euery one his neighbour and will not speake the truth they haue taught their tongue to speake lies and weary themselues to commit iniquity Ier. 9 5. Herod pretended loue outwardly to the new borne King of the Iewes that he also would come worship him Mat. 2 8. but indeed he purposed in his heart to kill him albeit the wise men perceiued it not Thus do men dig deepe to hide their counsels and weaue the spiders
the multitude when he was dishonoured by others We learne hereby Doctrine God hath euer had some witnesses of his truth that God hath alwayes had some witnesses of his truth in all ages euen whē it hath beene most of al oppugned and resisted as Reuel 11 4. Ier. 38 8 9. Luke 7 35. Wisedom is iustified of her children when others regard it not Nicodemus stoode vp and defended the cause of Christ when the Pharisies sought to condemne him Iohn 7 35. When the whole multitude had condemned Christ the penitent theef vpon the crosse confessed him to be the Lord of life Luke 23 42. and when they sate in councel vpon him to put him to death and gaue full consent to make him away Ioseph a good man and a iust consented not to the counsell and deede of them Luke 23 50 51. And how can it be otherwise For the truth Reason 1 shall neuer decay from the earth but be spread abroad from place to place and from generation to generation for euer Psal 119 89. We perish and decay for all flesh is as grasse and all the glory of man is as the flower of the fielde but the word of the Lord abideth for euer 1. Pet. 1 24. God will haue this neuer to dye or decay neuer to wither or to be worne away Secondly hee hath the hearts of all men in his owne hand to turne them and change them at Reason 2 his pleasure as we see in Paul who persecuted the church and bound them in chaines which called vpon the name of Christ but the Lord sodainly appeared vnto him when the poore sheepe were neere to the shambles conuerted him and appointed him a witnesse of his truth To beare his name vnto the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel Acts 9 15. So sayeth Christ Luke 19 40. I tell you if these should holde their peace the stones would cry and therefore he can neuer be without some witnes to maintaine and defend his truth This teacheth vs that God is most glorious Vse 1 and powerfull he is a most mighty God and will be knowne in the earth Psal 8 1 2. with Math. 21 15. Acts 14 17. He chooseth manie times instruments in the eyes of the world vnfit and vnable for to accomplish any great worke that the power and praise may bee giuen to him We see how he worketh for the most part contrarie to the manner of men that the opinion of our owne excellency shold not ouershadow his power In war he saueth with few in the saluation of the soule which is one of the greatest workes he worketh by weake instruments and putteth his grace in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power might be of God and not of vs euen as he commanded the light to shine out of darkenes 2 Cor. 4 6 7. So that wee may conclude with the Psalmist O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy name in all the earth Who hast set thy glory aboue the heauens c. Psal 8 1 2. Mat. 21 15. Vse 2 Secondly great and mighty is his truth preuaileth he hath alwaies had a church vpon the face of the earth and he neuer forsaketh it though multitudes conspire against it and swarmes of enemies set vppe lies yet it shall haue the vpper hand at last This is easie to be shewed in the middest of darknesse when the foggy mistes of popery had corrupted the aire and ouer-shadowed the truth yet God euermore raised vp some one or other that crossed opposed the strong faction that was maintained in the church of Rome Thisf were not hard to shew in many particulars touching the Canon of the Scriptures touching the sufficiency of the Scriptures touching the reall presence and transubstantiation touching the supremacie of the byshop of Rome and the infallibility of his iudgement touching Pardons and Indulgences and many other points which were neuer generally receiued no not in the Church of Rome The doctrine of Antichrist hath beene reprooued in all times by sundrie persons euen in the greatest darkenesse of the night of superstition for as it grew vp by little and little so was it resisted openly euidently to which purpose I could produce infinite testimonies which a man may reade at large in Catalogo testium veritatis set forth by Illyricus Vse 3 Thirdly be not discouraged when the truth is oppressed because God is able to maintain it and raiseth vp his enemies oftentimes to defend it and to speake for it and the professors and preachers of it Acts 5 34. He maketh the weake strong and the fearefull to be bolde in his cause so at the passion of Christ when all forsooke him euen his own disciples he opened the mouth of the theefe as we noted before vpon the crosse to confesse him as his Sauiour and Redeemer that was able to bestow vpon him the kingdome of heauen Luke 23. He will neuer want hearts to beleeue in him who can change the heart neyther mouthes to confesse him who out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings hath perfected his owne praise Againe obserue that he saw what the greatest number of the spies and searchers out of the Land hath reported yet he is so farre from ioyning with them that hee maketh it plaine and apparent that they should be well able to ouercome all their enemies The Doctrine from hence is this Doctrine ●he euil of o●●ers yea al●●ough the● 〈◊〉 many may 〈◊〉 be follow● of vs. The euill of others yea although they be many should not be imitated and followed of vs. We may not follow the example of euill men that go before vs in euil We see this in Micaiah an holy prophet when the Messenger sent vnto him bad him to say as the rest had saide and to flatter the King Let thy word I pray thee be like the word of one of them which declare good to the King 1 King 22 12 13 He refused to assent vnto it but saide As the Lord liueth what the Lord saith vnto mee that will I speake verse 14 So Ezek. 20. ver 18. Walke ye not in the statutes of your Fathers and keepe my iudgements Math. 23 6 7. Noah his family were iust in that vniust generation when the whole worlde had corrupted their wayes and the whole earth was filled with crueltie Gen. 6. Eliah was alone when idolatry had gotten the vpper hand in Israel 1. Kings 19 verse 10. 1 Cor. 10 6. The Reasons Whatsoeuer is in it selfe euill and vnlawful Reason 1 cannot bee made good and lawfull by anie example nor by many examples It cannot be warranted by the law of man much lesse by the law the pure law of God himselfe Secondly no greatnesse no companie no Reason 2 multitude can saue a man from iudgements due to the least sinne for though hand ioyne in hand the wicked shall not go vnpunished Pro. 5. and 11 21. If we could couer our selues vnder the might of
sorrow to see men drawn away from the faith and obedience of the Gospel Gal. 4.19 and 5.12 so it giueth great ioy and much comfort to see this zeale and care one of another The Prophet testifieth this Psal 122 12. I was glad when they saide vnto me Let vs go into the house of the Lord c. It would greatly reioyce vs to see a man pull the friend whom we loue out of a pit into which he was fallen but it ought more to cheere vp our hearts to behold a brother drawne out of the pit of hell destruction and made a Citizen of the kingdome of heauen 31 But the men that went vp with him saide We be not able to go vp against the people for they are stronger then we 32 And they brought vp an euill report of the land which they had searched vnto the children of Israel saying The land thorough which wee haue gone c. 33 And there we saw the Gyants the sonnes of Anak c. Here we haue the second report which they make to the people now they pull off their vizard and shew themselues in their colours For after that these turbulent spirits preuaile nothing before the Councell they flie to the people stirring vp the multitude to a tumult and commotion to which purpose they bring vp an euill report of the land as if it yeelded nothing without great labour and extreame paines so that when the inhabitants had spent themselues and wasted their strength yet it was scarse able to maintaine them wherein as Serpents they hisse with two tongues The report of the spies contradicteth it selfe for they falsifie their owne words they confound their owne practise and slander the trueth of God with a lye They belye themselues because they had confessed openly that it was a fruitfull land now their tongues are diuided they auouch that it cannot sufficiently nourish the inhabitants Againe they confound their owne practise for they did cut downe a vine branch with a cluster of Grapes and bare it vpon a staffe betweene two vpon their shoulders Lastly they slander the truth of God who promised vnto their Fathers to giue them a Land flowing with Milke and Hony Exod. 3 8. If then it were barren and vnfruitfull and not able sufficiently yea aboundantly to nourish the inhabitants God had failed of his promise and deceiued the hope and expectation of his people True it is these words are not literally to be taken for there is in them another trope or figure for first a part is taken for the whole so that the meaning is that the land abounded with the best fruites neuerthelesse such are named and expressed as needed least labour and trauel of their owne Againe there is an hyperbolicall or excessiue speech borrowed from the waters of the sea which oftē flow out of their banks the meaning whereof is that there should bee great-store and plenty of these and such other necessary and profitable things so that they should haue abundance The commendation whereof is further set downe Deut. 8.8.9 and 11.11.12.14.15 Therefore Ierom is much deceiued Hieron Ep. 129 ad Dardan that vnderstandeth this flowing with milke and hony spiritually and it is true that the word of God is saide to be milke for such as are babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3 2. and learne the first principles of the oracles of God Heb. 5 12. Likewise to bee sweeter then the honie and the hony combe Psal 19 10. neuertheles in this place we must vnderstand it of the land it selfe and the fruitfulnesse of it and so it is saide to be euen while the Canaanites did inhabite it and when the Spies brought with them the commodities of it long before the word of God was published in it Moreouer they make report of great and mighty gyants in comparison of whom they thought themselues as grasse-hoppers Some thinke they are so called because they were tyrants oppressors not in regard of strength of bodye and eminency of stature But such there were both before and after the floode Gen. 6.4 and 14 5. Numb 15 34. Deut. 2 20.21 Amos 1. Deut. 3 11. Iudg. 14.6.19 16 3. 1 Sam. 17 4 2 Sam. 21 19. 1 Chron. 20.4 5 6 7 8. These exceeded the bulkes and bodies of men that are now borne in this withered quarter and winter of the world nature it self and the force of it as it were waxing old We see then how these hollow-hearted spies discourage the people and discouer their hypocrisie for they blow hot and cold almost with one breath and yet they would haue more vnderstood then themselues dare vtter For they say The people are strong but they meane too strong for them they say Their Cities are walled euen vp to heauen Deut. 1 28. but they mean they shall neuer be able to win them by scalado they say There were Gyants in the land but they meane they would bee able to eate them vp as Grashoppers they say The Land did deuoure the inhabitants but they meane that albeit they should haue no enemies yet the Land would in short time consume them They neuer once mention or remember the promise of God but as Infidels distrust and despaire and cause others to distrust and despaire and as Apostataes they slide backe from the couenant of God The doctrine Euil men Doctri●● H●pocri● though 〈◊〉 couered 〈◊〉 last vn● though they long dissemble and hide the euil and corruption of their hearts yet at last they lay thēselues open and are often contrary to themselues Luke 9 59. and 19 22. and 4 22.29 Mat. 2 8 16. Herod sent and killed the infants of Bethlehem intending thereby to kill Christ whom he pretended to worship and 28 12. False witnesses came and said The Disciples stole him away while we slept But this tale did discredite it selfe The Disciples of Christ were few and vnarmed the watch were many and with weapons And if they were asleepe how knew they the disciples did it Wherefore we shold rather thinke that they do dreame when they are awake then suffer our selues to be perswaded that they were awake when indeede they did dreame So Prou. 26 26. Whose hatred is couered by deceite his wickednesse shall be shewed before the whole congregation Reason 1 For first hypocrisie is like a wound healed outwardly but festering inwardly and therefore at last the corruption cannot but breake out It is a true saying Nemo potest diu personam ferre fictam citò in naturam suam recidunt quibus veritas non subest that is No man can long continue masked in a counterfet behauiour the things that are forced for pretences hauing no ground of truth to stand vpō cannot long dissemble their owne natures This is the iudgement of God vpon hypocrisie at the last it wil vncase and vncouer it selfe Force the water against the current at last it will breake out to his proper course like to the bow that being bent
of teeth Math. 25 30. horrour without release weeping but the teares shall neuer be wiped away fire but it shall neuer be quenched this is their cup to drinke this is their portion to inherite But the godly vpon earth haue the gifts of GOD mingled with wants faith with infidelity assurance with doubting hope with despaire loue with hatred perfection with imperfection sanctification with the reliques of sinne as likewise they haue greefe tempered with ioy and ioy with greefe Indeed sometimes they want the sense and feeling of ioy and comfort but neu●r all hope and expectation of them Vse 3 Thirdly we ought much more to mourne for our owne sinnes otherwise it were grosse hypocrisie to mourne for others more then for our selues or so much for others as for our selues It is sufficient that we mourne for other men whose sins we cannot amend but more is required to be performed toward our selues wee must both mourne for them and amend them If we can weepe for them and doe not amend them our teares are counterfeit teares Let vs therfore oftentimes examine our selues how we are affected toward our selues and toward others and touching our greefe conceiued for our sinnes and for the sinnes of other men Let vs marke where we bestow our greatest sorrow and thereby take notice how it standeth with vs and so learned to reforme our practise if we finde it any way to bee amisse The women that followed Christ our Sauiour to the Crosse wept for him and thought they had iust cause so to doe but neuer imagined that they had more cause to weepe for themselues and therefore he correcteth that practise Luke 23 28. Daughters of Ierusalem weepe not for mee but for your selues and for your children c. We shall all of vs finde cause in our owne selues to mourne and humble our selues for our selues Lastly we ought to haue a care of the saluation Vse 4 of others and to desire their repentance otherwise our mourning is idle and nothing worth He that is entred into the way of saluation himselfe will both hunger and thirst after the saluation of other And heereby we may try whether our mourning for others be sanctified or not For as there is a carnall ioy so there is a carnall sorrow and as there is a naturall ioy such as natural men haue so there is a naturall sorrow arising from naturall causes If we haue the spirituall godly sorrow it will worke in vs a great care and desire of the saluation of our brethren 〈◊〉 oecol●m●●omment 〈…〉 cap. As godly sorrow causeth in vs repentance neuer to bee repented off 2 Cor. 7 10. so godly sorrow conceiued for the sins of others will bring foorth an earnest longing in vs to bring them to repentance 8. If the Lord delight in vs then he will bring vs into this Land and giue it vs a Land which floweth with milke and hony 9. Onely rebell not ye against the Lord neither feare ye the people of the Land for they are bread for vs their defence is departed from them and the Lord is with vs feare them not Of the interpretation of these words wee haue spoken in the former verses They containe an effectuall exhortation able to stoppe the mouthes of the seditious spies and to perswade the people to proceed building themselues vpon the blessed experience of the loue of God toward them and of his power sufficient to saue them and ready to stand for thē and touching their enemies they should bee assured they could not preuaile because God is not among them he had laid them open to iudgement The Doctrine Doctrine God is a shield to his but taketh no care nor charge of his enemies God is a shield and defence for all that are his but as for his enemies he taketh no care nor charge of them he leaueth them to themselues Prou. 30 5. Exod. 15 2 and 29 45 46. Iudg. 2 14. Psal 3 3 and 18 2. The reasons God is the Captaine of his Reason 1 host to fight his owne battels against all the enemies of the Church 2 Chro. 13 12. Iosh 5 14. Secondly sinne maketh naked and bare of Reason 2 Gods protection and defence Exod. 32 25. when the people had committed idolatry Moses saw that they were naked for Aaron had made thē naked vnto their shame among their enemies Thirdly the enemies of God haue forsaken Reason 3 him and therefore hee will not be with them because they will not be with him it is a iust thing that hee should forsake them that haue forsaken him and that he should not be on their side who are not on his They that will not be his people he will not be their God Hos 3 3 1 9. From hence it may be obiected Obiect Is not God saide to be euery where Esay 66 1. Answer Answer He is touching his essence but not in his effectuall working by his Spirit to saue and deliuer Thus he is onely with the godly Hence it is that in the end of this chap. verse 42. the Lord said to the rebellious Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you that ye bee not smitten before your enemies He was not among these to fight for them and to saue them to defend and deliuer them by his power great might otherwise by his essence and according to his nature he was euen among them as he is also euery where Thus we see how God is said to be neere and how to be farre off How God is said to bee neere how farre off For while he offereth grace by the ministery of his word and causeth it to bee preached vnto vs he is neere vnto vs Esay 55 6. Call vpon him while he is neere to wit while his arme is stretched out to receiue vs and his mercy is offered to saue vs. Thus God may be saide to be in one place and in one person more then in another yea in one place and person not in another and he is said sometimes to come and sometimes to go away notwithstanding he be euery where essentially and there be no mutation of place or shadow of change with him When he beginneth to worke by his holy Spirit How God may be saide to come to a people faith repentance and sanctification in the hearts of his children he may be said to come vnto them as Iohn 15 22. Reuel 3 20. And when he preached by Noah to the old world Christ is said by his diuine Spirit to come among that people 1 Pet. 3 19. He went and preached vnto the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient c. So likewise his absence or departure is the remouing of the effects of his presence to wit his grace and fauour Vse 1 From hence arise●● comfort to all the godly they are safe and 〈◊〉 vnder the wings of God he is a buckler round about he is their castle and their fortresse whereupon
what not shall all be barred therefore from the heauenly Manna which is sweeter then the hony and the hony comb more to be desired then great heapes of riches which is much more profitable then is the finding of great spoiles The Scripture is a notable part of our spirituall armour Ephes 6 17. able to offend and to wound our enemy If a Captaine should go into the field with his souldiers and suffer them to carry with them no weapons but such as should serue to defend their owne bodies and forbid them such armour as should any way hurt their enemies if hee should permit them the shield but not the sword or allow them a Corslet but not the speare would he not bee thought and that iustly and worthily to betray thē into the enemies hand But thus it is with the Popish captains that must or at least will be accounted the onely masters of Israel they allow to the people after a sort the girdle of truth the brest plate of righteousnesse the shield of faith and the rest to defend themselues but touching the sword The two edged sword of the word Heb. 4 12 wherewith Christ our Sauiour resisted and we after his example must resist the deuill Matth. 4 4. they forbid them to gird that about their loynes as if it were like Saules armour 1 Sam. 17 39. which Dauid could not go withall because he had not proued it whereas indeede it is like Dauids sling the stone which he slang that smote the Philistine in the forehead and caused him to fall vpon his face to the earth verse 49. and therefore what doe they but treacherously betray the people of God and leade them naked into the field to be vtterly spoiled and so to fall before their enemies Secondly it confuteth those amongst our selues that say what neede so much teaching and preaching There are some that thinke themselues to bee wise men much wiser then their fellowes that sticke not to speake thus but this their wisedome is no better then foolishnes with God 1 Cor. 1.23 The preaching of the crosse I confesse is accounted no better then foolishnes but it is to them that perish whereas to them that are saued it is the power of God It is accounted a state-policie now adayes to defend litle preaching and lesse hearing But ignorance can vphold no kingdom True religion is the stay and pillar of a State Religion and the knowledge of it is the pillar and stay of a State and Common-wealth the want of it is the cause of tumults rebellions insurrections and seditions What was the cause of the rebellion in the North in the dayes of our late Soueraign of blessed memory was it any other then want of knowledge and of Preachers to plant knowledge in the hearts of the people but blessed be God they haue since bene better stored and that hath broght better quietnesse in those parts And what is the cause of the often risings rebellions and treasons in the kingdome of Ireland at this day but because they remain either Atheists or Popish or sottish wanting the meanes of knowledge to instruct and informe them better True Religion is a bulwarke and a Castle of defence to any kingdome the very chariots and horsemen of Israel 2 King 2.12 and godlinesse hath the promises of this life and of the life to come 1 Tim. 4 8. Wherefore they are prophane speeches of ignorant people or of idle teachers going about to maintain their ignorance and idlenesse who think that a sermon in a quarter is sufficient either for the Minister to preach or the people to heare If you marke or would examine what the people are that liue vnder such and for the most part you shall see they know nothing But the Minister must preach in season and out of season the duller the scholler is he should haue his lesson the more often repeated Such for the most part are the people slow in hearing dull in conceiuing weake in remembring bearing away what they haue heard Some there are who not onely are ignorant but defend their ignorance and thinke men neede not haue any knowledge in the Scriptures nor trouble themselues any way about it These doe imagine that it belongeth onely to the Ministers and other lerned men to know the Scriptures And it is fit hee should haue more knowledge then a priuate man because hee is appointed of God to teach the people but this exempteth not the people from it For take this as a certaine principle that the poorest simplest person must haue as much knowledge for matters of saluation as the Minister hath or els he shall neuer be saued Vse 3 Lastly let all men know men and women children and seruants that in their seueral places they are bound to exercise themselues in the Scriptures and daily to meditate in them that so thereby they may come to knowledg for without knowledge in the word it is vnpossible for any to bee saued The way for a man to get his liuing by his trade is not to exercise himselfe in it once in a weeke or to imploy himselfe to it once in a quarter but hee must vse it dayly and diligently or else he shall neuer liue by it or thriue in it So may I say in this case a man that hath a desire to be saued and to liue heereafter in a better life it is not sufficient for him to reade the Scriptures and to meditate in them now and then or when he hath nothing else to doe and to keepe himselfe from idlenesse but hee must obserue a constant and continual course in the searching and reading of them that by them he may come to knowledge by knowledge to faith by faith to obedience and by obedience to saluation Ignorance shall excuse no man at the day of iudgement He that knoweth not his Masters will shall be beaten Luke 12 48. Hosea 4 1 3. If we thinke to pleade for our selues and to alledge in our defence that we followed our callings to erne our liuings to maintaine our families it shal not serue our turnes this will not bee taken for currant payment Our particular and our generall calling agree well together God hath not ioyned them in euery man Our particular calling is to follow our businesse our generall calling is to know the Scriptures the one doth not abrogate the other inasmuch as God hath commanded them both what God hath coupled together no man shall put asunder Math. 19 6. CHAP. XVI 1 NOw Korah the sonne of Izhar the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Leui and Dathan and Abiram the sonnes of Eliah and On the sonne of Peleth sonnes of Reuben took men 2 And they rose vp before Moses with certaine of the children of Israel 250. Princes of the assembly famous in the Congregation men of renowne 3 And they gathered themselues together against Moses and against Aaron and said vnto them Ye take too much
rashly and rigorously censure others for falling into sin For seeing we haue all our frailties and infirmities and are not able to keepe our selues wholly from euil we are not headily to iudg of others lest thereby we hasten the greater condemnation vpon our selues This the Apostle Iames vrgeth Chap. 3.1 2. My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater iudgement for in many things we sinne all Let vs therefore consider our selues before we cast our eyes vpon other men for they are the most sharpe and seuere Iudges that forget their owne infirmities As we would bee dealt withall in meekenesse so must we deale with our brethren with all gentlenesse For howsoeuer they haue sinned nothing hath befallen them but that which is incident to the nature of man we may be ouertaken with the same sinne or with the like sinne or with a greater sinne The Apostle saith Brethren if a man be suddenly taken in any offence Gal. 6.1 ye which are spirituall restore such one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted There cannot be a more effectuall meanes to draw vs to deale mildly and mercifully with our brethren then the consideration of our selues There is no man among vs that dealeth truely with his own heart and entreth into the meditation of his owne frailty with his owne soule but he hath daily experience in himselfe how hardly sinne is subdued and mastered of vs how many sighes and gronings it requireth how many teares and prayers it costeth vs What striuing and strugling wee haue with it to keepe it vnder What battels and combats we haue with the flesh that lusteth against the spirit And yet notwithstanding our continuall watching wrastling labouring endeuouring and resisting it oftentimes breaketh from vs so that the knowledge of our owne weaknesse must teach vs to deale with all meekenesse and moderation with our brethren Verse 11. Moses smote that rocke and much water gushed out We haue heard before the people complaining and Moses praying now we shall see God helping and releeuing them notwithstanding their rebellion and vnthankfulnesse The Lord commanded Moses and Aaron to speake vnto the rocke without life without sense without reason to conuince those rebels ●y 1 2. and to shew that there was more vnderstanding in the dumbe and deafe creatures then in this company of conspirators For now the promise of God was performed aboue all naturall meanes True it is they were vnworthy of any mercy they deserued to perish in their thirst through want of water notwithstanding at the striking of the rocke with the rod he gaue vnto them their hearts desire This was the Lords doing it is maruellous in our eyes ● 10.3 4 This rocke was a figure of Christ as the Apostle teacheth Besides the striking of the rocke was a signe vnto them of the gushing out of the waters ●dg 14.14 When Samson propounded this as a darke riddle Out of the eater came meate and out of the strong came sweetnesse It was resolued thus What is sweeter then the hony and what is stronger then the Lyon But much more may we propound this miraculous worke of God Out of the hard rocke came softnesse out of the dry came moysture and out of the strong came weakenesse For what is harder dryer and stronger then the rock and what is softer and weaker then the water according to the common prouerbe As weake as water And yet the soft and moyst waters issued out of the dry and hard rocke suddenly aboundantly miraculously at the commandement of God This teacheth vs this doctrine ●trine 〈…〉 appoint 〈◊〉 and at al●owance that we liue by Gods appointment and in feeding and sustaining vs he is not tyed to outward ordinary meanes Whensoeuer we want meat drinke apparell and the necessary helpes of this present life God is able to prouide them and to nourish vs without naturall meanes when it pleaseth him This Moses teacheth at large Deut. 8.3 1. Hee humbled thee and made thee hungry and fed thee with Manna which thou knowest not neither did thy fathers know it that he might teach thee that man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth a man liue thy rayment waxed not olde vpon thee neither did thy foot swell these 40. yeres So we see he fed Eliah flying from Iezebel 1 King 19.8 who when he had eate and drunke he walked in the strength of that meat forty dayes and fortie nights vnto Horeb the mount of God The like we see in Moses when hee was in the mount with God Matth. 4.2 and the like we see in Christ our Sauiour when hee was in the wildernesse tempted of the diuell So then whatsoeuer the decree determination of God is whereby wee shall liue whether it bee by meanes or without meanes whether by wayes ordinary or extraordinary the same shall bee effectuall to mans preseruation The reasons follow First the infinite power Reason 1 of God which maketh weak things strong and things of no value that are despised to effect great things He is able to do and deale as he will His souldiers were flyes and lice against the Egyptians Exod. 8.24 1 Sam. 6.5 his armies were mice against the Philistims By such meanes he is able to worke his will to saue his people and to destroy his enemies This reason is vrged and pressed oftentimes as Gen. 18.14 1 Sam. 14.6 Zach. 8.6 Secondly hereby his honour and glory is Reason 2 better set foorth that no flesh should reioyce and trust in it selfe but in God Therefore he often worketh aboue reason and beyond nature that al the world may giue glory to him and magnifie his great Name This appeareth in the prayer of Hezekiah who desired the presence of God to be with thē that he might be glorified in their deliuerance 2 King 19.19 O Lord our God I beseech thee saue thou vs out of his hand that all the kingdomes of the earth may know that thou O Lord art onely God The vses follow First this teacheth vs in Vse 1 all wants and necessities to depend vpon God and neuer to vse vnlawfull meanes to come out of trouble and so sinne against God If God send the sword or famine or other iudgment to walke through the land as hee iustly may doe for our transgressions and rebellions we must learne contentation and patience in pouerty in sickenesse in misery and not to be swallowed vp with excessiue sorrow Our life standeth in the word and will of God who can manifest his power as wel without means as with meanes in our preseruation and therefore let vs not despaire or flie from him to any creature for releefe and succour 1 King 17.14 He can feed as well without bread as with bread who encreased the oyle in the poore widowes cruse and the handfull of meale in the
Son of God was smitten for the vnnaturall the onely begotten for the adopted the beloued for the enemy greater loue then this could no man shew then to die for his enemies But God setteth out his loue toward vs Rom. 5 8. seeing that while we were yet sinners Vse 1 Christ dyed for vs. The vses follow First we may conclude from hence that no creature shal be able to hurt his people If he haue takē them into his protection loued them with an euerlasting loue who shall by the hatred of thē procure their harme If he be on our side who shall be against vs If he be our friend who shall shew himselfe our enemy What seruant feareth the face of his fellow seruant that hath the good wil of his master Or what mā feareth the hatred of any subiect that hath the loue of his Prince So then the consideration of Gods loue toward vs assureth vs of our blessed condition and of our safety defence from all dangers that may surprize vs. Whosoeuer dwelleth in the secret of the most High Psal 91 1 2 3. shal abide in the shadow of the Almighty hee will deliuer him from the snare of the hunter and from the noisome pestilence This the Prophet concludes Psal 36.10 11. Extend thy louing kindnesse vnto them that know thee and thy righteousnesse vnto them that are vpright in heart Let not the foote of pride come against me and let not the hand of the wicked moue me Let vs labor to haue a true feeling of the loue of God shed in our hearts by the holy Ghost then will he couer vs vnder his wings and we shall be sure vnder his feathers The cause why we feare him that can kill the body is because we are not rooted grounded in the loue of God Vse 2 Secondly hereby we receiue another comfort to our faith for as the wicked shall not hurt vs so we are assured to haue our prayers heard granted Why because God loueth vs as his deare children Comes not that child with boldnesse vnto his father that loueth him in al his need So if once we haue this perswasion setled in vs that God will shew himselfe gracious vnto vs we may aske in faith and not wauer but be assured of the promise of God that he will giue to them that aske and open the gate of mercy to them that knocke This Christ our Sauiour affirmeth Verily verily Iohn 16 23 24 27. I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name he will giue it you Aske and yee shall receiue that your ioy may be full for the Father himselfe loueth you because ye haue loued me and haue beleeued that I came from God What greater comfort can there be then this that God will heare our prayers that we may vnlade al our cares and troubles into his bosome There cannot bee a greater daunting and dismaying vnto any then when God will not respect and regard them though they poure out many praiers yet he wil not heare them as he threateneth those that will not heare his voice speking and crying vnto them in the ministery of his word They shall cry and not be heard Prou. 1 28. Zach. 7 13. So of all comforts that can befall vs in this life this is one of the greatest which cannot be taken from vs though our mouthes should be stopped yet we may safely lift vp our hearts and soules vnto the Lord from whence our helpe cometh Thirdly it is our duty to loue one another Vse 3 as euery one of vs hath a blessed experience of Gods mercy fauour toward vs let vs deale in like measure toward our brethren This the Apostle Iohn exhorteth vnto 1 Ioh 4 1● Heerein is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes Beloued if God so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Iohn 13 3● and 15.12 for heereby shall all men know that we are his Disciples if we loue one another This is my Commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued you greater loue then this hath no man when any man bestoweth his life for his friends Great was the loue of God toward vs as appeareth by many circumstances considerations For he loued vs first not we him 1 Iohn 4 ● Iohn 15 1● as Christ chose his Disciples not they him Heereby God cōmendeth setteth foorth his loue toward vs that he loued vs first and not we him Againe he loued vs when we were not whē we had not our birth or being he chose vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe before the foundations of the world as Rom. 9. Rom. 5 12 Before the children were borne and when they had done neither good nor euill it was said Iacob haue I loued Thirdly he loued vs when we were enemies vnto him he was found of vs when we sought not after him nay when we fled from him and rebelled against him as Ro. 5 6. 10. Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly so as God setteth out his loue toward vs seeing that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. Fourthly he loued vs frankly and freely without any merits or desarts of our owne Ferus An● 1 Iohn 4. but of his owne meere grace and fauour onely Our saluation is wholly of grace We are elected according to the good pleasure of his will Ephes 1 ● Wee are called with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his owne purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1 9. Wee are iustified freely by his grace without the works of the Law Rom. 3 24 28. We haue saluation of grace not of our selues It is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Eph. 2 8 9. Lastly the loue of God is so great that he spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to the death That whosoeuer beleeued in him should not perish ●●hn 3 16. but haue euerlasting life If then the loue of God bee such and so great to his seruants that he loued them first freely when they were not when they were his enemies spared not his well-beloued Sonne for them how great should our christian loue be one to another to promote the good one of another and to releeue the necessities one of another We know the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ that he being rich Cor. 8 9. for our sakes became poore that we thorough his pouerty might be made rich Whosoeuer therefore hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion frō him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Wherefore let vs not loue in word neither in tongue onely as Caine which was of that euill one and slew his brother Iohn 3 17 〈◊〉 19. but in deed and
King of Bashan Now let vs come to the first point which is the encounter with the Canaanites in these words 1 And Harad a Canaanitish King dwelling toward the South heard tell that Israel was come by the way of the Spies then fought he against Israel and tooke of them a multitude of prisoners 2 So Israel vowed a vow vnto the Lord and said If thou wilt surely deliuer this people into mine hand then will I vtterly destroy their Cities 3 And the Lord heard the voice of Israel deliuered them the Canaanites and they vtterly destroyed them their Cities and called the name of that place Hormah What Canaanitish King this was whereof Moses maketh mention in this place is vncertaine Some thinke it to be the king of the Amalekites which Moses pointeth out but this carieth no shew or semblance of truth For first the Amalekites long since endeuoured to stop the passage and proceeding of the children of Israel and were destroyed with a great destruction and therefore it is not likely that now they would come out againe to make a new on-set especially seeing the Israelites inuaded not their Land Besides the Amalekites cannot be accounted in the number of the Canaanites Gen. 36 12. inasmuch as they descended not of Canaan but of Esau and so were alied to the Israelites being of the race of Shem. Rather we are here to vnderstand some King of the Amorites who because they came of one common stocke as Moses teacheth Gen. 10 15 16 ate comprehended vnder the Canaanites But to come to the matter it selfe here we see how the Israelites encounter with Harad occasion of the battaile beeing offered by himselfe For when by his espials and scouts sent abroad he had intelligence that Israel approched he leuied an hoast armed them and issued forth against them of his owne accord not chalenged not prouoked not iniuried by the Israelites but himselfe chalenging and prouoking rusheth forward to the destruction of his person and the confusion of his army The successe of this encounter was double First the Canaanites had the vpper hand slew some of the Israelites and tooke many prisoners led them away captiues so that they turned their backes and were not able to stand before their enemies The people of God hauing had this losse taken the foyle do not fret against God nor despaire of his helpe but after this fresh disaster discomfit they reconcile thēselues to God they flie to him by prayer they humble themselues as Ioshua did when the mē of Ai put them to flight Iosh 7 4 8. saying O Lord what shall wee say when Israel turne their backes before their enemies They vow vnto God to turne nothing of this Kings Country to their owne vse and profite but consecrate and sanctifie all to God destroying their enemies and razing their Cities if hee would grant them victory and deliuer the Canaanites into their hands in whom now was equall their proud insolency and good successe through the former battaile No doubt the Israelites had sinned before against God and not repented of their sinne they prouoked him by their security glorying in their strength trusting in their multitude and puffed vp with the victories which God had giuen them who had fought their battels gone in and out with their armies and couered their heads in the day of slaughter thus lying in their sinnes nothing can prosper God curseth the works of their hands and letteth them see their owne weaknesse and that they should not be able to preuaile against any of their enemies vnlesse God did fight for them according to that in the 127. Psal v. 1 2. Except the Lord keepe the City the keeper watcheth in vaine it is in vaine for you to rise early and to sit downe late and eate the bread of sorrow but he will surely giue rest to his beloued So long as they trusted in their owne strength and number looked not for victory as a blessing from God they could not stand but when they had repented and craued protection from him that is the strength of Israel they ioyn againe their power vnite their forces order their battails resist their enemies preuaile and put them all to flight Rom. 8 38. For if God bee with vs who shall bee against vs But if he be against vs who shall be with vs or who shall pleade for vs It is not the wisedome of the Leaders nor the vertue of the souldiers nor the counsell of the wise nor the planting of munition can any whit preuaile vntill we be reconciled vnto God and God vnto vs. Lastly the Israelites being masters of the field hauing the Cities and persons standing at their mercy they performe the solemne promise and vow made to the God of heauen not to halues or in part as Saul did 1 Sam. 1● who spared the better sheepe and the fat beasts but they vtterly destroyed their enemies their cities in memoriall of the great goodnes of God hearing them in their prayers and respecting them in their miseries they call the name of y place Hormah that is destruction and confusion This is the principall drift of this diuision Now let vs consider the doctrines that directly arise from this place that our faith may be strengthened our obedience encreased And Harad a Canaanitish King c. We see here how the Canaanites appointed to destruction and to be rooted out enemies to the people of God such as had now filled vp the measure of their sins yet here preuaile against Israel kill some of them and take others prisoners This teacheth vs this Doctrine that oftentimes Doctrine the enemies of the Church preuaile ouer them Enemie●● tentines a● suffered 〈◊〉 preuaile ● the Churc● I say the enemies of God and of his people who in the secret counsell and purpose of God are vowed to destruction doe insult and triumph ouer the Church and particular parts thereof God correcting the rebellion of his children by them This truth God sealed vp in the beginning by the blood of Abel Caine spake friendly Gen. 4 8 But rose vp desperately against him and slew his brother because his owne works were euill his brothers good So iust Lot vexed with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked for he being righteous 2 Peter 2 ● and dwelling among them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous soule from day to day with their vnlawfull deeds was notwithstanding carried away captiue by a proud and insolent enemy Genesis 14 Besides the book of Iudges serueth vs as a plentifull storehouse to teach this truth where we see that whē the people of God did wickedly in the sight of the Lord serued Baalim and forsooke the Lord God of their fathers which brought them out of the Land of Egypt the wrath of the Lord waxed hot against them he deliuered them into the hands of spoilers he sold them into the hands of their enemies
are of great force the least the meanest the smallest of Gods creatures being sent of God do mightily preuaile to the aduancement of his owne glory to the destruction of all his enemies This is plentifully taught in the history of the plagues of Egypt God did not send out his Angels against them nor leauy an hoast of horse-men and foote-men but he sent an army of lice of frogs of flies and these were confessed to be the finger of God Exod. 8 6 16 19 24 and were able to daunt and bring downe all the pride presumption of the Egyptians So when God would plague the Philistims who had destroyed his people taken the Arke of God and blessed their Idols for the victory Sam. 6 5. he sent a multitude of Mice that destroyed their Land to the ende they might learne to giue glory vnto the God of Israel and acknowledge the plague to proceed from him Thus likewise when the Assyrians brought into the Cities of Israel worshipped not God aright but made them molten Images and serued all the hoast of heauen 2 King 17 25 he sent Lyons among them which slew them When Herod had stretched out his hand to vexe certaine of the Church Acts 12 1 2.23 had killed Iames and put Peter in prison intending after the Passeouer to bring him forth to the people the Angell of the Lord smote him because he gaue not glory vnto God so that he was eaten of wormes and gaue vp the ghost The Scripture is full of such examples how God destroyed the olde world with waters Gen. 7 41 Sisera and his army with the Riuer Kishon that ancient Riuer Iudg. 5 21. the Riuer Kison when the Stars fought in order against Sisera Albeit we say in a common Proue●be As weake as water yet it was strong enough and it is still strong enough as wee see by experience in such floods and inundations as pleaseth God to send when he armeth it against his enemies whereby hee taketh away the fruites of the earth wasteth the increase of our cartell casteth downe our houses and dwelling places and sweepeth away as with a beesome the Inhabitants of the earth Gen. 19 24. Sodome and Gomorrha were consumed with fire and brimstone from heauen All these things as examples of Gods iudgments teach vs that he need not march against vs in his owne person or set vpon vs with millions of his Angels or assault vs with an hoast of men he can send out the smallest and silliest of his creatures to our destruction and make the least and lowest of them accomplish the greatest works so often as it pleaseth him This appeareth by sundry reasons First all Reason 1 power is of God who as he saueth with many or with few so he destroyeth with many or with few 1 Sam. 14 6 17 47. with the strong or with the weake with reasonable creatures or vnreasonable with liuing things or wanting life The meanest and basest haue power enough the most contemptible haue force and might enough to hurt to punish and to destroy when God vseth their seruice neither can any flesh resist them with all their craft and cunning they are able to cast downe our high lookes when we swell in pride against him So then whatsoeuer the meanes are the power of then is of God Ezek. 5 16. When weake man taketh vp any weapon into his hands though without sense life whē he shooteth an arrow draweth a sword throweth a dart or pusheth with the Pike we see oftentimes great and deadly effects to follow How much more whē the strong God armeth himselfe with any of his creatures shall hee be able to ouerthrow his enemies and to bring strange things to passe Secondly it pleaseth God to imploy and Reason 2 set on worke contemptible and base things to vse foolish things to confound the wise to chuse weake things of the world to ouerturne mighty things yea 1 Cor 1.27 vile things of ●he world and things which are despised hath God chosen things which are not to bring to nought things that are to daunt pride by weaknesse and glory by shame and honour by dishonour that no flesh should reioyce an his presence It more fretteth and galleth an high minde to be crossed and countermanded by meane things then by things of reckoning and account Wee see this in the example of Abimelech Iudg. 9 54. who being wounded by a woman besought his seruant to slay him rather then it should be said that a woman had slain him It had bene an easie thing with the Lord whē in the Land of Egypt he turned the dust of the earth into Lice to haue turned it into Lyons and Beares into Wolues Tygers of strange greatnesse and cruell fiercenesse but it pleased him rather to deale in this manner the more to pull downe the mighty and to scatter the proud in the imaginations of their heart Thirdly he is the Maker and Creator of all Reason 3 things so that they are not only his creatures and the workmanship of his hands but his seruants and souldiers to serue him fight his battels against his aduersaries such as all vngodly persons are he is the Generall of this army and therefore is called The Lord of hosts Esay 1 9 hauing these as his serieants and attendants to do his will When he saith to his army goe it goeth or come it cometh or do this by and by it doth it The vses remaine to be considered From Vse 1 hence we learne that the power of God is absolute and infinite without limit or restraint who is able by an army of meane creatures to put vs to foyle flight whatsoeuer our might and manhood be we boast of What hath not God men and Angels to command Yes yes he hath them all at his pleasure to bee imploied But he needeth not to arme the sonnes of men or troopes of Angels if he do but hisse or whistle for any of his creatures they come foorth with store strength out of their places against vs as it were in battaile aray This the Prophet Ioel teacheth chap. 1 verses 3 4 19 20. So then we must learne to acknowledge the great power of God who gouerneth all things in heauen and earth to work his will For as the Prophet saith Psal 94 9. Hee that made the eye shall not he see or the eare shall not he heare So may we in like manner reason He that giueth power shall not he haue power He that putteth strength into his creatures shall not he be armed with strength himselfe Now wee haue already declared that what force and might soeuer is in any of his creatures it is a sparke of his flame it is an arme of his sea it is a gift of his treasures therefore we are bound to acknowledge and confesse to beleeue and to rest in his power that doth terrible things for his owne Names sake Vse 2
as his Lord if they haue called the Master of the house Belzebub how much more them of his houshold Vse 1 Now let vs see what vses may be gathered from hence First we may assure our selues that it is a lamentable and wofull condition to liue and dwell among such mallitious mischieuous enemies They grin and grinde their teeth at vs like Dogs they gape at vs with their mouthes like the ramping and roaring Lyon they push at vs with their heads like the fat Bulles of Bashan they run at vs with their hornes like the Vnicorne they whet their tuskes at vs like the wilde Boare out of the wood they seeke to eate vs vp like the sauage beasts of the Field and Forrest Would we not take it to bee a fearefull condition to be carried into a great and terrible Wildernesse and to be compassed about with Dragons Tygers Beares and other deuouring beasts ready to eate vs in peeces while there is none to helpe But man vnto man is many times al these especially the vnfaithful man to the faithfull ●or what fellowship is there between the seed of the woman ● Cor 6 14. and the seed of the serpent Wh●t communion betweene light and darknesse and what concord betweene Christ and Belial This the Prophet acknowledged felt by experience in his owne person 〈◊〉 20 5 6 7. Wo is me that I remained in Meshech dwel in the tents of Kedar my soule hath too long dwelt with him that hateth peace I seeke peace and when I speak therof they are bent to warre For as the societie of the faithfull is good and comely like the precious oyntment vpon the head of Aaron and as the dew falling vpon the mountaines of Hermon and Sion because they take sweet counsell together and go vnto the house of God as companions so the accompanying conuersing with euill persons is irkesome and tedious vnto the godly as if they liued with Wolues and wilde beasts in the Wildernesse True it is the people of God hate and abhor the sinnes of the vngodly but yet loue their persons as the Physitian hateth the disease but loueth the person of his Patient But the vngodly hate not onely the infirmities of the faithfull but their persons euen to the death as the dung of the earth and the off-scouring of all things and therefore we must needes account it a wofull condition full of greefe anguish and vexation of Spirit to liue among them This life is as a continuall death Secondly seeing this is the entertainment that we must looke for and shall finde in the Vse 2 world to bee hated and harrowed by the vngodly it standeth vs vpon to liue in vnity and to loue one another as the children of the Father and the disciples of Christ When enemies dayly increase and ioyne their forces together in a common band an vnited league it standeth all those vpon that are of the communion of Saints that are come vnto Mount Sion to the City of the liuing God Heb. 12 ●● 23 and to the assembly and congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen to vnite combine themselues together as one man The aduersaries of the Church are many their power is mighty their malice is vnsatiable against the little flock of Christ it is time therfore for vs to ioyn our selues against the common aduersary Who can be ignorant how the popish crew associate themselues together seeking to subuert the state and to ouerthrow religion established among vs being resolued by murdrous Masse-Priests and set on fire of hel Wee haue also many hollow-hearted hypocrites damnable Atheists filthy Libertines sundry loose liuers that can abide none to make any sincere profession of godlinesse The poor sheepe and innocent Lambes of Christ amidst so many subtle Foxes and cruell Wolues had neede loue one another beeing hated of the world and seeke the good one of another being maligned of the wicked Heereunto Christ exhorteth in sundry places as Ioh. 13. A new commandement I giue vnto you that ye loue one another Iohn 13 3● 35 16 12 1● 13. 1 Iohn 3 1● as I haue loued you that ye also loue one another By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye haue loue one to another And in the 16. Chapter hee mooueth the Disciples to loue one another seeing they are hated of the world as their Mayster was This therefore is the comfort of a true Christian that albeit he be hated of the vngodly yet there is a true communion among the beleeuers of all gifts and graces granted vnto them being ready to teach the ignorant to gather home them that go astray to binde vp the broken-hearted to comfort the weake to conuince the deceiued to admonish the vnruly to stirre vp them that are dull to encourage all in well-doing And touching the bodies of our brethren those that haue this worlds good must shew themselues willing to help the poore to feed the hungry to cloathe the naked to raise vp the distressed to visite the sicke and to do good to all but especially to them that are of the houshold of faith Gal. 6 10. Lastly seeing hatred lodgeth in the heart Vse 3 of a wicked man toward the faithfull it is our duty to pray to God to be deliuered from vnreasonable and euill men Seeing all haue not faith ●ess 3 2 3 and that liuing among them wee may be established and kept blamelesse and pure from euill and may shine as lights in the midst of a crooked naughty Nation ● 2 15. holding foorth the word of life This the Prophet Dauid declareth Psalm 35 12 13 15 16.17 Thus doth God weane vs from the loue and liking of this world that we should looke and long after his kingdom where is fulnes of ioy for euermore Verses 25 26. And Israel tooke all those Citties therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages thereof These Cities taken by the Israelites did sometimes belong to the Moabites as appeareth Iudg. 11. But Sihon had taken them from Veheb the former King of the Moabites So thē in these words we haue the preuenting of an Obiection 〈◊〉 Num. ● 21. as Lyra well obserueth vpon this place where it is saide that Israel dwelt in Heshbon in the Villages thereof which properly belonged to the Land of Moab as part and parcell thereof being now rent and torne in peeces as a body that had lost many limbes and members Some man therefore might aske the question how came the Israelites to possesse that Land seeing they were expresly restrained and forbidden of God to fight against the Moabites they were tolde that they should haue no part nor portion of their Land giuen vnto them Deut. 2 9. Thou shalt not vexe Moab neither prouoke them to battell for I will not giue thee of their Land for a
which we should account as the life of our liues Seeing therefore on the one side Warre is the iust wages of great sins and on the other side peace bringeth with it many blessings of all sorts spirituall and temporall we conclude that many are the miseries of warre The vses are in the next place to be thought vpon and application ●o be made of this Doctrine Vse 1 First let vs pray earnestly to God and call vpon him faithfully to keep from vs both warres and the rumors of wars and continue peace in our borders with the free publike vse of the Gospel to vs and to our posterities that there may not be the voice of lamentation lifted vp in our streetes weeping mourning and great howling Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted because they were not Mat. 2 18. Ier. 31 15. We liue in a plentifull and well-peopled Land no Nation vnder heauen is more populous This is a blessing of God as Moses declareth Leuit. 26 9. Likewise Prouerbs 14 28 Yet many times we repine at his mercie we thinke the Land will be too little for vs and that we shall not be able to liue one for another Hee can make roome enough for vs if he once send the bright weapons of warre and the glistering sword of the bloody enemy among vs. He can make fewer of vs and turne our Land into bryars thornes and make it a place of Salt-pits and Nettles Then shall a man nourish a yong Cow and two Sheepe Esay 7 21 22. and 4 1. and for the abundance of Milke that they shall giue he shall eate Butter The number of men shall then be so small tha● a few beasts shall bee sufficient to nourish the remnant abundantly Then shall seuen women take hold of one man saying We will eate our owne bread and will weare our owne garments onely let vs bee called by thy name and take away our reproch Let vs therefore in this great encrease of the land and store of people acknowledge his mercy let vs reioyce in the society one of another and pray that wee taste not the bitternesse of war that there be no slaying with the sword no shedding of blood no carrying into captiuity This the Prophet teacheth Ps 144 desiring God to continue his benefites toward his people the fruite of the wombe the filling of store-houses the encrease of sheepe the quietnesse of peace Psal 144 12 13 14 15. That our sonnes being as the plants growing vp in their youth and our daughters being as the corner stones may be the building of the temple that our corners may be full and our Oxen strong to labor that there be no inuasion nor going out nor no crying in our streets O blessed are the people that bee so yea blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. Where we see the Prophet prayeth and directeth vs to pray that there may be no taste of the sharpnesse and misery of warre nor we know the assaulting of our Citties nor going out to warfare that there may be no sorrow of heart no weeping of eyes no wringing of hands no shriking of voices among vs. Were it not a wofull and lamentable thing to see fire without mercy and without quenching consuming houses eating vp all things and sparing nothing How much more to see and heare and feele the affliction of warre when all things are in confusion and combustion For this is one great mischiefe and bitternes of warre that all things are holden to be lawfull and all men make themselues to bee lawlesse There is no regard of right or equity of shame or conscience when many times the souldiers are as hungry as wolues as cruell as Tygers as fierce as Lions as merciles as Bears robbed of their whelpes which spoyle in the euening and leaue not the bones vntill the morning Liberty is oppressed good men feare euill men expect knowing it is best fishing in troubled water if there be any place free from tumult at least there is none void of suspition and free from iealousie few then are to be trusted and none assured all things in confusion violence spoyling blood murthers outcrying and nothing else before our eyes but a lamentable face of all calamities extremities The Prophet Zachary describing the golden dayes of a peaceable life which should be giuen to the Israelites when they were returned from captiuity saith Zac. 8 4 5. There shall yet old men and old women dwell in the streets of Ierusalem and euery man with his staffe in his hand for verie age and the streets of the City shal be full of boyes girles playing in the streets therof Then is the mouth of the people filled with laughter and their tongue with ioy Psal 46 9. When the Lord maketh warres to cease vnto the end of the world he breaketh the bow and cutteth the speare burneth the Chariots with fire But in the time of war and in the day of battaile all things are turned topsie-turuý all things lye open to sacking and pillage to insolencie of souldiers to desire of reuenge and to most horrible accidents Then we are constrayned to see and lament the slaughter of men the rauishing of women the deflouring of virgins the spoyling of goods the robbing of houses the taking of prisoners the breaking of lawes the defacing of iustice the intermission of sowing the innouation of estates the subuersion of realmes the desolation of countries the violation of religion the destruction of Citties the effusion of blood the suffering of famine and sometimes the extreamity of eating children and alwayes the ouerthrowing of all order and honesty Who is able to recount rehearse the great horror and feare the sorow and mourning the weeping and lamentation the seditions tumults outrages villanies insurrections conspiracies calamities dangers difficulties and the miserable traine of infinit miseries and maladies that war bringeth with it No maruell therefore if Dauid preferred the pestilence before the sword 2 Sam. 24 14. desiring that hee might fall into the hands of the Lord because his mercies are great and not fall into the hands of man whose bowels of pitty are instruments of cruelty Let vs therefore pray earnestly and feruently vnto God that wee may not haue experience of these troubles nor endure the violence of this fire and intreat him to continue a gracious God to vs and to our posterities for euer This we see fruitfully and profitably practised by the people of Israel when the Lord for their idolatry threatned to deliuer them no more out of the handes of their enemies and bad them cry vnto the gods which they had chosen that they might saue them in the time of their tribulation they said vnto the Lord We haue sinned do thou vnto vs whatsoeuer please thee onely we pray thee to deliuer vs this day from our enemies Iudg. 10 10 11 12. Secondly let vs learne by the horror of the Vse 2
on the left hand we know not what the miserie of slauery and slaughter meaneth we do not behold our Citties besiedged our Countries wasted our Townes entrenched our walles b●tter●d our houses fired consumed blessed bee the great name of our most gracious God therefore for euermore Let vs then take heede that wee abuse not these mercies and good things of Almighty GOD lest hee take them away from vs in his fierce wrath and indignation O that there were in vs wise hearts to consider these things whilst we dwell safely in these our houses and habitations and before the enemie approacheth ne●e vnto vs and casteth a trench about vs. But if we prouoke God and make warre with him how can we haue peace with men how can we looke to liue in safetie any longer with our wiues and children This our Sauiour hath set downe and with ●eares taught the Iewes long before their destruction came vpon them For when he came neere and beheld the City he wept for it and passionately saide Luk. 19 41 42 43 44. O if thou haddest euen knowne at the least in this day those things which belong vnto thy peace But now are they hid from thine eies For the daies shall come vpon thee that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee and compasse thee round keepe thee in on euerie side and shall make thee euen with the ground and thy children which are in thee and they shall not leaue thee a stone vpon a stone because thou knowest not that season of thy visitation Let vs apply these things vnto our selues and if wee desire to liue peaceably with men let vs first seek to be at peace with God and if we would be reconciled to our brother let vs in the first place be reconciled to our God and then all things shall speake peace vnto vs. Verse 29. Woe be to thee Moab O people of Chemosh thou art vndone hee hath deliuered his sons which escaped and his daughters into captiuity to Sihon king of the Amorites Here the Poet rhetorically turneth his speech to the Moabites describing their foolish confidence in their dumbe Idolles Psal 115 4 5. Which are the worke of mens hands which haue eies and see not eares and heare not they haue a mouth and speake not noses and smell not hands touch not feet and walke not neither make they a sound with their throat they that make them are like vnto thē and so are all they that trust in them The Nations of the Gentiles had multitudes of gods and euery Nation his seuerall Idoll-go● As Chemosh was the idoll of the Moabites Baal of the Caldeans Ashteroth of the Sidonians Moloch of the Ammonites Rimmon of the Syrians Dagon of the Philistims These are false gods and had the godhead or diuine nature falsly ascribed vnto them who were not able to saue such as did worship them as the author of this song here declareth Hee hath deliuered his sons and daughters to captiuity and was not able to deliuer them out of the hands of Sihon king of the Amorites 1 King 18 26. For as the Israelites cried for fire to come from heauen from morning to noone O Baal heare vs so no doubt did the Moabites for deliuerāce from their enimies cal to their idol Chemosh O Chemosh heare vs but there was no voyce nor any to answer so that they fel into the hands of the Amorites and receiued no profit or benefit by their idoll seruice Heere then wee see how the idolatrous Moabites worshipping a false god and trusting in their great Idol are defeated and destroyed Hence we learne Doctrine Idolaters shal be confounded and destroyed That Idolaters lye open to iudgement The worshipping of Images howsoeuer it bee coloured with false reasons is the true cause of Gods iudgements We see heere how the Moabites were rooted out of theyr Townes and Cities for this sinne Hitherto come the threatnings of the Prophets against the Nations by Esay chap. 46 1 2. and Ier. 46 44 7 8. for their idolatry We see in Iudg. 2 11. when Israel committed idolatry began to cleaue to strange gods and forsook the Lord God of their fathers God sold them into the handes of their enemies so that they could no longer stand before them This was the destruction of Ieroboam the son of Nebat that made Israel to sinne and of Iehu who set vp idolatry after he had destroyed it This was the cause that the wrath of God brake in vpon the Israelites when they had erected the golden Calfe which sin was reuenged with a greeuous and horrible slaughter Heereunto also the Prophet hath relation Psal 106 34 35. They destroyed not the people as the Lord had commanded them but were mingled amongst the heathen and learned their workes and serued their Idols which were their ruine Thus we see how idolatry turneth to the destruction of the idolater The Reasons follow First God is the husband Reason 1 of his Church and can no more abide to haue his honour and worship communicated to any other then the husband any partner or fellow in his loue Prou. 6 35. ●ho cannot beare the sight of any ransome neither will hee consent though thou augment the gifts Idolatry therfore is spirituall whoredome and God is a iealous God of his honor and glory and will not suffer the same to be giuen to any other Esay 42 8. Exod. 20 5. This is notably declared and woorthily expressed by the Prophet Hosea where the idolatry of the Israelites is resembled to the adulterous and whorish woman that doateth vpon her louers that forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the couenant of her God Their mother saith the Lord by his Prophet hath played the Harlot she that conceiued them hath done shamefully c. As then God is the husband of his C●urch so our spirituall worship is as a certaine marriage of our soules consecrated vnto the Lord therfore all false and forged worship is spiritual whordome and adultery toward him To this purpose speaketh Hosea ch 2 19 20. I will marrie thee vnto me for euer yea I will marry thee vnto me in righteousnes and in iudgement c. Thus also the Prophet Ieremy speaketh ch 2 2. Thus saith the Lord I remember thee with the kindnesse of thy youth and the loue of thy Marriage when thou wentest after me in the wildernesse in a Land that was not sowne Secondly Idols are the workes of mens Reason 2 hands whether they bee of Siluer or Golde they are the worke of the Founder or whether they bee carued or grauen in stone or timber they are the hand of the workeman or whether they bee wrought in blew silke or purple Ieremy 10 9. All things are made by cunning men Heereupon it followeth that they that depend vpon them and seeke helpe of them doe seeke helpe of flesh and doe make stockes and stones their god and therefore they
when Rabshakeh with his bold and blasphemous mouth had ●ailed vpon the strength of Israel and had proudly threatened the King and his people that they should be compelled to eate their own dung and to drinke their owne water Be not afraid of the words which thou hast heard behold I will send a bl●st vpon him and he shall heare a noise returne to his owne Land and I will cause him to fall by the sword in his owne Land Esay 37 6 7. And afterward chap. 43.1 5 when the people of God were greeuously oppressed by their bitter and bloody enemies so that they were robbed spoyled snared thrust and throwne into Dungeons fettred in prison-houses and euery way euilly entreated he speaketh vnto them on this manner Thus saith the Lord that created thee O Iacob and he that formed thee O Israel feare not for I haue redeemed thee I haue called thee by name thou art mine feare not for I am with thee So Christ forewarning his Disciples what entertainment they should finde in the world Mat. 10 26 28 and how hardly they should be tryed as to be betrayed hated persecuted imprisoned scourged railed vpon and in the end brought to their end hee prepareth them to this duty and repeateth it oftentimes Feare them not And the Apostle Paul after he had earnestly instructed the Philippians to grow in all graces to leade their conuersation worthy the Gospel of Christ he remembreth thē of this point In nothing feare your aduersaries Phil. 1 18 Answerable to these precepts are the worthy practises of the faithfull Hereunto cometh the example of Moses Heb 11 Exod. 11 8. 27 when he led the people of Israel out of Egypt notwithstanding the threatenings and bloudy words of Pharaoh he feared not the fiercenesse of the King but endured a constant maintainer of the Church of God ceassed not to encourage the people aga●●●● their enemies whose hearts failed and q●●●led when they were pursued and ouertaken by the Egyptians Likewise the three seruants of God beeing threatned by that great Tyrant Nebuchadnezzor to be cast into the fiery Furnace were not daunted or feared by his high power fierce displeasure but answered him We are not carefull to answer thee in this matter Dan. 4 15. This appeareth at sundry times vpon sundry occasions in Dauid whē he waxeth bold and couragious in the Spirit saith I will not be afraid for ten thousand of the people that should beset me round about Psal 3 6. Reason 1 The reasons follow First God is with his people If he be with them shall we feare any to be against them If we haue a protection from the Prince shall we feare the face of the subiect If the Lyon fight for vs shal we feare the flye or the worme that are weak in strength This is the reason vrged by the Lord in the Prophet Feare not for I am with thee Esay 43 5. Now God is with vs by his power and prouidence If we consider these things that are in God as his generall speciall prouidence which guideth and ouer-ruleth all things for the glory of his Name and the benefit of his children the holy meditation hereof ought to remoue from vs all distracting and distrustfull feare When Christ had disswaded his Disciples from the feare of men he saith Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall to the ground without your Father Yea the haires of your head are numbred Math. 10 29 30. And indeed the cause why in trouble we faint and faile for feare of men whose breath is in their nostrils and whose malice is limited is because we distrust Gods promises and prouidence which is indeed a fearefull sinne Againe if we consider that God is with vs by his power which being endlesse infinite is able to redresse represse the greatest tyrant and tyrany in the world we shall finde nothing more auaileable to keepe vs from the excessiue feare of weake man seeing he can restraine them when it pleaseth him This the three seruants of God acknowledge in their danger Behold our God whom we serue is able to deliuer vs from the fiery Furnace and he will deliuer vs out of thine hand O King Dan. 3 13. Againe let vs haue our conuersation without Reason 2 feare in regard of the persecuters themselues and the power which they haue For consider the difference betweene that which God can do and that which man can do The most vile and cruell tyrant that breatheth out threatnings and slaughter against the Saints when he hath done his worst and raged to the vtmost when he hath disgorged al his malice and quenched his thirst in bloud can goe no further but to kill the body but God can goe further who hath the keyes of hell and death Nay these enemies cannot so much as kill the body or touch the skin with all their power without the will of God as our Sauiour speaketh to Pilate when he boasted of an absolute power in his owne hands to binde or loose to crucifie or to absolue Thou couldst haue no power at all against mee except it were giuen thee from aboue Iohn 19 10 11. This is that reason which Christ himselfe expresseth Mat. 10 28. Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell Thirdly the enemies shall be destroyed Reason 3 They fight against God they fight against his people therefore they cannot prosper True it is they may for a time preuaile and proceed in their euill enterprizes and God may for a season vse them as his Rod to try the faith of his children but when he hath vsed them as instruments to bring his iudgements to passe they shall preuaile no longer This consideration serued to encourage the people of Israel when Pharaohs hoast pressed vpon them and marched toward them Feare not stand still behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to you this day for the Egiptians which yee haue seene this day ye shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you therefore holde you your peace Exod. 14 13 14. The vses remaine to be stood vpon First this teacheth that the childe of God must be Vse 1 a man of valour and courage and as a mighty man of warre not to be daunted with any terrour to forsake his faith a good conscience but such an one as is able by the fortitude power of Christ to vndergo all tryals to ouer-stride al dangers to ouercome al enemies and to triumph ouer all things that oppose themselues against their peace So then the godly whose faith ouercommeth the world are not onely souldiers but valiant souldiers 1 Iohn 5 and victorious conquerors The Apostle hauing commended Moses that he forsooke Egypt feared not the fiercenesse of the King addeth this
should bee also in all Ministers of the Gospel though the power of man rise vp against them they must depend vpon him that is highest in power This christian courage appeareth to haue beene in the Apostles Acts 4.2.29 when they were persecuted imprisoned for preaching in Iesus Name the resurrection from the dead considering the multitude of enemies the assembling of the Rulers the corruption of Pilate the malice of Herod the cruelty of the Pharisies the rage of the Gentiles the tumult of the people they praied saying Now O Lord behold their threatnings and grant vnto thy seruants with all boldnesse to speake thy word And this generally should bee practised of all the godly that haue in mercy receiued to beleeue they must go forward in their holy faith and obedience and arme themselues against the tentation and feare of restraining their liberty of losing their goods of laying downe their life and when men persecute vs for imbracing the faith and professing of godlines we must remember Gods care ouer his seruants and his speciall prouidence ouer them that feare him with the most blessed end that shall certainly follow 2 cor 4 17 18 to wit the kingdome of heauen and an exceeding waight of glory Lastly seeing the godly must lay downe all Vse 3 feare which the wicked seeke to cast vppon them for righteousnesse sake let vs labor truly to feare God For if we may not stand in feare of men let vs know whom we ought to feare and reuerence euen the Maiesty of God fearing to offend him as a good childe feareth his Parents as the Prophet teacheth A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his master If I be a Father where is mine honour If I be a Master where is my feare saith the Lord of hostes Mal. 1 3. This feare is the beginning of wisedome as the wise man sheweth Prou. 1 7 for this feare the holy man Iob is exceedingly commended in the Scriptures this feare should be stronger in vs to keep vs from sinne in respect of God then in respect of mē This is the vse directly made by the Prophet Esay chap. 8 11 12. Say yee not a confederacy to all them to whom this people saith a confederacy neither feare ye their feare nor be afraid of them Sanctifie the Lord of hostes and let him bee your feare and let him be your dread Where we see that hauing remoued from them the false feare of men he planteth in them the true feare of God hauing shewed where it should not be he teacheth where it should be hauing declared what feare is euill he toucheth the remedy The ready way to take from vs the feare of men dangers that may fall vpon vs from men is the feare of God For whosoeuer feareth God aright How the fe●● of God ●●ueth away th●● fea●e of m●● he will not prouoke him to wrath for feare or loue of any creature knowing that God is stronger and mightier then al and assuring himselfe that if God be offended no creature is able to secure him and safegard him from danger of iudgement Againe whosoeuer hath God his friend shall not need to feare man to be his enemy If then we seeke to feare God with all our heart aboue all things we shall be free from the immoderate and excessiue feare of the mightiest enemies But if we doe not feare to offend him we shall bee constraind alwayes to tremble at the least occasion and to feare the wicked the diuels death hell and damnation Euery storme of troubles shall be able to ouerturne vs. Let not our hearts therefore be troubled let vs rest in God and beleeue in him Let no danger driue vs to deny h●m Mat. 10.33 lest we be denyed of him in his kingdome And let vs consider the heauy punishment determined and reserued for all distrustfull and fearefull men which shall feare man more then God and so make ship-wrack of faith and a good conscience they shall be punished with vnbeleeuers with the abhominable with murtherers and whoremongers Reuel 21 8. with idolaters and lyars in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone CHAP. XXII 1 AFter the children of Israel departed and pitched in the plaine of Moab on the other side of Iordan from Ierico 2 Now Balak the sonne of Zippor saw all that Israel had done to the Amorites 3 And the Moabites were sore afraid of the people because they were many Moab fretted against the children of Israel 4 Therefore Moab said vnto the Elders of Midian Now shall this multitude licke vp all that are round about vs as an Oxe licketh vp the grasse of the field and Balak the son of Zippor was King c. 5 He sent messengers therefore vnto Balaam the sonne of Beor to Pithor which is b● the Riuer of the Land of the children of his folke to call him saying Behold there is a people come out of Egipt which couer the face of the earth and lie ouer against me 6 Come now therefore I pray thee and curse this people for they are stronger then I so it may be that I shall be able to smite them to driue them out of the Land for I know that he whom thou blessest is blessed and he whom thou cursest shall be cursed 7 And the Elders of Moab and the Elders of Midian departed hauing the reward of the soothsaying in their hand and they came vnto Balaam and told him the words of Balak 8 Who answered them Tarry here this night and I will giue you an answer as the Lord shall say vnto me so the Princes of Moab abode with Balaam 9 Then God came vnto Balaam and saide What men are these with thee 10 And Balaam saide vnto God Balak the sonne of Zippor King of Moab hath sent vnto mee saying 11 Behold there is a people come out of Egipt and couereth the face of the Earth come now curse them for my sake so it may be that I shall be able to ouercome them in battaile and to driue them out 12 And God said vnto Balaam Goe not thou with thē neither curse the people for they are blessed 13 And Balaam arose vp in the morning and said vnto the Princes of Balak Returne vnto your Land for the Lord hath refused to giue me leaue to goe with you 14 So the Princes of Moab rose vp and went vnto Balak and said Balaam hath refused to come HItherto we haue seene the prosperous and happy successe which the Israelites had against three mighty enemies and the threefold triumph ouer them But here ariseth a new enemy with a new deuice or rather a knotte and band of many enemies to stoppe their passage to lessen their multitude and to weaken their strength Moses therefore first declareth what lets and impediments they had as blockes lying in their way and what stopping of their quiet and peaceable proceeding Thus they meet with many stayes and encounter
seruice in detecting and disclosing the conspiracie intended against him Hamans wife and his wise-men sayde vnto him Ester chap. 6. verse 13. If Mordecai bee of the seede of the Iewes before whom thou hast begunne to fal thou shalt not preuaile against him but shall surely fall before him And heereunto also come the words of the Moabites Midianites to Balaam Numb 22. verses 5 6. Behold there is a people come out of Egypt which couer the face of the earth they are stronger then we So that they ioyned together because they feared the multitudes of Israel lest they should lose their Dominions and their ancient glory through their conquest Reason 2 Againe they hate the people of God and their Religion Although the Church bee weake and want humane strength so that the enemies neede not feare it yet still they plot and bring forth new deuices the children of Belial are alwayes packing and contriuing mischiefe against the Church For as true faith and loue of religion vniteth hearts together that wee may with one mouth glorify God the Father so contrarywise where hatred of the true Religion reigneth there can be no loue to the Professors thereof No maruell therefore if such ioyne in league against Gods people As wee see when the Rulers and Gouernours could not finde any fault in Daniel in regard of his faithfulnesse concerning the kingdome enuying his honour and promotion They picked a quarrell against him in matters of the pure worship of the true God So then whether we consider that the wicked feare theyr owne fall and hate the faithfull with a deadly hatred in both respects we may conclude this as a most certain trueth that notwithstanding the bandings and brawlings of the wicked and vngodly among themselues yet they can consent and consort themselues together to impugne and slander the Church of God and the doctrine of Christ Vse 1 The Vses now remaining to be handled are these First this teacheth that seeing sundry sects dissenting and varying greatly one from another do many times ioyne together in one vnity is not alwayes a note of the Church except it be conioyned with veritie For as dissention is sometimes in the church so agreement is oftentimes out of the Church among the enemies of Christ There was an vnity betweene the Moabites and the Midianites betweene the builders of Babel betweene the Priests of Baal between the Scribes and Pharisies betweene the Rulers and the people There is an vnity betweene theeues conspirators murtherers and malefactours there is an vnity betweene the Turkes against the Christians betweene Antichrist and his adherents betweene sathan and his members yea betweene the diuels themselues al vsing the same meanes all ayming at one end all conspiring consenting against the kingdome of Christ Howbeit the agreement of euill men is not truly to be tearmed an vnity but rather rightly to be called a conspiracie Wherefore they are greatly deceiued that make all agreement and vnity an essential and vnseparable note of the Church What a● notes an● ma●ke 〈◊〉 Church If we would know what are the proper markes and euident notes of the Church agreeing to euerie Church alwayes and onely they are the powerfull preaching of sound doctrine the right administration of the holy Sacraments the spirituall worshippe of the true God and holynesse of life and conuersation Where these are not found it cannot bee that there should be the true Church This the Euangelist Saint Luke testifieth in the second of the Acts verses 41 42 46 47 They that gladly receyued the word were baptized and the same day there were added to the Church about three thousand soules and they continued in the Apostles Doctrine and fellowshippe and breaking of bread and prayers So Christ calleth and accounteth those as his Brethren Mother and Sisters that heare his word and keepe it and those his Disciples that abide in his word and his Friends if they do whatsoeuer he commādeth them as Luke chap. 8. verse 21. and chap 11. verse 28. Iohn chap. 8. v●●se 31 and ch 15. ver 14. These are the notes that are peculiar and proper to the Church by these we shall finde the true Church and learne to ioyne our selues vnto it wh●n we haue found it and descry the false signes of the Romish Synagogue where neither the gospell is truely preached nor the Sacraments rightly administred nor the pure worship of God is spiritually instituted nor holynesse of life is sincerely practised As for vnity vniuersality antiquity succession of Byshoppes multitude of beleeuers the title of Catholicke the working of myracles the glory of victories obedience to the Pope and such like Pelde 〈◊〉 lib. 4 ca● Hosius 〈◊〉 hum cap. which the aduersaries of the grace of GOD make notes of the Church which is an assembly of Antichrist they are not proper onely nor alwayes nor vnto all Churches for this is indeede to be proper Purpyr 〈◊〉 cap de 〈◊〉 as all know that haue tasted the first rudiments of Logicke Besides these supposed signes are subiect vnto the outward senses are open and visible vnto the eyes not matters of fayth which are to bee beleeued They are as obscure darke and hard to bee knowne as to know which is the the Church they may bee claymed and challenged by euery hereticall congregation Wherefore as Hilary in one place teacheth The name of peace is beautifull Hilar c●● Auxent the opinion of vnity is f●ire Notwithstanding far better is a diue●s●ty in iudgement then an vnity in falshood The Apostle Paul commending concord and consent to the Church addeth that all our vnity must bee in Christ Ro. 15 5.6 The God of patience and consolation giue you that ye be like-minded one toward another according to Iesus Christ that yee with one minde and one mouth may praise God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Let vs therefore seeke for vnity in verity and honor it as the greatest comfort of our hearts otherwise a iust warre is farre better then an vniust and an vnhonest peace The true and Christian vnity is when the sheepe of Christ heare the voice of the sheepheard and follow him and that our Sheepheard is Iesus Christ by whom alone wee enter into the sheepefold Vse 2 Secondly seeing diuers men at great variance within themselues yet are content to ioyne together in wicked amity and vnity against the Church of Christ wee must confesse that the saluation and safe keeping of the Church is onely of God If men of all lewd deuices of different opinions men at mortall hatred and deadly warre amongst themselues cloase together and plot against the Church how shall they bee able to stand of themselues being few in number weake in strength destitute of friends and lying open to so many and mighty enemies For the Church albeit it be the house of God the mother of the faithfull the body of Christ and the pillar of the trueth yet it is
lips The like we see in the siedge of Samaria when the Lord promised that to morrow that time should bee great plenty of Barley and fine flower to bee solde a Prince answered and saide 2 Kinges 7 2. Though the Lord would make windowes in the heauen could this thing come to passe This appeareth in Zachary Luke 1 18. when God promised him a sonne in his old age he saide How can this thing be And whereby shal I know this When the Israelites were pursued ouertaken by the hoast of the Egyptians and were in present danger of death they wer so●e afraid and forgate the power of God able to deliuer them So the experience of our owne hearts in all dangers and difficulties that ordinarily fall vpon vs 〈…〉 doth tell vs how hard it is to rest vpon God as an all-sufficient helper in time of neede We distrust Gods promises and feare in euery euill that he wil not or cannot succour vs. Forasmuch therefore as we are priuy to our owne corruptions being readie to thinke our helpe and deliuerance to be vnpossible let vs in all troubles build on Gods power as on a firme rocke and sure foundation that can neuer be remoued Secondly hereby we haue a great comfort in our troubles and sufferings to consider the strong hand of God preuayling ouer them that do insult and triumph ouer the Church The yeeres and dayes the very houres moments of time touching the Churches afflictions are determined of God so that the vngodly shall rage but their time This is it which God speaketh to Abraham Gene. 15 13. That his seede should bee a stranger in a Land that is not theirs foure hundred yeeres and shall serue them Thus when the people of Israel were carried into Babylon The daies of their captiuity are determined to be seuenty yeares Ier. 25 11 12 29 10. When Pilate the Lieutenant of the Romanes and Iudge of Iudea had sayde vnto Christ Iohn 19 10 11. Knowst thou not that I haue power to crucifie thee and haue power to loose thee Iesus answered Thou couldest haue no power at all against me except it were giuen thee from aboue Let vs therefore goe constantly forward in our vocation to do our duties to speake freely in the middest of the enemies though they do heare vs sit among vs. This we see to haue bene the behauiour of Christ Iohn 8 20 21. These things spake Iesus in the treasury as he taught in the Temple and no man laide hands on him for his houre was not yet come Where we see the place the persons the time seemed to fauour his enemies yet hee taught boldly and preached openly amongst them This example must bee our imitation Though we liue among many dangers are inclosed with a thousand deaths yet we must know that we are protected regarded defended of God we are by his right hand made able to stand when so many deuices of the vngodly assault vs and so many hornes of the wicked push at vs to ouerthrow vs. It is an admirable and maruellous thing considering the enemies of the Church and Gospell both open and secret professed and close knowne aduersaries and close brethren all mischeeuous hauing also such men and meanes to worke their malice that any Church continueth in the world being as a little flock among many wolues Wherfore if there be any light of the Spirit of God in vs the consideration of this that their rage is determined must giue courage and constancy both to vs that be teachers and to you that be hearers and worke in vs all assurance of helpe and assistance to come from the highest heauens Thirdly this doctrine is a great terrour to Vse the wicked persecutors and malicious enemies to consider their estate and to remember their condition that they cannot do what they list but what God will they cannot execute wh●● they please but what pleaseth God This limitation of their rage abridgement of their doings is sufficient to dane their hearts and to pull them backe from fighting against God If they could prolong their daies and double their strength as they can increase their malice and double their deuices they might haue some cause to insult and triumph ouer the faithfull But seeing they are stinted as the hireling that hath his taske shared out vnto him it serueth notably to abate theyr pride to asswage their malice to confound their deuices and enterprizes against the seruants of God They are not their owne men they are not free and at their owne libertie God holdeth them in and tyeth them short that they cannot rage and reigne at their own pleasure Herod and Pontius Pilate the Gentiles and the Iewes 〈…〉 could doe no more then God had determined Let all the vngodly remember this doctrine and consider it in their hearts it will be a notable bridle to restraine them from all euill practises and to stoppe the course of their corrupt purposes They cannot preuaile ouer the Saints of God albeit for a time they haue the vpper hand The time shal come when they must giue an account of all their workes Lastly seeing the times of the enemies Vse 4 preuailing bee set let vs not feare the faces of men they can but run the race that God hath set them albeit they rush forward like blinde men and thinke themselues able to do great things yet their power is subiect to an higher power and their malice shall quickly haue an end● If a Prince should encourage any of his poore subiects against the might and oppression of any of his Nobles and say● vnto him Feare not his feare I will be thy defence and protection I will stand betweene thee danger he shall do thee no harme would not this make him ioyfull and banish all feare from him of being ouer-borne and ouer-matched by his might But this is our case and condition lying vnder the crosse afflicted of enemies and persecuted for our profession the Lord hath promised to beare vs out and to bee a buckler round about vs. If then the Lord be our light and our saluation whom shall we feare If the Lord be the strength of our life of whom shall we be afraid Psal 27 1. Therefore Christ Iesus comforting and imboldning his disciples against dangers to come Matth. 10 25 26 28 31. forewarning them that they should be deliuered vp to the Councels bee scourged in the Synagogues be brought before Gouernors and bee hated of all men for his names sake exhorteth them to patience courage I care them not for there is nothing couered that shall not be disclosed nor hid that shall not be knowne Feare ye not them that kill the body are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell We are safe vnder Gods shield they cannot cut off one houre of our life they cannot shorten one moment of our
nature and without all meanes and sometimes against all meanes the euidence of this truth is cleared the power of GOD is manifested and the mouthes of all Infidels and of iniquity it selfe is stopped Our faith must goe beyond reason if wee will professe our selues schollers in the schoole of Christ In the schooles of the Philosophers reason goeth before assent but in the schoole of GOD first we haue vse of faith and after followeth discourse of reason Let vs therefore learne to magnifie the Scriptures and by the authority of them tread and trample vpon all Atheisme and Prophanenesse As many miracles as wee finde expressed and wrought by the finger of God so many testimonies and euidences wee haue against these patrones of Nature who being wholly carnal corrupt know nothing that is spirituall These deny the resurrection of the body and the immortality of the soule that so they might escape the sentence of the eternall ludge by whom they shall bee iudged in the last day and shall know to their confusion that there is a GOD whose power is infinite Exod. 34 7. who will not make the wicked innocent but visit the iniquity of the fathers vpon the children and vpon childrens children to the third and fourth generation and reward euery one according to his workes Hee is able to bee reuenged on all his enemies who shal sooner pul their hearts out of their brests then God out of their mindes This Moses setteth downe Deut. ●2 Deut. 32 39 42. Beholde now for I I am he and there is no gods with me I kill and giue life I wound and I make whole neither is there any that can deliuer out of mine hand If I whet my glittering sword and my hand take hold on iudgement I will execute vengeance on mine enemies and will reward them that hate mee I will make mine arrowes drunke with blood and my sword shall eate flesh for the blood of the slaine and of the captiues when I begin to take vengeance of the enemy This is Gods arrow against all Atheists this is a fearefull thunder-bolt throwne down vpon their heads which shall crush them in pieces testifie their destruction which shall come vpon them when there is none to helpe Let such therfore betimes acknowledge a God of Nature that he may bee to them a GOD of grace let them confesse him to worke when he will by extraordinary meanes that he may direct them in the ordinary pathes that leade to saluation and eternall life let them reuerence him as the ruler of the world that hee may rule in their hearts by his Word and Spirit and Sacraments whereby he applieth to vs his heauenly gifts Secondly let vs learne by this miraculous Vse 2 manner of working to trust in him when all meanes faile vs and tye not him to the ordinary course of second causes that is able to make the Sunne and Moone to stand still as in the pursuit of Ioshua Iosh 10 1● 2 King 2● and to bring the Sun backe againe many degrees in the Diall of Ahaz as in the comforting of Hezekiah and to turne the Sunne into darkenes Math. 27 as we see in the time of the passion of Christ He is able to doe whatsoeuer hee will and more then hee will doe It is an easie matter for euery man to say he trusteth in God and boast of his faith when no meanes faile him when hee hath abundance and store of all things when hee is fed to the full with his hid Treasure that they leaue the rest of their substance for their children Iob. 29 6● when God compasseth them about with his mercies That they wash their pathes in Butter and haue the Rockes to powre them out Riuers of Oyle as Iob speaketh it is quickly said and spoken that we will relye vpon God and acknowledge his prouidence But if GOD blow vpon our meanes they shall doe vs no good hee can take vs from them as hee dealt with the vnfaithfull rich man Luke 12 2 Iob. 1 ● or hee can take them from vs as hee dealt with his faithfull seruant Iob Wee must therefore depend vpon him in time of war as wel as of peace in want as wel as in time of wealth in sicknesse as in health when he shall make the heauen as iron and the earth as brasse when hee shall take away the staffe of bread when hee shall cause thee to walke through the valley of the shadow of death thou must then cal on him for thy daily bread and say with Iob Loe though he slay me Iob 13 15 Prou. 16.3 1. Pet. 5 7 yet will I trust in him Commit thy wayes and workes vnto the Lord and thy thoughts shall bee directed Cast all your care on him for hee careth for you Such wee are indeed as wee are in aduersity Such is our faith as it is found in the day of temptation Wherefore let vs lift vp our eyes to him that sitteth in the heauens and swayeth all things by his prouidence and say with the Prophet Psal 28. The Lord is my strength Psal 28 7 ● 37 39 40. and my shield mine heart trusted in him and I was helped therefore mine heart shall reioyce and with my Song will I praise him The Saluation of the righteous men shall be of the Lord he shall be their strength in the time of trouble For the Lord shall helpe them and deliuer them he shall deliuer them from the wicked and shall saue them because they trust in him Thirdly let vs not doubt of the promises Vse 3 or prouidence of G G D who is able to make good the words of his own mouth how incredible or vnpossible soeuer they seeme in our eies Therfore the faith of Abraham the Father of the faithfull is commended by the Apostle that aboue hope he beleeued vnder hope that he should be the Father of many Nations 〈◊〉 4 18 19. and he not weake in faith considered not his own body which was now dead neither the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe neither did he doubt of God thorough vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the Faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that he which had promised was able to doe it This is a great comfort if at any time wee see the miseries and ruines of the Church if wee beholde the desolation hauocke that is made of it that God is able to restore the flourishing estate thereof again God can work aboue meanes without so that albeit we can see with an eye of flesh no way to worke the safety of the Church let vs not despaire or cast away our confidence and hope which hath great recompence of reward We reade how God saued Israell when there appeared no meanes of deliuerance in the eyes of men the rockes and mountaines hemmed them in on both sides the red Sea was before them 〈◊〉 14 13 ●4 the hoste of the Egyptians marched
of we must prepare strength and courage we must get vs faith and patience that we may be able to hold out vnto the end Secondly this is a singular comfort to all Vse 2 the children of God and able to season and sweeten the bitternesse of the Crosse make vs to vndergo it with ioy and gladnesse Whēsoeuer therefore we shall be hated for the Gospels sake and suffer persecution at the hands of our enemies let vs comfort our selues with these meditations First afflictions shall not separate vs from God howsoeuer for the present they seeme not ioyous but greeuous yet afterward they bring the quiet fruite of righteousnesse vnto them which are thereby exercised Heb. 12 11. This the Apostle teacheth That neither tribulation nor anguish neither persecution nor famine neither perill nor sword shall separate vs from the loue of Christ Rom. 8 35. Secondly the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be reuealed vnto vs Rom. 8 1● which neither the eye hath seene nor the eare heard nor the hart of man conceiued True it is our afflictions are oftentimes great but the reward is greater our troubles are of great continuance of long durance but the glory to come is with out end when we shall be crowned and cloathed with immortality 2 Cor. 4 17 18. Our persecutions are many but the ioyes laide vp for the faithfull are infinite not to be numbred Thirdly all our crosses which wee beare and sustaine shall haue an happy euent and a glorious end for such as hold out to the ende shall be saued Mat. 10 22 32 39. Whosoeuer shall confesse Christ before men him he will acknowledge before his Father which is in heauen and whosoeuer shall lose his life for his sake and the Gospels shall be sure to finde it inasmuch as he hath committed it to a faith full keeper who is able to keepe that which hee hath committed vnto him against that day 2 Tim. 1 12. Fourthly we must consider that the same calamities nay farre greater haue happened to Christ himselfe and his Apostles to the Prophets and holy men of God remembred vnto vs in the Scriptures Now the seruant must not looke for a better condition then the Master Mat. 10 24 25 nor the disciple then his Lord nor the houshold then the Housholder nay we must nor dreame of a better estate thē our fellow-seruants haue had before vs. Fiftly the enemies in their greatest rage snarling like Dogs hurting like Serpents byting like Cockatrices deuouring like Lyons bloody like Wolues subtle as Foxes raging as wilde Boares as vnreasonable as Beasts yet can proceed no farther then to kill the body they cannot destroy the soule Math 10 28. nay they can exercise no power ouer the body except it be giuen them from aboue seeing the prouidence of God so ouerswayeth all things that not an hayre falleth from our head nor a sparrow to the ground without the will of our heauēly Father These are great comforts that arise vnto vs in our troubles wherewith we should be wholly possessed that we murmure not against God On the other side this doctrine serueth to set downe the wofull condition of the persecuters and enemies of the Church they may prosper and preuaile for a time but in the end they shall not escape Math. 10 33 38 39. for the church and the members of the Church must haue the vpper hand when all their aduersaries shall be shamefully confounded This we see notably set before vs in the booke of Daniel he had many and mighty aduersaries that plotted his death and sought his ruine incensed the King against him and caused him to be cast into the Lyons denne But what was the yssue of these things Surely he was deliuered they were destroyed For by the commandement of the King these men which had accused Daniel were brought and cast to the Lyons they their children their wiues and the Lyons had the mastery of them and brake all their bones apeeces or euer they came at the ground of the den Dan. 6 24. This is it which Salomon teacheth Prou. 11 5 8. Looke vpon the examples of Pharaoh of Sancherib of Haman of Herod and sundry others in al which we see that the wicked shall bee a ransome for the iust and the transgressour for the righteous Prou. 21 18. This serueth to terrifie all vngodly mē to teach them not to set themselues against the godly that are more righteous then themselues Thirdly heere is matter giuen vnto vs of Vse 3 praise and glory to be giuen vnto God for the safety and deliuerance of his people It is the worke of his right hand and therefore the glory also must be his Our helpe cannot come by our owne strength nor we ouercome by our owne pollicy when we haue searched and examined all that is in vs we shall finde it to come short of working our deliuerance It is God onely that hath done it and therefore we must yeeld him the honour of all the victories that he giueth vs against our enemies When a man hath done vs any wrong or put vs to some trouble and we be deliuered from it we must assure our selues that it is God that hath giuen vs the vpper hand to the end our mouths should alwayes be opened to giue him thanks and we by our whole life shold acknowledge how much wee are bound and indebted vnto him This is it which Moses pointeth vs vnto ●eut 32 43 when he willeth the Iewes and Genetiles to praise Gods Name For he will auenge the blood of his seruants and yeeld vengeance to his aduersaries but he will bee fauourable to his Land and bee mercifull vnto his owne people Lastly as Balaam heere declareth that the Vse 4 Church hath sure and certaine hope of victory and shall rise vp as a Lyon in defiance of all their enemies so th s shall especially appeare in respect of spirituall enemies which fight against our soules This victory shal be finished and fully accomplished in Christ who as the victorious Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah with his foote of brasse shall stampe downe and trample vnder his feete by little and little the enemies of our peace and saluation This is it which the Apostle assureth the Saints of God Rom. chap. 16 verse 20. The God of peace shall tread Satan vnder your feete shortly This is a sweete and singular promise which should be as the Anchor of our soules both sure stedfast whe●ein it is vnpossible that God should lye that we might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to lay hold vpon that hope that is heere set before our eyes True it is the diuell doth alwayes renew the battaile against the seruants of God he doth sift and winnow them as Wheat and as it were bruise their heele but his head is broken Gen. chap. 3 vers 15 he hath receiued his deadly wound and
of the world and hunting after vaine-glory which haue receiued all their reward they can looke for no other at the hands of almighty God This property Christ obserueth to be in hypocrites Math. chap. 6 verses 2 5 16 and 23 3. They blow a Trumpet before their almes they stand and pray in the open streetes they disfigure their faces when they fast and all these ceremonies and circumstances are vsed that they may bee seene and praised of men But we must in all our works looke vnto God and know that his eye is vpon vs who seeth vs in all places and will reward vs openly To conclude we are all to take knowledge of these fruites and effects of hypocrisie that we be not ouertaken with it and on the other side let vs first seeke the glory of God reforme our owne wayes preferre the statutes of God obserue the weighty things of the Law and content our selues to be seene of God that so we may haue praise not of men but of God Thirdly it teacheth vs what to thinke of Vse 3 coniuring sorcery enchantment Sorcerers and Witches will seeme to doe all things in the name of God they vse many good words they haue the Name of God and of Iesus Christ continually in their mouthes would be thought to worke wholly by the diuine power of almighty God wherby they shamefully take his Name in vaine and notoriously deceiue such as resort and repaire vnto them and therefore wee see how God maintained his owne glory and reuenged the abuse done vnto his holy Name in the Acts chap. 19 13 16. by the example of those which tooke vpon them to coniure and cast out diuels in the Name of God and to name ouer them which had euill spirits the Name of the Lord Iesus saying We adiure you by Iesus whom Paul precheth for the man in whom the euill spirit was ran vpon them and ouercame them and preuailed against them so that they fled out of that house naked and wounded Neither let any obiect and say there is no sinne in seeking to them seeing they vse good words whereof followeth a good effect to wit recouery of health and restoring of the sicke For heerein lyeth the deep subtilty of Satan vndermining craftily to hide his purpose He knoweth that if he were knowne and his hand seene in it al men would abhorre and abiure him Therefore he vseth to assaile men disguised 1 Cor. 11 14 changeth himselfe into an Angel of light that wee may be the sooner deceiued and he the better receiued Now he can finde no fitter colour thē to make shew of the Name of God which is horribly abused and prophaned euen by such as are accounted cunning men and cunning women These the more they vse the Name of God the more wicked they are and therfore albeit they speak of God and Christ his Son teach such as come vnto them to vse good words to weare some part of Iohns Gospel to do all in the Name of Christ yet they are the instruments of the diuell prophaners of the Scriptures abusers of holy things and takers of the Name of God in vaine whom God will neuer hold guiltlesse Exod. 20 7. The diuels are not driuen out with good words he is with stood with the shield of faith Eph. 6.16 where the Scriptures are not hanged about the neck but written in the heart by the Spirit of God and the soule throughly armed with the power of them as with a spirituall sword that is able to wound the enemy Lastly we learne from hence to ioyne to Vse 4 our outward profession true sanctification inward holinesse of conuersation True profession bringeth with it true godlinesse For al such as haue this honour giuen vnto them to be the people of God and his precious inheritance must be an holy people to God as Moses teacheth Thou hast set vp the Lord this day to be thy God and the Lord hath set thee vp this day to bee a precious people vnto him that thou shouldst keepe all his Commandements to make thee high aboue all Nations in praise in name in glory c. Deut. 26 17 18 18 19. Let vs not content our selues to haue GOD in our mouthes but labour to be sincere and first of all begin to looke to our hearts He that looketh to haue good fruite of his Trees looketh to the rootes He that would haue cleere waters in the chanels looketh to the Fountaines So if wee would cleanse our wayes in Gods sight this is the right order to be obserued to begin first to cleanse the heart This Christ teacheth the Pharisies being proud hypocrites Ye make cleane the vtter side of the Cup and of the Platter but within they are full of bribery and excesse thou blinde Pharisie cleanse first the inside of the Cup and Platter that the outside of thē may be cleane also Math. 23 25 26. This duty must of euery one of vs be practised First giue vnto God the heart that made it be careful to begin the worke of repentance there take heed of all hypocrisie Luke 12 1. which may deceiue others and will deceiue our selues but cannot deceiue God Counterfet holinesse is double vngodlinesse both because it is vngodlinesse Aug in Psal 63 and also a counterfetting which God abhorreth Oh hypocrite saith one if it be a good thing to bee good indeed Chrys in Math. hom 7. what reason hast thou to appeare to bee that which thou wilt not be And if it be an euill thing to be euill indeed why wilt thou bee that which thou wouldst not seeme to be If it be a good thing to appeare good it is better to be so indeed and if it be euill to appeare to be euill it is worse to be euill indeed Wherefore eyther appeare as thou art in truth or bee in truth as thou appearest For what shall it profit thee to seeme to all others a very Saint and to bee to thy selfe nay to thy God a diuell It is much more to thy profit and comfort to bee that indeed to thy selfe Senec. epist 78. which thou wouldst seeme to be to others A wicked man counterfetting godlinesse is most vngodly the deeper his hypocrisie is the greater is his iniquity and impiety Verse 28. So Balak brought Balaam vnto the toppe of Peor that looketh toward the Wildernesse Then Balaam saide c. Hitherto of two Doctrines arising partly from the person of Balaam and partly from the person of Balak One more remaineth to be considered in the shutting vp of this Chapter from the practise of them both In all this businesse we haue seene more their pollicy then their power and how they haue behaued themselues cunningly and craftily to bring their purpose to passe Hitherto commeth Balaks sending from farre and hyring of a sorcerer to curse the people Hitherto cometh Balaams consenting and comming for lucre and loue of money
There is no way to turne away his wrath from them and their kingdomes but by turning vnto God and by entreating him to spare them As their places are great so their sinnes are great and many times draw many to follow after them If they would blot out their offences against GOD and call in his iudgments gone out against them they must shew their subiection to him and giue him the reuerence that is due to his holy Name Lastly our trust must not bee in man our Vse 3 confidence must not be in Princes who cannot deliuer their owne soules from the sentence of death nor discharge themselues of the punishment which they haue deserued much lesse can they giue safety and assurance vnto others This is that duty which the Prophet Esay concludeth in the second and third chapters of his Prophecy where threatning that God will take away from Ierusalem and from Iudah the st●y and the strength the strong man and the man of warre the Iudge and the Prophet the prudent and the aged the captaine of fifty and the honourable and the counseller and the eloquent man hee sayth Cease from the man whose breath is in his nostrils for wherein is he to be esteemed Esay 2.21 3 1 2 3. Whereby we see that we must not put our trust in weake man nor ralye vppon him to be our defence but put our whole trust in God alone Hee that putteth confidence in him shall be blessed and bee like the tree planted by the riuers side Ier. 17 7 whatsoeuer changes and alterations others do find in the world hee shall continue in a fruitfull and flourishing condition The staying of our selues on mans power ariseth from the forgetfulnesse of our duty toward GOD who hath commanded vs to trust in him with all our heart Prou. 3 5 and hath promised that If we stay vpon him he will giue vs our hearts desire Psal 37 4. This trust we shall attayne vnto if we vse these means the meditation of mans weakenesse that cannot helpe vs the consideration of Gods power that is able to strengthen vs and the experience of his mercy that hath deliuered other of his children from great afflictions If these things as helpes to our faith bee laide vp in our hearts wee shall bee assured to build vpon a good and certaine foundation that shal neuer be remoued Verse 5 Then Moses saide to the Iudges of Israel Euery one slay his men that were ioyned vnto Baal-peor The wrath of God was so fierce against ●hose that sinned that he commanded them to be destroyed To this end wee see Moses as the chiefe Magistrate taketh order that the guilty should not be suffered to Lue but suffer punishment according to their offences From hence ariseth this doctrine Doctrine Magistrates must punish Maiefactors that Magistrats are appointed of God to gouerne mankind in the ciuill affaires of this life to be the hand of GOD for punishing and cutting off the wicked and for the supporting and maintayning of the godly It is the duty of Magistrates to doe Iustice vpon euill doers and to giue comfort and countenance to the faithfull This is it which Dauid promised vnto God when hee should bring him vnto the kingdome and set him vpon the throne I will sing mercy and iudgment vnto thee O Lord will I sing Psal 101 1. This is the charge that hee giueth to Salomon his sonne concerning diuers men as appeareth 1. Kings ● 6 for he telleth him hee should remember the bloud of battell that Ioab shed in peace and therefore not suffer his hoare head to goe downe to the gr●ue in peace The like direction he giueth him to shew kindnesse vnto the sonnes of Barzillai the Gileadite and to let him be amongst them that eate at his table because they came vnto him when hee fled from Absolom This direction did Salomon precisely follow he slew Ioab Shemei and Adoniah and set vp godly men in the places of such as were remoued from their offices being more able then his father was All the precepts that are giuen vnto them to execute iustice tend directly to this point whosoeuer sheddeth mans blood must not be spared but ha●e his blood shed by the Magistrate Gen. 9.6 If a man sayth Moses cause any blemish in his neighbour as he hath done so shall it bee done to him breach for breach eye for eye tooth for tooth such a blemish as he hath made in any such shall be repayed to him Leuit. 24 19. These examples and precepts serue to teach vs this truth that the end of Magistrates appointed of God ouer his people is not to rule as they list not to be idle and doe nothing not to tyrannize or to be highly accounted of not to lift vp their hearts or to please themselues in the titles of honour giuen vnto them but to doe good in helping the good and punishing the euill Reason 1 The reasons to enforce this doctrine are to be weighed considered First they haue to these ends and purposes the sword of Iustice committed vnto them not to let it rust in the scabberd but to remooue all such as the land for their outragiousnesse is not able to beare For when they grow obstinate in their sinnes enemies to God plagues to the godly burdens to the earth and an infection to all with whom they liue they must be cut off as rotten members swept away as filthy dung and purged as euill humours out of the body This is it which the Apostle teacheth in his Epistle to the Romanes There is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God he is the Minister of God for thy wealth beareth not the sword for nought for he is the Minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Rom. 13 4. So then they are Gods Lieutenants in his stead the iudgement is Gods and not mans For there is no iniquity with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward 2. Chro. 19 7. Deut. 1.16 17 so that it is required of them to heare the controuersies that come be-fore them indifferently to iudge righteously to heate the small as well as the great and not to stand in feare of the faces of men Reason 3 Secondly they are as bulwarks of brasse as wals of defence as maintayners of peace among men For albeit men be of one self same nature yet they cannot abide one another vnlesse they be held in as with a bit and bridle Wolues know one another in the woods the Lyons know one anothet in the forrests so doe other wild and sauage beasts in the fields but men haue such a corrupt and sauage nature that hardly they can loue another or suffer the company one of another vnlesse they had rulers Magistrates set ouer them This the Apostle teacheth He is the Minister of God for thy wealth Rom. 13 4. And the Apostle Peter Hee is sent for
Manna as a light meate he smote them with an exceeding great plague he slew the strongest of them and smote downe the chosen men of Israel so that the name of the place was called The graues of lust beecause there they buried the people that fel a lusting Numb 11.33 When Corah Dathan Abiram rose vp against Moses backed with certaine Captaines famous in the congregation and men of renowne they were swallowed vp of the earth and consumed with fire and on the morrow when the multitude murmured against Moses and Aaron saying Ye haue killed the people of the Lord Numb 16 41 49. hee sent a plague amongst them that quickely wasted consumed fourteene thousand and seuen hundreth besides them that dyed in the conspiracie of Korah When Dauid had sinned in numbering of the people and in glorying in his owne strength 2 Sam. 24 15 the Lord sent a pestilence in Israel and there dyed of the people from Dan to Beersheba seuenty thousand men The Apostle Iude produceth sundry examples to this purpose of the Angels that are reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day of the Israelites who albeit they were deliuered out of Egypt yet were afterward destroyed beecause they beleeued not ●●de 6 5. of those vngodly mē that turned the grace of God into wantonnesse and are ordained to condemnation The truth heere of shal more fully and wonderfully appeare in the day of iudgement when iustice onely shall bee executed and the Lord shew himselfe to the wicked onely as a terrible Iudge He shall come from heauen with al his mighty Angels with a great shout and with the Trumpet of God To render vengeance vnto them which know not God and which obey not the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ which shall bee punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glorie of his power 2 Thess 1 9. Then they shall say vnto the mountaines and rocks fall on vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe for the great day of his wrath is come and who can stand Reuel 6 16. And to the end no doubt hereof should remaine Reason 1 in vs let vs consider the reasons The anger of God is as himselfe is infinite and without end so that nothing is able to stand before him This is it which the Prophet Dauid teacheth Psal 90 11. Who knoweth the power of thy wrath or of thine anger according to thy feare As if he should say when thine hand is any way heauy vpon vs no man standeth in awe of thine indignation and fearfull displeasure so much as thou and thine anger ought to be feared of vs. Heereunto accordeth the saying of the Prophet Nah. 1 5 6 The mountaines tremble for him and the hils melt and the earth is burnt at his sight yea the world and all that dwell therein who can stand before his wrath or who can abide in the fiercenesse of his wrath his wrath is poured out like fire and the rocks are broken by him If then his wrath be infinite without limitation of time without circumscription of place and without respect of person so that the heauens melt the mountaines are dissolued and the foundations of the earth are discouered it must needs be that when hee is mo●ued his wrath is very full of rage and reuenge Secondly we must needs hold that plenty Reason 2 of desolation is made in the earth in the wrath of God if we consider the comparisons wherby it is expressed It is compared sometime to the roaring of a Lion which maketh all the beasts of the forrest to tremble It is a fearfull voice it maketh man and beast to stand in feare This the Prophet Amos expresseth The Lyon hath roared who will not bee afraide the Lord GOD hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 3.4 8. Sometimes it is compared to a violent fire that spreadeth it selfe farre and neere This Moses did teach the people when he willed them to take heede to themselues lest they forga●e the Couenant of the Lord their God and make to themselues any grauen image saying The Lord thy God is a consuming fire and a iealous God Deut. 4 24. 9 3. fire we know is fierce and fearfull wasting and deuouring al things before it so that nothing is able to resist the strength and force thereof VVe say in a common Prouerbe that fire and water are without mercy They are of an vntamed nature euen so is the displeasure of almighty God being prouoked by sinne intollerable vnspeakable vnsearchable without limitation of time of quantity or quality and therefore hee must needes bee armed with great wrath kindled against the vngodly Vse 1 The vses of this doctrine are very many but wee will stand onely vpon the principall First wee may conclude that it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of so mighty a God It is extreme madnesse for any man to set himselfe against such a God Who is able to preuaile that hath him his enemy Take heed therefore God will not be mocked Are we stronger then he that wee should fight against him This is the vse which the Apostle maketh in the Epistle to the Hebrewes We know him that hath said Vengeance is mine I will recompence Hebr. 10 30 31 and againe The Lord shall iudge his people It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing GOD. There is no iesting nor dallying with so fearefull and dreadfull a Maiesty who is so great in power glorious in holinesse fearefull in praises terrible in his anger and iust in all his doings Exod 15 11. The heauens and the heauens of heauens together with the earth and all the compasse of the world are not able to beare the least sparke of his displeasure when it is kindled the flame whereof shall burne vp the wicked and shall we play with him in his anger as with a little childe Alas then what shall become of the wretched soules of wicked and damnable men when his wrath shall smoke against them and the whole viole of his fury shall be powred downe vpon them O how miserable shall their anguish and tribulation be and how infinite and vnmeasurable theyr torment which shall be thus plagued condemned and cursed of the Lord what shall become of swearers drunkards whoremongers and such like in the day of the Lords wrath They shall wish that they had neuer bin borne Mat. 26 24 they shall thinke it a benefite if they had beene borne toades And if they could behold at the least in these their dayes but a shadow of the misery that remayneth for them and of the pit of destruction that gapeth for them it were sufficient to swallow them vp in heauinesse and make them euen dissolue themselues into teares and torments as passing all that can be spoken or thought thereof but now
goe bidde his friends farewell which were at his house and when he had more leysure Christ should be serued So it fared with them that were bidden to the marriage-feast who all with one consent beganne to make excuses the first said I haue bought a peece of ground and I must needes goe and see it another said I haue bought fiue yoke of oxen and I goe to proue them and another saide I haue married a wife and therefore I cannot come Luke 14 18 19 20 Math 22 5. Thus wee see our nature is slow and vntoward to follow the Lord wee shift off and shrinke backe as long as wee can and many goodly excuses our corrupt flesh findeth to linger and put from vs all true obedience to Christ Iesus Faine wee would seeme desirous to follow God to come vnto Heauen but wee are loth to soyle and defile our feete Cant. 5 3 so that we must be violently thrust forward before we will yeeld so sturdy and stubburne our neckes are Ioh. 6 44. Wee see the truth of this in Nicodemus he bare a loue to Christ and a liking to his doctrine but first hee came to him by night for feare of the Iewes Ioh. 3 2 afterward hee waxed more bold in the cause of Christ before the face of the Pharisees and that in the open day thogh he receiued a checke Ioh. 7 50 and lastly he shewed himselfe more constant and zealous in professing himselfe to be one of his disciples in the buriall of Christ The like we see in Ioseph of Arimathea who at the first was a disciple of Iesus secretly Ioh. 19 38 but after declared himselfe manifestly in the costly and honourable buriall of his Master Thus it appeareth that the Kingdome of Heauen is like a graine of mustard seed which is one of the least of all seeds Matthew 13 31 and that the Elect themselues are brought on by small degrees their handes hang downe their knees are weake they goe halting and limping and quickly turne out of the right way they hang off and on a great while they meete with many lettes and incombrances both at home in themselues and abroad in others And albeit for further proofe and certainty of this point it were sufficient to send euery man that knoweth what true vocation and conuersion meane home to his owne dores to examine his owne heart yet consider I pray you briefly the heauenly calling of Saint Austine as it is testified by himselfe in his bookes of confession For when God beganne to speake to his conscience hee felt a world of tentations he was tossed and troubled with infinite combates and conflicts betweene the flesh and the spirit Lib 8. confess cap. 1. 2 7. betweene God drawing on the one side and the flesh the world and the diuell holding backe on the other part His pleasures past presented themselues before his eyes and hee thought hee might prolong the time at length he beganne to breake through this army of enemies and to speake vnto God after this maner Et tu Domine vsque quo q●am d●u quam ●iu cras cras quare non modo O Lord how long wilt thou suffer me thus how long how long shall I say to morrow and to morrow why should I not doe it now why should there not be an end of my filthy life euen at this houre Then hee was bidden to take vp and reade in the Scripture after which followed his wonderfull and finall conuersion ioyned with much weeping and lamentation This difficulty the Apostle found in his practice that when hee would doe good hee was so yoked that euil was present with him he did delight in the Law of God concerning the inner man yet he saw another law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde and leading him captiue vnto the law of sinne so that he did not those things which he would but the euilsi which he would not he did Rom. 7.21 22 23 29. This should teach vs to call vpon God by earnest prayer that we may receiue of him the presence of his grace the assistance of his Spirit that wee may ouer-stride all doubtes and difficulties that would stay vs and so entangle vs in the snares of sinne Let vs vse all holy and lawfull meanes to strengthen our faith that we may proceede from faith to faith and grow in the graces of God vntill we come to be perfect men in Iesus Christ And let vs not doubt of our calling when we see to the griefe of our hearts and the discomfort of our soules such wants and weakenesses in vs it is not otherwise with vs then with all the faithfull but let vs striue and fight against these lettes which would withdraw our mindes from God and take heede wee quench not the Spirit nor grieue him by whom we are sealed vnto the day of redemption 1 Thessalon 5 19. Ephes 1 30. And although Satan and the world make neuer so much suit vnto vs to entertayne the pleasures of sinne which are but for a season and sing neuer such sweet songs to enchant vs and lull vs asleepe in carnall security let vs stoppe our eares and strengthen our hearts against such lusts as fight against the soule Wee see sundry persons after theyr calling by the preaching of the word and after a long profession of the faith to turne backe againe as the dogge to his vomit 2 Peter 2 22 Prouerb 26 11. 2 Timoth. 4 4 some to theyr vaine company others after the loue of the world the lusts of the flesh the cares of this life and grow to bee more filthy and prophane then they were before Let vs take heed of such dangerous examples their doings are euill theyr fall is fearefull theyr end wil be more fearefull without repentance and practising of their first workes Fourthly we see the people of God before Vse 4 they could enter into the land of Canaan were constrayned to buckle and encounter with sundry enemies the Amalekites the Canaanites the Amorites the Bashanites the Midianites and sundry others Exodus 17 8. Numbers 21 1 and 31 1 2 c. all which in the end they subdued so that not one of them was able to looke them in the face Thus it fareth with all the faithful in this life As soon as wee enter into the race of Christianity by and by we must expect many and sundry enemies that crosse vs in the way some secret that seek to vndermine vs some open that with all violence flye vpon vs and driue against vs both seeke to ouerthrow vs yea such as before our calling seemed our friends and familiars now beginne to reiect and renounce vs now fall to nod the head at vs and to set themselues against vs because it seemeth strange to them that wee runne not with them into the same excesse of riot and therefore they speake euill of vs which shall giue account to him that is ready