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A29689 A golden key to open hidden treasures, or, Several great points that refer to the saints present blessedness and their future happiness, with the resolution of several important questions here you have also the active and passive obedience of Christ vindicated and improved ... : you have farther eleven serious singular pleas, that all sincere Christians may safely and groundedly make to those ten Scriptures in the Old and New Testament, that speak of the general judgment, and of that particular judgment, that must certainly pass upon them all immediately after death ... / by Tho. Brooks ... Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680.; Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2. 1675 (1675) Wing B4942; ESTC R20167 340,648 428

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to be endured a thousand years me-thinks I could bear it but for ever that amazeth me Bellarmin out of Barocius tells us of a learned man De arte bene mo●iendi who after his death appeared to his Friend complaining that he was adjudged to Hell-torments which saith he were they to last but a thousand thousand years I should think it tollerable but alass they are eternal The fire in Hell is like that stone in Arcadia I have read of which being once kindled could not be quenched There is no Estate on Earth so miserable but a man may be delivered out of it but out of Hell there is no deliverance It is not the prayer no not of a Gregory though never so great what ever they fable that can rescue any that is once become Hells Prisoner I might add other Scriptures out of the old Testament but let these suffice That there is such a place as Hell is prepared for the torment of the bodys souls of wicked impenitent Siners is most clear evident in the New Testament as well as in the Old Amongst the many that might be produced take these for a tast Mat. 5. 22. But I say unto you that whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause rashly vainly and unreasonably shall be in danger of the Judgment whosoever shall say to his Brother Raca shall be in danger of the Councel but whosoever shall say thou Fool shall be in danger of Hell-fire Gr to or in the Gehenna of fire In this Scripture our Lord Jesus doth allude to the custom of punishing Offenders used among the Jews now there were three degrees of punishments that were used among the Jews First In every Town where there were a hundred and twenty Inhabitants there was a little Councel of three which judged smaller matters for which whipping or some pecuniary mulct was imposed Secondly There was a Councel consisting of three and twenty seven of these were Judges fourteen Assessors Josephus who were mostly of the Levites and to these were added two supernumeraries which made the twenty-three which the Hebrews generally say was the number that made up this second Councel Now this Councel sate in the Gates of the City and did judge of civil matters having also power of life and death Thirdly There was the great Synedrion or High-Court of Judicatory which consisted of seventy and two six chosen of every Tribe Now this Councel sate in the Court of the Temple and had all matters of greatest moment brought before them as Heresie Idolatry Apostacy Beza Somtimes they convented before them the High-Priest and somtimes false Prophets yea somtimes a whole Tribe as my Reverend Author thinks Now look as there is a gradation of sin so there is a gradation of punishment pointed at in this Scripture for the opening of which consider you have here three degrees of secret murder or of inward heart-murder And 1. The first is Rash anger Now this brings a man in danger of the Judgment By the judgment he means not the judgment of the three who judged of mony-matters but by judgment he means the Counsel of the three and twenty men Now they are called the Judgment because they judged of Murthers and inflicted death c. Now he that shall rashly vainly causelesly unseasonably be angry with his Brother he shall be liable to the punishments that are to be inflicted by the Judges Look what punishments they in the Sanhedrim inflicted upon actual and apparent Murderers the same were they liable to and did deserve at the hands of God who were guilty of this secret kind of Murther viz. Rash Anger From the different degrees of punishments among the Jews Christ would shew the degrees of punishment in another world according to the greatness of mens sins as if he should say Look as among you Jews there are different offences some are judged in your little Counsel of three and others are judged in your Counsel of three and twenty and others in your great Sanhedrim So in the high Court of Heaven some sins as Rash Anger are less punished and others are more sorely punished as when your Rash Anger shall break forth into railings c. In these words Whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause shall be in danger of Judgment You may see that Christ gives as much to Rash Anger as the Jews did to Murther as if he should have said You Pharisees exceed all measure and bounds in your anger and with a malicious heart you rail upon the most innocent persons upon me and my Disciples but I would have you take heed of Rash Anger for you shall have greater torments in Hell for your Rash anger than those that Murderers suffer by your Counsel of three and twenty But these words he shall be in danger of Judgment do contain the reward and punishment of unlawful anger as if our Saviour had said Rash Anger shall not escape just punishment but shall be arraigned and summoned before Gods Tribunal at the dreadful day of Judgment when the angry man shall not be able to answer one word of a thousand The second kind of secret Murder is to say to our Brother 2. Whether the word Raca be Hebrew or some say as Syriack as others say or Chaldee it matters not for all agree in this that it is a word that notes scorn and contempt c. Lapide Vide Weemes on the judicial Law of Moses and Dr. Field of the Church Michael Maronita Raca that is say some O vain man others say it signifies a brainless Fellow and the learned Tremellius saith it signifies one void of judgment reason and brains Some will have this word Raca come of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Racos Cloth as though one should call a man a base patch or piece of cloath or beggarly Raca signifies an idle head a light brain for so Rik in the Hebrew to which the Syriack word Racha agreeth both in sound and sense signifieth light or vain Racha is a Syriack word and signifies say some these three things 1. Empty as empty of wealth or poor or as some empty of brains or wit or as others a light head or cock-brain wide and empty of wisdom or understanding 2. It signifies spittle or spit upon to signifie that they esteemed one another no better than the spittle they spat out of their mouths 3. It signifies contemned vile despised abject and in this signification one in his Proeme of the Syriack Grammer thinks it to be taken The Ethiopian expounds Racha thus He that shall say to his Brother be poor by contempt and of torne Garments shall be guilty of the Counsel such a one saith our Saviour Shall be in danger of the Counsel that is contract as great guilt unto himself and is subject to as severe a judgment in the Court of Heaven as any capital crime that is censured in the Sanhedrim or
High-Court of the Jews But The third kind of secret Murder is an open reviling and reproaching of a Brother in these words But whosoever shall say thou Fool shall be in danger of Hell-fire Thou Fool this is a word of greater disgrace than the former 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies unsavory or without rellish a Fool here is by a metaphor called insipid Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sote which we call Sot shall be in danger of Hell-fire or to be cast into Gehenna Gehenna comes from the Hebrew word Gettinnom that is the Valley of Hinnom lying near the City of Jerusalem in which Valley in former times the Itolatrous Josh 15. 8. Jews caused their Children to be burned alive between the glowing arms of the brazen Image of Moloch imitating vide 2. King 23 10. Jer. 7. 31. Jer. 32. 35. Jer. 19. 4 5 6. the Abominations of the Heathen And hence the Scripture often makes use of that word to signifie the place of eternal punishment where the damned must abide under the wrath of God for ever There were four kinds of punishments exercised among the Jews First Stranglings 2. The Sword 3. Stoning 4. The Fire Now this last they always judged the worst as Beza affirms upon this very place In these words Shall be in danger of Hell-fire Christ alludes to the great Sanhedrim and the highest degree of punishment that was inflicted by them namely to be burned in the Valley of Hinnom which by a known Metaphor is transferred to Hell it self and the inexpressible torments thereof For as those poor wretches being inclosed in a brazen Idol-heat with fire were miserably tormented in this Valley of Hinnom So the wicked being cast into Hell the Prison of the damn'd shall be eternally tormented in unquenchable fire This Valley of Hinnom by reason of the pollution of it with slaughter blood and stencth of Carkasses did become so execrable that Hell it self did afterwards inherit the same Name and was called Gehenna of this very place And that 1. In respect of the hollowness and depth thereof being a low and deep Valley 2. This Valley of Hinnom was a place of misery in regard of those many slaughters that were committed in it through their barbarous Idolatry So Hell is a place of misery and infelicity wherein there is nothing but sorrow 3. Thirdly By the bitter and lamentable crys of poor Infants in this Valley is shadowed out the crys and lamentable torments of the damned in Hell 4. In this Valley of Hinnom was another fire which was kept continually burning for the consuming of dead Carkasses and filth and the garbidge that came out of the City Now our Saviour by the fire of Gehenna in this Mat. 5. 22. hath reference principally to this fire signifying hereby the perpetuity and everlastingness of Hellish pains To this last judgment of the Sanhedrim viz. Burning Doth Christ appropriate that kind of Murder which is by open reviling of a Brother that he might notifie the heynousness of this sin marke in this Scripture Judgment Councel and Hell fire do but signifie three degrees of the same punishment c. See also Matth. 5. 29 30. And if thy right Eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy Members should perish and not that thy whole body should be cast into Hell And if thy right hand offend thee cut it off and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy Members should perish and not that thy whole body should be cast into Hell-fire Julian taking these commands literally mockt at Christian Religion as foolish cruel and vain because they require men to maim their members He mockt at Christians because no man did it and he mockt at Christ because no man obeyed him but this Apostate might have seen from the scope that these words were not to be taken literally but figuratively Some of the Antients by the right hand and the right eye do understand Relations Friends or any other dear enjoyments which draws the heart from God Others of them by the right eye and the right hand do understand such darling sins that are as dear to men as their right eyes and right hands That this Hell here spoken of is not meant of the Grave into which the body shall be laid is most evident because those Christians who do pull out their right eyes and cut off their right hands that is mortifie those special sins which are as dear and near to them as the very members of their bodies shall be secured and delivered from this Hell whereas none shall be exempted from the Grave though they are the choycest persons on Earth for grace and holiness Death like the Duke of Parma's Sword knows no difference twixt Robes and Raggs twixt Prince and Peasant All flesh is grass The Isa 40. 6. flesh of Princes Nobles Counsellors Generals c. is grass as well as the flesh of the meanest Beggar that walks the Streets The mortal Sythe saith one is master H●rat l. 1. Oct. 28. of the Royal Scepter it mows down the Lillies of the Crown as well as the Grass of the Field Never was there Oratour so Eloquent nor Monarch so Potent that could either D●aths Motto is Nulli cedo perswade or withstand the stroak of death when it came It is one of Solomons sacred Aphorisms The Rich and the Poor meet together somtimes in the same Bed somtimes Prov. 22. 2. at the same Board and somtimes in the same Grave Death is the common Inne of all Man-kind There is no defence against the stroak of death nor no discharge in that H●b 9. 27. Eccles 8. 8. War Death is that only King against whom there is no rising up If your Houses be fired by good help they Prov. 30. 31. may be quenched if the Sea break out by art and industry it may be repaired If Princes Invade by power and policy they may be repulsed If Devils from Hell shall tempt by assistance from Heaven they may be resisted But Death comes into Royal Pallaces and into the meanest Cottages and there is not a man to be found that can make resistance against this King of terrors and terrour of Kings Deaths Motto is Nemini parco I spare none Thus you see that by Hell in Math. 5. 29 30. You may not you cannot understand the Grave and therefore by it you must understand the place of the damned But if you please you may cast your eye upon another Scripture viz. Math. 10. 28. Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in Hell The word rather is not a comparative but an adversative We should not fear man at all when he stands in competition with God So Victorian the Pro-Consul of Carthage being sollicited to Arrianism