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

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make our selues sure of any thing vntill we haue it in present possession We say commonly we say it truly Erasm de 〈◊〉 ●hil● ad p●aelur 5. A●● li. noct All● lib. 13. ●● 17. Erasm 〈◊〉 chil 2. 〈◊〉 2. that many things fall betweene the cup and the lip between the meat and the mouth the meaning whereof is this that nothing is so certain but it may be preuented nothing so neere but may be disappointed and therefore we are not to make our selues too sure of any thing He that hath sowed his seed hath not yet ripe corne neither hath seene the time of haruest he that hath mony hath not yet gotten gain by it we must therfore take the losse as it is not as it may be To returne to the point that is in hād we hold that no mā is bound to restore to another that which he tooke not away forasmuch as that were to accuse himselfe falsely and rather to giue then to restore True it is the Prophet saith He restored that which he tooke not away Psal 69 4. but he complaineth of the wrongs iniuries which he receiued and suffered wrongfully wherein he was a notable type and figure of Christ who suffered punishment for the fault which he committed not which after a sort may be called a restitution he was not guilty but dyed for vs that are guilty he was innocent and yet suffered for vs sinners he did no euill yet was crucified for vs euill doers Hee stood in our place the iust for the vniust The fift point to be considered is whether we ought alwaies to mak restitutiō to him of whō we haue receiued and taken somewhat The answer is whatsoeuer belongeth to another How farre we are bou●● to r●store and is not our owne ought to be restored because there ought to be an equality of commutatiue iustice and the Apostle willeth vs to render vnto al men their dues Ro● 13 7. tribute to whom tribute is due custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour Neuerthelesse if that which is to be restored be hurtfull to him to whom restitution shold be made or to any other it ought not to be restored but rather to be kept close and laid vp safe that when better occasion and fitter time serueth it may be restored For restitution rightly made respecteth his profit and benefit to whom it is made When a thing is giuen vnlawfully so that the gift it selfe is vnlawfull as we see in Simony when holy things are bought and sold as sheepe in the market no restitution is to be made to the giuer that deserueth iustly to lose whatsoeuer he hath giuen neither ought the receiuer to retaine it because he can lay no iust claime and title vnto it so that it ought to be bestowed vpon godly and holy vses Cicero de 〈◊〉 ●ibr 1. The heathen man speaking of iustice and making it a part of it to giue to euery man his owne maketh this exception that it is vnlawfull to deliuer into a mad mans hand his owne sword which he committed vnto vs and sometimes the case falleth out that a man is by no meanes to keepe his promise that he hath made And to this purpose he setteth downe these two generall rules to be obserued in the particular duties of iustice first that we hurt no person then that we serue the common profite of men forasmuch as we are seruants vnto all Moreouer if hee to whom we are to restore be vnknowne vnto vs we must make diligent enquiry to know him if he be dead restore it to his heires that he hath left behind him if he be remooued farre from vs it ought if it be possible to be sent vnto him if it cannot be done safely and fitly it ought to be laid vp in some safe place and then the matter must be signified to the owner that he may take order by some meanes to haue it or to dispose of it at his own pleasure The sixt doubt is this whether he be alwayes bound to restore which hath taken any thing I answere he is alwayes bound so long as he hath any thing in his keeping Restitution belongeth to satisfaction but he that hath offended ought to satisfie ●●w restituti●● to be ●de by him 〈◊〉 hath ta● anything Now albeit he that hath taken away any thing haue it not in his owne keeping but another yet because the owner is destitute of his goods he is bound to restore them in regard of the iniury that he hath done or to procure the restoring at his hands that hath them in his possession Besides a man is bound to open and vncouer his owne fault not onely to God by confession but to his brother by satisfaction Many wil neuer acknowledge the matter vntil they be taken with the manner Moreouer when many ioyntly together haue taken away from any man that which belongeth vnto him and some one of them hath made satisfaction vnto him fully so much as he can require the rest are bound to content him that hath satisfied the person iniured they are not to pay it vnto him that was damnified For then he should be payed doubly which double paiment he cannot receiue without iniustice seeing he that is wronged may as well offend by taking too much as they that do wrong by restoring too little Therefore they are repooued that having had their share and portion in euill gotten goods say what need I to giue any thing backe the party wronged is satisfied But if one man haue returned as much in value and quantitie as many tooke away the rest that were partakers of the booty are bound to satisfie him that hath paide the whole not him that was wronged because he hath receiued so much already as he could challenge 〈◊〉 as in 〈◊〉 owne ●ons haue ●aken a● any ●g may be ●d to re● Seuenthly we are to know and informe our selues whether they that haue not themselues in their owne persons taken away any thing may notwithstāding be iustly bound to make restitution and tyed necessarily to this duety I answer that euen such as haue not taken any thing with their own hands are charged to restore because they may be the cause of vnlawful taking if not directly yet indirectly For the Apostle saith that they are worthy of death not only which commit euil things Rom. 1.32 but such as consent to them that do them or haue pleasure in them And we may be partakers of other mens sinnes and so draw vpon our selues the punishments due vnto them We are ready to iustifie our selues and to wash our hands when we practise not euill but it is as Pilate washed his hands who made himselfe guilty of innocent blood by consenting to the Iewes and by pronouncing sentence against him to please pleasure them as well as they that were the executioners and pierced his hands and feet so that
where he had graciously bestowed much he may iustly require the more Againe our spirituall life is a debt and our workes due to him in regard of our redemption iustification and sanctification in consideration of all the which we owe our selues wholly vnto God and he in iustice may require all the seruice that wee can possibly performe vnto him A seruant bought with money and redeemed out of bondage is a debter to his master and is wholly at his commandement because he oweth to him his life his liberty and all that he hath How much more then must we consider our selues to be wholly the Lords to serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues being redeemed from the bondage of sinne and slauery of Sathan not with siluer and golde but with the precious blood of Christ as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled 1 Pet. 1. 1 Pet. 1.19 Neither were we once onely made free men but moreouer are laden with many benefites by this our Sauiour and redeemer being regenerated with his Spirit to walke before him in newnesse of life So that our vnthankefulnesse is exceeding great if forgetting the greatnesse of our deliuerance we returne to our vomit againe as dogges 2. Pet. 2.22 and lye wallowing in the mire as filthy swine Lastly in regard of the benefits to come which by the Spirit of Christ we doe certainly expect and looke for to wit our resurrection of the body and glorification in the heauens These being exceeding blessings do make vs infinite debters vnto God Hence we learne to detest the heresie of Popish hypocrites that dare boast of the merits of the Saints and of workes of supererogation an euident argument of intollerable proude spirits For debt and merit are quite contrary they are so opposite the one to the other that the first being established it ouerthroweth the second as Rom. 4.4 5. Rom. 4.4 5. To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth on him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse If then our whole life be a debt of the Spirit it must of necessity be false that there is any meriting of life and saluation by any workes either of congruity or condignity or supererogation For whatsoeuer it pleaseth them to prate of merits either publikely or priuately to their disciples dare any of them when they are ready to goe the way of all flesh and must be presented before the eternall iudge dare any of them I say desire of God to giue them according to their merits dare any in the pride of his heart so exalt and lift vp himselfe as to pray Lord I am worthy of thy mercy I haue deserued thy kingdome pay me that thou owest vnto me I desire nothing at thy hands gratis or freely my works are truely and properly meritorious I haue a right to heauen and deserue it worthily I expect not eternall life as an almes but as a price due vnto my labours I am content thou enter into iudgment with me for I haue righteousnesse in mine owne person and therefore I craue not to be accepted in thy beloued Ephes 1.6 1 Pet. 2.5 but in my selfe Lord thou hast made me able to merit heauen for my selfe and the●efore repay me according to my worth I thinke none of them are come to this presumption to pleade for themselues with God therfore whatsoeuer they write whatsoeuer they speake whatsoeuer they resolue and determine in their schooles and pulpits they deny it renounce it wholy at the point of death with their own mouthes condēne their owne folly In their life they talke of merits but at their death they are glad to call for mercy so by their owne practise proue and confirme the trueth of the doctrine of the Protestants howsoeuer against the light of their own consciences they oppose themselues flatly as enemies vnto it The debt of the creature euen of the man regenerate is greater then he is able to pay the thousandth part nay the more he payeth the more he oweth and is bound to pay forasmuch as the benefits of God do daily grow and encrease toward him and abound in a wonderful measure that they augment the debt strengthen the obligation Neither can they escape and auoid the force of this Obiection by a friuolous and false distinction that our works are not indeed meritorious in the rigour of Iustice or absolutely considered in themselues but that they are so by the ordinance and acceptation of God Answere For albeit God accept of our workes and reward them euen to a cup of cold water Mat. 10. yet he accepteth them not as merits but as the due obedience of his sonnes which he recompenseth freely and fully because he that cannot lie or deceiue hath promised the reward Neither is it the ordinance of God that we should merit by our obedience but that we should performe the worship and honour that is due vnto him Tit. 3.4 Act. 15. Let them therefore shew vs where God hath made any such promise vnto vs to accept our workes as merits and we will beleeue them The Lord gaue the Israelites the land of Canaan not for their workes Deut. 7.8 and 9.5 but for his owne loue and mercy If they could not merit the earthly Canaan how should any deserue the heauenly Wee are taught to pray to GOD to giue vs our daily bread If wee cannot merit the foode of this life no not one morsell of bread but must craue it of him as poore beggers doe an almes at the dores of men much lesse can we merit euerlasting life which is the gift of God Rom. 6.23 Rom. 6.23 For what is a bit of bread in comparison of the kingdome of heauen or what is the food of the body in respect of the food of the soule Lastly this doctrine destroyeth another bulwarke of the Church of Rome Against mans free will whereby they set vp mans nature and that is free will teaching that there is a cooperation of mans free will with Gods free grace in the first act of our conuersion A doctrine full of pride and folly as well as the former for as much as this is to part stakes betweene God and our selues and to diuide our conuersion betweene him and vs and consequently to ascribe as much to man as to God Christ saith that without him we can do nothing Phil. 2.13 we cannot come vnto him except the Father draw vs Ioh. 6. It is God that doth worke in vs the will and the deed saith the Apostle We are all by nature corrupt there is no part sound in vs or without vs. We are not onely as crazy or sicke but as dead men God doth all and we nothing in good things Hee preuenteth vs with his grace he prepareth vs by his word he enclineth vs by his Spirit and worketh both the
men but the one hanged himselfe the others were smitten with sudden death at the voyce of Peter as with a thunderbolt so that they fell downe and neuer rose vp againe A iust reward of all such as haue a conscience gilt or rather guilty of the horrible sinne of hypocrisie If a man goe about to deceiue his neighbour how is he spoken against but if he goe about like a wretch to cosin his master or his father how doe all men point at him as a varlet and abhorre him as a beast God is our Master our Father our Husband our King all Titles of honour are due vnto him and too litle for him forasmuch as no dignity or excellency or superiority can be giuen vnto him but his Maiestie and honour surmounteth them all shall we then goe about to deceiue and circumuent him though wee could carry it away cunningly and not bee espied Know therefore that he detesteth all such wickednesse more then man doth the deceitfulnesse that is practised against himselfe The first example of hypocrisie that wee haue in the Scripture Gen 4 5. is Caine he came to the worship of God with his brother but because his heart was not vpright God had no respect vnto him nor to his offering no more then if hee had cut off a dogges necke Esay 66.3 or had offered swines flesh but reiected both his person and his oblation The like he speaketh to the Israelites that pleased themselues in outward ceremonies and turned the worship of God into a lie Ierem 7.8.9.10 11. Behold ye trust in lying words that cannot profit will yee steale murther and commit adulterie and sweare falsely and burne incense vnto Baal and walke after other Gods whom yee know not and come and stand before me in this house which is called by my Name and say Wee are deliuered to doe all those abominations Is this house which is called by my Name become a denne of robbers in your eyes Behold euen I haue seene it saith the Lord c. Where wee see we cannot deceiue the eye of the Lord with a lie he knoweth our wicked hearts and will finde vs out to bring vs to shame in this life and to destruction in the life to come We may not dally with him wee cannot deceiue him notwithstanding all our windings and turnings and altering our selues into all shapes he will finde vs out to the contempt of our persons to the shame of our faces and to the astonishment of all that behold vs. Secondly seeing it is a speciall duty belonging Vse 2 vnto vs to yeeld obedience to the whole will of God and to all his commandements we haue from hence a preseruatiue from the poyson that is cast out against vs as it were dung in our faces to make vs deny the faith renounce our Religion and start backe from our most holy profession For seeing we must performe perfect obedience and not limited as we thinke good we haue direction how to serue him that hee may accept of vs and bee well pleased with vs. If then Satan the master of all mischiefe and the author of all confusion raise vp cursed instruments brought vp as cunning schollers in his owne schoole to scoffe at vs and to scorne at our obedience we must comfort our selues in the Lord and commit our selues to the word of his grace knowing that it is God who requireth this intire obedience at our hands and delighteth in such sacrifice as is without blemish Let it not trouble vs that we heare such slanderous words such false reportes and diuellish lies cast out against vs let vs commit our causes to him that iudgeth vprightly who will iustifie vs in the ende and condemne our enemies Let vs be able to say with the Prophet All this is come vpon vs Psal 44.17 yet haue we not forgotten thee neither haue we dealt falsely in thy couenant These are the dayes of sinne wherein iniquity hath already gotten the vpperhand and such as are truely religious are made a prouerbe God requireth of vs that we be pure but who are in greater disgrace then such as study after purity and true holinesse If we labor to leade our liues according to the Lawes of God wee shall bee vpbraided with Puritanisme and as the enemies of Daniel could finde no accusation against him Dan. 6.5 except they finde it against him concerning the Law of God so doe our enemies deale with vs when they can catch no aduantage against vs they picke a quarrell with vs about the Scriptures and our profession as if it were a shame to reade the Scriptures or a disgrace to follow after holinesse of life The Apostle teacheth Phil. 2.15 and 4.8 that wee must bee blamelesse and pure as the sonnes of God in the middes of a naughty and crooked nation among whom wee are to shine as lights in the world Philippians chapter 2.15 And againe Whatsoeuer things are true whatsoeuer things are honest whatsoeuer things are iust whatsoeuer things are pure whatsoeuer things are of good report think on these things Our Sauiour the author of our saluation and the finisher of our faith Matth. 5.8 pronounceth that the pure in heart are blessed Paul willeth his scholler Timothy to keepe himselfe pure and to take heed lest hee make himselfe partaker of other mens sinnes 1 Tim. 5.22 1 Tim. 5.22 and 2.8 and 3.9 He commandeth all men to pray euery where lifting vp pure hands without wrath or doubting and to haue the mystery of faith in a pure conscience And in the second Epistle 2 Tim. 2.22 he chargeth him to fly the lusts of youth and to follow after righteousnesse faith loue and peace with them that call on the Lord with pure heart Heere we see what God requireth of vs and what he speaketh vnto vs this is his voyce that ought to sound euermore in our eares Be blamelesse be pure be the sonnes of God in the middes of a naughty nation blessed are the pure haue pure consciences pure hands pure hearts whatsoeuer things are pure and of good report thinke on them True it is there haue alwayes beene hypocrites in the Church Prou. 30.12 and there is a generation that are pure in their owne eyes and yet is not washed from their filthinesse Pro. 30.12 What then shall we whip their faults vpon the backes of those that are of no kinne vnto them For the faithfull though they haue in them many frailties and infirmities yet are washed by the blood of Christ and by the Spirit of God from their sins that they haue no dominion ouer them and exercise no kingdome in them Was it euer allowed in any court of Iustice and iudgment to take one for another to accuse one for another to condemne one for another It is the Law of God Ezek. 18.4 that euery soule should beare his owne sinne that neither the father should beare the iniquity of the sonne nor
separated frō it that were neuer of it or in it And touching the elect they can neuer fall from the grace of election the foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. ● ● hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his so that it is vnchangeable Besides such are also engrafted into Christ and cannot be separated from his communion according the saying of Christ Iohn 6 ver 37. All that the Father giueth mee shall come to me and him that commeth to me I will in no wise cast out And the Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn ● ● saieth They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would no doubt haue continued with vs but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of vs. If then the reprobate were neuer of this communion and the elect can neuer fall from this communion it may seeme that none can be said to be truely excommunicated that is to be separated from that spirituall communion which wee haue with Christ and with all the Saints by faith ● hope and loue I answer that which is affirmed of the elect and reprobate is most true neuerthelesse that which is concluded from thence is most false as the learned haue well obserued For first of all touching the reprobate that being hypocrites were once in the Church though they were neuer of the Church neither truely partakers of this spirituall communion of the Saints yet then they are saide to bee separated from it when they are manifested declared to haue beene alwaies strangers vnto it and separated from it as when Dauid praieth in the Psalms that they might be blotted out of the booke of life Psal 69 28. as if he had said declare it shew it plainely that they were neuer written in the booke of eternall election Secondly touching the elect the question is more difficult and yet the knot is not so intricate or intangled but it may be loosed For albeit they cannot be cut off from the grace of election because his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. neither can be wholly and altogether excluded from that communion which they haue by faith with Christ and by loue with the Church both by reason of the stablenesse of Gods promises and by reason of the efficacy force of Christs praier heard of the Father 〈◊〉 ●7 21 ● Luke 22 32. Yet in some sort in some respect they separate themselues as much as lyeth in them when they fall into greeuous sinnes as Dauid when he committed adultery and Peter when he denyed his Master The guifts of the holy Ghost are as a flame of fire kindled in vs such sinnes are as water powred vpon them to quench it and except GOD did grant his Spirit to dwell in them and preserue it as fire hidden vnder the ashes they would lose it wholly be quite and cleane excluded from this spirituall communion Notwithstanding our saluation is sure for his promise sake who hath promised to put his feare in our hearts that we should not depart from him and for Christs praier who praied for Peter all the elect that their faith should not faile Hence it is that he keepeth a remnant of grace in them and cherisheth the fire of his Spirit that it should not goe out so that the flame is slaked and the heat is diminished But in his good time he kindleth the fire and stirreth vp the heat somtimes by his word and sometimes by his corrections and therefore the Apostle willeth Timothy to stirre vp as coales 〈◊〉 1 6. the gift of God that was in him Dauid hauing experience hereof praieth vnto him to create a new heart in him and not to take away his Spirit from him Ps 51 10 11. Thus we see how the faithful are not wholly but yet in some part separated frō the communion of Christ because they are depriued of the sweet comforts that they felt before of the large measure of grace which they finde greatly diminished by the committing of sinne and continuing in it This is the spirituall communion The externall communion standeth in a common partaking together in the word in praiers in the receiuing of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another as Luke speaketh of the Church of Christ after his ascension Acts 2 42. They continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and in praiers Excommunication separateth from all these But some will say Obiect doth excommunication take away all commercing and conuersing one with another May not one in any sort liue with such Or doth it dissolue all bands of nature and pollicy I answer Answer no. There are some bands so firmely and closely knit tied together that nothing can loose them and abrogate them Some duties are naturall some domesticall and some ciuill which no excommunication can diminish or dissolue or dispense withall The Apostle giueth this as a generall precept If thine enemy hunger Rom. 12 20. giue him meate and if he thirst giue him drinke If an excommunicate person be in want and in any distresse we must helpe him and minister vnto him such things as are necessary for his preseruation wee must not cast away all care of him and all loue vnto him forasmuch as God hath made vs keepers one of another Againe it is lawfull to buy of him to sell vnto him and to bargaine with him albeit we should not conuerse and commerce with him as with a friend Moreouer if we owe personall duties to such a one as is in the family with vs we cānot shake them off vnder any colour or pretence of excommunication The wife must performe due beneuolence to the husband the children must obey their parents the seruants must count their masters worthy of all honour and contrariwise prouided alwayes that they do not ceasse to pray for thē to admonish them and to hate their sins and that they looke to themselues that they do not defend them in their wicked courses and ioyne with them in opinion for then we make our selues partakers of their sins Lastly let vs set before vs the ends of excommunication which also haue bin considered in part already One end of it is the good of the person excommunicated that if it bee possible he may be won Tit. 2 11. Rom 1 6. Christ deliuereth the doctrine of saluation the Gospel is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth For wheras Christ Iesus saith of himself Math. 10 34. that he came to send fire and sword into the world and that hee is appointed for the fall of many in Israel Lu. 12 46 2 34. that the Gospel is the sauor of death vnto death 2 Corinth 2 15. Yet this is not the proper end of Christ or the Gospel but as it were beside their purpose
habitation of God who is light it self in whom only is light properly to be found who dwelleth in light that none can attaine vnto 1 Tim. 6 16. Hee hath called his Church his rest and the place where his honor dwelleth Psal 132 13 14. The Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation this is my rest for euer heere will I dwell for I haue desired it Vse 1 This condemneth the Papistes who stand from the verdict of this doctrine as men endited of two crimes and errors first they accuse the Scriptures left vnto vs in the Originals to be corrupted the old Testament by the Iewes the new by Marcion and other heretikes But it is a vaine surmise without proofe or probability touching the corruption of the original fountaines which notwithstanding the Romanists pretend thereby to make a way to bring in the Latine translation to be the pure authenticke Scripture and consequently to bee preferred before them which is as foolish and vnreasonable as to make the mistris to walke on foot like a seruant Franci Luc. in Epist ad Serlet and to set her handmaid on horsebacke therefore some of their own frends are ashamed of this vanity It is a shame they say to belye the deuill It is a crime to taxe the Iewes of a crime wherof they are not guilty It is wel knowne that howsoeuer they stand affected vnto Christ yet they alwayes were and now are very religious respectiue in keeping the text sound and sincere and cannot by any meanes be induced to choppe and change to adde or to diminish any thing And doubtlesse had they not bene trusty and faithfull would God haue trusted them with this true treasure yea though that Church were oftentimes corrupt yea sometimes an Harlot or an Apostat yet the ouer-ruling prouidence of God hath alwaies wrought in them a care and conscience this way both for their owne future happy estate and the benefit of posterity to come to keepe the ancient records euidences of the Scripture sound sure and sincere This appeareth further by the Sermon of Christ in the Mount reprouing the false interpretations of the Scribes and Pharisies who had very grossely corrupted the meaning of the Law Mat 5 21.27 31 33 38 43. 16 6. The church of the Iewes was neuer more corrupt then in the dayes of Christ yet could they neuer be touched nor be iustly charged with this horrible crime of offering violence to the holy bookes of Scripture And if they might haue bene endited of this detestable forgery ●hrist would not haue omitted this greater fault who often reprooueth them of lesser offences Besides our Sauiour willeth the Iewes to search the Scripture which the Prophets had left vnto them by diuine inspiration hee sendeth them vnto these as then they had thē to try the doctrine of the Pharisies by them Ioh. 5 39. Iohn 5 39. which hee would neuer haue done had they bene corrupted and themselues the corrupters of them Moreouer touching the Iewes seeing they were mortall enemies to Christ if they were minded to corrupt the Scripture they would haue corrupted for their own aduantage such places out of Moses and the Prophets as concerned Christ whome they hated but these remaine entire by which they are fully conuinced and confuted Andrad lib. ● defens Trid●● Hieron epi. 7● ad Marcell And therefore one saith well that such as holily and religiouslie handle the Hebrew Text do find therein more notable testimonies of Christ then in the Latine and Greeke Copies Now if the true Church had lost the pure and perfect fountaines of the Hebrew and Greeke Text how could it bee a faithfull keeper of his Will and Testament Howbeit GOD hath euer had a care of his word and truth euen then when he committed the same to the custody of the Church Another error of the Romane church is that they make the churches authority to bee our supreame ground and stay of our faith and set it farre aboue the Scriptures themselues These assertions are found in their writings touching the Scripture It is not authenticall without the authority of the church that the authority of the Scripture dependeth on the authority of the Church necessarily Ecchi ●●cbir●● Pighi lib. 1. de Hierar eccl cap. 2. that we are not bound to take them for Scripture without the authority of the Church that in respect of vs the church hath absolute authority to determine which is Scripture and which is not that the Church hath power to make a booke not Canonicall Stapl. to be Canonicall and one of them vttred this impudent and shamelesse blasphemy that the Sc●ipture should bee of no more credit then Aesops Fables Herma●●m without the approbation allowance of the church Howbeit as wee must not take from the church hir right so we must take heed that we giue not to it more then is due and so rob God of his honour and glorie and derogate from the excellency and authority of the Scriptures They make the Church the light it selfe and not the Candlesticke to hold the light say that it also is called light I answer it is a borrowed light receiuing all the light it hath from the word as the Moone doth from the Sun They make it to be the authorizer of the word and hold that it is of no force or credit but is as a dead letter and inken diuinity without it This is no better then to hang the word and consequently Cal in inf●●● lib 1. cap. 7. the promises of God the kingdome of heauen saluation it self vpon the pleasures of men wheras the church is founded and grounded vpon the word not the word vpon the Church as Peter is builded vpon Christ not Christ vpon Peter All the authority that the Church hath be it neuer so great it hath it from the Scripture for how do we know whether the Church erreth or not but by the Scripture The Church cannot giue vs faith whereby we beleeue in Christ and lay hold of eternall life it is the Scripture that worketh it by the inspiration of the holy Spirit The Scripture is the chiefest and the highest court from whence is no appeale but we may appeale from the iudgement of the Church to the Scriptures not from the Scripture to the Church The Church that is the company of the faithfull are not lords ouer our faith they are ruled by faith not ouer-rulers of our faith True it is the Church is a means to bring vs more speedily to know the Scriptures as the woman of Samaria was a meanes to bring the Samaritans to beleeue in Christ 〈◊〉 4 42. but as they when they had heard Christ beleeued not so much for her report as for that themselues had heard him speake so after the Scriptures are discerned and pointed out vnto vs as by the finger of the Church we beleeue them to bee the word of
yeelde them subiection feare honour prayer tribute and obedience as the Apostle vrgeth these particulars Ro. 13 1 2. 6 7. and it condemneth to the pit of hell all such as resist them and rise vp against them Should the sonne rebell against the Father as Absolon did Let him then feare the end of Absolon to be hanged in the tree Should the childe striue against his Nurse that beareth him or the sheepe set themselues against the sheepheard that feedeth them Woe then to such as will discharge themselues of the dutie they owe to such as haue the charge ouer thē and will plot against their life of whom they receiue life and goods and peace and safety and all Vse 4 Fourthly it is the duty of all Magistrates and those that are in authoritie to consider what they haue to do their names and titles must teach them what their office is not to magnifie themselues not to think themselues absolute not to set themselues against God not to tyrannize ouer his people not to maintaine themselues in ease and idlenesse in vanity and superfluity not to follow after their owne pleasures but to do iustice to all without respect of person to protect euery one from wrong to maintaine publike peace and tranquility but especially to further Gods true religion They must haue publike minds and not seeke their owne good only or principally It is the ruine of an estate when publique persons haue priuate mindes regarding only to serue themselues and to procure their owne good These are no common-wealths men but priuate wealths men The Apostles were called to be fishers of men and Princes are called to be sheepheards of men to feede reasonable sheepe and this is their honour if they be found faithfull that it may be said of them as it is of Dauid Hee fed them according to the integrity of his heart-and guided them by the skilfulnesse of his hands Psal 78.72 Verses 16 18 20. And the Lord sayde vnto Moses Gather vnto me seuenty men of the Elders of Israel whom thou knowest to bee the Elders of the people c. In these wordes we haue the answer to Moses complaint And as the complaint stood of two distinct parts so doth the answere of the same points Touching the greatnesse of the charge and burthen whereof Moses complaineth God commandeth him to gather together vnto him seauenty men of the Elders of Israel to whom he would communicate of the same spirit that Moses had howbeit without any diminution of his gifts although many suppose that the Lord did punish him for his murmuring with the lessning of his gifts as it is true Marbac Comment in Num. Whit. praelect de pont f. Rom. pag 89 4. hee doth sometimes punish in that manner sometimes by lesning and sometimes by taking away what hee had formerly bestowed Zach. 11 17. Mat. 25 27. But we do not reade or finde that hee dealt so with Moses or that he was lesse fit for gouernment then he was before rather his gifts were deriued to others as one candle lighteth another and yet the light is not diminished And what benefite or profite had it beene to Moses to haue these ioyned if his gifts had beene impaired In this place we haue the institution and erecting of a new Court among the Iewes called the Sanhedrim The institution of the Sanhedrim among the Iewes This honourable Senate at the first founding of it consisted indifferently of men taken out of all the Tribes which had some of the Leuites to assist them This court was seated and kept at Ierusalem and might handle waightier causes D. Field of the Church lib. 5. cap. 9. inflict more greeuous then the set Courts and Tribunals of iustice appointed and assembled and obserued in the gates of euery Citty and to this they might appeale from those inferiour Consistories For such as were instituted thorough the aduice and counsell of Iethro Exod 18 21. were not necessary to be of this number of seuenty they had the hearing and determining of the least causes and besides they receyued not an extraordinary spirite neyther was it needfull for that calling This Councel of the Sanhedrim remained after the captiuitie and continued vnto the dayes of Herod Iunij in Analy● in Numer who made hauocke of many of them and put most of them to death Howbeit some of them remained euen to the desolation of the Temple and of the City by the Romans Liuelies Chronology of the Persian Monarchy page 238. and of this Christ speaketh Matth. 5 20. and 18.17 which the best interpreters vnderstand of the 70. Elders of the great Consistory or iudgement place in Ierusalem But when King Agrippa was once driuen out of Ierusalem by a rakelly rout of seditious cutters and cut-throats then were the Sanhedrim deposed at their will when there was none to controll them Ioseph de bell Iud. lib. 5. cap. 1 and other base pesants were set vp in their roome who had no lawes to restraine them no Magistrates to punish them no authority to bridle them Then was the Priest-hoode made a mockerie then was Ierusalem without a guide as an house without a Ruler or a ship without a Pylot There was none to manage the state aright but all gouernment was turnd into confusion and disorder The second complaint of Moses was touching the feeding of so great a multitude which God answereth verse 18 19. by a promise and by a threatning Hee promiseth vnto them store of flesh and to fit them and fill them not for a day or two dayes c. but euen a whole month And he that sheweth he could do this sheweth also that he could doe more if that had bin too little howbeit they should in the end take litle delight pleasure in their delicates after which their soules so ernestly lusted because hee threatneth that in the midst of their abundance it shold come out of their nostrils and be vtterly loathed of them This answer of God ministereth many instructions First that God layeth no more vpon any then he will inable them to beare if they thinke it bee too heauy hee will ease them of it He is not like to Pharaoh that willed more to be laid vpon the people then they could compasse complaining that they were too idle Exod. 5 17 18. Neither is he like to Rehoboam that refused to make the greeuous seruice of his father and his heauy yoke lighter but answered the men of Israel roughly that he would adde to their yoake and if his father chastened them with whips he would chastice them with Scorpions 1 King 12 11. but God is ready to take away part of the burthen and diuide it among others that it might bee borne equally vpon all their shoulders Secondly he furnisheth with gifts all such as he sendeth and calleth he employeth none in any function but such as he furnisheth for that purpose Thirdly we see that God is able
would make them right beggers indeed So that as Ieroboam made the basest of the people to be the Cleargy so they make the Cleargy to be the basest of the people and desire to bring them to their doores crouching creeping for a crust of bread But we demand that for which we haue laboured of duty not of curtesie and as a recompence not as a beneuolence not as their vassals but as Steward 's set ouer the family or Captaines ouer the host In the law the people were charged with tithes of foure sorts First such as were paid distinctly and directly to the Leuites What tithes were paied in the Law Secondly such as were deducted out of these and to be leuied for the vse of the Priests both these kindes of tithes are touched in this chapter Thirdly such as the people laid aside for the furnishing of their sacred and solemne feasts when they should be at Ierusalem to which the Priests were ordinarily inuited Deut. 14 22 23 28 29 and 26 11 12. Lastly such as euery third yeere were gathered for the releefe of the strāgers the fatherlesse the widow and the poore This last sort I will not deny to be in nature of an almes but such tithes as were paied to the Priests and Leuites were paid as wages is for worke This will bee plainely proued by the doctrine of the Apostle 1 Cor. 9 7. producing the examples of souldiers gardners sheepeheards such like all which claime a recompence of debt not of deuotion If then a common souldier lawfully requireth his stipend of that people for whom he fighteth Tithes are not almes the Minister also fighting for the people against their spirituall aduersaries may do the like and if he that planteth a vineyard he that feedeth a flocke may of duty chalenge to eate of the fruite of the one and the milke of the oth●r then the Minister that planteth the vineyard of the Lord and feedeth the flocke committed vnto him may iustly claime to liue vpon the same Againe almes do alwaies exceed the desart of him that taketh the almes they testifie the mercy of the giuer not the merit of the receiuer for charity is more worth then single thankes and good deeds are to bee valued aboue bare words But it is not so in paying tithes of temporall things all which cannot sufficiently counteruaile the worke of the Ministery 1 Cor. 9 11. Is it a great matter if we shall reape your carnall things And the Apostle is bold to tell Philemon that he did owe to him euen himselfe verse 29. It is a principle written in the heart of man by nature to pay him his wages whom wee set on worke not to send him away empty that laboreth for vs. As then the labourer hath right to his wages so the Minister hath his right and part in the goods of those whom he teacheth among whom he laboureth and therfore when he receiueth his tithes he doth not take almes but receiueth his owne hauing as good right vnto the tenth part as hee that paieth it hath to the other nine No man can say that the begger is worthy of almes he receiueth them by the law of charity but cannot claime them as due by the rule of iustice The day labourer that hath laboured all day and wasted his strength and spirits would thinke scorne though he bee a poore man to receiue his hire for his labour in the nature of an almes as the begger taketh a peny at the doore and shall the Minister receiue his wages as a gift or as a gratuity The housholder that hath agreed with the labourers for a peny a day saith vnto them when he came to pay them Math 20 14. Take that which is thine own and goe thy way as then they receiued their duty so doth the Minister receiue his due his duty Vse 3 Thirdly they are also iustly reproued who treading in the steps of the Bishop of Rome do deteine from the Ministers of the Gospel the tithes appointed vnto them which are not vnfitly called Gods auncient d●maine founded originally vpon the law of nature For as we learne by the light of nature that there is a God and that he is to be honoured so the honour that is due vnto him Sr Henry Spelman de non temerandis Eccles cannot be performed without Ministers neither can the Ministers attend their function without maintenance To this I will adde the saying of the wise man Prou. 3 9. Honour God with thy riches For seeing he is the high possessour of heauen and earth Gen. 14 19 and giueth life breath and all things vnto vs Acts 17 24. it is our duty to render backe somewhat vnto him again thereby acknowledging that wee hold all of him in chiefe except wee will yeeld lesse vnto him then the Infidels did to their heathenish gods Now we honour God with our riches How to honor God with our riches not onely when we vse them soberly without excesse righteously without oppression and ch●ritably without defrauding of the poore but when we employ them religiously toward his seruice The Nicodemites were content to become Christians thus farre as to giue their hearts to God so that they might haue liberty to dispose of their bodies as thēselues pleased but these will steppe one steppe farther they professe to worship God both with soule and body so they may be discharged dispensed withall from honouring him with their riches They will willingly offer the calues of their lips so they may be freed from the calues of their stalles They can be content to trauaile from the East with the wise men to fall down before him and worship him Bernard but they cannot abide to open their treasures and present vnto him gifts gold frankincense myrrhe Mat. 2 11. Paul had almost perswaded Agrippa to become a Christian when hee exempted those bandes and chaines and if euer we will perswade these to become Christians we must also except these bandes and chaines that wee speake off for they are very heauy vnto them they cannot abide them The tithes are the Lords he hath reserued them to himselfe as a rent of the tenant due to the Landlord or as a tribute and subsidy due to the king therefore when they are not truely paid Deut. 14 28. as GOD commandeth but are vnconscionably deteined he complaineth that he is robbed and spoiled Mal. 3 10. so that if wee giue not vnto the Lord the tenth who hath giuen vnto vs the other nine Serm. de Te● p●re 219. Sr Fra●●●●● let vs take heed lest he resume the nine parts and leaue vnto vs the tenth onely And I may say as a worthy and learned knight of our times saith Such as haue taken away the Churches dowry and s poiled her of it it had bene great reason they should haue made her a ioynter to recompence the wrong they had offered and the losse
There was no king like him ouer all Israel neuerthelesse euen him did out-landish women cause to sinne This was the cause of the great wickednes of Ahab who solde himselfe to worke euill in the sight of God because he tooke Iezabel to wife 1 Kings 16 31. And wherefore did Iehoram forsake the steppes of his godly father and commit grosse idolatry but because hee linked himselfe in an idolatrous stocke and married the daughter of Ahab 2 Kings 8 18. Mal. 2 11. Ezra 10 1 2 3. Lastly they are to be reproued who are present with their bodies before the abominable idoll of the Masse whether it be of a fansie or for fashion whether of curiosity or for feare of punishment and to bow downe to an image thinking to be excused if they reserue theyr hearts to God Discommodities of being present at the Masse whereby they robbe God of his glory they giue scandal and offence to the weake brethren they spoyle the Lord of his right they cast themselues wilfully into desperate danger they depriue themselues of a good testimony of their owne saluation and lastly they deny the Lord IESVS and his truth before men and therefore must take heed that he deny not them before his Father in Heauen Math. 10 33. Obiect Neither let them think this any defence or comfort vnto them that they reserue their hearts to God Answ and for his pure worship For if this were true then were the holy Martyrs of God simple fooles that were content to endure all torments yea to lay downe theyr liues for a testimony to the truth rather then giue the least outward approbation to idolatry Then were those three seruants of God greatly deceiued who chose rather to be cast into the fiery fornace then bow downe to the idol that was set vp Dan. 3 18 we are bought with a great price and therefore we must glorifie God in our body and in our spirit for they are Gods 1 Cor. 6 20. Rom. 12 1. Mat. 4 9 Exod. 20 4. 1 Ioh. 5 21. What husband would endure that his wife should prostitute her body to commit whoredome albeit she should pretend and protest that shee reserued her heart chast and pure for him only Then how much lesse will the Lord admit such a bad and blind excuse when they that professe themselues to be his spouse shall commit spirituall whoredome with idols in their bodies Secondly we must learne from hence that Vse 2 it is impiety to worship images with any kind of worship whatsoeuer For if we be commanded to abstayne from familiarity with them that be idolaters much more are we charged to abstayne from idols and from all worship of the idols It is a greeuous sinne to giue the honour of God whereof he is iealous to any but onely to himselfe To robbe God and thereby to enrich another must needes be acknowledged to be a sinfull and wicked practice much more then is it a sinne to giue the same to such base stuffe as stockes blocks and stones and images Not to honour the king is wickednesse To giue the honour due to the King to his Peeres and Nobles must needs bee a greater sinne and offence but to giue it to a base and contemptible person must needs be greater wrong and wickednesse then any of the rest So is it in this case for men not to honour God is euil Idolatry much abuseth the dignitie of man to giue his honour to any mortall man is more sinfull but for a man made after the image of God to giue it to base and senselesse idols is most wicked of all which are the workes of mens hands The basest image-maker that liueth is farre better then the image that liueth not as the workeman is better then the worke And what a grosse and senselesse thing is it that the liuing image of the liuing should performe worship or seruice to the dead image of a dead Saint It were much better therefore and lesse absurd to worship him that made the image who is the creature of God then the image it selfe which is the creature of man So then we oght carefully to take heed to our selues that wee worship not any image or idol with any worship whatsoeuer It is not lawful for a subiect to worship his Prince or for a sonne to worship his father with any religious worship much lesse lawfull is it then for a man to worship such things as these that haue eyes and see not eares and heare not feete and walke not neyther doth any sound passe from them A man would be much ashamed to be found or seene worshipping a tree that groweth a bird or beast that liueth much more then ought we to be ashamed of this grosse kind of worship that we should bow downe to such things as are beholding to vs for theyr forme and fashion so that there is farre more reason that the image should worship his maker then the maker worship the image that hee made Let vs learne to feare GOD and reuerence his worship and flye all kinde of worshipping of images whatsoeuer to abhorre the same as the imiattion of the Gentiles and the very excrements of Antichrist himselfe Whosoeuer they be that practise such impiety in these dayes of grace are fallen from grace It may be that in time of danger and persecution a man may be forced to doe that which goeth against his conscience to saue life but for a man to stand out in these times and to approue such maner of worship he is certainly fallen from Christ and deserueth iust condemnation and destruction and therefore let no colour or pretence or perswasion whatsoeuer draw vs away to the committing of this sinne but let vs labour to keepe our selues pure by cleauing to the worship and seruice of God and by giuing honour and glory vnto him Obiect But they tell vs that they worship not the image of any false God The Scripture indeed cryeth out against the images of false gods and such as are no true Saints but wee for our parts worship nothing but the Images of the true God and of true Saints I answer Answer there is a great difference betweene the Images of true Saints and of false Saints but there is no difference at al in the action it self forasmuch as it is idolatry to worship the Image of the true God as well as of the false And the reason is because it is to giue worship to that which by nature is no God at all Paul and Barnabas were true Saints yet if the men of Lystra had worshipped them they had sinned against GOD as much as when they worshipped Iupiter and Mercurius which were no other then fayned gods Acts 14 12. Therefore that distinction falleth to the ground Deut. 4 15. Obiect Esay 40 18. Rom. 1.23 1 Cor. 10 20. Deut. 27 15. Psal 97 7. But some of the Papists tell vs that images are Lay mens bookes to looke vpon