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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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Tabernacle of the Congregation shall be the Tabernacle and the tent the couering thereof and the hanging for the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 26 And the hangings of the Court and the Curtaine for the doore of the Court which is by the Tabernacle and by the altar round about and the cordes of it for all the seruice thereof We haue seene already the numbring vp of the sons of Leui in generall and then in particular such as come immediately of his sonnes whose posterity are farther set forth vnto vs in this diuision and afterward according to the three chiefe and principall families Of all obserue in generall thus much touching the order that there are fiue points set downe by Moses First the families are numbred that came of them Secondly the particular number of the persons is described Thirdly their place of abode is limited and appointed Fourthly the chiefe ouerseer or superintendent of the house is named Fiftly their office and charge is assigned to euery one as it were a field in which they ought to labour and as a garden in which they ought to plant The trueth of these things shall farther be opened vnto vs in each of them in the families of the Gershonites and in the families of the Kohathites and in the families of the Merarites Touching the Gershonites they are described vnto vs in these words from the 21. verse to the 27. The families descended of Gershon are two the Libnites and the Shimeites in the 21. The persons amount in the whole to seuen thousand and fiue hundred in the 22. their mansion was behinde the Tabernacle Westward in the 23. the chiefe captaine of them was Eliasaph the sonne of Lael in the 24. Lastly their order and office was to carry the couering and the hangings of the Tabernacle in the 25. verse Thus we see that things were not shuffled and confounded together but euery one of them knew their station All things were not confusedly committed to all but euery one had his peculiar office and charge which was as it were the vineyard that they were to dresse We learne from hence ●octrine 1. ●ery one the Church ●th his pro●r and pecu●r office that euery one in the Church both Minister and People haue their proper and peculiar charge different frō other The Lord did by precept distinguish not only betweene the calling of the Leuites and the people but between Leuite Leuite For the Leuites were either called Priests or by the common name of Leuites which were not Priests The Priests were either the high Priest as Aaron the father and Eleazar his sonne after him c. or such as were vnder him ouer the rest as Eliasaph the ouerseer of the Gershonites or Elizaphan the ouerseer of the Kohathites or Zuriel of the Merarites Their office was publikely to teach to pray to offer sacrifice and to keep the vessels of the Sanctuary The office of the other Leuites was to minister and serue the Priests in all things belonging to the discharge of their necessary duties Thus God alotted to euery one his seuerall office to bee as his standing place in the army out of which he should not step forth one foote either to the right hand or to the left This appeareth most notably in the first booke of the Chronicles where Dauid setteth a particular order among the families of this tribe ● Chro. 24 1. ●nd 25.1 and ●6 1 and sorteth out to euery one his speciall charge both for the Priests Leuites who should be singers who should be porters who should haue the charge of the treasures and who should be appointed officers and Iudges This appeareth more plainely in the new Testament as 1 Cor. 12.28.29 God hath set some in the Church first Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly teachers after that miracles then giftes of healings helpes in gouernment diuersities of tongues Are all Apostles are all Prophets are all teachers c. All haue not one office all haue not one gift but as he noteth in the beginning of that chapter there are diuersities of gifts diuersities of administrations diuersities of operations and afterward Vers 8 9 10. To one is giuen by the spirit the word of wisedome to another the word of knowledge by the same spirit and to another the working of miracles to another Prophesie to another discerning of spirits c. This he sheweth also expresly in the Epistle to the Romanes chap. 12.6 Seeing we haue gifts that are diuers according to the grace that is giuen vnto vs whether we haue Prophesie let vs Prophesie c. or Ministry let vs wait on our Ministring c. 1 Pet. 4 14. The Apostle Peter hath a generall sentence tending to this purpose As euery man hath receiued the gift euen so minister the same one to another as good stewards of the manifold grace of God Lastly we reade in the Epistle to the Ephesians chap. 4.7.11 Vnto euery one of vs is giuen grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ who gaue some to be Apostles and some Prophets and some Euangelists some Pastors and Teachers Thus God hath appointed that euery one should haue his proper function and office For as it is in the naturall body so is it in Reason 1 the mysticall body of Christ which is the Church But in our naturall body euery part hath his office and knoweth his place and dischargeth his duty without intermedling and incroaching vpon the right of another So should it be among the faithful we haue diuers and distinct giftes for the good of the Church This is the reason of comparison vsed by the Apostle in sundry places as Rom. 12.4 5. As we haue many members in one body and all members haue not the same office so we being many are one body in Christ and euery one members one of another Where he teacheth that as we haue in our naturall body many members so we haue in one Church many members as all members in the natural body haue not one office so all the members of the Church haue not one office as the many members in the naturall body haue one head wherin they are so many members in the mysticall body haue one wherein they are and last of all as in the naturall body euery member is anothers so in the Church euery member is not his owne onely but anothers and is set in the body for the benefite of the whole The same similitude to the same purpose is vsed in the former Epistle to the Corinthians chap. 12.12.14 As the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so also is Christ c. for the body is not one member but many For if they were all one member where were the body but now there are many members yet but one body therefore also there must bee many members in the body of the Church Againe such as
that may not be eaten Whereby we see why some of the beasts were said to be cleane and some of them vncleane namely because some might be eaten and some might not be eaten Lastly in the Booke of Genesis Chapter 9. Where the eating of flesh is most of all expressed and mentioned there seemeth to bee made no new grant in those particulars which in that place are remembred but onely the old priuiledges renewed as the fruit of multiplication the dominion ouer the creatures and the replenishing of the earth Wherefore seeing all these were in vse before it is very probable Gen. 9.3 that as the greene hearbes were eaten before so was the flesh of fish and of the beasts albeit there be not expresse mention of them made before Euery moouing thing that liueth shall be meate for you euen as the greene hearbe haue I giuen you all things These things being true the former sect of the peeuish and peruerse Nazarees are more strongly conuinced and ouerthrown forasmuch as they make that vnlawfull which from the beginning was vsed and practised as lawfull These were the sects among the Iewes which they inuented vnto themselues when they departed from the purity and simplicity of the word of God D. Willet Hex in Gen. 1. qu. 35. This we may reade largely and learnedly handled else-where Vse 3 Thirdly this reprooueth the hierarchy of the Church of Rome from the highest to the lowest their Popes their Cardinals their Abbots Monkes Fryers Priors Nunnes Iesuites and the rest of that race and rabble which are as croaking frogges or deuouring locusts that couered the face of the earth and ascended out of the bottomelesse pit of which the word hath not spoken any thing but quite ouerturneth that whole generation For to set the gouernement of the whole Church vpon one mans shoulder and to put all other vnder his feete is a burden able to breake his necke and to cracke his shoulders which no man is able to beare This man of sinne they make the head of the Church The Pope is not head of the Church and the vicar of Christ This is to thrust downe Christ from his dignity and to depose him from the headship of the Church or else they make it a monster of two heads or rather of many heads For this is an high honour peculiar to Christ to be the head of the body which is his Church Ephes 1.22 23. and 4.12.15 and 5.23 Coloss 1.24 and 2.19 And that for these causes First by way of excellency Secondly by reason of fulnesse of grace Turrecrema sum lib. 1. cap. 44. Thirdly because from him floweth all graces of faith and other blessings into his members He it is that gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists and some Pastors and teachers to build vp the Church to the end of the world These he thought to be sufficient without Popes and Cardinals that is without such heads and shoulders He called his Apostles and made them all equall none superiour none inferiour to other but commanded them indifferently to preach the Gospel to euery creature The Commission which he gaue vnto them was equall in feeding in binding in loosing in remitting and retaining none was before or after other as Luke 9. He calling the twelue Apostles gaue them power ouer all diuels and to heale diseases and sent them to preach the kingdome of God They had all of them the keyes of it equally committed vnto them But they wil obiect Obiect the words of Christ to Peter Matth. 16. I say vnto thee that thou art Peter and vpon this Rocke I will builde my Church and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it And I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt binde on earth shall be bound in heauen whatsoeuer thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Answer These words we acknowledge to be the wordes of Christ howbeit they are too weak a pillar to beare vp the Papacy First let vs speake of Peter and then of the Pope that claymeth to be his successor For if Peter himselfe in those words had no superiority or Monarchy bequeathed vnto him or sole regiment of the Church then hee could not leaue it as a legacy to the Bishop of Rome nor make him his heire of so faire a patrimony that he might claime authority and supremacy from him This is without all question and both sides yeeld vnto it that Peter could giue no more then hee had himselfe and the successour can haue no more iurisdiction then hee had into whose roome he succedeth Now touching Peter obserue this as another rule which also is receiued without cōtrouersie that nothing in this place is giuen to Peter but promised only as appeareth by the forme and phrase of speech that is vsed and by the words vttered in the time to come For Christ saith vnto him I will build my Church vpon this Rocke I will giue vnto thee the keyes of heauen the gates of hell shall not preuaile whatsoeuer thou shalt binde whatsoeuer thou shalt loose so that the manner of speaking in the time to come argueth that nothing is heere really granted but onely graciously promised to be granted He doth not say vnto him I do build my Church I doe giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen but I will builde I will giue Bellar. lib. 1. de Pontif. Roma cap. 10. This is so plaine that our aduersaries are necessarily constrained to yeeld vnto it So then I aske the question and demaund of them where this is giuen and how this promise is performed Whatsoeuer Christ promiseth his word is not yea and nay he cannot lie hee will not faile his people Obiection If any reply it is no great matter where we reade the promise to haue been performed seeing no doubt Christ meant to be as good as his word Solution I answere It mattereth much to vnderstand where it is forasmuch as there can be no better way to make tryall of the promise then to know the gift To which purpose they are wont to alledge two places and we are content to stand to both of them The one is in the Euangelist Matthew chap. 18.18 Verily I say vnto you Whatsoeuer ye shall bind on earth shal be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Where we see Christ speaketh to all the Apostles and not to Peter alone or to him more then to any other but applyeth the same power of binding and loosing to euery one without exception or limitation The other place is in the Gospel according to Iohn chap. 20. where Christ standing in the middes of them saith vnto them Receiue ye the holy Ghost Ioh. 20 22.23 whose soeuer sinnes ye remit they are remitted vnto them whose soeuer sins ye retaine they are retained In which words Christ also doth equally
the Church Hymeneus and Alexander 1 Tim. 1.13 ● concerning the faith made shipwrack are deliuered vp vnto Satan that they may learne not to blaspheme The Apostle commandeth the Church of the Corinthians to purge out the old leauen that is 1 Cor. 5.7.13 as it is expounded afterward in plaine words put away from your selues that wicked person Wherein he alludeth to the law of Moses such as were to eat of the Passeouer were bidden to put leauen out of their houses Exod. 12.15 ● 23.18 and 3● 25. and to prouide that no leauened bread were found among them The Israelites were not to kil the Passeouer before they had rid their houses of it It was not enough for them not to vse or not to touch leauened bread but they were charged to remoue it from them and then they should be sure not to be partakers of it nor to be tempted by it to eate thereof To these euident proofes it were easie to adde sundry other but these are sufficient to shew vnto vs that open and obstinate sinners are not to be fostered in the Church but to be put out of it The reasons heereof are diuers and that in Reason 1 diuers respects both in respect of God and in respect of the Church and in respect of the offenders themselues First it would be reprochfull to God and his sonne Iesus Christ if they that leade a wicked and wretched life should be admitted freely to his Table as if his people were a cōpany or conspiracy of prophane persons Col. 1.24 whereas the Church is the body of Christ If then his body should consist of such filthy loathsome stinking members the reproch of it would redownd vnto the head The Apostle telleth the Iewes that the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through them Rom. 2.24 If then wicked men should be suffered and cherished in the Church the enemies of the Gospel would take occasion thereby to blaspheme the Name of God as if the Christian faith did either make men wicked or did winke at wickednesse or did encourage them to liue wickedly Secondly by continuall company with the Reason 2 wicked the godly are corrupted We are all prone to euil as Adam to lay hand on the forbidden fruite we are ready to goe out of the way and when we haue euil examples before our eyes we soone take the occasion that is offered as when fire and to we come together This reason is vrged by the Apostle 1 Cor. 5 6 7 11. Your reioycing is not good know ye not that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe There is danger to the rest of the Church to retaine among them euill men It is a meanes to spread sinne abroad into euery part vntill the whole body become abhominable and therefore it is better that one member be cut off then that the whole body of the Church should perish The offender then is to beare the punishment of his sinne that the rest may be kept from sinning Thirdly they are to be cut off to the ende Reason 3 that such as are wicked liuers may begin to be ashamed of themselues and their wickednesse It is profitable to themselues that their vngodlinesse should be punished that they by the feeling of Gods chastisement may awake out of their sleepe who by sufferance winking at their sinne would grow more obstinate This is the reason set downe by the Apostle in many places The incestuous person that had committed such fornication as is not so much as named among the Gentiles must be barred and banished from the city of God and deliuered vnto Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the Spirit may be saued in the day of the Lord Iesus 1 Cor. 5 5. We must haue no company with scandalous liuers that they may bee ashamed ●●ess 3 14. In like manner also heretickes must bee proceeded against and cast out by the highest censure that they may learne not to blaspheme Before we come to the vses let vs answer Obiection 1 a few obiections thereby to cleere this point which hath beene gainsaied and contradicted by many First there is obiected against it the Parable of Christ Math. 13 30. touching the tares where the housholder commandeth his seruants to suffer the tares and wheat to grow together vntill the haruest that is the end of the world verse 39. then shall the tares be gathered and bound in bundles to be burned but the wheat shall bee gathered into the barne This they expound as if Christ should command the Ministers not to excommunicate any of the wicked but to tollerate them together with the godly But this were to make Christ to speake with two tongues ●er and to vtter things contrary one to another for in the 18. chapter of that Gospel he doth expresly command it to be practised Besides we are not to sift euery part of a Parable but to mark the scope Now his purpose is not to set downe the duty of the Ministers but to comfort all the seruants of God when they behold publike scandals and open offences euery where to arise euen in the middest of the Church so that it cannot bee cleane purged forasmuch as in the end it shall come to passe that albeit notorious sinnes breake out as vlcers in a body yet all stumbling blockes shall be remoued and taken out of the way and all that worke iniquity shall bee cast into hell This is it that he teacheth chap. 18 7. Woe to the world because of offences for it must needs be that offences come but woe to that man by whom the offence commeth And the Apostle saith There must be heresies that they which are approued may be made manifest 1 Cor. 11 19. Heere the faithfull and hypocrites are mingled together in the Church as wheate and chaffe in the floore and as good fish and bad in the net When we see this we ought not to be discouraged but rather labour that we may be good Corne fit to be gathered into the Lords Garner when he shall send his Angels to gather out of his kingdome all things that offend and them which doe iniquity then hee shall cast them into a furnace of fire where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Math. 13 41 42. That this is the drift of Christ and the meaning of the Parable appeareth by the interpretation that is giuen of it in that place wherein he maketh no mention at all of those seruants which are supposed to represent the Ministers which if it had bin as these would inferre he would not haue left out But he insisteth cheefely and principally vpon this that when all things shall be dissolued all offences and offenders shall be gathered together and cast as it were one bundle into hell They then are deceiued that thinke it is not necessary to purge out the great and grosse offenders The Church is the City of God excommunication is the
euident First Reason 1 they are the Messengers of God sent out of him to do his message and to execute his wil and to speake in his Name and to deliuer that which he shall put into their mouthes and to discharge the commission that he hath giuen vnto them After that God had made a couenant with Leui so that the law of truth was in his mouth and he turned away many from iniquity he setteth downe this as a rule Mal. 2 verse 7. The Priests lippes should keepe knowledge and they should seeke the law at his mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of hosts To this purpose Paul speaketh both touching himselfe and the rest of the Ministers 2 Cor. 5 20. Now then we are Embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by vs we pray you in Christs stead to be reconciled to God If then the Messenger be to bee respected as he that sent him the Minister is to be acknowledged to represent the person of God in whose Name he speaketh Secondly it pleaseth God to worke saluation Reason 2 in his people by them and their Ministery For as the Gospel is the power of God so the Preachers of the Gospel are workers together with God Indeed we deny not but he is able and sufficient of himselfe to saue the soules of men without the Ministery of men as he created them without the helpe of men Neuerthelesse hee will vse their Ministery at his good will and pleasure and he will conuay his treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of vs. Not that he standeth in neede of any helpe or could not attaine to the end of his purpose without our labour for who are wee that can adde any thing to his perfection but hee doth it for our owne good and to manifest his greater loue and mercy toward vs. Hence it is that the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 6.1 Wee then as workers together with him beseech you also that ye receiue not the grace of God in vaine And in the former Epistle saith ● Cor. 3 9. We are labourers together with God ye are Gods husbandry ye are Gods building Seeing then the Ministers are workers together and labourers together with God so that they are the meanes by whom we beleeue God accounteth that as done to himselfe which is done to them as we are to account that God doth that vnto vs which they doe being directed by his word Reason 3 Thirdly he accounteth that which is done to any of his seruants and children as done to himselfe whether it be good or euil whether it be right or wrong forasmuch as Christ and the faithfull make one mysticall body whereof he is the head and they are the members In the day of iudgment Christ wil acknowledge that to be done vnto himselfe which is done to the least of them that beleeue in him and belong vnto him Matth. 25.40 In like manner when Paul was going to Damascus to bring them bound to Ierusalem that called vpon his Name he called vnto him from heauen ●cts 9 4. Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Christ Iesus is touched in his members when any of them are troubled so that their persecutions are his persecutions their afflictions are his afflictions according to the saying of the Apostle Col. 1.24 I Paul am made a Minister who now reioyce in my sufferings for you and fill vp that which is behinde of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church The faithful are as parts members of Christs body of his flesh and of his bones Ephes 5.30 and he is the head ouer all things Ephe. 1.22 So that as the head hath a feeling of these things that befal the body so is it with Christ he doth after a sort suffer with vs and reioyce with vs. Vse 1 The vses therefore are to bestood vpon that the trueth of this may be applyed to our instruction without which the doctrine is as bread cast vpon the waters or as seed that rotteth in the earth that is commeth to nothing First we are directed hereby what ought to be our behauiour toward their persons wee must take heed that we doe neither wrong them nor hurt them neither rise vp against them considering that God will take their wrongs and iniuries as done vnto himselfe If a Prince should giue vs in charge to beware that we doe not hurt some speciall seruants of his house and should adde withall that he would account their wrongs if any be offered as done in disgrace and despight to his person there is no doubt but euery one would take diligent heed that he did not hurt them Thus the case standeth with euery one of vs. The Ministers are Gods seruants appointed to doe his will and separated to preach the Gospel of peace and God hath laid a charge vpon men that they offer no iniury nor indignity vnto them If they doe they touch the apple of his eye which is most tender Zach. 2.8 and therefore they incurre his wrath and heauy displeasure This is it the Prophet teacheth Psal 105.15 He reprooued kings for their sakes saying Touch not mine Annointed and doe my Prophets no harme They then shall not escape the reuenging hand of God that set themselues against the seruants of his house and the trueth of his word that they deliuer Their word is mighty and shall preuaile it is Gods word that they bring vnto vs and he will take their cause into his hand It is true indeed they are aboue all other persons and callings in the world subiect to many and great abuses they are made a reproach to men and Angels they endure the nippes and quippes of wicked men with silence and patience so that wee may cry out with Ieremie in the bitternesse of our soules Woe vnto vs Ierr. 15.10 we are borne to be men of strife and men of contention to the whole earth But seeing God hath a sight and sense of these vniust and iniurious dealings toward them and accounteth them and accepteth them as done against himselfe we see it is no small sin to wound them with the tongue of malice to smite them with the fist of iniquitie or to spurne and kicke them with the heele of contempt and reproach It stirred vp Dauid to shew exemplary punishment vpon the wretched and wicked Ammonites that abused grosly and grieuously his seruants whom hee sent among them for he put them vnder harrowes and yron sawes and so reuenged thereby with rigour the disgrace brought vpon them as if they had done it to his owne person They could not more haue offended him and prouoked him to wrath if they had cutte off his garments in the middes and shaued off the one halfe of his beard 2 Sam. 10.4 and so done him all the villany that might be This therfore giueth vs a notable warning to beware that
will raise vs also We are the members he is the head Therfore if the head be aliue he will no● leaue the members dead so that if he be risen frō the dead we shall rise againe How thē shall we that are appointed to glory defile our bodies beastly lustes the end and wages whereof is shame and ignominy Seeing then Christ Iesus hath determined to make our bodies glorious let vs not make them foule and infamous for as much as the reward of fornication is shame not glorie If then we look that these fraile and mortall bodies should be partakers of immortality at the last day let vs keepe them as fit vessels to receiue honor and glory and euerlasting life It is no small offence to pollute the body of Christ with filthines and vncleannes which God raiseth frō the dead and maketh it sit most glorious in the heauens The fourth motiue to worke in vs the detestation and to lay before vs the danger of whoredome is this the members of Christ are not to bee made the members of an harlot but our bodies are the members of Christ therefore we ought not to make them the members of an harlot Now the bodies of the faithful are called the members of Christ because Christ is the head of the church and performeth the office of an head vnto it into which all the elect are grafted by faith If any man were asked whether he would willingly rent or pull away a member from Christes owne body to make it the member of an harlot he would vtterly deny it he would be ashamed of it he would be ready to defie him that should charge him with it Howbeit the Apostle feareth not to lay that imputation vpon such as commit fornication they separate themselues quite away from Christ so that it must needs be a deadly sin which parteth and pulleth vs from him Wherefore hee saith Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ 1 Cor. 6 15. Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid Hereby then we must learne how heinous whoredome is because wee are the members of Christ but by it we make our bodies the members of an harlot which is as much in effect as to turne Christ himselfe into an harlot and to make him a whoremaster then which nothing is more reproachfull and dishonorable vnto the glory and maiesty of Christ Colos 1 18. Eph. 1 22. For the Church is the mysticall bodie of Christ which hee hath redeemed with his blood whereof hee is the head and by his Spirit so ioyneth it to him that it is made one spiritual body with him So then euery faithful person is one member for his part of the body of the Church and of Christ the head ioyned with him by faith quickned by his Spirit He that ioyneth himself therfore to an harlot is made one body with an harlot so that of the members of Christ hee shall make them the members of an harlot and thereby cease to be any longer the members of Christ then which what can be more dangerous to vs or more reprochful to Christ or more dishonorable to God The fift motiue to disswade from fornication is because this sin is committed against the body whereas all other sins are without the body He that committeth whoredom defileth and abuseth his own body and leaueth a proper staine and blot vpon it making it both the subiect and the obiect of his sin It is not so with the theef or the murtherer or the slanderer they deale with the life with the goods and with the good name of another But the whore-master vseth his bodie as the instrument and sinneth against his owne body more then any other Hence it is that the Apostle saith Flie fornication euery sinne that a man doth is without the body 1 Cor. 6. ● but hee that committeth fornication sinneth against his owne bodie If a man kill himselfe he hurteth indeed his owne bodie howbeit he vseth sworde or knife or fire or water or some such like instrument which is out of the body but the fornicator both vseth and abuseth his owne body he maketh it either instrument or obiect or subiect or all of them The sixt motiue that is vsed is this That our body is the Temple of the holye Ghost whereupon the Apostle would haue it inferred that a fornicator is a sacrilegious person because he hurteth and wrongeth the temple of God But Whosoeuer defileth the Temple of God him shall God destroy for the temple of God is holy which temple we are 1 Cor. 3. ver 17. Temples are ordained and appointed for holinesse and pure actions and are not therefore to be prophaned with filthinesse forasmuch as they be consecrated and dedicated to God which is most pure and holy To this purpose he speaketh and argueth What 1 Cor. 6 13. Know yee not that your body is the temple of the holy ghost which is in you which ye haue of God If our bodies be Temples they ought to bee kept cleane and decent of vs. The Apostle nameth the bodie in this place as hee did also before in regard of the matter he hath in hand to the end hee might withdraw vs from the defiling and poluting of our bodies Wee heard alreadie that our bodies are the members of Christ heere he saith Our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost not that our soules are excepted and exempted for they are made partakers of Christ and we are the Temples of God in soule and bodie as hee speaketh in the second Epistle Ye are the Temples of the liuing GOD. 2 Cor. 6 16. If he dwell in vs let vs beware of fornication because he will not inhabite and abide in defiled bodies He is the spirit of purity therefore we must be pure he is the spirit of holinesse therefore we ought to be holy otherwise we are not his He will dwell in a clean house therfore not in a stye of vnclean and filthy swine Let vs take heed we greeue not the spirit of God whereby wee are sealed vnto the day of redemption Eph. 4. The Gentiles knewe by the light of nature that they ought to keepe their temples swept and garnished Christ whipped out of the temple such as bought sold in it yet what are these but lime stone and such corruptible stuffe how much more then ought wee to looke to our selues our souls bodies that we do not defile them and God destroy them The Temple of Ierusalem was burned and the Arke carried away for the sinnes of the people there is no holinesse of place can priuiledge vs if sound Religion be wanting in them that inhabit it Thus was it also at the destruction of Ierusalem foretolde in Scripture after the Gospell of Christ was preached the abhomination of desolation was set in the holy place so that one stone was not left vpon another
he worketh in the people This is a blessed worke happy are they that are so wrought vpon The obedient hearer is the onely hearer that heareth to saluation that receiueth with meeknesse the engrafted word that is able to saue his soule CHAP. VII 1. AND it came to passe on the day that Moses had fully set vp the Tabernacle and had annointed it and sanctified it and al the instruments thereof both the Altar and all the vessels therof and had annointed them and sanctified them 2. That the Princes of Israel heads of the house of their fathers who were the Princes of the Tribes and were ouer them that were numbred offered 3. And they brought their offering before the Lord sixe couered wagons and twelue Oxen a wagon for two of the Princes and for each one an Oxe and they brought them before the Tabernacle 4. And the Lord spake c. HItherto of the sanctification which is generall and common now Moses descendeth to particular lawes This chapter containeth two thinges first the offering of the Princes secondly the speech of God to Moses The offering of the Princes is set out by certaine circumstances of the time when they offered when Moses had fully set vp the Tabernacle and had annointed and sanctified it c. of the persons which offered the Princes of the Tribes the heads of the house of their fathers and of the place where they are offered it was before the Lord. Then their offering is described by the particulars that were offered which is performed ioyntly or seuerally Ioyntly they brought sixe couered wagons and twelue Oxen c. I will not stand particularly to speake of the sanctifying and anointing of the Tabernacle handled at large Exod. 40 9 10. Remember in generall that the Tabernacle was a type and figure of the Church Willets Hexapl. in Exod. 36. which is a company of men acknowledging and worshipping the true God whō Christ doth regenerate and sanctifie with his Spirit and purposeth afterward to glorifie thē in his kingdome 1 Iohn 2 27. Moreouer consider that these Princes heere described are called the heads of the house of their Fathers This word is diuersly taken in the Scriptures God is the head of Christ Rainol confer with Hart. ch 1 Christ is the head of man and man is the head of the woman 1 Cor. 11 3. The head of Syria is Damascus the head of Damascus is Retzin Esay 7 8. The heads of the Leuites are put for the cheefest and the Priest the head that is the cheefe Priest Neh. 1 16. 2 Chron. 31 10. The King the head of the Tribes of Israel 1 Sam. 15 17 The heads of housholders the Elders Exod. 16 13. The head of the people the foremost 1 King 21 9. The head of the Mountaines the highest Esay 2 2. The head of the spices the cheefest Exod. 20 23. Among Dauids Captaines the heads are the most excellent 2 Sā 23 8 13 18. The Princes mentioned in this place may after a sort be called heads in all these respects because they are the cheefest the foremost the highest and the most excellent And albeit Kings and Princes abstaine from this title to be called heads of the Church as pointing out the soueraignty of Christ and content themselues to be stiled supreme Gouernors as appeareth by the oath of supremacy vsed among vs yet we doubt not but they may be called by that name in a kinde degree of resemblance because they haue preheminence of place and gouernement ouer all people within their dominions 1 Sam. 15 ●● For if Samuel tell Saul that when he was little in his owne sight he was ordained to be made the head of the Tribes of Israel being annointed King it may be thought not vnlawfull being rightly vnderstood to giue Princes the name of heads of their people As for the Bishop of Rome that challengeth this title to be called head of the whole Church wee cannot acknowledge him for any such head but rather the taile being indeed no sound member of the Church but the head of the apostacy and falling away from the faith prophesied of by the Apostle 2 Thess ● ● Touching the annointing oyle wherewith the Tabernacle and the vessels thereof were annointed signifying that all the true members of the Church are endued with the graces of the Spirit from hence the superstitious Romanists would gather their consecrating and hallowing of Churches with oyle and other ceremonies and hold it vnlawfull to say their Masse in a Church not hallowed yea they will tell vs of much profite and many vses thereof as the increase of deuotion and the expelling of diuels But hereby they run into sundry errors abuses They deuise and set vp a sanctificatiō without warrant of Gods word Euery P●●●● with thē 〈◊〉 bap●●● 〈◊〉 Bishops 〈◊〉 may 〈◊〉 Churche 〈◊〉 also they ●●fer 〈◊〉 ●●●firma●●●●●fore bap●●● they prefer their owne tradition before the institution of God they commit idolatry in dedicating Churches to Saints they make these ceremonies a part of Gods worshippe they would bring in againe the types and shadowes of Moses law which doe not binde vs but are abolished they make humane traditions and obseruations not grounded vpon the Scripture to be the meanes to stir vp deuotiō Lastly they teach that by this vnholy hallowing diuels are driuē out of churches which are not cast out but by fasting praier Matth. 17 21. As for that dedication of Churches which standeth partly in prayer grounded vpon the word and partly in setting of them apart to holy vses to the preaching of the word to the administration of the Sacraments such like exercises of religion we do no more condemne then Dauids dedication of his house which he had newly built Psal 30. who notwithstanding vsed neither crossings nor tapers nor such toyes as are taken vp and tollerated in the Church of Rome Ver. 1. And it came to passe Moses hauing prouided all things necessary for the seruice of God mustered his army diuided them into troopes and squadrons before remembred and appointed them Leaders of all sorts here he sheweth that the twelue Princes the Captaines Commanders of the Tribes broght their offerings before the Lord to wit sixe couered wagons and twelue Oxen to draw them to transport in them as they marched the parts of the Tabernacle with al the vessels belonging thereunto ●●●ect But were not these things to be carried vpon the Priests shoulders What vse then was there or what need of these wagons or chariots The Sanctuary indeed or the most holy place ●●●wer for greater respect and reuerence was to be carried vpon the shoulders of the sonnes of Kohath to whō the charge was committed howbeit these wagons were appointed to carry and conuay in them the other parts of the Tabernacle and the vessels thereunto belonging and were deliuered to the Leuites for that seruice namely to the sonnes of Gershon and Merari Now
foule or dung so filthy as we are through corruption Iob 14 verse 4 and 25 verse 4. Esay 64 6. Titus 1 15. There is no sent or sauour no carcasse so corrupt and ready to infect as that which proceedeth from our selues What it is that doeth chiefly infect wherby we defile our selues and one another This Christ teacheth Math. 15 verse 18. Those things which proceed out of the mouth come foorth from the heart and they defile the man Keepe out sinne from the heart and the plague shall neuer defile the man euery one therefore must labour to cleanse the heart Thirdly seeing it is caused by sinne wee must learne to search and finde out the true Vse 3 cause of the plague The enemies of Gods word will make the Gospel the cause of the pestilence and of all other calamities So did Ahab Iehoram make the Prophets the principall procurers of the famine which fell out in their daies 1 Kings 18 17. 2 Kings 6 31. Thus dealt the heathen with the christians that liued vnder the heathen and persecuting Emperours when any famine or pestilence or ouerthrow befell among them they imputed all to Christians and cryed out to haue them persecuted and punished as appeareth at large in the Apology of Tertullian These are blasphemous mockers and deriders of the holy faith of Christ which open their mouthes against heauen The chiefe cause of the plague is the contempt of the word Ier. chapter 29 17 19. Lastly euery one of vs must learne how to behaue our selues in the troublesome times of Vse 4 this heauy iudgement We must haue a tender feeling of their distressed condition that lye vnder this greeuous hand of GOD. The Church is compared to a body wherof Christ is the head Eph. 4 ver 16 and the faithfull are members Romanes 12 4. 1 Corinthians 12 12. They make but one body though they be many different members and are all vnder one head and therefore are to helpe one another to beare one anothers burden and so fulfill the law of Christ Galathians 6 2 1 Corinthians 12 verse 24. Let vs consider the seuerall duties belonging to seuerall persons in the day of visitation The duty of Magistrates is then especially to see religion established The duty o● Magistra●●● time of th● plague euill doers cut off from the City of God and all disorders remoued Psal 101 8. They must humble themselues and cause the people to humble themselues They must appoint fasting and praier that thereby they may moue the Lord to call backe his iudgement We haue a notable example of this in the King of Nineue Ionas 3 6● when he feared a generall iudgement to come vpon himselfe and his people he rose vp from his throne and laide away his robe from him he couered himselfe with sackcloth and sate in ashes yea he proclaimed that neither man nor beast herde nor flocke should taste any thing and that they should cry mightily to GOD saying Who can tell if God will returne and repent and turne away from his fierce anger that we perish not Ion. 3 6 7 8 9. Here is a good president for Kings Princes what by their owne example publike decrees they ought to do that there may be a common humiliation of all estates 〈◊〉 dutie of ●●●●sters in 〈◊〉 of the ●e It is the duty of the Ministers to preach the worde most earnestly both the Law and the Gospell in season and out of season to perswade to repentance to comfort the feeble-minded out of Gods word to stirre vppe the poore to patience the rich to liberality and all men to compassion and commiseration It belongeth vnto them as it were to stand in the gappe they must aboue others pray earnestly to God Amos 7. verse 25. knowing that the prayer of a iust man auaileth much if it be feruent Iames 5 16 17. So was it with Moses and Aaron when the plague was begunne he willed Aaron to take a Censer who ranne into the middest of the Congregation and stoode betweene the liuing and the dead offering Incense and making attonement for the sinnes of the people Numbers 16. verse 48. It is the duty of all parents to teach and instruct their children from whence 〈◊〉 dutie of ●●●●nts in 〈◊〉 of the ●e for what causes God sendeth the pestilence and other calamites Deut. 6.7 They must goe before them in a good example of life Genesis chap. 18 19. and if they should see all other carelesse and negligent in this duty yet must they say with Ioshua chap. 24. verse 15. As for mee and mine house we will serue the Lord. It belongeth vnto them to call their families vnto priuate humiliation as Ester did chap. 14. verse 16. and euery day they should offer vp sacrifice for their seruants and children after the example of holy Iob chap. 1. verse 5. and pray for their safety and welfare and euerie day giue thankes for their most mercifull deliuerance while in the meane season so many fall on their right hand and on their left It is the dutie of rich men in time of contagion 〈◊〉 dutie of 〈◊〉 men in 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 to haue as at al other times so then especially a diligent care of the poore because then the greatest occasion is offered to doe good We must not shut them vppe in their houses and then shut vp our compassion from them as it were in a close prison without releefe It is the commendation of the Christian Church after the ascension of Christ that they had all things common and no man said that ought of the things which hee possessed was his owne neither was there any among them that lacked Acts 4 32 34. If they did this in the neede of the Church how much more ought we to prouide for those that cannot prouide for themselues He is not worthy to beare the name of a Christian that at such times would withhold things necessarie from those that are withholden from the companie of others Woe vnto those that would adde so great affliction to those that are deepely afflicted already The foure Lepers that were put out of the city according to the law dwelt apart by themselues at the entering in of the gate for feare of infection were notwithstanding prouided for in the streight siege of Samaria so long as there was any thing in the city they wanted not but were prouided for 2 Kings 7 4. So it ought to be among vs. It is the dutie of the poore needy to arme themselues with patience The dutie of the poore and needy in time of the plague as a shield buckler in time of trouble knowing that nothing falleth out without the prouidence appointment of God He will not lay more vpon vs then he will enable vs to beare but with the tentation will make an happy issue 1 Cor. 10 13. hee will comfort vs in our tribulation 2. Cor.
Psal 80 5 where he complaineth that God had giuen them bread of teares and fed them with teares to drinke in great measure Thou hast made vs a reproch to our enemies thou hast brought a Vine out of Egypt thou hast cast out the Heathen and planted it yet the wilde Boare deuoureth it the beasts of the field eate it vp Vpon this consideration he sheweth his affection and oftentimes doubleth it Returne we beseech thee O God of hosts looke downe from heauen and visite this Vine The like care of redressing the distressed condition of the Church appeareth in Habakkuk for when God reuealed vnto him that for the wickednesse and iniquity the strife and contention of the people he would punish and visite them by the Chaldeans a Nation worser then themselues it cōstrained the Prophet to break out into an earnest prayer When I heard thy voice I trembled and was afraid Lord in wrath and in the middest of iudgement remember mercy Hab. 1 3 6 3 2. What should I adde more The booke of Lamentations sheweth that the horrible desolation of the Church did draw vp whole buckets of water and fountaines of teares frō the Prophet euen bowels of compassion and most earnest praier to God for the deliuery of his people being moued with a sensible feeling of the Churches distresses Lam. 1 and 2 and 3. And although this meditation alone be sufficient Reason 1 to enforce this affection of compassion yet it may be more earnestly considered and deepely enforced by sundry reasons For first nothing ought to be more precious and deare vnto vs then to see the florishing estate of the Church nothing ought to go nearer vnto our hearts and to make our eyes a fountaine of teares to weepe day and night then to behold the decayings and desolations of Sion This appeareth euidently vnto vs Psal 137 1 2 5 where the Prophet layeth downe the miserable estate of the Church vnder the Babilonians and the affection of the Church conceiued vpon that distresse We sate downe and wept when we remembred Sion we hanged our Harpes vpon the willowes in the midst therof if I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget to play If I do not remember thee let my tongue cleaue vnto the roofe of my mouth yea if I preferre not Ierusalem before my chiefe ioy Wherein ariseth this reason that howsoeuer many things are ministred to comfort the people of God as fauor friends honour glory pleasure and prosperity yet aboue all other ioy the peaceable and prosperous estate of the Church affecteth thē as that which sticketh neerest and cleaueth closest vnto them 1 Pet. 1 12. at the sight wherof the Angels take occasion to wonder at the mercies of God Contrariwise the troubles and tumults raised against the Church beginning to preuaile against it and threatning to make hauocke of it haue caused the greatest sorrow of all other incident to the sonnes of men We see a worthy and memorable example of this in the wife of Phinehas when the Philistims preuailed ouer the people of God many sorrowes fell vpon her one in the necke of another the taking of the Arke the fall of her father the death of her husband the slaughter of her brother the ouerthrow of the hoast the triumph of the enemy yet aboue all as if the rest were nothing the report of taking the Arke was as a sword to pierce through her soule and suffered her not to receiue any comfort in her trauaile but she named her childe Icabod that is no glory saying The glory is departed from Israel because the Arke of God was taken and because of her father in law and her husband She saide againe For the Arke of GOD is taken 1 Sam. 4 19 21 22. Whereby we see that howsoeuer we feele nothing but worldly losses being men of this world whose portion is in this life and are acquainted with nothing but worldly sorrowes which cause death chusing rather to leaue Christ then to lose our commodities to sell our birth-right then to want our pottage like prophane Esau or the swinish Gadarens yet she sealeth vp her sorrow in the name of her sonne and repeateth the departure of the glory from Israel as that which most of all doubled and increased her affliction If then all things in this life are not to bee compared and matched with the prosperous proceeding encrease of the Church in spirituall things if no earthly losse of things neerest and dearest vnto them do so far enter into them as the calamities and ruines of the Church maruaile not if the wants thereof go neere vnto the Church and stirre them vp to labour the redresse thereof in their best meditations Secondly the distresses of the Church set Reason 2 open a wide doore to faithlesse and prophane men to insult contumeliously and to triumph vaine-gloriously ouer the Church as though God had forsaken them left them as a prey in the iawes of the enemy whereby the truth is slandred the Name of God which ought to be precious vnto vs is blasphemed This appeareth Psalm 70 1 4 5 8 10. when the heathen rushed into the inheritance of God defiled the Temple and made Ierusalem an heap of stones that they were a reproch vnto their neighbours euen a scorne and derision to them that were round abound them The Prophet expressing his affection saith Lord how long wilt thou be angry for euer Shall thy iealousie burne like fire And thē he addeth this as a reason Wherfore should the heathen say where is their God Let him bee knowne among th● heathen in our sight by the vengeance of the blood of thy seruants that is shed So then as on the one side the florishing estate of the Church is that which giueth inward ioy and true comfort of heart aboue all other things to Gods seruants on the other side the distresses of the Church do set open a doore to faithlesse and rebellious men to take aduantage to reioyce ouer the Church and in the spirit of Ismael to scoffe at it with taunts more bitter then gall and wormewood it followeth that the troubles thereof must draw vs to pitty moue vs to prayer and incite vs to vse all good meanes to redresse them The vses follow First we must be greeued for the troubles of the Church as fellow-fellow-members Vse of the same body Can that be a true and liuely member that is not any way touched with a fellow-feeling of the rest of the members The Apostle teacheth 1 Corin. 12 25 That the members should haue the same care one for another therefore if one member suffer all suffer with it if one member be had in honour all the members reioyce with it Would wee then know whether we haue Christ for our head coupling vs together whether wee be members of Christ and haue him dwelling in vs by faith and whether we be made bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh
slenderest there his te●●ations wil be thickest where the hedge is lowest euery beast will seeke to enter so it is with vs if one place be left open vnguarded Satan will enter there as well as if we gaue hi● I passage many waies One knowne sin nourished in vs is sufficient for him to bring vs therby to damnation He can well abide to haue vs reformed in many faults that we should deny thē defie thē hate them and ery out against them yet some one sinne or other whereto we are by nature most enclined he fosteteth and furthereth in vs and by it in a vile manner he wholly possesseth vs and dwelleth in vs. It is a wonderfull pollicy of Sathan when he cannot make vs to walke and wallow in all sin he endeuoureth to poyson vs with some one sin lest he should wholly giue ouer his hold and by it will bring vs to destruction as well as by a thousand A Bird entangled with one foot and holden in the snare of the Fowler is as vnable to escape and flye away as if she were taken and held by both the feete So is it with man if he beholden in one notorious sin and flatter himselfe in it he is in as great danger of death and damnation as if he gaue ouer himselfe to many sins What I pray you should it profit when a City is besiedged and compassed with the enemy to shut vp all the gates and to leaue one standing open May not the enemy enter at that one as well as at many and by assault take the City and people Or what should it auaile a Marriner to stop all the holes of the Shippe where it leaketh and leaue one vnstopped Will it not sinke the Ship as well as many So what shall it profite and helpe vs to set open one corner of our hearts for one sinne to enter albeit we should shut vp and locke the doores of our hearrs against all other sins Will not Satan enter there and fill vs full of all wickednes bring vs to destruction of soule and body Consider the examples of Saul Herod Iudas Ananias and Sapphira all these turned from sin yea from many sins but not from all sinne nor from their speciall sins whereof they shold haue repented and therefore their repentance was but the shew and shadow of repentance and not true repentance indeed If then wee would haue that true godly sorrow which causeth repentance 2 Cor. 7 10. not to be repented of wee must turne from all our sins to God and bring foorth fruites worthy amendment of life and hereby learne to try our owne hearts by this special conuersion We must consider our proper and personall sins Endeuouring to be perfect as our heauenly Father is perfect Mat. 5 48 and not exempting our selues from the obedience of any of the Lords holy Commandements And Moses prayed for the people They desire the prayers of Moses as we heard before who refuseth not but prayeth for thē to God He was not mindfull of the wrongs sustained and of the iniuries receiued of them for in all the indignities offered vnto him he was patient and meeke aboue all men that were vpon the earth Numb 18 3. therefore he goeth to God and desireth him to remoue the iudgement The Doctrine from this place is this Doctrine It is our duty to pray one for another euen for our enemies It is our duty to pray one for another The Lord requireth of vs not only to commit to God and commend in our prayers the Saints but to be mindfull of our enemies and them that hate vs and to desire their good and conuersion This affection we see in Abraham who prayed earnestly and oftentimes for the Sodomites Gen. 18 23. that God would spare them not destroy the righteous with the wicked but rather to spare the wicked for the righteous sake This was also in Samuel when the people besought him to pray for thē that they dyed not he saide God forbid that I should sin against the Lord and ceasse praying for you c. 1 Sam. 12 23. How often did Moses Aaron pray for Pharaoh and spread out their hands vnto the Lord That the plagues might ceasse and that he might know that the earth is the Lords Exod. 9 29. This duty Christ our Sauiour setteth downe as a rule to guide vs both by word of mouth and by example of life For he taught his Disciples this Doctrine Mat. 5 44. Loue your enemies blesse them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for the that hurt you and persecute you c. Now this point as Christ preacheth so he practiseth and prayeth for his enemies Father forgiue them for they know not what they do Luk. 23.34 Thus did the faithfull witnesse of God Stephen whē he was stoned he kneeled downe and cryed with a loud voice Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Acts 7 60. The Reasons are plaine and direct First we Reason 1 are fellow-members of the same body and fellow-souldiers that fight vnder the same Captaine Iesus Christ We see them embers of our body are carefull for the good one of another vnlesse they be dead and sencelesse so should we be mooued at the consideration of the troubles and wants of the Church as the Apostle by this similitude teacheth vs 1 Cor. 12 20 21. We are many members yet but one body and the eye cannot say vnto the hand I haue no need of thee nor the head againe to the feet I haue no need of you So it is in the body of Christ wee cannot want each other but stand in need one of another to keepe the whole body in peace and concord In regard heereof it is that wee are partakers also of their prayers so as we pray one for another and seek the good benefit one of another as the Church did the deliuerance of Peter Acts 12 5. Secondly this duty of praying for our brethren Reason 2 is inforced charged vpon vs because it is acceptable to God and an oblation wherwith he is delighted and well pleased For our prayer is directed in his sight as Incense Psal 141 ● and the lifting vp of our hands as an euening sacrifice It auaileth much if it be feruent it pierceth the heauens and obtaineth euery good blessing at the hands of God for our selues for others The Vses fo●low First we are especially in Vse 1 duty bound to pray for Magistrates and those that be in authority as the subiects for their Princes and the people for their Pastors that the worke of God may prosper vnder their hands This the Apostle teacheth 1 Tim. chapter 2 1 2. So the Iewes were commanded to pray for Babylon that persecuting Citty where they were captiue Ier. chap. 29 ver 7. We see in the naturall body that albeit the members haue care one of another yet the chiefest care is for the
subiect vnto God But when he had nearkened to the olde serpent and disobeyed the commandement of God the whole course of Nature was turned he hid himselfe from the presence of God and feared the creatures which before hee ruled To conclude therefore seeing it is God who is the cause of our peace let vs rest vpon his prouidence and protection and seek earnestly reconciliation with God that wee may haue the inward peace of a good conscience which howsoeuer the world may striue to disturbe and hinder yet cannot take away from vs as our Sauiour Christ promiseth Iohn 16. verse 33 In me ye shall haue peace in the world yee shall haue affliction And againe Iohn 14 27. Peace I leaue with you my peace I giue vnto you not as the world giueth giue I vnto you So that in regard of this spirituall peace of the faithfull cōsisting partly in our peace with God which is the Fountaine and partly in our peace of conscience which is the fruite Psal 25 our soules are assured to dwell at ease in the middest of all troubles wee shall be comforted and by his prouidence and protection be secured howsoeuer our bodyes bee tossed and turmoyled For this spirituall peace not onely may stand but is euermore ioyned with crosses and persecutions Verse 24. Behold the people shall rise vp as a Lyon and lift vp himselfe as a young Lyon hee shall not lye downe till he eate of the prey c. In these words the estate of the Church is described after sundry conflictes in this life It hath many enemies that for a time rise vppe against it but in the end the Church shal rouze vp it selfe and arise as a Lyon who will not couch till hee haue taken and eaten his prey This shal be the strength of the people of God in subduing and ouercomming all theyr enemies This was begun by Moses prosecuted by Ioshua continued by Dauid and fulfilled by Christ Who ruleth in the midst of his enemies and shall bring all things in subiection vnder his feete Doctrine 〈◊〉 Church 〈◊〉 in the ●●●●e vic●●er all ●●●es Psal 110 1 2. From hence we learne That the Church in the end shall haue victory ouer all enemies that set themselues against it They dash themselues against the Rocke that shall breake them in peeces for howsoeuer they oppose themselues against the good estate thereof they doe but kicke against the goad as stiffe-necked hard-hearted beasts that haue not learned to beare the yoke of God nor to acquaint themselues with the wayes of godlinesse God will shew himselfe most powerfull in ouerthrowing and discomfiting the enemies of the Church This euidently appeareth by the history of the Church in Egypt in Babylon as also in the bookes of Exodus and Ester The Prophet Dauid declareth 〈◊〉 14 and 〈◊〉 8. that notwithstanding the rage of Gods and his enemies He that dwelleth in the heauens shall laugh the Lord shall haue them in derision yea he shall crush them with a scepter of Iron and breake them in peeces like a Potters vessell Psal 2 4 9. This Christ our Sauiour teacheth his Disciples when he sent them foorth to worke myracles and to preach the Gospel of the kingdome to be at hand he prepareth them for the Crosse he foretelleth them what they should looke for I send you as sheepe in the midst of wolues but beware of men for they wil deliuer you vp to the Councels they will scourge you in their Synagogues they will bring you before Rulers they will betray you to your enemies and ye shall be hated of all men for my sake but hee that endureth to the ende shall bee saued Matth. 10 16 17 22. Reason 1 The Reasons are euident For first the Lord Iesus is the King of his Church he hath the keyes of hell and death He openeth and no man shutteth he shutteth and no man openeth Reuel 1 18. Iohn 10 28. He is the Shepheard of his sheepe his sheepe heare his voyce he knoweth them they follow him he giueth vnto thē eternall life so that they shall neuer perish neyther shall any pluck them out of his hand He is the head of the Church and quickeneth all the members of his body by whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of our sinnes Col. 1 18. Seeing therefore Christ Iesus is the King of his Church the Shepheard of his sheepe the Head of his body wee cannot doubt but he will defend his Church saue his sheepe keepe safe and sound the members of his body that none shall be able to destroy them or to take them out of his hand Reason 2 Secondly our weaknes is not hidden from the Lord he knoweth whereof we are made he remembreth that we are but dust yea a winde that passeth and cometh not againe Therefore the Apostle saith that God is faithfull which will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that we are able but will euen giue the issue with the tentation that we may bee made able to beare it 1 Cor. 10 13. So the Prophet teacheth that the rod of the wicked shall not alwayes rest vpon the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put foorth their hand vnto wickednesse Psal 125 3● declaring that the Lord appoints his for a time to be afflicted yet in the end they shall be deliuered and the wicked shall not be suffered in their oppressions The vses are now to bee handled First Vse 1 this teacheth for our instruction that the Church hath alwayes enemies in this world against which it must continually striue and fight There is no victory before the battaile there is no conquest before the fight We are all souldiers and warriours in this life to fight the battels of God we must not dreame of liuing euer in rest and pleasure Humility and misery must go before honour and glory the crosse commeth before the crowne we must wrastle before we can haue the garland 1 cor 9 24 25. wee must runne before we can obtaine the goale we must striue before we can haue the mastery we must labour before we can receiue the fruites we must fight before we can win the victory This is it which the Apostle sheweth vnto vs 2 Tim. 2 5 6 11 12. Thus it was with Christ first he suffered aduersity and then hee entred into glory first he endured the Crosse and despised the shame and then he was set at the right hand of the Throne of God Luke 24 26. Hebr. 12 2. This is the way let vs walke in it He is a foolish husbandman that will look to reape before he haue sowed The Disciple must not looke to be aboue his Master nor the seruant aboue his Lord. We must through manifold tribulations enter into the kingdome of heauen and all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecutions This is our lot portion this is the cup which is prepared for vs to drinke
of the church rauishing as it were all his senses and so astonishing him that he is not able to finde words sufficient to expresse the glory thereof For heere we see he compareth the happinesse and blessednesse of the Church to the Valleyes Gardens Cedars and such like all to this end to shadow out vnto vs the value and worth of it that it farre surmounteth all other societies and is most precious deare in the sight of God Heereby then wee learne what is the Doctrine true Church The Chur● is more excellent an● precious 〈◊〉 all other ●ces it exceedeth all other societies of men and is most precious and deare vnto God and vnto Christ We see then how from hence we learne that aboue all other companies and fellowships in the world the Church is most excellent and beautifull and of GOD most respected This hath plentifull testimony of other Scriptures The Prophet saith The Kings daughter is glorious within her cloathing is of broidered gold Psal 45 13. Hereunto come the titles and commendations giuen vnto the Church in sundry places dispersed in the booke of Canticles chap. 2 2. and 4 13. and 5 9. Shee is the Rose of the field the Lilly of the valley the fairest among women an Orchard of Pomgranats a Fountaine of Gardens a Well of springing waters the Spouse and Sister of Christ the beauty of the earth the glory of the world and being compared with other societies as a Lilly among Thornes like the Apple among the Trees of the Forrest It is a Citty whose walles and gates are of precious stones and the streetes thereof of gold Reuel 21 2 19. It is compared to a woman cloathed with the Sunne and had the Moone that is all corruptible things which are vnstable and vncertaine vnder her feete As the Doctrine by these euidences is Reason 1 made cleare so by the Reasons whereby it is proued it may be yet made much clearer For first it is more excellent then all other societies as gold aboue all other mettals because in it alone saluation is to be found and no where else When the vniuersall flood came and couered the face of the whole earth what place wouldest thou preferre before the arke in which Noah and his family were saued and out of the which all the world beside was drowned So saluation is taught and receiued in the Church damnation is to be found and felt out of the Church Can there be a greater priuiledge had then to haue our souls saued or a greater losse then the losse of our soules Wee reade in the Scriptures of many great and exceeding grieuous losses Iob lost all his camels and his asses his oxen and his sheepe his seruants and his sons all his goods and riches Saul lost his kingdome and his life But all these are pettie losses and damages in comparison of the incomparable and inestimable losse of the soule which is a perpetuall separation from the glorious and comfortable presence of God according to the saying of our Sauiour Math. 25 16. What shall it profite a man if he winne the whole world and then lose his owne soule Or what shall a man giue for the recompence of his soule The truth of this reason the Lord himself expresseth in the Prophet saying I will giue saluation in Sion and my glory vnto Israel Esay 46 13. The wealthiest country vnder heauen hath not this treasure the greatest Monarke in the world hath none of this merchandice the richest merchant that compasseth sea and land and trauaileth into the furthest part of the earth cannot bring home with him this pearle of vnualuable price it is only to be found in the city of God which is his Church for in mount Sion and in Ierusalem shal be deliuerance Reason 2 Secondly all other sorts and societies of men are appointed and ordained of God to serue and preserue this This is it which the Prophet Esay saith Esay 45 14. It shall be the honour of Kings and Princes to doe seruice to the Church and to promote the good of it It is the end for which God hath lifted vp the heads of rulers and gouernors aboue their brethren to promote the good of the Church and to aduance the glory of God This the Prophet speaketh of in the Psalme Psal 78 71. that God chose Dauid his seruant tooke him from the sheepefold and preferred him before his brethren euen tooke him and from behinde the ewes with yong brought he him to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel so he fed them according to the simplicitie of his heart and guided them by the dis●retion of his hands The like we see in the book of Ester when the destruction of the Church was determined and contriued Mordecai said to Ester Ester 4.14 If thou holdest thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy fathers house shall perish and who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time So what power strength ability or meanes soeuer God hath giuen he looketh for this duty and thankfulnes at our hands to seek the safety of Sion to aduance the glory of Ierusalem and to know that hereunto we are called Thirdly the beauty of all other cities and Reason 3 societies standeth in this that they are parts and members of the Church This is the glory of kingdomes and countries whereby they are beautified in that they belong to the true Church for otherwise all places are as cages of vncleane birds nay as lodges of vncleane spirits and all persons are as dogges swine as Tygers and vncleane beasts Hence it is that the Apostle describing what wee are by nature saith Eph. 2 12. Yee were at that time without Christ aliants from the commonwealth of Israel strangers from the couenants of promise and had no hope and were without GOD in the world If then it beautifie other places and persons it must needes be beautifull it selfe If it giue grace and glory to others that ioyne themselues to it it must needs be both gracious and glorious it selfe For whatsoeuer causeth a thing to be so must needes be so it selfe much more The vses of this doctrine are excellent as Vse 1 the nature of the Church is For first we conclude that they must needs be most happy blessed of God that are members of the Church For howsoeuer the world account them miserable grinning at them with their teeth nodding at them them their heads gaping at them with their mouthes hissing at them with their tongues and euery way contumeliously reproaching them with their words yet they are deare and precious in the account of God and in the reputation of Christ Iesus who bought them at a great price and redeemed them with the ransome of his owne blood 1. Pet. 1 18 19. Behold what loue the Father hath giuen to vs that we should be called
teach vs that this must be the end we oght all to aime at that it is our duty to the vtmost of our power to procure the peace of Sion the prosperity of Ierusalem all the dayes of our life For euen as the hilles and mountaines did compasse about Ierusalem to defend it from all dangers and inuasions of enemies so ought all the faithfull that are the friends of the Church seeke to defend it from all such as seeke the ruine and destruction thereof They haue a promise made vnto them that they shall prosper that preferre it Psal 122 6. Pray for the peace of Ierusalem let them prosper that loue thee Such was the zeale of Dauid for the house of God Psal 132 1 2 3 4 5. that it euen consumed and eate him as the people declare Psal 132. Lord remember Dauid with all his afflictions who sware vnto the Lord and vowed vnto the mighty God of Iacob saying I will not enter into the tabernacle of mine house nor come vpon my pallet or bed nor suffer mine eye to sleepe nor mine eye-liddes to slumber vntill I finde out a place for the Lord an habitation for the mighty God of Iacob c Loe how great his care and zeale was to builde the Temple and to further the worship of God he spared no cost but opened the treasures of his house to imploy them this way Thus it ought to be with vs it is the chiefe end why God doeth blesse vs with the blessings of this life that we should pay him his tribute and be content to depart from them when his glory worship do require it If we care not how bountifully we spend and lauish in vnprofitable nay in vngodly vses and pinch for a penny and an halfe-penny imployed to charitable and godly purposes we make it manifest to all men that the glory of God is not before our eies nor his worship any whit regarded of vs. And hence it is that God oftentimes curseth our store and substance and bloweth vpon it that it flyeth away as the winde that commeth not againe Let vs therefore be wise hearted to referre our goods our liues and all that wee haue to seeke the good of the Church that it may be safe and then shall we bee safe vnder the shadow of it On the other side the Lord denounceth a sore and seuere threatning against all such as doe wrong to the Church so that he will wound the head of his enemies and the hairy pate of him that walketh in his sinnes This appeareth by the prayer of the Church ●l 74.2 3. Psal 74. Thinke vpon thy Congregation which thou hast possessed of olde and on the rodde of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this mount Sion wherein thou hast dwelt lift vp thy strokes that thou mayest for euer destroy euery enemy that doth euill to the Sanctuary Such shall neuer prosper albeit they may flourish for a time that hate the Church which God loueth Secondly it is the duty of all persons to assemble together to heare his word all excuses and delayes set apart For wherefore was the Tabernacle placed in the mids but to bind all persons alike to come to the exercises of religion and to performe publike worship to God Ieroboams calues who made Israel to sinne were set one in the North part of the land the other in the South but the Tabernacle of God was setled in the middes among them that all men should haue accesse vnto it and that no man should colour his absence with any pretences Hence it is that the Prophet declaring that GOD had chosen Sion and loued to dwell in it saying This is my rest for euer ●al 132.13 ● 7. heere will I dwell for I haue delight therein doth adde We will enter into his Tabernacles and worship before his footstoole A notable encouragement to moue vs to resort repaire oftentimes to the place of Gods worship seeing he maketh it his habitation and resting place and the house where he will dwell and where we shall find him in time of need A strong perswasion to worke a desire and delight in vs to goe to the Lords courts ●al 68.15 16 ●mpared ●th 10. that we may behold the maiesty of the king of glory To this purpose speaketh Dauid in another Psalme The mountaine of God is like the mountaine of Bashan it is an high mountaine as mount Bashan Why leape ye ye hie mountaines as for this mountaine God delighteth to dwell in it yea the Lord will dwell in it for euer Where he teacheth that Gods Church in regard of mercifull promises heauenly graces and noble victories doth excel without comparison all worldly things and all earthly places All assemblies though neuer so glorious and glitering outwardly must giue place to it and are as nothing being matched with it inasmuch as the excellency beauty and continuance of the Church goeth beyond all other congregations of men Hereupon hee inferreth Thy Congregation dwelled therein for thou O God hast of thy goodnesse prepared for the poore If then we would dwell with God let vs repaire to his house if we would see him we shall see him there if we would heare him we shall heare him there if we would know him we shall know him there for his face is to be seene there his voyce is to be heard there his presēce is to be found there O let vs prefer one day in his courts before a thousand elsewhere Let vs rather desire to be dore-keepers in his house then dwellers in the pallaces of the wicked If they were called and accounted blessed that stood in the presence of Salomon how much more blessed and happy are they that stand in the presence of God and worship toward his holy Temple Let the same mind and affection therefore bee in vs which was in Dauid to say with him with a feeling heart One thing haue I desired of the Lord Psal 27.4 that I will require euen that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to visite his Temple Where shal we find in our dayes this longing and holy desire to speake with God in his word and worship where are the ancient wishes of the Saints Psal 42.1 and 84.2 thinking it long before they came and appeared in the presence of God where is now the panting of the soule and fainting of the heart and the reioycing of the flesh in the liuing God like vnto the earth that gapeth for the showers of raine to refresh it We are an vnthankfull people whom plenty and aboundance haue glutted and made to loathe the heauenly Manna giuen to vs. Thirdly let vs not stand in feare of any enemies as if they could beare and beate downe the Church before them and raze the foundations of it to the ground neither let vs as gracelesse children forsake our mother for
a thousand fold because he selleth it to Christ the best rewarder All men are content heere to sell to him that will giue most Christ is the best chapman the best buyer he giueth eternall saluation to vs. To draw vs from our sinnes that do vs the greatest hurt and bring infinite danger vpon soule and body he offereth to recompence vs an hundred fold more for withdrawing our hearts from our sinnes then the world can reward vs for the vsing of them Art thou not stedfast in religion but as a reede shaken with the winde sometimes carried one way and sometimes inclined another way Sell this thy doubting and wauering vnto Christ be no longer vnstable vnsetled and he will giue thee constancy to continue vnto the end Psal 68 28. and will strengthen that which he hath wrought in thee Art thou puffed vp with pride in apparell Sell this corruption and he will garnish thee with better garments he will cloathe thee with his innocency and righteousnesse that the filthinesse of thy nakednesse shall not appeare Art thou poore and needy Christ saith vnto thee The Foxes haue holes Math. 8 20. and the birds of the aire haue nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Wilt thou prouide for thy children thy houshold Dauid saith I was young and now am olde yet I haue not seene the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging bread Psal 37 25. Now in this selling of our sinnes and parting from them we must obserue these particulars First that it must not be for a short time or for a season but for euer We must not sell our sinnes for a season onely but renounce all right title interest and propriety in them we must depart from them with a full purpose and resolution neuer to take them vp againe neuer to practise them any more To sell any thing is to alienate the property of it from our selues Blessed are all such sellers In this point therefore we must not be lenders as they that chalenge the right of being owners but quite and cleane put from our selues all title to our former sinnes Many indeede lay them downe for a time as hypocrites doe wiping their mouthes with the harlot and returning to their vomite with the dogge Prou. 30 20. 2 Pet. 2 22. or to their wallowing in the mire with the swine Thus it fareth with such as come to the word and Sacraments of God with prophane and vnreformed hearts They seeme godly while they are in the Church but their righteousnesse is but as the morning dew they hang downe their heads as a bulrush for a time afterward they are as bad or worse then they were before This is nothing in the sight of GOD except we vtterly forsake our sinnes True it is the faithfull and godly man may fall into some sinnes which they haue forsaken Gen. 20 2. as Abraham did in denying his wife but they must do it as strangers to it not as owners of it for it is none of theirs they haue giuen ouer the vse of it and the right vnto it It is the man that is vnregenerate he may lay lawfull claime vnto it as for vs it is no more ours then the house that we haue solde and so alienated it from vs. Secondly there is another kinde of sale that is faulty and deceitfull which is when we are content to sell some of our sinnes but we will not sell all of them Some there are so couetous that they wil part from nothing they will sell nothing Though they be neuer so well offered they are so in loue with their owne faults and folly that they will keepe them still albeit to their infinite hindrance losse euen the losse of their soules Others are content to lend their sinnes but they will not leaue them they are willing to abstaine from them for a time but they will not renounce them for euer These are like the Israelites who albeit they were brought with a strong hand out of Egypt Numb 11 5. yet they had a minde to returne thither againe they thought vpon the fish which they did eate there and remembred the Cucumbers and the Melons the Leekes the Onions and the Garlicke these they lusted after with all their soule Or as Lots wife being deliuered out of Sodome as a firebrand out of the burning or as two legs or a piece of an eare out of the mouth of the Lyon Amos 3 12 and 4 11 euen a little remnant out of the common destruction of the City Gen. 19. Luke 17. she looked backe againe toward Sodome and hadde her minde there vpon such things as she had left behind which sheweth she had not sold all but as he that lendeth his goods looketh for them againe so would she faine returne to those things that yet shee retained in her heart If the case be better with vs and that our righteousnesse exceed these yet let vs not flatter our selues and deceiue our owne soules forasmuch as wee must goe farther and step many degrees beyond them For albeit we can be content to sell and to sell for euer yet there is more required of vs so that we may say with Christ One thing is wanting we must sell all and must keep back nothing We must not sell as Ananias Sapphira did they kept backe part of the price so many make sale but they are deceitfull Merchants they will not passe all but leaue out somewhat in the bargaine So do many deale doubly with God they desire to forgoe their sinnes but they will keepe somewhat But he cannot bee mocked or cousened of vs. We must renounce our sweet sinnes our profitable sins with all the appurtenances and dependances vnto them We must abstaine from all appearance of euill We must pull vp these weeds by the rootes that they grow not in the gardens of our heart againe God will haue all that is ours left or else hee accounteth nothing truely left Herod was cōtent to heare Iohn to feare him to reuerence him to do many things that he required Mat. 14 4. and to reforme many euils that he reproued and himselfe had practised but when he told him he must not marry his brothers wife he stopped his eares and would not heare he was determined to keep that one sin The hypocrites in Micah are ready to come before the Lord and to bow themselues before the most high Mic. 6 6 7 ● to offer Riuers of oyle and the fruite of their body for the sin of their soule neuerthelesse the Prophet telleth them that God liketh not of this bargaine inasmuch as he requireth of them to do iustly to loue mercy and to walke humbly with their God We are like vnto the young man mentioned in the Gospell whom Christ is saide to haue loued Mar 10 22 When he was bidden to sell all that he had he was sad at that saying and went away
Mat. 13 verse 3 the watchmen Ezek. 3 verse 17 the Leaders Heb. 13 verse 17 the Shepheards Eph. 4 verse 11 the Stewards Luke 12 verse 42. Shall the Ministers then being Officers onely vnder another to serue him presume to doe any thing in their owne name and not acknowledge their subiection vnto another Thirdly the Ministeries that are expressed Reason 3 in the word are all sufficient to bring the church to perfection and to make it a complete body as appeareth by the Apostle where he serteth downe the Officers that haue receiued guifts for the instruction of the Church of Christ Eph. 4 11 12 13. Christ gaue some Apostles and some Prophets and some Euangelists and some Pastours and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints and for the worke of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ till we all come in the vnity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ If then these suffice for the bringing of the worke to perfection all other inuented by men are needlesse and superfluous and may be cut off as superfluous branches Lastly none can appoint new Officers or Reason 4 strange Ministers in the Church but he that can giue them gifts to discharge the Callings that they vndertake For what is an office with out strength and ability to execute it Eph. 4 10. but an idle name without the thing as it were an empty box without the oyntment But no mā hath it in his power to bestow any gifts to set vp a new office neither ought hee to set on worke the gifts that God hath giuen otherwise then he appointeth as it were to till the earth with another mans heiffer therefore it belongeth not to any man to institute any new Ministeries or to imploy them that are warranted contrary to the will of him that hath called thē and consequently it is God only to whō it belongeth to chuse such as shal minister before him as the master appointeth his owne seruants that shall serue him in his house and do his businesse Vse 1 Let vs in the first place see what profitable vses arise from this doctrine First of all we learne that no man hath any authority or iurisdiction to peruert or euert that order that God hath set in his Church whether it be by deuising new Ministeries or by destroying diminishing of the old For as well do they erre in building that adde such as are not warranted as they that take away such as are established in the word It is a true saying worthy to be obserued deliuered by Christ our Sauiour Euery plant which mine heauenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted vp Matth. 15 13. It is the word of GOD that endureth for euer all mans deuices are as the flower of the field that fadeth in a moment There is nothing shall continue constant which standeth not by the strength of God The traditions of men howsoeuer they may seeme to be firmely rooted and strongly backed by the best deuices and pollicies that flesh and blood can deuise yet they are as chaffe which the wind driueth away and they shall not be able to endure It is truely spoken of Gamaliel though it be euilly applied Acts 5 38. Refraine from these men and let them alone for if this counsell or this worke bee of men it will come to nought The Church is the body of Christ wherein nothing is too much nothing too little 1 Corinth 12 12. For as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is it in the mysticall body of Christ whereof he is the head In the naturall body of man if it should haue three legges or three ●ands or diuers heads it would be a monstrous body it would not reioyce or take pleasure in that excrescence or abounding of proud flesh Or if it had onely one legge or one eye it could not delight in it but would be greeued at the defect So is it in the body of Christ which is the Church God hath made it a perfect body he hath giuen it hands eyes to guide it selfe into the way of peace and to bring it vnto the kingdome of glory If wee will adde other eyes or other hands then God hath fitted or tye them that it hath from imploiment to the good of the body we do iniury to the body of CHRIST and make the Church disfigured and deformed If wee should see a man in our daies like to the gyant mentioned in the second booke of Samuel whose stature was exceeding great that should haue on euery hand sixe fingers and on euery foot sixe toes 2 Sam. 21 20. foure and twenty in number we would thinke it vncomely and ill-fauoured and no ornament vnto the body So is it with the Church which ought to haue her forme and feature in euery part It is for beauty and comlinesse compared to a company of horses in Pharaohs Chariots Cant. 1 verse 9 and to a rowe of Iewels It is saide to be beautifull as Tirzah Cant. 6 verse 4. and comely as Ierusalem that is compact together Psalme 122 3. It is saide to looke foorth as the morning to bee faire as the Moone cleare as the Sunne and terrible as an army with banners Cant. 6 verse 10. If then wee shall strippe the Church of any of her ornaments if we shall wound it and take away her veile from her Cant. 5 verse 7. If we shall giue her any new parts or rob her of any of her true parts we make her no longer beautifull and beloued to say of it as Christ doth Thou art all faire my Loue there is no spot in thee Cant. 4 verse 7. We make it deformed as a body that is eyther maimed or monstrous Eph. 5 26 27. This is the commendation of the Church that her glory is absolute perfect throughout all the parts of her and that it hath no spot no blemish no imperfection Such a glorious body is meet to be ioyned with so glorious an head as Christ is When we suffer the Church to be all black and foule full of wrinkles and withered deformities how should it be vnited vnto him Happy is that Church that hath all her parts and none but her parts like a body that retaineth the naturall lustre But if it want any members that it ought to haue or haue gotten an ouerplus that it ought not to haue they serue to no other vse but to disfigure the body and to disgrace the head The true naturall parts are much ashamed both of those wants and of those superfluities the which the more they are the farther is that Church from perfection Some Churches haue somewhat too much that ought to be pared away some Churches haue too little that ought to be restored and some Churches are
riches and reioyce in it more then they that finde great spoiles Account the merchandise of it better then the Merchandise of siluer and the gaine thereof more precious then Rubies so that nothing that we highly esteeme can be compared vnto it Prou. 3.13 14. Magnifie it as a treasure of that value that rather then thou wilt leaue it thou wilt be ready to forsake all that thou hast Matth. 13. There is nothing that more slaketh and shaketh off our deuout attention then to account the precious word of God vile and base in our eyes according to the corrupt custome of many in our dayes that preferre huskes fit to feed swine before the fat of wheat that is sent to nourish the sonnes of God Fourthly we must know that there is great hope of those that refuse not the meanes but submit themselues vnto it but none at all of those that vtterly refuse it What God may worke extraordinarily who sometimes feedeth by miracle from heauen as he did the Israelites Exod. 16.15 1 King 17.6 and Eliah in the wildernesse we cannot affirme and they that waite vpon such vanities forsake their owne mercy But of this point we haue spoken already Lastly it is our duty to lay vp the Word in our hearts that it may not be taken from vs but that we may practise it and profit by it For all our hearing must aime at profiting We must desire the sincere milke of the Word 1 Pet. 2.2 that we may grow thereby Now it can neuer take root except we heare it with an honest and good heart Luke 8.15 If we haue it only running in our mouthes or swimming in our braines it is as the grasse vpon the house toppe Psal 129.6.7 which withereth afore it groweth vp wherewith the mower filleth not his hand nor he that bindeth sheaues his bosome Let vs therefore first of all giue our hearts vnto God pray him to reforme them and to open them that so we may attend to those things that are deliuered vnto vs. As for those that haue their mouthes open but their hearts empty of the word they are as sounding brasse or a tinkling cymball they may please themselues and deceiue others for a time but their hypocrisie shall be vncased their deceitfull dealing manifested and themselues prooued to be no better then vessels that make a noyse but are without all substance in them Verse 11 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites c. Hitherto we haue spoken of the commandement of God directed vnto Moses that he should present the Leuites before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him now we are to proceede to the reason of the commandement where we see the cause rendred why they should be giuen vnto him because euen vnto this time the first borne had executed the Priests office being consecrated vnto God and preserued out of the common destruction when the first borne in Egypt were destroyed He putteth them in mind of Gods mercy toward them who might iustly haue destroyed them as well as the Egyptians if it had pleased him When we see a common desolation or destruction and our selues as a remnant taken out of the common calamity it ought to make vs thankfull vnto God and to acknowledge that wee holde our life of him in cheife Thus did Noah stand affected when he offered sacrifice to God after he was come out of the Arke and was preserued with his family from the flood of waters Thus doth Daniel Dan. 5.20 ●● teach Belshazzar the king to humble his heart knowing the heauy iudgment that God brought vpon his father and tooke his glory from him We must profit by the examples of Gods workes both of his mercy and iudgement vpon others We learne from hence Doctrine that the first borne were from the beginning the Lords The first bo● were sanctified to the Lord. and consecrated to serue him and to instruct others This dignity and preheminence of the first borne beganne among the sonnes of Adam and continued in his posteritie as well before as after the generall destruction of the old world the eldest euer succeeding in the kingly and Priestly office vnlesse for some open impiety or other secret cause best knowne vnto God and vnknowne vnto the Church hee were reiected so that there was euermore some excellency vntill that Israel came out of Egypt and the Church became nationall Hence it is that God saith to Caine the elder sonne of Adam If thou doe well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well sinne lieth at the doore and vnto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule ouer him Gen. 4.7 To this purpose Iacob speaketh to Reuben Gen. 49.3 Thou art my first borne my might and the beginning of my strength the excellency of dignity and the excellency of power Thus he was by priuiledge of birthright and thus was euery sonne by creation that first opened the matrice Luke 2.23 Whereby we see that in the family of the faithfull from the first man that God created vntill Aaron was sanctified to be a Priest vnto God in stead of the first borne the eldest of the family ordinarily had both the kingly and Priestly direction of the rest of his brethren As we saw this before in the house of Adam so it appeareth also afterward For when Caine the eldest sonne of Adam to whom the dignity of the first borne did pertaine was for his iniquitie reiected from that honour and excommunicated from the Church which was a spirituall kinde of banishment God raised vp Seth who being taught by his father touching the fall of man touching the punishments of sinne and the promised Sauiour assisted him while he liued in guiding his family and succeeded him after his death in the gouernment of the Church of God which was as a little flocke in comparison of the race of Caines posterity that married many wiues and encreased in great multitudes In like sort Enoch succeded Seth and dying ●ield of the ●rch lib. 5. ● ●et 2.5 ●● 4. ● left that honour to Kenan Kenan to Mahalaleel c. These were preachers of righteousnesse and repentance some of them indued with the spirit of Prophesie to conuince that wicked generation These Preachers of God being contemned and despised in the world such entertainement haue his seruants euer found the flood came and swept them away Noah gouerned as a father the Church of God before and after the Flood and left the same dignitie and office to Shem his second sonne Iaphet his eldest sonne being put behinde for secret causes knowne vnto God euen as his father had committed it vnto him ●en 10.21 Thus we might proceed and goe forward to shew in succeeding ages of the Church how God continued this fauour to the first borne and thereby set as it were a crowne of honour vpon their head Hence it is that at the giuing of the
whensoeuer any euen of the lowest that pertaine vnto their flocke when the tradesman the Shoomaker the Weauer the Husbandman when the seruant the poore soule that hath scarce what to eate or what to drinke or what to put on shal resort vnto them for comfort or counsell then is there place especially for this grace of humblenesse and lowlinesse of mind they must make much of such as come vnto them and beare themselues familiarly and plainely toward them entertaining them with all gentlenesse and giuing them encouragement with all patience in hearing of them and in bearing with their wants and imperfections But many there are that take themselues to be such profound doctours such learned Clearkes such deepe Diuines and iolly fellowes that they thinke it were a great disparagement vnto them to bestow their labour and learning among such sottes They say I could be content to take greater paines to teach Gentlemen and those that are more ciuill but these rudesbies and Russet coates who can abide to liue withall who can endure to spend his dayes among Clownes and clouted shooes Thus they deale with Gops people thus they speake of Gods people for whom Christ dyed Thus they account of those that hunger and thirst after knowledge thus they bewray the pride of their owne hearts and testifie against themselues the little loue they beare to the sheepe to the sheepfold and to the sheepeheard of the sheepe Let them steppe but one steppe forward and then they will plainely discouer their owne hypocrisie and euidently shew that they differ little or nothing from the Papists themselues For they to discourage simple people from reading the Scriptures Ce●s● C●●● ● 13. call them dogges and swine to whom holy things are not to be deliuered and to that purpose alleadge the words of Christ Matth 7.6 Giue not that which is holy vnto the dogges neither cast yee your pearles before swine lest they trample them vnder their feet and turne againe and rent you so these men account them as clownes and Coridons and cast out what words of contempt they can against them they bid them follow the plough taile get them into their shops and busie themselues in their trades as though conference and communication with them were in no sort to be admitted or as though they had no soules to saue so that in short time peraduenture these high minded men will esteeme them as dogs and swine also which ought not to treade in the LORDS courts These are farre from the minde and example of Christ who being equall with God made himself of no reputation and took vpon him the forme of a seruant he vouchsafed to conferre with rude and simple men hee taught men and women high and low rich and poore he refused none He taught indeed in the Temple and in great cities and in populous assemblies but he disdained not to teach also in their villages and townes and to instruct plaine countreymen and had oftentimes more comfort of his labours among such then among men of greater callings In like manner we that are called to this office and haue our speciall and particular place of teaching assigned vnto vs ought to know that we must be no chusers When the Lord of the haruest hath sent vs into his field the chiefe Shepheard of the sheepe hath set vs ouer his flocke and the housholder hath hired vs to labour in his vineyard it is our dutie to follow the example of our Lord and Master and to apply our selues in our charges that we may discharge them faithfully zealously carefully and diligently Let vs not dislike our places in the countrey which we haue taken because the people are few or rude or simple or poore or of meane conceit and vnderstanding in them These men will doe nothing in secret but seeke to be famous and to be knowen openly they affect honours and promotions they resort to great places and solemne assemblies and desire to preach in the Vniuersities at the Court at Pauls at the Spittle or to be heard of great men and noble personages and in the meane season absent themselues from their owne cure of soules which are like to perish for whom they must giue account and come to their reckoning and so disdaine to haue any dealing with such as are simple as if they were too good and the people too base Let vs seek to shake off this high conceit of our selues and take heed of a scornfull and disdainefull heart which naturally accompanieth all and especially those of great giftes of high places We see this in Christs owne disciples notwithstanding his owne example of humility daily before their eies euen when he was preaching most seriously and earnestly vnto them of his death and departure of his Crosse and Passion of loue and humility Luke 22.22 23. they began to striue for superiority contend which of them should be accounted the greatest Thirdly we haue warrant and direction Vse 3 from hence to desire most earnestly that the kingdome of God may flourish euery where Christ our Sauiour teacheth vs to pray that his kingdome may come Matth. 6.10 and so to be erected in the hearts of men It was an holy affection in Moses to desire that all the Lords people were Prophets Num. 11.29 so ought we to craue that Gods word might be established among all men and made manifest to all people of the world This vse consisteth of many branches Branches of this vse First it is our duty to bewaile such places and persons as lie in darkenesse and ignorance and consequently in the shadow of death Christ had compassion of such and his bowels yearned within him Such as haue not the light of the Gospel shining among them are said to sit in darkenesse and to liue in the region of death Matth. 4.16 There are many places of the land many thousand poore desolate soules that lie in great ignorance and haue no knowledge of the wayes of God dwelling in them The fields are ouergrown with bryars and nettles which should bee white vnto the haruest Ioh. 4.35 The diuell smileth at it and reioyceth to behold the desolations of the Church because it is the exalting of his throne and the setting vp of his kingdome He is the king of the world as Christ is of the Church and his scepter is ignorance as the scepter of Christs kingdome is his word And therefore when the seat of wickenesse is ouerthrowne by preaching of the Gospel we may see Satan as lightning fall downe from heauen Luke 10.18 If then we can behold the ruines of the Church and the destruction of many of our brethren through want of knowledge and yet are not grieued at it nor lament for it we haue not the affection in vs of Christ the head neither the grace of compassion that ought to be in vs toward our fellow members Secondly we are bound to desire that wheresoeuer there is a candlesticke there
ignorantly like the blinde man that hitteth the white cannot be accepted of him or looke for any reward at his hands God will accept of none to be his seruants that know him not Will any man receiue into his seruice one that cannot see to dispatch his businesse and shall we thinke that God will admit blinde men that regard not to vnderstand his wayes and want their spirituall eyes to discerne betweene good and euill This we see by sundry examples as Psal 95.10 where the Lord rendreth this reason why the people erred in their hearts and greeued him forty yeeres in the wildernesse Psal 95.10 because they had not knowne his wayes It was the cause why the Sadduces denyed the resurrection Matt. 22.29 Ye do erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God This caused the Iewes to crucifie the Lord of life Act. 3.17 Now brethren I wote that through ignorance ye did it as did also your rulers for if they had knowne him they would not haue crucified the Lord of life This is it that maketh the proud iusticiaries of the world to rest in their owne righteousnesse Rom. 10.3 because they know not the righteousnesse of God This was the cause of the idolatry of the Gentiles Gal. 4.8 When ye knew not God ye did seruice vnto them which by nature are no Gods So what was the cause but ignorance that moued Paul to persecute the Saints he rendreth this as the reason 1 Tim. 1.13 I was before a blasphemer and a persecuter and iniurious but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in vnbeliefe And as it is the roote that brancheth out into many sinnes so it is as pitch that defileth whatsoeuer it toucheth turneth good affections into euill and maketh them to decline and degenerate into sinne Religion deuotion hope feare being ioyned and guided with the eye and light of knowledge please God whereas without this sight they highly displease him For religion ioyned with ignorance begetteth and bringeth forth idolatry deuotion accompanyed with ignorance is no better then superstition hope ioyned with ignorance worketh presumption feare ioyned with ignorance engendreth desperation If we haue not knowledge to support and season vs we erre out of the right way and are deceiued beyond all measure Loue blinded with ignorance becommeth sottish Zeale patience and such like corrupted with ignorance are turned into brutish and sauage passions This reprooueth three sorts of men First the practise of the Church of Rome ●re● that taketh away the key of knowledge from the people and seeketh to bring in palpable darknesse These false teachers cannot endure that the people should enioy the light of the Scriptures They reade them in an vnknown tongue perswading them they may be most deuout when they are most ignorant that it shall goe well with them though they haue no faith of their owne but an implicit faith to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they know not what it beleeueth These are they that notably abuse the people to their perdition and bewitch them with spirituall socery as they that bring Gods iudgments vpon their heads ●●8 ● 13. and 〈◊〉 1. ● 10. ● 1. 8. for when a land is destitute of the knowledge of God al things are couered with darknesse and the persons are liable to his fearefull iudgements as is euident by sundry places of Scripture Dauid saith the blind and lame that mocked at him were hated of his soule so that such should not enter into his house 2. Sam. 5.8 Such as are spiritually blinde shall neuer enter into Gods kingdome they are all seers that shall come thither The want of naturall sight is nothing in comparison of the want of the eyes of the minde Our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed that are pure in heart ● 5.8 because they shall see God This sight of the minde is two fold partly in this life partly in the life to come one of them vnperfect the other perfect when we shall see him as he is This is eternall life to know God ● 3.2 it is eternall death not to know him and to be ignorant that God is our father that Christ is our redeemer and that the holy Ghost is our sanctifier ●●econd ●ofe The second reproofe is of those that are children in knowledge that liue in the light and yet can see nothing The Sunne shineth brightly in their faces yet they shut their eyes Many thinke they haue religion enough if they haue a good mind and meaning and leade a ciuil life among their neighbours who like not such busy fellowes that will be medling euermore with the Scriptures They are accounted honest men and are well liked of all they pay that they owe they are iust of their word they deceiue no man But this ciuil conuersation and honest behauiour shall profit them nothing nor be able to bring them into the fauour of God nor giue them any title to the kingdome of heauen so long as they are destitute of knowledge forasmuch as they haue God their aduersary who will contend with them and plead against them neither will he know them that regard not to know him Others despise it and contemne it like the foole or idiot that casteth away a pearle or precious stone not knowing the value or worth of it These come to the Church sometimes and heare the word of God both read preached and yet are not so much as acquainted with the histories of the Scripture the principles of religion which are as milke for yong children They know not what faith is they are not acquainted with the meanes of our iustification they know not the difference betweene the Law and the Gospel neither the vse of the one or the other they cannot discerne any thing betweene the religion of Christ and of Antichrist Lastly The third reproofe it serueth to stoppe the mouthes of all proude and malicious slaunderers of the Gospel that accuse the preaching and publishing thereof as the cause of the sinnes and enormities that abound among vs as also of the plagues and pnishments that God hath inflicted vpon the land These men vttering the froth and scumme of their soule mouthes and belching vp the venome of their poisoned hearts cry out It was neuer wel since this new religion sprung vp since there was so much teaching and preaching that we haue so much knowledge and learning that we are well the worse for it The cause of Gods iudgements is not the preaching of the Gospel but the contempt of the Gospel and because we haue the light but loue darkenesse more then the light God iustly giueth ouer such prophane beasts into a reprobate sense Our great ignorance is the cause of our sinnes and that we are children of darkenesse rather then of the day of the night not of the light Are not these ashamed to say that the light of the Sun causeth men to stumble and goe
to preserue holy things in their purity and to deliuer them as much as may be from contempt Obiection If it be said the word is the ordinary meanes of saluation if then they be denied the word they be barred from the means of repentance I answer Answer these are such as the bare word can worke no good vpon and therefore they are vnworthy of it except peraduenture when some part of the Scripture is expounded and such doctrine deliuered as by all probability and likelyhood may serue to bring them to repentance To admit of them at such times may seeme not altogether vnprofitable as for example when the Minister shall haue or take occasion to handle excommunication and to shew what a fearefull thing it is to be cast out of the Church and to bee deliuered to Satan the enemy of mankinde and to become his bondslaue Besides they want not altogether the meanes of repentance seeing they are priuately to be admonished not to be hated and counted as enemies but euery one is to labor their conuersion This appeareth farther in these foure points First Duties to bee performed to excommunicate persons we must loue the persons of the excommunicate in the Lord and thirst after their soules health Secondly it is our duty to exhort and rebuke them so that albeit we loue them we must take heed we do not flatter them and so harden them in their sinnes Thirdly we are bound to pray for those that are bound by the Church censures We are not to pray with him but it is required of vs to pray for him that God would open his eies turne his heart Lastly we are to assure him that vpon his repentance we are ready to imbrace him and to receiue him as a brother forasmuch as there is ioy in heauen for one sinner that conuerteth Againe it teacheth vs to auoid the conuersation of such as are cast out of the Church so far as we can are not by some necessary duty as by a band or chaine tyed vnto them as we shall farther declare afterward To be familiar with such giueth thē encouragement to continue in that dangerous and damnable estate Lastly wee see it is the duty of the Church to purge it of such offenders as a corrupt body of grosse and superfluous humors We see in the time of the Law they had in the Tabernacle not onely the Candlestickes and the Lampes to giue light but also pots pannes shouels beesoms snuffers snuffe-dishes such like vessels and instruments as serued to carry and conuay away all filth and vncleannesse from the place of assembly of the Congregation Prou. 25 4. The Lord will haue the drosse taken from the siluer that there may come forth a vessell for the finer neither will he haue any root that bringeth foorth gall and wormewood to be among his people Now we are come to the last but not the least point to be obserued in excommunication The sixt part of the description which is that the principall scope and end of it is the saluation and recouery of the offender and the bringing of him out of the wildernesse into the sheepfold of Christ frō which he wandred and went astray By his repentance the knot is loosed which before was strongly tied It is a medicine bitter indeed but wholesome vnpleasant to the flesh but profitable to the soule as an hot iron that seareth and putteth to paine but it tendeth to health it worketh sorrow but it is the godly sorrow that causeth repentance not to bee repented of The Apostle sheweth this at large in his second Epistle to the Corinthians speaking of the fruite of the excommunication of the incestuous person it wrought many worthy effects of true repentance he was ashamed of himselfe and of his sinne he had sorrowed greatly for it and was very neere to desperation so that he willeth them to forgiue him 2 Cor. 2 7 8. to comfort him to loue him and to receiue him againe as a Christian brother Let no man therefore condemne this censure or open his mouth against this ordinance of God so souereigne so profitable so necessary forasmuch as the Church casteth them out for a season that it may receiue thē againe for euer Secondly let no man condemne such persons as stand excommunicated though we cannot admit of them as Christian brethren yet they are naturall brethren may belong to Gods eternall election The incestuous Corinthian was iudged of many 2 Cor. 2 6. and put out of the society of the Church yet he was brought to repentance laid hold of the promises of the Gospel We haue this notable example commended vnto vs that we should make good vse of it He suffered a greeuous punishment for a greeuous offence but it was onely to humble him and to bring him to see his sin which otherwise he could not he would not Lastly we see that whatsoeuer power is giuen to the Pastors of the Church is giuen to edification and not to destruction 2 Cor. 10 8. God intendeth and the Church respecteth the destruction of the flesh and the mortification of the deeds of the old man but the saluation of the spirit in the day of the Lord. If then this ordinance worke not this sauing effect it cometh through their fault that doe abuse and contemne it Secondly seeing obstinate sinners are to Vse 2 be excommunicated The fearefull estate of excommunicate persons it doth shew vnto vs the fearefull estate and condition of such as are iustly excommunicated cut off from the society of the Church and from the company communion of beleeuers They are dragged as dead carcasses out of a City that others should not bee annoied with the stench and contagion of them This may appeare vnto vs by many particulars First they haue their names blotted out of the number of the people of God Gen. 17. Luke 6 22. This maketh their names to rot as dead branches to wither away No man looketh vpō them but with remembrance of their sin with terrour and detestation therof This is the highest punishment in the church it is as a piercing thunderbolt cast downe from heauen vpon the heads of dissolute liuers and incorrigible persons What greater honor can there be then to bee the sons and daughters of God whereby God is made their God as for others they are cut off from his protection they can looke for no blessings to come from him but all plagues and curses to ouertake them This is a misery of all miseries for as he is the God of his people Hebr. 1● so he is a consuming fire to burne vp all his enemies If then we be his people he loueth vs he defendeth vs he heareth vs he receiueth vs he honoureth vs if not he hateth vs and withdraweth his grace from vs he leaueth vs as a prey to our spirituall enemies and cloatheth vs with shame as with a garment For as
held in the number of them but are as rotten members to be cut and pulled from the body The heathen had no communion with the Iewes nor the Iewes with them in matters of religion The Publicanes were men giuen ouer to couetousnesse vnrighteousnes Excommunicate persons are infamous extortion oppression and to all kinde of iniquity If a man should meete them and tell they are as the Pagans and Paynims or call them Publicanes sinners they would scarse endure it they would be at defiance with him they would think they had wrong offered vnto them Neuerthelesse we heare and cannot be ignorant what Christ hath pronounced with his owne mouth shall he say that if these cannot be gained neyther by the priuate admonition of the brethren nor by the publike warning of the Church Let him be vnto thee as an heathen man and a Publicane and shall wee be afraid to speake as he speaketh to cal them as he calleth and to name them as he nameth them These are as true as fit names for thē as that which they receiued at their baptisme If they be ashamed of the names let them also be ashamed of their sins and if they scorne to be branded and vp braided with them let them consider the cause which maketh them to deserue them Wherefore all excommunicate persons are infamous and of euill note Euery man must thinke of them and speake vnto them as they deserue that they seeing how others are ashamed of them may learne at last to be ashamed of themselues Fiftly the Apostle teacheth that such are to bee deliuered ouer to the power of the diuell that they may bee knowne not to bee the members of Christ but limbes of Satan neither to be heires of heauen but inheritors of hell not vnder the protection of GOD but in the power of the Prince of darknesse forasmuch as such as contemne the admonition and reprehension of the Church haue lost the communion of Saints and are become the bondslaues of the diuell This we see very plainely 1 Cor. 5 3 4 5. For I verily as absent in body but present in spirit haue iudged already as though I were present concerning him that hath so done this deed In the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ when ye are gathered together and my spirit with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ To deliuer such a one vnto Satan for the destruction of the flesh c. So was Hymeneus and Alexander deliuered vnto Satan 1 Tim. 1 20. that is cast out of the Church of Christ The reason of this manner of speaking is this because Christ is the head of the Church and promiseth that he will bee our King and maintaine vs by his power Wherefore whensoeuer we are cut from the Church and haue Christ no more to bee our head needs must we be laide open and naked as a prey to the tyranny of Satan For Christ reigneth among his own he keepeth his sheep in his fold such as wander from it are left to be deuoured of the wolues Hee speaketh of two persons whom he singleth out for examples sake We are not so moued with iudgements as we ought to be and therfore it is requisite that we haue some men set before our eies that we may consider better of our selues and learne to walke in feare before him and carefully to take heed to our waies And if by this separation from the Church and deliuerance to Satan they be not reformed yet it shall shut their mouthes and bridle their tongues from speaking euill against God and his truth and preserue the Church in purity and verity For to this end he setteth a note of infamy vpon them and brandeth them with a marke in the forehead as we see malefactors burned in the hand that they might no longer be of any eredite either to hinder the saluation of the godly or to draw the weake to destruction If any man had the question asked of them whether they would willingly be deliuered ouer to Satan to haue him their Lord to rule them their Prince to leade them their God to haue the whole gouernement of them they would shake and tremble at the thought of it For who would openly professe himselfe to bee the seruant of such a master the bondslaue of such a tyrant Notwithstanding this refusall and deniall in words all excommunicate persons must know that while they remaine out of the Church as filth cleansed out of the streete or as dung swept out of the house they are committed to the custody of Satan as prisoners to a Iaylor who will keepe them safe and sure if possibly hee can For who reigneth out of the Church but the diuell The world is his kingdome and their hearts are his throne where he sitteth as in a principality These men so long as they continue thus separated cannot be saued forasmuch as out of the Church there is no saluation but a fearefull looking for of iudgment and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries Sixtly this also serueth to note out the most fearefull and dreadful condition of all excommunicate persons because beeing cast out of one Church they are banished out of al churches All are to take them as Gentiles and heathen men wheresoeuer they liue all are to shun them among whomsoeuer they come This point also notably sheweth the greatnes of their punishment and serueth to adde somwhat to the heape of their iudgements When they are cast out of one Church if they might be receiued into another and by changing their dwelling bee admitted as members of that Church it might much mitigate the sharpnesse of the censure for that were but as it were to leaue one house and betake them to another as a stranger that is driuen out of one chamber and lodged in another But it is not so with them The Churches throughout the world as louing sisters doe hold communion one with another whom one receiueth all do receiue whom one reiecteth all do reiect and such as haue dealt otherwise haue bin sharply reproued as were easie to bee shewed out of sundry Histories Fathers and Councels Aug epist 14 if it were expedient or necessary If a seruant that belongeth to one certaine family did certainly know that being cast out from thence hee could be receiued no where beside it would make him carefull to please his master and fearefull to offend him If a man that hath his dwelling in a house where he is well entertained did know that if he should be turned out of it he could be suffered to dwell in no other place but must wander vp and downe as a sheepe from the sheepefold it would make him make much of that house and to take heed he were not remoued and displaced out of it Thus should it be with euery one of vs the Church is Gods house and his children are of his family if we be put out of it as a servant turned out
dominions to whom he pleaseth This is highly to abuse this high censure as they doe also other ordinances of God What is more comfortable then the Supper of the Lord yet they haue horribly and shamefully prophaned it nay they haue altogether abolished it and brought it to nothing by the abominable idoll of the Masse which they haue set vp in stead thereof Suppose this man of sinne had iurisdiction and authority to excommunicate for sinne yet from whence had he right to apply it to the deposition of kings and alienation of subiects and other temporall matters but from him that is the authour of sinne to wit the diuell Lib. 1. de Consider It was well said of Bernard to the Bishop of Rome Your power standeth in censuring crimes not in taking away possessions but a kingdome is a possession and therefore his power extendeth not vnto it Besides the committing of any heinous crime is not a sufficient cause to depriue them of their Crownes and Scepters When a priuate person is censured with excommunication according to the merit of his offence hee loseth not his substance he forfeiteth not either house or land he loseth no part or parcel of his possessions neither is there any cause why he should neither was there euer any such claimed or challenged or practised or assayed What then is the nature of this censure changed when the Bull roareth against Princes shal it take frō him his possession which it doth not from any other The law of God saith Thou shalt iudge the small as well as the great and not respect persons in iudgement Deut. 1.17 But according to the corrupt proceedings in their courts it were better to bee a priuate man then a Prince To ascend a step higher that we may pull downe the pride of Rome a step lower is it otherwise in the degrees of honour and dignity whereunto men are aduanced then with priuate persons when a Knight is excommunicated is he disgraded of his knight-hood hath he his spurs smitten off with a knife hard by the heeles hath he his coate of armes torne from his body Stowes Annal. in the reigne of Edw. 4. and other ornaments and ensignes of renowne and worship taken from him ●r doth the noble man forfeit his nobility lose his Barony or of a Baron is he made no Baron This was neuer attempted or heard off The lightning that descended from the Vatican neuer touched either the priuate mans possession or the noble mans honour how then should it goe worse with the king himselfe then with al his subiects that he should lose his royalty and not the Baron his Barony Moreouer it is the Apostles rule That God iudgeth those that are without the Church cannot giue sentence against such as are not of the Church 1 Cor. 5.12 13. as we noted before Some are in the Church and some are out of the Church The Church is the house and Citie of God the faithfull are his houshold seruants they liue and abide vnder his roofe they eat of his meate and therfore happy is their condition Such as are not of the Church are not of his house and therefore must perish as all they were drowned that entred not into the Arke and as all perished in the sacking of Iericho that were not in Rahabs house and therefore their condition is wofull and miserable as Reuel 22.15 These shall not goe vnpunished God shall enter into iudgement with them the Church hath nothing to doe with them God will proceed against them so that they shall not escape let vs therefore remit them to his seate of iustice But the Church of Rome holdeth that we are heretiks schismatikes and I wot not what else and so out of the bosome of the Church For so many as do not submit themselues to the Popes supremacy him they adiudge and condeme of heresie If then we be none of the Church they cannot smite vs with their censures nor thunder against vs with their excommunications wherby notwithstanding they haue especially raised vp their state to the top of greatnesse and haue laid such a burden vpon their heads that in time is likely to breake their neckes Excommunication then being a cutting off from the Church of such as are of the Church it cannot touch vs euen in their own iudgment whom they teach in all their bookes of Controuersies to be out of the Church Furthermore this is such a censure as neuer any of the Apostles nor their successors practised to meddle with such as were heathen Pagans or to touch their persons or to take away their possessions This is a barre or blocke that lyeth in the way to hinder the conuersion of kings that are Gentiles For who among them would willingly embrace the Christian religion who being before an absolute Prince should by his embracing the faith and receiuing the Gospel put his head vnder the Popes girdle and offer his necke to be led vp and downe in a string at the discretion of his good lord and master and be a king no long then it pleased him He shall make his estate much worse then 〈◊〉 his people as if the Church were a tender mother to priuate men but a step mother vnto Princes Againe God hath prouided by this ordinance that none should be censured but he only that hath committed the fault and that such as haue not offended should not be punished and chastened The kingdome is an inheritance and admitteth a successour of the same line If the father be dethroned and depriued of his kingdome and it be giuen away to another or left to him that can seaze vpon it the sonne cannot reigne by succession from his father albeit he be innocent he shall not inherite the kingdome albeit he be in no fault at all so that the son must beare the iniquitie of the father contrary to the Law of God Deut. 24.16 and the practise of the godly 2 Kings 14.6 The Prophet Ezekiel handleth this at large chap. 18. ver 20. The righteousnesse of the righteous shall be vpon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall be vpon himselfe What iustice then is this to strike the innocent with the guilty and to binde them together as it were into one bundle It was well said of Abraham in his prayer to God Gen. 18.24 25. Peraduenture there be fifty righteous within the citie wilt thou also destroy and not spare the place for the fifty righteous that are therein That be farre from thee to doe after this maner to slay the righteous with the wicked and that the righteous should be as the wicked that be farre from thee shall not the Iudge of all the world doe right If this be farre from God it ought also to be far from the Church of God If the iudge of all the world will doe right shall he that holdeth himselfe to be the head of all the Church delight to doe open wrong But these
both to thee and to the rest of the parts of the Church one being named in stead of all the rest Lastly the text it selfe being rightly weighed and considered will make it plaine and apparant that this is a foolish cauill and a slender euasion to vnderstand the words thus Let him be to thee that is Let him be to thee alone and to no others for Christ hauing said Let him be vnto thee as an heathen man to the end he might strengthen and confirme this that he would ratifie all this in heauen aboue he annexeth immediately after Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall bee loosed in heauen Behold heere the change of number vsed by Christ Tell mee then wherefore when he had said in the singular number Let him bee vnto thee as speaking of one hee spake afterward in the plurall whatsoeuer yee shall loose whatsoeuer ye shall binde as speaking of many What was the cause of this difference but onely to signifie that vnder one person he vnderstood the Church To shut vp this first point wee are not to doubt but that Christ gaue power and authority to the Church to excommunicate wicked persons that are obstinate and impenitent when by priuate admonition they cannot bee wonne as we shall shew more at large afterward Secondly we must consider when any man is to be excommunicated the fit season wherof is when he hath contemned all admonitions and exhortations of priuate men and is waxen proud and selfe-willed setteth himselfe against the Church and not before For then he manifesteth as cleerely as the light that shineth at noone day not onely his obstinacy resolution to goe forward in sinne but his contempt of the word and of the Church and of Christ himselfe the author of the word and the head of the Church so that hee is separated from the communion which all the faithfull seruants of GOD haue with Iesus Christ and the Church whereof wee say in the Articles of our faith I beleeue the holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints Whereby it appeareth that he who is excommunicated is not properly by the Churches censure separated from God and his people but is declared pronounced to be separate forasmuch as properly it is sin which separateth 〈◊〉 ● 2. Your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sins haue hid his face from you that he will not heare Excommunication then doth not separate but serueth to shew who are separated euen as the fanne doth not make the chaffe but sheweth it manifestly which before lay hid among the good Corne. Whensoeuer therefore sinners grow obstinate it is high time to draw out this sword of iustice to cut off from the Citty of God such incorrigible persons Thirdly Christ our Sauiour sheweth to whō excommunication belongeth and who are subiect vnto it He is vnder it that is called a brother and being exhorted will not heare being admonished will not obey being reproued will not repent He must be a brother he must be admonished reprooued and conuinced He must be told of his fault or faults priuately and publikely He must be one that hath confessed Christ and called vpon God the Father together with vs albeit hee haue denied him in his deeds It is the Lord that will iudge thē that are without 〈◊〉 5 12. the Church hath nothing to doe with them God will punish those that are in the Church those that are out of the Church forasmuch as all belong to his iurisdiction it is not so with the Church they haue nothing to do with such as are infidels and neuer gaue their names to Christ as Turkes Iewes Pagans and such like For as they that neuer were in the Synagogue and of the Synagogue could not be put out of the Synagogue and as they that were not of the communion cannot be thrust out of the communion so they that were neuer of the Church or in the number of the faithful brethren cannot be cast out of the Church For these only are they that are spots and blots to the church these are they that cause the Name of God to be euill spoken off these are they that lay stūbling blocks before the weake these are they that regard not the first or second table of the Law these are they that tread vnder foot all counsels perswasions and admonitions made out of the word of God these are they that are setled and resolued to continue in euill whatsoeuer the Church say vnto them Fourthly he is to be excommunicated only that hath in this manner offended neither is it to bee suffered or allowed or practised that one should be excommunicated for another except peraduenture he also offend and be intangled in the same sinne or haue giuen consent vnto it The sonne is not to bee excommunicated for the father nor the father for the sonne The rule of the Apostle is to be obserued Gal. 6 5. Euery man shall beare his owne burden It is a common prouerbe among vs Euery vessell shall stand vpon his owne bottome that is euery one shall beare the punishment of his owne sinne This is it which the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 31 30. Euery one shall dye for his owne iniquity euery man that eateth the sowre grape his teeth shall be set on edge To this purpose speaketh Paul Roman 14 12. Euery one of vs shall giue an account to God for himselfe If any obiect Obiect that we are to giue an account to God not onely for our selues but for these also that belong vnto our charge as the father for himselfe and his children as we see in Eli the Shepheard for his sheepe and the watchman for the soules of the people as the Lord saith His blood will I require at thy hands Ezek 33.10 and Hebr. 13 verse 17. They watch for your soules as they that must giue an account Answer I answer they shall indeed giue an account and be punished howbeit it is for their owne sins and no farther Parents Masters Magistrates and Ministers shall not answer for their sinnes that are committed vnto them for the sinnes of their children their seruants their subiects and their hearers but for the sinnes which themselues commit by their negligence because they do not looke vnto them nor admonish them nor reprooue them nor restraine them as it is plainely expressed in the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 33 verse 8 9. If thou doest not speake to warne the wicked from his way that wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Neuerthelesse if thou warne the wicked of his way to turne from it if he do not turne from his way he shall dye in his iniquity but thou hast deliuered thy soule So then he that is impenitent is to be excommunicated euen he onely and not others that are not partakers of his sinne S. Augustine hath
might gaine their soules to God not their goods to himselfe 2 Cor. 12 14 19. Phil 4 17. Lastly that he might not be any way inferiour to the false Apostles 2 Cor. 11 12. But let vs come to the vses Vse 1 First this serueth to reproue sundry persons First him that is the grand theefe that first robbed the Church by his dispensations alienations of the rights and reuenues thereof I meane the Bishop of Rome who hath robbed the Church in soule and body and is growne far with the spoiles thereof This he hath done by degrees he would not let out all the blood at once but opened the veines by little little that had he continued longer to beare sway he would haue left no blood nor liuely-hood in the body The first wrong was offered to the Churches by depriuing them of their tithes in fauour of his goodly creatures the cursed generation of his Monkes D. Field of Church lib cap. ult who obtained of the Pope and other Bishops that the lands which they held in their owne hands vsed for their owne benefit might bee freed from any payment of tithes So the councel of Lateran vnder Alexander the third ordained that religious men shall pay no tithes out of such their lands as they till themselues but if they put any out and take rent as other men they shall pay tithe as other men do Here was the flood-gates pulled vp and a way and passage made for al the mischiefe and misery that fell vpon the Church in succeeding times for heere is the seede sowne that beeing watered from the Vatican grew vp apace to the robbing of many flourishing Churches to the destruction of many christian soules and to the discouragement of many godly Pastours For this exemption of religious men I might say irreligious was indeed the cut-throat of all religion and the bringing in of the streames floods of irreligion which staied not here but preuailed greatly and gate farther footing to the great preiudice of the Church therefore this rabble of Church-robbers sought in the next place to exempt all their farmers and tenants that belonged vnto them from payment of tithes the which albeit it were disliked and resisted at the first in the Councell of Cabilon Cabienes ● ca● 19. yet at the length it passed and preuailed Nay after that they had swallowed vp the inheritance of the Church like wolues that tasted the sweetnesse of the blood of the lambes which they had hurried wearied they went forward to steale to kill and to destroy as the theefe doth Iohn 10 v. 10. till they had subiected those Ministers Churches vnto themselues to whom themselues at the first paied tithes as belonging to their iurisdiction Thus these idle drones and euill beasts were not cōtent to slippe their neckes out of the yoke and make themselues free from others vntill they had brought others to be in bondage and subiection vnto themselues Thus did one theefe make another and one Church-robber gaue free licence vnto another to rob spoile saying one to another Come with vs let vs lay wait for blood let vs lurke priuily for the innocent without cause let vs swallow thē vp aliue as the graue and whole as those that goe downe into the pit we shall finde all precious substance we shall fill our houses with spoile cast in thy lot among vs let vs all haue one purse Prou. 1 11 12 13 14. Thus did one theft and robbery make cleere way for another in all this time while the church was pilled and polled and as it were left naked of her garments the Pope that would bee called the Protectour of the Church was so farre from sitting still and looking on that hee was the ringleader in this sinne that vpon his head may iustly come all the blood of so many thousand soules as haue by this meanes bin lost vtterly Thus hath the wilde boare rooted vp the vineyard of the Lord and made it a prey to wolues and foxes that entred into the same and the rauenous cloisters of the insatiable Monkes are guilty of that horrible sacriledge which hath laid waste and desolate so many goodly Churches brought the Cleargy to that poore estate wherein to this day it remaineth and continueth in many places For it is not to be imagined that any of the people who gaue liberally to the Churches and richly endowed them with lands and liuings of their owne would euer haue entertained any thought much lesse entred into any practise of alienating tithes from the lawfull owners and appropriating them to themselues had they not seene the way laid plaine and open before them and that by those who by the originall institution of their order were to pay tithes yea and those same tithes consumed in most vile and shamefull manner Neither shall we finde that euer any inherited possessed this portion by an absolute title of inheritance as their feesimple and freehold til the suppression of the houses of these vermine which were become cages of vncleane birds and dens of theeues and robbers I cannot see therefore how at the first laymen could haue any better title to these tithes then their predecessours the Monkes had and therfore they yet beare the names of impropriations ●ropriati why so ●d as things that are so holden and possessed by an vnproper title In other purchases the Lawyers are wont to say if the case in this be not altered caueat emptor that is let the buyer take heed and looke to his right and title To conclude therefore I would gladly be resolued whether our Improprieta●ies hold the Church tithes by any better title then the Monkes did at the first by the Popes pillage and whether they were not giuen to the Church by a good law and taken from it by a bad Vse 2 Secondly seeing it is Gods pleasure that such as preach the Gospel should be maintained by the Gospel they are reproued that account it an idle and needlesse function care not if wee were chased out of house home when we haue spent our time our labour our strength and our substance for the fitting of our selues to this calling Such men are wholly carnall and sauour nothing of the Spirit The Apostle saith They that labour in the word and doctrine are worthy of double honour 1 Tim. 5 17. Meaning by honour the care and prouision that is to be taken for them And in the Epistle to the Hebrewes they are willed to be mindfull of them that haue the ouersight of them who haue deliuered to them the word of God Heb. 13 8. 1 Thess 5 12 13. To these mis-prizers and false iudges of good things I will adde another sort that hold tithes to be a kinde of almes and so would not haue the Ministers chalenge any thing as due for their Ministery and maintenance but to stand wholly to the peoples deuotion good will and thus they
offer c. 30 Therefore thou shalt say c. 31 And yee shall eate it in euery place yee and your housholds for it is your reward for your seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 32 And ye shall beare no sinne c. Moses speaking both of the Priests and Leuites speaketh first of their office and then of their maintenance for whatsoeuer they haue they enioy it for their seruice verse 21. it is giuen vnto them as their reward for their seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation ver 31. Now the Leuites are charged to deale truely with the Priests as they would haue the people to deale truely with them ● Leuites ● deale ●ly with Priests ●e people ● with the ●ces They were to pay tithes out of their tithes to the Priests by reason of their honor and labour who did as it were beare the burden and heat of the day and least couetousnesse and greedinesse of gaine should make them base minded and hard hearted he telleth them that they themselues should be no lesse guilty of theft if they deale fraudulently and iniuriously with the Priests then the people if they deale falsely toward them So then as the people must set out their tithes before they presumed to vse the rest so must the Leuites the tithes of tithes before they vse the rest of the tithes We might obserue from hence the common rule of equity Whatsoeuer we would that other men should doe vnto vs we should doe the same vnto them Matt. 7.12 We are ready and forward to require good dealing of others toward our selues but slacke and backward to returne the same to others Beware therefore of hurting and hindring any man in his body in his soule in his substance in his good name by cruelty by oppression by fraude by lying by slandering this the darkish light of naturall reason may teach vs because we would not haue others to defraud to defame vs to oppresse vs or to purloyne from vs and therfore we ought not to deale so with others nay we ought to be ready to doe good for euill and in all our dealings one with another to proceed by the rule of loue remembring how we desire others should deale with vs. Doctrine A sinne to reape the profits of any place and not to discharge the duty But the point which I will insist vpon is this that it is a sinne for any especially the Minister to take the profits and commodities of any place and not to performe the duties that belong thereunto Esay 56.10 11. Ezek. 34.2 3. 1 Cor. 9.13 14. 2 Thess 3.7 8. 1 Tim. 5.17 The reasons first because profits are giuen Reason 1 for duties performed and therefore hee is a theefe before God and stealeth the benefit whosoeuer neglecteth the duty It is a sinne therefore because it is iniustice If a man shold make a bargaine and take money vpon it and yet afterward not performe his bargaine like to that son that promised his father to worke in his vineyard but went not Matth. 21.30 euery man would condemne him of wrongfull dealing so is it vniust and iniurious for a Minister to take the profit that shall arise out of any place and then not to performe that which is required as belonging of right vnto it as it is to take a fee and to doe nothing for it Secondly this is an occasion of the perishing Reason 2 of many people both of himselfe and of others committed to his charge 1 Tim. 4.16 A faithfull Minister by doing his duty doth saue both himselfe and them that heare him the vnfaithfull destroyeth both himselfe and his hearers Therefore it must needs bee wrongfull If it were so that he did destroy himselfe onely it were no small euill to be a selfe-murtherer but when with himselfe he shall ruine many others it must needs be more impious Lastly because in not performing his duty Reason 3 he doth defraud the people and depriue them of that great good which the Lord hath bestowed vpon them and committed vnto him to deliuer and dispense vnto them Hee hath trusted them with a great charge and willed them to keepe the same to their vse 1 Tim. 6.20 2 Tim. 1.14 If he that concealeth and keepeth backe temporal things from his brother doe offend the Law Exod. 22. then great is his sin that keepeth backe spirituall things from those to whom they ought to be deliuered and so much greater as the difference is betweene spirituall and temporall This serueth to condemne the Popish teachers Vse 1 that liue vpon the spoile of the Church and make merchandise of mens soules Wee might taxe these and arrest them as guilty of an horrible crime from the highest to the lowest from the head to the foote from the Pope the mightiest to the Priest the meanest they are all idle bellies and conspire together to destroy the people and happy is he accounted that hath his hand deepest in this sinne For though many of them haue goodly reuenewes and haue filled themselues with the fat of the earth yet they liue at pleasure and are no whit seruiceable to the Church of whom I may speake with the Apostle Rom. 16.18 They that are such serue not our Lord Iesus Christ but their owne belly and by good words and faire speeches deceiue the hearts of the simple The Cardinals doe scorne this office as too base and simple for them and chuse rather to reigne like Princes then to rule as Pastors and make more reckoning of their purple then they doe of their people and therefore turne ouer the toile and labour of teaching to the Parish Priests whereas themselues not long agoe were no whit better The Priests considering that they haue no calling to preach but to say Masse and to reade their portuisse doe passe it ouer as a thing impertinent vnto them The Monkes which of ancient time labored with their hands liue at ease and pleasure in their Cloysters and Couens but doe no good to others The Abbots fat themselues like boares in their styes and are no way seruiceable to the Church but make their bellies their god and their kitchen their heauen and their table their ioy and the Pope which sitteth at the sterne and gouerneth the ship taketh no care of any thing but letteth all alone so that it is no maruell if all the rest follow his example Vse 2 Secondly to let these passe and to come vnto our selues it reprooueth all such as are content to reape the profits of their places and swallow great preferments downe their wide throates and yet take no paines at all in teaching This certainely is a palpable sinne howsoeuer many euen those that are Non residents already or would bee open their mouthes and set on worke their pennes to mainetaine and defend the same This we all confesse to bee vnlawfull in other callings where notwithstanding the danger is not so great how then should it be allowed
brethrē that are Christians by profession Saints by calling heyres by faith sons by adoption partakers of the same grace with vs yea as we see the gifts of God more cleerly to shine and more manifestly to multiply in them so our loue must encrease toward them As they goe forward or backward encrease or decrease as we see them zealous or cold or luke-warme so must our inward loue proceed or stay grow or slake toward them alwaies where God sheweth forth the abundance of his loue shed into their hearts we must most wisely bestow our loue according to his example which the nearer we follow the more conformable we are to God wherein standeth our happinesse Vse 3 Lastly it reproueth such as are vnappeasable and will neuer forgiue and forget the iniuries that are done vnto them Assuredly such shall finde iudgement without mercy as shew no mercy Who is there among vs that doth not daily euen with the ayre draw in the mercy of God It is his mercy that we are not all consumed If then hauing our selues receiued so great mercy we can returne in way of thankfulnesse no compassion to others we make a law against our selues and as it were stop and shut vp the spring of grace from flowing vnto vs. ●er 2 13. This the Apostle Iames teacheth There shall be iudgment mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercy and mercy reioyceth against iudgement It standeth vs all therefore vpon not to rest in the bare and naked name of the sonnes of God but labour in the truth of the inner parts and in sincerity of our hearts to be like to him practising the exhortatiō of the Apostle 〈◊〉 12 13. As the elect of God holy and beloued put on tender mercy kindnesse humblenes of minde meeknesse long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiuing one another c. There is no saluation without pardon and remission of sin Would we then haue saluation Do we desire forgiuenesse at the hand of God The meanes to assure vs that we haue attained it 〈◊〉 4 31 32. is to put away wrath all maliciousnesse and to be courteous tender-hearted one to another forgiuing one another if we desire to feele any true comfort to our own soules in the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes When we cried vnto the Lord he heard our voice The truth of the former reason 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 setteth downe the loue of God to his people hearing their prayers sending his Angel and bringing them out of Egypt The doctrine out of these words considered in themselues is this Doctrine God loueth his people God loueth and fauoureth his owne people Howsoeuer they be hated of the world because they are not of the world but are chosen out of the world yet he setteth thē as a seale on his hart Cant 8 6 5 2. and as a signet on his arme Heereunto come the amiable and louely titles that Christ giueth to his Church calling it knocking vnto it saying Open vnto me my Sister my Loue my Doue my vndefiled for my head is full of dew and my lockes with the drops of the night So the Prophet expresseth his loue in the Psalme toward his people Albeit they were few in number yea Psal 105 12 13 14 15. very few and strangers in the Land and walked about from Nation to Nation from one Kingdome to another people yet suffered he no man to do thē harm but reproued Kings for their sakes saying Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harme So Moses testifieth the same Deu. 7 6 7 8. The Lord thy God hath chosen thee to bee a precious people vnto himselfe aboue all people that are vpon the earth The Lord did not set his loue vpon you nor chuse you because ye were moe in number then any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the lord loued you and would keepe the oath which hee had sworne vnto your fathers Ioshua 24 3. Psalm 78 70. Mathew 4 18 Luke 23.43 Acts 9 15. Thus God in great mercy brought Abraham from his Country tooke Dauid from the sheepfolds chose Peter and Andrew from their nets called Mathew from the custome conuerted the theefe vpon the crosse and turned Paul from a persecutour to be an Apostle beeing oftentimes found of them that sought not after him by all which testimonies and examples it appeareth that God doth shew himselfe good and gracious vnto his people The reasons are First because they are his Reason 1 sonnes and daughters This is an argument of great loue a testimony that he will not forsake vs for euer We are not onely the seruants and friends of God but the sonnes of God the spouse of Christ Indeed Christ is the naturall Son of God and the eldest brother by whom we are adopted to be the sons of God This reason the Apostle propoundeth 1 Iohn 3 1. Behold what loue the Father hath giuen to vs that we should be called the sonnes of God for this cause the world knoweth you not because it knoweth not him Great is the affection of feruent loue that parents beare toward their children no heart of any can wel expresse it but he that hath bin a father himselfe to feele it Others may well speake of it but they are not able to comprehend it And yet all their loue is a cold frozen loue yea it is no loue indeed yea it is no better then hatred in comparison of the loue that the Father of heauen and earth beareth to his children whose loue to vs is wonderfull passing the loue of men and women This the Prophet teacheth Can a woman forget her child and not haue compassion on the sonne of her wombe though they should forget yet will not I forget thee Es 49 15. Likewise Christ saith Mat. 7 9 10. What man is there among you which if his son aske him bread would giue him a stone Or if he aske fish will he giue him a serpent If ye then which are euill can giue to your children good gifts how much more shal your Father which is in heauen giue good things to them that aske him Reason 2 Againe he hath sent his Sonne into the world who came from the bosome of his Father and tooke our nature vpon him he endured the infirmities of our nature the shame of the crosse the wrath of his Father to bring vs into his fauour He was punished we are pardoned he was charged with our sinnes we are discharged from our sinnes he was crucified we are acquitted he was condemned we are iustified Thus the Apostle Iohn reasoneth Heerein was the loue of God made manifest among vs 1 Ioh. 4 9 10. because God sent his onely begotten Sonne into this world that we might liue through him Heerein is that loue not that we loued God but that hee loued vs and sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sins The naturall
or in the publicke ioy of the Church do mourne cannot in truth perswade their owne hearts that they haue anie part or portion in the body of Christ Wherefore whensoeuer God taketh away any principall stay of Church or Common-wealth we haue cause of mourning and humbling our selues vnder Gods iudgement When the husbandman layeth his Axe to the root of the tree or vndermineth the ground about it we can not doubt but he meaneth the felling and falling of it Or when wee see a Gardiner take away the hedge or wall of his garden Esay 5 5 6. plucke vp by the roots the cheefest choisest plants disfigure the ornaments and beauty of it and lay it open for the beasts to enter we may gather hee mindeth not to continue but deface the Garden Or when a Carpenter pulleth downe the master-peeces and postes that doth hold vp the whole frame and layeth the foundation euen with the ground wee may coniecture by these meanes that he meaneth to remoue the building to another place So when we see the euident footsteps of Gods wrath and begin to discerne the fire of his iealousie breaking out by the smoake beginning to appeare in taking away seruiceable men as plāts of his own garden as pillars of his own house and as branches of the Tree which his right hand hath planted we must lay it to our hearts as tokens going before destruction This our Sauiour handleth Matth. 42 32 33. speaking of the signes going before his glorious appearance at the end of the world Learne the Parable of the Figge tree when her bough is yet tender and it putteth foorth leaues yee know that Summer is neere so likewise yee when ye see all these things know that the kingdome of God is nere euen at the doore And now beloued behold and consider lift vp your eies and looke how God hath dealt with vs and marke whether his dealings toward vs be not tokens of his anger and fore-runners of his iudgements Hath hee not taken from vs a most worthy Prince our late Soueraigne who by the course of nature might haue liued longer Of whom wee may truly say as Dauid did 2 Sam. 1 24. Ye daughters of Israel weepe for Queene Elizabeth who clothed you with Scarlet and pleasures and hanged Ornaments of Gold vpon your apparrell P. o● 31 2● Or else as Salomon doth speaking of a good woman Many daughters haue done vertuously but thou surmountest them all She opened the house of the Lord in the first yeere of her reigne as good K. Hezekiah did shee called backe the reuerent Ministers fled out of the land as Eliah into the wildernesse through the tyranny of Iezabel she brought in the pure worship of God cast out the Romish abhominations set forth the seruice of God in a knowne tongue repealed the bloody acts of the persecutors and therefore she thus honouring God and aduancing his Gospel he likewise exalted her Throne on high as the Throne of Salomon 2. Samuel 2 ver 30. so that she shined in her time in the world as if all the firmament thereof had bin but one starre and as if in all the cope compasse of heauē there had shined none but she This starre is now set and gone downe which should go neere vnto vs and pierce vs to the quicke and make vs seeing a great Prince is fallen in Israel neuer to forget the great works which the Lord did among vs by her happy hand Besides hath not the Lord taken from vs many lights out of the Vniuersity whence flowed many comfortable streames that watered the Garden of God many out of Cities and particular Churches wherby the Church hath receiued a deepe and dangerous wound and yet we seeme to haue feared consciences and to be past feeling When the vitall parts begin to faile or to languish the life of the body is in hazard While the disease or distemperature is in the outward parts farre from the head or the heart there is hope of health and recouery but when the liuely parts begin to waste and consume by little and little it is a signe of the decay of life and of the approch of death Howsoeuer therefore the greatest part neuer lay these things to their hearts nor interprete them as present tokens of imminent danger and iudgement yet we that haue learned better things ought to consider that as they are taken away from the euill to come ● 57 1 2. ●gs 22 20 rest quietly in the graue as in a bed euen so they haue left vs behinde for the euill to come Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to pray to God to stay his hand to shew mercy to his Church and to poure out the full Viall of his vengeance vpon his enemies that know him not Psal 79 6. Ieremy 10 25 and vpon the Nations that call not vpon his Name This the Prophet practiseth Psalm 74 2 19 20 21 22. Thinke vpon thy Congregation which thou hast possessed of old and on thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this Mount Sion wherein thou hast dwelled We see how he putteth God in minde of his Couenant and entreateth him to strike through the loynes of his enemies to their destruction to maintaine his own cause and to spare his people the sheepe of his own Pasture the dwelling place of his own Name and the Congregation of his poore afflicted ones So when in like manner we behold the hand of God vpon his owne Sanctuary to begin iudgement at his owne house let vs call vpon him to consider whereof wee are made and to remember that we are but dust This did the Prophet Habakkuk when God threatened to enter into iudgment with his church O Lord I haue heard thy voice and was afraid O Lord reuiue thy worke in the midst of thy people in wrath remember mercy Hab. 3 2. Where hee teacheth that whensoeuer wee heare of the threatnings and iudgements of God we must pray him to repaire and restore the state of the Church which is ready to perish who is able to heale the wound that his owne right hand hath made True it is the great sinnes of this Land do cry out against vs may iustly prouoke him to make hauocke of all yet let vs call for mercy at his hands and stay the course of our sinnes that so he may stay the stroke of his iudgements CHAP. XXI IN this Chapter ●e diuition ●●es chapter we are to obserue four principall pointes First the battaile fought betweene Arad King of the Canaanites the Israelites Secondly another murmuring of the people the last recorded in this Booke which God punisheth with fiery serpents cureth them with a brazen serpent Thirdly their happy proceeding in their journey toward the Land of promise where God gaue them water and brought them to the borders of the Amorites Lastly the victories which Israel obtained on Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the
they oppressed him with iniuries and banished him their country and yet behold they are constrained immediately to seeke peace of him and to make a couenant with him so that albeit they hated him and put him away from them yet the King his Captaine are glad to come vnto him Gen. 26 24 25 26. For they feared him and saw certainly that the Lord was with him The like submission we see in Pharaoh albeit he hardened his hart and often had contemned and reuiled Moses yet in the greeuousnesse of the iudgement he sendeth for Moses and Aaron and saith I haue now sinned the Lord is righteous but I and my people are wicked pray ye vnto the Lord for mee that there be no more mighty thunders amd haile Exod. 9 27 and 11 8. Such an example is recorded 1 Kings 13 4 6 touching Ieroboam who albeit he regarded not the word of the Prophet but raged against him and stretched out his hand from the Altar saying Lay hold on him yet when his hand was dryed vp so as he could not pull it in againe vnto him he humbled himselfe greatly in the present feeling of this punishment and besought that Prophet to pray to the Lord his God and make intercession for him that his hand might be restored Thus Saul seeketh to Dauid 1 Sam. 24 21 22. Belteshazzar to Daniel Dan. 5 12 13. Zedekiah to Ieremy Ier. 37 3. The foolish virgins to the wise Mat. 25 8. Haman had conspired the destruction of the Church and thirsted after the bloudy massacre of the Saints of God whose death is precious in his sight yet in the end he saw mischiefe prepared for him he stood vp to make request for his life vnto Queene Ester chap. 3 9 and 7 7. Thus the saying and sentence of the wise man is verified Prou. 14 19. The euill shall bow before the good and the wicked at the gates of the righteous Neither let vs doubt of this truth or greatly maruaile at it For God hath planted imprinted Reason 1 such a maiesty in the person of those that are vnfainedly godly truely religious that the most desperate and despightfull wicked men feare their faces and reuerence their presence If then the vngodly feare them it is no great maruaile though they fal downe before them many times in submissiue manner But the vngodly do often feare them therefore it cannot seeme strange vnto vs if they do some reuerence vnto them This we see in Herod Mark 6.20 He feared Iohn Acts 4 21 and 5 26. knowing that he was a iust man and an holy and reuerenced him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly So when the people saw how God heard the prayer of Samuel they feared Samuel exceedingly 1 Sam. 12 18. Such is the force of innocency that it conuinceth the enemies in their owne consciences and driueth them to do homage and vaile their bonnet to the seruants of God Againe it is the will of God that all such Reason 2 as humble themselues should be exalted and the lowly in heart should be aduanced so also such as exalt themselues should be brought low and therefore it is no maruaile if GOD euen in this life doe many times for the manifestation of his mercy and iustice lift vp the heads of his owne children Luke 14 11. cast downe the wicked vnder their feet Hence it is that Christ Iesus was so much delighted with this sentēce so often repeated by him in the Gospel Whosoeuer exalteth himselfe shall be brought low but he that humbleth himselfe shall be exalted Math. 23 12. Luke 18 14. Vse 1 Now let vs make vse of this doctrine First seeing the vnfaithfull be oftentimes constrained to sue to the faithfull for their helpe as the rich glutton did to Abraham let vs all learne to plant true godlinesse in our hearts and to turne to the Lord with all our soules that we may haue our part and portion in this preheminence and let vs walke worthy of our places and of this priuiledge honour and dignity Seeing almighty God maketh vs spirituall Kings to rule and reigne Reuel 1 6. and often subiecteth the wicked vnder vs let vs not be slaues to our owne lusts and corruptions but rule with authority and dominion ouer them and labor to subdue sinne vnto vs. We see the Princes of this world will not dishonour and debase thēselues with base Offices We are Kings and Princes to God in this life let vs then walke worthy of this dignity as the Apostle vrgeth this duty from vs 2 Thess 1 10 11. The Lord shall come to bee glorified in his Saints and to bee made maruailous in all them that beleeue in that day wherefore we also pray for you alwaies that our God may make you worthy for this Calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnesse and the worke of faith with power Where we see that after he had set downe the great glory that belongeth to Gods children at the comming of Christ he exhorteth them to walke worthy of their calling seeing it shall be glorious with Christ and the vngodly shall be brought to vtter shame contempt dishonour reproch confusion There is no way to bring any to true honour but to purchase to our selues true godlinesse Therefore the Lord said 1 Sam. 2 30. Them that honour me I will honour and they that despise me shall be despised Old age is rightly honourable but it must bee found in the way of righteousnesse Prou. 16 31. This we see to haue beene in Iob chap. 29 7 8. When I went out to the gate euen to the iudgement seate and when I caused them to prepare my seate in the streete the young men saw me and hid themselues and the aged arose and stood vp the Princes staied their talk laid hand on their mouth Loe thus shall they be honoured that feare the Lord and therfore blessed is the estate condition of the godly Vse 2 Secondly seeing the wicked euen in this life are vrged to seeke mercy at the hands of godly men so that God here vpon earth bringeth downe their heads that before were lifted vp in great pride how much more shall this be verified in the life to come when the redemption of Gods children draweth neere their happinesse shall be perfected then they are appointed to triumph and to haue the victory ouer all their enemies tread the wicked vnder their feet For the true children of of God shall rule and ouer-rule the world and shall trample vpon the kingdome of darknes ouer hell death damnation the diuell the reprobate whatsoeuer setteth it selfe against their peace This the Lord from the beginning taught the Church Gen. 3 15. He shall breake thine head and thou shalt bruise his heele The diuell shall tempt Christ assault his members but not ouercome them whereas Christ shall conquer the power of death and make his
Patron of that people could do them no good but suffered them to be taken and spoyled Such is the vain hope of poore Idolaters in their Idols which cannot helpe or deliuer themselues much lesse their worshippers that trust in them Lastly touching the Israelites they spoiled them that were the spoilers and conquered them that were the conquerors for they recouered for themselues and for their owne vse the Townes and Cities which the Moabites had lost Thus Israel medled not with the Moabites neither tooke any thing from them but peaceably possessed that which they won frō the Amorites none laying any claime or title thereunto as Iephtah pleadeth Iudg. 11 13. And this is the right which the Israelites had to dwell in the Cities of the Amorites and to possesse as their owne goods the labours and liuings of other men which they could iustifie by the Law of God and man For when Abraham had subdued in battell the fiue Kings he chalenged to himself a right in the prey that was taken and payed the tenth of all to Melchizedek Gen. 14 20 21 Hereunto belongeth the commandement giuen of God touching the diuiding and retaining the spoyles of war saying All the spoyle thereof shalt thou take vnto thy selfe and shalt eate the spoyle of thine enemies which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee Deuter 20 14. Xenoph. lib. 7. Cyropaed Halicarnas li. 6. And this we might plentifully prooue by the Lawes Decrees and Constitutions of Princes and States in former times Verse 21. Then Israel sent Messengers In this diuision generally is set foorth the end of the enemies of the Church that albeit they preuaile for a season and plow vpon the backs of the godly and make long and large surrowes albeit they plant themselues strong flourish as the greene Bay-tree yet they passe away suddenly and are cast downe in desolation The persecuters and enemies of the Church shall perish and come to confusion Doctrine The persecuters of the Church shall perish Howsoeuer they lift vp their heads hornes on high and their honor reach vp to the Clouds there shall be a downefall they shall be confounded and consumed in his wrath Looke vpon Caine who was the first persecuter of the church in Abel and we shall see the same confirmed which is offered to our considerations in these present examples He killed his brother Gen. 4 11 and wherefore slew he him Because his owne works were euill and his brothers good But did cruell Caine escape No the curse of God came vpon him he was made a runnagate and fugitiue vpon the earth and so God reuenged the innocent blood of his brother Abel which he had shedde with barbarous and vnnaturall cruelty The like we might say of Pharaoh an arch-enemy of the Church in Egypt who oppressing the people of God with burdens and destroying their children was ouerwhelmed in the red Sea Exod. 14 28. Another fearefull example we haue in Saneherib which set himselfe against the people that called vpon the liuing God and blasphemed his Name which is holy throughout all generations hee was slaine of his owne sonnes 2 Kings 20 37 which iudgement the Lord foretolde that being accordingly performed accomplished it might be knowne whence it was wherefore it came to passe The like is reported recorded of Haman in the booke of Ester ch 7 9 who procured the Kings writ to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes young and olde children and women in one day yet abusing his high fauour with the King and great honour in the Court God threw him downe and layd his honor in the dust so that he was hanged on the same tree which he had prepared for Mordecai that spake good for the King Thus his mischiefe returned on his owne head and his cruelty fell vpon his owne pate and himself was taken in the snare which he made for another Hereunto tendeth the end of Nebuchadnezar whose seruice God vsed to chasten his owne people to destroy the Temple to waste the City and to cary them away captiue Dan. 4.30 hee was throwne downe his reason was taken from him and he had the heart of a beast giuen vnto him The Iewes to whom pertained the right of adoption the glory of the Arke the tables of the Couenant the giuing of the Law the seruice of God the accomplishment of the promises the comming of the Messiah the Oracles of trust committed vnto them were notwithstanding all these priuiledges enemies of Christ and of the Apostles enemies of Christian Religion and the professors thereof they put the Sonne of God to death and persecuted his Apostles that he sent among them to preach and teach the Gospel of the Kingdome Matth. 24.21 in the end themselues were iustly slain for sedition which they falsely charged vpon the Apostles nay as themselues cried his blood be vpon vs Ioseph de bel● Iuda lib. 7. cap. 4. 8. and vpon our children so that which Christ foretold came vpon them in full measure pressing downe and running ouer when the abhomination of desolation sate in the holy place there was such trouble amongst them and so great tribulation came vpon them that the like neuer was nor shall be to the end Herod that bloody tyrant which had slaine Iames with the sword and putting Peter in prison intended the like measure and murther vpon him this wicked wretch escaped not the hands of God for being arrayed in his royall Robes sitting vpon the Iudgement seate and making an Oration vnto the people The Angel of the Lord smote him he was eaten of wormes Acts 12 23. Iudas the child of perdition and betrayer of the Son of God despaired Hung himselfe burst in the middest and his Bowels gushed out Acts 1 18. for whom it had bin good if he had neuer bene borne What shold I say more If we remember the late dayes of persecution wherin the patience of the Saints was tried by bloody executions tortures murthers massacres hanging beheading burning and imprisonment wee may obserue that the heauy hand of God was one way or other against those bloody Inquisitors and cruell persecutors that had imbrued and defiled their hands with their blood that they dyed not the ordinary and common death of all See Acts and Monuments in the end nor were visited after the visitation of all men Some died fodainly falling downe on the ground that they neuer stirred as Ananias and Sapphira some had their bowels and inward parts fall out and died the death of Iudas their elder brother some could not swallow and digest their meate but it came forth againe sometimes at their mouth and sometimes at their nosthrils most horribly to behold Some were striken in the one halfe of their body that they lay benummed halfe aliue and halfe dead to the great terror and astonishment of all that were present and did looke vpon them Some brake their Neckes others became
a sort the Lord also doth it who as a iust Iudge for the wickednes of the world and contempt of the Gospel letteth loose Satan to deceiue in his heauy yet righteous iudgement So the Apostle teacheth that God shall send strong delusions that they shall beleeue lies that will not imbrace and receiue the truth 2 Thes 2 11. The vses are to be thought vpon and to be Vse 1 learned of vs. First maruaile not if wicked mē many times prosper and preuaile For if God vse them as his Rods and enableth them to worke his will albeit they do not feare God nor purpose to serue him nor ayme at his glory yet they shall ouercome and haue the vpper hand for God hath sent them God hath armed them God hath saide vnto them goe and prosper Let vs not therefore thinke when euill men preuaile that all things are shufled hudled together let vs not doubt of Gods high prouidence ouer-ruling the world let vs not make prosperity a note of the Church as if it were alwaies here in flourishing estate multiplying in wealth abound●ng in friends glorious in victories flowing in honours increasing in multitudes and excelling in outward priuiledges for God many times raiseth vp the heads of euill men to bring mighty things to passe This the Prophet Ezekiel declareth chap. 29 18 19 20. Sonne of Man Nebuchadnezzar King of Babel caused his army to serue a great seruice against Tyrus euery head was made bald and euery shoulder was made bare yet had he no wages nor yet his army for Tyrus for the seruice that he serued against it therefore thus saith the Lord God Behold I will giue the Land of Egipt to the King of Babel and he shall take her multitude and spoile her spoile and take her prey and it shall bee the wages of his army I haue giuen him the Land of Egipt for his labour that he serued against it because they wrought for me saith the Lord God Where the Prophet sheweth that Nebuchadnezzar had serued Gods prouidence in the siedge and sacking of Tyrus and therfore he had another kingdome giuen him for it and blessed with victory ouer other enemies This is the reason why euill men are set vp and haue a reward of temporall blessings because they are Gods souldiers and are vnder his pay who suffereth them not to goe and depart without their wages Thus all earthly things fall out alike to all there is the same outward condition belonging to all To the iust and vniust to the pure and to the polluted Eccles 9 2. Secondly let vs from hence know assuredly there are no waies to withstand his wrath Vse 2 no policy to preuent his iudgments no force that can resist his purposes We see how many meanes he hath to bring forth his decrees he can make the vngodly serue him whensoeuer he will command them True it is Gods children guided by his Spirit and framed to the obedience of his will will alwayes be seruiceable to him with cheerefulnes of heart and willingnes of minde If he command his aduersaries any worke they must obey him albeit against their wils hee enforceth them as slaues to do his will Whatsoeuer their purposes be God disposeth them to bring his own decrees to passe What man then can promise to himselfe rest and peace or thinke to winde himselfe from the hand of God or escape the sentence gone out against him or stand against God comming out to take vengeance vpon him Seeing he hath so many seruants in readinesse set in battell aray to performe his purposes and can single out what instruments he listeth albeit as euill as themselues This the Prophets teach euery where to the terror of al Gods enemies Consider that Ieremy is bold and saith to Zedekiah King of Iudah Deceiue not your selues saying The Chaldeans shall surely depart from vs ● 37 9 10. for they shall not depart for though ye had smitten the whole hoast of the Chaldeans that fight against you and there remained but wounded men among them yet should euery man rise vp in his Tent and burne this City with fire The destruction of the vngodly hangeth not vpon the power and pleasure of men nor on the might and multitude of Souldiers but on the iudgment of God who giueth strength to the weake and courage to the coward and might to the maimed man to root out and to destroy This should greatly humble and terrifie the wicked man that promiseth safety security to himselfe who notwithstanding lyeth open euery way to the wrath and indignation of God Lastly let the people of God comfort thēselues Vse 3 though they be ouer-burdened and ouer-mastered by them A time will come and loe it tarrieth not when those wicked men that oppresse and vexe the Church shall bee rooted out The Lord of hoasts hath men and Angels and all creatures to worke out their destruction he can whistle for other enemies as euill as themselues to come against them to conquer and ouercome them Be not therefore daunted to see them rule and reigne Fret not thy selfe because of the euill men neither be enuious for the euill doers ● 37 1 2 3 ●6 for they shall soone be cut downe like grasse and shall wither as the greene Hearb Trust in the Lord and do good dwell in the Land and thou shalt be fed assuredly I haue seene the wicked strong and spreading himselfe like a greene Bay-tree yet he passed away and loe he was gone and I sought him but he could not be found Let vs therefore no whit bee troubled to see the enemies of God and of the godly exalted and lifted vp they are set in slippery places they are suddenly destroyed and horribly consumed as a dreame when one awaketh For God sendeth an euill spirit among them as hee did betweene Abimelech and the men of Shichem to bee reuenged of the cruelty which they had shewed toward the 70. sonnes of Ierubbaal Iudg. 9 23 24. We see this in the deliuery of the Church out of Babylon God stirred vp the Medes Persians as great idolaters as proud and prophane persons as themselues and by Cyrus deliuered them whom long before he had designed and deputed to that worke This the Prophet Esay sheweth chap. 21 2 10. So the●● albeit the Church were as it were thressed with a Flaile and a Cartwheele turned vpon their backes albeit their loynes were filled with sorrow yet shall their enemies come to ruine and destruction Babel is fallen it is fallen and all the Images of her Gods hath hee broken to the ground Esay 21 9. Howsoeuer therefore the estate of the Church in Babylon seemed desperate and past al hope of recouering her former glory yet we see God wanted not waies and meanes to free his chosen people and set them at liberty he raised the Medes and Persians to leade them by the hand out of the hand of their oppressors His hand is not now shortened
behinde them no way was left them to escape the dangers in mans iudgement But as the Church in this world is euer subiect to affliction and to lye vnder the crosse so God doth not incontinently deliuer it out of danger but many times continueth their troubles and augmenteth their calamities to exercise their faith to try their patience and to proue their obedience notwithstanding in the end God maketh an happy issue and sheweth that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against the Church Therefore when the Israelites began to murmure and not so much against Moses as against God and looked more to the danger of death before them then to the power of GOD aboue them and considered more what they did want then what they should beleeue Moses said vnto them Feare yee not stand still and behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to thee this day for the Egyptians whom yee haue seene this day yee shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you 〈◊〉 1. therefore hold you your peace When there was a great persecution raised against the Church at Ierusalem so that the sheepe of Christ were scattered abroad and nothing but threatnings and slaughter breathed out against the Disciples of the Lord 〈◊〉 2 3. Authority being giuen by the High-Priest to imprison all such as called on his Name rather then the Church should bee rooted out the Lord Iesus appeared in the Heauens to Paul as hee was in the way being now come neere to Damascus called him to the knowledge of the truth and appointed him to be a teacher of the Gospel that before hee destroyed 1. Sam. 10 11 so that wee may renew the ancient Prouerbe Is Saul also among the Prophets So when wee see the dangerous times and perillous seasons of the Church let vs not hang downe our heads but rather lift vp our hearts and cry vnto God saying Helpe Lord in the time of neede forsake not thine inheritance which thou hast purchased nor the Vine-yard which thy right hand hath planted And let vs assure our selues that when the cause thereof seemeth most desperate and helpe appeareth to vs to be farthest off 2. Cor. 12 9. then is his mercy greatest and his presence neerest then is his power made perfect through our weakenesse This is that which the Prophet Zachary witnesseth chap. 8. speaking of the returne of the people from captiuity vnto Ierusalem and of the louing kindnesse of GOD to bee extended toward them For albeit the residue that were left were reproached the Citty ruinated the gates burned and the wall broken downe yet hee prophesieth Zach. 8 4 5 ● That old Men and old Women shall dwell in the streetes of Ierusalem and the streetes of the City shall be full of Boyes and Girles playing in the streetes thereof For thus saith the Lord of hostes Though it seeme vnpossible in the eyes of the remnant of this people in these dayes should it therefore be vnpossible in my sight saith the Lord of hostes Vse 4 Lastly as this Doctrine teacheth vs to beleeue the promises of God so it teacheth vs not to doubt or despair of the saluatiō conuersion of our brethren for God is able to cal and conuert them to the sauing knowledge of the Gospel This the Apostle vrgeth intreating of the calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 23. to embrace the faith of the Gentiles And they also if they abide not still in vnbeleefe shall be grafted in for God is able to graft them in againe Likewise when the Disciples saw and heard the difficulty of entring into heauen for those that trust in their riches that they haue need of a singular gift of God to escape out of the snares subtilties of Satan Math. 19 26 Christ Iesus beheld them and said vnto them With men this is vnpossible but with God all things are possible Math. 20 1. He calleth at all houres of the day at the dawning of the day at the third houre at the sixt at the ninth and at the eleuenth houre For as he is bound to no person so he is bound to no time he calleth whom he will he teacheth and toucheth the heart when he will This we see in the example of the Apostle Paul which wee spake of before he was at the first a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1 13 a persecutor and an oppressor yet he was receiued of God to mercy to the encouragement of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life Marke 16 9 So was Mary Magdalen a greeuous sinner an vncleane liuer Luke 7 47. out of whom he had cast seuen diuels yet many sinnes were forgiuen her inasmuch as she loued much was the first to whom the Lord appeared after his resurrection Wherefore albeit we s●e men run on in their wickednesse and shut theyr eares against the wholesome admonitions of the word of God albeit their whole life be a continuall practise of sinne and that they drinke in iniquity as the fish doth the water yet wee must iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4 5. vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the hearts manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God God is not tyed to ordinary causes but as hee fed the people with Quailes in the wildernes so he can inwardly instruct the conscience he can make the least meanes powerfull and effectuall to saluation Math. 19 30. so that as many which are first shall bee last so sometimes the last shal be first He called Iohn the Baptist as it were in the dawning of the day whom he sanctified from his mothers wombe Luke 1 15. He called Timothie and Titus some others as it were at the third houre of the day 2 Tim. 3 15 and 1 5. Who were brought vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of children which are able to make thee wise vnto saluation through the faith which is in Christ Iesus and honoured the Lord with the first fruits of their life Hee called Paul to be an Apostle Mary Magdalene to be a beleeuer as it were at the sixt houre who after their conuersion redeemed the time and though they were inferiour to other in respect of time yet they were equall vnto them or before them in regard of zeale other graces of Gods Spirit He called the theefe vpon the crosse as it were at the eleuenth houre to bee partaker of his kingdome Luke 23.42 43. to whom Christ said This day shalt thou bee with me in Paradise Let vs not therefore enter into iudgment against our brethren let vs commit them to God Acts 1 7. Seeing it is not for vs to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his owne power Let vs pray for their conuersion to God that hee would giue them repentance to know him
potters vessell So then when the wicked say peace peace vnto themselues and thinke themselues sure of their purposes they shall faile in the midway and suddainly come to destruction verifying the saying of Salomon Prou. 11 7. The hope of the vniust shall perish Reason 1 The reasons are first because as they set themselues against the Church so God setteth himselfe against them Can we then maruaile that they are confounded and consumed against whom God opposeth himself they are the enemies of God and God professeth himselfe their enemy Who euer arose against him and prospered Who euer fought against him and preuailed They shall consume as the fat of Lambes before the fire and melt as the waxe against the Sunne This hath beene the faith and assurance of the Church of God in all their dangers that haue threatned and assailed them namely that God would take their cause into his hands and reuenge the wrong done vnto them Therefore when the enemies tooke crafty counsell against them and consulted cruell things to compasse their destruction saying Psal 83.12 Come let vs cut them off from being a nation let the name of Israel be no more in remembrance and let vs take for our possession the habitation of God they prayed to God to confound their enterprizes to fil their faces with shame to make them afraide by his iudgments to turne them vpside downe as a wheele to persecute them with his tempest that they might be as stubble before the wind as the fire burneth the forrest and as the flame setteth the mountaines on fire Reason 2 Secondly they trust in lying words that cannot profit and consequently they cannot prosper because no man by his own strength or the power of his owne hand can bring any thing to passe God scattereth the deuices of the crafty and taketh the wise in their craftinesse so that man cannot by his care and confidence attaine to the fruite of his desire Hagg. 1 9. For God bloweth vpon it and it commeth to nothing The vses of this doctrine remaine to be Vse 1 considered and handled First marke heereby the vnhappy estate of those that haue onely eyes of flesh to rest vpon the things which they see Nothing shall be able to helpe them wofull therefore is their condition This the Prophet teacheth Ier. 17 5 7. Thus saith the Lord Cursed be the man that trusteth in man maketh flesh his arme and withdraweth his heart from the Lord but blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is So then all they that make not God their Lord are vnhappy If the vngodly did consider these things that they setting vp their rest vpon vaine things and putting their confidence in a broken reed cannot prosper it would bee a notable meanes to bridle their vanity and to suppresse their folly If we should see a man naked vnarmed to go into the field against his enemies and perswade himself with a blast or bullrush to thrust them through and throw them down on euery side and make no doubt to get the victory we would thinke him s●ttish and pitty his folly wee would wish him to keepe a good dyet and keepe himselfe and his head warme fearing the man were breeding mad But thus it is with all the enemies of God and his people that raise great hope by their owne deuices and imagine great matters by their own counsels they are as distracted and distempered men they are in a miserable and wofull condition leaning vpon a bulrush and setling their trust and rest vpon a rotten reede They build vp the tower of confusion God will come downe against them and diuide their tongues as hee did at Babel Gen. 11.8 Wofull therefore and wretched is the case of all those whose confidence raised vp to high attempts falleth on the ground they trust in an arme of flesh and are deceiued for GOD laugheth them and their inuentions to scorne They attaine not to the end of their desires but are disappointed and so their hope perisheth and this is chiefly in death when they shal remaine in misery for euer Secondly let vs not rely vpon such vaine Vse 2 things nor rest vpon deceitfull vanity nor waite vpon lying dreames and deuices of men for then all our expectation shall deceiue vs. What man is there in his right wits that would in danger leane on the spiders web and yet thinke to be deliuered Who would trust to a broken staffe who would lay his strength vpon a weake reed This is it that Bildad one of Iobs three friends vttereth ch 8 14. 20 5 6. where he teacheth That the reioycing of the wicked is short the ioy of hipocrits is but for a moment though his excellency mount vp to the heauens his head reach vnto the clouds yet he shal perish for euer like the dung they which haue seen him shal say where is he His confidence also shal be cut off his trust shal be as the house of a spider therfore it can minister no comfort to such as catch hold vpon it Heereunto come sundry exhortations of the Prophet in the Psalmes Psal 62 10. 20 7 125 1. If we rest vpon God we shall haue a sure staffe that shal neuer faile we build vpon that hope that shall neuer make ashamed They that trust in the Lord shal be as mount Sion which cannot be remoued but remaineth for euer Vse 3 Lastly seeing the glory of our enemies shall end in shame and their vaine reioycing be buried in confusion let vs all take comfort and cheere vp our selues and one another when we see the enemies of the Church plot and conspire against the Church Albeit they lay their heads together and be very busie to stoppe the course of the glorious Gospel yet this is our hope that their hope is but on the spiders web the gates of hell shall neuer be able to preuaile against the Church and themselues shall worke out their owne destruction Thus doth the Prophet comfort himselfe Psal 49.5 6 7. Let this stay our faith and comfort our hope when wee see mighty plottings subtill proceedings deepe deuices and conspiracies of the wicked For why should we feare seeing they wait on lying vanities and forsake their owne mercy See this in the example of Pharaoh of Haman of Sancherib of Herod and sundry others If other enemies in our dayes follow their deeds let them also feare their ends And for this purpose the Prophet speaketh vnto them Esay 8 9 10. Gather together on heapes O ye people ye shall be broken in pieces and hearken all yee of farre Countries gird your selues and ye shall be broken in pieces gird your selues and ye shall be broken in pieces Take counsell together yet it shal be brought to nought pronounce a decree yet shall it not stand for God is with vs. Thus the enemies shal be confounded thus their counsels shal be ouerturned so
Abel in Saul toward Dauid in the Scribes and Pharisies toward Christ in Haman and his sonnes toward Israel in the chiefe Priests toward Paul Albeit they be ouermamastered their counsels detected their purposes defeated and themselues be disappointed that they may see how they fight not against men but against God yet their diligence is vnweariable and their rage vnspeakable This truth will further appeare vnto vs by Reason sundry reasons drawn from the person of God and from the conditions of the enemies of the Church God seeth the wickednesse of their hearts heareth the groanes afflictions of his elect yet he suffereth the vngodly to whet their tongues sharpen their swords against them to the end hee may gaine glory to his great Name in the confusion destruction of them Pharaoh contriued sundry plots fetching deuices to subuert the Church in Egypt some secret some open Exo. 1.17 9 16. Rom 9.17 He commanded the midwiues to stifle strangle the young infants comming out of their mothers wombe which are the spawn fry of Religion the hope of the succeeding Church When this diuellish deuice was discouered and disappointed because the midwiues feared God did not as the King charged them but preserued aliue the men children then he attempteth another way commanding by publique edict to drown and destroy their children afterward vexeth them by making bricks and carrying burdens Thus he proceedeth from one euill to another God setteth him vp as a marke and appointed him to shew his power in him and to declare his Name throughout all the world Thus GOD draweth good out of euil and manifesteth his owne glory in confounding the malice of mischieuous enemies Secondly the enemies of the Church run Reason 2 on in malicious courses to vndermine the good estate of the Church because they are led by the spirit of the diuell as his vassals and slaues to do his will Why did Cain burst with enuy against his brother hanging down his head drawing his weapon Because he was led by that euil one the prince god of the vngodly 2. Cor. 4 4 who blindeth their minds worketh in their hearts holdeth them in ful power possession The greatest deuouring beasts in the wildernesse alwayes keepe their courses recourses Psal 104 2● 12 23. either wearinesse constraineth them to cease or the light of the Sunne affrighteth them whereby the silly prey getteth some respite and refreshing But Satan the Prince of this world is neuer at rest he is euer greedy and neuer weary alwayes plotting practising catching destroying and deuouring The light of the day and darkenesse of the night are both alike to him Iob 1 7. Who compasseth the whole earth and walketh in it too and fro 1 Pet. 5.8 like a ramping and roaring Lyon seeking whom hee may surprize and subuert The end of one tentation is the beginning of another Hee will neuer make peace with vs vnlesse wee deliuer our soules vnto him in hostage Nahash the Ammonite is noted of extreme cruelty that would no otherwise make a couenant with the men of Iabesh Gilead but on this condition that he might thrust out all their right eyes and bring the shame vpon all Israel 1. Sam. 11. But Satan as he is more mighty so is he more malicious he will haue both eyes and hands he wil haue both head and heart hee will haue possession both of soule and body And therefore no maruaile if the sonnes of Belial bee stamped with his Image and resemble him in an vnweariable desire of mischiefe plotting and performing day and night one mischieuous attempt or other against the children of GOD. Vse 1 Let vs now carefully apply this doctrine to our vses First consider from hence the cause of the confusion of the enemies of the Gospel and of the godly They deuise crafty counsels and conspiracies against the faithful but withall they worke out their owne death and destruction and ouerthrow themselues in their malice mischiefe For of al such the Prophet saith Psal 7 15 16. He hath made a pit digged it for another and is fallen himselfe into the pit that he made his mischiefe shall returne vpon his owne head and his cruelty shall fall vpon his owne pate The hatred of the vngodly goeth before and the iudgements of God follow immediately after who hath prepared him deadly weapons will ordain his arrowes for them that persecute his seruants This the Prophet pronounceth against y● enemies of the Church Esai 8 9 10. Gather together on heapes ye shall be broken in pieces gird your selues and ye shall be broken in pieces take counsell together yet it shall be brought to nought pronounce a Decree yet it shall not stand for God is with vs Behold the horrible down-fall of Haman an Arch-enemy of the people of God 〈◊〉 7 9 10. raised vp from the highest degree of honor and dignity who thought it too little to lay hands on Mordecai alone but sought to destroy all the Iewes that were throughout the whole kingdome he fell into the lowest step of shame reproach was hanged on the tree that hee had prepared for Mordecai The aduancement of the wicked is but for a momēt their destruction commeth suddainly according to the saying of the Prophet Dauid Psa 37 35 36 58 6 7 8 in Iob 20.4 Thus we see that the malice of the wicked turneth to their own calamity and confusion so that when they haue raked ransacked all the corners of their heart to contriue meanes to ouer-throw the Church they shall find by woful experience that God hath many moe meanes and wayes to turne their owne deuices to their owne destruction Secondly see hereby Gods almighty power Vse 2 and abundant kindnesse in sauing and preseruing the Church among so many enemies as it were a little flocke of sheepe among so many wolues For we may behold a part of his chastisements vpon his Church by setting them in the world as in a wildernesse and that among the wicked as it were among so many beasts whereby their faith is tried their obedience manifested and their patience proued so wee see his maruailous mercy in their deliuerance from them as out of the denne of Lyons inasmuch as we know to our endlesse comfort that notwithstanding all the pollicies and practices of the diuelish and damned crew of most spiteful and desperate enemies yet God holdeth vp the heads of his people that they are not drowned like the Arke that floated on the waters Reu. 12 15. Howsoeuer the serpent cast out of his mouth water after the woman like a floud that he might cause her to bee carried away of the floud Let vs therfore confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and acknowledge surely that saluation is of the Lord and not of our selues of his mercy and not of our own merit This the Prophet professeth at large Psal 114 1
me This is it which Christ our Sauiour often alledgeth for the comfort of his disciples Ioh. 14 18. Math. 18 20 28 20. I will not leaue you comfortles but I will come vnto you Loe I am with you to the end of the world The reasons are these First his presence appeareth Reason 1 that the faithfull might be assured of his protection and defence beeing gathered together by his power without which they could not haue any comfort If the souldiers should bee destitute of the presence of theyr Captaine the wife of her husband the people of their King they would remaine comfortlesse and in continuall feare to do their duties and performe their allegeance But hauing their continuall presence they haue continual assurance and ioyfulnesse in theyr place and charge committed vnto them otherwise the best seruants of God most painfull in theyr callings should be in the worst case and condition To this purpose Christ sayth Goe and teach al nations to obserue whatsoeuer I haue commanded you and lo I am with you alway vntil the end of the world Mat. 28.18 19 20. Seeing therfore God wold not haue vs danted with danger or discouraged with feare but to go lustily forward where he hath called vs we cannot doubt of the assurance of his presence with vs in all assayes and assaults whatsoeue● shall be offered vnto vs. Reason 2 Secondly he is ready to heare their prayers to helpe them in their distresses to yeild them those things that they stand in neede of If he were absent from vs not present with vs hee could not consider of our wants nor succour vs in our necessities nor deliuer vs from our enemies nor refresh vs with his helpe while we walke through the valley of the shadow of death Therefore when Christ teacheth Mat. 18 20. that by the grace of his Spirit and the power of his Deity he is in the middest of the Church he confirmeth it hereby that whatsoeuer they shall desire it shall be giuen them of his Father which is in Heauen Vse 1 Let vs now proceed to the vses of this Doctrine First it followeth from hence if God be still with his Church then there is neuer any separation diuorcement between God and his Church betweene Christ his members so that whosoeuer would find the Lord to be his God he must be in the Church of the Church Christ is sayd to walk in the middest of the seuen golden Candlestickes ●●●l 1 13. that is of the Church Christ is euermore in his Church and whersoeuer the Church is there is Christ No man shall euer finde Christ as a Sauiour but in his Church The Emperour is to be acknowledged whersoeuer his standard is the King is where his Court is So there is alwayes a neere coniunction betweene God and his Church Where he is present with his grace there is his Church We shall not need to say with Martha Lord if thou haddest beene heere my brother had not bene dead Iohn 11 21. for God is euer with vs in all dangers he standeth present by vs His left hand is vnder our head 〈◊〉 2 5. and his right hand doth embrace vs. This is a notable and singular comfort to all the true members of the Church who are assured of the spirituall and speciall power and loue of God toward them supporting them and staying them vp with both his hands that they fall not from him through weaknes and infirmity of the flesh And seeing his loue is such vnto vs that he will not be farre from vs but in all our troubles embrace vs in both his armes this ought to stay and strengthen vs in all trials and confirme vs in all tentations which are as it were so many stormes and tempests beating vpon the barkes of our soules and threatning to make shipwracke of them We are ready in all our troubles when wee finde not present help at hand to suppose the Lord to be farre from vs. We are impatient of delay wee cannot abide to waite the Lords leysure So soone as we are entred into the Furnace of affliction that we feele the flames thereof to scorch vs and the anguish therof to enter into our bones by and by we thinke that God should helpe vs euery moment and minute appeareth to be a day and euery day seemeth a yeare vnto vs vntill hee scatter the coales and pull vs as a fire-brand out of the fire This made the Prophet in the heat of his affliction to cry out Why standest thou farre off O Lord and hidest thee in due time euen in affliction Psal 10 1. Wherby we see that the children of God are wonderfully assaulted the flesh wrastleth against the Spirit sometime preuaileth and for a time getteth the vpper hand So the same Prophet saith Psal 13 1 2. 22 1 2. How long wilt thou forget me ô Lord for euer How long wilt thou hide thy face from me c. And againe My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and art so far frrm mine health and from the words of my roaring c And in another place Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer and will he shew no more fauour Is his mercie clean gone c. Thus his faith was assaulted and his hope tryed that he should not fal into infidelity and yeeld to distrust in God But seeing our doctrine affirmeth that God is neuer from vs howsoeuer hee seemeth to delay and deferre his helpe let vs learne how great soeuer our conflicts be not vtterly to despaire of Gods mercy though it tarry Waite Habbak 2 3. for it shall surely and certainly come and not stay when the time euen the appointed time commeth So when the faithfull recouer thēselues out of the former tentations as it were out of a gulf ready to swallow them vp they gather strength of Faith rest vpon the power presence of God and waite with patience the Lords leysure and confesse it was their owne infirmity This the Prophet Dauid setteth downe in Psal 40 1. and 42 5 11. and 43 5. and in diuers other places Thus it standeth all of vs vpon when affliction tryeth vs when the flesh tempteth vs when satan winnoweth vs and all of them consenting and conspiring together seeke to ouerthrow vs to consider that howsoeuer God oftentimes deferreth to help vs yet he is still present with vs and to assure our selues that doubtles he is not farre from euery one of vs. Matth. 15 21. It is the will and pleasure of God to try our faith to stirre vp our zeale to exercise our patience and to teach vs to make greater account of his blessings whē we haue obtained them but in the end to our endles comfort he will declare by the effects of his loue and fauour that he was neuer indeed absent from vs howsoeuer we iudge so according to the weaknes of the flesh and hee for a time hide
Iudea and to carry away the Israelites ●●remy 25 9. ranging ouer the land raging with fire and sword and wasting the neighbour-Nations they spoyled the Kenites bordering vpon the Iewes which doth verifie the common Prouerbe It is some euil to be neere vnto euill And againe when thy Neighbours house is on fire it is high time to looke vnto thine owne and teacheth vs to esteeme as our owne the damage of our neighbour and to feare lest in the ruines of others our destruction bee conspired This calamity and captiuity was brought vpon them by Saneherib who comming to spoyle Israel spoiled them and as they were carried away out of their owne country together so they returned back againe into their Countrey together as wee reade in the holy history of the 1. Chronicles chap. 2 53. And thus as they tasted of the same misery so God made them partakers of the same mercy as they were afflicted together so also they were comforted together Thus much of the method and meaning of these prophesies The doctrines arising from hence are to be considered according to the seuerall prophesies and first touching the first against the Moabites Verse 17. I see that but not now I behold it but not neere there shall come a Starre out of Iacob c. In this prophesie Balaam foretelleth the future condition of the Moabites declaring both that they shal be destroyed and by whom For God wil raise out of the contemptible stocke of Iacob a bright Starre that shall refresh the Church with his sweete influence and giue them comfort against their enemies This we shewed to be performed in the dayes of Dauid afterward therefore he saith I see it but not now nor neere at hand This teacheth vs Doctrine The Church sometimes hath rest and glory That sometimes God maketh the Church to flourish in this life Howsoeuer God oftentimes bring trouble vpon his Church and affliction vpon his people yet at other times he giueth rest and peace and continueth theyr prosperity a long time This truth receyueth plentifull confirmation out of the booke of Iudges chap. 3.11 30. 5 31. 8 28 it is the maine drift and scope of it to shew how God in the miseries thereof prouideth a remedie and giueth rest round about from all their enemies God sometimes giueth them a time of breathing and recouering their strength and will not suffer the rodde of the wicked alway to rest on the lot of the righteous Psalm 125 3. We haue examples of this in the reigne of Salomon Iehoshaphat Hezekiah Iosiah and other godly Kings which were as strong props and pillars in Gods house a sure stay to the seruants of God in well doing he gaue them an outward estate that flourished both in wealth and pe●ce This appeareth euidently in the booke of Ester Ester 8 1 16. after he had deliuered them from the mouth of the Lyon that gaped as it were after his prey to deuoure them the Church prospered the head of Mordecai was exalted comfortable letters were published and sent abroad for their safety and vnto the Iewes came light and ioy gladnes honor So the prophet Zacharie prophesying of their returne from captiuity saith That the streets of the City shal be full of boyes girles playing in the streets thereof Zac. 8 5. The booke of Iosuah is a notable storehouse of Gods mercy vnto his church giuing them rest from their enemies as hee had promised them so that none were able to stand before them Iosh 22 4. And as he dealeth with his Church in generall so hee doth with his seruants in particular as we see in Ioseph Moses Dauid and diuers other turning their mourning into ioy Psal 30 11. loosing theyr sack and griding them with gladnes The Reasons of this dealing of the Lord are many and most euident First his eares are Reason 1 open to heare the cries of his children he seeeth their miseries add putteth all their teares in his bottle of remembrance This is it which the Lord declared vnto Moses when he called him to deliuer his people out of the thraldom and bondage of Egypt Exod. 2 7. I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry be●ause of their Taske-masters for I know their sororwes GOD hath made a couenant of peace with his people hath a compassionate sense of their miseries and a feeling of their afflictions There is a notable agreement and vnion betweene God and his Children They in their crosses and calamities cannot but sigh and mourne and they cannot so soone vtter a groane but by by and by the Lord is touched with compassion This is euidently recorded in the booke of Exodus 2 23 where it is said The childrē of Israel sighed for the bondage and cried and their cry for the bondage came vp to God The prayers of the faithfull preuaile much with God if they be feruent He vnderstandeth the words of their mouth and the grones of the heart and in his good time will heare them graciously Reason 2 Secondly hee giueth vnto his Church oftentimes a sweet taste of earthly blessings to the end his people might haue all occasions and opportunities to serue him If they should alwayes beare the yoke vpon their necks and haue the heauy burden of affliction lying on their backs though they were strong in faith and had their hope fixed in GOD yet they would be soone dismayed and discouraged and ioyne with the wicked falling into the impieties of their persecuters But God is the sunne and the shield of his Church hee will giue grace and glory vnto it and withholde nothing that is good from them that walke vprightly Psal 84 11. He will comfort and defend them in their danger he will exalt them to dignity after their distresses least they should bee too much daunted and discomforted This is the reason vsed by the Prophet The rod of the wicked shall not alwayes rest on the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put foorth their hand vnto wickednesse Psal 125 3. Vse 1 The vses now are to be marked and obserued of vs. First acknowledge from hence with a sweet feeling the infinite loue compassion of God toward his people he delighteth not to be alwayes chiding and his anger endureth not for euer Hee will not haue his Church to be alwayes vnder the crosse but sendeth it some release For hee endureth but a while in his anger but in his fauour is life c. Psal 30 5 6. Thus doth the Lord giue encouragements and comforts vnto those that faithfully serue and rightly worship him whereby hee not onely testifieth his owne loue toward them but allureth others by their example to trust in him and daunteth all their enemies that hoped to haue seene their destruction Such therefore as are not mooued to confesse the loue of God vnto his seruants and see not his kindnesse toward them haue
it may be smothered with the cloudy mystes and darknesse of the night yet it shall preuaile and breake foorth as the light in the open sight of all men that haue spirituall eyes to looke vppon it Seeing therefore the truth of God shining brightly hath alwayes beene resisted and that the true Prophets of God haue beene withstood so as they could neuer serue God quietly through the malice of Satan who continually goeth about to stop the course of sound doctrine let vs not be offended with false opinions it hath beene so from the beginning and will continue so vnto the ending of the world but rather labour to haue our hearts established in the truth that we be not carried about with euery blast as the waues of the sea and try all things holding fast that which is good 1 Thess 5 21. We must not refuse and reiect the truth of God because the father of lyes seeketh to hinder the free passage of it by broaching lyes among the people It is an euident signe that the truth is among vs because Satan sweateth so much against it and laboureth to poyson it with his owne inuentions Vse 2 Secondly seeing false Teachers are thrust vpon the Church to draw it into errour and falshoods this sheweth the great necessity of the Ministery of the word not onely to ingender true knowledge of repentance and obedience to God but also to continue men in the faith and to prepare them against heresies and false opinions And surely the mercy of God heerein is great vnto vs in commanding the sanctification of the Sabbath a duty so much neglected of master and seruant wherby we are charged to rest from our labours to assemble together in one place and to attend vpon the Ministery of the word For how many among our selues and elsewhere do neuer so much as thinke of God or of religion doe neuer heare of the danger of sinne of the necessity of grace of the reformation of theyr life but on the Lords day If there were not a set day appointed for these purposes and a solemne time of assembling our selues determined the greatest sort would become as rude and vnreformed as the Barbarians or the wilde Irish If then we would bee directed in the truth and supported from falling into errour we must submit our selues vnto the Ministery of the word Mal. chap. 2 verse 7. and be content to be guided by the ordinance of God This is it which our Sauiour speaketh reprouing the Sadduces who denyed the resurrection Are ye not therefore deceiued because ye know not the Scripture nor the power of God Mark chapter 12 verse 24. It is dangerous to rest where there is no bread to sustaine the body and to preserue life It is dangerous to dwell in a City assaulted by enemies hauing no watchman to giue warning of theyr approaching It is dangerous to haue a flocke of sheepe compassed about with wolues hauing no Shepheard to attend vpon them and to looke vnto them But of all dangers it is the greatest to liue where the bread of Gods word is not broken where the sound of Gods siluer Trumpet is not heard and where Gods flocke is not ledde in greene pastures The word is a Pearle of all Pearles which a wise Merchant would purchase at a great price rather then liue without it Where the preaching of the word ceaseth the people perish Prou. chapter 29 18. Where the blinde leade the blinde both fall into the ditch Matthew chap. 15 verse 14. Where the watchman bloweth not the Trumpet and the people is not warned Ezek. chap. 33 verse 6 both the Watchman and the people are taken away in theyr sinnes Where the Salt of Gods word doth not season the people with holy and wholesome doctrine Math. chapter 5 verse 13 they rot and putrifie in their corruptions As then we would be free from errour and not be carried away with false doctrine so it is required of vs to be careful in vsing the meanes that may bring vs to the truth and keepe vs from the pathes of falsehood And it shall be a vaine thing for any man to imagine himselfe to be able or likely to keepe himselfe pure and vndefiled from errour and heresie so long as wee despise the ordinary way that is allotted and appointed to preserue vs from falling into false opinions Thirdly seeing it is a note of a false teacher Vse 3 to lay stumbling blockes before men and to draw them to euill and entice them to wickednesse by this rule it will euidently appeare that Popish Religion is a most wicked Religion and the Teachers thereof false Prophets The Religion maintained in the church of Rome established in the Trent-councell defended by the sworne vassals of the Pope hath cancelled and disanulled the whole Law of God The church of Rome ●pealeth the whole Mo● Law of bo● Tables it hath abrogated and repealed eyther directly or indirectly eyther expressely or by consequent eyther plainly or in effect all the commandements of the Morall Law which God hath left to be a rule of righteousnesse to remaine in full strength power and vertue for euer This will easily appeare vnto vs if wee enter into the particular consideration of both the Tables The first Commandement chargeth vs to haue and to holde the true God onely for our God and to cleaue vnto him with full purpose of heart But the Church of Rome resteth not in this one GOD they teach vs to make and acknowledge more Gods They make the Pope to be God which title both in plaine words is ascribed and in power attributed vnto him For touching the name wher by he is named the Canonists call him Our Lord God the Pope Others cal him The supreme God on earth a visible God the spouse of the Church 〈◊〉 dedicat 〈◊〉 ●●incip 〈◊〉 praef de 〈◊〉 Rom. the corner-stone of the Church the head of the Church the Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah the light of the world the King of Kings the prince of the Church Againe they aduance the Saints departed into the honor of gods praying vnto them and making them to hear our prayers to know our hearts to vnderstand our thoughts and to merit for vs at the hands of God which none can do but the Son of God They do notoriously make the blessed Virgin the mother of Christ 〈◊〉 ●●cio beat 〈◊〉 to be as a god in expresse words call her a goddesse yea they do in effect equall her with Christ and ascribe as much to her as vnto him As Christ is called our Lord so they call her our Lady hee our King she our Queene he our Mediator she our mediatresse he like vs in all things sinne onely excepted so she deuoid of sinne he the onely meanes whereby we must be saued she our life our ioy our hope our help our comfort our stay in troubles Lastly to fill vp the measure of their sinne they make the
youth Shall wee make a mocke of it and a may-game at it These prophane beasts haue filled vp the measure of their sinne and are set downe in the seate of the scorners God alloweth no more liberty in sinning to youth then he doth to age The wise man willeth such to remember their Creator in the daies of their youth Eccl. 12 1. 11. and telleth them that for all the lustes of their eyes the vanity of their mindes the swinge of their pleasures and the lewdnes of their harts God will bring them to iudgement The Apostle teacheth That whoremongers and adulterers shall not inherite the kingdome of God 1 Corinth chapter 6 verse 9. The wise Salomon saith He that committeth adultery with a woman destroyeth his owne soule Prou. 6 verses 22 33. and so is accessary to his owne death And in another place he saith He shall finde a wound and dishonour and his reproch shall neuer be put away and shall wee make a sport of it to delight our selues in it We are admonished by the Apostle Paul that our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Corinth 6 19. so that seeing God vouchsafeth vs this honor to choose our vile bodyes which are dust and ashes earth and rottennesse to make them Temples and Tabernacles for his holy Spirit to dwell in let vs not turne them into filthy stables and vncleane styes and so driue him from vs who would possesse vs as his mansion and dwelling place Heereby then we vnderstand that wee are not to iudge of whoredome after the common opinion of men which make but a sport and pastime of it as we see how scoffers iest at it and despisers of God make a game of it Such mockers were risen vp long agoe in the dayes of the Apostle of whom he exhorteth vs to beware For hauing said that no whoremonger neyther vncleane person hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God he addeth in the next place Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for for such things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 6. And this example of the people of Israel which now wee haue in hand in this Chapter is able to strike a terror and feare into our hearts for euer breaking out into this iniquity The life of man is precious and deare vnto God we are creatures created according to his image he taketh no pleasure in our destruction Now in that hee destroyed such a number of his owne Images and Creatures for this sinne must not this sinne of fornication be great greeuous which kindleth such a fire of his vengeance and indignation that flamed out so farre and could not bee quenched but with the slaughter of so many thousands Thirdly it behoueth euery one according Vse 3 to his place and calling to punish this sinne seuerely that so euill may be taken out of Israel But such as haue a light estimation of this sinne which is the cause of the encrease of it do obiect the example of Christ who hauing a woman brought before him Obiect that was sound committing adultery in the very acte would not condemne her nor pronounce sentence of death vpon her but said vnto her Goe and sinne no more Iohn 8 11. Heere our Sauiour seemeth to free her from the law of Moses Leuit. 20 10. I answere this is Popish Diuinity Answer taught in the dayes of darknesse which cannot beare the tryall of the light For this is to make it not onely a venial sinne but no sinne at all Christ forgaue her freely and denounced no punishment at all against her neither of limb nor life nor chasticement nor other mulct bee inflicted vpon her so that if it doe not proue that the Magistrates should not punish whoredome sharply it proueth as well that he ought not to punish it at all if it ought to receiue no correction we cannot acknowlenge it for any transgression Furthermore the Iewes beeing in subiection vnto the Romanes and constrayned to beare the yoke of forraigne gouernment had the ciuill punishments of death eyther wholly taken from them or at least suspended vpon the will and pleasure of their officers which were sildome vpright often corrupted This is it which the Pharisies confesse in the Gospell For when Pilate willed them to take Christ to iudge him after their owne Law although the malice of their hearts and the cruelty of theyr hands were against him yet they sayde vnto him It is not lawfull for vs to put any man to death Iohn 18 31. Lastly the office of Christ was not to be an earthly Iudge to giue sentence of death but to be a Sauiour to call sinners to repentance Hence it was that hee refused a temporall kingdome when it was offered vnto him Iohn 6 15. and denyed to diuide the inheritance when he was requested as wholly impertinent vnto his calling and therefore he said Man who made me a Iudge or a diuider ouer you Luke 12 14. So then this Obiection being remoued it belongs to all Magistrates to be zealous in punishing this sinne and to sharpen the law against this other sins that bud vp and grow apace among vs lest they ouerthrow good Corne. Yea it appertaineth not onely to Magistrates but generally to all men to bring such offenders to open shame that so they may come to amendment of life The Apostle speaking of vnclean liuers saith If any that is called a brother bee a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such an one eate not 1 Cor. 5 5 11 and speaking of an incestuous person he chargeth the Corinthians to put him from among them and to deliuer him to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus Such vncleane liuers should bee swept out of the Church of God and haue the sword of excommunication drawne out against them that so they might learne not to transgresse But so long as wee beare with such persons and foster them in the bosome of the Church as the practise is too common neyther are we their friends neyther are we the friends of the Church neyther indeed are we the friends of almighty God For if we were their friends and loued them aright we would seeke their conuersion and repentance wee would vse the meanes to bring them to a shame of their offences to a sight of their sinnes and vnto a confession of their iniquities And if we were the friends of the Church we would labour to separate the vncleane from the cleane and the infected from the sound knowing that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe And if we were the friends of God we would be zealous of his glory and not suffer his Name to be prophaned through the lewde and wicked life of such rotten members For so long as such are harboured in the Church which is the body of
the sinne might be knowne and the men also knowne that do commit it And to what end doth the Apostle Iohn tell vs 1 Iohn 5 ver 16. There is a sinne to death and of seeing our brother sinne vnto death If then it may be seene it may be knowne And hence it is that when the Church saw Iulian the Apostata who had bin enlightned with the truth and bin zealous in the profession of it to despite God openly to lift vp himselfe against his word and to make a mocke of all religion they would haue no more to do with him they accounted him as a diuell and they prayed with one consent against him that God would confound and destroy him They did not pray vnto God for his conuersion and to giue him a new heart but because he could not repent being past amendment they called vpon God to hasten his condemnation that he might shew thereby what account he maketh of his most holie truth Last of all we ought to haue a care to bee Vse 3 helpfull and profitable to the Church and to be zealous in the seruice of God that thereby to the comfort of our selues and our posterity we may carry a sweet remembrance a blessed report in the Church for euer The loue of Mary in annointing Christ with the precious oyle which she powred on his head is promised by Christ to bee remembred for euer in what place of the worlde soeuer the Gospel shold be published Verily I say vnto you whersoeuer this Gospel shal bee preached throughout all the world there shall also this that she hath done be spoken of for a memoriall of her Matth. 26 13. The praise of Iehoiada is recorded in Scripture he dyed an old man and full of dayes they buried him in the City of Dauid with the Kings because hee had done good in Israel and toward God his house 2 Chr. 14 16. This serueth to reprooue such as care not at all what men thinke or speak of them and regard not what name they haue good or bad what report is giuen of them honorable or dishonorable sweet or rotten so they may preuayle in their purposes Cicer. of f●ic l 1. and bring to effect their diuellish deuices An heathen man could say It is the part of a retchlesse and dissolute man to neglect what a man sayth of him Salomon teacheth vs that a good name is more to bee desired then great riches and a louing fauour more then siluer and gold Pro. 22 1 Eccles 7 3 This is not attained by flattery or falshood but by godlinesse and righteousnesse by humility and an vpright conscience Riches are fraile and transitory subiect to vanity and corruption but a good name and louing fauour remaine for euer So the Prophet describing the blessednes of the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth in his commandements sayth that he shal neuer be moued but the righteous shal bee had in perpetual remembrance Ps 112.6 A good name is better then a great name And albeit the godly be despised in the world yet God will aduance theyr estimation giue thē a sweet sauour among all good men True it is sinfull men are magnified of sinners for euen the sinners loue those that loue them Luke 6 32. to receyue the like of them againe yet they shall bee made abhominable vnto the Saints and their name shall bee cursed and as much loathed as the filthy fauour of his carkasse that lyeth rotting in the graue So then seeing shame shall be as an vnseparable companion of wickednesse and no man can separate those things which God hath ioyned together on the other side heere is comfort to the godly that GOD will vndertake the protection of their names so that no creature shall bee able to rob them of it but as he preserueth them to saluation so he will maintayne their credit and estimation Wee see this in many the deare seruants of God who albeit they haue had their names for a time diminished impayred yet they haue beene restored and recouered The name of Naboth was greatly blemished with the slanderous imputation of treason and blasphemy but that momentary shame is swallowed vp and recompensed with euerlasting honour throughout all generations 1 King 21.10 The like wee might say of Cranmer Ridley Latimer Hooper Bradford Philpot and many other the deare seruants of God that gaue their liues for the truth howsoeuer they were condemned for heretikes yet they are renowned for Saints and shall be so acknowledged to the end of the world 16 Againe the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 17 Vexe the Midianites and smite them 18 For they trouble you with their wiles wherewith they haue beguiled you as concerning Peor and as concerning their sister Cosbi the daughter of a Prince of Midian which was slaine in the day of the plague because of Peor We haue hitherto in this chapter handled the transgression of the Israelites and the reconciliation of God Now remayneth the decree and determination of God against the Midianites For after that God had chastened his owne people and iudgement hath begun to breake out against the house of God hee riseth vp in wrath and indignation as a iust Iudge against his enemies Heerein we are to marke two things First the commandement Secondly the reasons or causes of the commandement The commandement and charge directed vnto Moses in this Smite and slay the Midianites Thus doth wickednesse returne vpon the heads of the authors thereof These enemies being drawne into the league to take part with the Moabites had conspired against Israel soght to subdue them not by strength but by sensuality nor by force of warre but by lasciuiousnesse and wantonnesse of women Now the wheele is turned vpon themselues the stone is rolled vpon them that first stirred it and mischiefe falleth vpon the first contriuers Obiect But heere out of this commandement arise two questions fit to be mooued and worthy to be discussed First inasmuch as God euery where forbiddeth reuenging of our owne causes and quarrels why doth hee now permit and prouoke the people of Israel therunto as if they were not by nature prone enough to vengeance I answere Answ there is a double kinde of reuenge one priuate the other publicke Priuate reuenge is that which proceedeth from the priuate motion of our corrupt nature seeking to satisfie our owne malice with the hurt of others This is forbidden by our Sauiour Christ Mathew 5 44 commanding vs to loue our enemies and to ouercome euill with good Publique reuenge is that which is commanded and warranted by God being imposed vpon vs either mediatly by authority of the Magistrate or immediatly by the secret instinct of the Spirit This is allowed and lawfull as we saw before in Phinehas and others inasmuch as it proceedeth not from the corruption of nature but from the inspiration of God For God the iust reuenger of all wickednesse may vse the ministery of
God vpon the people and places where vngodly sinners dwell and causeth him to turne away his face and fauour from them Deuter. 23 9 14. Hos 2 ver 5 9 10. We reade in the Prophesies of Daniel chap. 3 29 that the king made a Decree that euery people nation and language which blasphemed God should be cut in peeces and their houses made a dunghill in the same manner it is with God hee bringeth reproch and maketh infamous not onely the persons that prouoke him by their sinnes but also the places and habitations where they dwell He could haue destroyed the men of Sodome Gomorrha and yet haue spared their Citties and houses and substance but hee destroyed these also to make them more ignominious to all posterity Iude verse 7. This teacheth vs how iust it is with God Vse 1 and how warrantable it is for vs to disgrace and discredite and discountenance the City and Church of Rome that they might bee odious in the eyes and stinke in the nostrils of all good men as a dead carkasse without life and breath For although their faith was once famous through the whole world Rom. 1 8 yet inasmuch as they are fallen from that faith to heresie and from sincerity to hypocrisie wee haue iust cause to hate the same to disgrace it what we can It is iust with GOD that it should be so and lawfull for vs to do so Reu. 18 2. But to cleere themselues of apostacy from the faith Obiect they will tell vs that we cannot tell them from whence their supposed heresies should first proceed who was the author of them and the scatterer of them abroad as wee see in Campians sophisticall and verball challenge he demandeth at what time Rat. 7. quo tempore qua via qua vt c. vnder what Bishop by what steps and proceedings a new religion was spread ouer the church of Rome and the whole world I answer Answ it is not necessary to set downe the minutes and moments of time inasmuch as some alterations are insensible Many errors creepe on secretly and as it were in the darke The euill and enuious man in the Gospel sowed tares among the wheate in the night when no man could see Mat. 13.25 The hayres of our head are not all white at a suddaine and old age doth not creepe vpon vs in a day Take the oldest man that liueth vpon the earth who can tell when he began to be old We know by sundry infallible tokens that he is an olde man but what day or weeke or moneth or yeare when he began to be so who can assigne or determine This is manifest in al things that arise of small beginnings and grow by little and little to a greater quantity vntill they come to perfection If we see a man sicke of the pestilence or a City corrupt in manners with riotousnesse and wickednesse or an house ruinous and ready to fall or a ship in the midst of the sea ready to sinke shall we deny all these to bee because we know not when they first began to bee when that man began to bee infected or the City to bee corrupted or in what yeare the house began to be ruinous or in what day the ship began to leake We know not how and when weeds and thornes and thistles first tooke roote vnder the ground but whē once they are sprung vp and growne aloft wee see them we discerne them wee feele them wee plucke thē vp So the alterations of the church of Rome are as a mystery The mystery of iniquity 2 Thess 2 ver 7 and albeit we could not shew the beginning of them yet that such desolations and ruines of the ancient building are among them that they vtterly lay waste the foundatiō we proue by the word of God in the old and new Testament This is the triall of all errors and heresies And because the doctrines that they embrace and the religion that they professe are not agreeable to these ancient monuments and records which are as the Meteyard or the Standard to try all measures wee therefore say and conclude they are errors and wee wrong them not at all though wee bee not able to produce the first broachers and beginners of them all This is enough for vs we finde by the word of God that they are heresies and therefore iustly chalenge them and complain that Bethel is become Beth-auen and the Church of God become the Synagogue of Satan Hos 4 verse 15. How many heresies haue sprung vp in the Church like darnell in the fielde among the Corne noted by Epiphanius Austine and others of the learned and ancient of whom neither we nor they know the first authors The Scribes and Pharisies taught many things against the Law or else Christ would not haue reproued their false glosses Math. 5 neyther willed his Disciples to beware of the leauen of the Pharisies and of the Sadduces Mat. 16 6 that is of the doctrine of the Parisies and of the Sadduces verse 12 yet the circumstance of time when these corruptions crept in and the persons that deuised them are altogether vnknowne and who is able to tell vs In the primitiue Church there were a kinde of heretiques called Acephali because no man was found to be their head and master Alphons haer l. 4 The like we might say of many other heresies of which if any should aske as Campian doth In what age vnder what Pope vpon what occasion by whose compulsiō by whose power it came to passe I doubt the best answer would be silence Wherefore it is not necessary to produce the precise time and tokens of euery change because the alteration was not made at an instant or all at once as when a land is inuaded by a forreigne enemy that turneth all things vpside downe but it entred slily and slowly into the Church as a worme that gnaweth the roote of the tree by little and little to omit that wee in these last dayes want the histories and records of many things done before vs and the Romane tyranny hath suppressed or corrupted a part of them that are left vs. The Probleme is not vnknowne which the Greekes so curiously debated Plutark touching the Argos wherein Iason sayled for the golden fleece which at his returne and comming home was layde vp and reserued in the Road for a great and worthy monument This ship decaying by little and little for what is it that time doth not consume as a moth and eat as a canker they alwayes peeced and repayred where it began to weare away till in the ende the whole substance of the old vessell or bottome wherein Iason sayled and made his voyage and aduenture was vtterly wasted and nothing remaining of it but onely the later reparations successiuely made in the roome of the other Now the question was A probleme of the Argos wherein Iason sayled whether this were the ship wherein Iason sayled
and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart much more must wee acknowledge the author and giuer thereof to bee the searcher of the heart so that there is not any creature that is not manifest in his sight but al things are naked and open vnto the eyes of him with whom wee haue to doe Hebrewes 4 12 13. Will any that is brought before a Iudge and standeth in his presence beginne to mocke and iest as with a childe But the Lord is the Iudge of the whole world and he will reward euery man according to his workes Genes 18 25 and 21 49. Deuteronom 10 17 Acts 17 31. Romanes 2 5 6 and 3 6. So then they are desperately euill that dally with their owne saluation halting on both sides swimming betweene two streames and losing their first loue whereby they glorified God and adorned the profession of the Gospel Lastly it is required of euery good and Vse 3 faithfull seruant of God to bee zealous and amend This serueth to giue a watch word and warning to the greatest number of our professors among vs such as are accounted the most peaceable of the kingdome honest men iust dealers and ciuill liuers who can say with the Pharisie in the Gospel they are no theeues nor adulterers nor drunkards nor extortioners they hurt no man they wrong no man they meane well to all they follow their businesse quietly they liue among their neighbours peaceably they are no medlers nor busie-bodyes in other mens matters these think themselues therefore to be in good case to be assured of Gods loue and fauour to need no particular repentance yet in the meane season they haue no zeale nor care of religion in them But some wil say Are not the former points that you haue named good things Do you shalt passe but no farther and heere shall thy proud waues be stayed Iob 38 11. Vse 1 This serueth to reproue the cursed secte of the Anabaptists who bring in a confusion of all things that set the heauens out of theyr course and remoue the earth out of his place and breake vp the barres of the sea and turne the order that God hath setled vpside down For they can abide no priuate mans possessions but would haue all things common Thus they thinke to make themselues like to the Apostles but indeed they thereby resemble rather some of the Philosophers If we should see a man come into his neighbours ground pull vp the hedges teare vp the enclosures rend vp the fences fill vp the ditches take away the pales through downe the wals and remoue the bounds wee would hold him an enemy to humane society and to the expresse ordinance of God For wherefore hath God seuered and diuided people from people with bro●d seas deepe riuers and high mountains but that they should not passe those bounds nor inuade the possessions of others And this was the cause why in this place he bounded so exactly the Land of promise and teacheth thē where it should begin and where it should end on the East-side and on the West on the North-side and on the South And in the booke of Ioshua the seuerall bounds limits of euery Tribe is seuerally and largely expressed and described Hence it is that Salomon saith Prou. 22 28. Remoue not the ancient land-marke which thy fathers haue set This is the law of God and man a law vnder the Law and the Gospel to continue for euer True it is the Romanists would conclude from hence Obiect that their errors which haue gotten foot for a few hundred yeares climbed vp into the chayre of Moses ought to preuayle and take place But this is no better then to draw the words frō the litterall meaning to an allegory Answer which by the doctrine of theyr owne schooles cannot be sound Tho Aquinas Againe howsoeuer in worldly possessions prescription of time may carry some credite and be of some force Iudg. 11 26 yet in the matters of God no time thogh the hayres be neuer so gray can prescribe against the ancient of daies Dan. 7 22. For if it be a prerogatiue royall in a temporall kingdome as the lawyers teach that nullum tempus occurrit regi that is no time shall barre the king nor preiudice him of his right then much more must we hold that no time shall barre the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords of his right but his law must take place for euer against all other lawes customes immunities priuiledges and prescriptions whatsoeuer Lastly the doctrine of the Gospel which we professe is more ancient then all the deuices and inuentions of men which hath beene receyued and beleeued from the infancy of the Church and from the beginning of the world and therefore the late and new start vp religion of popery must rise vp before the hoary head thereof as the young man is commanded to honour the face of the old man Moreouer Obiect whereas they alledge this and vrge it to procure credite and authority vnto the works and writings of men as if the sayings of the Fathers were to stand for a law it is of no greater weight then the former And albeit it were sufficient to say Let God be true and euery man a lyar Rom. 3 4 yet we answer Answer farther that the Fathers are for the most part against them and refuse to be witnesses for them as might easily appeare in the maine controuersies betweene them and vs. Againe as they dissent from them so sometimes they dissent from themselues Lastly all the Prophets Apostles as a cloud of witnesses stand on our side and we teach nothing but what wee haue receyued of them and they are our warrant To returne then vnto the former point wee see the Anabaptists are iustly reprooued who cannot abide any bounds or buttelles or land-marks neither that any should be master of his owne possessions but would haue all go to spoyle and hauocke And as God would haue iust weights and measures obserued betweene man and man that they might buy sell one with another so he wold haue bounds and markes also vnchanged that equity and vprightnesse in all our dealings might take place For this cause Moses saith Cursed is he that remoueth his neighbours landmarke and all the people shall say Amen Deut 27 17 and 19 14. Diony Halic antiq lib. 2. The very heathen by the light of nature saw that such markes ought to be inuiolable which of old time had beene set in inheritances and they all thought that God himselfe was wronged and iniuried in such false dealings And because it should be accounted an holy matter they made a god of it according to their common manner which they called Terminus and dedicated a feast to him which they called Terminalia True it is this was a diuellish inuention to set vp an Idoll for the maintainance of equity yet nature taught engraued this
most comfortable p. 563 b. Faithfull must vse meanes to further Gods prouidence 577. they must deale wisely p. 579. b. they are greeued for the sins of others 504 they shall be euilly intreated p. 596 b. Faithfull faile in many things 735 a. 736 how said to walke in all the Commandements 736 b. they may fall into the same sinnes againe 772 they are forrainers in this life 822 they are brought into the inheritance of the wicked 845 b. they are men of courage 864 b. they bring a blessing vpon their families p. 1080 b. Faith true of an applying nature p. 1232 b. False Teachers p. 1036. Familiarity with Idolaters to be auoided p. 1219. Famine of the word p. 780. Fast the kindes of it 1153 a. what it is ibid. it is to be ioyned with praier 1154 the popish fastes ibid. Fathers comforted that haue euill children 134 their duties See duties Fauour of God must be cheefely desired 432 b. 433 mans happinesse standeth therein p. 433 b. 434 a Feare wrought two waies p. 269 b. Fellowship with wicked p. 1049 b. 1050. Feast of the Sabbath 1140 of the New-Moones 1143 of the Passeouer 477 1146 of Pentecost 1148 of Trumpets 1150 of fasting 1152 of Tabernacles p. 1155 b. Fire one of Gods iudgements p. 525 a. First borne the Lords p. 145. 158 b. First fruites p. 630 631. Flesh eaten before the flood p. 150 b. Food of the soule p. 532 a. Forefathers stood vpon p. 586. Foreseene works p. 87 a. Forgiuenesse by man how farre p. 298. Forgiuenesse of sinnes 654 b. a notable benefit 955 what it is 311 a. 340 such as want it are most miserable p. 340 956. Forgiuenesse three fold p. 298 b. Forme of set praier 513 b. 424 b. against those that condemne it 512 their reasons answered p. 426 b. 512. Fornication not indifferent 380 it is knowne vnto God 381 motiues to auoid it 385 it bringeth iudgements 1052. b. auoid the occasions 1055. See adultery whoredome Freedome ciuill 181 and spirituall ibid. Free will confuted 90 a. what free will man hath p. 90 b. G. Gaine a tentation p. 886 b. Gaming and Gamsters p. 142 b. Genealogies p. 174 b. Gifts what may be lost what not p. 24. 25. Gifts of Moses whether diminished p. 535. b. Glebe of the Church p. 705. Glory of God 605. it is the triall of doctrines page p. 232. God is the Author of the Scriptures 1. hee performeth all his promises 41 b. how hee is present and how farre off 81. 958. 595. hee bestoweth his gifts freely 85. yet by meanes 546 a. how he requireth impossibilities p. 89. God disliketh mens deuises in his worship 141 b. he ordaineth the officers of his Church 146 b. he chuseth weake meanes p. 175. God will haue all places taught 197. and haue a learned Ministery p. 199 a. God hath not giuen to all alike p. 243. God punisheth sinne in his owne kinde 390 he will make knowne the innocency of his 396 b he bestoweth more vpon them then they desire 403 b 683 he knoweth all secrets 410 b. why hee holdeth his peace at our afflictions page 413 b p. 572 a. God hath two schoole-houses 443 b two dwelling places 520 hee vnderstandeth all mens wayes p. 558 God searcheth before he punisheth 562. he heareth not such as lye in their sins 568. hee mingleth his chastisements with mercy 573 b. he respecteth no persons 575. how he is saide to come to a people p. 596 a. God deliuereth from dangers vnknowne to his 902 he is vnchangeably true 952. he prouideth for his 1113. he is of much patience 606. not to be abused p. 778. God visiteth the sins of fathers vpon children 615 b. he punisheth for sinnes of impiety 640 b. he would haue all brought to repentance 678. he is not to be accused for not giuing it Ibid. he giueth life to the dead 683 b. iust in all chastisements p. 691. God chastiseth his owne children 739 he loueth his people 759 b. heareth their prayers 760 784 b he deliuereth them vnder the crosse 786 b. he is mercifull to greeuous sinners p. 809 b. God is mercifull to the mercifull 993 b. accounts our wrongs as his owne 996 a. he chastiseth his owne first p. 1050. Gods presence what it signifieth p. 283. Gods dwelling is among his people p. 519. Gods wrath moued is full of rage 1077. it is foreknowne three wayes p. 1078 b. God setteth bounds to all mens possessions p. 1225. God tolerateth things which he neuer alloweth p. 1247 Godly See Faithfull Good name 357. haue care of each others 398 401. especially of Gods name p. 400. Good is to be commended in whomsoeuer it abideth p. 1257. Gospel of Iames counterfet p. 348 b. Gospel contemned a greeuous sin 796. it needeth no new miracles p. 685 a. Greatest part See multitude Guilty none before triall p. 362. Guilty ought not to be spared p. 1252 b. H Hollowing of Churches p. 436 b. Harlots to be auoyded p. 384 b. Hatred none like to that for Religion p. 764. Head taken diuersly p. 436 a. Hearbes soure p. 1147 b. Hearers duty p. 474 Hearing 13 b. it is a Iewel for the eare 234 a. wherein it consisteth p. 13 b. Hearing the same things p. 238. Heart p. 145 b. Hebrewes how they entitle the Scriptures p. 8 a. Hiding of gifts p. 463. Hin what p. 626 1143 b. Honour God with the best 348. it draweth from God p. 863. Hope of euill professors more then of ciuil men 120 b. of wicked is vaine p. 937. House of God what p. 563 b. Housholders p. 573. Humility p. 77. a Hipocrisie 31 976 582. the markes of it Ibid. at last it is vncased 588 b. the heinousnesse of it 589 a. nothing worse then it p. 1126. Hipocrites 446 b. often in the church p. 11. I Iealousie what 347 a. whereof it consisteth Ibid Iewish lawes touching inheritance p. 1127 a. Iewes had knowledge of the Messiah p. 498 b. Idolaters honored their Prophets p. 914. Ignorance abounds 142 b. the danger of it 170. it is the root of disobedience 250. a great sin 526. it shal excuse none 931. the causes of it Ibid. Ignorant what they are p. 172 251 b. Ignorant Ministers p. 229. Image of God what p. 422. Images not to be worshipped p. 789 b. 790 792. Imposition of handes 434 a. 469 Ministers ordained by it ibid. Impropriations p. 702. Inheritance of the Israelites p. 1257 b. Infants without baptisme 486. they belong to the Couenant p. 1081 bi Inferiors must reuerence their superiors p. 541. Innocency p. 596 b. Innocent person not to be put to death p. 1252 a. Instruction to the Ministers p. 697 a. Instruments weake God chuseth p. 105. Intents excuse not p. 141 b. 170 b. Iobs children godly p. 1130 b. Iosephus tale of Moses wife disproued p. 500. Ioseph and Mary brothers children p. 1270 a. Irony p. 895. Ismael whether he repented p. 1171. Israelites 42 mansions in the wildernesse p.
Christ the reproch redounds in part to the head Fourthly it behoueth vs from hence to Vse 4 learne to auoyde all allurements and enticements that may draw vs into this sinne For to auoyd sinne is to auoyd the occasions of sinne Whosoeuer doth nourish the occasions cannot be long free from sinne And whosoeuer maketh no conscience to follow the prouocations of lust and the meanes that may bring it vpon vs will shortly make no conscience of whoredome it selfe Therefore our Sauior correcting the false glozes of the Scribes and Pharisies and expounding the true meaning of the seuenth Commandement saith If thy right eie cause thee to offend plucke it out and cast it from thee for better it is for thee that one of thy members perish then that thy whole body should be cast into hell Math. chap. 5 29. Whereby our Sauiour meaneth that the Law of God not onely forbiddeth the sinne expressed but restraineth all occasions and allurements though they were as deare vnto vs as our right eye or as necessary vnto vs as our hand A notable example hereeof wee haue in Ioseph when he was tempted by his wanton mistresse to commit folly hee was so farre from consenting to adultery that he absented him selfe from her company Gen. 39 10. Many are the allurements that leade the way vnto this sinne wanton apparrell filthy communication vncleane songs wanton lookes beastly drunkennesse vnlawfull embracings excessiue dyet hurtfull idlenesse and too familiar company with those that may entice vs and tempt vs to lust The following after these the delighting in them is the path that guideth vs to the practise of all vncleannesse and therefore we must abhorre them if we would hate whoredome it selfe Such then as say they cannot abide whoredome and they doe detest it from their harts and yet do not shun these allurements do not consider their owne weaknes but offer themselues leade themselues into tentation yea as much as in them lyeth they make God a lyar and there is no truth in them Lastly let vs according to our duty with Vse 5 all speede forsake this filthy kinde of life and renounce our former vncleannes so the hearty repētance may follow after wher this sin hath bin cōmitted before For there remaines mercy to such if they repent and turne with all their hearts and with all their soules The Lord is full of compassion and mercy slowe to anger and of great kindnesse If the wicked man forsake his waies and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations if he returne vnto the Lord and craue mercy at his hands hee will not alway chide neither keepe his anger for euer Esay 55 7. He will not deale with vs after our sinnes neither reward vs according to our iniquities Psal 103 10. Dauid through the lust of his eye fell into this sinne and committed folly in Israel but when he confessed his fault and forsooke his sinne he was receiued to mercy For when Dauid saide vnto Nathan I haue sinned against the Lord Nathan saide vnto Dauid The Lord also hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die 2. Sam. 12 verse 13. The Lord seeketh no more but that the sinner turn vnto him When once we are reconciled vnto him he hath no more controuersie against vs. This we see in Rahab the harlot she led a filthy and vncleane life among her people but when she heard of the great workes that the Lord had done for the children of Israel in deliuering them out of Egypt in drying vp the red sea in feeding thē from heauen and in preseruing them from all their enemies she ioyned in heart with the Church forsooke her euill life and in token of her true repentance Heb. 11 31. Iam. 2.25 she receiued the messengers sent vnto her with the danger of her life and sent them out another way This the Apostle speaketh of the Saints at Corinth for hauing denounced a fearful iudgment against fornicators adulterers wanton persons that they shall not inherit the kingdome of God he addeth 1 Cor. 6 11. Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Seeing therefore God is ready to forgiue our sins why should not we be ready to forsake our sinnes This vncleannesse maketh vs guilty of temporall and eternal punishments yet God offereth to discharge vs of both and to receiue vs vnto his fauour if we will turne from our sinnes to him bring forth fruite worthy amendment of life Let vs therefore confesse with Dauid that wee haue sinned let vs call for mercy at the hands of God saying Haue mercy vpon me O Lord according to thy louing kindnes acording to the multitude of thy compassions put away mine iniquities wash me throughly from mine iniquity and clense me from my sinne Psalme 51 the first second verses Verse 4. And the Lord said vnto Moses Take all the heads of this people and hang them vp to the Lord before this Sunne In the words before the punishment that fell vpon the people of Israel was set downe in generall now hee setteth downe vpon whom it fell in particular to wit both Princes people for the wrath of God was so kindled against them that they were cut off as rotten members all through the counsell of Balaam For when he saw that God opened not his mouth to curse the Israelites but rather when he was resolued to vtter curses hee was inforced to pronounce blessings hee gaue diuellish counsell as his last shift to the Moabites that their beautifull women should allure the Iewes into their cōpany and by their company vnto adultery by adultery vnto idolatry wherby they shold prouoke Gods indignation and so bring vpon themselues vtter confusion Now we must obserue in this place that God in punishing these sinnes beginneth first with the heads of the people Doctrine Superiors lye open to iudgmen●s as well as others From hence we learne that Superiors and men of high places lye open to greeuous iudgements as wel as others All sorts of men high and low rich and poore noble and vnnoble shall taste of the punishments of God for sinne This the Prophet pointeth vnto when he faith God powreth contempt vpon Princes and causeth them to erre in desert places out of the way Psal 107 40. In the first chapter of Esay verses 10 23 24 this truth receiueth plentifull confirmation Heare the word of God O Princes of Sodome hearken vnto the Law of our God O people of Gomorrha thy Princes are rebellious and companions of theeues euery one loueth gifts and followeth after rewards they iudge not the fatherlesse neither doth the widdowes cause come before them therefore saith the Lord God of hostes the mighty one of Israel Ah I will ease me of mine aduersaries auenge me of mine enemies And in the Chapter following the same Prophet saith The high lookes