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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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shall leave a seed behinde him Cain and Abell resemble all mankinde Elect Reprobate as the variety in names so in natures and dispositions Secondly you heard that from this tree doe sprout two branches that is a pair of brethren to whom all mankinde may be reduced from whom both Sion the City of God and Babell the City of Satan take their beginning concerning whom in the variety of their names we observed the variety of their natures the one called Cain that is a possession sets out those people whose felicity is to get and which count it the only misery to lose the things of this life the other called Abell that is vanity doth set out unto us those which reckon all things in this life to be vanity as the Preacher teacheth us to value them thereby we considered what account we made both of the one and the other In the world Cain is called a great Jewell and Abell despised as a thing of naught Second and third Division Now we are come to a second and third division 1 In their Trades For in this verse they are divided by their trades and calling 2. In their Religion in the next by their religion and profession in the service of God both which divisions have their ground the second chapter and the seventh verse Man consists of Body and Soul to fill both Earth and Heaven For where man is said to consist of two parts body and soul the one formed of the dust of the earth the other breathed by God that is to shew that as according to Gods commandement the first chapter of Genesis and the twenty sixt verse He hath a care to fill the earth by bringing forth children so he must be as carefull to fill heaven by a second generation that as he was to till the earth from whence his body was taken chapter the third Mans vocation maintain life and religion a spirituall life So he must imploy his study in Gods service from whence he received his soul his care must be not only to leave behinde him a long generation but semen sanctum Mal. the second chapter as they must have a vocation whereby to maintain naturall life So they must be religious and offer sacrifice that leading a spirituall life here on earth they may obtain eternall life in heaven 1. The naturall life then the spirituall and why But as Cain was first born after the flesh and then Abell So alwaies flesh goeth before the spirit nature before grace as the Apostle witnesseth the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter That is not first which is spirituall but that which is naturall and then that which is spirituall Therefore God was first to feed the Israelites with Manna and to give them water out of the rock the sixteenth chapter of Exodus before they would receive the Law which after was published upon mount Sinai the twentieth chapter of Exodus For as the Apostle sheweth there is a debt due to the flesh Rom. the eight chapter which must be paid before the spirit can with quietnesse attend upon Gods service which being provided for the spirit is the fitter to attend upon Gods worship Children are not to be trained up in idlenesse and why Before we come to their severall vocations we have first to consider in generall that Adam would not have either of his children trained up in idlenesse and therefore he sets not only his younger sonne But to labor in a vocation but even his heir to a trade and occupation knowing that whereas God hath ordained that man shall live by some painfull vocation chapter the third there is a thing that both touched him and his the necessity whereof is such as Job saith Man is born to labor even as a bird to flie the fifth chapter of Job and the seventh verse And as he imployeth in trade as well the eldest as the youngest So Abell the good no lesse then Gain the wicked sonne for the godly have no liberty to live without some honest calling and therefore the Apostle saith Let a man abide in that calling wherein he is called the first of the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the twenty fourth verse If the godly may not live idlely much more ought wicked children to be set to some trade of life The second point to be observed is that there is no sooner mention made of the birth of these two brethren but presently the Holy Ghost setteth down their trade commending unto us from Adams example that which Salomon after teacheth the twenty second chapter of the Prov. Teach a childe in the beginning of his waies and he will not depart from it when he is old Seasonable instruction in youth and why for without seasonable instruction children and youth are but vanity the eleventh chapter of Eccle. and the third verse All are not fit for one and the same calling and why Both these sonnes are not set to one vocation to shew that all men are not fit and meet for one and the same calling for as there is this diversity in the earth out of which man is taken that one part of it is sandy some clay and some gravell And as in the heavenly light there is that diversity which the Apostle speaks of the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter and the fourty first verse one star differing from another in glory So the like variety appeareth in the dispositions of men in so much as we see all men are not meet for one thing Fourthly from hence we learn that albeit the labors and trades of men be diverse Callings must be such as God alloweth and are serviceable to the Common-wealth and why yet they must be such as both God alloweth and such as are serviceable to the publique wealth we may not say because Cain a reprobate was a husbandman that therefore God dislikes husbandary for God affirmeth of Noah that he was a just and upright man and yet he was an husbandman Genesis the ninth chapter nor that the office of keeping sheep is therefore lawfull in Gods sight because Abell the just was a sheephcard for Juball the sonne of wicked Lamech was the father of them that dwelt in tents and kept Sheep Genesis the fourth chapter and the twentieth verse and yet himself a wicked man the person doth not make the calling lawfull but it must be taken from God himself and be such as God alloweth touching husbandry Christ saith My father is the Husbandman the fifteenth chapter of John and the first verse and you are Gods husbandry saith the Apostle the first of the Corinthians the third chapter and the ninth verse Therefore the calling of an husbandman is allowable for the other calling God himself is called the Shepheard of Israel the eightieth Psalme and the first verse and Christ saith of his Church I have other sheep which I must gather under my government
bodies that are corruptible to become glorious Philippians the third chapter and the twenty first verse If in this life we keep our selves from the filthinesse and pollution of worldly and carnal lusts our bodies shall be glorious after death therefore we are to be more careful for the soul than for the body Of this life Job saith It is but short Job the fourteenth chapter It is like a vapour that suddenly ariseth and vanisheth away James the fourth chapter It is as grasse the first epistle of Peter and the first chapter And it standeth not in the aboundance of riches that man hath Luke the twelfth chapter Man walks in a shadow and disquiets himself in vain Psalm the thirty ninth He is every moment subject to death and howsoever death it looks a young man in the face as it doth old men yet it is as neer to him while it stands close to the other Therefore the Wise man saith All the cares of this life are but vanity and vexation of spirit And howsoever while we are in our joyes drunk with the pleasure of the world as Naball the first epistle of Samuel and the twenty fift chapter So that though we be wounded we feel it not like the drunkard Proverbs the twenty third chapter Though we have not grace to say Quid prodest totum mundum lucrari Matthew the sixteenth chapter yet when it is too late we shall say What hath it 〈◊〉 us to have enjoyed the pleasures of this life Sapi. 5. The life to come is void of all misery and torment There is the fulnesse of joy and pleasure for evermore Psalme the sixteenth But all the pleasure and profits of this life if it were possible to possesse them all are not answerable to the joyes of the life to come With which present pleasures are joyned many griefs and torments If a man be never so rich or humble diseased or afflicted it will marre all his joyes But all the afflictions of this life are not comparable to the future glory Romans the eighth that shall be revealed which swallows up all our troubles that we suffer here because it is hard to root out of mens hearts the cares of this life and Christ doth not forbid them altogether to be carelesse But first seek the kingdom of God and all things else shall be cast upon you Matthew the sixt chapter If ye neglect earthly things for heavenly you shall not only obtain heavenly things but earthly things withall If we only seek bodily things and not heavenly we shall want both But if we seek for the soul we shall have things necessary for the body for the Lord 〈◊〉 said I will not for sake thee Hebrews the thirteenth chapter And David affureth himself that because the Lord is his 〈◊〉 he shall want nothing Psalm the twenty third If Salomon ask not riches nor honour but wisdome he shall have not only wisdome but riches honour and all other things the first book of Kings the third chapter the seeking of things pertaining to this life 〈◊〉 the care of the life to come but the seeking of Gods kingdom includes the care of all other things The 〈◊〉 that it is Christ the sonne of man that gives us this bread of life Muerial bread is the effect of Creatures but the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 is the effect of the redemption But seeing all things were made by Christ John the first chapter therefore it is Christ that gives us both eartnly and heavealy bread Christ made 〈◊〉 materiall bread of nothing but this bread he maketh of himself the one he made 〈◊〉 but the other cost him the shedding of his 〈◊〉 His flesh simply is not bread but his flesh 〈◊〉 for us caro 〈◊〉 prodest John sixth chapter the bread that perisheth and all the works of the Creation he performed in six dayes but the bread of life was not made but during the whole space of his life upon earth The six point is where the bread is to be found touching which he saith say not with thy heart who shall goe up to heaven to fetch this bread nor 〈◊〉 down to hell komans the tenth chapter and the sixth verse It is the Sonne of man that gives it for God the Father hath sealed him for this end In which words we have First a 〈◊〉 Secondly an Affirmation The direction hath a Correction for we think we deserve it by seeking and labouring for it For Christ tells us it is not to be had except the Sonne of man give 〈◊〉 Christ gives us the bread of life three wayes First When he gives his flesh to be crucified for us in his 〈◊〉 for in death only it 〈◊〉 power to quicken us into eternal life as the Apostle witnesseth By death he did destroy him that had the power of death Hebrews the second chapter In thy favour is life Psalme the thirtieth But we are brought into Gods favour no otherwise but by the death of his Sonne Romans the fift chapter So that by his death we obtain life By the sacrifice of himself he hath done away our 〈◊〉 Hebrems the ninth chapter Secondly he gives us the bread of life in the sacrament his flesh is made bread for us in his passion when he dyed but is given and applyed to us in the Supper The expiation for sinnes was once performed upon the Crosse By one sacrifice hath he perfected for ever Hebrews the tenth chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse But 〈…〉 is often applyed to us in the 〈◊〉 Thirdly where as there are two 〈◊〉 of giving offert and confert he gives us this bread when he doth not only 〈◊〉 it unto us but makes us 〈◊〉 it If we 〈◊〉 hold of the bread by faith which is the work of God and 〈◊〉 that he is the food of our souls then 〈◊〉 will give us it and make us partakers of 〈◊〉 as Christ saith This is the 〈◊〉 That light came into the world and ye loved darknesse rather than light John the third chapter So it shall be our condemna ion if God doe only offer us the bread of life and doe not withall give us it and make us to receive it All bodily meats being a power nutritive but profit 〈◊〉 except they be a power digestive So though the body of Christ crucified have a power to give life and nourishment yet except we digest it with faith it shall doe us no good For our assurance hereof Christ saith of the Sonne of man that God the Father hath sealed him that is he hath power and authority to be the bread of life and to conserve life to them that feed on him He hath sealed him First with his nature being the very Sonne of God He is the similitude and ingraven form of his person Hebrews the first chapter and the third verse We need not to doubt of the remission of our sinnes for Christ as he is God giveth power to forgive sinnes Secondly as he is sealed with Gods
separation from the Temple which was but a type of that place was so grievous to Davids soul as he had no rest in his spirit and thought himself in worse state than the Sparrow till he had accesse to the Citie of God Psalm the eighty fourth Much more grievous is it to be separated from heaven If of the Church on earth it is said there are gloriosa dict a de te Psalm the eighty seventh Much more glorious things are spoken of Heaven whereof to be deprived will be a great grief for this place hath all things which may commend any place Of light it is said Lumen dilexit oculus but this place hath no night but continual light from the Lord himself Apocalyps the twenty first chapter If society doe commend a place then this place is commendable quia janua ibi aperta If immunity from pain there is neither hunger nor thirst nor cold If joy then there the elders sing continually the praises of God Apocalyps the twenty first chapter Therefore to be excluded from this place which is so to be desired is a great punishment Again To be separated not only from so good a place but from such company not only of holy Angels where if it were a great blessing to lodge while they were clothed with mortality Hebrews the thirteenth chapter then it is a greater blessing to dwell with them in this perfect 〈◊〉 None of the saints who albeit on earth they be despised and called fools Wisdome the fift chapter yet shall be glorious in heaven and not only their souls but their bodies made like the glorious body of Christ Philippians the third chapter and the twenty first verse of whose company to be deprived will be a grief but to be cast out of the company of Jesus Christ who when he did give but a taste of his glory it was so glorious 〈◊〉 his Disciples Matthew the seventeenth chapter so as they said 〈◊〉 est nobis hic offici will be a great grief for there he shall be in perfect glory at the right hand of God where he now 〈◊〉 which shall much more rejoyce us than these drops Lastly If the comfort of Gods 〈◊〉 in earth where the light of it is greatly eclipsed and darkned doe afford more comfort than 〈◊〉 of corne and oyle Psalm the fourth then what a discomfort will it be to be separated from the light of it when God shall shew the brightnesse of 〈◊〉 but even then shall the unprofitable servant be cast out from beholding the same Secondly That which doth aggravate his punishment is that this separation shall be done with violence cast him out not bid him goe out or lead him out The separations that are made from the Church militant are not done without great difficulty no man would willingly be 〈◊〉 But it will be a farre greater grief to be separated from the Church triumphant but howsoever they be unwilling yet they shall be separated violently no man will willingly come to judgment at the last day but God will bring every thing to judgment Ecclesiastes the twelfth chapter He that doth evil hates the light John the third chapter but we shall be brought to light whether we will or no and death which is a preparation to the last judgment is fearfull So as no man willingly dyeth nay we make many pleas becaule we would not be separated we say Lord have not we prophecied and yet Christ tells all will not serve the turne Matthew the seventh chapter Not every one that saith Lord Matthew the twenty fift chapter When did we see the hungry or naked c. But Christ for all that we are so unwilling to be cast out tells us In as much as you did it not c. So that albeit man will not goe out of himself yet he shall be cast out with violence which makes his punishment more grievous Thirdly This separation shall be with contumely and disgrace to be thrown out of the company of the Angels is a disgracefull separation Many times Malefactors though they suffer for their offences yet have no disgrace offered them But the unprofitable servant shall not only be punished with the losse of this heavenly place but shall be cast out to his shame for he that dishonoureth God by burying his talent bestowed upon him God will punish him with dishonour and disgrace Them that hate me I will hate the first book of Samuel the second chapter Secondly The place into which he shall be cast is utter darknesse The Apostle when he saith Ad quem ibimus 〈◊〉 habes verba aternae vitae John the sixt chapter and the sixty eighth verse tells us It is an excellent thing to be in presence of them that have the words of eternall life but it is farre more excellent to be present with eternal life it self but not only to be deprived of his presence but to be cast into utter darkness is extreme misery If we might be choosers for our selves as the Devils choesed to goe into the hoggs 〈◊〉 the eighth chapter and the thirty first verse So if we might choose some place if it were but to return to the world again it were some mitigation but when we have not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is greater cause of misery we are not only deprived of light but cast into a place of darknesse And this punishment is very just that the unprofitable servant should be cast into darknesse which did darken his talent and hid it as the Prophet speaks of cursing Psalm the hundred and ninth He loved not blessing then let it be farre from him So quia non dilexit lucem non veniat ei lux extinguit scintilla gratiae ne videat lumen gloriae Which punishment how grievous it is appears for that the beholding of light as the Preacher saith Ecclesiastes the eleventh chapter is so comfortable to the eyes As Paul was out of hope of recovery when he and the rest could see nothing but darknesse Acts the twenty seventh chapter And God plagued the Egyptians with darknesse as the greatest plague he could lay upon them And the Apostle to shew the grievous punishment of the evil Angels saith They are reserved under darknesse the second epistle of Peter the second chapter for tenebrae formidolosae Again He is punished not only with darknesse but also with weeping and gnashing of teeth A man may have some comfort in darknesse it is the best time to sleep and meditate but the unprofitable servants being cast into darknesse shall have neither of these comforts to mitigate his punishment For there he shall feel the worm of conscience gnawing him which shall never dye and be tormented with the fire that never goeth out Mark the ninth chapter He shall have all things that may continue and increase his weeping But in these words the Holy-Ghost pointeth out two things The certainty and the measure of weeping in
hour every day to perswade us that are men which are farre more beholden unto God than any Creature else and yet it will not avail to make us obedient to his word As for conformity to his word it was sic even after the manner and form in all respects as he would have it But if we doe a thing it is lame and unperfect in some respect and not conformable to his will Last of all constancie and perpetuity Psal. 119. 91. they continue still according to their ordinance for all things serve thee He hath set thee a Law which shall not be broken Psal. 148. 6. For it is a wonder that such Seas of waters which hang and fly over our heads daily doe not fall on us and with their weight destroy us for we see what a bucker of water is for heavinesse in his fall yet the pillers of God uphold them that they fall not which pillers one would think should be aere that is made of brasse but they are aëreae airie pillers and yet last longer and are more durable then the greatest brasen pillers that we can imagine for in time they would corrupt and be eaten up of the waters but yet the power of God hath so strengthned the Aire that being the weakest thing that is as our Proverb saith As weak as Water not being able to sustain it self no not to be a piller to hold up a feather from the ground yet it is made a Firmament that is a most firm sure and durable piller to uphold all these Clouds and bottels of water above they move motu immobili varietate invariabili and so they continue after Gods ordinance even unto this day as the Psalmist saith Expansum autem hoc Deus Vocavit Coelum sic fuit vespera fuit mane diei secundi Gen. 1. 8. WHich words contain in them the second principall part of the second dayes work which is the word of denomination and entitling the Firmament thus with a new name When God made Abraham the Father of the faithfull he exchanged and gave him a new name Gen. 17. 5. When Jacob was exalted to the like dignity his name was also changed and he called Israel Gen. 32. 28. So here having made ex abysso Coelum that is as some say Coelum a coeno of the dreggs of that gulfe then he vouchsafeth according to the dignity of 〈◊〉 to give it a name agreeable thereunto Touching the denomination in general I shewed four things before which I will not repeat now but only call to your remembrance The first was The name of things are of freehold and therefore must move us to attention because though these works are beneficiall to all Creatures yet the apprehension of their names belong only to man at whom God did aime and levell in this work The second That the things which are divers in nature must be distinguished in name The third The manner of giving names must be in proportion agreeable to the nature of them And lastly What the significations of the names are Not repeating this generality we will now descend to the particularity of this name and see by the notations of the word what is signified thereby The old English called the Heavens aloft as though it were lifted up as it was out of the deep The Latines call it Caelum quasi caelatum that is embroidered and garnished as it is The Grecians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi terminus mundi as it were the border and bound of the World The Hebrews call it Shameshe Concerning which word there is three several opinions all which may be well and to good purpose received There are of the Hebrews which deduce the word from the verb Shama which is to wonder because of the admiration which all men have of this glorious World especially if we consider with David Psal 8. 4 5. that God having such excellent and glorious Creatures in Heaven should so notwithstanding regard man which is but a clod of earth as to endue him with these divine graces and with a reasonable soul The admirablenesse of this work consisteth first In that they being made of the dreggs of the deep are notwithstanding the most splendent and glorious Creatures of God Also in that they moving continually are immobilia and varying and changing in their courles alwaies are notwithstanding invariabilia for they move motu immobili varietate invariabili Also in that they consisting of water which is most weak and infirm are nothwithstanding most sure and firm of all other things The other opinion taketh it from the verb Magam and the adverb Iham as if God had appointed with his finger to the Heavens and said Here are all things if you want light waters either for soul or bodie here they are to be found and here you may have it as indeed all good graces come from above from our Father in Heaven Jam. 1. 17. The second note touching the word is in that it is of the duall number which implyeth that the Heavens are double and two fold which is apparent in the 17. verse where it is said that the Starres are in Heaven and in the 26. verse it is said that the Fowls also flye in Heaven Now this is plain and sensible in every mans eyes that the starres are not where the Birds doe flie neither doe the Fowles flie where the Starres are Out of Psal. 68. 33. the ancient Hebrews doe note to us that there was a former and later Heaven a higher and a lower Heaven made by God the lower Heavens in the Scriptures are usually termed and called Coeli Psal. 148. 4. and the upper Heavens which is the Seat of God is called Coeli Coelorum 1 Reg. 8. 27. and in other places for as there was in the Temple of Salemon Sanctum Sanctum Sanctorum so in the the great Temple of the world there is Coelum Coelum Coelorum to answer to it in the upper and higher Heavens as was shadowed in the Temple is the mercy Seat the Altar and the Propiciatory but in the nether is atrium I. Benjamin c that is a division of severall Courts for Starres Clouds Fowls Men c. Between the higher and the nether Heavens as it was in the Temple there is a Vail or Curtain spread Heb. 6. 19. which doth part the one from the other Besides these two Heavens we read of a third Heaven 2 Cor. 12. 2. which is the highest number we read of in Gods word so that besides the Merchant mans Heavens which is prosperous winde and besides the Husbandmans Heaven from whence commeth seasonable weather in Summer and Winter there is a third Heaven which we must seek for which is Regnum Coelorum for the Fowles doe flie per medium Coelorum 17. and 26. verses as the Angell did Rev. 8. 13. therefore there is a Heaven on both sides of this middle Heaven The impressions of the Aire are the
said was death and deadly poyson 2 Reg. 1. 39,40 is medicinable with us and commonly used in purgations so is Vipers flesh c. But we stand not on this but though they were not good for to shew Gods mercy and love to the Godly yet they are good to shew his justice and wrath to the wicked Esay 10. 5. there are none but will say that rods are good and necessary in a school so are these things good to punish the wicked in the world Joel 2. 25. So that if there were nothing but this which David confesseth Psal. 119. 67. Before I was troubled I went wrong but now I keep thy Law therefore it was good for me that I have been introuble c. It were enough to prove them to be good because these Armies and Hosts of Gods displeasure doe bring us to goodnesse Joel 2. 25. But now for germinabit tibi spinas Gen. 3. 18. that is for thy finne and because of thy disobedience the earth shall bring forth to thee thousinner so that before we did sinne there was none of these things that could hurt us but were for our good for as God made us mortall and subject to corruption yet it was Gods preservative grace which keeping him from dying and mortallity that his dust returned not to dust so the same preservative grace should have kept all Adams posterity from any hurt of these things if they had continued in integrity Wherefore to conclude this whether thornes and venomous herbs were created in principiis suis or in semine for we hold both Creations it is certain that they had been good and could not have been hurtfull to them if they had not sinned which we see by warrant for those men which were renewed to the Image of God and were in Gods favour all things did serve to their good and no ill thing could hurt them Jam. 5. 17. Elias could command Heaven to rain not to rain Jam. 5. 18. Joshuah might by Gods permission command the Sun and Moon Joshuah 10. 12. The three Children could not be hurt in the fire raging and flaming Dan. 3 27. Neither could the Lyons be evill to hurt him Dan. 6. 22. The Viper could not hurt Paul Act. 28. 3. If the faithfull drink deadly poyson it shall not hurt them Mark 16. 18. and many such examples are Heb. 11 33. which shew that God giveth his preservative grace to the Godly by which they have such a prerogative as Adam had in his innocency when his corruptible dust was kept from corruption that it turned not to dust again They which have Gods eyes and Image shall see this to be true that the thing which is deadly to some shall not hurt them So that as all things are clean to the Clean so all is good to the Good and Godly Usus Spiritualis Now for the spirituall use And first we are put in minde of our homage to God in serving and praising him for these earthly and temporall blessings which we receive from him the only author and owner thereof for many not knowing that their Wine Oyle and Corn and other riches come from God Ose 2. 8. did give the glory and praise of them to Idolls ascribing the gift to others If by these things we receive strength and continue in health we must remember our duty to be thankfull Ezech. 11. 16. to 21. for seeing God hath opened his mouth for our good saying Let the Earth be fruitfull and if now he still openeth his hands and fill us with his blessing it is our duty of gratefullnesse to lift up our hands and open our mouths to blesse and praise his holy name so these earthly benefits must be keyes to unlock and open our mouths to sing some praise to him Jer. 2. 31. God hath not been a Lord of darknesse nor a wildernesse to us therefore we must not be as barren and unfruitfull ground to him but yeild some fruit of our lives by obedience and some fruit of our lips by thankfullnesse Usus duplex The use and profit of this is first in regard of Gods word to the Earth and then in regard of Gods word in respect of himself For the first we see that God speaketh but once to the Earth and it is sufficient to move it to perfect obedience But in the 22. Jer. 29. God is fain to speake thrice terra terra terra before we can be brought to heare and understand for our eares are more deaf than the senselesse earth Post dixit Deus Sunto luminaria in Expanso Coeli ad distinctionem faciendum inter diem noctem ut sint in signa cum tempestatibus tum diebus annis Sintque in luminaria in Expanso Coeli ad afferendum lucem super terram Gen. 1. vers 14.15 IN this Chapter God created the World and being created he perfected it and being perfected he furnished it Thus the Heavens and the Earth were finished and all the hosts of them the first verse of the next chapter Austin saith well Creata ordinavit ordinata ornavit creata ordinata ornata septimo die perfecit after the beginning was the perfecting after the perfecting was the adorning tenebras fugavit abyssum exaltavit terram discooperuit In these three following dayes is the beautifying of the Heavens the Waters and the Earth God first began to create the Heavens then he made the Waters and lastly the Earth So he first beautifieth the Heavens then the Waters and lastly the Earth that is first beautified which was first created Argument Touching the Argument of this dayes work The Heaven is as a Garden the Fathers call the stars coelestes Rosas heavenly Roses The Sun is as the general of the hoste of Heaven the Moon is as the Suns Lieutenant The Sun is as the Father the Moon as the Mother the Stars are as the Children When Joseph dreamed that the Sun and the Moon and the eleven Starres did doe him reverence and he told it his father Jacob was angry saying What! shall I and thy mother and thy brethren fall on the ground before thee chap. 37. 9. The Sunne seemeth as gold the Moon as silver and the Starres as many pearls God counteth the starres and calleth them all by their names Psal. 147. 4. and in Psal. 19. 4. he hath set in the Heavens a Tabernacle for the Sunne which commeth forth as a Bridegrome out of his Chamber and rejoyceth like a mighty man to run his race His going out is from the end of the Heaven his compasse is unto the ends of the same and none is hid from the heat thereof The Sunne saith Austin is a Bridegrome all the starres with one consent doe sing praises unto God Job 38. 7. This is the summe of the Argument As for the words in Dixit Deus is the Decree then is the return then the execution then lastly the approbation Of Dixit generally Quest.
and commendeth the poor widows oblation Luke the twenty first So both Cain and Abel bring their offerings to God The things they had in common are Three First Offerings Secondly To offer to God Thirdly They offer of their own and that which they had gotten by their honest vocations 1. We may not worship God with empty hands or give that which cost nothing First In that they both offer something it is plain we may not worship with empty hands Exodus the twenty second and give him that which cost us nothing in the second of Samuell and the twenty fourth chapter Our service must be as Paul speaketh in the first to the Corinthians the ninth chapter and the eighteenth verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such are worse than Cain for he brought somthing and therefore shall condemn those that content themselves with the sacrifice of the lips The oblation is originally Mincah that is a thing brought not 〈◊〉 from them they must proceede of a willing affection and therefore also are called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Psalmist saith in the twenty ninth Psalm afferte Deo They thought it not a weariness to serve God as the people did Matthew the third They considered he was a God of infinite Majestie and power in comparison of whom all the Kings of the earth are but crickets and grashoppers Isaiah the fourtieth and the twenty third verse 2. Both offered to God and not to Idols Secondly They both offered to God not to Idols Hosea the second not to the creatures as the Sun and Moon and stars of whom they say Jer. the fourty fourth and the seventeenth verse Let us offer up Cakes to the Queene of heaven Much lesse doe they offer to Devills in the first to the 〈◊〉 the tenth chapter and the twenty sixth verse nor to their own bellies and backs making their bellies their God and sacrificing to their backs on which they think they never bestow cost enough 3. Both offered that which they had lawfully gotten Thirdly they both offered of that which they had gotten by their own labour and industrie It was not the fruit of sinne for God saith I will not have the price of a whore in the twenty third of Deuteronomie and the eighteenth verse no sacrifice be it never so beautifull shall come into Gods house if it be unlawfully gotten But we must offer to God that which we have gotten by following some honest calling Three severall differences in the sacrifice The things which they had in severall are three 1. The time when they offered The first is the time when they offered which circumstance and the rest sheweth that there is a great difference between their sacrifice for the Holy Ghost is 〈◊〉 diligent to set down Abell's sacrifice than Cain's Of Cain it is said he offered in fine dierum that is it was long before he could 〈◊〉 in his heart to give somthing to God but Abell gave primitias the first thing that ever he had Cain served himself first and God after But Abell did contrary Cain served himself first and God last but Abell was carefull of Gods service in the first place and after provided for himself And this is a materiall point diligently to be considered There are none so hard hearted all their life long but if they draw near their end that sickness come then they will offer in fine dierum and in novissimo die Jer. the fift Those are times that will compell men to be mindfull of God But if we will have our offerings pleasing to God they must be primitiae 2. Difference in the things which they offered Secondly that which they had in severall was the thing it felf which they offered which was diverse and different God doth not 〈◊〉 fault with Cains offering but maketh choyce of Abel's Cain's was that which came next to hand for Cain offered to God that which came first to hand any thing as he thought was good enough Abel's was the first and fattest of his sheep but Abell made choyce of the fattest of his sheep As God is the first and best thing so he offered to God the first of his sheep and the fattest among them But Cain confounded this order Of the difference of whose minds in offering these verses are witnesses Abel when he would offer saith Sacrum pingue dabo nec macrum sacrificabo Cain saith Sacrificabo macrum nec dabo pingue sacrum Cain was of the same minde that the Priests were that would be served before God had his part in the first of Samuel the second chapter and sixteenth verse So Cain will have enough for himself before he will once offer any thing to God Secondly when he doth offer he maketh no choyce of his oblation but thinketh any thing good enough but the Prophet saith Cursed be he that offereth a lame offering to God and sacrificeth a corrupt thing for I am a great King Mal. the first chapter and the fourteenth verse Offer such to thy Prince would he be content to accept such offerings but we will offer the best things to earthly Princes how much more to the great King of Heaven and therefore the Wiseman saith Honour God with thy substance and that with the first fruits of thine increase Proverbs the third and the ninth verse 3. Difference in the persons that offered The third thing observed by the Apostle is the person of the party that offereth Abel was a faithfull man that made his sacrifice the better accepted Heb. the eleventh and the fourth verse By faith Abell offered a better sacrifice than Cain the faith of Abel was his assurance that God was a great God and would not accept of lame offerings and therfore is carefull to bestow the best and first thing he had Abel's was to testifie his faith in Christ and to expresse his thankfulness For knowing that sacrifices are testimonies of the thankfulness of the heart Abel to testifie his faith in the blood of Christ and to expresse his thankfulness for the same doth choose out of his flocks the fattest of his sheep Faith maketh men offer often and of the best things Faith maketh men offer often and better things but they that are without faith care not how few times they offer nor how small their oblations be We are to know therefore that these two may not be severed neither fides from obtulit nor obtulit from fides where there is faith there will be offerings for so saith the Apostle that from the increase of faith there was an increase of offerings in the Church But when there is little faith or none at all as in Cain there are offerings seldome made and when they offer it is the smallest and meanest things they have the second to the Corinthians the eighth chapter and the seventh verse As ye abound in faith and word and knowledge and
in all diligence and in your love to us so see that ye abound in these graces also Respexitque Jehova ad Hebelum ad munus ejus Ad Kajinum verò ad munus ejus non respexit Gen 4. 4.5 April 29. 1599. WHich words contein the acceptation of the service of Cain and Abel with God which is the matter of greatest moment and which putteth the greatest difference between them and all the world and is a pattern of the distinction which is between the godly and the wicked begun in this life and perfected in the great day of the Lord when he shall set Abell and histure Worshippers on his right hand and Cain and his false Worshippers on the left In the denomination of the name which Eve gave her first Son I told you what is the worlds censure viz. that Cain is a name of great price in the judgment of the world but as for Abell that is a name of great contempt and such as Abell was are persons of no account but here we see Gods censure upon them both is otherwise for as the Apostle saith He that praiseth himself is not allowed but he which God praiseth the second to the Corinthians the tenth and the eighteenth verse so Cain that was so precious in the eyes of the world is of no account with God but Abel which was of no reckoning with men but despised as a thing of nought he is highly accounted with God for he hath respect to his oblaion but as for Cain and his oblation he respected them not So we see that as on the one side God makes the stone that was refused to be the head stone of the corner Psalm the one hundred and eighteenth and the twenty second verse so on the other side we see it true in Cain and Abel which Christ affirmeth in the sixteenth of Luke and the fifteenth verse that which is high in the account of man is abominable with God The words contain two points first Gods regard to Abel and his offering secondly his want of regard towards Cain and his oblation first that we may understand what is meant by regarding respicere is not only aspicere for God beheld Cain and his offering no less than Abel God seeth all things be they never so private he seeth Sarah when she laugheth behinde the Tent door Genesis the eighteenth and the twelfth verse whether we flie up to heaven or lie down in hell he is present with us we cannot goe from his spirit nor flye from his presence Psalm the one hundred and thirty ninth and the seventeenth and eighteenth verses but respicere is when one likes a thing so well that he looks on it again as we behold those things that we love God seeth all things and all present when he loves he beholds with an amiable look for ubi amor ibi oculus so God beheld Abel and his offering with an amiable look as not contenting himself to look once upon it The example of a Nurse Isaiah 66. 12. which gracious respect of God is set out by a loving regard that a Nurse hath to the Child when she beareth it on her lap Isaiah the sixty sixt and the twelfth verse Of the next oblation offer this which Noah offered to God it is said that the Lord smelled a savor of rest the eighth chapter of Genesis and the one and twentieth verse by which smelling and by this seeing and beholding with the eye is meant nothing else but that God received them in good part and therefore the Paraphrast expoundeth these words suscepit Dominus which exposition is grounded upon the words of the Prophet Malachy the first chapter and the eighth verse the offering is no more regarded nor received acceptably in his hands On the other side the Lord beheld Cain and his offering but he suffered not his eye to stay upon it for hee did not allow of it Testified by visible signs this acceptation the Fathers say was testified by a visible signe and they ground this opinion upon the word for the Apostle saith the eleventh chapter to the Hebrewes and the fourth verse God bears Abel witnesse that hee was just for it was usuall with God to testifie his liking of the service of his servants by outward and visible testimonies Leviticus the ninth chapter and the twenty fourth verse there came fire from the Lord and wasted Aarons burnt offering to shew that hee allowed it so hee approved Gedeons Sacrifice Judges the sixth chapter and the one and twentieth verse when the Angell touching the flesh with the end of his staffe caused fire to come forth and consume the flesh whereby hee knew that his offering pleased God So when Salomon had ended his Prayer fire came downe from heaven and consumed his Sacrifice and Oblation the second of the Chronicles the seventh chapter and the first verse but it is plain in the first of the Kings the eighteenth chapter and the twenty fourth verse By fire The God that answereth by fire let him bee God saith Elias to shew that the true God doth by outward tokens testifie who bee his true worshippers But to come in particular to Abels Oblation Gods liking is upon two things upon the Person and then upon the Gift for non ex seipsis placent munera sed ex offerentibus and St. Augustine non ex muneribus Abel sed ex Abel muner a placuerunt And St. Ambrose priùs is qui dabat quam ea quae 〈◊〉 placuerunt so the person hath the first place but he respected not the person only nam ne vanae putentur oblationes it is not said he had respect to Abel and not to his offering but respexit ad Abelem munera that is not to Abel alone but to him and his gift The person must first be pleasing to God before his gift be accepted the person must first please before the gift can be accepted but as he respects the person so will he have the gift withall and therefore God that said I will have no Bullock out of thy house nor Goats out of thy folds saith gather my Saints together that make a Covenant with me with Sacrifice the fiftieth Psalm and the fifth verse and where he saith thou desirest no sacrifice he means God chiefly respects the persons of men that they be such as may please him otherwise all their oblations are to no purpose but when they are so qualified that they can offer to him a contrite and a broken heart then God will accept of their Sacrifices which they offer upon his Altar the fifty first Psalm and the ninteenth verse non est detrahendum oblationis sed adjiciendum 〈◊〉 as Abel offered by faith the eleventh to the Hebrews and the fourth verse so we may not take away obtulit but joyn fides with it so shall our oblations please when our persons are by faith in Christ reconciled to him the person
countenance The other of the countenance Why is thy countenance cast down Concerning both which in that God knoweth no cause of Cain's sorrow it is plaine that it was an evill sorrow for God alloweth not that sorrow for which we cannot give a reason Note A reason to be given of our sorrow and actions And as God will come one day to ask an account of our works so we must every one give a reason of our actions in the fourteenth chapter to the Romans and the twelfth verse and in the first cpistle of Peter the fifth chapter But if we be not able to give a reason of those things which we doe then are we as bruitish as unreasonable beasts God teacheth man more than the beasts of the earth giveth him more wisdome than the fowles of heaven Job the thirty fifth chapter verse the eleventh Therefore man ought to doe God more service than they Therfore the Prophet saith in the thirty second Psalm Be not like horse and mule that have no under standing We are as the Apostle speaks men of understanding in the first to the Corinthians and the tenth chapter such as ought to doe nothing but what they can give a reason for Therefore the word is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the second verse and the service that God requireth of us is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the twelfth chapter to the Romans and the second verse and they that doe otherwise are not only evill but absurd and unreasonable men in the second to the Thessalonians the third chapter and the second verse All kinde of sin is unreasonable As God sets this brand upon all kinde of sinne that is unreasonable Chiefly hatred so chiefly the sinne of Cain for his hatred towards Abel was not for evill but for good In naturall reason we are to love good things and hate evill but where he hated his brother because his works were good and his own evill the first epistle of John the third 〈◊〉 and the twelfth verse it appeares that his sinne was bruitish and unreasonable which unreasonable kinde of dealing the holy Ghost expresseth Is thine eye evill because his is good Matthew the twentieth chapter and the fifteenth verse We must make account for gestures of our bodies Secondly for his countenance God will have an account of the gestures of our bodies for as they were both created and redeemed by God so we must glorifie God both in body and spirit the first to the Corinthians the sixth chapter and the twentieth verse God alloweth no affection that is causless and therefore condemneth unadvised anger as a sinne Matthew the fifth chapter which was Cains sinne The second motive is If thou doe well shalt not thou be rewarded and accepted where in he wills us to look not only to the ground and cause of our actions but to the end of them as if God should say if reason cannot move you to hate sinne yet let affection move Affections Hope Fear Now there are two chief affections which move the life both of man and beast that is hope and feare first God moves with the hope of reward If thou doe well shalt thou not beeaccepted then with the fear of punishment but If thou doe evill sinne lyeth at the dore By the first question Gods meaning is Am I such a one as doe not regard well doings All Scripture affirmeth that God tendreth goodnesse dicite justo quia bene erit merces so saith Jehosaphat to the Judges in the 〈…〉 Isa. Be of good courage and 〈◊〉 it for the Lord will bee with the good the second booke of the Chronicles and the ninteenth chapter with whom the Apostle agreeth Be stedfast and unmoveable quia labor vestra non erit inanis in Domino as it is in the first of the Corinthians and the fifteenth chapter and the conclusion of the whole Scripture is Behold I come shortly and my reward is with mee the two and twentith chapter of the Revelations and the second verse If our love were perfect it would cast out feare and wee should not neede to bee drawne to doe well with hope of reward but because there is great imperfection on both parts during this life therefore wee have neede to bee stirred up to doe well with the one and terrified from doing evill with the other The reason why David hearkned to Gods statutes was propter retributionem Psalme the hundred and ninteenth Moses was contented to suffer adversity with Gods people for that hee looked to the recompence of reward Hebrewes the eleventh chapter so that it is Gods will we should take notice of this word of comfort that if wee doe well wee shall bee accepted The word Neshah used in the originall hath two significations both to reward and to forgive as it is in the thirty second Psalme Blessed are they whose intquities are forgiven the first sense hath reference to the fourth verse where it is said God had respect to Abel and his sacrifice And for the other sense thou shalt be forgiven It is agreeable to the Scripture which teacheth us that to ridd our selves of sinne wee must breake off iniquity with right dealing Daniel the fourth chapter and mercy Joel the second chapter and the thirteenth verse sanctifie a fast call an Assembly then shall the Lord bee mercifull and Peter to Simon Magus Pray to God if so bee the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee Acts the eighth chapter and the twenty second verse But Abel did well and that was 〈◊〉 rewarded in this life for his brother killed him he was not rewarded here therefore it followeth he was rewarded in the life to come For God is not unrighteous to forget the labour of our love Hebrews the sixth chapter and the tenth verse though God forget us on earth yet we shall be remembred in heaven It is a righteous thing with God to recompence them which are troubled with rest when the Lord Jesus shall shew himself from heaven the second to the Thessalonians the first chapter and the sixt and seventh verses So that the second motive to drive us from sinne is that it deprives us of the reward and sets us out of the hope of Gods favour In which case we must practise the counsell of the holy Ghost Apocal. the second memor esto unde cecider is resipisce The third motive is that if thou doe not well sinne lyeth at the dore which is the corrective part as if God should say though neither reason can move nor hope of good yet let this move us that sin doth not only deprive us of God but brings eternal destruction si bonus non infructuosê si malus non impunè for God takes order that neither good shall be unrewarded nor evill unpunished sinne shall not only deprive us of our hope and shut us out of heaven but lock us fast
sanguinum The Lessons to be learned hence are First matter of Faith for the ancient Fathers upon these words The voice of thy brothers blood cryeth compared with the Apostles Hebrews the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse by the which Abel being dead yet speaketh doe ground the immortality of Abel nam qui loquitur vivit of which we are to be perswaded in regard of the truth of Gods promises made for God in his first Sermon said If thou doe well shalt thou not be rewarded As for Abel albeit he did well yet he was not rewarded in this life therefore it followes there is another life wherein Abel must have his reward for his good service to God For it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble the godly and to the afflicted rest when the Lord shall shew himself from heaven in the second epistle to the Thessalonians the first chapter and the sixt verse And God is not unjust to forget our works and labour of love Hebrews the sixth chapter and the tenth verse And for a third proof if God be the God of Abraham as he affirmeth himself to be the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob then no doubt but Abel liveth no lesse than Abraham because as Christ affirmeth deus non est mortuorum deus sed viventium Luke the twentieth chapter Secondly hence we have commended to us morall doctrine against those which doubt not without all fear to dispatch and rid out of the way whatsoever is a stay or let to them because as they speak mortui non mordent but such are to learn from hence that albeit they whose blood they doubt not to spill doe not bite yet they crye out to God for revenge even when they are dead as Abel for if they crie not the stones in the street will crie as Christ speaks as albeit Abel be dead yet the voice of his blood cryeth to God for vengeance Concerning which six points are to be noted First It is true that the souls of them that are deceased are brought in crying for vengeance Revelations the sixt chapter How long Lord but it is not here affirmed of Abel that his soul in heaven cryeth for vengeance as he kept innocency so no doubt he kept a brotherly affect on to Cain though he deserved it not at his hands As Stephen did not 〈◊〉 for vengeance but prayed Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Acts the seventh chapter and our Saviour Luke the twenty third chapter Father forgive them they know not what they doe but it is his blood that cryeth and his blood not de corpore but de terra that is though the soul out of heaven complain not yet his blood out of the earth shall crie to God for vengeance Secondly His blood though it be separated from his body and concorporate with the dust of the earth shall crie and speak to God if the blood of beasts offered in Sacrifice doe speak to God so as they make him answer by fire in the 〈◊〉 of Kings the eighteenth chapter then much more shall the blood of man when it is shed have a voice to speak to God for revenge and so forcible is the vocie of that blood that there is no expiation but by blood and the land cannot be clean'ed but by the blood of him that hath shed blood Numbers the thirty fift chapter If the blood of them crie the blood of Innocents shall speak to God for vengeance and so when the Israelites offered their Sonnes and daughters and shed innocent blood the wrath of the Lord was kindled against them Psalm the one hundred and sixt and thirty seventh verse but the blood shed by Cain was the blood of an Innocent even of righteous Abel Matthew the twenty third chapter and therefore must needs receive an answer sooner from God than the blood of beasts Revelations the sixteenth chapter and the sixt verse and the ninteenth chapter and the second verse The third point is that the word blood is expressed in the plurall number sanguinum clamantium to note that in killing Abel he did not only shed his blood but the blood of all those that might have proceeded of Abel if he had lived and married whereby his fact is the more grievous in that it is committed in tantâ paucitate gener is humani Others say it is expressed plurally because every drop of Abels blood did crie for vengeance so there was blood crying with many voices for revenge Fourthly This voice is not every ordinary voice but vox clamantis which sheweth that murther is no light sinne but great and hainous for as the Heathen man saith leves loquuntur ingentes clamant peccatum cum voce is nothing but ordinary sinne but peccatum cum clamore is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the seventh chapter it is one of those sinnes which crie and therefore shall have vengeance They are in Scripture four First wilfull murther as Cains in this place Secondly the sinne of Sodom against nature which cried to God for vengeance Genesis the eighteenth chapter which by the qualitie of the punishment appeareth how filthie it was for it was punished with stinking brimstone as the sin it self above all others doth most stinck before God Thirdly the oppression of the poor Exodus the second chapter and the twenty third verse which crieth to God Note for as God plagued the Egyptians for oppressing the poor Israelites so he will plague them that oppress the stranger and poor Exodus the twenty second and the twenty first verse The fourth is Deuteronomie the twenty fourth chapter and the fourteenth verse that of other poor the poor Labourer must not be oppressed nor his hire delayed from him when he hath taken pains for as the Apostle saith James the fift chapter ecce merces operantis clamat in auribus domini These are the sinnes that speak not but crie to God for vengeance Fiftly for the nature of the crie it is in Hebrew vox preconis or proclamantis of such a one as hath strong sides of which we have an example Genesis the fourty first and the fourty third verse where Pharoah causeth one to crie with a Trumpet before Joseph Abreck so forcible was the crie of the blood of Abel in the eares of God The sixt point is that which maketh it up sure for where there is no voice of any Cryer be he never so strong that can be heard up to the top of high hills or steeples the voice of this crie is heard higher than any hill or tower whatsoever it is heard de terra ad me saith God it pierceth the very heavens ecce quousque volat vox sanguinis That which we are to learn from hence is First matter of comfort to those of Abels side that suffer wrong Abel said never a word though his Brother slew him neither doth his soul from heaven it is his blood from the earth that
of bread that Cain and all those that walk in his way doe eat they eat it wrongfully and shall make and an account for it as if they had stolen it So that though Cain speak never so much to the corn and wine and oyle and they in his behalf call to the earth and the earth to the heavens and the heavens crie unto God yet there shall be no answer for his relief Hosea the second chapter and the twenty first verse but they shall all con pire and plague Cain for his sinne Job saith If I have eaten the fruit of the earth without silver or grieved the soules of the Masters thereof Job the thirty first chapter and the thirty ninth verse to shew us there is a right not only of labour but of person for Adam may eat of the fruits of the earth by right of his labour bestowed in dressing it but Cain for that he is a person accursed cannot eat thereof God gives Adam food upon condition of his labour but food is denyed to Cain though he take never so much pains for that Cain is a person accursed by God and hath no part in that blessed seed in whom all the promises of God touching this life and the life to come are yea and amen in the second to the Corintbians the first chapter and the twentieth verse Secondly As we desire sufficientie of living against want so we desire rest and quietness from trouble and this we desire rather than the other For a little with the fear of the Lord is better than great treasure with trouble Proverbs the fifteenth chapter and the sixteenth verse but as the earth denyed him sufficiencie so it will not afford him a dwelling place to rest in Of these words there are two constructions and both profitable First The 〈…〉 these words Vagabond and Runagate gemens tremens that is in grief and feare shalt thou be all the daics of thy life without any certain dwelling to rest in He that is in grief is heavie and burthensom to himself but he that is in fear is suspicious of others which is a great vexation which kinde of punishment is laid upon them that keep not Gods Commandements that they shall be smitten with searefulness they shall fly at the shaking of a leaf Leviticus the twenty sixt chapter and the sevententh verse They shall flye when no man pursueth Proverbs the twenty eighth chapter And albeit they goe from place to place seeking for rest and peace yet non est pax impiis Isaiah the fifty seventh chapter Of this Fear we have an example in Cain who being guilty of the breach of Gods Command confessed that he was now in that case that whosoever shall finde him might kill him Secondly The other sense which they gather of these words that where there are but two places for men to rest in either his own native Country or some other where he can be Cain shall tarry neither in his own Country nor in any other but shall 〈…〉 and remove from place to place and finde rest no where therefore he went out of his own Country and went and built a City in the land of Nod and yet was not quiet there neither And this is the case of an evill conscience not to rest any where for to a good conscience Angulus sufficit but for him that hath a bad conscience ipse mundus angulus est Therefore we are to think of these things when we begin to commit any sins namely that thereby we deprive our selves both of living and 〈◊〉 welling so that if we sinne against God by transgressing his Precepts we can neither look to have food sufficient nor place convenient to dwell and rest in The qualification of this Sentence or mercy with God sheweth herein is that 〈◊〉 Cain be punished with want of food and dwelling 〈◊〉 it is but super terram therefore if he repent while he is on the earth he may set himself in a better state for this restraint doth shew that God gave to Cain space to 〈◊〉 Apocalyps the second chapter and the twenty first verse so that there is hope for sinners so long as God suffers them to continue upon earth for if God would not have Cain repent he should have been presently swallowed up of the earth as Korah was and have dyed suddenly as Ananias did Therefore this super terram is a mercy It sheweth also that all Cains care was set upon earth We are punished with that which is our delight and therefore God doth punish him with that which was his delight as he had no care at all of heaven as appeared by the manner of his Sacrifice which he offered to God without any choice at all but set his affection upon earth so God punisheth him with an earthly punishment that he should finde no comfort or rest on earth and this he doth both in justice and mercy to draw him back to repentance and to make him sorry having a sense of his miseries Hosea the second chapter and the seventh verse I will goe and return to my first husband that the want of food on earth and of rest might make him sorry with the prodigall Son in the fifteenth chapter of Luke I will goe to my Father God suffers Cain to live in penury that the sense thereof might inforce him to this resolution 〈◊〉 ad Patrem As the dove sent out of the Arke finding no rest had no place to goe to but to the 〈◊〉 from whence she came Genesis he eighth chapter so God doth punish Cain with a restlesse life on earth that he might seek for rest in heaven And as the Angell called Agar when she wandred from her Mistris to return to her and humble her self under her hands Genesis the sixteenth chapter and the ninth verse so it was Gods will that Cain considering his restlesse life on earth should return to God from whom he had now strayed as a lost 〈◊〉 by means of his greivous sinnes and 〈◊〉 himself under his mighty hand as it is in the first epistle of 〈◊〉 confessing his sinne and craving forgivenesse That so God might have mercy on him receive him into everlasting Tabernacles Luke the sixteenth chapter where is rest void of trouble and sufficiency of all good things Tum Kajin dixit Jehovae Major est poena mea quam ut sustinere possim Gen. 4. 13. Septemb. 〈◊〉 1599. THE word which signifieth sinne here in other places of Scripture is used for the punishment of sinne as in the thirty second chapter of Numbers and the twenty third verse Yee have sinned against the Lord and be sure your sinne shall sinde you out Which double signification maketh that there is a double reading of this verse The one in the Text My punishment is greater than I can bear The other in the Margent My sin is greater than can be pardoned So in the Text the word is translated the
of his sinne is dispatched in a word My sinne is greater but he takes his punishment in pieces and thinks of it particularly whereupon one saith of Cain and the wicked that the repetition which they make is eorum quae ferunt non quae fecerunt they are generall in their sinne but particular in their punishment For as of the abundanee of the heart the mouth speaketh Matthew the twelfth chapter so we may gather by Cains words that he thinks more of his punishment than of his fault that which offends him stood more in his sight and grieved him more than that which offended God but the godly are of another minde for they will be content to have the punishment remain upon them so that the guilt may be taken away But there is a third point in this repetition which is a perverting of the order which God set down in giving the Sentence God began with the curse ended with casting out of the earth but Cain beginneth with his casting out of the earth wherein he sheweth what is his greatest grief for if a man suffer many pains he will speak of that first which doth most pinch him and complain first of the losse of that thing which he doth most of all affect in that he first complaineth he is cast out from the face of the earth he sheweth he took more care for the face of the earth than the face and presence of God and it grieved him more to be deprived of the good will of men than of the favour of God It is otherwise with the Saints of God for they crie Psalm the seventy third and the twenty fift verse Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none in earth whom I desire besides thee Psalm the 〈◊〉 third Thy kindness is better than life it self and when they come to make composition between heavenly things and earthly we see what David saith in the second of Samuel the fifteenth chapter and the twenty fift verse If I finde favour in Gods sight I will see the Ark again that is the presence of God and makes choice of that as his greatest felicity not to enjoy his Scepter or to be restored to his Wives and Children which earthly men would make most account of so the Apostle Philippians the third chapter and the eighth verse Esteeming all things as dung in respect of Christ. Whereby we see that as Cains punishment grieved him more than his sinne so the earthly part of his punishment offends him more than the heavenly One thing more is to be added that is Cains Commentary or interpretation of Maledictus for he saith that to be cursed is to be cast out from Gods presence The presence or face of God hath reference to the power of God or to his favour from the presence of Gods power knowledge or spirit there is no escaping Psalm the one hundred and thirty ninth If I climb up to heaven 〈◊〉 art there if I goe down to hell thou art there also of which the Prophet saith Jeremiah the twenty third chapter and the twenty fourth verse coelum terram ego 〈◊〉 but that is not his meaning but that he is cast out from the presence of Gods favour so are 〈◊〉 words to be taken to Moses Exodus the tenth chapter and the twenty eighth verse Get thee from me and look thou see my face no more Rsalm the thirty first and the twenty second verse I said in my half I am cast out from thy presence and Psalm the eightieth Turn again O Lord cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved so that we must know that albeit God be present every where with his power yet he is not present with his favour and not only that but it signifieth the place where the favour and grace of God is intailed that is his House and Church of which the Prophet saith Psalm the ninty fift Let us come before his presence or face with thanksgiving When shall I come and appear in the presence of God Psalm the fourty second of which presence Christ saith Matthew the eighteenth chapter When two or three be gathered together I am amongst them and the Apostle in the second to the Corinthians the second chapter In the presence of Jesus Christ forgive I them that is in the Church where God speaketh to us in his word and we again speak to him by prayer so Cains punishment is both spirituall and ecclesiasticall for that he is not only shut out of Gods favour but cast out of the place where the presence of his favour and grace is shewed and the punishment was justly inflicted upon Cain that durst commit so great an offence in the presence and sight of God and when it was committed feared not Gods presence but denyed it as if God knew not of it The second point is Cains admonition wherein the first thing to be observed is how in this repetition it comes to pass that Cain saith whosoever shall finde him will kill him seeing in the sentence there is no mention of death the reason comes from the guiltiness of his conscience severiorum seipso Judicem habet 〈◊〉 whereupon it falleth out that though the Judge absolve yet the party guilty addeth a sentence of condemnation upon himself so doth Cain condemn himself as worthy of death God indeed afterward saith He 〈◊〉 shedeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed Genesis the ninth chapter but seeing Cain 〈◊〉 God hath uttered his opinion of murther that it is a sinne mortall it may be said to him ex ore 〈◊〉 te 〈◊〉 Luke he 〈◊〉 chapter that men may know that wisedome is justified of 〈◊〉 children 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter so 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 of her children Secondly Where he saith he shall be killed with a 〈◊〉 and bloody death this is secundum dictamen rationis ut 〈…〉 fecit expectes Cain is told by his own conscience that 〈◊〉 he 〈◊〉 murthered Abel so himself must look to be murthered This is that Lex 〈◊〉 written naturally in the hearts of all men which made the bretheren of Joseph to say Genesis the fourty second chapter and the twenty first verse We have sinned against our brother in that we saw the anguish of his soul when he besought us and we would not hear him therefore is all this come upon us By that Law it was just that as Hammon had made Gods people afraid so he himself should fear and be dealt with as he had purposed to deal Esther the seventh chapter and the sixt verse therefore the Prophet saith Isaiah the thirty fift chapter and the first verse Woe be to them that spoile for they shall be spoiled and our Saviour Christ saith agreeably Matthew the seventh chapter With what measure ye meat the same shall be measured to you again Thirdly He saith Omnis qui inveniret there could but one kill him and yet his 〈◊〉 tells him he deserveth to die at the hands
of every man even of every beast in as much as he hath first taught beasts to kill men by his own confession it is just that as the Prophet speaks Micah the seventh chapter and the fift verse The Wife of his bosome and the Children of his loyns shall break the bonds of nature with him as he before hath thewed himself unnaturall to his brother And this is a great part of Cains punishment that albeit there be none to kill him yet he shall be in continuall fear of death that a man shall not only fear Gods threatning but his own fancy that he shall fear not one but every one that meets him as if every one knew his fault that he shall fear not only where there is cause of fear as wilde beasts but tuta timere and this is a part of Gods curse that God will send faintness into their hearts so as they shall be afraid at the shaking of a leaf Leviticus the twenty sixt chapter and the thirty sixt verse at every shadow as the Midianites were of their dreams Judges the seventh chapter and at every noise and rumor in the second of the Kings the seventh chapter and the sixt verse These feares are great punishments and arguments of a guilty conscience and this sheweth that albeit wickedness be secret yet it will not suffer a man to be quiet Wherein we are to observe how Cain de scribeth the state of them that are out of Gods favour and cast from his presence that they fear either no fear as Psalm the fifty 〈◊〉 If the Prince frown upon a man there is no hope of favour any where else so if God be once offended so that a man despair of his favour he will fear every creature the starres of heaven fought against Sisera Judges the fift chapter and the twentieth verse The stones in the street will cease to be in league and peace with him Job the fift chapter therefore when God saith quaerite faciem meam Psalm the twenty seventh our soul must answer thy face Lord will I seek For if we seek the Lord our God we shall finde him Deuteronomie the fourth chapter and the twenty ninth verse and that is so necessary that the People say If thy presence goe not with us carry us not hence Exodus the thirty third chapter and the Prophet speaketh Cast me not from thy presence Psalm the fifty first for without the assurance of Gods favour and protection we shall fear every shadow every noise that we hear Secondly Cain in these words sheweth what was his chief fear and what did most grieve him that was that he should die not the death of the soul but the bodily death by the hand of man he feares the shadow of death but not the body of death as the Apostle speaks Romans the seventh chapter but eternall death is that which he should have feared most of all for it hath a body and shall be found though the bodily death is often sought and cannot be found Job the third wherein Cain shewes what he is that is animalis homo in the first to the Corinthians the second chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phillippians the third chapter not having the spirit so was Saul afflicted in the first of Samuel the fifteenth chapter Honour me before the people he respected worldly honour more than Gods favour whereupon saith Augustine quid tibi honoratio haec proderit miser If 〈◊〉 death fall upon Cain what shall it profit him to live on earth but this sheweth plainly that the life of the body was Cains chief felicity and that the greatest grief he had was for the death of the body as if he should say let me live though it be but in fear and sorrow This is the affection of flesh and blood as the Devill saith of Job Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life Job the second chapter that is so long as life is not taken away man is well This being Cains complaint it is an implied petition and the request is Quasi pro magno beneficio ut non 〈◊〉 which request may be well uttered if it be rightly taken for not only the wicked feare death but the godly say themselves we sigh and would not be uncloathed but cloathed upon in the second to the Corinthians the fift chapter they would passe to immortality without the dissolution of the body and soul. That prayer for life is well if it be for a good end as Hezekiah praieth he may live to the end he may bewaile his sinnes in the 〈◊〉 of his soul Isaiah the thirty eighth chapter repentance is the end that he sets David saith I will not die but live and praise the Lord Psalm the one hundred and eighteenth the Apostle Paul albeit in regard of himself he desires to be dissolved yet because it is profitable for the Church that he should still remain in the flesh he desires to live Philippians the first chapter and the twenty second verse so life may be sought if it be for this end to doe good but if our end be the escaping of death for a time the case is otherwise Touching the end of Cain's desire It may be he 〈◊〉 life that he might repent and praise God and doe good for charity 〈◊〉 the best in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the thirteenth chapter But we see what doth continually vex Cain and all the wicked that is the doubt of the forgivenesse of sinne which is the worm of the spirit and a continuall fear of death which they know they have deserved at the hands of all Gods creatures Dixit verò Jehova illi Propterea quisquis interfecerit Kajinum septuplo vindicator imposuit Jehova Kajino signum ne eum caederet ullus qui foret inventurus eum Gen. 4. 15. Septemb. 26. 1599. CAINS chief complaint and petition therein implied was handled verse the fourteenth This verse contains Gods answer which is a yeelding or granting to that petition of his and that effectuall for God provideth for the safety of Cain's life not only by his word and command but by a visible mark which he set upon Cain Wherein we are generally to observe First That as the Prophet tels us in the one hundred and tenth Psalme God dealeth not with any sinner according to his sinnes and deserts for if God did not in wrath remember mercy 〈◊〉 the third chapter he should not in justice have suffered Cain to open his mouth for it is just that he which turneth away his car from hearing the law when he prayeth should not be heard Proverbs the twenty eighth chapter and the ninth verse That he which will not hear Gods Prachers shall not be heard of God when he prayeth And the Lord in the Propher saith more plainly in the second chapter of Zechary and the thirteenth verse that as he by his Prophets cried unto the people and they would not
therefore they would have another seed like the starres of heaven such as should have their conversation in heaven it is that which the Prophet tells us there is semen nequam Isaiah the first chapter that is a naughty and corrupt seed such was the seed of Cain and there is semen sanctum Isaiah the sixt chapter such a seed was it that Adam desired Cain was a naughty seed but they would have a holy seed for there is not only good seed but tares as Christ sheweth Matthew the thirteenth chapter Such is the difference that is in seeds A holy seed is such as shall sinne but yet shall not doe sinne in the first epistle of John the third chapter that is not operarius iniquitatis Matthew the seventh chapter because the seed of God is in them but they that sell themselves to all manner of sinne are the corrupt seed such as power out themselves to all wickedness because they have not the seed of God in them but the Serpents seed of whom it may be said verò ex patre Diabilo estis John the eighth chapter Fiftly This other seed might be another seed yet not like Abel that is a seed more civill and temperate in the course of this life than Cain was and his posterity but they desire a seed for Abel that is such another seed as Abel was They desire a Child not simply but pro Abele that is such a Child in whom they may finde the spirit of Abel that they might say here is another Abel that though Abel be taken off yet there might another like Abel be ingraffed The last point is in these words For Abel whom Cain 〈◊〉 There were many things that Cain could endure well enough in Abel but the cause why he 〈◊〉 him was for that he had a desire to please God and to sacrifice to him in the best 〈…〉 could his desire was to offer plurimam hostiam 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse that is a Sacrifice that should be in 〈◊〉 more and in quality de 〈◊〉 of the best of his sheep so they would not only have one religious as Abel but one that should be opposite to Cain and as it were the Heir of Abels 〈◊〉 one that might accomplish that which was lacking on Abels part in the first to the Thessalonians the third chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse 〈◊〉 as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him 〈◊〉 was born after the spirit Galatians the fourth chapter so they might have one to maintain his quarrel and might uphold that holy seed Concerning which as God hath a purpose that the patience of his Saints should appear Romans the ninteenth chapter 〈…〉 patientia Sanctorum for which cause he suffers Abel to be 〈◊〉 so he will have his providence appear too and therefore he sets up Seth so as Tubal-Cain with all his armor shall not remove him So we see in every of these words there is a power They would have this other seed like Abel in all things saving in this that Abel was but shewed only to the world but they would have Seth a permanent seed So doth God make the distinction between his Saints to some he saith as to Peter John the twenty first chapter Follow me that by thy death thou maist glorifie me Of others he saith as of John the Evangelist I will have thee tarry still that is he will have some Saints to be 〈◊〉 as Peter and others he would have to live out all the dayes of their life as John the Evangelist and John that dieth in Domino is no less blessed 〈◊〉 Peter that dieth pro Domino So 〈◊〉 he would have Abel 〈◊〉 taken a way and 〈◊〉 to live out the course of nature yet the one is no lesse acceptable to him than the other Lastly These words contain a plain 〈◊〉 of Eve not only in regard of her stile for of Cain she said I have obtained a man of the Lord but of Seth Deus posuit The one is 〈◊〉 Evae the other positio Del. But in regard of that account which now she makes of Cain Why should not Cain be still her Jewell as before for he lives still and hath a great and mighty seed She faith the cares not 〈◊〉 him for that he is cut off from Gods Church a stranger from the promises of God And as for Abel whom before she 〈…〉 now she desires one like him though he should be 〈…〉 Abel 〈◊〉 So she condemnes her self for having so great a 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisedome at last is justified of her Children For a time 〈◊〉 〈…〉 accounted of but at last Abel shall be found to be 〈…〉 case Out of which we see that which the Prophet 〈◊〉 That men must not make too much 〈◊〉 in 〈…〉 Isay 〈◊〉 twenty 〈◊〉 chapter if the Lord 〈◊〉 and come not so soon as we 〈◊〉 we must wait and he that 〈◊〉 will come Hebrews the second chapter Give not over if Abel be lost God will provide another seed Secondly We see here the propriety of the Church it is a thing set as the Prophet speakes in the twenty eighth chapter of Isaiah I will lay a Stone in Sion a chief corner Stone upon which Stone the Church is built so as the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Matthew the sixteenth chapter Therefore the Apostle saith Colossians the first chapter the faithfull are radicati fundati in fide whereupon it followeth that as God himself is from everlasting and world without end Psalm the nintieth so he will be with his Church to the end of the world Matthew the eighteenth chapter so we see there is a reward for the righteous though he were killed touching the body yet he lives still in heaven And now in as much as there is one like Abel he revives in earth and so he hath his reward in heaven and earth Howsoever before Cain was preferred before Abel yet now by the testimony of Adam and Eve is counted one not worthy the ground that he treads upon but Abel is acknowledged to be a great blessing and therefore hath his desire one like him Sed ipsi Schetho genitus est filius cujus nomen vocavit Enoschum tunc coeptum est invocari nomen Jehovae Gen. 4. 26. Februar 17. 1599. YOU see here that albeit Moses might have deferred these two verses to the next chapter wherein he drawes down the genealogie of the godly seed yet he could not contain himself but before he concludes this chapter he will make some mention of some that regard the worship of God as well to shew that God did not clean forget his promise and his people as also that he might counterpoise the evill of the wicked that went before as last of all that he might make a good conclusion that as he had a good beginning in Abels oblation so he might end it well in the invocation of Enosh and he doth end
are taken away There are two natures in a Cole that is the Cole it selfe which is a dead thing and the burning nature and heate that it hath which setteth out first Christs humane nature which is dead in it selfe And then his divine nature containing the burning force of that is represented in this burning Cole So the element of bread and wine is a dead thing in it selfe but through the grace of Gods spirit infused into it hath a power to heate our Soules for the elements in the Supper have an earthly and a heavenly part Secondly that Christ is to bee understood by this burning Cole wee may safely gather because his love to his Church is presented with fire Cantit the eighth chapter and the sixth verse It is said of Christs love the Coles thereof are fiery Coles and a vehement flame such as cannot be quenched with any water nor the floods drown it even so all the calamities and miseries that Christ suffered and endured for our sakes which were poured upon him as water could not quench the love that he bare us Thirdly quia non solum ardet ipse sed alios accendit so saith John the Baptist of him There cometh one after me that shall Baptize with the holy-Ghost and with fire as it is in the third chapter of Luke the sixteenth verse therefore the graces of the holy-Ghost are also represented by fire Acts 3. the union whereof hath a double representation First it is signified by water in Baptisme for sinne that is derived 〈◊〉 us from another being as a 〈◊〉 may be washed away with water and therefore the Propher saith there is a fountaine opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of 〈◊〉 for sinne and 〈◊〉 Zach. the thirteenth chapter and the first verse therefore 〈◊〉 said to Saul bee Baptized and wash away thy sinnes Acts the twenty second Chapter and the sixteenth verse that is meant of originall sinne and the corruption of our nature by which wee are guilty of the wrath of God but because through the whol course of our life sinne by custome groweth more to be strong and to stick fast in our nature so as no water can take it away therefore 〈◊〉 Grace of God is set out by fire as having a power and force to burn 〈◊〉 sinne for by custome sinne is bred and setled in our nature and is 〈◊〉 drosse that must be tryed and purged by fire so the holy Ghost speaketh of actuall sinnes the first of Isaiah and the twenty fift verse and the sixt ter of Jeremiah and the thirttieh verse Ezech. the twenty second chapter and the eighteenth verse The house of Israel is to mee as drosse that is by custome of sinne and in regard of this kinde of sinne there needs not only water to wash away the corruption of our nature and the qualitie thereof but fire to purge the actuall sins that proceed from the same The sinnes of Commission came by reason of the force of concupiscence and from the lusts that boyle out of our corrupt nature and the grace that takes them away is the grace of water in Baptisme but the sinnes of omission proceede of the coldnesse and negligence of our nature to doe good such as was in the Church of Laodicea Rev. the third chapter and the fifteenth verse and therefore such sinnes must bee taken away with the fiery Grace of God Secondly for the quality of the Cole it is not only a burning Cole but taken from the Altar to teach us that our zeale must bee 〈◊〉 and come from the spirit of God The fires that are appointed by earthly Judges to terrifie malefactors from offending may draw a skinne over the spirituall wounds of their Soules so as for feare they will eschue and sorbeare to sinne but it is the fire of the Altar and the inward Graces of Gods spirit that taketh away the corruption and healeth the wound therefore as in the Law God tooke 〈◊〉 there should ever bee fire on the Altar Leviticus the sixt chapter and the ninth verse so for the sinner that is contrite and sory for his sinne there is alwaies fire in the Church to burne up the Sacrifice of his contrition and repentance even that fire of Christs Sacrifice The love which hee shewed unto us in dying for our sinnes is set 〈◊〉 unto us most lively in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood unto which wee must come often that from the one wee may fetch the purging of our sinnes as the Apostle speaks and from the other qualifying power si in luce John the first chapter the seventh verse wherefore as by the mercy of God we have a fountain of water alwaies flowing to take away originall sinne so there is in the Church fire alwaies burning to cleanse our actuall transgressions for if the Cole taken from the Altar had a power to take away the Prophets sinne much more the body and blood of Christ which is offered in the Sacrament If the hem of Christs garment can heale the ninth chapter of Matthew and the twentith verse much more the touching of Christ himselfe shall procure health to our soules here we have not somthing that hath touched the Sacrifice but the Sacrifice it self to take away our sins Secondly the Application The application of this Cole is by a Seraphin for it is an office more fit for Angells than men to concurre with God for taking away sinne but for that it pleaseth God to use the service of men in this behalfe they are in Scripture called Angells Job the thirty fifth chapter and the twenty third verse Malachi the second and the seventh verse The Priests lips preserve knowledge for hee is the Angell of the Lord of Hosts and the Pastors of the seven Churches in Asia are called Angells Apoc. the first chapter and the first verse for the same office that is here executed by an Angell is committed to the sonnes of men to whom as the Apostle speaks Hee hath committed the ministery of reconciliation 2 Cor. the fift chapter and the eighteenth verse to whom hee hath given this power that whose sinnes soever they remit on earth shall bee remitted in heaven the twentith chapter of Saint John and the twenty fift verse So when Nathan who was but a man had said to David etiam Jehova transtulit peccatum 〈◊〉 the second booke of Samuel the twelfth chapter and the thirteenth verse it was as availeable as if an Angell had spoken to him And when Peter tells the Jewes that if they amend their lives and turn their sinnes shall be done away their sinne was taken away no lesse than the Prophets was when the Angell touched his lips Acts the third chapter and the ninteenth verse for not hee that holds the Cole but it is the Cole it selfe that takes away sinne and so long as the thing is the same wherewith wee are touched it skills not who doth hold it but wee
any pains nor fear any danger to obtein the bread that endureth for ever In other things of this life we doe not only desire that which seemeth good to us but we seek for it till we have it So the Prophet speaks Cupiunt rapiunt Michah the second chapter and the second verse So we must not only desire the Kingdome of God but must violently seek after it for The Kingdome of God suffereth violence Matthew the eleventh chapter Secondly this word labor is opposed to seeking for Christ saith here Matthew the sixt chapter Seek the Kingdome of God but labor for the meat that endureth This labor is that work of God which is ascribed to faith John the sixt chapter by which we labor for the bread of life we must use an excessive kinde of labor in this work of God for that to labor for the bread of life is no bodily labor and therefore we must work for it earnestly for cursed is he that doth the work of the Lord negligently Jeremiah the fourty eight chapter Therefore when Christ pronounceth them blessed that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse he commands us not only to seek and desire it in our hearts but to hunger for it as we doe for the food of our bodies Matthew the fifth chapter and as he commands us to doe so so he hath left us his example for as it becomes him to fulfill all righteousnesse so he protesteth that it was his meat and drink to doe the will of him that sent him John the fourth chapter so did Mary earnestly labor for the meat that perisheth not when she was sitting at the feet of Jesus for though her sister called upon her to help her yet nothing could draw her from this spirituall labor Luke the tenth chapter and the fourty second verse So did the people labor that pressed to hear Christ Luke the eighth chapter they laid violence to the Kingdome of God as also they that hearing Paul preach would needs have him preach the same thing again to them and for that end came together in great companies to hear the next Sabbath Acts the thirteenth chapter If we thus seek the bread of life striving and wrastling with God in our praiers as Jacob did with the Angell then we doe indeed labor for it as Christ willeth us to doe The second sense of laboring is that we must labor for this bread more than for the other and not at all for the other in comparison of this All grant that we must labor for the bread of life but not for it more than for that which nourisheth this life we must observe in what manner we ought to labour as well as that we are to labour for the excessive desire of this life makes us defective in the desire of the life to come The desire of this life is not oppofice but subordinate to the desires of the life to come But we must desire this life so farre as it may further us to the other life Some doe make this life the end of all their desires and doe heap up wrath to themselves against the day of wrath 〈◊〉 the second chapter But the care and indeavor of the Saints of God is that in this life they may lay up for themselves a good 〈◊〉 for the life to come the first epistle to 〈◊〉 the sixt chapter Men are bound to be carefull to make honest provision for this life and not to be idle and burdensome to the earth For when Christ willeth us not to be carefull for this life yet from the example of birds we may learn that we must not be negligent for they are made to flie as it is in the Provarbs And so we are by Gods appointment to provide for our maintenance in this life Matthew the sixt chapter When Christ saith We shall give account for every idle word he means we shall be called to account That we have not spoken the good words that we ought Matthew the twelfth chapter The Apostle 〈◊〉 him 〈◊〉 stote to steal no more but to labour Ephesians the fourth chapter and the twenty eighth verse The reason is that for want of labouring in some honest calling for our outward maintenance we shall fall to poverty and Poverty will make us steal and use unlawfull means Proverbs the thirty chapter Though a man were able to live without labouring yet remembring Gods sentence that we 〈◊〉 eat in the sweat of our faces we shall say 〈◊〉 tram Domini 〈◊〉 the seventh chapter and the ninth verse And that made the Apostle say That if any will not labour let him not eate the second epistle to the 〈◊〉 and the third chapter And the blessed man shall 〈◊〉 of the labour of his hands Psalme one hundred twenty eighth Thus we are to provide for this life But if comparison be made we are to labour more for the life to come and for the food that belongeth to the maintenance of it It were a thing hard enough for us if Christ should command us to labour for the heavenly food as we doe for the earthly but yet it is necessary that as the soul is more excellent than the body so we should be more carefull to maintain the life of the soul than of the body The excellency of the soul made the learned Philosophers to 〈◊〉 from many bodily pleasures which otherwise they could not have forborn but that they knew the life and felicity of the soul is 〈◊〉 better than all the profits and pleasures of this life Of the good things of this life Christ saith What shall it profit a man to 〈◊〉 the whole world and lose his own 〈◊〉 Matthew the sixteenth chapter So we are to seek the good of the next life rather than of this Touching our defence from bodily miseries Christ saith 〈◊〉 not him that 〈◊〉 kill the body and not the soul but he that can kill 〈…〉 Matthew the tenth chapter that is if he that 〈◊〉 not a due care to provide for the soul rather than for the body Some use the soul is if it were to serve the body whereas the body ought to serve it But seeing our body is Corpus mortis Romans the seventh chapter because either it shall be destroyed by death or while it liveth is under the dominion of death Romans the sixt chapter Therefore whatsoever care is bestowed upon the body shall perish with it for they that sow to the flesh as it is corruptible shall reap corruption but as the spirit is immortal so they that sow to it shal reap immortality and life ever lasting Galatians the sixt chapter The good estate of the body will not make the soul the better but rather the worse but the souls estate being provided for the body shall be farre the better If we seek Gods Kingdom first then that care will cause all other things to be added Matthew the sixt chapter If our conversation be in Heaven it shall cause our
faith by means whereof that was made present to Abraham which otherwise was absent The fathers by faith beheld this promise afarre off Hebrews the 〈◊〉 chapter and the seventh 〈◊〉 c. And were as sure of them as if they were performed Thirdly He rejoyced It is said that God gave charge touching the Patriarchs and ancient Fathers Nolite tangere unctos 〈◊〉 Psalm the hundred and fift and the fifteenth verse Which 〈◊〉 was Abraham who was 〈◊〉 with the oyle of gladnesse Psalm the fourty fift By which the conceived joy when by faith he saw the day of Christs 〈◊〉 Here we are to inquire of the matter and words of this joy The 〈◊〉 and cause of Abrahams joy was deliverance which is a great cause of joy When the Lord brought again the captivity then was our mouth filled with laughter Psalme the hundred twenty sixt So Abraham 〈◊〉 to think that he was delivered from being dust and 〈◊〉 that now be might say with David They 〈◊〉 not leave my 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 nor suffer me to see 〈◊〉 Psalm the sixteenth and the tenth 〈◊〉 Secondly He rejoyced considering that by means of Christ his 〈◊〉 he should not only 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 which is death of body For dust thou art and to dust 〈…〉 Genesis the third chapter And the death of the soul which is the 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 the sixt chapter But should have 〈…〉 and that not temporal but spiritual in 〈…〉 the first chapter and the third verse For as the 〈…〉 they 〈…〉 not earthly blessings but heavenly For 〈…〉 had been mindfull of earthly blessings They had 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 and had 〈…〉 them Hebrews the 〈◊〉 chapter and the 〈…〉 But the matter of Abrahams joy was the hope of a 〈◊〉 blessing 〈◊〉 Christ. This God 〈◊〉 when he promised That his seed should not only be as the dust of the earth which is an earthly 〈…〉 the thirteenth chapter but As the starres of Heaven Genesis the fifteenth chapter By which is meant the blessing of Heaven This blessing was That he should enjoy those things which the eye bath not seen the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter and the ninth verse Thirdly That this blessing should come to him per semen suum not by a strange or foraign means this did increase Abrahams joy to think quod Servator Abrahae est semen Abrahae And that he whom David called his Lord was his sonne Matthew the twenty second chapter Fourthly His joy was the greater considering that this benefit was not appropriated to the Jews only that were of the stock of Abraham but that in him all Nations should be blessed not only he and all his children but as many as were to be blessed should obtain this blessednesse in him So say the Angels that the birth of Christ is matter of the Peoples joy because it belongs to all People Luke the second chapter That in this life all that are blessed with faithfull Abraham Galatians the third chapter And after this life shall be blessed by being received into Abrahams bosome Luke the sixteenth chapter For the manner of his joy As his desiring sight was spiritual so his joy is not carnal as ours but spiritual We desire to see the feast of Christs nativity and we joy when it comes but in a carnal manner but it must be spiritual as Mary saith My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour Luke the second chapter There is a joy of the countenance which is outward but the true joy is of the heart and conscience To desire Christs dayes before he come and to joy when he is come are the true touchstones of our love to him When our Parents heard God was come they hid themselves Genesis the third chapter So he that is in state of sinne desires not Gods comming or presence neither rejoyce at it They say Let the holy one of Israel cease from before us Isaiah the thirtieth chapter and the eleventh verse So farre are they off from desiring his comming And for joying when he is come they will say with the Gergasites Depart out of our Coasts Matthew the eighth chapter and the thirty fourth verse But contrariwise the godly to testifie their desire say Break the Heavens and come down Psalme the hundred fourty fourth 〈◊〉 So for joy The hope that is deferred makes the heart to faint but when it comes it is as a tree of life Proverbs the thirteenth chapter and the twelfth verse Therefore we must proceed from desire to sight and by it as also by our joy we conceive at the day of Christs birth we may examine whether we be the children of Abraham and so may conceive hope to be partakers of blessing with him But if we rejoyce as the carnal Israelites did of whom it is said The People sat down to eat and drink and rose up to play Exodus the thirty second chapter and the sixt verse If we testifie our joy by eating and drinking that is no true joy Our 〈◊〉 day shall be 〈◊〉 Malachie the second chapter This joy is the Heathens joy whose hearts are filled with food and 〈◊〉 Acts the fourteenth chapter They eate cakes and drink wine and make themselves 〈◊〉 therewith Jeremiah the fourty fourth chapter But that is not Abrahams joy it is spiritual wherein is blessednesse For blessed are the People that can rejoyce in thee Psalm the eighty ninth We must learn to rejovce a right at the day of Christs birth If we will rejoyce as Abraham did we must pray with David Remember me Lord that I may see the 〈◊〉 of thy chosen and bee glad with thy people and give thanks with thine inheritance Psalm the hundred and sixt and the fourth and fift verses Abraham knew a day would come that should take away all his earthly joy and therefore desired the day of Christs birth which might make him to rejoyce in 〈…〉 the fift chapter And rejoyce in afflictions the first epistle of Peter and the fourth chapter such a joy as na man shall take away John the sixteenth chapter As we must rejoyce at this day of Christ after Abrahams example so Christ hath a second day wherein he will give to every man according to his works Romans the second chapter If we rejoyce at this day when it comes and desire it If we love the glorious comming of Christ the second epistle to Timothy and the fourth verse If we look for the appearing of the just God Titus the second chapter and the twelfth verse then shall we shew our selves the Children of Abraham Of that day to see it he saith it shall be matter of joy Lift up your heads Luke the twenty sixt chapter and the twenty first verse For your redemption draweth neer To others matter of sorrow They shall hide them in the rocks Revelations the third chapter but we must say with David I remembred thy judgements and received comfort Psalme the hundred and ninteenth Principes populorum congregantur
Jews and Gentils So the matching of Jews with Gentils doth signifie the affinity that should grow between the two Churches The same was shewed by the stuff where of 〈◊〉 Tabernacle was made by the first Temple which was built upon the ground of a Gentile Araunah the second book of Samuel and the twenty fourth chapter with timber sent by Hiram a Gentile the 〈◊〉 book of Kings the tenth chapter by the second Temple which was founded by Cyrus and 〈◊〉 Heathen Princes By which we may perceive that God had this in minde and in a purpose To gather the Gentils into the Church of Christ and to be of the people of the God of Abraham which thing was not only foreshewed but plainly performed For not only there came of the 〈◊〉 from the East to Christ Matthew the second chapter but Grecians from the West to see Christ John the twelfth chapter The second thing in the Prophecy is that not only the People should be gathered to be of the Church but the Kings and Princes for when Peter saw the sheet let down from heaven Acts the tenth chapter and the eleventh verse he was taught that Nations should come immediatly to the Church for then Cornelius and others were converted to the faith but Princes came not till three hundred yeeres after that was performed when the Prophet foretelleth the poore shall eate and be satisfied Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty sixth but for Rulers it was not so performed therefore the Pharisees object Doe any of the Rulers beleeve but this simple People that know not the Law John the seventh Chapter therefore the Apostle saith you knew your calling that not many noble not many mightie but the base and weake things hath God chosen as it is in the first of the Corinthians a great number of the poore people were at the first joyned to the Church of Christ and not only they but as it was foretold the rich upon earth shall eate and worship Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty ninth verse so Sergius Paulus Acts the thirteenth the noble man of Berea Acts the seventeenth the Eunuch chief governor for the Queene of Ethiopia Acts the eighth chapter her Lord Treasurer and the elect Lady the second Epistle of Saint John and the second chapter So both Lords and Ladies were brought to the Church but as yet no Princes for they stood up against Christ Acts the fourth chapter both Herod and Paul gathered themselves against Christ the holy sonne of God Paul had almost got one King to the Church that is Agrippa Acts the twenty sixt chapter and the twenty eighth verse Thou almost perswadest mee c. but there must bee a time when the kings of Arabia shall bring presents Psalme the seventy second a time when Kings should bee foster fathers and Queenes nursing mothers to the Church Isa. the fourty ninth chapter therefore under the Law he confirmed the hope of Kings by shewing grace to the King of Ninevey who repented at the preaching of Jonas and to the Queen of the South who came to honour Salomon Matthew the twelfth chapter no less than he confirmed the hope of the poor by calling the poor Widdow of Zarepta and of the humble by the example of Naaman Luke the fourth chapter by whose example all sorts of people both poor and rich both Prince and Subject have hope be gathered into the Church wherein the people of this English Nation have speciall cause to magnifie God for the first prince that professed the Gospel was Constantine the great born in England and ever since Christ hath had a Church of the Gentils not only dispersed Gentils John the seventh chapter a few only of them to worship him but the fulness of the Gentils Romans the eleventh chapter Now not only the simple and unlearned people but the Rulers themselves doe follow Christ John the seventh chapter wherein we are to exalt magnifie the power of Christ that he contents not himself with the inferiour people to be worshipped of them he will not only be the God of the Mattocks and Staves but of the Shields To teach us that he can turne the hearts of Captains and Princes whither he will Secondly That when this was performed the Princes were not Togati such as delighted in peace but Armati men of warre and hard to be brought under to the obedience of the Gospel such persons as at their pleasure will not hear when they think good but take away their life Esther the 6. chap. These men were the harder to be subdued to Christ being without Religion for the most part Nulla fides pietasque viris qui Castra sequuntur The Rulers of the people shall come to thee as it is in the Psalms God would not have David build him an Altar because he was a man of warre and had shed blood the first book of the Chronicles the twenty eighth chapter and the third verse But to gather a Church and Temple of the Gentils he hath no respect of that but sheweth his power in bringing them to his Church which were most cruel The Psalmist saith God is highly to be exalted among the Princes of the People At this ●ime the people of Abraham were at a poor stay like sheep appointed to the slaughter Romans the tenth verse In which regard it was not like it would come to passe that the Princes and mighty men would subject themselves to them Paul confesseth that the Sect which he followed was every where evil spoken of Acts the twenty sixt chapter That he and the rest of the Apostles were as the filth of the world and the off-scouring of all things the first epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter the thirteenth verse therefore unlikely that the great men of the world should yeeld to them Again that they should doe this of themselves voluntarily without constraint that where they had occupied their shields upon Gods People now they should use them for their defense that they should bring bountifull gifts to the Church whereof we see examples in the new Testament Matthew the second chapter The Reason is to be taken four wayes First When God shall be exalted then shall the Princes of the people be gathered to the people of the God of Abraham This is true for this Psalme is of Christs ascention of which Christ saith When he is exalted omnes traham ad me John the twelfth chapter So that it is as much as if the Prophet should say When Christ is exalted then the Nations shall come to him Secondly When the Princes of the people be gathered to the ●…ple of Abraham then shall Christ be exalted that is when the Kings of the earth doe imbrace the Christian Religion God shall be exalted and have more glory for every King is worth ten thousand and when one King followeth Christ it is a greater glory to Christ than if many people the second book of Samuel
from the Lord For so saith King David the first book of the Chronicles the twenty ninth chapter and the fourteenth verse Quae de manu tua accepimus damus tibi Secondly When we have received any blessing from God then we must give to him as we are exhorted Psalm the seventy sixt and the eleventh verse and Psalm the ninety sixt the eighth verse Bring present and joy into his Courts Of those things that are to be given some are laid upon us of necessity As the tenth of the fruits of the ground which the Lord challengeth to himself Leviticus the twenty seventh chapter and the thirtieth verse and hath set over to the Levites that it should be given to them Numbers the eighteenth chapter Then there are 〈◊〉 or free-will offerings such voluntary gifts as the people gave of their own accord for howsoever they were bound to offer their first born yet they might redeem the life of them Exodus the thirtieth chapter To speak 〈◊〉 of them Gods donation hath two parts Hannahs Prayer and Gods Gift In Prayer we are to observe two things The sense of Want And the desire of the Heart For it is the supply of want which makes her break forth into prayer for 〈…〉 indigentiae Wherefore howsoever the want of so great a 〈◊〉 as is the bearing of a child did move Hannab to break forth into this desire of Prayer Yet it is most certain that the Virgin 〈◊〉 more needed a Saviour for which she confessed her spirit 〈◊〉 than Hannah needed a sonne And as her need was greater so her prayer was stronger than Hannahs prayer for Hannah prayed alone but as for Maries prayer it was accompanied with the desire and prayer of all Creatures as both the Prophets and Apostles doe shew Heaven and earth was reconciled to be God Ephesians the first chapter and Colossians the first chapter and the third verse Therefore they did greatly desire Christs comming And therefore when there was hope of his comming they are exhorted to be glad Rejoyce ye heavens shout ye lower parts of the earth Isaiah the fourty fourth chapter and the twenty third verse and the Apostle saith that the Creatures 〈◊〉 groan waiting for the redemption Romans the eighth chapter much more shall 〈◊〉 desire his comming and therefore the Prophet saith desideratus est 〈◊〉 is gentibus Haggai the second chapter As all Nations did ignorantly worship the unknown God Acts the seventeenth chapter so they all had an ignorant desire of his comming but especially the Saints of God have not only desired in heart but prayed for this gift as Jacob Genesis the fourty ninth chapter I have waited for thy salvation Psalm the fourteenth and the seventh verse O that salvation were given to Israel out of Sion Isaiah the sixty fourth chapter and the first verse Utinam dirumpat caelos descendat such a desire had this Virgin for the comming of her Saviour as she expressed in her song when she confesseth he hath filled the hungry Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel so did Hannah the Prophetisse Luke the second chapter So that whether we respect the Prayer or Desire of Prayer we see that Marys prayer is greater than 〈◊〉 If we respect the effect of the Virgins prayer we shall see it more fully persomed in her than in the other Prayer is compared to a Key wherewith as Elias opened the Heavens when they were shut up Luke the fourth chapter and the twenty fift verse So when God shuts up the wombs of women Genesis the twentieth chapter and the eighteenth verse that they become barren then prayer is the key that opens them By this key was the 〈◊〉 of Hannah opened and she brought forth Samuel But if we consider that by this key God opened the womb of a Virgin that she conceived and bear a sonne that is a greater wonder and a matter more highly to be extolled but so did he open the womb of the blessed Virgin Elias opened the Heavens when they were shut and obtained rain for the earth But the Virgins key of Prayer accompanyed with the prayers of all Gods People in all ages opened the Heaven of Heavens so as they dropped down righteousnesse Isaiah the fourty fift chapter and the eighth verse Even the Sonne of Man that came down from Heaven John the third chapter that is Jesus Christ who is our righteousnesse our sanctification the first epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter and the thirtieth verse The effect of Hannahs Prayer is Dominus dedit which is the inscription of all the things we possesse as King David confesseth O Lord all this aboundance is of thine hand the first book of the Chronicles and the twenty ninth chapter But this inscription is peculiarly given to children and the fruit of the womb Psalm the hundred twenty seventh which indeed are an inheritance and gift that commeth of the Lord for he saith Scribe virum istum sterilem Jeremiah the twenty second chapter and the thirtieth verse So he punished Michal which despised David so that she had no child to the day of her death the second book of Samuel the sixt chapter and the twenty third verse But if he blesse this working and so make them fruitfull then is it a blessing and gift to be acknowledged with all thankfulnesse especially when the children are as arrows and darts in the hand of a Gyant that is spiritual in Church or Commonwealth Psalm the hundred twenty seventh for such a child was Samuel therefore Hannah confesseth it thankfully But if we come to the composition we shall finde that Christs gift to us by God is a farre greater gift if we consider that Salus data est 〈◊〉 Isaiah the ninth chapter that God hath manifcsted his love to the world by giving a sonne to us John the third chapter and the sixteenth verse He is Donum Dei John the fourth chapter which if we could receive we should perceive how farre he exceeds Samuel but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the second epistle to the Corinthians the ninth chapter and the fifteenth verse Gods unspeakable gift We must not talk of any other gifts for he is the great gift of God to us and that gift which we must offer to God for our sinnes without whom it is in vain to bring burnt offerings and sacrifices for he only putteth away iniquitie Isaiah the fourty third chapter And God having given us such a gift how will he not with him give us all other things Romans the eighth chapter Samuel was a great gift to Hannah for he proved spiritual in the People of God as a dart in the hand of a mighty man but yet he was but a type of Christ who is the greatest gift that ever God bestowed upon mankinde The second Donation is on our part to God In mans judgment if God gives us such a gift we are best to keep it but this gift is given us not to be
restored to it The answer is Genesis the third chapter and the twenty second verse the punishment laid upon him was 〈…〉 forth his hand and 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 of life But if there be a power given to man to eat of the tree John the nineteenth chapter and the eleventh verse then he may take of it Man of himself may not 〈◊〉 into Paradise but if that power of returning be given him which Christ gave to the 〈◊〉 Luke the twenty third chapter 〈…〉 thou be with me in Paradise then he may enter Now Christ 〈◊〉 purchased to us a new right of returning and by virtue thereof we have power to eat of the tree of life and he gives us licence to enter into Paradise Applicat●… But to apply this Scripture to our present purpose 〈…〉 thing in the Sacrament that disposeth us to life and 〈…〉 of life no lesse than the tree of life For herein we are 〈◊〉 of that bread of life which our Saviour speaks of 〈…〉 I am the bread of life that 〈…〉 of 〈◊〉 bread shall live for ever 〈…〉 Father so he that 〈◊〉 me 〈…〉 the fifty seventh verse So that whether it be the 〈◊〉 of the 〈…〉 Paradise or the bread of life in the Sacrament we see there is a 〈◊〉 affinity as appeareth if we compare this 〈…〉 the second chapter and the 〈…〉 which as the Apostle 〈◊〉 in the 〈…〉 tenth chapter and the third verse 〈…〉 whereof we are partakers in this 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 blood This scripture 〈◊〉 of two parts The 〈◊〉 and the Promise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Touching the conjunction of these two 〈…〉 when Christ promiseth to him that 〈…〉 tree of life which 〈…〉 God and no matter of 〈◊〉 and that he will not 〈…〉 that doe nothing for it is not the bread of 〈…〉 is bestowed on them that doe 〈…〉 sixt chapter In the Promise we are to know That the Paradise and tree of life which Christ promiseth is not that earthly Paradise planted at the beginning for Adam nor that tree of life appointed for the prolonging of his natural life but a better Paradise the other was Adams Paracise but this is called Gods Paradise the other was a Paradise on earth but this a celestial Paradise that into which the Apostle was caught up in the second epistle to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter which he himself saith was the third Heaven the Paradise which Christ here promiseth is that wherein he himself is a Paradise of all joyes and happinesse of which he saith Father I will that they be with me where I am that they may behold my glory John the seventeenth chapter and the twenty fourth verse For as God himself is a spirit so his joy and happinesse is spiritual and the place wherein he is is a spiritual Paradise Such joy was that he speaks of Matthew the twenty fift chapter Intra in gaudium Domini So are we to think the throne of God the Father where Christ sitteth Apocalyps the third chapter and the twenty first verse that it is the heavenly joy and glory which he enjoyeth in heaven So saith the Wise man Proverbs the thirteenth chapter that there is ordained this tree of life wherein we have the accomplishment of all our desires which is no where but in Heaven where God is all in all For the tree of life which Christ promiseth to him that overcommeth It is another manner of tree than that in the garden of Eden That was a natural tree appointed to preserve Adams natural life but this a is spiritual tree and preserveth supernatnral life And albeit Man being debarred of this natural tree in the Garden dyeth a bodily death yet this tree in the Paradise of God keeps us from being hurt of the second death Apocalyps the second chapter and the eleventh verse Christ himself saith of himself I am alive but I was dead and behold I live for evermore Apocalyps the first chapter and the eighteenth verse that is he lost the natural life but now he lives a supernatural life and so shall all his members that eate of the tree of life which he promiseth Well is the state of our death and rising again shadowed out by a tree for as Job speaks Job the fourteenth chapter There is hope of a tree that though it be cut down yet it will sprout out and the branches thereof will shoot forth So though we dye a bodily death yet there is hope that we shall rise again and live a supernaturall life which we obtain by eating of this tree of life The center of our desire is the tree of life the circumference is Paradise wherein we have promised us not only coronam vitae Apocalyps the second chapter 10. But the crown of glory the first of Peter and the fift chapter And the crown of joy and happinesse the first of the Thessalonians the second chapter and the nineteenth verse We shall have our saciety of pleasure and whatsoever mans heart can desire for we shall be in the presence of God whose right hand is pleasure for ever Psalm 16. Dabo From the condition we are taught that this promise is not to be cast upon us but given and it is not a generall promise but made particularly to him only that overcometh Which condition carrieth us to the promises of virtues made by God Genesis the third chapter where God proclaimeth war between the woman and the serpent between the womans seed and the serpents seed Vincentis And Christ rels us hore that he which is conqueror in this war shall injoy Paradise and be restored to the tree of life for no man is crowned except he both strive and strive lawfully the second of Timothy the second chapter Cum Serpente 〈◊〉 suo The battail that we are to fight is either with the Serpent himself or with his seed With the Serpent we are at warre as the Apostle sheweth Ephesians the sixt chapter and the twelfth verse We fight not with flesh and blood but with principalities and power Such a fight did the Apostle feel when the Angel of Satan was sent to buffet him the second epistle to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter And of the victory against this enemy the Apostle saith Young men I write to you because you are strong and have overcome that wicked one the first epistle of John the second chapter and the fourteenth verse The warre which we have with the Serpents seed is 1. Intra First within us for his poyson infecteth our inward parts not only the Reins by stirring in us fleshly lusts which fight against the soul the first epistle of Peter the second chapter which must be overcome as the Apostle exhorts Colossians the third chapter Mortifie your earthly members but the heart also by that boyling lust of revenge which made Cain one of the Serpents seed to kill his brother the first epistle of John the third chapter and the twelfth verse
there is an Angel under Christ which takes charge for the defense of the Church on earth which is Michael your Prince Dan. 10. 21. Secondly Out of Judes epistle verse the ninth the ancient Fathers prove that by Michael we are not to understand Christ for that which he affirmeth that Michael durst not check the Devill with cursed speaking cannot be ascribed to Christ which not only dare but hath trodden down Satan under his feet much more dare he check him which unlesse he could doe it were a plain signe that he is not Omnipotent Therefore by Michael here we are to understand some other and not Christ. Thirdly Out of this place Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the fift verse In as much as the Child that was born was Christ it is not like that this Childe should suddenly be translated into an Archangel and fight with the Dragon And therefore both Theodoret and others say that Michael is a chief spirit among the created spirits that then took care of the Church in Jury and still is carefull of Christs Church unto the end of the world And to this we may add the judgement of the Church which on this holy-day doth thank God for the service of the Angels but makes no mention of Christ that it is he that in this place warreth with the Dragon and his Angels For the Dragon there is a farre more easie passage so as we may soon guesse what is meant by him for in this chapter he is called the Devil and Satan whereof their name signifieth a slanderer and he is justly so called for that he both slandereth God to man as if God did envy mans prosperity Genesis the third chapter and slanders man to God as he did Job whom albeit he were a blessed Saint yet he accuseth before God as an Hypocrite Job the first chapter The other name Satan signifieth a great enemie not only to the good whom he hath most cause to hate as being contrary to him but also to the bad That he is an enemy to the good it appears by this That he persecuted not only the child that was new born but the woman also and because he cannot shew his malice upon him he makes warre with her seed Apocalyps the twelfth chapter the thirteenth seventeenth verses That he persecuted also an enemie to the bad appears verse the ninth where he is called The seducer of of the whole world and the accuser of the brethren for that he first brings them to commit grievous sinnes and then pleads against them that the plague of God may come upon them These are the Leaders The Bands and Souldiers under their conduct are Angels on both sides The Angels that serve under Michael are they that excell in strength and doe the command of God in obeying the voice of his word Psalm the hundred and third and the twentieth verse they that the Apostle calls elect Angels the first epistle to Timothy the fift chapter and the twenty first verse The Angels that warre on the Dragons side are the evil Angels Psalm the seventy eighth and the fourty ninth verse The Angels that sinned the second epistle of Peter the second chapter And they that kept not their original as Jude saith these fight for the Dragon and he is their Captain as Christ saith The Prince of the Devils is 〈◊〉 Matthew the twelfth chapter For as among the good Angels there is principatus primus principatus so it is among the wicked Angels for there must be order in all companies Touching the Battail it self we are first to remove some things of offence not to think it strange that the Angels are here said to move battail For albeit they be called Angeli pacis Isaiah the thirty third chapter and the seventh verse because they bring peace yet in many places they are called Gods Hosts as Jacob seeing the Angels of God called the place where they were Nahanaim Genesis the thirty second chapter and the second verse and they magnisie God by that title Isaiah the sixt chapter Lord God of Hosts Luke the second chapter the Angels are called Heavenly Souldiers And where Christ saith If I pray to the Father he will give me more than twelve 〈◊〉 of Angels Matthew the twenty sixt chapter He compareth them to Troops and Bands of Souldiers for that they are not only Angels to Gods friends and servants but souldiers fighting against them that oppose themselves against God Further where their state is in a continual motion that must not offend us for the Angels themselves are not yet in the perfection of their felicity for we see they are imployed in doing service for us they continually aseend and descend from Heaven to Earth and from Earth to Heaven for the good of the godly for God saw it good that as well they as the Saints departed out of this life should not be made 〈…〉 Hebrews the eleventh chapter and the fourtieth verse which is illistrated Matthew the thirteenth chapter where the Angels are called Reapers giving us to understand thereby that as the 〈…〉 is not at rest till the Harvest be all in so it is with the Angels they must continually be imployed in doing service for them that shall inherit Salvation till the number of the Elect be accomplished So neither needs that to offend any that the Dragon is 〈◊〉 to have fought in Heaven for so he is said to have appeared before God among the sonnes of God And when Ahab was to be deceived a lying spirit stood before God the first book of the Kings the twenty second chapter All this was only by Gods permission For all this doth no make the Devil blessed no more than Adam was blessed being in paradise For having sinned and being thereby out of Gods favour he no more enjoyed that comfort of Paradise which he took before his fall but quaked and hid himself from the presence of God for tear Genesis the third chapter The Dragon is no more blessed for being in Heaven or appearing before God than a prisoner that for a time is brought out of prison into the Court to be arraigned for he takes no delight of the pomp and glorie of the Court knowing it is not for him but he must return to the 〈◊〉 from whence he was taken So it is with the Devil These offences being removed we come now to the Fight it self which was not in any bodily manner for they are spirits 〈◊〉 the hundred and fourth and therefore their fight is a spiritual fight Ephesians the sixt chapter And their 〈◊〉 not carnal but spiritaul the second epistle to the Corinthians the tenth chapter That as the Angels fight by temptations on the one side and by resistances on the other they fight by agonies and inward conflicts which is more truly called conflicts than any combat The other fight with bodily enemies for as some note Abraham would rather fight wich five Kings than abide that conflict
child and the woman to be in his Throne the Angels are ready to fight for them In that it is said The Dragon prevailed not it may be gathered that for all that he might begin again but where it is added And their place could no more be found in Heaven thereby we learn that Michael and his Angels set upon the Dragon and his Angels and drave them out of Heaven That which ariseth from hence on our parts is of two sorts First The thankfulnesse we are bound continually to render to God that we are of such regard in his sight that in Heaven they fight for us the elect angels with the evil angels Michael with the Dragon and his companie It is that which Christ tells us Luke the eleventh chapter When the strong men keep the Palace all things are in peace but then comes a stronger c. Man is even in the estimation of the Devil a Palace howsoever we by our sinnes make our selves a Hogstie therefore both Christ and the Devil esteeming so highly of us we may not esteem basely of our selves The angels have charge not only to keep us Psalm the ninty first but to wage battail about us and therefore it is plain the soul of man is no mean thing The Angels as we see are ready to enter field with the Dragon and his Angels Neither doth Heaven only take this care of us but the Earth also is ready to help us and openeth her mouth and swalloweth up the flood which the Dragon casts out of his mouth Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the sixteenth verse Therefore if they have such care of us it is reason we should have care of our selves if they take such care for man that is but earth then ought we for Heaven to be carefull If no man be crowned no not the Angels themselves except they strive aright the second epistle to Timothy the second chapter no more shall we be crowned unlesse we be as carefull of our selves as the Angels If the Angels were so busie to defend the earth we must be more diligent to fight for Heaven Again here we see that to come to Heaven is a matter of fight and wrastling Ephesians the sixt chapter If we look upon Christ and the Apostles we will say it is Lucta a wrastling but if upon common Christians it is but Ludus a pastime and sport And he that stirrs up this warre and conflict is not dead howsoever he was put to the worst but only driven out of Heaven That battail which was in Heaven among the Angels is come down to men on earth and now the Dragon fights with the womans seed and therefore it imports the womans seed to fight with him For the warre we have is not only with flesh and blood that is with our own passions and affections which is the philosophical warre though we must fight with them also because fleshly lusts fight against the spirit the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the eleventh verse But our wrastling is chiefly with the spirits with spiritual wickednesse in heavenly places Ephesians the sixt chapter And what is this enemy the Dragon foolish and weak after his conquest had over finne No he is the old Serpent therefore full of experience These enemies or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephesians the sixt chapter therefore they want no power But are they discouraged upon this overthrow No but he is the more fierce and his wrath kindled knowing his time is but short Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the twelfth verse Then seeing we have such an enemy we must strive rightly if we will be crowned si place at Corona place at studium we must take the more heed to our selves because as Gregory saith Magis est fortis nostrâ negligentiâ quàm 〈◊〉 potentiâ Secondly As we give God thanks that he makes this account of us so are we to thank him that he hath created and commanded such excellent spirits to fight for us and to pray that they which have thus fought for us in Heaven may in earth fight with us to help us that as they have cast him out of Heaven so 〈…〉 come him in earth We are to thank God that we which by our sinnes have made our selves like the beasts that perish 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke the twentieth chapter and to 〈◊〉 that we may drive the Dragon into the bottomlesse 〈◊〉 Thirdly we are to take heed that we provoke not the Angels with our misdeeds Exodus the twenty third chapter and twenty first verse nor alienate them from us with the wicked words of our mouths Ecclesiastes the fift chapter and the fift verse If we suffer our selves to sinne by filthy words and speeches we make them turn their favour from us When we come into the Church we must come with a due regard and reverence propter Angelos the first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter for by rude and uncomely behaviour in the Congregation and by suffering our mouths to utter offensive speeches we offend the Angels and deprive our selves of their favour so as they will not care for our safeguard But if as the Angel tells Danil Daniel the tenth chapter and the twelfth verse We set our hearts to understand and to humble our selves by fasting before God that may draw their affection towards us for repentance is that which doth minister joy to the Angels in Heaven Luke the fifteenth chapter Lastly By this means though we obtain not such a perfect conquest over the Dragon as the Angels did yet we shall attain to the first degree though we cannot drive him out of earth as they did out of Heaven yet we shall obtain thus much That he shall not prevail against us no more than he did against them We see it in Paul though he fought never so much yet he could not avoid it but sinne would dwell in him Romans the seventh chapter but this victory he obtained that it did not reign in his natural body Romans the sixt chapter Though till our corruption be dissolved we shall not drive him out we shall so be armed That he shall not prevail against us We must indeavor our selves that by thankfulnesse to him for vouchsafing to us this help and by intercession to continue the same we may still resist the Dragon not suffering our selves to take the soyl howsoever we cannot utterly drive him out And in this respect when we shall be like the Angels then shall we tread Satan under our feet then shall the Dragon be bound in chains and cast into the bottomlesse pit so shall we have a final conquest over him Now we must labour to 〈◊〉 to the first degree of the Angels victory and so shall we be crowned Quicquid dat mihi Pater ad me veniet eum qui venit ad me nequaquam ejecerim foras John 6. 37. Octob 7. 1559. THE words are Christs and are
both agreeable to the action we have in hand and also a good dependance upon that wherein we have been heretofore conversant But that these words are to be applyed to the holy 〈◊〉 and Sacrament of the Lords Supper appears for that before he calls himself the bread of life verse the thirty fift The bread from Heaven verse the fourty first The living bread verse the fifty first and all along this chapter there is nothing spoken of Christ but as he is the matter of this Sacrament and therefore these words are to be understood of the holy Eucharist And so these words as they yeeld comfort to the commers perswading them that they are of those whom God the Father hath given to Christ so no lesse comfort is reached to them here for that they understand from Christs own mouth That if they come to him they shall not be cast out but received of him so as none shall be able to take them out of his hands John the tenth chapter and the twenty eighth verse On the other side They that come not may know from hence that as they are not in the number of the Fathers Donatives that is such as are given to Christ but are the portion of Satan For they shall be cast out into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Apocalyps the twenty first chapter and the eighth verse And into utter darknesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Matthew the eighth chapter and the twelfth verse Touching the dependance his words have with that part of Scripture which we usually have held when we spake of Cains departure from Gods presence we heard that he did set himself as neer Eden as he could be that he was content for a little trifling pleasure that shortly fadeth to forgoe Gods presence where is pleasure for evermore that for a little worldly gain with Balaam he gives over all godlinesse which is the true gain and that not he but the whole world through ambition as Lords doe seek the worlds honor with the losse of the honor and favour of God Being thus departed from God we heard he came to a Land called Nod that is a Land of unquietnesse and troubles both in respect of the inward disquietness of his soul by continual fear the outward vanities of the whole world where he found that having forsaken God with whom is fulnesse of joy he could not have his desire satisfied by any pleasure that the world could afford But we left not Cain there but heard that the end of that journey was woe as it shall be the end of all those that walk in Cains way Jude the eleventh verse And for that there is none but may fall into the same way it concerns every man to think how being departed from the presence of God he may come back to Christ and especially that he watch his opportunity to come at such a time as Christ will not cast him out And that is taught us here in these words where Christ saith That whosoever commeth to him as he is the bread of life he shall not be cast forth But we must watch this opportunity for there are two wenite's Come to me all ye Matthew the eleventh chapter that have departed from me to receive worldly pleasures and gain The other Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome Matthew the twenty fift chapter and the thirty fourth verse But he that will have his part in this latter venite must have his part also in the first He must come again to Christ by repentance else he cannot come to be partaker of the heavenly Kingdome In these words of Christ we have three persons First Pater dans Secondly Homo veniens Thirdly Christus non ejiciens Whereof the two former parts be the Condition the third person belongeth to the Promise The Condition stands in The Fathers giving and our comming The Promise is Christs not casting out Touching which parts joyntly we are to observe these That every one by experience sindes that the state of sinners live they never so pleasantly is but as Cain called his sonne Chanoch that is a good beginning For the mid'st of that state is unquietnesse and the end everlasting death Which being considered it will make every man willing to come again to God if there be any hope they shall be received In regard of our selves as St Paul speaketh of her that departed from her husband the first cpistle to the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the eleventh verse so it were just that in as much as we have willingly forsaken God and departed from him preserring transitory and earthly delights before his favour he should say Qui discedit discedat that being once gone from him he should not receive usagain But here we are to admire the goodnesse and mercy of God and Christ that instead of a revenger and punisher he is a mercifull receiver that where in Justice Christ might be a rock of offence to such as depart from him he will be a rock of refuge to them that he is so farre from casting out if they come that he is content to seek such as are lost Luke the nineteenth chapter and the tenth verse That he sends and sends again that they should come back Matthew the twenty second chapter That he stands at the dore knocking Apocalyps the third chapter And saith Come to us all ye Matthew the eleventh chapter So there is no doubt but Christ will receive them that come to him For as the ancient Fathers note If when he comes to us we cast not him out neither will he cast us out when we come to him And that no unworthinesse by means of any filth either of body or soul doth keep him from us we see for bodily uncleannesse he was content to be received by Simon the leper Mark the fourteenth chapter and the third verse And in regard of spiritual pollution howsoever a man know himself to be a sinner that is to have an unclean soul yet not to despair because Christ by the confession of his enemies is such a one as doth not only receive sinners but eats with them Luke the fifteenth chapter and the third verse yea he not only 〈◊〉 them that deserve to be cast out as unworthy to inher it s he Kingdom the first epistle to the Corinthians the sixt chapter and the ninth verse but doth also wash sanctifie and justifie them in his 〈◊〉 name and by the spirit of God The Condition on our part was That we come the meaning where of if we look into the ancient Fathers upon the thirty fift verse He that commeth to me is some externall part of Gods worship for so they expound it by the Apostles words Romanes the tenth chapter If thou beleeve in thy heart and confesse with thy mouth for 〈◊〉 eving is the affection of the heart but confession is outward in the conversation of life as some are said to deny God
Father This doth distinguish true Christians from Counterfeits which say I know not whether the Father doe give me to Christ and therefore I will not come but to such Christ answers Matthew the eighteenth chapter and the fourteenth verse Non est volunt as patris 〈…〉 de pusillis illis pereat De pusillis dixit saith Augustine non de 〈◊〉 Christ meaneth not such as are little in respect of the world but but little in their own eyes that are not possessed with a spiritual pride of their own righteousnesse as though they need not now to come another time will serve It was the opinion of 〈◊〉 Acts the twenty fourth chapter When I have convenient leasure I will 〈◊〉 for thee So they think another time will be more fit than the 〈◊〉 oceasion and so Christ must wait upon them they may not wait upon Christ. But as the Pharisees despised the counsel of God and would not be baptized by John Luke the seventh chapter and the thirtieth verse so doe these despise the counsel of Christ against themselves whose purpose happily was even at this time to have received them But because they despised his counsel that happeneth to them which besell Saul whom Samuel tels That if he had kept the Lords commandement he had now established his kingdome for ever upon Israel the first book of Samuel the thirteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse but for that he despised the oportunity now it is removed to another And of them that come it may be they will come but with Cains spirit not caring how or what 〈◊〉 they give to God But they must come as given of the Father and not tanquam ab hominibus 〈◊〉 they may not come like him that sate down at the Marriage without awedding 〈…〉 the twenty second chapter Who so commeth in that 〈◊〉 as he shall not be received for that he is not given of the Father so he shall be 〈◊〉 out into utter darknesse Thirdly The promise is They that come after this manner shall not be cast out Which is set out earnestly by Christ with a 〈◊〉 negation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is never at no hand This 〈…〉 for Christ doth performe it and 〈…〉 when the 〈◊〉 saith 〈◊〉 for sakest not them that seeke 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 the meaning is they not only 〈◊〉 God but with him 〈◊〉 joyes and glory 〈◊〉 So he that comes to Christ is 〈…〉 〈…〉 out but received to be a member of 〈◊〉 my 〈◊〉 body 〈◊〉 partaker of the divine nature the second 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chapter and the fourth verse What is meant by being 〈…〉 appears by the 〈◊〉 out of the dry branch that bringeth forth no 〈◊〉 John the 〈◊〉 chapter which is to be cast 〈◊〉 the fire by the 〈◊〉 that 〈…〉 and is cast out Matthew the fift chapter by the bad fish caught in the net which is cast away Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the fourty eight verse This casting out is a degree to that casting into utter darknesse which Christ speaketh of There is a second for as that is out of the Church as John the ninth chapter and the thirty fourth verse of whom Christ saith Mark the fourth chapter and the eleventh verse but to them which are without the first epistle to the Corinthians the fift chapter and the twelfth verse What have ye to doe with them that are without that is the Heathen And this is nothing but a disposition to the second for as that is to be cast out of the Kingdome of Heaven of which Apocalyps the twenty second chapter and the fifteenth verse for as autem er ant canes and to be cast into the lake that burns with fire and brimstone where their smoak shall ascend for ever where the worm never dyeth and the fire is never quenched where they shall wish for death and death shall flie from them This is the state of them that are cast out But Christ promiseth That who so commeth to him being given shall not be cast out but shall be quit from death and damnation He doth not only receive them and eat with them but receives them into that union that is inter alitum alimentum that is to be one with him which is a greater union than is either between brother and brother or between man and wife for herein is that verified That we are received to be partakers of the Divine nature by partaking whereof he is in us and we in him we and Christ are made one we receive him and he receives us So that as God cannot hate Christ so he cannot but love us being ingraffed into him Thus it comes to passe that we are not cast out but are made partakers of all the good things of Christ who saith to him that comes to him Luke the fifteenth chapter Omnia nostra tua sunt and Matthew the fifteenth chapter Intra in gaudium Domini that is the chief point in this promise As for them that come not to Christ howsoever they deserve to be cast out yet Christ doth not cast them out but they cast out themselves in as much as they sever themselves from this Sacrament which is the holy of holiest and from the memorial of his loving kindness He that commeth not to the Lords Supper sets himself in the state of the Heathen which albeit they have a kinde of prayer and a knowledg no lesse than we yet come not so farre as to celebrate this Sacrament He is in no better state than the Jews and Turks which albeit they beleeve the creation of the world and the last Judgment yet acknowledge not Christ nor come to him tanquam panis vitae But they must come to the Lords Supper if they will be bidden to the Lambs Supper Neither may they defer to come at their own pleasure for it may be now is the time that Christ will receive them and if they neglect the opportunity they shall be cast out as Saul was in the first book of Samuel the thirteenth chapter It remains that we stirre up in ourselves a willingnesse to come For to come is a voluntary action as Christ tells us John the fift chapter Vos non vultis venire adme nam qui venit ideò venit quia voluit venire unlesse we be as willing to come as Christ is to receive all is nothing Matthew the twenty third chapter and thirty seventh verse Quoties volui noluistis How often would I have gathered thy children together even as a Hen gathereth her chickens under her wings and ye would not Therefore we must beware of removing this willingnesse from our selves To this end we must continually pray that Christ will work in us this willingnesse that the Father will draw us by his spirit and say with Peter Matthew the fourteenth chapter and the twenty eight verse Domine mitte me ad te venire let me be in numero pusillorum non timentium one of those little ones that
Except a man be born again of water 〈◊〉 John the sixt chapter unlesse ye eate the flesh and drink the blood of Christ ye have no life in you 〈◊〉 these conditions and for these uses are we commanded to drink of the same spirit If we drink the blood of Christ we shall drink the spirit of life which it gives and so shall we live by him John the sixt chapter and the fifty seventh verse Christ shall live in us 〈◊〉 the second chapter There are that doe not potare in eundem spiritum Water of it self is not able to purge from original corruption without the spirit and Potus vappa sine spiritu The flesh 〈◊〉 nothing it is the spirit that gives life John the sixt chapter The word it self preached 〈◊〉 not unlesse God giveth increase the first epistle to the 〈◊〉 the third chapter nay this spiritual food kills some for they eat and drink their own damnation the first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter Therefore if we will drink the spirit it is required First That he thirst after spiritual things no lesse than after worldly things John the seventh chapter Si quis sitit ad me veniat bibat vers the thirty seventh Secondly He must pray for the spirit 〈◊〉 God giveth his spirit to them that ask it Lake the eleventh chapter So while Jesus was baptized and prayed the Heavens opened and the holy Ghost came down upon him Luke the third chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse We must both 〈◊〉 after the spirit and pray for it else we cannot have it But if we come non sitientes omnino without any sense of our own want or come only with a form of Godlinesse the second epistle to Timothy the third chapter and the fift verse we may drink the outward object but not the spirit for they that come thus pray not to God to be made partakers of the spirit as of the object And to this we may add as a reason of our unprofitable drinking how can we 〈◊〉 the spirit seeing we sow only to the flesh Galatians the 〈◊〉 chapter In as much as we sow no spiritual works we cannot be partakers of the spirit These are the means to obtain the spirit Then when we have drunk we must examine our selves whether we have drunk the spirit which we shall know thus A drink and potion is either for recovery of health or for comfort or refreshing If we finde that the blood of Christ hath purged our consciences from dead works Hebrews the ninth chapter and that we mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit Romans the eighth chapter then have we drunk of the same spirit If we 〈◊〉 the power of sinne abated in 〈◊〉 and the will of sinne by this Sacrament then have we drunk the spirit Secondly For refreshing which is the other use of drinking as Psalm the seventy eighth and the sixty fift verse The Lord arose out of sleep as a 〈◊〉 refreshed with wine there comes courage to a man by drinking of the spirit so as he hath a desire to spiritual drink Ephesians the fift chapter Be not drunk with wine but be filled with the spirit Now they call the holy Ghost new wine Acts the second chapter these men are filled with new wine For indeed as the one so the other gives greater alacrity and cheerfulnesse In respect of these two effects it is termed the holy spirit of God and therefore First He that having drunk findes in his soul a comfortable anointment the first epistle of John the second chapter the seal of the spirit Ephesians the first chapter and the thirteenth verse and the earnest the second epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter and the twentieth verse he hath a signe that he hath drunk the spirit But these sensualiter are not enough they may deceive us there were that eat and drank in Christs presence but he told them I know you not Luke the thirteenth chapter Therefore to the comfort of the spirit we must add the holy spirit and see what operation he hath we must see if we can finde sanctificationis spiritum the second epistle to the Thessalonians the second chapter and the fruits of the spirit wrought in us after we have drunk Galatians the fift chapter and the twenty second verse whether we be transformed by the same spirit the second to the Corinthians the third chapter Thus we see the Apostle in this place against the spirit that lusteth after envy and contention James the fourth chapter useth the Sacrament of unity to perswade men to unity and love and against the unclean spirit he useth the Sacrament of cleannesse as in the first epistle to the Corinthians the sixt chapter Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot By the effects that the spirit worketh in us we may know whether we have the spirit for we are not only made partakers of Christs body in Baptism but of the spirit in the Lords Supper If we cleave to the Lord Christ we are made one spirit the first epistle to the 〈◊〉 the sixt chapter Whereupon this ensueth That as he and his Father are one so are we one with Christ and consequently being one with him we can want no happinesse for his will is That we should be with him where he is and behold his glory John the seventeenth chapter and the twenty fourth verse Ex eo quòd maxima illa nobis ac pretiosa promissa donavit c. 2 Pet. 1. 4. A Scripture applyed to this time wherein we solemnize the memory of his taking of our nature as we have here a promise of being partakers of his and it conteins as all other Scriptures of comfort a Covenant between God and us That which is performed on Gods part is That he hath made us most great and pretious promises The condition on our partie is That we eschue the corruption that is in the world through lust In the former part there is a thing freely bestowed on us Secondly That is a promise Thirdly The promise is That we shall be partakers of the divine nature Concerning which A promise being once past is no more a free thing but becomes a debt and in justice is to be performed in which respect the Apostle saith in the second epistle to Timothy the fourth chapter There is laid up for me a crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the just judge shall render to me and hence the Prophet is bold to challenge God with his promise Psalme the hundred and nineteenth Perform thy promise wherein thou hast caused me to put my trust and therefore Augustine saith Redde quod non accepisti sed quod premisisti Promises doe affect two wayes because they stand upon two points First The party promising Secondly The thing promised If it were the promise of a man it were to be doubred of for all men are lyars Psalm the hundred and sixteenth They
sides Matthew the fourteenth chapter and the thirty first verse so Modica virtus Apocalyps the third chapter and the eighth verse Where there is great faith there is great virtue where no faith no virtue As it is no true faith which virtue doth not follow so no true virtue which faith doth not goe before It is called Grace in respect of God from whom it comes and virtue in regard of the effects The Philosopher called them habitus because they had them from themselves but virtus est 〈…〉 Domino virtutis to salve the error of the Philosophers The Apostle calls it Grace in the second epistle of Peter the third chapter and the eighteenth verse grow in grace so he calls it virtus He hath called us to glory and virtue in the second epistle of Peter the first chapter and the third verse and Philippians the fourth chapter and the eighth verse It is by good consequence that it is so called because it is wrought by the Gospel which is the power of God Romans the first chapter and the sixteenth verse His words are spirit and life John the sixt chapter Virtue must bring forth virtus The Philosophers Virtue had no divine thing in it they enured themselves to it and so ascribed it to themselves Our virtue proceedeth from faith which is a divine thing Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Romans the fourteenth chapter But the Heathen called their virtues habits as from themselves not from the grace of God To Virtue Knowledge He began with Faith a theological virtue then he added Virtue which is moral now he comes to Knowledge another theological virtue By this successive coupling we are taught not to stay at virtue but to proceed de virtute in virtute Psalm the eighty fourth and the seventh verse from strength to strength As before against infirmity and weaknesse of our nature he added virtue So for our error and ignorance he joyneth knowledge for there may be an active power to work and yet not aright as Romans the tenth chapter the second verse They have zeal but not according to knowledge But there must be not only power but wisdome not only homines improbi shall be cast out but foolish vigins Matthew the twenty fift chapter As virtue is required so is knowledge to direct us in that we doe We must seek for Non tam virtutem quam aurigam virtutis scientiam sine quâ ipsa virtus est vitium therefore Proverbs the twenty third chapter and the fourth verse Cease from thy wisdome And in Ecclefiastes the seventh chapter Be not nimium just us Knowledge is a key Luke the eleventh chapter and the fifty second verse And a Quire must have a key to set the song that is the key of knowledge In the Law nothing was to be offered without salt that is the grace of knowledge It is that which the Apostle calleth the inward annointing in the first epistle of John the second chapter and the twentieth verse which gives a sweet savour and sent to God So saith the Apostle in the second epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter We are a sweet savour to God But is not faith knowledge It is But yet where the object of faith is verum falsum Science hath for its object good and evil as Genesis the second chapter and the ninth verse the passions of Christ and the torments of Hell are indifferently the objects of faith but the affections are stirred by good and ill And it is knowledge that must discern between good and ill evil things may goe under the shew of good and therefore we must have knowledge to unmask them So the doctrin of repentance being a good thing hath a shew of ill and without the grace of knowledge men are hardly brought to beleeve it As there is prudentia carnis Romans the eighth chapter and the sixth verse and prudentia seculi in the 〈◊〉 epistle to the Corinthians the third chapter and the nineteenth verse so there must be a spiritual knowledge and wisdome to discern them and to measure what is good That all which we doe teach may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and all you doe may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the twelfth chapter we must add this knowledge Knowledge is lame without power and power is blinde without knowledge for knowledge is the lightning of the eyes of the minde the second epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter There is a knowledge falsly so called the first epistle of Timothy the sixt chapter and the twentieth verse The knowledge truly so called is not speculative but practique It is the knowledge from on high that directs our feet in the way of peace as Luke the first chapter and the seventy ninth verse And not only that which lightens our eyes Physitians of longest practise and Souldiers that have been trained are most respected so it is in worldly things and so it should be in divine things A man must animare praxin that was the advise of the Civilian give a soul to it as in the thirty third chapter of Deuteronomie and the eighth verse first Thummim and then Urim Jesus began to doe and teach Acts the first chapter and the first verse that is the touchstone of knowledg as Christ saith If any man will doe his will he shall know of his doctrine qui fecerit voluntatem Patris sciet de doctrina utrum sit ex Dec John the seventh chapter and the seventeenth verse for there are some that are alwayes learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth especially that knowledge that may be truly so called in the second to Timothy and the third chapter Scientiae verò continentiam continentiae verò tolerentiam 2 Pet. 1. 6. THE Apostle proceedeth now to the fourth voice of this quire having laid faith for the first and to it added that which the Apostle calls the work of faith in virtue in the second to the Thessalonians the first chapter and the eleventh verse and thirdly To virtue knowledge now in the fourth place he joyneth to it temperance It is the common course of the world so soon as they have a little taste of knowledge to ascend up to heaven but he tells us knowledge must goe down to our fouls and then proceed to godliness which we are taught in our conformity to our Saviours example of whom the Apostle saith Ephesians the fourth chapter and the ninth verse He that ascended the same is he that descended first The chief point of our duty is first to temper our affections and then to come to godliness after For the justifying of 〈◊〉 order in respect of the consequence this hath with the former there are three causes why he bringeth in temperance next after knowledge The first is because whereas corruption is in the world through 〈◊〉 verse the first and Ephesians the fourth chapter The
because he of all others began with the beginning of all John the first chapter This order we see he took of Moses who first telleth of things past from the Creation till his death and foretelleth of things which were to come to passe in the latter end and which the new Testament doth say is fulfilled The knowledge of both these things past and to come God promised to shew to his Church and after it must we seek Isaiah the fourty first chapter and the twenty second verse and these secrets are no where so fully shewed as by Moses in this book If then we intend to get knowledge and with that key to open Heaven dores and to see the glorious Majestie of God let us take this book in hand which hath in it both leaves at large both the knowledge of the Creation of all Gods works and the knowledge of the wisdome and the true word of God But some may demand What will become of Christ and of his Gospel all this while that we are meditating of Moses and Gods works I answer That if Moses did not testifie and teach us of Christ we would account the time lost which we spend in reading him Philippians the third chapter and the eighth verse and we would leave Moses learning that we might only finde Christ. But St. Paul doth assure us Acts the third chapter and the eighteenth verse that all the Prophets from the beginning of the world did speak of him and among all the Prophets it is said We have found him of whom Moses spake John the first chapter and the fourty fift verse even Jesus the sonne of Joseph And more plainly Christ saith John the fift chapter and the fourty sixth verse Moses doth write and testifie of me And this we shall see plainly in all his books to be true both in evident and direct Prophesies and also in dark and mysticall types and figures The second question is touching Moses himself How he being but a man could come to the knowledge of such secret things which were hidden from other natural men besides being supernatural and beyond mens reach I answer As we cannot have knowledg of a strange Country where we never were but by report or by Letter or relation sent from some which dwell therein so we can have no notice or certain knowledge of God and his kingdome unlesse God first by his letter written make relation thereof to us Has quidem literas dedit Deus Moses attulit God was the writer Moses the Messenger of these holy Writts many things no doubt were taught by instruction and received by tradition from the Patriarchs before as wee see in the fift chapter of Genesis and the twenty ninth verse for so Lamech knew from his fathers that the Earth was accursed by God as it is in the eighteenth chapter of Genesis and the twenty seventh verse Abraham knew from his Ancestors that he was made of dust and ashes Adam leaving it to his posterity as Abraham did teach his family that God revealed to him Genesis the eighteenth chapter and the ninteenth verse But though many things came to knowledge by this meanes yet de eo tempore scribere de quo non erat is a strange matter some may say but wee answer that this was done either knowing it by that pattern which hee saw in the Mount or else by the voice and spirit of God speaking and talking with him to teach him the so things that is hee must needs come by it by the Eye that is by vision or else by the Eare that is by Revelation For as all Scriptures came by inspiration the first of Peter and the first chapter so 〈◊〉 this booke of Moses who writ it not of his own privat motion but by the heavenly direction of the spirit of God And therefore Moses might say as Daniel did Daniel the second chapter and the twenty eighth verse It is not I that can reveal secrets but there is a God of Heaven which declareth them Moses was but the pen of that God did speak If any then shall move that question Matthew the twenty first chapter and the twenty fift verse The Doctrine of Moses whether it is from Heaven or of men We answer That it is of God and from Heaven 〈…〉 hereby appear because he was so publickly and manifestly 〈◊〉 with God and had often and long company and conference with him all Israel seeing him to goe up to the Lord. If any object that Heathens have pretended as much of their Laws and 〈◊〉 they have delivered Moses is able to 〈◊〉 him self from 〈…〉 because this thing was not done in a 〈◊〉 but in the view and before the face of all Israel and that not in a Cave or Den as they but in the top of Mount 〈◊〉 which made that 〈◊〉 of all Israel 〈◊〉 his time ever made any doubt or question 〈◊〉 but still 〈◊〉 him the servant of God 〈…〉 he called them 〈◊〉 and rebellious men Deuteronomie the ninth chapter and the ninth verse And as none durst call his truth in question so they which resisted as Korah and Dathan did were grievously punished by the hand of God And so were Appian and Julian plagued for their blasphemy which scoff and deride these holy Books For so saith Moses to his accusers Numbers the sixteenth chapter the twenty eigth and twenty ninth verses Hereby ye shall know that the Lord hath sent me to speak these words if these dye not the death of all men c. Another reason to prove that his writings came from Heaven is his Rod and the miracles which God caused him to doe to confirm these things which he spake and wrote which miracles even the Heathen Chronicles doe confesse to this day Last of all Mens writings and books savour of passions and imperfections incident to men Moses is not of self-love partial to himself nor vain-glorious seeking any praise For in his writing he spareth not his own Father Exodus the thirty second chapter and the twenty seventh verse he spareth not Idolatry in his brother nor his sister Cozbies fault no nor his own fault of unbelief for which he confesseth that he could not enter into the promised Land Deuteronomie the thirty second chapter Seeing then all that is of the flesh and earth is flesh and savoureth earthly things this sheweth that Moses writing came from Gods spirit For Moses in all the warres he waged and in all the Laws he wrote he never ascribeth any thing but to the glory of God which gave them by his means exhorting to nothing but this That by holy obedience we should seek his praise The conclusion therefore must be this That seeing it is the infallible word of God sent from Heaven and not invented by men Why doe we not then with all reverence hear him and with all diligence beleeve him as a Prophet sent from God especially seeing it is threatned concerning him by name That whosoever
verse they say Angells were created yesterday as it were the next day before after David saith in the hundred fourty eighth Psalm and the second verse Praise ye him in the high places he saith first Praise him all his Angells In six dayes the Lord made the Heaven and the Earth and all that in them are in making Heaven he made all things as Angels in the Heaven Exodus the twentieth chapter As Hell hath been prepared of old so the Devill hath been a murtherer from the beginning John the eighth chapter and the fourty fourth verse It hath been questioned whether the fall of Angels was the first or second day Secondly They say there is no mention made of goodnesse because division was in the second day and therefore no goodnesse but notwithstanding the division there is a union In the dayes of Peleg the earth was divided the tenth chapter and the twenty fift verse At the building of Babel was the division of tongues which was confusion the eleventh chapter and the ninth verse This division of the second day is of things of diverse natures therefore good Likewise they say there is no mention of good because that was made that day namely the divided waters the upper and nether waters were the deluge and destruction of the world afterward But by them he punished mans wickednesse and the worlds sinfulnesse but to give to give to each his reward and desert to the godly glory to the wicked punishment this his Justice is full of Goodnesse Num 〈…〉 is Inf●…stis say the Papists yet Matrimonium eft binorum So litarinesse is not good which God perceiving he made to man an helper the twenty eighth verse of the next chapter We say in a Proverb Sec●… omnia sunt prospera yet it was said dies secund●… was inf●…stus But it was Jeroms blemish who is not to be excused for who is blamelesse for he that first devised that opinion did first strangle it Division signifieth as well conformity as confusion and where reward is for desert that is good All that God made was very good the thirty first verse of this chapter The action of goodnesse is suspended the number is suspended till both be perfected which is after in the third day in the which day you shall finde goodnesse twice when the second day as the Se● was perfected the day was p●…ed but the work was ended This I doe take in the course of 〈◊〉 reason Et fuit ita Nam produxit terra herbulas herbas sementantes semen in species suas arbores edentes fructum in quibus semen suum est in species suas vidit Deus id esse bonum Sic fuit vespera fuit mane diei tertii Gen. 1. 11.12.13 Place this in pag 72 after the Sermon upon Gen. 1. 11 WE have heard of Gods Decree commanding and the returne executing it and his censure approving that is made which in every dayes work is set down in these three phrases fiat erat sic bonum erat Of this third dayes work we have handled before we have heard the first part namely Gods word commanding the Earth to bud forth hearbs and seeds and trees c. now it remaineth to speak of the other two And first of the return and execution And it was so For the Earth according to every 〈◊〉 and title of Gods word fulfilled Gods will and brought forth all sorts of hearbs and trees and buds and fruits and seeds leaving nothing undone which was commanded Touching which besides the obedience of this Element in executing Gods Decree we note a special Certificate under Gods hand as it were for the discharge of this Creature in the dispatch of his work and that without delay with all haste and speed Which reproveth not only our disobedience to God but also our dulnesse and slownesse in doing any thing which God commands For with us it is one thing to doe a thing and another to doe it willingly and quickly with expedition and speed For when God doth command any thing we put it off with this delay erit sic it shall be so hereafter when we can finde leisure and fit time It can seldom be said in the present tense erat sic it was performed without delay For we are as Salomons debtors which bid God stay till tomorrow or the next day Proverbs the third chapter before he can finde leisure to pay this debt and duty of obedience Secondly In that the return in the end of the eleventh verse was erat sic it was so two things are to be noted out of the nature of the word First a congruity of the performance answerable to the commandement in every point for here is specified just so much done as was required nothing too much or too little to teach us that our obedience must be such We must not deficere in necessariis nec abundare in superfluis The other point is for continuance or perpetuity for the word signifieth that it was so surely and firmly done as if it had a sure basis or foundation for continuance that it might never fail we see it holdeth and endureth ad hunc usque diem our eyes and experience seeing that it is 〈◊〉 The last thing we gather by opposition That Gods word was the cause and is that hearbs and trees doe bear fruits and trees So è contra it is the same word of God saying Let not the Earth nor the trees bear which is the cause of 〈◊〉 and want If for our sinne they fail any year ab ejus 〈…〉 interdicto 〈◊〉 If therefore we disobey Gods 〈…〉 be our punishment That his word shall 〈◊〉 the Earth to 〈◊〉 encrease and to deny us his fruits The second part is the censure and approbation of God saying that it was good I said before there are 〈◊〉 sorts of good 〈◊〉 honestum secondly utile thirdly 〈◊〉 each of which we shall see in the earth and the fruits thereof For honesty and moral good we see it is gratefull to the owner or 〈◊〉 which laboureth therein faithfully and gratefully repaying and requiting his 〈◊〉 and labour thereon For profit it veeldeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both for man and beast and so necessarily good is it in this 〈◊〉 that without it the King cannot live Ecclesiastes the fift chapter and the eighth verse For pleasure and delight either of the eye to behold it or of the taste to relieve it it is most delicious and delightfull Milk Wine and Oyle Wheat and all other grain which are both for variety and necessity we receive by Gods 〈◊〉 from the fruit and increase of the earth and trees And therefore is every way good Postea dixit Deus Abundè progignunto aquae reptilia animantia volucres volanto supra terram superficiem versus expansi Coelorum Gen 1. 20. Place this in the beginning of pag. 84. THIS verse and the three following 〈◊〉 contain in them the first dayes work by which both the
called a Serpent of creeping but other beasts though they have their brests between their leggs yet they doe not creep as the Serpent doth Another question is How this creeping can be a punishment to the Serpent seeing from the beginning they were created without feet The solution is That that which was natural before the fall after the fall became a punishment Nakednesse before the fall was no matter of shame for The man and his wife were naked and were not ashamed Genesis the second chapter and the twenty fift verse but since the fall it is a disgrace to be naked So now the creeping of Serpents is a signe of Gods 〈◊〉 inflicted upon visible Serpents because of the sinnes of him that is invisible whereas in the beginning it was no punishment Another question is How the third part of this Sentence is verified of the visible Serpent That he eats dust For one Prophet saith of him To the Serpent dust shall be his meat Isaiah the sixty fift chapter and the twenty fift verse And another saith The Serpent lick the dust Michah the seventh chapter and the seventeenth verse and yet in the Creation Moses recordeth that the Serpent hath the like food that other Creatures have of whom God saith To every beast of the earth fowl of the aire and to every creeping thing upon earth I have given every green hearb for meat Genesis the first chapter and the tenth verse The answer is That whereas at the first the Serpent had food in common with other beasts now he is excommunicated and is appointed only to feed upon the dust not upon the earth for that hath a moisture and so is apt to nourish but God did not allot unto him so much but only to feed upon the dust which is dry and altogether without moisture So that all men may evidently see both by the motion and feeding of the Serpent that the Curse of God is upon him because the Devil that old Serpent did use him as a means to perswade man to sinne against God As for the invisible Serpent these punishments pronounced by God are verified in him also but not literally for he hath no 〈◊〉 of body and therefore cannot creep but as he is a spirit so we must judge and discern spiritual things spiritually the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter for he hath a spiritual brest and belly he hath a spiritual creeping and feeding For his moving we are first to consider the motion as it offereth it self First It is the basest and vilest motion that is to signifie unto us that the dejection of the Devil is a more 〈◊〉 dejection and overthrow than any can be For where at the first he was an Angel of light appointed to be a Minister in Heaven now he is cast down into the deepest Hell and is there occupied in all base and vile service Now he doth busie himself in nothing so much as how to work wickednesse and to destroy the souls of men Of this dejection our Saviour speaks I saw Satan as it were lightning fall down from Heaven Luke the tenth chapter and the eighteenth verse And of him to his shame it is said How art thou fallen from Heaven that said I will ascend into Heaven and exalt my throne above the starres of God Isaiah the fourteenth chapter and the twelfth verse For it is a great shame for a Prince and noble person that hath been occupied in matters of State to be thrust into the Kitchen to be a drudge So is it with the Devil the invisible Serpent who having been before a Minister in Heaven doth now creep upon earth and compasse it Job the first chapter And as Christ saith He walks through dry places Luke the eleventh chapter and the twenty fourth verse that is he delights to be in souls that are defiled with all manner of sinne and if he cannot be received there he will enter into the Swine Matthew the eighth chapter And then doth he creep when he makes men to minde earthly things Philippians the third chapter and the second verse As this word sheweth that the reward of pride is and shall be basenesse so from his creeping we are taught what is his fraud and deceitfulnesse These things that have feet and goe cannot move without some noyse but the way of the 〈◊〉 doth passe mans understanding for that it leaveth no impression Proverbs the thirtieth chapter In this sense the Apostle saith Some false brethren have crept in Galatians the second chapter and the fourth verse and these creep into widows houses the second epistle to Timothy the third chapter This kinde of creeping is nothing else but a privy kinde of beguiling and deceiving such as we finde to have been used by the Devill the second epistle to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter Therefore we must have a special regard of the Devil when he comes to us in this manner for then is he more to be feared than when he seeks about like a roaring Lyon whom to devour the first epistle of Peter the fift chapter and the third verse The Devil is said to creep to signifie thus much That as creeping things doe not fly about our heads nor keep even pase with us so the old Serpent is alwaies aiming at our lowest part as it were at the heel tempting us by sensuality to the sinne of uncleannesse and intemperance Secondly We are to consider the manner of this motion which is expressed by the original word to be upon the brest and belly whereby we have shewed to us two main 〈◊〉 For when he creeps upon his brest by the listing up of himself he brings the temptation of the brest that is he would have us 〈◊〉 up with pride and exalt our selves When he creeps upon his belly he tempts us to desire the forbidden fruit and apple that was so goodly and pleasant to look upon and under this is comprehended both the sinnes of 〈◊〉 and lust In this manner we are to observe the means whereby he perswades men to these sinnes In the breast is the heart and when he labours to take the possession of the heart by corrupting our inward thoughts then he creeps upon his brest And his creeping upon his 〈◊〉 betokens the actual accomplishment of sinne So we see that albeit the Devil be a spirit yet by a spiritual analogie he creeps upon his breast and belly no lesse than the visile Serpent Thirdly After the casting down of Pride we come to consider the sinne of Lust and the punishment laid upon it which is To eate the dust The invisible Serpent doth not eate only corporally but spiritually he may be said to eate for in spiritual matters there is a thing answerable to eating We say in regard of the delight we take in somthing this is meat and drink to us And so the Holy Ghost also speaks I esteem of thy word above my appointed food Job the twenty third chapter
an instant the world must needs bee by fatall destiny and necessity and might not bee otherwise Epicuremum The other were the Epicures which taught The world was a thing made at a venture by casual chance and happy hazard by a divine essence the one taught that God could doe no otherwise then but make it the other thought that God did hee could not tell what But Psal. 115. 3. Deus fecit quecunque voluit in Coelo Terra And Revel 4. 11. All things were made for him and by his will And Esai 45. 18. God made not Heaven and Earth in vain to no end but the word fignifieth that hee made it with Wisdome and Counsell Esai 43. 13. God was before any day was and hee asketh Who could constrain him by necessity to make it or not to make it Heb. 3. 4. If a man being in a strange Country shall see a house hee will certainly affirm that there hath a man builded it that it is a mans worke so saith hee when wee see all Creatures Heaven and Earth wee know that God made them all A reason against that opinion of Fortune is this That things done by Chance are without cunning But God with infinite wisdome devised all things the Eye to see Colors to bee seen and the Light as the meanes by which wee see also all things are in such wonderfull order succeeding one another in their course as the seasons of things which shew them not to bee by Chance therefore the Philosophers were glad when they found out that 〈◊〉 intelligentia that was the cause of all so that they confesse all things to bee made by a wonderfull wise Counsell and discourse of an understanding minde So that it was made by another not by Necessity nor Chance Creavit Coelum Terram omnia in illis Gen. 1. vers 1. NOw are wee come to the fourth and last point which wee are to consider in this verse and that is That the things which were Created by God are both Heaven and Earth which here is said to bee his workmanship Which though it be here set downe in two generall things yet are his works manifold yea infinite and cannot be numbred All which Creatures and things Created cannot bee better expressed then in these two which contain all the rest for hee so faith Exod. 20. 11. In six dayes hee made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that is therein So doth David expound his meaning Psal. 146.6 and Revel 10. 6. therefore Job saith 38. 6 7. That God made not only the Starres with the Heavens but also the Angels or Children of God which are in them and Psal. 24. 1. God when hee is said to make the round World he meaneth also all that dwell therein that is Man also yea hee is also the Lord and Creator of the Soules and Spirits of all Flesh as well as their bodies Numb 27. 16. So that to conclude with Saint Paul by these two is understood and comprehended all the Creatures visible and invisible which God made Coll. 1. 16. For the Heavens are the bound upward and the Earth is the bound below which conclude all between them Let us therefore first consider these two joyntly then in the order wherein they stand and in the last place severally Touching the first David saith Psal. 102. 25. Thou Lord in the beginning hast laid the foundations of the Earth and the Heavens are the worke of thy hands Esay 40. 12. It is God that made Heaven and Earth Job 37. 17. 18. Job 38. 5 6. The Heavens doe shew this in that they resemble their Creator because they are moveable and yet subject to alteration and the Earth unmoveable and not subject to motion 2. Point Moses meaning is That not the Earth alone was made by God but also the Heavens that is both of them and all in both were his worke not the Earth only but also the Heavens against the Philosophers which thinke therfore that the Heavens were not made because none can assigne the point where the Heavens began nor in what part God began to make them nor where the Heavens first began to move by which reason they might hold that the heart of man was not made because none can tell how it began its motion to pant and beat whether by sustole or diastole but as the heart was made though unknown where the first motion of it is so were the Heavens That hee made not the Heavens only but also the Earth below against the errors of the Manichees which hold that there were two causes of Heaven and Earth That the good and white God made the Heaven and Man from the middle upward And the black and evill god was the efficient cause of the Earth and of Man from the middle downward but as Gods power and wisedome is shewed and seen as well in an Ant as in an Elephant as one saith as well in the creeping Wormes and basest Creatures as in the Angels and most excellent Creatures So doth his Majesty and Might appeare in the Earth as well as in Heaven 3 Point Now in regard of the order here set downe wee have a consideration first of the Heavens for if there were any Order observed in Gods Creation surely the Heavens were made in the first place which sheweth the glory of the Creator for who ever in building his house would or could begin it at the Roofe first and then afterwards lay the Foundation of the Earth but his omnipotency is such that hee beginneth to make his house from the Roofe downeward as wee see in the second and third verses And this is strange saith Job 26. 7. That hee hath made the Heavens turn round like a wheele without an axeltree and that hee hath caused the Earth to hang and stand without any prop to uphold it When wee therefore consider the Heavens and Earth the worke of thy hands wee must needes know that the corners of the Earth are upholden by his hand 4 Point Let us consider them severally and apart in which wee must regard them after three sorts 1. First in respect of God as they are compared with him 2. Secondly as they are compared to themselves 3. Thirdly comparing them to us 1. Esay 66. 1. Comparing them with God Heaven was made to bee his Seate and Earth to be his Foot-stoole 2. In respect of themselves Heaven was made as the male part of the World by whose influence motion and dewes the Earth as the female part should as it were out of her womb bring forth all living and necessary things Hermes the AEgyptian the Persian wife men and Orpheus the Grecian appoint these two as the matter of all things that are 3. In regard of us our selves Heaven and Earth are the meanes of our moving and rest for the motion of the Heavens is the beginning of our bodily motion and the unmoveable Earth is
teach us that he is our per quem and must be our propter quem in all our actions therefore as it is he per quem sumus so we must make here his glorie and praise the end of all our thoughts words actions or devises whatsoever Psal. 96. 5. Elohim is said to make all and therefore we must with praise tell it out among the Heathen So there we are taught to remember him in our youth as our Creator to knit our selves and our wills to him as our Governor and in trembling to fear him as our Judge for he commeth to judge the world in truth Psal. 96. 13. for if we shall amend our lives we shall rejoyce and wish for his comming as we rejoyce and praise him for our making and this is the perfection of a Christian man contremiscere when we think how wonderfully God hath made us and with joy and gladness say with David Psal. 119. 52. I remembred thy judgements of old and received comfort and as we know that in him and by him we live move and have our being Acts 17. 28. so we must live move and breath only for him that is so farre forth as may make for his glorie that at last we may with joy commend our souls to him as to a faithfull Creator 1 Pet. 4. vers 19. 4 Point The fourth point was the things made namely Heaven and Earth which comprehended all in them that one being the upper bound above and the other below between both which are all The use is that if we look upward we see Heaven if we cast our eyes down the earth will be seen for our eyes and light are given to see both which two if we ask them they will tell us Job 12. 7. If we will not ask them yet they will preach and declare Gods glorie Psal. 19. 1. that not once a week but night and day not for an hour in the night or day but continually though their preaching doe not trouble our ears being dumb yet they cry aloud and though they speak not English yet their voyce is intelligible to all Nations and Languages in the world wherefore seeing they still cry aloud and tell us of the Creator that he made all these for us it is required of us that we be ready with our tribute and homage which is to yeild due and continuall praise and thanksgiving to God for them for heaven and Earth have a fellow feeling of the good and evill which either we doe or God doth for us Esay 39. 1. and they rejoyce with us when we doe or have any good done to us And so when we offend God in paying our duty Jer. 2. 12. then it is enough to make heaven and earth stand still and be amazed and astonished at it because we forget God and our duty Thus doth our sinne and ungratefullness overthrow and prevent and stain the whole course and order of Nature Jer. 12. 4. so there is a concurrent of them with us in honoring serving and praising the Creator both of them and us Therefore it is our duty and part to give heedfull care to those preachers which preach God without the Church alwayes in silence and so give our duty and tribute to serve and praise God with them amongst his Saints here that we may be glorified with them in Heaven that we may praise and magnifie him with his Creatures in earth that we may be glorified with his Saints in Heaven quod faciat Deus per Christam Terra autem erat res informis inanis tenebraeque erant in superficie abyssi Gen. 1. 2. verse THE former verse was delivered to us an abstract of the whole work of Gods Creation now lest we should think that when he mentioned Heaven and Earth before he should mean that all things in Heaven and Earth were made in the very moment of the beginning even as we see them now therefore Moses 〈◊〉 haste to tell us that though at the beginning and first moment God made quecunque nunc sunt yet he made them not qualia nunc sunt but did that in six distinctions of severall times It had been as easie to him to have created all things even in the perfection and order they are in a moment and instant and in that beautifull form in which they present themselves now to our eyes But it pleased God though in power he could doc it yet in wisdome to proceed after these three degrees mentioned before First to create the beginning both of all times and of all things as the matter and beginning of all superior bodies and the beginning of all inferior bodies of nothing After the work of creation followeth the work of distinction from this 2. verse to the 11. And lastly ensueth the work of persection with beauty to adorn all his works and to finish them which is from the 11 verse to the 16. It pleased God thus to proceed in this work as well that he might shew himself to be the God of order as also to discover to us the mysterie of the Trinity in the three properties of the three persons which appear in the Creation For all was made by his Power which is the property of God the Father By his Wisedome which is the property of God the Sonne by which all things were orderly disposed and distinguished And by the riches of his Goodness which is the property of the holy Ghost by which all things were adorned and made perfect these three properties are remembred in the Revel 5. 12. and Acts 17. 28. We live by his power we and all things move in this order by his wisdome and we have this our being by his grace and goodness by his power we are taught to acknowledge him to be our beginning and originall ex quo sumus by his wisdome we acknowledge him to be the upholder per quem sumus by his goodness we confess him to be the Chief propter quod sumus For considering his goodness we and all Creatures must endeavor to doe all that we can for him and his praise and honour All which three are plainly and orderly set in the 11. Rom. 36. God also took this orderly proceeding partly that we entring into the meditation of Gods works might by this means have as it were a thread to direct us orderly therein for by this means we come to know this difference between Creatum ordinatum ornatum esse as the Hebrews say by this means we shall know not only the beginning and being of all things but also how orderly and excellently all things were made in this Creation And thus much of the reasons of this course of Gods proceeding in this work Moses having therefore in the first verse set down the materials of the World and all in them now to the 11. verse he sheweth the work of distinction And after the work of adorning and perfecting all But first of all he handleth
as molten glasse Job 37. 18. and they shall dissolve and melt again in the last day 2 Pet. 3. 10 11 12. so that in this depth of water is conteined the matter whereof the high heavens were made St. Austine calleth it inordinatum mensitatem aquarum that is a disordered for they had no limit or bound nor any order or course in them they were without any shore Psal. 104. 6 9. for they were above the mountains and prevailed over all untill God did limit them and set them their bounds Pro. 8. 27. which they should not passe to cover the earth yea and also God limitted the upper waters and bounded them in Clouds Job 26. 8. so that the Clouds break not he also made doors and barrs for the Sea below Job 38. 10 11. and said thus farre you shall come and no further Touching their first disorderly motion it is set down Psal 93. 3 4. the flood did rage horribly and they did lift up their waves but now God hath set them a most orderly and profitable and necessary course eundo redeundo Psal. 104. 10. of ebbing and flowing by course and recourse of times and tides These deeps had a face nay as the word signifieth it had two faces in which the Philosophers doe easily consent and agree with him for all know that this globe hath a double hemisphere yea one half sphere is the upper face of the earth and the other is the nether face of the earth now he telleth us that then the darknesse was over both faces of the earth and waters and not as it is now for when it is dark night with us it is bright day with the Antipodes which are as the nether face of the earth but then it convered all with obscure darknesse 3. Thirdly As for darknesse we are not to conceive any otherwise of it then to be only a privation defect and absence of light which then wanted for as one faith tenebrae erant id 〈◊〉 non erat lux So that by the negative he sheweth that there was a privation of light not that this privation followed the habite as if there had been light but that the darknesse was first over all before there was any light made 45 Esay 7. it was said that God created darknesse but that was by denying unto things light for herein appeared Gods power in that as he made something of nothing so God brought 〈◊〉 out of darknesse 1 Cor. 4 5. Psal. 18. 11. God came down and darknesse was under his feet he made it his pavillion round about him to cover the brightnesse of his person Psal. 36. 6. God and his works are as tenebrae Abyssus like the great gulph therefore we must not curiously prye and question about him and his matters As God made the darknesse for some use and purpose for himself to be his pavillion Psal. 18. 11. so in respect of us he made them to speciall use Psal. 104. 23. he made darknesse that it may be night which is a time for all things to take their rest in so that as the day was made for labour so this for rest because quod caret alterna requiae durabile non est And God hath made it for a third use to the rebellious Spirits and Divels and to wicked men namely to reserve them in utter darknesse unto the great day Jude 4 5 6. So God made it to be a pavillion for himself a couch for us and a torment to the wicked Tum dixit Deus esto lux Gen. 1. 3 verse MOses having before described the primative State of the world how God made it of nothing and then endowed it with an aptnesse to receive a better form he doth in this verse unto the 11. proceed to a three fold work of distinction separating and sequestring orderly one part from the other to avoid confusion The first was of the light from darknesse which was the first dayes work The second of the celestiall and superior parts of the heavens from the inferior bodies below Thirdly the earth and dry land from the waters and having performed this inward perfection as it is called Chap. 2 verse 1. he proceedeth afterward to the outward adorning of them three and so finisheth the work This verse hath in it the first work of distinction for whereas before it was a blinde lump wrapped up in Clouds of waters as in his Clouds and swadled with darknesse as with a 〈◊〉 as Job faith now God took off from it his swadling 〈◊〉 and clothed it with his own garments Psal. 104. 2. that is endowed it with light Fiat lux er at lux In shewing thereof we are to consider two things First the precept and mandate of God Fiat lux Secondly the execution thereof for the performance Et er at lux In the first two things are to be observed First the authority from whence the mandate came Dixit Deus Secondly the tenor and contents of the precept Fiat lux First touching the authority of the precept we see it was God that said it dicere autem faith 〈◊〉 eft verbum proferre whereout we gather two observations 1. The mouth of the Lord from whence this spirit before and this word came 2. Of this word from whence this work came Touching the first it were absurde to say that God should speak after the manner of men with an audible sound of words for it were in vain and to no end to speak when there were none to hear therefore this is that which we must conceive of it that when God speaketh to us in his word he doth it as it were in our dialect that is so as we may understand what he meaneth for if he should speak properly of himself we are not able to comprehend the manner of his works therefore as the Holy Ghost taketh a name and title from a Dove so doth God 〈◊〉 borrow his manner of doing from a Prince which is the greatest thing we can conceive for what is in our conceit more forceable to the speedy execution and through dispatch of a thing then a Princes streight commandement and mandate which on a sodain can cause whole Armies of men to be ready at his pleasure Men doe unfold and manifest their walls and counsells in all matters by word of their mouthes Sicut voluntas sermo ejus it a natura opus ejus faith one his word is his will and all the frame of nature is his work proceeding therefrom Wherefore in that it is said God spake it is meant that he plainly revealed and meant to declare his will This uttering and revealing the will is after two sorts which the two Hebrew words doe signifie First when a man by a secret discourse doth reason or speak in his heart which doth reason off the audible sound of words Preach 2. 3. I in my heart purposed with my self so the fool spake in his heart that he durst not utter by
dark and hidden though it be in darknesse it self but his eye of providence can see it so that there is nothing so deeply covered in secret but that he by the same can reach to it In this second work the Prophet beginneth at the third point for the first two which are the materialls and womb and the impregnating making fit or enabling it to receive a better form were things belonging particularly to the first dayes work which in respect of the prerogations it had was called the one day and the day alone For in the first day there was spiritus 〈◊〉 creatio sed varia procreatio for all things being made in grosse at the first and impregnated and conceived in this womb of the waters had afterward in the six severall dayes and times their procreation and were brought forth and therefore the gulph being enabled before is not distinguished and separated into that place which is the upmost Heavens of all above us and the purest and cleerest and best part of the waters The other part which is more unpure is set in that place below under us which reacheth unto the bottom of the deep of the earth Saint Austine saith that this separation was therefore made because God would not trouble the living Creatures of the earth afterward with many waters which were not a meet Element for them to live in but only they should have the impressions of the Ayre to water the earth as rain snow haile and dews Coelum aëreum Touching Heaven which is one part of the division there is varia acceptio verbi it is diversly understood for first it is taken for coelum aëreum which we call the skie as in the 20. verse of this Chap. volucres coeli when Heaven is taken for the Ayre or Skie Jer. 8 7. Milvus in coelo c. that is in the Ayre so Gen 9. 14. nubes coeli that is the Clouds which hang and flie in the Ayre And Christ saith that they are skilfull to discern the times by view of the face of Heaven to know what the day will be by the rednesse or lowring of the Ayre or Skie Luk. 4. 25. he saith the Heavens were shut or locked up three yeers that is the Ayre where the Clouds are So doe Heathen writers take the word coelum non animum mutant qui trans mare currunt that is they change the Ayre not their mindes c. where coelum is taken for that distance of place which is between us and the Moon After we have spoken of this coelum aëreum we will come to the other coelum coelorum but first let us consider the Ayre in the generall and then the true Chambers of the Ayre as David calleth them Psal. 104.2.3 that is of the three Regions of the Ayre In which treatise we will consider Distributio first the matter or argument of these verses Secondly the name of the thing it self in the 8 verse In the first three things are to be noted First Gods Edict Secondly the execution of it in the former part of the 7. verse And the third is the return of the Edict or Writ And it was so Of the first in which we consider the word the manner and the parts to whom the Edict is given and then what wherein and to what end it was namely to distinguish the one waters from the other It pleased God in every daies work to have severall speech and mention made of his Word and Spirit the one to exclude necessity the other to exclude chance or casualty the word is ever named to conclude and shut out that objection quis erat ei consiliarius Esay 40. 13 14. that he had no need of counsell or advise the other to exclude quis dedit illi prior for as he did all things without the advise and help of any by himself so he did it of his meer goodnesse and grace without any motive or perswasion of our deserts Touching the word which I told you was verbum unum increatum aeternum We must consider it abiding in God as skill art and cunning doth abide in a perfect work-man and his proceedings and manifestation in the Creatures as the skill of an artificer proceedeth from him into his work and there is to be seen so the second person the word of God abideth for ever wholly in God and dwelleth and resteth in his bosome Pro. 2. And this by this means passeth from God the Father into his workmanship and Creatures and is to be seen manifestly how wonderfull and glorious Gods word and wisdome and art is by which he made all And so may we say of his spirit which is inseparable and coequall with it for as with our words our breath also proceedeth out of our mouthes in one action and at one time so ever the word and the spirit of God proceedeth from him together to the perfecting of any work So we see they are indivisible Heb. 1. 2. 3. Christ by whom God made the World is there called a stamp or graven form of his Father and the brightnesse of his glory so that now here is shewed the second stamp and impression graven and formed in these works in which the brightnesse of his Image may be seen namely his power and wisdome c. For by the word of God also were the Heavens made Psal. 33. 6. saith David out of which sentence we may learn two speciall points 1. First that the word of God is the generall mediator not only between God and man in the work of redemption but also between God and his works in this Creation for after that the word of God was he by whom all things had their being and were that they are and were set joynt and in order by him then by the same verbum increatum proceeding from God together with that powerfull working of the sanctifying Spirit were all things new created and set in right order and joynt again being by Adams sinne clean out of frame 2. The other point is that whereas it had been all one for Moses to say Deus dixit aut Deus facit he rather causeth this phrase Dixit Deus quia fecit dicendo in men indeed sermo apus are two things of divers natures often separated for commonly the greatest sayers are least doers well the talkative are seldom active but in God they are all one his dictum factum have no difference for as 〈◊〉 saith with God initium sermonis est perfectio operis and this is the prerogative of the supernatural Agent Touching the stile or phrase of the Edict or Mandate it is imperative the Kings of the Earth are glad oftentimes by fair means to entreat that their inferiors and subjects may doe their will as the 〈◊〉 men counselled Roboam 1 Reg. 12. 6 7. And the Apostles 〈◊〉 alwayes use their authority in commanding 2 Cor. 8. 8. 〈◊〉 continually goeth by way of commanding
Host and Army of the nether Heavens and the Starres are the Hostes of God which inhabite and are in Garrison in the second Heavens and the Hosts of Heavenly Souldiers Saints and Angells are the Armies of the third Heavens Luke 2. 13. which Heaven is called solum gloriae for Heaven is his throne it is called the habitation of Gods holinesse Esay 63. 15. And God is described by this place Matth. 5. 34. Deus qui sedet in Coelum Psal. 121. 2. so his place is in the third and highest Heavens and from thence cometh the true winde and spirit John 3. 8. and the true rain and dew and water of Grace and life John 4 14. and from thence discended the true bread of life John 6. 32. and the oyle of joy and all good things spirituall whatsoever and from thence we are to look for them Thus we may consider of Heaven though we might here rather know and learn the way thither then curiously to search what it is which we cannot finde nor comprehend 1 Cor. 2. 7. I come to the two other Heavens because this place teacheth and warranteth us only but of these two Touching the second Heaven this we finde that it is a glorious body Exod. 24. 10. though it consisteth of and by the waters as St. Peter saith 2 Pet. 3. 5. as in the water we see no diversity or variety yet in the bodie of the Heavens there is great variety for it is as it is in natural things In a kernel we can perceive no variety but yet it bringeth a tree forth which hath great variety as a body of wood bark leaves blossoms and fruit and by this incarnation we have participation of those graces Heb. 10. 20. and he calleth all to him to buy these waters John 7. 38. 39. and by his spirit he will power them into our souls Rom. 5. 5. Water of Meditation and of these waters the Patriarchs and we tasted 1 Cor. 10. 3. and by these waters of Grace we have passage and navigation from Earth to Heaven Act. 2. 17. 18. by our waters we can passe from one Country to another Waters of Grace These waters of Grace are contained in the clouds of the Law the preaching thereof doth drop gratious words as the dew Deut. 32. 2. and therefore the wiseman saith that the lipps of instruction are a well-spring of life so the preaching and ministery of Gods word is the clouds and bottels which hold this water Therefore Acts 14. 3. and Acts 20. 32. Gods word is called verbum gratiae which doth contain heavenly grace as the clouds doe water which by the inluence of Gods spirit is made aqua vitae vivificans John 6. 35. for the word is as seed but the spirit giveth life and so that is made effectuall in us and we made fruitfull unto God and as a sweet ground whom God hath blessed Gen. 26. 12. Now as God in the name of Heaven holdeth up the finger as it were and saith here is waters to be had and looked for so the same word of God which made the Heavens must give these waters from thence and therefore they which want wisdome and knowledge let them ask and seek them of God Jam. 1. 5. 17. The bucket by which we must draw this water is a true faith Esay 12. 2 3. Prov. 12 17. 19. and then our souls became like a well watred garden Jer. 31. 12. This water it yeeldeth for meditation There is also profitable matter to learn for 〈◊〉 For as we see God doth here we must expresse the like in our actions that we may be like unto God First When we have received our light of knowledge we are taught by the order of Creation that the next course in regeneration is to extenuate our earthly affections and to sublime and elevate and to lift up our mindes to Heaven Phil. 3. 20. So St. Paul willeth us Col. 3. 2. this is the laying up of treasures in Heaven Matth. 6. 20. we must think on Jerusalem which is above if we will be free Citizens in it Gal 4. 26. Secondly for the division As there is a Heaven and Earth the two parts of the world so is there in man two parts correspondent the earthly Adam made of the dust and the spirit and soul which God gave 〈◊〉 12. 7. which is called the Heavenly Adam 1 Cor. 15. 47. 48. God will first say let be a separation our souls must be separated from earth earthly and carnall things as we said before and ascend And as all earthly things which make for the flesh are brought into a narrow compasse of the Earth which is but a prick in a circle whereas God hath reserved the large spatious roome of the Heavens for our souls so must we bring our carking cares of this life into a narrow room of our hearts and let the whole compasse of our souls and thoughts be filled with the study and care of the Kingdome of God Thirdly As the part of waters which ascended became a Firmament and are most sure and immutable unto the end of the World so must our souls having begun in the spirit ascend to Heaven be constant firm and immutable to the end of our lives and never end in the flesh Gal. 3. 3. nor fall to the Earth as those starres did Rev. 6. 13. for it it is the part of a foolish and wicked man that is mutable and wavering Prov. we must not be Rubenites Gen. 49. weak and inconstant as water for a just mans heart is firm and shall not shrink nor be moved but 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 in God Psal. And this is the part of Martyrs for though they are by nature weak and fearfull and as waters yet by Gods grace are made as the Firmament more sure against all Gods enimies than a wall of brasse Matter of thankfullnesse The last use is for matter of thankfullnesse and gratefullnesse with which we will close up all For we see that when the Earth sendeth up but a thin and a small myst the Clouds requite it by powring down showers So Cursus Dei gratiae dependet in recursu nostrarum gratiarum actionis for as the Clouds will send no more rain if the Earth will send up no vapours nor breathe up any mists so only Gods Graces will discend into our Souls when our gratefullnesse doth from thence ascend up to God for then they cease distilling down on us when we leave off to be thankfull Wherefore let us be thankfull for Coelo aëreo for without the benefit and purenesse of it we cannot breathe and live Psal. 65. and let us be thankfull pro Coelo aethereo for the comfortable and sweet influence of the starres because the Earth hath no power to bring fruit without the virtue of the Heavens And lastly Let us 〈◊〉 thankfull pro Coelo Coelorum or Coelo Coelesti that is for the third Heavens for as we must praise God for
lights to the glorie and praise of Gods name so shall we come from the light of the Sunne to continue in the everlasting light of righteousnesse Then shall the light of the Moon be as the light of the Sunne and the light of the Sunne shall be seven fold Esay 30. 26. This place hath no need of the Sunne nor the Moon to shine in it for the glory of God doth light it and the Lamb is the light of it the people which are saved shall walk in the light of it there shall be no night at all Rev. 21. 23. Then shall the just men shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father Matth. 13. 43. sic finiamus de luce of the light which light God of his mercy grant us all Amen Et creavit Deus Coetos maximos animantia omnia repentia quae abundè progenuerunt aquae in species ipsorum omnesque volucres alatas in species suas viditque Deus id esse bonum Gen. 1. 21. Preached January 16. 1590. HEREIN is the second part of the work of the fifth day Here is the return of the Precept Creation of Fishes This is Gods water-work first the creating of the great Whale then of the shoale of small fishes It is said creavit and not fecit you shall finde this word creavit in three several verses only of this chapter in the first in this and in the 27. verse Creavit Creavit is applyed in the first to being in this verse to living in the 27. verse to understanding In the holy tongue aget in the first verse is to be Cara is to have life and Sagar in the 27. is to have understanding So that creavit goeth by degrees from being to living from living to understanding which is the perfection of creation the first of the Heavens lacking sense the other of Fishes and Fowls having life the other of Man having understanding Barha in Hebrew in the first verse is not only creare ex nihilo aliquid but ex nihilo magnum quod est miraculum The Master-peece Artificers among their works have one especiall which they call their Master-peece God in his creation hath in the Heaven one especial Master-peece namely the shining Sunne having his being from the Creator he hath in the Water the great Whale who hath life from above He hath in the Earth Man his Master-peece who from God hath his understanding Whales These Whales are the great monsters of the Sea In creating them saith Ambrose Creavit vastitates stupores even at the sight of him shall one perish Job 40. 28. the Tunny is a great fish the Whale is a great tyrant The great Leviathan God hath made even to play in the Sea Psal. 104. 26. He hath made him saith a Father to be vectem maris a barre of the Sea so great is a Whale Sathan the tyrant of the world is compared to Leviathan the tyrant in the Sea Esay 27. 1. AEqualia habent montibus corpora saith Ambrose The nature of the Sea is to be abyssus these great Whales are immensae moles in hoc abysso though he be huge yet the Sea is deep though he be strong yet the Sea keepeth him in warde Job in his 7. chap. and 12. vers Am I a Sea or a Whale fish that thou keepest me in warde the greatnesse and strength of a Whale is declared in the 40. of Job the 20. verse to the 41. chapter He cannot be drawn with an hook neither can his jaws be pierced with an Angle thou canst not fill a basket with his skinne nor the fish-panner with his head And in the 4. chapter God saith None is so fierce that dares stirre him up In the fourth verse of that chapter it is said A double bridle cannot hold him Who shall open the dores of his face his teeth are fearfull round about In the 6. verse The Majestie of his scales is like the strong sheilds In the 9. verse His neesings make the light to shine and his eyes are like the eye-lids of the morning out of his mouth goe lamps and sparks of fire In the 11. Smoak commethout of his nostrils as out of a boyling pot in his neck remaineth strength In the 15. verse His heart is strong as a stone and hard as the nether mill-stone In the 18. He esteemeth iron as straw and brasse as rotten wood When the Sword doth touch him he will not rise up He laugheth at the shaking of the speare the Archer cannot make him flie the stones of the sling he accounteth as stubble In the 22. verse He maketh the depth to boyle like a pot and maketh the Sea like a pot of 〈◊〉 when he foameth the depth seemeth to have an hoare and white head He is made without fear he is a king over all the children of pride This Leviathan is left here by Job for an Epilogue of Gods great works He like the Serpent in the 12. of the Revelation the 15. casteth out of his mouth waters as a flood This his greatnesse is an especial and infallible example of Gods strength who created him and his hugenesse Creation af all other Fishes Furthermore he created all living and moving things in the Waters in great aboundance The small fishes are not the superfluity of nature saith Ambrose He shewed as much power in creating the small fishes as the great Whales totidem syllabae ad creandum pisciculos ut ad creandum coetos nec labor at Deus in maximis nec fastidit in minimis both are miraculous there are miracula magna parva sape parva sunt magnis majora saith Austin There is as much admiration in the small shrimp as in the great Leviathan Living Souls Every soul is the matter of this creation but not the body At the resurrection he will doe a strange miracle but this is a greater for plus est ut educat Deus animam viventem quam ut reducat Deus animam viventem this is the miracle in this creation that God gave sense life moving to the fishes Soul The soul is distinct from the body there is a soul and flesh Esay 10. 18. the soul is distinct from life My soul is cut off though I live Job 10. 1. the soul is distinguished from the breath Genesis 8. Moving of Fishes Further every thing moving that moved of it self not one way as heavy things doe downward and light things upward not by any circular motion as doe the Heavens but that moved all wayes every way and that moved as the shell fishes doe by expansion The moving in this place signifieth a gliding applyed to fishes in waters and worms on the Earth there are other motions as the flying of birds the pacing foot by foot of beasts and of men The sense of fishes is dull yet their motion is perfect and swift If they had sense only to feel their hurts and not
tend to honour and excellency this work of ours sheweth our own basenesse that we are but fimus and limus the creeping worm called in Hebrew Adama hath alliance with Adam which man who is but a worm as saith Job he confesseth himself to be vile Job 39. 37. In the 22. Jeremy 29. the prophet exclameth saying O Terra Terra Terra Adam or Man is not every kinde of Earth he is not sandy but of a serviceable and profitable gleeb for he is for Gods especial use and made to his own likenesse In Gods temple there was no tymber but of fruitfull trees aliquid Deus creavit exnihilo hîc ex infimo maximum at homo malus otiosus ex aliquo facit nihil Though David were an holy man yet did he see corruption Acts 13. 36. For man is of the Earth earthly and born mortal subject to corruption Galen the Heathen saith that the Anatomy of a man is Hymnus Dei He saith to the Epicure take an hundred year to work but one part of a man and thou canst not mend it for in man God hath been so absolutely a work-man that nothing in him may be mended Miranda fecit pro homine sedmagis miranda in homine I will praise thee O Lord saith David Psal. 139. 14. for I am wondrously made 3. The form of Man Thirdly The form of man in our Image juxta similitudinem nostram though man be de terra in terra yet he is not propter terram God created his former Creatures secundum speciem suam according to their kinde God createth man secundum similitudinem suam Man is Microcosmos so say the Heathen but divinity saith he is Imago Dei in omnibus Creaturis vestigia sunt Dei sed in homine non solùm sua vestigia sed imago sua Est enim non solum opus sed imago Dei Miscen upon this place saith upon Imago Dei that in una hac voce innumer as habemus voces Who fo sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed the reason is this for in the image of God hath he made man Gen. 9. 6. So there is no exchange of mens souls in imagine sua we are created without blemish Now when Adam was an hundred and thirty yeers old he begat a childe in his own likenesse after his image chap. 5. 3. that was blemished by his sinne Our perfection in the image of God is esse constmiles filio Dei for we are predestinate to he made like the image of his Sonne that he might be the first born of many Brethren Rom. 8. 29. We are changed into the same Image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3. 18. Perfect felicity is the Image of God virtue is the way to this felicity sinne deformeth this Image in us Here is Imago similitudo Similitudo Similitudo is the genus and comprehends both similitudo is as a union in quality here it is added as a perfection to the Image the lineaments hereof by the Fathers are said to be first The essence of the soul is in the body in omni unaquaque parte as God is in the world ☜ Secondly the soul is immortal God is so Thirdly there is a triple power of the soul Understanding Memory and Free-will Understanding is every where in Heaven in Earth in the deep on this side and beyond the Seas there is an ubiquitie of the soul as of Gods presence every where Memory the infinitenesse thereof is as that of God who is without limitation quae est haec immensa hominum capacitas saith a Father the will and conscience cannot be bound but it is free to think so God what him pleaseth that can he doe God by his power createth man and make h a natural World And Man likewise maketh artificialem mundum as ships for carriage temples for service lights and candles as artificial starres creavit etiam homo alteram quasi naturam Imago Dei nata creata There is a primitive Image which is Imago nata that is of Christ the Sonne of God Imago autem creata Dei is of man Christ is the Image of the invisible God the first born of every Creature Coloss. 1. 15. Zeleb in the original tongue is nata Imago quae est Christi Tohar creata Imago quae est Adami In the Redemption Christ made himself as our Image Man planted may fall so did Adam but being replanted by Christ he cannot fall The first man Adam was made a living soul the last man Adam was made a quickning spirit 2 Cor. 15. 45. ad similitudinem nostram Imago Dei est omnium hominum similitudo autem est paucorum the one is the bare face the other is the robe royal the one we have by essence the other by virtue the one by nature the other by grace We ought to put off the old man with his works and put on the new man which his renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him Colloss 3. 10. and love is the bond of perfectnesse so that knowledge is recommended in the Image and love in the likenesse which two are as the Urim and Thummim of the Law Our soul is as a glasse to behold his virtues and humble precepts Luke 6. 27. In his similitude to be as he is as farre as we may Hence have we a thankfull remembrance that he will crown us with glory everlasting if we finne not against nature and draw on instead of his similitude larvam Demonis the visor of the Devil but put on the new man which after God is created unto righteousnesse and 〈…〉 and give not place unto the Devil Ephes. 4. 24. We have in us Earth in regard of the body and Heaven in regard of the soul in the one is time in the other eternity Christ calleth the Gospel The Gospel of every Creature Mark 16. 15. Ambrose saith posuit Deus in homine Terram Coelum non ut Terra mergat Coelum sed ut Coelum elevet Terram totum hoc est 〈◊〉 se assimulare Deo Let thy inward thoughts and outward conversation be good and agreeable for this is the end of all Fear God and keep his commandements this is the whole duty of a man for God will bring every work with every secret thing unto Judgment whether it be good or evil Ecclesiastes 12. 13. 4. The end of mans creation to rule other creatures After God hath crowned man with knowledge and love in the latter part of this verse he giveth him a Scepter and maketh him Vicegerent over the Sea the Aire the Earth over all the fishes fowls beasts and creeping things therein bidding him to rule over them He brought before man the beasts and fowls he had created to whom Adam gave their names Gen. 2. 19. The Image is of perfection the Similitude is in wisdome in knowledge in the Sonne in love in the Holy Ghost
in power of the Father Miscen saith Fecit Deus hominem nudum to shew that he needed the help of other Creatures for cloathing and for meat Mans soveraingtie is to have at his command and to serve him the whole earth and the furniture thereof If God bid him to rule over the fowls fishes and the beasts over the better sort then surely over the worser Yea God hath made the Sunne the Moon and Starres with all the hoste of Heaven to serve man and hath distributed them to all People Deut. 4. 19. He hath given him dominion over the beasts that is the priviledge of hunting into what parts he please and dominion over the Earth which is the priviledge of Husbandry Oh let us live after the similitude of him whose Image we are and let us not be like nay worse than beasts pejus est comparari bestiae quàm nasci bestiam For man though he be in honor he understandeth not but is like to beasts that perish Psal. 49. 20. We are here to note the obedience of the Creatures while man was obedient and that the mutinie and discention between them and their disobedience to man did arise by mans rebellion to God his Maker Adams disobedience caused their disobedience When Adam stood then the cattel the fowl and the beasts of the field came and did homage unto man and were content to be named by him chap. 2. 20. But after his fall fugiunt fugant they some of them flie from him and other some make him to flie Now we serve the cattel before they can serve us This commeth to passe by disobedience by blotting as much as in us lyeth the Image of God Let then our own wickednesse correct us and our turnings back reprove us for know and behold that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast for saken the Lord thy God Jer. 2. 19. It is Gods bounty to be created in the Image of God according to his likenesse Let therefore our care be that these his great benefits be not bestowed in vain by our own sensuality lest by that means we be cast from his likenesse for at the first God created man without corruption and made him after the Image of his own likenesse Wisd. 2. 24. Itaque creavit Deus Hominem ad Imaginem suam ad Imaginem inquam Dei creavit eum Marem Foeminam creavit eos Gen. 1. 27. Februar 6. 1590. GODS deliberation was in the former verse Here he entreth into consultation in this image his person is represented this verse is the accomplishment of the former Fuit sic was the return of the other dayes Three creavit's in this verse but he useth another course here the three creavit's iterated thrice is a specifying of great joy of God in this his work it is saith a Father triumphus Creatoris It expresseth the tender affection and dear love God hath to man in a speech of affection Salomon saith Prov. 31. 2. What my sonne and what the sonne of my womb and what oh sonne of my desires Paul likewise ravished and carried away with this fervent affection useth this treble iteration in the 2 Cor. 12. 2. I knew a man in Christ above fourteen yeers agoe whether he were in the body I cannot tell or out of the body I cannot tell I knew such a man whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell which was taken up into thethird Heaven Others doe conceive that God by this treble iteration blew a trumpet to the Waters Earth and Heaven that is to all the World that they should all know that man was their Governor Thus much for creavit in general and the treble iteration thereof Now we will consider the especials Faciamus was a word suspicious so that some thought God had the help of Angels but here by creavit the doubt is answered that is was one by the Deity ☜ Imago nostra was suspicious here ad imaginem Dei ad imaginem suam taketh away the doubt Creavit thrice iterated in this chapter the first is creating essence the other life the other understanding Creavit is here thrice mentioned for that all these three essence life and understanding are in this one Creature Adam He hath being sense and reason est autem ratio anima animae pupilla animae all which three are expressed in chap. 2. 7. God made man of the dust of the ground that is his essence and breathed in his face the breath of life and the man was a living soul there is the person of God the Father in the creation All things were made by the word and without it was made nothing John 1. 3. So by this conceit Gods purpose is understood Here the Fathers in treble iteration finde trinity of Person in creavit unity of Godhead The Image is for knowledge the similitude for love and power is given him for execution The minde or heart receiveth Deut. 6. 6. the will affecteth the power or dominion executeth There is contemplation affection and action brought forth by this triplicitie Now of the considerations apart Three parts of this verse This verse hath three parts Two of the soul one of the body the two first concern the soul the last the body as is apparent By the two branches of the soul is signified a double care of the soul and a single care of the body Our soul is coelum our body coenum the one heavenly the other earthly The opinion of the better sort of Interpreters is That God useth this often repetition for the better credence saying ad imaginem suam ad imagine ejus cujus respondet ad imaginem Dei Man carrieth the image of God not of Caesar not of the World Date ergo Deo quae sunt Dei The best sort say it is for the emphasis for our learning and for our memorie alledging the 22. of Proverbs 20. Have I not written unto thee three times in councells and knowledge It is ad perpetuam rei memoriam Jeremy saith thrice Oh Earth Earth Earth in regard of our humiliation Similitude Imago Here Moses sheweth that though in regard of our bodies we are Earth yet in regard of our souls we are Heavenly To the peace of God we are called in one body Colloss 3. 15. Christ took upon him our vile Image to redeem us The woman is of the man the man is by the woman but all things are of God 1 Cor. 11. 12. By sinne we have lost this Image but fear to sinne reneweth this Image which who hath not he is no man But what is become of Gods likenesse the Image is twice mentioned but sometime the Image is taken for the likenesse as in the 3. James 9. Men are made after the similitude of God The Fathers take the similitude for a perfection not a generalitie St. Ambrose saith Est Imago quam babemus est similitudo quam
first part The first whereof I will handle at this time 1. He perfected all when man was created Moses by way of sequell telleth us by joyning the perfection of things to mans Creation That is a singular and an honourable prerogative in that behalf unto man For recounting the perfection of all Creatures presently after mans making he inferreth that they were not perfect but defective before for untill man was made that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that wheel of generation and course of nature whereof St. James spake 3. 6. which never stood still God took no rest before nor made holy-day because there was no end nor perfection of his work untill man was made Insomuch as God may seem to have made such a vow as David did Psal. 132. 4 5. That he would not suffer himself to take any rest until he had found that earth of which he would make man and had placed him in the World which argueth that there was a defect and imperfection and as yet something to be supplyed for the Earth lacked and therefore looked for her possessor which was man who carried therefore the Earth in his name that he might shew that the earth depended on him The Host of Creatures for the perfection of Heaven and Earth is in him who as he was Princeps Terrae A Captain so was he Infans Coeli one born to inherit Heaven also for seeing Heaven is a body and capable of a body it must needs be that it was not made only for spirits but for a body which was to be made Therefore in that he saith Thus were the Heavens and the Earth perfected he sheweth that their perfection was suspended and they held as unperfect and not compleat until man was made Though the Heavens were made 1. 19. yet until now they were not perfected There was Urim as the Hebrews say but there was not Thummim i. there was light but there was not the perfection of light Thus then were the Heavens and the Earth perfected for though there was a power in God to make more Creatures and create more things besides these yet note he maketh his full point and saith all is perfected which is that consummatum est of the Creation Thus much generally for the copulation sic Now to descend to the particulars we see thy are distributed into two joynts 1. First Heaven and Earth which are the Continents 2. Secondly The host of them which are Contents and fulnesse thereof That a thing be made perfect there are required two degrees of perfection which are opposite to the double imperfection spoken of in the former Chapter Barrennesse Emptinesse called Tohu Tobohu the one being an outward perfection opposite to barrennesse and emptinesse without the other is inward opposite to rudenesse and deformity within The one is called perfectio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is integritas partium when all the parts are orderly in a comely proportion framed and well set together The other outward perfection is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a due supply of decent furniture and the accessory of needfull ornaments which being added it is also outwardly perfect both which you may see in a body for when a mans body is rightly knit together in every joynt with good colour and countenance he hath his first inward perfection of nature but so long as there is nakednesse there is yet a defect and want outwardly But being adorned with jewels and apparel it hath then the outward perfection also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We see them also in a house for when it is framed and the frame set together orderly and the rooms of the building well contrived and conveyed then it hath the first perfection Integritas partium i. integritatem partium but when it hath the hangings furniture and implements which is called suppellex then it hath also the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for by that means every room is furnished and adorned The like order we may observe in Heaven and Earth First they were imperfect nothing done nor disposed then they were facta that is perfectly made and disposed as great spacious and stately rooms as yet empty and void but now being filled with the hosts of of them then they are perfectly furnished indeed The Septuagint doe translate that which is here called the host 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. the beauty of Heaven and Earth but the propriety of the word in the original tongue importeth Armies or Hosts or Bands Quest. Whereupon the question is Why Moses doth expresse the fullnesse of Heaven and Earth and the furniture and implements thereof by this comparative name of Armies Resp. For answer some say That it may be that the Israelites were then in Camp and Garrison when Moses wrote this which estate of theirs being militarie he useth a military word Indeed if we consider the form of Heaven the Prophet saith It is as a Tent spread abroad Esay 40. 22. In regard of which the furniture which is under it is fitly compared to Armies and Bands or Troops to inhabit it But many other good and forcible reasons there are why Heaven is called a Tent or Pavilion and the furniture in it compared to Squadrons of Souldiers in a Camp 1. As first in regard of the huge multitude of things in them for one cannot say the furniture or implements of a house is comparable to them therefore the furniture of an Host doth best expresse it Every Creature therefore in Heaven or Earth is Gods Souldier in pay with him and hath received some weapons to punish Gods Enemies and the several kindes are as it were the Ensignes of his Army and the company of all are the Host and Army Royall 2. The second reason is in respect of order because no Camp can be more orderly trained than the course of Nature in the order of Gods Creatures The dayes in Winter cast themselves as it were in a ring in the Summer abroad and so come long The Starres keep duly their assigned place time and course without disorder or disturbance to the rest So the Herbs doe in their order and seasons one follow another And so doe the Fish gather together in skuts and squadrons and march about the Sea coasts in their kindes 3. Thirdly There is a respect beyond these which is in regard of their head and Captain for in an Host there must needs be imagined a Leader or head Governour of all which we cannot say of houshold-stuffe or apparel for it implyeth not a head necessarily Man therefore is made the Captain and guide or head of this Host In which regard they are thus called 4. Fourthly There is a higher regard which is of God the chief and supreme head or Emperor in which respect God is called The Lord of Hosts Exod. 15. 3. Therefore as man on Earth is Lieutenant to lead you so in Heaven and
Earth God is Chieftain and highest Commander of them For if God send out his swift watch-word all Creatures doe carefully obey and muster themselves to doe his will Psal. 147. 15. If he doe but hisse or whistle they come out and set forward Esay 7. 18. And for retreat Mark 4. 39. if he say Peace and be still the windes cease are still and goe no further 5. Last of all because if they had been expressed by the term of apparel or furniture it might have been thought that all things had been made for pleasure but by the comparison of Soldiers they are made known to be made for service also as Soldiers are All other kindes of service are but for one use as a Servants service is only obedience either to doe or not to doe but there is a double use and service of a Soldier Miles pro contra The one is to apply himself to the good of his Captain and Country The other to be ad oppositum against his enemies to defend his Captain and to offend his Adversarie So mans life is called a Warfare and Christians are Soldiers in both virtues endeavoring to doe good and to resist evil and to throw down all that doth oppose it self against God Also wheresoever mention is made of an Army there is implyed an Enemie which therefore giveth some occasion out of this to gather the fall of Angels which Heavenly Creatures are made not only to serve ad muniendum sed ad puniendum for the benefit of the good but for the punishment of disobedient and disloyal servants for against such all things in Heaven and in Earth doe arme themselves for revenge and oppose them selves against them We may if you please muster these Armies in their several ranks and orders Armies in Heaven celeftiall Spirits as the Angells And first concerning the Armies in Heaven they are of two sorts The first are in the uppermost Heavens in which are the Angels which being spirits are called by implication Heavenly Souldiers or Gods host as Jacob in the old Testament called them Gen. 32. 2. and St. Luke in the new Testament 2. 13. These are the first order which have the name of an Host concerning which celestial Creatures we read that they are 〈◊〉 Psal. 104. 4. Called Souldiers in respect of their ministery and fitly compared to Soldiers in respect of their service and ministry Heb. 1. 14. Multitude and also in respect of their multitude Psal. 68 17. and Dan. 7. 10. And in the New Testament Matth. 26. 53. Christ speaketh of twelve Legions which surpasseth the greatest Host that ever was Power Also in respect of their power they deserve the same name 2 Thes. 1. 7. Also in respect of their wisdome for policie 2 Sam. 14. 20. these are continually present and affistant with God Job 1. 6. 1 King 22. 19. And God doth send and imploy them to our service Gen. 28. 12. and are often messengers between God and man Their care and charge and their care and charge is not only to look to whole Countries and Nations Joshua 5. 14. as of Israel and Dan. 10. 13. of Persia and Grecia but also of singular persons as St. Peter had his Angel Act. 12. 15. So had Agar Gen. 16. 7 8. And little Children had their Angels Matth. 18. 10. Abrahams servant an Angel Gen. 24. 7. and Tobias an Angell Having their charge generally of Countries and especially of several men They are present with us it followeth consequently that they are present with us and about us Preach 5. 5. In which regard we must take heed to our behaviour propter Angelos 1 Cor. 11. 10. To guide and direct us They are not only present but also doe goe before us as guides for directions in good matters as Abrahams servant Gen. 24. 40. To hinder some in bad matters And as they serve to further us in good things so doe they hinder some men in bad courses and enterprises Numb 22. 31. as they did Balaam And they doe rejoyce if we prevail in that which is good Luke 15. 10. And the last service they perform is to carry and convey us into Abrahams bosome Luke 16. 22. The Militarie service of Angells Now touching their militarie service they doe pitch their Camp about the Godly ad muniendum for defence Psal. 34. 7. and ad puniendum they doe pursue and scatter the wicked They are in Cherubins spreading their wings over the good Exed 25. 22. and 〈◊〉 out a fiery sword against the evill Gen. 3. 24. There is friendship and fidelity to the one and opposition and open hostility with the other So they served for Elishaes protection and defence 2 Kings 6. 17. and for opposition and defiance to the Enemies of God Esay 37. 36. We see both together Gen. 19. 15. they defend Lot and 〈◊〉 Sodom And Acts 12. 7 8 9. the same Angell which delivered 〈◊〉 out of 〈◊〉 smote Herod with the disease of the worms that he died In the Firmament the Stars Touching the nether Heavens The Host of the firm ament is the celestial bodies Deut. 17. 3. for so are the Starres and the Planets called Act. 7. 43 44. And their Militarie service is Judg. 5. 20. to fight in their courses against Gods enemies Armies in the Aire For the lowest Heavens which is the Aire There God hath his Host viz. the Winde for the Winde though it be but a puffe of Aire yet when God doth stirre it it hath such a militarie and violent force both on the Seas Psal. 48. 7. and also on the Land 1 Kings 19. 11. Job 1. 19. Leave the body of the Aire and goe to the furniture of it There shall you see that God hath his store-house of Snow and Hail Job 38. 22. both for reward of the good and revenge of the wicked for from thence came fire and brimstone on Sodom Gen. 19. 24. and from thence came the storm of Haile upon the Egyptians Exod. 9. 22. c. If you come to the fowls of the Aire they are Gods Armie for our good to feed us 1 King 17. 6. or else for our punishment to feed upon us Ezech. 39. 4. And Gods power doth not shew it self in the great Fowls as Ostriches and Eagles but in his Army of little poor Flies which are in the Aire Exod. 8. 24. and his swarms of Hornets Deut. 7. 20. for by them he can compell People to forsake and leave their Land and dwelling places Armies in the Earth Let us come to his Armies on Earth and Waters And first concerning the Waters doe not we see Gen. 7. 21. that there were such huge Armies thereof that at Gods commandement they overflowed the whole Earth That they drowned the Egyptians Exod. 14. 27. And the Whales in the Waters are Gods Host to devoure Jonas Jon. 1. 17. Yea to leave the great Army of Whales and come to the
Army of Frogs which God hath in the Waters where you shall see that God hath such great power in these weak things that they can annoy the mightiest Kingdomes upon Earth Exod. 8. 14. Armies of Earth For the Earth it self that can swallow up Gods enemies Numb 16. 32. And on the Earth you may take the Lyons for a strong Army 2 Kings 17. 25. but his power is most of all seen in the weak Host of Grashoppers Exod. 10. 14. and of Locusts and Caterpillers Joel 2. 25. Yea of Lice he can make such an Army that c. Exod. 8. 16 17. If we come to men the Inhabitants of the Earth they are Gods Host but they fight not against other Creatures but with their own kinde not one against one but thousands against thousands even in pitched fields not with natural Instruments as the Boare with his tusk the Bull with his horne but with artificial weapons of divers sorts with whose kinde of forces the World is too well acquainted Thus we see that there is no creature in Heaven or Earth but is a Souldier in pay with God and all these hoasts are in league with us so long as we serve God Job 5. 23. And keep our sacramentum militare which we make in our Baptism otherwise they come upon us like armed men and are prest against us to punish our disobedience And every part of Heaven and Earth then will send out an Army to conspire our destruction and overthrow and this may suffice for a brief view of these Armies A word of the third perfection we have seen perfection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now we are to consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First The World was a great House perfect in respect of the parts but yet the rooms were emptie and unfurnished Then God replenished garnished and furnished it with its hoasts as we have heard But yet there wanted a third perfection which is a head to guide and an owner to possesse manure and occupie all Man the perfection of Gods work God made the Earth as his work-house and shop and Heaven as his chamber and place for a rest and reward and both for one and that is man God made the Earth as the Tent to prepare our selves and to put on our Armour as the Field Lists or Tiltyard to trye masteries or to fight in against Gods enemies 1 Pet. But the Heavens and Firmament he made as locum triumphi that is the Court to triumph in So that when man was made to be a Souldier in the one and a Conqueror in the other all was perfected God made the Earth in its parts absolute and gave it erecta 〈◊〉 depressa vallium densa silvarum and furnished it with beasts and cattell of divers kinds but did perfect all by making man the owner of all In a Battell though the Field be appointed the Ordinance planted and the Souldiers encamped yet all is unperfect till there be a Generall of the field to marshall them and a Captain to lead them so was all unperfect till man was made Object Seeing man was the perfection of all things what ayleth it now That being so many men we can see nothing absolute and in its perfect estate David saith Psal. 119. 96. I have seen an end of all perfection but thy Law is perfect as if he should say there is nothing else perfect now the Heavens are called often imperfect Levit. 26. 19. The Ayre is infectious the Seas dangerous the Earth also groweth in her imperfections So the Beasts are unto us In our bodies we finde troops of diseases and in our souls heaps of sorrows and care which shew our imperfections Resp. Perfectio creationis Though the finishing of Heaven Earth and Man be the perfection of Creation Deformatis 〈◊〉 perfectionis Yet now we must understand that the sinne of man brought in death and so an imperfection or deformation Finis peccati mors Rom. 6. 21. Et peccati finis damnatio Phil. 3. 19. verse Thus then standeth our estate and condition Ratio The reason of it is because the Captain and Lieutenant man being set to resist the enemy Satan grew in a league and conspiracy with him against God and so apostatavit non militavit as saith St. Ambrose wherefore seeing he was not content with his estate to be Lieutenant but would be chief generall sicut Deus Gen. 3. Therefore consequently followed his decay And this is the means whereby from perfection he came to desection and so to imperfection for when he which was the perfection of all things became imperfect then all things which were ordeined for and given to him grew subject to alteration and vanity Rom. 8. and so per consequence imperfect And thus saith David we have seen an end of all perfection under the Sunne Perfectio redemptionis Yet that perfection of nature being lost see the unspeakable mercy of God we have another new perfection 2 Cor. 5. 17. in Christ In whom we are made new creatures And that perfection to the which nature would have brought us that is never to dye but to be translated with Enoche to the same will Gods grace through Christ restore us again And as in the sixt day man was here perfected So in the sixt age of the World Christ came and made his Consummatum est which is the second perfection of redemption at which time as St. Peter saith all things lost by nature shall be restored by grace Yet there is another further perfection then this of grace and redemption that is the perfection of glory in the life to come for then shall the last end and perfection come Matth. 24. 14. When that which is imperfect is done away then that which is perfect shall come 1 Cor. 13. vers 11. Quam autem perfecisset Deus die septimo opus suum quod fecerat quievit ipso die septimo ab omni opere suo quod fecerat Gen. 2. 2. vers April 24. 1591. THe other day I shewed you that these two verses doe as links in a chain depend one upon the other for the Holy Ghost telleth us that when he had made man he perfected all his works and here when he had perfected and finished all then he rested It is the right order to work and labour still untill we have attained to the perfection of our work which done it is reason we should leave off and rest For whereas that is perfect whereunto nothing can or may be added and Gods works now being so having that perfection within which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fit joyning and knitting together of parts and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the furnishing and adorning of the parts and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the setting a head over them there wanteth now nothing else to be added but only an end and conclusion to be
and men of great honour could be content to labour all the day 1 Sam. 11. 5. I trow our World now is wiser in which men hold scorn of work Then Jacob when he saw the money in the sacks thought it some over-sight of Joseph and therefore sent it again Gen. 44. 12. But now men are wiser they count restitution a childish thing and think other mens oversight to be their good gain It had an infancie then at the beginning at which time God by his word conceived three children Deformity Confusion Darknesse of the first he made the Earth of the second the Waters of the third the Lights which may teach us to setch our Pedigree aright by lineall descent from the first beginning for we are all the sonnes of Adam which was the sonne of dust which was the sonne of Deformity which was the some of nothing and this is the first father and beginning of our generation which may suffice against the error of the Heathen Pagans 2. 2. Another error there is which they being forced by reason to acknowledge a beginning yet did with it hold that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it hath been made from everlasting ever since there hath been a God for they say That as the beam had his beginning when the light began and as a shadow hath his beginning with the body so had the World a beginning when God began to be and then by necessity it must needs be Against which Moses saith not only that it was produced but it was produced in die in a certain prescribed day and therefore this proceeding was not eternall And here we must note that in die is not here taken for some one only day as some ground their conceit as if God made all things in one day For the day in which the light was made there was no Earth and when the Herbs were made there was in that day no man untill the sixth day as it is in the fifth verse This therefore overthroweth the second error before because all was made in a certain bound of time 3. Another ●ort there was which granted both these that the World was made and that in die but yet affirmed that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely that it was self borne and made it self or was produced and came of it self as a thing casuall and by chance which foolish and grosse opinion of Epicures was ever for the absurdity thereof hissed out of Schools but Moses meeteth with this also saying that the Lord made it And because it may be thought that there was divers Gods he telleth us by a name which was never heard of before this time by the which he describeth him unto us and that is Jehovah Thus he hath recapitulated all the former Chapter unto these three considerations which is all one with the first use of the first Chapter saving that here is expressed the name Jehovah which is not there for this name of God is the most glorious name Deut. 28. 58. and therefore Moses here reserveth it till every thing in this glorious World be fully accomplished and perfected In the 6. Exod. 3. it is said he was not known by this name before then that is whilest he was bringing any thing to passe and not yet perfected he is Elohim but when he hath fully performed it and set it on foot then he is known to be Jehovah by whom the thing hath his being and is that which it is for he is the essence and being of things that are There are many difficult mysteries in these names which because some are too curious in standing upon and others have itching eares listening too much after curiosities I will omit only this we must needs know which the nature of the word sheweth that God is he which is of himself and by whom all things are move and have their being for seeing we know not nor can see the nature of God we must give him a name according to the greatest benefits which we receive and the greatest works which we have seen But the work and benefit which is most common to all things is being Therefore by that name he is most fitly called for life moving and reason all things have not but every Creature hath his benefit of being and therefore he taketh his name from this general benefit which is seen in all Another reason of this name Jehovah is taken from the perfection of this being Exod. 3. 14. which is set down Revel 1. 4. because he was is and shall be for ever Therefore no Creature but God can ever say I am this is my name for if a Creature of the time that is past should say Before Abraham was I am John 8. 58. he should make himself God So if a Creature should in respect of the future tense say I am with you untill the end of the World Matth. 28. 20. he should therein make himself God who by propriety of nature may still say I am as it is his nature therefore this his name Jehovah signifieth that he hath the perfectest being and only such a being And thus much of the reasons of his name Elohim signifieth Power and Judgement The one sheweth his Might in doing the other his Truth and Justice in judging both which in his name shew that as it was he that did make the World so it is he also which shall judge the World at last for that as the one allureth us to love so the other yeildeth us matter of dread and fear So Jehovah signifieth not only Hagah which is making of things but also destroying and dissolving of things to nothing again Ezech. 7. 26. where it signifieth calamity and destruction So doth his name Shaddi import not only plenty and nourishment but also punishment and undoing of things So that in all his names this nature of Mercie and Justice is expressed There is yet a further thing to observe for whereas before Heaven was first placed and had the precedence of Earth here the preheminence is given to the Earth and the Heaven doth come behinde in the last place Which whether it be the propriety of the tongue which usually beginneth with the latter thing was spoken of before or a mysterie to shew closely that the Heavens were made for the Earth and not the earth for the heavens or whether it darkly shadoweth out to us that in Christ Jesus Adam which is earth that is our nature shall be exalted above the highest heavens in the day of restauration I will not curiously discusse but allow each sense as having a good and a godly use to such as be sober minded Et omnem stirpem agri c. Verse 5. MOses in this verse passeth over the first estate of Creation and cometh now to the state of propagation in which things now 〈◊〉 that we may know that these things were not only made by the power of Gods word Coll. 1. 17. But also
without any help of the body or power thereof separately of himself yea it causeth a man to believe and know many things of it self even against the bodily senses and contrarie to them as that the bignesse of the Sunne and Moon is of a huge greatnesse though it seem to our sense but two foot yea the same power of the soul causeth us to desire many things contrarie to the outward sense as that it is healthfull sometimes to fast eat nothing c. Now of this they conclude that of these things there must needs be principium agendi where there is potest as agendi therefore a separate essence and being of the Agent Cause Thus by this separate action the Heathen rose up to this notice of the separate essence of the soul. Again the moving of this question Whether there be a God and eternity and a Heaven and spirits This we know that there is no outward thing which giveth occasion to our senses to move this question therefore the principium movendi is the power of the soul in reason who alone by his own light according to the state of his own nature moveth these things for a blinde man that never saw nor heard of colors can never in reason make question of colors So for as much as there is nothing without to tell or move him to this they conclude that the soul only was the cause and beginning of it within Touching the coupling of soul and body together into one living Man we know that Gods purpose and meaning in it was that the soul should rule the body and be a means to lift it up to Heaven and to God that it might so be made of the same excellent nature and estate which the soul had But now it is perverted and by sinne the course of nature and ordinance of God is changed and naturally our body doth labour to pull down the soul and make it earthly base and miserable But by grace we must endevor the contrarie it is Gods will it should be so and no reason to the contrarie But men seem by the care and cost they bestow on the body that the soul is worthy no care or cost at all But we must remember that many things and much time must be bestowed in seeking to garnish our souls Matth. 6. 20. We must lay up treasure in Heaven Matth. 19. 21. We must make friends of this Mammon put out our money to the Exchangers Luke 16. 9. for it is to lend to the Lord and if there be any truth in him he will repay it to their soul Prov. 19. 17. If we sow in the flesh the fruit of all that is but corruption but that which we sow in the soul and spirit hath his fruit to be glory and immortalitie and this is the point which we are to cleave unto and hold You know how little we bestow on spirituall uses for the soul and how much daily we spend on our bodies therefore I am an Intercessor to you for poor men made de eodem luto de 〈◊〉 imagine beseeching you that it may please you both in regard of the honour of God who made us and them to this end that we which have should doe good to them which have not and in regard of Gods Image in them of whom we should have a care and also in regard of our own duty of imploying our goods of which God hath made us Stewards and of the reward and gain which God will repay for it That therefore you would extend your liberalitie to their relief Our Doctrine is rain Deut. 32. 2. If you as barren ground drink in the rain and yeild no fruit you may fear a curse Heb. 6. 7 8. But if you yield the fruit of righteousnesse then Gods blessing in this life is still to minister food and all other things to you and at the last the end of it is everlasting life Wherefore to the end we may shew our selves not altogether earthly and carnally minded minding only earthly and bodily things and things which make only for this short life let us in the fear of God and love of our Brethren put on the tender bowels of compassion for their relief Ornaverat autem plantis Jehova Deus hortum in Hedene ab Oriente ubi collocavit hominem illum quem finxerat Gen. 2. 8. June 5. 1591. FRom the 7. verse of this Chapter unto the 18. thereof Moses as I have said before doth deliver and add a supplement unto the historie of man for having first Gen. 27. briefly dispatched the Creation of Man under these short terms Marem Foeminam creavit eum he lightly passed it over there purposing here in this place to handle it more at large and therefore he divideth the treatie here into two parts First prosecuting the Historie of Man from the 7. verse to the 18. verse and then of the Woman from thence to the end of the Chapter he left out many things there which he expresseth here As in the 7. verse he sheweth the matter of his body and the pattern after which he was made and the separate substance of his soul The manner of making of his body was as the Potters frame the vessels and the manner of making the soul was by inspiration breathing it into him Now in this verse unto the 15. verse he describeth and setteth down the place in which he was setled and from thence to the 18. verse delivereth the end to which he was made And thus are these verses touching the glosse or Commentarie of the historie of Man reserved Touching this 8. verse it consisteth of two parts 1. The first respecteth the place 2. The second the placing or bestowing man in it The place containeth three parts 1. First The kinde of place a Garden 2. Secondly The dignity of the place as I may tearm it in that it is said God planted it 3. Thirdly The scituation of the place which is also described in the 6. verses following Concerning the first of these three we see the place wherein this Creature of excellencie is to be seated we must needs conceive it to be some place of excellency meet for him and that either to be some place of pleasure within dore or else some place of pleasure without but there was no need for him to have any place of covert or defence within because there was no such distemperature of aire then but that they might well enough yea best of all endure naked therefore God resolveth to appoint and prepare a meet place without Certain it is that all the Earth at that time was in comparison of this as it is now vallis lachrimarum a paradise of pleasure yet God made this paradise and speciall place of the Earth a more excellent place of pleasure than any other in so much that it farre exceeded any other place wheresoever in Earth both in pleasure and
to be understood as the Scriptures well teach us Augustine saith that the tree of life served not only ad alimenta sed etiam ad sacramenta for doubtlesse as Adam in his estate of innocency had a bodily Sabbath so therein he had a spirituall use of these trees in the mid'st of the Garden and that in this sort First for the tree of life it was not so called as if it gave life to him for God breathed that into him at the first But besides that the tree of life was a means to preserve it It was also a Symbolum and memoriall also to put him in minde to know that it was not 〈…〉 virtute arboris but vi virtute divina by which he had life at first and by which his life and length of dayes shall be continued hereafter In the middest of the Garden was the Pulpit and this is the Sermon which was preached unto him by these things which the trees did represent namely That God was his life and length of dayes 〈◊〉 30. 20. And that this gratious visitation did preserve his life Job 10. 12. As he breathed out his life into him at the first Again it did put him in minde that seeing he had received a spirituall life of immutability in esse so also he received a spirituall life of eternity in posse Therefore he had matter and just occasion of thankfulnesse for the one and of obedience for the other Adam had two things injoyned him the one was praeesse Creaturis the other subesse Creatori he had no need of a Caveat for the one for he was ready enough to govern and bear soveraignty but for his duty to God he had great need to be put in minde and for the try all and practise thereof he caused this tree of knowledge to be planted there with an inhibition not to eat of it upon pain of death which now and ever hath offended many Some wish it had not been in the Garden Others wish Adam had never tasted it But Saint Augustine saith if it were good and pleasant why should it not be there Gods purpose therefore in planting the forbidden tree was that it might be a triall of his obedience and practise of his duty that if he should continue as he might and had ability given him then he should have the greater reward afterward 〈◊〉 saith Rev. 2. 7. Vincenti dabo edere de ligno vitae in medio Paradisi Well saith St. Paul But no man can overcome except he strive first and fight the good fight 2 Tim. 2. 5. And no man that will or can strive well but he abstaineth from something 1 Cor. 9. 25. For which cause therefore that we might be rewarded it was necessary that there should be a commandement and forbidding for his abstinence that when there should be a tryall of the Tempter saying Eat of this he should strive and say I may not and so get the victory and be crowned that is eate of the tree of everlasting life and live for ever with God in Heaven On the contrary side 17. verse if in triall he should wilfully fall then for transgression the tree of life should be a tree of death Mortem morieris And the reason of this choice why God should prescribe him a law and form of obedience is because this should be primor dialis lex as one saith ut nostrum obsequi sit nostrum sapere Deut. 30. 20. This is our wisdome to know and doe that which God will have us to doe if God give a Law at large every one will consent to it As if God had said No man shall disobey or transgresse my will none will deny it But let it come to positive law and bring the triall and practise of that generall to a particular as to say I forbid and restrain this tree none shall break my will nor eat of it then is the triall of obedience indeed Object But some may say What hurt is it to know good and evill For we read Esay 7. 15. that Christ shall doe that And therefore it is no sinne Resp. I answer that God forbiddeth not to eat the fruit nor that he would have us ignorant of that knowledge quam quis quaerit a Deo sed quam quis quaerit a seipso And no doubt Adam had the knowledge both of good and evill per intelligentiam si non per experientiam And he knew how to choose the one and to refuse the other to pursue the one and to fly from the other he understood it then but when he would know both by experience Gen. 3. 6. He could not see why God should forbid him and therefore the Tempter taking occasion by it made him make an experiment of it This is the cause then why at last Adam came to know evill by sense and experience and saw to his shame what evill was for to take he knew and confessed by experience that bonum erat adhaerere Deo as the Prophet saith Jer. 2. 19. And now he knew by tast how bitter a thing it was to forsake the Lord And that he knew it appeareth Gen. 3. 8. by hiding himself for fear he shewed that he knew it when he did feel ante-ambulatores mortis which is sorrow and sicknesse and when he saw the Statute of death that now it must necessarily come to him and all his posterity to dye the death then he knew evill by wofull experience You see the cause of the Law and of his sinne of good and evill it remaineth that we believe Adam in his knowledge and in his experience both of good and evill For by his good lost we come to the knowledge of the means by which our good may be lost that is if we seek to satisfie our lusts and curiously not contented with the open knowledge of his revealed will shall try conclusions with God and say what if we should break the Law Wherefore abandoning these faults which by experience we see were the cause of evill in him it behoveth us to receive more thankfully of God the good things we have and live obediently resting on the Sonne of God for good things to come And so at last Christ will be unto us the tree of eternal life hereafter as we have made him the tree of knowledge wisdome and sanctification to us in this life Fluvius autem procedit ex Hedene ad irrigandum hunc hortum inde sese dividit ferturque in quatuor capita Primi nomen est Pischon hic est qui alluit totam Regionem Chavilae ubi est aurum Et aurum illius Regionis praestans ibidem est Bdellium lapis Sardonyx Gen. 2. 10,11,12 June 10. 1591. THe verse going before containeth as we have seen the planting of the Garden and the devise of God framed and set in the middest of Paradise which is a plain resemblance of all Divinity both touching our duty in knowledge and
man Thus much for the framing of our Judgments Now of the practise which we will divide into the precedents before Marriage the duties in Marriage and the dissolution of Marriage Before our marriage must be deliberation First touching the precedents we are not to enter into it unadvisedly but with deliberation and to seek with Adam for a meet help which if we cannot finde then to commit our selves to God which we may gather out of Gods speeches who said faciamus and not siat And again Adam slept while she was framed by God Generall deliberation This deliberation is generall whether it be good to marry at all or else it is speciall whether it be good to marry such or such a person For the first God seeth it is not good for man to be alone Good is not taken there as I told you heretofore for opposite to evill but to inconvenient and the good of convenience is gathered by the circumstance against both the extremes the one is the forbidding to marry 1 Tim. 4. 3. The other extreme is for that they saw the daughters of men to be fair they took Wives according to their own lust and liking chap. 6. 2. The one of the circumstances is grounded upon the person the other upon the time for as it is in the Preacher 3. 5. there is a time to embraee and a time to be farre off from embracing I suppose saith Paul 1. Cor. 7. 26. it is good to be single for the present necessitie in time of affliction Yet in Malachi 2. 14. the Prophet calleth the wife uxor faederis the wife of thy covenant from whom at no time thou must goe to cleave to another but as thou must continue in obedience to God during thy life Psalm 146. 2. so thou must cleave to thy wife so long as you both shall live It is not trouble that must break the bond of marriage It is not age nor sickness must part them Rebekah when Isaac was old provided meat for him such as he loved she forsook not Isaac in his age Genesis 27. 9. and in sickness Amnon knew Tamar would visit him and cherish him the 2. of Sam. 13. 6. nothing may part them but for Fornication and Adulterie At touching the circumstance of the persons there are some that cannot be married saith Christ Matthew 19. 12. for some faith he are chaste from their Mothers bellie who are say the Fathers borne chaste by some incurable disease and are unable to marrie and there be some that be made chaste by men such as are gelded and cut and some are chaste which have made themselves chaste for the Kingdome of Heaven that is to whom God hath given thgift of continencie and 〈◊〉 as Paul expoundeth it 1 Cor. 7. 7. yet as Paul speaketh in the 28. verse If thou take a wife thou sennest not If a Virgin marrie she sinneth not such as are married have trouble in the flesh as wordly cares of their Children and of their Families they are troublea with a prick in the flesh Adams cleaving to Eve must be a way and means to cleave the faster unto God to cleave unto the Lord without separation as it is in 1 Cor. 7. 35. Now there are two spirits which would withdraw us from this conjunction the one is of the world the world and the cares thereof the other of Fornication There be those that seek their own and regard not that is Christs Philip. 2. 21. And the spirit of fornication will not suffer them to know the Lord Osee 5. 4. And lest that man should be exalted over much there was given to man a prick in the flesh 2 Cor. 12. 7. So that as Paul saith 1 Cor. 7. 38. He that giveth his daughter in marriage doth well but he that giveth her not to marriage doth better for that through mans 〈◊〉 not by gods institution Marriage bringeth cares and troubles So that St. Pauls bonum It is not good to touch a Woman and Moses bonum here It is not good for Man to be alone in regard of divers 〈◊〉 may both take place and by good deliberation If I can 〈◊〉 it is good to be alone If I cannot to avoid fornication it is good to 〈◊〉 But if we doe conclude with Moses It is not good to be alone it is good to marrie We must then not resolve to be as a dog as it is in Deut. 23. 18. God commandeth not to bring the hire of a whore nor the price of a dog that is an Whoremonger into the house of the Lord. We must resolve to follow Adams example who had but one wife not of wicked Lamech who took two wives chap. 4. 19. and brought in Polygamic first who brake the institution of Paradise that they two should be one flesh And if any might have had Polygamie Adam might above any But yet God took out of Adam but one rib brought unto Adam but one Eve that they two might be one flesh and better and more holy was it to have one than manie wives Two wives are an impediment to unitie it breedeth much dissention in the house and disquiet to the husband as I shewed you in the example of Hannah and Peninnah the two wives of Elkanah 1 Sam. 1. 7. and it breedeth dissention between the seed 〈◊〉 them two there was not only dissention between Sarah and Agar but even that Ismael the Childe of the Bond-woman could not agree with Isaac the son of the Free-woman but mocked him chap. 21. 9. The particular deliberation Now touching our particular deliberation 〈◊〉 we must have but one to consider what persons are meer and what 〈◊〉 meet this is for our choice and our refusall First we are to seek a meet match and if we cannot finde such an one then we are to pray for one at the hands of God not to say I will make to may self a meet help not to perswade in himself to be any such abilitie but recommending our selves to God to fall asleep with Adam that is to lodge up our own senses and affections not to follow the example of those in chap. 6. 2. who seeing the daughters of men to be fair took them wives of all they liked not such as God appointed for such wives shall be as snares to their husbands Saul he gave his daughter Micholl to deceive David 1 Sam. 18. 21. Adam the father of Mankinde and Abraham the Father of the Faithfull recommended themselves to God in this matter as in chap. 24. 12. the servant of Abraham that went to finde a wife for Isaac prayed God to send him good successe And in the 63. verse Isaac was at prayer in the field when he beheld his wife comming with Camels In the 27. chap. 20. when Isaac asked his 〈◊〉 How he had found him meate so quickly Jacob answered because the Lord thy God brought it to my hand And if we trust in the Lord he will bring a
great regard in times past not to abuse anothers Concubine 2 Sam 3. 8. In several there are in them two other Duties In the man understanding and wise government there is I say in the husband direction and there must be in the woman subjection to be subject to his direction And here I am to admonish women of seven things to make them to honor their husbands First they must consider that Adam was formed first and then Eve 1 Tim. 2. 13. Secondly Man was not created for the Womans sake but Woman for the Mans sake 1 Cor. 11. 9. Besides he was wounded that she might be made She was taken out of him She was brought unto him She was made to help him She received her name of his name his name was Ish her name Ishah She had in her name a letter of five in number lesse than man to shew she was but a diminutive All these doe imply womans subjection There are two other Duties several of the man and wife The Man must protect his Wife in danger chap. 20. 11. Providing is required of the man to provide for his houshold and family 1 Tim. 5. 8. And the woman is to preserve and enlarge that her husband hath provided the domesticall duty of preserving the house and houshold pertaineth to her as it is in Proverbs 31. 21. She should be of the property of the Snail still at home but a foolish Woman is troublesome Proverbs 9. 13. The house in holy Scripture is taken for the Children whom she must bear and bring up in the fear of God The Wife through bearing of Children shall be saved saith Paul 1 Tim. 2. 15. The house is taken for the Servants whom we must govern well And the house is taken for the implements which she must order and enlarge She must be not as Ivie which cleavth to the tree and is not profitable though green but as the fruitfull Vine on the sides of thine house she shall bear Children like to the Olive plants round about thy table Psalme 128. 3. 3. No divorce after marriage And this cleaving of each to other implyeth a perpetuity of this bond out of the 2 of Kings 18. 6. Man shall leave father and mother to cleave to his wife And in 1 Cor. 7. 10 and 11. Paul saith I command those that be married not I but the Lord Let not the Wife depart from her Husband and let not the Husband put away his Wife It is true Quos Deus conjunxit homo non separabit whom God hath joyned let no man separate Yet God himself may sever them either by death for when the Husband is dead she may marry to another man Romans 7. 3. or God may sever them by divorcement for lewdnesse and whoredome not for every light matter but for a very weightie cause as it is in the 24. of Deuteronomy 1. Divorcement is called in Hebrew a sawing and the divorce of man and wife should be as the sawing a 〈◊〉 from the body If a man have the dead Palsie in some part of his flesh he will not presently have it cut off unlesse it 〈◊〉 some other part Divorces for two causes The Wife so long as her Husband liveth is bound unto him 1 Cor. 7. 39. But if the flesh be not only dead but corrupted then may there be a proceeding to divorces and that upon two causes as the ancient Fathers doe say out of the Scripture The one is for Fornication and Adulterie And who so putteth away his Wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit Adultery Matthew 5. 32. except it be for Whoredome Matthew 19. 9. And as I told you adulterous flesh is rotten 〈◊〉 it is 〈◊〉 flesh in the thighs and this divorcement for carnall copulation in Adultery they doe gather quia adherebit uxori 〈◊〉 out of suae to his own wife and she to her own husband must cleave The other cause of divorce is for spiritual Adultery which is 〈◊〉 as it is called in the Scriptures If thou have an unbeleeving Wife if she be content to dwell with thee for sake her not for in that she is an Infidell she is dead flesh but in that she is content to dwell with thee she putrifieth not but if she seek to draw thee to Idolatry in such things thou mayst not yeeld but there may be a departure 1 Cor. 7. 15. God suffereth separation and apostacie for spiritual Fornication which is Idolatrie and where God doth make separation there his Deputies which are his Priests for Incontinencie and Apostacie may suffer divorcement for that the People committed Fornication both bodily and spiritually with the daughters of Moab Moses in the name of God ordained they should be slain and Phineas with his spear appeased Gods wrath Numbers 25. In Ezra 10. 4. after they had resolved to put away their strange wives they came to Ezra the Priest saying Arise for this matter belongeth unto thee who bid them in verse 11. to separate themselves from their strange wives as you may see there at large But Pauls counsell in the 1 to the Cor. 7. 11. is my counsell here that but for argent occasion a man should not put away his wife but if she depart let her remain unmarried as if she did retain only to her Husband or let her be reconciled to her husband and this reconciliation maketh no new marriage but by repentance she if she have offended must renew her life in honestie and holinesse and this reconciliation must be a renuing of their love and the man must heartily forgive her as he would have God forgive him then there must be a forgetting of any sepatation as though there had been no breach at all that so faith and love may ever after be preserved that so their love may be not only more dear than that to Parents but that it may grow daily more and more that God may blesse them and their Children that their union in the flesh may breed the unity of their mindes that they may be united each to other as Christ and his Church we in him and he in us who by his Incarnation became our flesh and he is one body with his Church who was tormented and scourged who dyed whose very heart was pierced with a spear whence his Church was taken he forsook his Father in the Heavens and was incarnate he forsook his Mother and suffered death that he might cleave to the Church and the Church to him that so they might be one spirit that so this bond might continue perpetually and that this knot that joyneth Man and Wife might be indissoluble Erant autem illi ambo nudi Adam uxor ejus ae non erubescebant Gen. 2. 25. Novemb. 〈◊〉 1591. THis verse at the first sight may seem 〈◊〉 and to small purpose but the wisdome of the Holy Ghost did add the same to the rest for good purpose If it be referred to that which went
the 14. of the 11. Thy pompe and pleasure is brought down to the grave the worms shall cover thee then with Job 17. 14. 〈◊〉 maist say to corruption thou art my Father and to the worm thou art my Mother and Sister and as it is in the 26. of Isaiah and the 19. the dust must be our dwelling joy not then in the joyes of this world which are but dust and corruptible they are as Austin saith gaudia privanda but sorrow for gaudia aeterna privanda sorrow lest 〈◊〉 be deprived of eternall joyes 3. Our life unconstant or death uncertain The third use for instruction is out of 〈◊〉 〈…〉 The state of our life is alwaies in motion and in revolving like a Ship a sailing Job in his 14. chapter and 14. verse called the resurrection after death a changing it is like a shadow it is still turning and returning Paul saith in the thirteenth to the Hebrews the fourteenth verse Wee have here no continuing City but wee looke hereafter for one our life is unconstant our death uncertain alwaies changing this the inconstancie of mans life is the motive to good as the other is the retentive from evill Paul saith hee dieth daily from sin here on the earth wee must not seeke for the hill of certain repose but look in heaven for a perpetuall City The Tents and Tabernacle are taken away therefore with Abraham Wee must looke for a City having a foundation whose builder and maker is God the eleventh of the Hebrews and the tenth verse 4. A time to return The fourth use is out of donec revertêris untill thou returne a time of returning where wee must learne to returne by repentance unto God before wee returne to dust that so wee may returne againe from dust 〈◊〉 God let men bee alwaies ready spend not thy daies with the wicked that goe suddenly down to the grave the twenty first of Job and the thirteenth the fourty fifth of I saiah and the eighth And as they live so they die like beasts the third of the Preacher and the ninteenth 5. We must return to God The fifth and last is that we must return to God For shall the dust give thanks unto thee the thirtieth I salme and the ninth verse The godly shall be delivered out of temptation though the unjust be reserved to judgement the second of Peter the second and the ninth We must return to God per poenitentiam Let it not be thought incredible that God should raise again the dead the twenty sixth of the Acts and the eighth the first of Jea and the eighth So a man shall return to God very well by due consideration of these things from the first pulvis es thou art dust to return to God by humility by the second not to joy in this world but in God by the third to rest our turning and returning in God and by the fourth to comfort our selves that out of the grave we shall rise to live with God Abraham addeth ashes to dust But what made Abraham to add ashes to dust the eighteenth of this Book and the twenty seventh he saith I am O Lord but dust and ashes The Fathers upon this place say that dust is our beginning and if we doe not obey God by fire we shall be turned into ashes ashes will be our ending We are all naturally dust and we are all by desert also but ashes and although by no means you cannot avoid to be dust yet by an upright life you may avoid to be ashes though we cannot but incurre the first death let not the second death take hold of us Though the grave inclose us let not hell swallow us All we eat all that we care for in this world is but for dust and for that will turn to dust If we be nothing but dust if we hope for nothing but dust if we care for nothing but dust we shall be swallowed up in dust Let us remember we are clay but God is the Potter Isaiah 64. 8. Above all regard thy soul. Above all regard thy soul then shall thy body of dust return to dust and from dust shall return again to God that made it and thee thou and thy body shall return to glory Vocavit autem Adam nomen uxoris suae Chavvam eò quòd ipsa mater sit omnium hominum viventium Gen 3. 20. December 10. 1598. ADam here calleth his Wife by a new name not by the former name in the 23. of the former which was Woman The mysterie of this name compared with the former Sentence is great she is called here Hevah she hath no name of dejection and despair but of life and of comfort Hereby is to be gathered that notwistanding the sinne committed and sentence pronounced yet there was in Adam some matter of hope for he beleeved the promise made in the 15. verse before that the seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head This was as it is in the 〈◊〉 to the Corinthians 2. 16. The savour of life unto life Abraham beleeved in Gods promise the 15. of this book the 6. by this Scripture Adam left a Monument of his beliefe as in the other Abraham left a Monument of his faith The seed of Abram in his age was promised to be in the 5. verse of that chapter as the starres of heaven Abraham desired to see the day of Christ and he saw it by faith Herein we will consider these two things first the imposition of a name and then of this name For the first the imposing of names is an argument of superiority and power in the 19. of the former chapter it is shewed in the naming of all the Creatures by man which names were properly given by him In the thirty fifth chapter and the eighteenth verse Jacobs Wife before her death called her sonnes name Ben-oni but his Father changed that name and called him Benjamin from the sonne of sorrow to the sonne of 〈◊〉 Jacob was after called Israel the tenth of the same chapter the name of Sarai was turned to Sarah the seventeenth of Genesis and the fifteenth verse as of Jacob by the Angell into Israel the two and thirtith chapter and the twenty eighth verse and out of these new names is taken matter of great mystery And Adam before called her Ishah woman as another from man but here hee changeth that to Hevah which is a name of life to others Now then touching the imposition of this name wherein wee will consider the signification of this name and then the qualitie thereof In the seventh of the former chapter God 〈◊〉 into man the breath of life and man was a living soule and here her name is a name of life now life is two fold either for a time or for ever shee is a mother of life in regard of this life for that her birth is not of an abortive it is a blessednesse production and education are in
there is faith to bee taken so out of this name is a worke of charitie to comfort us and Eve her selfe that was dejected and miserably plunged in sorrow by seeing shee had cast downe her selfe and all mankinde by her sin making her by her new name partaker of Gods love and charity this Charitie is not conteined in Eve alone but continued in her posteri ie unto the end of the world Abraham had great comfort the twelfth chapter and the third verse that omnes gentes all the Nations of the earth in him should bee blessed the eighteenth of the same chapter and the eighteenth verse and the two and twentith chap er and the eighteenth verse but this promise of all blessednesse was that in her omnes viventes all living should bee blessed for all that have beene all that are and all that shall bee are partakers of this promise for it reacheth from Eve to the end of the world In the first name Isha shee is the mother of nature of them that live and then die but by this name shee is the mother of Grace of them that though they are dead yet shall live for ever by the one the mother of mankinde by the other of the Church Job in his tenth chapter and twelfth verse saith vitam gratiam tribuisti mihi which life is the life of God eternally Therefore Adam by this name did comfort himselfe his wife and all others in their miseries in that wee must bee not only the seede of nature by her first name but the seede of Eve of Grace of the Promise and of Hope and so children of the Church of the holy seede to obtain the life of God eternall And lastly according to that of the second of Malachy Wee shall bee partakers of the Covenant of Peace and Life Fecitque Jehova Deus Adamo uxori ejus tunicas pelliceas quibus vestivit eos Gen. 3. 21. Dec. 7. 1598. THIS verse is as it were the opening of Gods warehouse and giving thence his liverie and aparrell wherein is mercy and favor even in judgement for after the Sentence God promiseth life and here giveth aparrell so that as Abacuck speaketh this commendeth Gods mercy in his anger as there was a mercy precedent in the Promise so here is a mercy subsequent in this provision and God mingleth mercy with judgement and joyneth Provision with punishment according to that of the seventy eighth Psalme and the twenty ninth verse this favour God vouchsafeth before hee ends his Sentence hee giveth hope of life everlasting and here addeth aparrell as the signe of his favor for all the care of this world is for foode and the back but seeke the kingdom of God and these things shall bee ministred unto you the sixt of Matthew and the three and thirtith verse Five parts of this verse This verse doth offer in it self five parts as they lie in order The first is the persons of Adam and his Wife The second is that God made The third is aparrel The fourth is of Skins The fift is that therewith they were arayed Out of each of these there is a double consideration of good use To begin then in order 1. Out of the persons of Adam and Eve we learn that though they were sinners yet God gave them his providence and provision The Sun shineth on the good and on the bad the rain falleth on the just and the unjust the fifth of Maithew and the fourty fifth he is kinde nnto the unkinde in the sixth of Luke and the thirty fift If God then give not over the wicked much more he will not leave the faithfull Secondly he extendeth his providence not only to sinners but even to the bodies of sinners which is shewed in his providence before for the bellie and here for the back both these are expressed in the tenth of Deuteronomy and the eighteenth Food and rayment is all we should desire in this world the first to Timothy the sixt and the eighth yea Gods providence goeth further than for the bellie and back for by it all the hairs of the head are numbred the tenth of Matthew and the thirtieth his providence watcheth over the soul and the body over the wicked then much more the good 2. God made The second point is God made he arraied the Heavens with starres and the Earth with grass and here he arraied Man with skins Here let us not search into the curiosity of the Jewes how God made them and what skins they were It is said in the holy Scriptures that God builded an house it is not meant that he was a Carpenter and here it is to be understood not that God was their Taylor but that God gave them power to kill beasts and capacity to make and shape apparrell he was not the Workman himself In the seventh verse before they made themselves Breeches of figge-leaves to cover their nakedness they were for no use nor continuance they were but vain God must teach them and direct them their clothing Mans reason without God hath a shew of wisedome but is without understanding the second to the Colossians and the twenty third In the first of Samaell 15. 15. Saul in his own conceit thought he had done well to save the best of the Sheep and Oxen. That apparrel that Adam made was cold and could not hold 3. Coats The third is Clothes or Coats in the originall tongue it is expressed that which is to cover and to defend Before Adam in Paradise had a care to have a Cover ad honestatem for shame there is a Commandement against the uncovering of shame in the eighteenth of Leviticus and the sixth which Paul in the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter and the twenty third verse calleth our uncomely parts Sem and Japhet will cover shame though wicked Cham will discover it The bruitish Savages respect not their nakedness The Sect of the Cynicks and the Adamites were shameless of their shame in the sixth of the Revelations shame must not be seen Adam by the light only of reason covered his shame that so this covering might be Velam verecundiae a Vail of shame fastness We must beware that we change not our clothing in vexillum superbiae to be the standard of pride at the first it was ordained for a covering for lust we must not then make it a provocation for 〈◊〉 it is made by God to suppress lust we must not then make it as a procurer of sensuality Such is the attire of an enticing Woman in the seventh of the Proverbs and the nineth St. Jerome upon this place saith that it is opposite unto this use or first institution of apparrel to make it nidum luxuriae a nest for lasciviousness The second reason why God made them apparrel was for defence both of the cold of Winter and the heat of Summer to save them from the weather St. Paul in the second to the
Corinthians the eleventh chapter and the twenty seventh verse among other miseries rekoneth cold and nakedness and as it is in the fifth of the Lamentations and the tenth the Prophet speaketh heat maketh the skin black as an oven so these clothes defended the skin from the offence of all weather For in nature every one nourisheth and cherisheth his own flesh the fifth to the Ephesians and the twenty nineth he nourisheth his belly with meat and cherisheth his back with clothes We doe account our selves debters to the flesh the eighth to the Romans and the twelfth These two are meant by things needfull for the body the second of St. James Epistle and the sixteenth but as it is in the thirteenth of the Romans and the fourteenth Put you on the Lord Jesus and take no thought for the flesh facere non perficere were vain to make a Creature and not to preserv it God will not but here we must learn to take heed that we make it a defence for necessity and not an offence for superfluity the first of James and the twenty first 4. Of Skins The fourth point is that this apparell was made of skins Herein are two things to be learned first that they were skins of beasts and then that the beasts were destroyed the beast was made to be destroyed but man was to be regarded they must die that man may be preserved from death God hath greater regard of us than of all the beasts we are of more value than many Sparrowes the tenth of Matthew and the thirty first he is allowed here to kill beasts for his apparrell and after to make their Tents of skins God hath given us more understanding than the beasts and more wisedome than the fowles of Heaven the thirty fifth of Job and the eleventh The second thing is the quality of the apparrell which is the first that God gave to Man which they weare for his liverie they are coverings of great frugality they are unlike unto ours which are for shew and not for durance It had been as easie for God to have made them of Silk and of Wool But God regarded not the gorgeous shew This simplicity of apparrell confoundeth the multiplicity of apparrell in these daies which they may well call a world of apparrell The gorgeous attire of the daughters of Zion the third of Isaiah and the sixteenth shall be altered to beggerie so that they shall discover their secret parts Here apparrell was made for the body but we make apparrell for apparrell vail upon vail the frugality confoundeth the riotousness and madness of apparrell and this simplicity our sumptuosness we are ashamed of Adams attire but Adam would be ashamed of us and our prodigality This apparrell was without pride Christ commandeth us not to care for our body what to eat or to put on in the sixth of Matthew and the twenty fifth the body is better than rayment but now mens apparrell is much more worth than the body for as farre as earth is from heaven so farre doe we differ in apparrell from the ancient world and now men consume their daies in vanity as it is in the 78. Psalme and the 33 before plainness was sufficient but now cutting and imbroiderie and needle-work on both sides nothing will suffice Esau for his belly sold his birth-right in the twelfth of the Hebrews and the sixteenth Achan for a little costly apparrell lost his soul in the seventh of Joshua the twenty first and with his 〈◊〉 he went to Hell it was a goodly Babylonish garment the simplicity of apparel was from Paradise but the pride of apparel seemeth by that place to be from Babylon The sumptuousnesse of apparel leadeth men into sundrie tentations the first to Timothie the sixth and the eight verse this is it that makes men to be lovers of themselves as it is in the second to Timothie the third chapter It draweth men to extortion but say rich apparel be worn without extortion or oppression or ill means yet it busieth the minde with vain thoughts and hindereth charitable works for often that too is bestowed upon vanitie which might better be bestowed in charity 5. Adam was content The fifth point and last is Adam looked not scornfully upon his apparel but was content with it which few of his posterity are for still though it be never so well yet one way or other they still mislike that is the first Secondly We must think well of such as weare such simple skinnes and not account vilie of them for having such apparel For those that went up and down in Sheeps skins and Goats skins were such quibus non dignus erat mundus of whom the world was not worthy the eleventh to the Hebrews the thirty seventh But he in the sixteenth of St. Luke the tenth verse that fared daintily that was elothed in purple and fine linnnen every day for all this he was not worthy of the world Salomon in his Canticles saith That the Kings daughter is beautifull within God respecteth the inward heart more than the outward shew the glory of apparel of gold or such like But if the hid man of the heart be uncorrupt and a spirit of humility before God is a thing much more set by the first of Peter the third chapter and the fourth verse Now we desire to be like golden sepulchres if the out side be gorgeous we care not how foul and filthy the inside is well therefore say the Fathers that nimia cura corporis ducit incuriam animae too much care of the body causeth the carelesnesse of the soul. Secondly They came hereby into Gods favour by wearing his liverie they became his servants and so of his houshold They are of the Princes house to whom he giveth bread and cloathing the third of Esay and the sixt verse If they were Gods servants then God was their Master and so it is said the sixt to the Ephesians the ninth that the Master of us all is in Heaven Out of these five clauses for things corporal we learn that out devising without Gods making cannot stand but is vain that God regardeth us more than all the beasts he had made he preserveth our life though by their death hence we may learn frugalitie and to flie vanity we may learn contentment and hate of pride hence we may learn that apparel was first instituted to cover lust not to provoke it Spiritual use And further than these literal points we may gather not only a bodily use but also a spiritual instruction He might have taken the hair of the Cammel or the wooll of the Sheep but the covering him with skinnes doth teach him humility to exalt him to glorie hence then may we gather matter of repentance and of humilitie hereby he hath to deject him in four regards the first is That by sinne he lay open in that he was after thus covered it put him in minde of his sinne though
graved with Cherubims the first of Kings the sixth chapter and the twenty seventh verse And likewise in the second building of the second Temple in the fourty first of Ezekiell were there many Cherubims And likewise the Angell in the fourteenth of the Revelations and the seventeenth verse with the sickle that came from Heaven was taken for a Cherubim and why was it a Cherubim that was appointed to defend this passage to the Tree of life to punish Adam and debarre him of Paradise with Sword and Fire It 〈◊〉 by the 〈◊〉 of Ezekiell and the twelfth verse That the Cherubim had a body with wings took 〈◊〉 coals and scattered them over the City and being appointed for a guard for Paradise therefore it is requisite they should be watchfull therefore it is said they were full of eyes round about or according to the fourth of the Revelations and the seventh verse they were full of eyes before and behinde which sheweth their knowledge which is requisite in them To this also it is necessary that there be added that they be armed with power of Fire and Sword for as the Cherubims of themselves were fearfull so Fire and Sword makes the passage more fearfull for to behold the Sword which will cut and the Fire which will burn it is dreadfull for incisio in the one and insentio in the other the edge of the Sword and the flame of the Fire are both more terrible and it is very usuall in the Scriptures to see them armed The Angell that stood in the way of Balaam riding upon his 〈◊〉 the twenty second of Numbers and the twenty third verse had his Sword drawn in his hand And in the first of the Chronicles the twenty first chapter and the sixteenth verse The Angell that appeared to David was armed with a drawn Sword in his hand And the Cherubim in the tenth of Ezekiell and the seventh verse was armed with Fire against Jerusalem and again in the second to the Thessalonians the first chapter and the eighth verse The Angels of God doe appear in flaming fire rendring vengeance to them that doe not know God nor obey the Gospell And here the Angell of God appeareth to Adam both with a Sword and with Fire to punish him because he would not obey God nor his commandment That we may conclude then that God hath sufficiently fenced this passage with his Angell thus armed with a burning Sword the very Asse which is of least understanding feared the Angell armed with a drawn Sword and perceived it before Balaam but to be armed with Fire it is more fearfull than with a Sword for many a one would run upon a Sword that by all means would shun the Fire look what scapeth the sword shall be devoured by the fire and the ancient Fathers upon Job 22. 20. And S. Jerom upon this place saith That the Cherubims are thus armed to shew that they have not only plenitudinem scientiae by their many eyes but plenitudine mpotentiae by being armed in this sort God taketh order that they should have both to be watchfull and powerfull But what doth this visible sign of Cherubyms and of a Sword shaken mean To make them to have a continual remembrance of their sin and likewise a 〈◊〉 griese to thinke of the pleasure and happy place that they 〈◊〉 and to see themselves lest to misery and 〈◊〉 of returning to that blessed Paradise by so strong a guard so strongly armed that there is no hope left to enter again into that former state happiness and again how grievous is it to see the elect Angels above and the damned Angels beneath yea all Gods creatures to become his enemies and to be banisheed from Gods presence all his pleasure turned to labor all plentie to necessity all joy to sorrow so that all that he saw without him was terror and fear and all that was within him was lamentations and mourning and woe as it is in the second of Ezekiell and the nineteenth verse And as we see when the Angell appeared unto David in the time of the great mortality that slew with the pestilence seventy thousand David in sack-cloath mourned and said it is even I that have finned but what have these sheep done alas they have not sinned I should have been punished and my fathers house and not this people the first of the Chronicles the twenty first chapter and the seventeenth verse And what greater grief could be devised than to be banished Paradise and to have no hope left of return not to live any longer there but to live in the barren earth in the valley of Achor the second of Osee and the fourteenth verse which is interpreted the valley of mourning and yet as the Prophet saith there that valley shall be for a gate or dore of hope for in that God doth not pull up the Tree by the root nor doth he cut it down as unprofitable we have hope that we shall have use of it hereafter for it is fenced to some use neither is Paradise layed waste nor utterly destroyed which giveth us a gate of hope The shaking of the Sword Secondly the Fathers say we have further matter of hope in regard the Sword is but shaken the Angell shakes the Sword but strikes not with the Sword St. Austin upon this shaking of the Sword saith that qui dicit percutiam non percutit minatur mortem non occidit minae ejus medicinae ejus He that saith I will strike striketh not he that threatneth death slayeth not his threatnings are as his curings and again he placeth the Cherubims armed in the East of Eden at the entrance into Paradise as the evill Angell that provoked them to sinne came with fair words and was in shew a friend but proved a deadly enemy so they say that though the Angell that keepeth the passage of Paradise doe seem an outward enemy yet in the end he will prove our very friend Versatilis Thirdly there is matter of hope in this that it is a moving Sword why then saith St. Jerome may it not be removed if Adam repent and remove himself far from his former sin Why may not God likewise repent of this Punishment neither is it unusuall that God doth so for in the first of the Chronicles the twenty first chapter and the fifteenth verse After God had sent his Angell to destroy Jerusalem as he was destroying God repented of the evill and said to the Angell that destroyed it is enough let thy hand cease and that Angell had a Sword drawn in his hand and after that David had built an Altar and made a burnt-offring in the twenty seventh verse of the same chapter The Lord spake again to the Angell and he put up his Sword again into his sheath It was Davids case the seventy seventh Psalm and the seventh verse In sorrow and great grief he said Will the Lord absent himselfe for ever and will be shew
to thy self and Paul the first to the Corinthians the second chapter and the second verse saith he esteemeth the knowledge of nothing but of Jesus Christ and him crucifyed And the Tree of life is fenced with Cherubyms which is taken for knowledge and the Sword for power Paul in the first to the Celossians and the 24 verse Rejoyceth in his afflictions to fulfill the rest of the sufferings of Christ in his flesh And Christ himself by his sufferings entred into glory the twenty fourth of Luke and the twenty sixt verse and if we with a contrite heart in repentance make a Sacrifice of our sensuall and bruitish affections and with patience beare our afflictions we shall passe with Christ to everlasting glory the Angel shall lay down his Sword the Cherubyms shall become our friends we shall be partakers of Christs Sacrifice which worketh reconciliation between God and man and the wrath of God being appeased then followeth the restoring of us to the heavenly Paradise And to him that overcommeth God will give to eate of the Tree of life in the middest of the Paradise of God the second of the Revelations and the seventh verse And so much shall suffice at this time AMEN LECTURES PREACHED UPON the fourth Chapter OF GENESIS LECTURES Preached in the Parish Church of St. GILES without Cripple-gate LONDON Deinde Adam cognovit Chavvam uxorem suam quae ubi concepit peperit Kajinum dixit acquisivi virum à Jehova Postea pergens parere peperit fratrem ipsius Hebelum Gen. 4. 1. February 7 1598. THIS continuance of the story of Moses begins to set forth the increase of the world after Adam and Eve were expelled Paradise The sum of all set downe in this Chapter to that end is of two parts First the propagation of mankinde Secondly the partition of mankinde set out in Cain and Abell The propagation is the fulfilling of that Prophesie of Adam who foretold of his wise that she should be mater viventium in the third chapter and the tewentith verse and it is indeed a resemblance of the tree of life in that by means hereof albeit life cannot continue in any singular person because of the Sentence pronounced by God that as hee is dust so shall heereturne to dust Chapter the third yet there is immortalitas speciel that is a perpetuall succession of life in the posterity of Adam As a Tree albeit in the end of the yeere it casts his leaves yet still there remaines a substance of life in it which makes it send forth leaves again Esay the sixt and the thirteenth verse so it is in mankinde for as the old life falls so there riseth up a new When the Father dieth the Child stands up in his place and so is life still preserved This is done by generation which is a kinde of creation as it is said of Adam that he begat a Child in his own likeness after his Image Genesis the fifth and the third verse For as there is in God diffusiva virtus whereby he communicateth his goodnesse to others so it is a thing to bee desired that Adam having received life should shew the same to others that when Adam dyeth Cain and Abell issued up in his stead which desire is so planted in man that albeit God when he said to Adam that in sorrow and the sweat of his browes he should eate his owne bread told him that hee should have enough to doe to get a living for himselfe yet Adam being scarce able to provide for himselfe begetteth children And albeit God said unto the woman that shee should bring forth children in sorrow and travell Genesis the third Chapter and the sixteenth verse yet shee not only brings forth Cain but having tryed the paine of child-bearing shee said not as Rebecca Genesis the twenty fift Chapter and the twenty second verse but addeth yet and brings forth Abell so high a reckoning did Adom and Eve make of continuing their kinde In the propagation we have two parts First Adams knowing And secondly Eves conception unto which two things are to be added first the manner of expressing the carnall copulation of Adam and Eve by this terme of knowledg Afterward Secondly the circumstance of time noted in the word afterward For Adams knowledg and the generation of mankinde wee see that the transgression of the Commandement of God in Paradise doth not hinder marriage so as it should be a sinne to beget children but contrary wise marriage is a remedy against sinne the first of the Corinthians the seventh Chapter and the second verse And that which God affirmeth touching the joyning of man and woman Genesis the second Chapter and the twenty fourth verse That Man shall leave father and mother and cleave to his wife and they two shall bee one flesh is not repealed by God for wee see the accord of marriage betweene Adam and Eve is continued and they company together and bring forth children And as the estate of marriage was not taken away by sinne so was not the blessing of fruitfullnesse and conception Therefore as before they fell God said Bring forth fruit and multiply and fill the Earth the first Chapter and the twenty eighth verse so here Eve receiveth from the Lord strength to conceive and bring forth Cain and Abell Now the woman bringeth forth not only a seede but the seede promised in the third chapter of Genesis and the fifteenth verse and that a holy seede Matthew the second chapter and fifteenth verse not only Men in Earth but Saints in Heaven and the end hereof is not only that wee should desire to have our own names continue but as Joshua speakes in the seventh of Joshua and the ninth verse quid fiet magno tuo nomine that is that not only wee may magnifie Gods name while wee live but that when wee fall another seede may stand up and prayse his name that the seede may serve him Psalme the twenty second and the thirtith verse A people that shall bee borne shall praise him the hundred and second Psalme and the eightteenth verse Know Touching the carnall copulation of Adam with Eve where God expresseth it by the terme of knowledge it sheweth us the holinesse of this tongue wherein the holy-Ghost writ this then which there is no tongue that useth so modest and chaste speeches and therefore is called the holy tongue and it withall sheweth us that the holy-Ghost by his owne example commendeth unto us modesty and chaste speeches for that modest speech which hee useth here to expresse the company of man and woman he useth also Matthew the first where he saith Joseph knew not Mary and this thing hee calleth by another terme Debitam benevolentiam I Corinthians the seventh and the third verse that is he exhorteth us to avoid fornication uncleaness and filthiness Ephesians the fifth and the third verse so he might provoke us by his example for as that broad speech uttered
by Saul was after the Lords spirit was taken from him and another evill spirit vexed him so unclean speeches proceed not from the holy Ghost that delighteth in modest termes 2. Again the term of knowledge is used as opposite to passion to teach men that they must dwell with their wives as men of knowledge the first of Peter the third and the seventh verse that they be not like fed horses neighing after their neighbours wives Jeremiah the fift chapter and the eighth verse Afterward The circumstance of time is noted in the word Afterward That is not before he was deprived of Paradise but when he was driven out For the pleasure of marriage is a mortall pleasure For as Christ saith In this world men marry but they that shall be counted worthie of the life to come neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angells of God Luke the twentieth chapter The use of marriage is that because men die they should beget sonnes and leave a posterity to stand up after them But the Children of the Resurrection dye as men and therefore he was made to beget Children And for spirituall joy or comfort it is none But postquam spiritus deficit venium ad solatia carnis It is a carnall pleasure For as Cain being cursed out of Gods City built himself a City in the fourth chapter of Genesis As Saul being cast out of the Lords favour would be honoured of man in the first of Samuell fift chapter So Adam being deprived of spirituall comfort and pleasure useth marriage as a carnall pleasure P●…itio For the point of division jointly in these this pair of Bretheren we have a view of all mankinde Adam had more Children but the Holy Ghost contenteth himself to set out mankinde in these two Even as the 〈◊〉 saith of Abraham that he had two sonnes one born after the flesh another after the Spirit Galatians the fourth chapter and the two and twentieth verse So were the sonnes of Adam To Cain are reckoned as his posteritie Henoch Lamech Nimrod Pharaoh and all the wicked To Abell Enoch Noah Shem Abraham Isaac and all the faithfull which is the great partition of mankinde For the holy Scripture setteth out which is Gods City that is Sion and Jerusalem and which is the Devils City by Babylon The one answering to Abell the other to Cain They set out the Devls city by amor sui ad contemptum Dei Gods city by amor Dei usque ad contempium sui Again by Abell is set out those that are in state of grace by Cain they that are in state of nature By the one are set out all them that are born after the flesh by the other such as are born anew and led by the Spirit Galatians chapter the fourth And this partion is made of all mankinde through the world till that last 〈◊〉 which Christ shall make of the Sheepe from the 〈◊〉 in the five and twentieth chapter of Mathew This partition we see in these two For that although they were both of one Father and Mother Contrary natures yet such was the diversitie and 〈◊〉 of their nature and disposition as they fitly represent the diverse state of mankinde The 〈◊〉 is in respect of their names the 〈◊〉 in respect of their works for the one rose up against the other and slew him Cain and Abell why so called The Devills 〈◊〉 in respect of their names is the one is called Cain that is a purchaser or possessioner that is such a one as thought it his 〈◊〉 to enjoy this world and contrariwise misery to lose it and the possessions thereof Abell 〈◊〉 sorrow and vanity But the other Abell that is sorrow and vanity such a one as doth with Salomon account all things in this life vanity and vexation of spirit in the first chapter of the book of Ecclesiastes such a one as hath sorrow by reason of continuall sinnes whereby he offendeth God of them Christ saith in the 〈◊〉 chapter of Matthew Blessed are they that mourne and sorrow for that they are out of their place As the Prophet speaketh in the one hundred thirty seventh Psalm By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept when we remembred thee O Sion For Abell was not a City of this world as Cain but was one of those that sought for a City in Heaven that was to come Hebrews the thirteenth and the second verse He is called Abell that is vanitie 1. First in respect of the shortnesse of his life in which regard every man is altogether vanity Psalm the thirty ninth 2. Then in respect of the afflictions of this life in which respect he saith Every man is vanity And therefore they that are of Abell will say We are strangers and sojourners as all our Fathers were Psal. 39. They are such as though they be in the world yet use it as if they used it not the first to the Corinthians the seventh chapter They set not their felicitie in this world as Cain but reckon all things in this world vanity and vexation of spirit and long to be restored to their heavenly Country 2. Contrary works Secondly As they have diverse dispositions so their works are contrary For as the Apostle saith of Ismael and Isaac Gal. 4. He that was borne after the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit So did Cain persecute Abell as the Apostle witnesseth Joh. 1. 3. that Cain was of that wicked One and slew his Brother Why Cain slew Abell And wherefore slew he him Because his own works were evill and his Brothers good So as their dispositions were diverse their works were contrary So in Cain there is a resemblance of all the persecutors and oppressors that have been in the world The Wicked persecute the Godly by hand and tongue And Abell is a pattern of all the Martyrs that have been slain by the hand of Cain or wounded and persecuted by the tongue of Ismael who by mocking persecuted Isaac in the fourth chapter to the Galatians In these two is fulfilled that envy which God proclaimed between the woman and the Serpent and between their seeds Genesis the third and the fifteenth verse who was not only of the seed of that evill one Joshua the first and the third verse that was of the Serpent and the reason why the name of Cain is set down in the Bible is to shew the performance of that Prophesie Genesis the third and the fifteenth verse and to shew his wrath upon the Vessels of wrath Romans the ninth and the twenty second such as was Cain Cham Pharoah and Nebuchadnezar and all the wicked ones of his Race for the order of their comming into the world as Cain who was first born was worst and Abell the last born was best so it is with all mandkind For as the Apostle saith first commeth that which is naturall and then that which
Christ which wee should chiefly desire to see is that joyfull day of his birth whereof the Angels brought word a day of great joy to all the people that this day is born a Saviour Luke the second chapter In the desire it self we are to consider two things First the Degree Secondly the Manner of this Desire First for the Degree It is noted in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is leaped for joy of that day in regard of the great benefit which should come unto the world by Christs birth Which joy the babe John Baptist expressed who before he was borne leaped in his Mothers womb Luke the first chapter and the fourty first verse The joyfull desire here mentioned is as St. Peter speaks a joy unspeakable and glorious the first epistle of Peter and the eighteenth chapter To teach us that the day of Christs comming in the flesh is a day most of all to be desired and a matter of the greatest joy that can be Secondly For the Manner of this Desire It was a desire joyned with trust and confidence without which our desire is in vain be it never so hot Abrahams desire of seeing Christs day was joyned with hope that he should see it which he so much desired The Creatures desire to see the day of their redemption for they groan Romans the eighth chapter but this desire is without hope These desires are both to be seen in Jacob For when his sonnes being sent from Joseph told him that Joseph was alive and was Governor in the land of Egypt his heart wavered Then he had a desire to see Joseph but it was not joyned with hope for he beleeved them not But when they told him Josephs words and shewed him the Chariots that were sent for to bring him then he had a desire with hope and his spirit revived within him Genesis the fourty fift chapter and the twenty sixt verse The hope that he conceived of seeing him whom he desired to see made him rejoyce Touching the Reason of this desire he had sufficient matter of present joy for he was exceeding rich in Cattel and Silver and Gold Genesis the thirteenth chapter and the second verse Why then doth he long after a joy to come The reason is though God had blessed him with aboundance of temporal blessings yet he considered a day would come when his present joy should be taken from him John the sixteenth chapter Therefore he desires a joy that had a foundation that is not earthly but heavenly joyes Hebrews the eleventh chapter Such as should not be taken from him John the sixteenth chapter and the twenty second verse as Job knew that his Redeemer lived Job the nineteenth chapter So Abrabam desired a Redeemer and such a one he had For thus saith the Lord which redeemeth Abraham Isaiah the fourty ninth chapter and the twenty second verse That might redeem his soul from Hell Psalm the fourty ninth And his body out of the dust of death Psalm the twenty second for he confessed himself to be both dust and ashes Genesis the eighteenth chapter Dust in regard of his nature and therefore subject to corruption but ashes in regard of his sinnes by which he is subject to everlasting condemnation in respect of both he desired a Redeemer that might deliver both his body from death and his soul from destruction that might say revertite silii Psalm the ninetieth and the third verse He considered he needed a Redeemer for his soul and body that he might not be dust and ashes and therefore exceedingly desired one that would deliver his soul from being ashes and his body from the dust Secondly It is said of Abraham that he saw Christs day the notice of Gods eternal mercie herein was Abrahams desire by whose example all that will see Christ must first desire the sight of him as he did Et desiderium sit eum spectare Though Abraham did not actually see Christ in the flesh yet he had a desire which was all one as if he had seen him with bodily eyes For if the concupiscence only of evill be sinne though the act follow not then desire of that which is good is accepted albeit it be not actually performed therefore Nehemiah prayeth Hearken to thy servants that desire to fear thy name Nehemiah the first chapter and the eleventh verse The very hungring and thirsting after righteousnesse is effectual to blessednesse Matthew the fift chapter When we can say with David Coepit anima me a desider are justitias tuas Psalm the hundred and nineteenth We desire to be more desirous of it as a thing acceptable before God and though our soul desire not yet the want of it is our woe and the fainting of our joyes while we say When wilt thou comfort us Psalme the hundred and nineteenth Those are as the bruised reed and smoaking flax which he will not quench Isaiah the fourty second chapter That which Abraham did see was Christs day which is true in what sense soever we take it He saw the day of his Deity Genesis the eighteenth chapter the second and third verses when seeing three men he ran to meet them and bowed himself to the ground saying Lord which was a vision of the Trinity Secondly For the day of his death and passion he saw that too Genesis the twenty second chapter and the fourteenth verse when Abraham making the great promise of his obedience by sacrificing his sonne upon mount Moriah when after Christ was crucified said In mane 〈◊〉 provideat Dominus though he take not my sonne Isaac yet will he take one of my seed that shall be the sonne of Abraham Thirdly He saw the day of Christs nativity when he said to his servant Put thy hand under my 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 by the Lord God of Heaven and God of the earth 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 fourth 〈◊〉 and the twenty third verse Quod 〈…〉 ad 〈…〉 saith 〈◊〉 but it was to shew that the seed in whom all 〈◊〉 should be blessed should come out of his loins and take flesh of him for he took the seed of Abraham Hebrews the second chapter So Abraham saw all the dayes of Christ. But secondly We are to inquire in what 〈◊〉 he saw this day For which point we must know he saw not Christs day 〈◊〉 Simeon whose eyes did behold 〈◊〉 salvation Luke the second chapter nor as 〈◊〉 to whom Christ saith 〈◊〉 are the eyes that see the things which 〈◊〉 see Luke the tenth chapter that is with bodily eyes which many 〈◊〉 and Kings could not see So Abrahams outward man 〈◊〉 not see Christs dayes but he 〈◊〉 it in the 〈◊〉 man Romans the 〈◊〉 chapter He saw it spiritually with the eyes of 〈…〉 Ephesians the first chapter and the eighteenth verse And 〈◊〉 the eyes of faith which 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 things not 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 By which things invisible to the eyes of the body are made visible to the eye of the minde by the eye of
willingly will come as often as they may and not like those that swell with pride and say another time will serve as well as now as Davids servants said to Naball in the first book of Samuel the twenty fift chapter We come now in a good time for thou makest a feast and art in case to relieve us another time peradventure thou wilt not be so prepared So men ought to take the opportunity and to say in their selves Now is the time of the celebration of Gods mercy and loving kindnesse Now we receive Christ and therefore there is great hope that if we come he will receive us Now we celebrate the memory of his death when he was content to receive the thief that came unto him and therefore it is most likely that he will receive us if we come to him But if we come not now happily we shall not be received when we would It is Christs will That they which are given him of the Father be with him where he is and may behold his glory John the seventeenth chapter and the twenty fourth verse Therefore it stands us upon to come to Christ that he may receive us to be one with him in the life of grace and partakers with him in his Kingdom of glory Qui verò haec audierunt compuncti sunt corde dixerunt ad Petrum ac reliquos Apostolos Quid faciemus viri fratres Petrus autem ait ad eos Resipiscite c. Act. 2. 37. April 12. 1600. OUR Saviour Christ promised Peter Acts the fift chapter to make him a fisher of men and 〈◊〉 the thirteenth chapter That the 〈…〉 of Heaven is like a 〈…〉 which catcheth fish of all 〈…〉 The first casting forth of this act and 〈…〉 draught that Peter had is by 〈…〉 these verses And the draught which he made was 〈…〉 souls verse the fourty first If we 〈◊〉 of what 〈◊〉 They were 〈◊〉 souls of them that killed the Sonne of God and 〈…〉 the spirit of God whom they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 holy Ghost to 〈◊〉 verse the 〈…〉 These men are full of new 〈◊〉 Which when we advisedly consider it cannot but be matter First Of great comfort Teaching us that albeit we be great sinners as the Jews that put the sonne of God to death yet there is a quid faciemus what to doe that is a hope of remission of sinnes Secondly Of instruction touching the means That if we repent and be pricked in heart with the consideration of our sinnes as they were we shall attain this mercie which they received First St. Luke sets down the Sermon of Peter Secondly The sruit and effect of it As the Sermon it self propounds the death and Resurrection of Christ so in the effect that followed of it we see the means how we are made partakers of his death and Resurrection and that is set down in these two verses which contain a question and an answer In the question is to be observed First the cause of it that is the compunction of their hearts Secondly the cause of that compunction and that was the hearing of Peters Sermon Touching this effect which Peters Sermon wrought in the hearts of his hearers it is compuncti sunt corde Wherein note two things First the work it self Secondly the part wherein of the work it self it is said they were pricked Wherein first we are to observe That the first work of the spirit and operation of the word is compunction of heart howbeit the word being the word of glad tidings and comfort it is strange it should have any such operation but that Christ hath foretold the same John the sixteenth chapter When the comforter comes he shall reprove the world of sinne Now reproof is a thing that enters into the heart as Proverbs the twelfth chapter and the eighteenth verse There is that speaketh words like the prickings of a sword and as Christ gave warning before hand so now when the holy Ghost was given we see that Peters hearers are reproved and pricked in their consciences that they dealt so cruelly with Christ. As this 〈◊〉 the Elect of God so there is another spirit called by the same name of pricking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the eleventh chapter and the eighth verse that is the spirit of slumber which shews it self upon those that shall not be saved Touching the manner of this operation we see it is not a tickling or itching but a pricking and that no light one but such as pearced deeply into their hearts and caused them to cry Whereby we see it is not the speaking of fair words saying with the false Prophets Jeremiah the twenty third chapter The Lord hath said ye shall have peace it is not that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the sixteenth chapter and the eighteenth verse that makes this effect but this speaking The part wherein this work was wrought was the heart as Luke the twenty fourth chapter they burned in their hearts and 〈◊〉 the second chapter and the fourteenth verse I will speak to their hearts So it was 〈◊〉 of the eares in the second 〈◊〉 to Timot hie the 〈◊〉 chapter or of the brain that they felt but a 〈◊〉 of the very 〈◊〉 and so should we be affected at the hearing of the word As 〈…〉 is pricked in the flesh is disquieted till he have remedy so should the consideration of our sinnes disquiet us and make us seek for cure This is our duty from their example and it is a good signe of distinction to shew us whether we be of the number of those that shall be saved whether of the good fish that shall be gathered together or the bad fish that shall be cast out Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the fourty eighth verse So if we pertain to God we shall feel this pricking at our hearts after we have heard the word The cause of this compunction is his auditis that is they had heard a speech of St. Peter which did disquiet them till they asked counsel of Peter and the rest The word of God of its own nature hath no such operation for the Patriarch Job saith Job the twenty third chapter It was agreeable to him as his appointedfood And David Psalm the nineteenth saith The Commanaements of the Lordrejoyceth the heart and is sweeter than the honey and the honey-combe But yet it hath this effect in regard that it meeteth with that which is an enemy to our Salvation that is sinne the deputy of 〈◊〉 as the word is Gods 〈◊〉 Without the Law sinne is dead but when the Commandement came sinne revived Romans the seventh chapter and the eighth verse for sinne is a sting the first epistle to the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter which lyeth dead so long as it is not reproved But when it is reproved by the commandement of God then it reviveth and stings the heart it makes men have a conscience of sinne Hebrews the tenth chapter and when sinne is
sound of voyce Psal. 14. 1. So there is a double word speaking the one is verbum vocis the other cordu But to speak truly and properly there is but one word which is in our hearts as our word is first cloathed with aire and so becommeth audible to mens eares so faith one Christ the word of his Father being cloathed with 〈◊〉 was visible and manifest to all men So to conclude the word is that he conceived first in the Closer as I may say of his 〈◊〉 and then doth make it plain here by Creation and after by redemption And here we may learn the difference between us and God In us there is one thing by which we are and another thing by which we understand and conceive things but in God both his being and understanding are of one and the same substance And this substantial Word of God is that where with St. John beginneth his Gospell God created that which was not but the word was in the begining Therefore it is verbum increatum it made all things at the beginning Coll. 1. 15. 16. Therefore it was before the beginning John 17. 5. Thus we see as Christ saith how Moses scripsit de me John 5. 46. this word of God is proceeding from God John 8. 42. as the holy Ghost doth also John 15. 26. The proceeding of the Sonne is four folde But Christs manner of proceeding is determined after four sorts First as a sonne proceeding from a Father Secondly as an Image from a Picture Thirdly as the light from the Sunne Fourthly as a word from the speaker as a Sonne from the Father Psal. 2. 7. this day I begot thee this day that is from all eternity for to God all times is as one day also he begot him in respect of the connaturality and identity of nature and substance that he hath with God the Father As an Image from a pattern that is in likeness and resemblance to the Father Coll. 1. 15. for he is like God in property and similitude of quality and therefore is called the lively and express character and graven Image form and stamp of his Father Heb. 1. 3. Thirdly in respect of Coeternity For as the light proceeded from the Sunne so soon as ever the Sunne was so did Christ the word from eternity Heb. 1. 3. and therefore he is called the brightness of his Fathers glorie So at what time God was at that time the brightness of his Sonne appeared and shone from him Last of all in regard of the immateriality 1. John 1. For as a word conceived in us is no matter or substance so this was Coemateriall but an incorporeall generation Thus we see that his proceeding is foure fold Christ distinct in person one in substance Now this word is distinct from the Father in person and one with him in substance That he is distinct from him it appeareth Gen. 19. 24. Psal. 110. 1. the Lord said to my Lord 30. Prov. 4. what is his name and what is his sonnes names Esay 36. 9. the father brought forth a sonne ergo divers from himself Touching the Godhead of Christ Job saith surely my Redeemer liveth and I shall see God with these eyes Job 19. 25 26. Psal. 45. 7. God even thy God shall annoynt thee There is God annoynting God for he is called thy God also whom wee must worship Esay 9. 6. Jer. 63. 6. his name is the righteous God In the new Testament Rom. 9. 5. even as he was verbum incarnatum 〈◊〉 Tim. 3. 16. and John 17. 2. this is eternall life to know God and him whom he sent Jesus Christ. I have made it plain before that the Heathen had notice of his second person As the Persian called him the second Understanding The Caldeans called him the Fathers Understanding or Wisdome Macrobius a Counsell or Wisdome proceeding from him so may we say likewise of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is attributed to Christ for they seem not to be ignorant of that name Some called him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is verbum Hermes calleth him the Naturall Word of God Orpheus the Word of the Father And Plato most plainly in his Epistle to Hormias But most strange is that which 〈◊〉 writeth inlib de preparatione Evangelii scited out of AEmilius and Heraclitus and let this suffice for the distinction of the duty and notice of Christ which is Verbum Dei Now this word hath a relation to him that speaketh it and also to the things Created therefore it is called verbum expressivum in respect of God and verbum factivum in regard of his works for his Precept did in respect of himself express his Will but in respect of us it had a power to Create and make things that were not Therefore 1. John 3. he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the 15. verse he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that both in regard of his Father and us he is a word Little divinity and much danger is in those late Divines which say that this was but a temperarie word which God used in Creating all things for we see this is verhum increatum and the very root of which all that is said after are but as branches derived therefrom And thus much for the authority of this Word Fiat lux Now to the Creation of light Moses maketh plain mention That the first several thing which God perfectly made was Light Wherefore we will first speak of the Order then of the Nature God is Pater Luminum Jam. 1. 17. Therefore first he brought forth light as his sunne But some having little Philosophie in them doe reason against this work of God very impiously as if it were not to be said that light was made three dayes before the Sunne which is the cause thereof But if we respect God the Father of lights or the Sunne which is the light of the World or the necessity of light for Lux est vox verum because that which things cannot express by voyce and words they doe plainly shew by the comming of light which manifesteth all things Again God being about the work of distinguishing it was necessary first to make the great distiuguisher of all things which is light for in nocte est color omnibus idem tenebrae rerum discrimina tollunt but the light distinguisheth one thing from another Again of the three beginnings we shew that the first beginning was of time but we could not have a morning to make a first day without light of it was first made for the naturall common Clock of the world to distinguish times is the course of light and darkness which is the essence of day and night Furthermore we have seen that the Heavens were the first and most excellent therefore the light being the first quality and affection of the the Heavens the first body made must by right order be made first Last of all we
begin naturally a communionibus but there is nothing with which all things doe more commonly communicate than the light of the Son ergo it is first for it is the communication of Heaven because all the Starres doe borrow their light of it and we see by it on earth it is oculus noster by which we see and it is their Cresset to light all them There are some which will have a reason of Gods works and would know how it could be that light should be first made and four daies after the Sunne to be made which was the cause of it But to these I answer that their absurd doubt doth argue small skill in Philosophy for they speak as if the light were an affection and quality only of the Sunne for we see that the fire on earth the meteors and lightnings in heaven the scales of Fishes and a dark wood have also light in them And what doth give light to these I answer not the Sunne But admit the same were the cause of light yet we see that many things have their proceeding in nature before things on which they have after their dependance As all agree that the livor in a man hath the precedence in nature and yet after it hath his dependance on the heart as his chief for though the light hath now his dependance on the Sunne yet then it had his precedence And as Christ was long before he took the body of Flesh so was the light a certain time before it took and was joyned to the body of the Sunne Again we may say that though the Sunne was not created now yet the substance of the Sunne was now made and so we may understand lux for corpus lucidum which after was perfected Last of all this of St. Basill will overthrow their doubt For if a man will grant to God that he made all things without matter of nothing then we must also grant that he can make light without the Sunne for God doth not depend upon ordinary means he is not bound and tyed to the Sunne that by the means thereof light should shew for he can give light without it three dayes by miracle at the beginning and will for ever give light without the Sunne after the end of the world The Hebrews spake of three Creations 1. De nihilo 2. In nihilo 3. Super nihilum All things were of nothing the light was in nothing the earth hanged upon nothing Job 26. 7. Tell me saith Job on what the earth dependeth and I will tell thee on what the light then did depend for it was miraculously giving light without Sunne A word of the second point Job telleth that it is a probleme and a hard question to know from whence the light is Job 38. 19. and in the 24. verse That it is more than mans wisdome to answer it for the very light is darknesse and ignorance to us for all that reason can conceive of it is this that either it must needs be a substance or else 〈◊〉 substantiae that is flowing or proceeding from a substance as a quality or affection of it if it be a substance it must be a spirituall or a corporall substance a spirituall substance it cannot be for it affecteth a bodily substance bodily it cannot be for the motion of it is a moment for with a flash it lighteneth all and also if it were then it must be granted that two bodies are in one place as the ayre and the light at one instant but indeed as they say of the Element that they are next kinne and affinity to accidents so we may say of light Preach 11. 5. there is a light of knowledge and a light of comfort The execution of the Precept The execution of the Precept was of the nature of the Preceptor and Commander 2 Cor. 4. 6. For as by his word he made the Whale bring Jonas safe to land so here he caused light to come out of darkness Rom. 4. 17. calling things that were not as if they were as the motion of the lightning is that is in an instant with celerity comming from the East to the West Luke 17. 24. so was the Creation of it for the facility of making it we know that no work is impossible to God Luke 1. 37. For as casie as it is for man to speak any thing so casie it is for God to doe any thing God 's dictum factum is all one and alike to him Wherefore we may conclude with David that Gods word runneth swiftly to the performance and execution of his Will It is easily and speedily done There is matter to be learned to lead us to good motions But of this hereafter Viditque Deus Lucem illam bonam esse Gen. 1. 4 vers THE meaning of this is That as we have seen Gods wisdome and power in the execution of his Will so now we may see the goodness and mercy of God in the confirmation and approbation of the light which he 〈…〉 allowing it as good for our use Job 28. 3. 〈…〉 God gave not the light to the Moon but to us that the light might arise to us The reference that this verse hath with that which goeth before is this God made things before and here Moses sheweth the quality of it that it was even in Gods judgement very good and perfect that is as the Philosophers say God in all his works limiteth together bonum ens for all that he maketh is passing well made The difference between Gods works and ours which sheweth the difference between Gods works and ours For it is our manner so we doe a thing that God willeth or that we purpose it is no matter we care not how it be done But here God teacheth us by his example that we should in attempting any thing have a speciall care that it be good and welldone Also it is usuall with us that the thing we make in haste is as we say canis festinans that is it is rudely and blindely done and therefore that which a man will doe well he taketh great pains and leasure about it because it is a hard and difficult matter to doe a thing well but God doth and can doe things well and perfectly well with ease with quick dispatch even in a moment with great facility and celerity and yet we see he confirmeth it to be very good in these words Two parts the View and Confirmation to be good Therefore there are two parts First the view which God taketh in beholding the light Secondly his testimony affirming and confirming it to be good The View Touching the first As before we haveheard of Gods speaking so here now we are to consider of Gods seeing Touching both which Moses by Gods spirit is taught to speak after the manner of men in our phrase and dialect that it might be to our capacity for he cannot speak to us as to spirituall but as to