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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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house and Temple Remember that our God is a God of peace let us be peaceable Wee have had the Title now to the effect the raising up of Christ from the dead elementia in collatione pacis potentia in suscitatione filij The party raised is set forth 1. By his Sovereignty 2. By his Name 3. By his Office For his Sovereignty He is our Lord. Ye call me Master and Lord. Not every one that sayeth to me Lord c. He created us He redeemed us He hath marryed us to Himselfe therefore we are to call Him Lord as Sarah did Abraham For His Name it is IESUS the onely SAVIOUR of the world There is no other name whereby wee can be saved but by the Name of IESUS Moses was the giver of the Law yet not he but Iosuah brought the people into Canaan So they be not the workes of the Law but Christ alone that carryes us into heaven the celestiall Canaan For His Office Hee is the Shepheard of the sheepe Cyrus my Shepheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where observe 1. What manner of Shepheard he is 2. How hee comes to bee our Shepheard If ye will know what manner of Shepheard he is he is a great one There be little Shepheards as the Rectours Curates of every Congregation but Hee is the great Shepheard 1. Great in the extent of the flocke the universall Shepheard of the whole Church throughout the world the Shepheard of Iewes and Gentiles so is none but he 2 Great in authority The sheepe are His Hee ownes them Simon feede my sheepe feede my lambes Peter as other Pastors feede them but the sheepe are Christs Iob had 7000. sheepe he had many Shepheards that kept them yet the sheepe were Iobs So Christ hath many thousands of sheepe in Christendome in the world Sundry Shepheards he places over them yet the sheepe are Christs not ours 3 Great in the charge which hee hath taken on him hee is the Shepheard of soule and body too the great Shepheard of our soules 1 Pet. 2. ult He hath care of body and soule too 4 Great in humility the King of Kings yet hee abased himselfe to be a Shepheard 5 Great in knowledge Iohn 10.3 6 Great in love and kindenesse Hee gave Himselfe for the sheepe 7 Great in power none can take them out of his hands All the Divells in hell all the wicked men on the earth cannot cozen him of one sheepe Be thankefull to God for this great Shepheard Of whom of the sheepe that is the righteous They are most fitly resembled to sheepe 1 Sheepe are humble Learne of Me I am humble and meeke 2 Sheepe are harmelesse be as innocent as Doves as harmelesse as sheepe 3 Sheepe are profitable for backe and belly 4 They are ruled by their Shepheard So whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe 5 Sheepe are lead into pastures and folds 6 They are obnoxious to many dangers to Wolves Briers Theives Dogges So many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of all Happy are the sheepe that have such a Shepheard But how came He to be Shepheard Sayd the chiefe Captaine with a great summe of money obteined I this burgeship But it cost Christ a greater summe even His bloud whereby the everlasting covenant is confirmed Acts 20.28 The wine in the Lords Supper is a lively representation of this bloud The wine is red So was the bloud of CHRIST the wine is powred out into the cup So the bloud of CHRIST was powred forth for our sinnes The grapes are pressed before there is any wine So was CHRIST Wine comforts a man hee hath given him wine to make him a glad heart So the consideration of the bloud of Christ that was shed for the remission of our sins is a singular comfort to the soules of Christians By this bloud He came to be the Shepheard of the Church and this is that bloud that ratifies GODS everlasting Covenant The Covenant I am thy GOD and the GOD of thy seede is an everlasting Covenant Such as the man is such is his bond and word It is good dealing with honest men A man may be bold to build on their word And such as GOD is such is His Covenant an everlasting GOD and an everlasting Covenant of His Kingdome there shall bee no end and of His Covenant there shall be no end As He is our GOD now So he will be for ever Let this stay us up when we are ready to faint in all distresses This is that great Shepheard of the sheepe which GOD hath brought againe from the dead But was hee not able to bring himselfe from the dead Yes verily He raised up this Temple Himselfe He presented Himselfe alive Acts 1.3 Yet in respect of His humanity GOD is sayd to have brought Him from the dead which He did after a glorious manner the Angels waiting on the Sepulcher the earth trembling the graves opening sundry of the Saints rising with Him and appearing to many Our Saviour truely dyed on the Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the breath went out of His body it was wrapt up in linnen cloathes layed in the Sepulcher there it continued three dayes and nights yet God brought Him againe from the dead Hee was seene of His Apostles and others fourty dayes together they beheld the print of the nailes in His hands and feet they eat and dranke with Him and looked on Him when Hee went into Heaven Even so the same God shall bring us againe from the dead The Head is risen therefore the members shall rise the first fruits are in the barne of Heaven therefore we that are the second fruits shall be gathered thither The husband is in Heaven therefore the wife shall be in Heaven Where I am they also that believe in mee shall bee there Hee brought CHRIST from the dead the third day there was an extraordinary reason in that because His Sacred body might see no corruption Our bodies corrupted with sinne must lye putrifying in the earth till the day of Iudgement Adventus Domini clavis resurrectionis then wee shall meete CHRIST in the ayre and bee translated with Him into His Kingdome of glory Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours VERSE 21. WEE have heard of the person to whom he prayes now to the thing for which he prayes It is perfection in all good workes the which is first set downe then amplified It is comprised in these words make you perfect c. Hee doth not say in faith but in workes workes are a demonstration of faith shew me thy faith by thy workes Except your righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Their righteousnesse was to say not to doe Matth. 23.3 ours must be to say and doe too else wee shall not set a foote into the Kingdome of heaven Not every one that sayeth unto mee Lord Lord c. Therefore
but would have his picture acknowledged every good man is the beautifull picture of God Almighty they be envious persons that will not acknowledge them How comes it to be in them In CHRIST IESUS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In us dwelleth no good thing Christ is the worker of all good things in us that yee may be plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ. Or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to CHRIST IESUS .i. In gloriam Christi Iesu that he may have the glory of it Not to us O Lord but to thy name give the praise Debes videri thou oughtest to be seene Let your light so shine before men that seeing your good workes they may glorifie your Father which is in heaven Sed non ad h●c debes facere ut videaris but thou must not doe it to this end to bee seene I lle in te laudetur qui in te operatur let him be praised that worketh all good things in thee VERSE 7. THis St. Paul confirmeth by experience in himselfe Where 1. exprimit latitiam he expresseth his gladnesse then ostendit causam he shewes the cause of it We .i. I and Timothie not we had as it is in the vulgar We have even at this present time Not a little but great joy and consolation arising of joy First his heart was affected with wonderfull joy from that did spring consolation in the midst of his great troubles and afflictions that comforted him it was as aquavitae to revive him withall Wherein did he take so great joy Not in his riches but in his love Many are rich wherein men take no great joy nor consolation Nabal was rich yet David had no joy nor consolation by him but in thy love which did untie thy purse strings and made thee bountifull unto all for that is the nature of love Why because the bowels of the Saints Some interpret the bowels of the Saints the children of the Saints because they bee the fruit of our body and our bowels as David sayes of Absalom my Sonne which came out of my owne bowels seeketh my life But it is more generall not only the children of the Saints but the Parents too The father and mother were refreshed by him The Greeke is Emphaticall were quieted for when the bowels are empty they be out of quiet He doth not say the backes of the Saints are refreshed by thee that is requisite but the refreshing of the bowels is more necessarie for if the belly bee well lined lesse cloath will serve the backe Almes or a worke of mercie is a singular worke above others 1. Homines facit Deo similes Be yee mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull Mercifull men draw neerest to God GOD feeds all creatures and he feeds as many as he can homo benefaciens est imago Dei a bountifull man is the image of God An Image is a lively representation of the partie and a liberall man that doth good to others represents God 2. Eleemosyna est scopa quae mundificat omnia It is a faire broome that makes all cleane Give almes ecce behold A fine spectacle not some but all things are cleane unto you As the first fruits in the time of the law did sanctifie the rest of the fruits So almes in the time of the Gospell sanctifie all unto us all that wee possesse are uncleane without them 3. Eleemosyna est usura à Deo approbata an usury approved by God more gainefull than any other usury He that hath mercy on the poore lendeth to the Lord and the Lord will recompense him that which he hath given Whereupon St. Basil sayes It is both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gift and a lent gift put forth to usury not to a mortall man but to the immortall God who will give great use for it not tenne in the hundred but an hundred fold in this world and everlasting happinesse in the world to come It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gainefullest trade of all Vende aurum eme salutem sell thy gold and buy salvation vende lapidem eme regnum sell a stone and buy a Kingdome vende agrum eme tibi vitam aeternam sell a piece of land and buy Heaven 4. It is procurator coeli an Harbinger that goes before to provide thee a place in heaven Cornelius his almes went up into remembrance before God God registred it in the booke of his remembrance against he himselfe came thither Saint Paul chargeth the rich men of the world to doe good to be rich in good workes ready to distribute and to communicate laying up in store for themselves a good foundation for the time to come 5. Remuneratur in coelo prae aliis operibus It is rewarded with Heaven above all other workes Come yee blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdome prepared for you When I was hungry yee gave mee meate c. Therefore let us refresh the bowels of the Saints here that wee may enter into the place of eternall refreshing hereafter We are too streight laced we make this mammon of unrighteousnesse our enemy whereas we should make him our friend Nazianzen's mother caryed such a bountifull minde to the poore that a Sea of wealth could scarce have sufficed her Shee was contrary to Salomon's horse-leach that cryed give give namely to mee Shee cryed give give to the poore Hee heard her often say Shee and her children should want before the poore should want wee are all for our selves our Wives and Children nothing for the poore Amadeus Duke of Sabaudia being asked of certaine Oratours whether he kept hounds or not Yes sayes he Come to morrow and ye shall see them They being come he opens a window into his Hall where a great multitude of poore folkes were dining hij sunt canes mei sayd hee these are my dogges and with them I hope to get Eternall Life It is not unlawfull for Noble-men and Gentlemen to have their hawkes and hounds God hath given us things for pleasure as well as for necessity wine and oyle c. Yet so as wee be moderate in the use of them and forget not the affliction of Ioseph One poore Lazarus is worth more than ten thousand dogges Ye are of more value than many sparrowes and wee should value the poore members of Christ above all the hawkes and hounds in the world as the Elect of God let us put on the bowels of mercy and refresh to our ability yea beyond our ability the bowels of the Saints especially in these hard times wherein wee live The hard hearts of men make the times harder then otherwise they would be He shuts it up with a kinde compellation brother Not in the Ministery as hee called Timothie his brother Verse 1. but in CHRIST our elder brother The Donatists were angrie with
though we be never so rich have never so many bags of gold and silver lye on beds of downe have never so many friends and Physitions about us yet if the worme of conscience lye gnawing on us for our sins our murders adulteries drunkennesse c. That we have no hope that Christ died for them in what miserable case are we The Hypocrite would give 1000. Rams 10000. Rivers of Oile the fruit of his body for his soule as a man that is dangerously sick would give any thing for health so a man that is oppressed with the burthen of his sins would give any thing that they were removed Now CHRIST IESUS alone hath purged us from our sins Apply this purgation to thy selfe by the hand of a true and a lively faith and then thou art a happy man if CHRIST had not purged us from sin we had fried in hell for ever Therefore let us magnifie the Lambe that was killed for us and give prayses to him for ever Worthy is the Lambe who hath purged us from our sinnes to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing Againe hath Christ purged us from our sinnes and shall we tumble in them Hath the Physitian purged thy body and made thee whole and wilt thou by ill diet make thy selfe sick Christ the heavenly Physitian hath purged us from sin that made us sick to death and shall we run into sin againe O that men would effectually consider of this great benefit the purging of our sins by Christ Who hath purged us not an Angell but the Son of God with what hath He purged us not with the bloud of Martyrs but with His owne bloud to what end hath He purged us not that like swine we should still wallow in the myre of our sinnes but that we should be an holy Nation a royall Priest-hood a peculiar people to Himselfe zealous of good workes Therefore as CHRIST hath purged us from our sins so let us hurle away our sins and have nothing to doe with them least we crucifie againe the Lord of life That proverb is knowne to us all the Hogge to the myre a Hogge is washed cleane and faire he runs into the myre againe what a filthy sight is that So it is for one whom Christ hath purged from sin to returne to them againe a Dogge to his vomit Who can abide to see a Dogge take up that which he hath cast out of his belly and a loathsome sight it is to see men daily yea hourely to take up the Vomit of their old sins againe How hath Christ purged us from sin when as sin still remaineth in us all If we say we have no sin we deceave our selvs c. The answer is easie there is in sin materia forma the matter still remaines to exercise us withall but the guilt that is the forme of sin which gave an esse to it that is taken away by Christ. In so much as we may say death where is thy sting hell where is thy victory the strength of death is sin but thankes be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. The sixth and last Argument to prove the deity of Christ is taken from His exaltation which is fitly inferred upon the former humiliation He that sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high is GOD but CHRIST sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Ergo. He doth not say standeth that belongs to Servants and inferiors but he sitteth Kings Senatours Iudges sit when they heare causes He sits not at the commandement or appointment of another but of Himselfe He knowes His place and takes it not at the left hand but which is higher at the right hand His fathers equall Regia majestas the Kings Majesty is more magnificent then to say the King Prov. 25.27 Scrutator majestatis opprimetur à gloria Heb. 8.1 We have such an High Priest who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens Christ could not purge our sinnes but by dying He was faine to shed His bloud and to dye for us yet He rose againe ascended into Heaven and fitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Out of this we have two notable comforts 1 If Christ sitteth above in the highest places then he beholdeth all things here below A man that is upon the top of some high Tower may see farre and Christ being in the high Steeple and Tower of Heaven can see all things on the earth He that is upon the top of an high Tower may see men but he cannot discerne who they bee Christ sees them and discernes them too If the wicked bee laying of plots and snares against His Children Christ being in Heaven sees them and in due time will overthrow them and He that sitteth in Heaven laugheth them to scorne This is a singular comfort that our Head King and defender is in Heaven and hath equall Power Glory and Majesty with God If thou hast a friend in the Court that sits daily by the King and is in favour with him wilt thou care for any in England we have a friend that siteth on the right hand of God and hath all power in Heaven and earth therefore let us feare nothing he will keepe us none shall doe us any harme but it shall all turne to our good in the end 2 As Christ sitteth in the heavens so we shall one day sit there with Him Many shall come from the East and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit downe in the Kingdome of God Yee shall sit on the twelve Seates and Iudge the twelve Tribes of Israel Which is not spoken of all the Apostles for Iudas never sate there nor yet of the Apostles onely but of all Christians Know yee not that wee shall judge the World wee shall one day sit in Heavenly places with Christ wee sit there already in our head but we shall likewise sit there in our owne persons with our head Let this comfort us against all the calamities of this life here the children of God are oftentimes made the wickeds footstooles they sit on them and tread on them no reckoning is made of a godly man A rich man that is a common drunkard and whore-master shall be more esteemed of by many then a godly poore man Here they sit as forlorne persons none regards them Many times they sit weeping and wayling for their sinnes for their children for crosses in goods in bodies in good name the wicked deriding them jesting at them making songs of them in the Ale-houses but let this comfort us against them all how contemptible soever we sit here wee shall sit with CHRIST IESUS though not in that degree of glory yet in the same kingdome of glory with him for ever VERSE 4. THe Iewes in generall were bitter enemies to Christ
humanity of God in respect of His deity because He was the first begotten of Him before any creature was Col. 1.15 He is unigenitus respectu naturae primogenitus respectu dignitatis The first begotten had a priviledge above all his brethren So had Christ In Hebr. elohim which may bee applyed to the Angells or Magistrates the Seventie expound it of the Angels which hee followeth Divine worship is proper to God Matth. 4.10 CHRIST must be worshipped Ergo He is God 2. The Angels must worship Him therefore they are inferiour to Him Not some but all the highest of them all God alone is to be worshipped thou shalt worship the Lord thy God There is a civill and humane worship that may bee ascribed to men So Abraham worshipped the Hittites in bowing himselfe to them So Iacob worshipped Esau in bowing to him seven times Thus the Subject may be said to worship the Prince when he kneeles to him in token of reverence thus the Husband is said to honour the Wife as the weaker vessell which is counted a kinde of worship but divine worship is proper to God alone Saint Paul and Silas were worthy men yet would not bee worshipped by the Lycaonians when they were about to offer Sacrifice to them as if they were Gods they rent their clothes and would none of it Saint Peter was a famous Apostle yet he would not bee worshipped nay the Angels themselves refuse divine worship Reve. 19.10 none but God must have a divine worship given to Him Then how sharply are the Papists to be reproved that worship the images of our Lady and other Saints Nay what a presumptuous man is the Pope that will have Kinges and Princes fall at his feete He takes on him to command the Angells of Paradise even they also must worship him They pray to images they offer to images they expect ayd and Succour from them What could they doe more to God Himselfe They praise their Idols for benefits received Christ is worshipped and that by the Angells the highest creatures of all therefore He is God 1. Laud and magnifie Him subject your selves to Him as to your Lord and Master acknowledge Him for your King So they doe in the Apocal. they cast downe their crownes at his feet they sing praises to him Day and Night Now if the Angels worship Christ shall not we men that be dust and ashes worship Him If the Lords of the Privie Councell stand bare to the King shall not we silly men of the Country doe it The Angels that dwell in the Court of Heaven with God worship Christ and shall not we on earth doe it Let us worship Him and Him alone let us not worship our gold and silver as Covetous men doe and come within compasse of Idolatry let us not worship our pleasures as Epicures doe and make their bellies God but let us worship Christ as the Angels doe If thou lovest any thing more then Christ if thou fearest any above Christ if thou trustest to any more then to Christ thou art not a right worshipper of the Lord Iesus We worship Christ with our lips we have His Name in our mouth but we worship Him not with our hearts and lives A great number of Christians are like the Souldiers that sate a Crowne of thornes on Christs head put a reede in stead of a Scepter into His hand cloathed Him with a purple garment and in the end did nothing but mocke Him So wee talke gloriously of CHRIST and of His Kingdome in words wee professe Him to be our King but wee doe not worship Him in truth and sincerity and serve Him in holinesse and righteousnesse as we ought to doe VERSE 7. Πρὸς for περὶ ad for de unlesse it be in regard of the antithesis verse 8. or quod ad angelos attinet It is an other argument taken from the Angels whereby he proves Christ to bee Superiour to them The Son is greater than the servant Christ is the Son the Angels are servants Ergo. Hebr. createth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which useth for it is ad usum adhibere Beza translates it which made his Angels windes and his ministers a flame of fire which useth them as windes and lightning 1 The Angells are Created Christ is the Creator 2 They be finite Spirits He an infinite Spirit 3 They be messengers Christ the Lord that sendeth them Spiritus est nomen naturae angelus officij ex eo quod est Spiritus est ex eo quod agit angeus est Mat. 4.11 His Angells Spirits of a lively and swift nature not flesh which is lumpish and heavy They all agree together have one minde in praysing God and doing good to the faithfull and elect of God therefore there needs no superiority among them as there doth among men that are of jarring dispositions One may be called an Arch-Angell in regard of some peculiar businesse committed to him for the time as the Subject is sent Embassadour from the Prince for the time And His Ministers a flame of fire 1 Fire is lightsome and strikes a terrour into men so doe the Angels when they appeare 2. Reg. 6.17 they be called Seraphim urentes ab ardore seu inflammatione Esay 6. 2 Fire is of a subtile and piercing nature So are the Angels they are quickly heere and there 3 Fire consumes and burnes up so doe they the wicked our enemies This is the greatest honour of the Angells to be Gods Ministers and Messengers So must we count it the greatest dignity of all men on the face of the earth Though thou beest a rich trades-man a wealthy Merchant a gentleman of great revenewes a Knight a Lord or a King yet the most magnificent stile thou canst have is this to bee GODS Minister and Servant to be his messenger and to goe on his errands As the Centurion said of his Souldiers I say to one goe and he goeth c. So God has Angels under him If he say goe they goe The counsell and Parliament house have their messengers whom they send into all quarters of the land So the high Court of Parliament held in heaven hath his messengers namely the Angels whom God sendeth into all the world Let us be his Ministers and messengers as the Angels bee let us not bee the Devills messengers for to runne on his errands if he say dwell in malice kill thy brother c. Let us not doe this but if God injoyne us any thing let us be his messengers We say in the Lords prayer thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven the Angels in heaven doe the will of GOD with all cheerfulnesse so let us doe on the earth VERSE 8. HE doth not call him his messenger or Minister but he gives him his owne title and here he speakes of his authority In his throne is signified his inauguration into his kingdome by the scepter the administration of his kingdome That Psalme is first to
thou not often looke upon it The world is the admirable picture of God Almighty in whom the treasure of all wisedome is hidde therefore let us behold it with admiration If the Tabernacle were now to bee seene which was of Aholiabs and Bezaleels making or if the goodly Temple that was of Salomons setting up were now to bee seene we would runne and ride many a mile to take a view of it The frame of the world set up by the wise high and eternall God surpasses them all yet we goe through it we looke upon it and it never carries us to the contemplation of the wisedome and power of GOD. The reason is because it is so common and ordinary a sight They that come first to London and looke on Pauls and Westminster upon the faire Tombes and costly ornaments that be in them are ravished with the sight of them but if they have beene there long they passe by them and regard them not So is it with us because we see the Sunne Moone and Stars the glorious curtaine of the heaven the birds of the ayre fishes of the Sea beasts of the field the goodly coate of the earth dayly which is better arrayed than Salomon was in all his royaltie because these are common they are not esteemed of us Let us remember they be the handy worke of God a glasse wherein we behold the everlasting God-head and in that respect let us view diligently and bee brought to the knowledge the feare and love of God by it that hath made all these things for our sakes VERSE 11. AS CHRIST had no beginning so he shall have no ending The heavens shall decay but not he Thus CHRIST is eternall without beginning and ending who as he is the beginning of the world being before it had a beginning So hee is the end of it who shall continue when it hath an end 2. He is immutable They are young and old so is not Christ he remaines alwayes in the same estate and condition All garments in the world in the end waxe old Deut. 29.5 So the whole fabricke of the world there is not that cleerenesse of light in the Sunne and Moone that there was not that force and strength in the Starres the earth is not so lusty and lively Old things are not wont to be had in any price or estimation who cares for an old paire of shooes that bee not worth the taking up Who regards an old Coate that hath no strength in it but is ready to be torne in pieces Who will give much for an old house the timber whereof is rotten and it is ready to fall on his head Now is the last age of the world it hath continued many thousand yeeres it is now as an old house an old garment that cannot last long therefore let us not be too much in love with it There was some reason why in former times when this building was new and strong when the coate and garment of the world was fresh faire and of good durance that men should set their affections on it but now when the beauty and strength of it is gone why should we be enamoured with it Let us use it as if we used it not and let us long for that day when both the heavens and the earth and we our selves likewise shall be changed and be translated with CHRIST into the kingdome of glory the heavens are most fitly resembled to a garment Observe the similitude and dissimilitude 1. A garment covers a man So doe the heavens 2. The substance of a garment must be before as Silke Velvet Cloth else you can make no garment but CHRIST made the heavens of nothing 3. A garment must have a forme or fashion So has this an excellent one 4. A garment stands in need of mending we need be at no cost nor labour in mending of this garment but CHRIST by the power of his providence upholds it VERSE 12. NOw this vesture of the heavens is spread abroad and cast as a mantle about us then it shall be folded up Esay 34.4 And all the host of Heaven shall be dissolved and the heavens shall be rolled together as a scrole and all their host shal fall down as the leafe falleth from off the Vine and as a falling figge from the figge-tree but CHRIST yesterday and to day the same for ever there is not a shadow of turning in Him He is the same both in respect of His essence and promise Properly to speake CHRIST hath no yeeres In the first or fortieth yeare of such a Kings reigne but CHRIST reigneth without yeares This is spoken onely for our capacity Such a King reignes so many yeeres and in the end hee dyes but Christs yeeres never faile The world it shall be changed Plato lighting on the bookes of Moses affirmed that it had a beginning but would not grant it should have an ending which opinion of his Aristotle confuteth for Omne genitum est corruptibile Democritus Empedocles and Heraclitus held that it had a beginning and shall have an ending yea some of them did speake of two destructions of the world the one by water the other by fire There shall not be consumptio but mutatio renovatio mundi 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praeteribunt Marc. 13.31 Non peribunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transit 1 Cor. 7.31 Non interit 2 Figura mundi non natura 1 Cor. 7.31 the fashion of this world passeth away 3 As the old world perished by water so shall the new by fire 2 Pet. 3.6 but the substance of that perished not no more of this 4. It shall be delivered onely from corruption for the which it sigheth 5 There shall be new heavens and earth 2 Pet. 3.13 Apo. 21.1 6 As our bodies shall not perish but be changed of corruptible made incorruptible 1 Cor. 15. And as it is in the little world of mans body so it is in the great world Vid. Aug. lib. 20. de civ Dei cap. 14. 16. CHRIST remaines ever without any change or alteration either in respect of His promise or essence which may cause us both to put our trust in Him to believe whatsoever He hath sayd and to depend on Him as a strong and unmoveable pillar Kings and Princes dye our friends dye our fathers and mothers that were our stayes are taken out of the world but CHRIST the King and protectour of the Church continues for ever King Henry the eight is dead who banished the Pope out of England That worthy Prince Edward another Iosiah and favourer of the Gospell is dead Queene Elizabeth that famous Queene the wonder of the world while she lived a carefull and loving nursing mother to the Gospell is dead King Iames of Blessed memory a great Patron of the Church a just and a peacefull Prince is dead Yet CHRIST lives still His yeares faile not and He will alwayes provide for his Church and children When we heare any ill
we are not the Angels Ministers This is thy gracious goodnesse towards us thy name be blessed for it for ever and ever Whether he have appointed to every one of us a particular Angell or not let us not be too curious in the discussing of it this is comfortable for us that wee have many Angels to Minister to us Their Angels saies CHRIST of those that believe in him not their Angell not one Angell but many carryed Lazarus his soule into Abrahams bosome 3. What an unspeakable comfort is this for us What a Tower of defence against Satan and his Angels The Devill compasseth the earth to and fro hee walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure and there be many 1000s of devils there were a legion in one man These by Gods permission raise up tempests stirre up extraordinary windes blow downe houses Nay if God did not bridle them they would quickly teare us all in pieces but let this be our castle to flye unto as there be bad Angels to hurt us so there be good Angels to defend us There were Charrets and horse-men of fire round about Elisha and the Angels of God though we cannot see them with our eyes pitch their Tents round about us these be stronger than the Devill and his angels because they never sinned and have God on their side In the time of Popery the people were much deluded with the walking of spirits they durst not go through a Church-yard in the night for feare of them Sundry are afraid of Fairies and of ill spirits that haunt their houses no doubt but the evill angels are busie in all places yet let us feare none of them all we are guarded with the celestiall guard of holy Angels that are able to protect us from them all especially Christ Iesus is on our side which is above all Angels he sits at Gods right-hand hath all power in heaven and earth he will preserve us from all dangers in this life and bring us to his everlasting Kingdome in the life to come 4 Seeing that God hath ordained the Angels to be ministring-spirits for our sakes which undoubtedly looke carefully to their charge seldome or never are they absent from us some or other are present with us continually Let us do nothing that may grieve these Heavenly Spirits let the Women be covered because of the Angels So let not us sweare and blaspheme the Name of God c. because of the Angels Men would blush to commit filthinesse in the presence of an honourable Personage the Angels are alwayes present with us therefore even in respect of them let us absteine from sin CHAP. 2. IN the former Chapter the Author as in a Glasse shewed the Deity of CHRIST and both simply and absolutely ratified it Now he applies it to them to whom he writeth Where 1. An application 2. A transition to his humanity In the Application 1. the Vse 2. the Reasons whereby it is pressed 1. From the incommodity 2. From the punishment set forth by a comparison 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forsomuch as CHRIST the Author of the Gospell is not onely above the Angels but is the high and eternall God being the naturall Son of the everlasting Father and engraven forme of his Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we ought So then it is not left to our discretion we are tied with the bond of necessity to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intend our mindes that the things may be imprinted in our hearts and practised in our lives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more aboundantly We should abound more in hearing attention and practice than they did in the time of the Law we should excell them by a more rare and singular attention for though the things are the same yet the party is not the same by whom they are delivered It is not enough to heare Sermons every weeke which is good and commendable but we must yeeld a diligent attention to the things that we heare we especially now in the time of the Gospell when God speaketh to us by his owne Son The people were bound to heare attentively in the time of the Law when the Prophets of God spake to them but much more are we when the Son of God the Prince of Prophets the Prophet of the Prophets speakes to us All Samaria gave heed to Simon Magus that bewitched them and lead them to the Divell and shall not we give heed to Iesus Christ that labours to carry us to Heaven Doe not onely heare but attend to that which ye heare Take heed how ye heare whether loosely or carefully profitably or unprofitably Lydia attended to the things that Paul spake Acts 16.14 We must not only heare the Preacher but attend to the things which he uttereth An Infant doth not only take the dug into his mouth but he sucketh at it and that with greedinesse So we must not onely lye at the big of the Word but we must suck sweet doctrines and heavenly instructions from it The ground that receives not the seed into it will never be fruitfull if it lye aloft and be not hidden in the bowels of the earth it can never yeeld fruit so when the seed of the Word is sowne if we doe not marke it and lay it up in our hearts hide it within us as David did the birds of the Ayre that is the divels that flie up and downe in the Church will pick it up and run away with it Therefore let us diligently give heed to the things which we heare hearing is good and they be commended that heare yet that is not sufficient a diligent attendance must be given to that which we heare When Christ reades a Divinity Lecture to us we that be his Schollers must attend to it It is said of the people that they hung on Christ watching the words that came from his mouth ready to receive them before they came so with all care and diligence we must hang on the Preacher marke his words and be ready to receive them into our eares and hearts even before they are delivered so eager should we be of the Word Especially now in the time of the Gospell what attention is there in the Starre-Chamber when the Lords of the Privie Counsell speake But if either the Prince or the King himselfe make an Oration then there is wonderfull attention In the time of the Law the Prophets spake which indeed were of Gods counsell by whom God revealed his will to the people but now the Prince of peace the everlasting Counsellor the Kings owne Sonne that lay in his owne bosome in whom all the treasures of wisdome are hid speaketh to us Therefore let us listen with all diligence to the things which he speaketh And how doth Christ now speak Not daily from Heaven as he did to Saul but by the mouth of his Ambassadours He that heareth you heareth me will ye have an experience of Christ that
that he might the better pittie us that be men that he might be a mercifull high Priest to us all and shall we be unmercifull one to another As the elect of God put on bowels of mercy Col. 3.12 We have a mercifull high Priest Let us be mercifull one to another It is a token of a wicked man of a reprobate to be unmercifull as that rich glutton was that saw Lazarus dayly at his gates and would have no compassion on him True Christians are mercifull as Christ is Iudas came howling to the high Priests and Pharises Oh I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what is that to us say they See thou to that So such a neighbour is sicke in the Towne such a one is mourning for the death of his Children his Wife c. Such a poore man hath neither meat nor firing nothing to relieve himselfe and his Children withall what is that to us A lamentable thing There is a thorne in the foot that paines it and makes it to swell shall the head and hands say what is that to us We are members one of another and we have an head that is pittifull to us Let us be pittifull one to another that Christ may have pittie and compassion on us both in this world and in that which is to come This may be a singular comfort to us all They say he is happy that hath a friend in the Court especially if he be gracious with the King wee have a friend in the Court of heaven that is deepe in Gods bookes such a friend as hath a feeling of all our infirmities He and we are as Hippocrates twins weeping and laughing together Saul why persecutest thou me If we be sicke or grieved he is c. This was one speciall end why CHRIST assumed our nature that hee might the better have compassion on us in our calamities As the bowels of the true mother yerned when her Child should have beene cut in pieces so if wee bee in any affliction the bowels of CHRIST yerne towards us therefore let us sound forth the praises of CHRIST with a cheerefull heart that tooke our nature on him let us glorifie this our elder brother LORD and Saviour in this life that we may be glorified with himselfe in eternall glory in the life to come CHAP. 3. HItherto he hath entreated of the person of Christ shewing him to be God and man now he proceedeth to his offices As for his regall dignity it might bee perceived by that which he had already spoken of him that he was above the Angels themselves therefore he sayes little of his kingdome in his other two offices he is ample 1. They are propounded joyntly Verse 1. Then opened Severally and particularly 1. Hee begins with his prophesie which is contained in this Chapter and part of the next to Verse 14. Then with his Priesthood in the Chapter following About his prophesie there be two things 1. An admonition with all reverence to listen to this our Prophet 2. Reasons to induce us to it Within this Chapter there are foure The 1. is taken from his fidelity illustrated by a comparison betweene him and Moses à 2. ad 7. 2. From the testimony of the Holy Ghost who stirreth us up to listen to him where we have the allegation of the testimony à 7. to 11. an application of it Verse 12 13. The 3d. reason is taken from the fruit and commodity we shall have by it a society and fellowship with Christ verse 14. 4. From the punishment inflicted on them that contemne this Prophet to the end In the admonition there be two branches 1. A description of the persons that are to attend 2. Of the person to whom they must attend Vnde whereupon Seeing the Prophet and Doctor of the Church is the high and eternall God above the Angels and all creatures seeing in time he became man that by Gods grace he might taste death for all men therefore let us make an high account and estimation of him The parties admonished to listen to this Prophet and Teacher of the Church are described by their estate and condition and by the gracious benefits bestowed on them 1 For their condition they be brethren dulciter eos alloquitur not carnall but spirituall brethren He doth not call them brethren only because they descended of the Fathers and came of the seed of Abraham as he did but because they were brethren in the Lord Iesus Christ. By this sweet and loving title he doth insinuate himselfe into the Hebrewes and allures them to have a reverent opinion of Christ. Yea he cals them holy brethren such as are made holy by Iesus Christ the Holy one of God 1 Cor. 6.11 By nature we are unholy as well as others but Christ sanctifieth us and makes us holy We that bee Christians must not be unholy brethren brethren in evill as Simeon and Levi were but we must be holy brethren As GOD our Father is holy the Church our Mother is holy Christ our elder brother is holy the Angels our fellow-brethren are holy Heaven is an holy place so must we in some measure be holy Seeing you are holy and have all your holinesse from Christ listen to him 2 For their dignity Partakers together with the rest of the Saints of the Heavenly and glorious kingdome whereunto God in mercy hath called us by the preaching of the Gospell 1 Thes. 2.12 Now as GOD hath beene so gracious to you as to make you partakers of his owne kingdome purchased by the bloud of his Sonne so listen you with all reverence to him and cleave to him alone Of the heavenly calling that is Of the preaching of the Gospell whereby we are called to the kingdome of heaven whom God hath predestinated hee hath called The preaching of the Gospell is the bell whereby we are called to eternall glory As by the sound of a Trumpet the people were called together in the time of the Law so the Word is the silver Trumpet sounding in our eares whereby we are called to the Kingdome of Heaven Blessed are they that be partakers of this calling Such are we in England at this present day if we had eyes to see it and hearts to consider it But GOD cals and we refuse to come wisdome hath made ready her Feast she shath sent her maids into the streets to call us to her banquet but we passe not for it The King made a Supper for his Son sent and invited many to it but they made excuses and came not so GOD calleth us continually but some sit at home in their houses some ride abroad c. when God cals them to his kingdome As we are partakers of the heavenly vocation so let us make a precious account of it that we may be called out of the kingdome of darknesse into the kingdome of light and remaine with Christ for ever Then he comes to the admonition it selfe Consider not lightly as they
the Gospell to give eare to Christ that speaketh to us in the ministery of the Word This is my beloved Son heare him Now in the end the Apostle makes an exposition of the Allegorie and applies it to them to whom he writeth I doe not speake of the Tabernacle or Temple which were glorious houses wherein God in some sort dwelt but I speake of Gods spirituall house the Church a part whereof you are as well as Moses and they in the time of the Law All Christians in all Ages are the house of God What a singular honor is this that we should be Gods house yea his dwelling-house 1. A Nobleman hath many Houses which hee dwels not in himselfe but letteth them forth to other men we are not houses to let but God himselfe dwelleth in us we are his mansion-House The Centurion said to Christ I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roofe so may we say we are mortall and sinfull men houses of clay unworthy that God should come under our roofe yet it pleaseth him of his infinite mercy to dwell in such base houses as we are 2 If God dwell in us and we be his house then how neat and handsome should it be kept Shall a Kings house be overgrowne with weeds Shall there be filthy and sluttish corners in a Kings Palace And shall we that professe our selves to be Gods house be full of pride envie and malice that be stinking weeds in the nostrils of God Shall Gods house be full of swearers drunkards adultereres c. The divell found his house swept and garnished to his minde and shall not Gods house be swept for the entertaining of him Let us garnish our selves which are Gods house with the sweet flowers of faith love hope zeale humility temperance patience sobriety that God may take delight to dwell in us 3 There is no man especially if he dwell in an house and it be his owne but will bestow needfull reparations on it and do you think God will suffer his house to lye unrepaired nay being Gods house we shall want nothing for soule or body If we decay in faith zeale and other graces of his spirit he will in due season repaire them againe he will keepe his house wind-tyde and water-tyde he will preserve it from wind and weather yea the gates of hell shall never prevaile against his house 4 A man may have an house and be defeated of it some wrangling Lawyer may wring it out of his hand or he may be weary of his house and make it away none can snatch Gods house out of his hand he is no changling he will keepe his house for ever Blessed are we that be GODS house and the Lord give us grace to keepe us undefiled for his Majesty that he may take pleasure to dwell in us in this World and wee may dwell with him in the World to come What are we the house of God simply Live as we list and do what we will No verily but if we hold fast the confidence c. One speciall quality of a good house is to be firme and stable if it be a tottering house ready to shake in every wind and tempest a man will have small joy to dwell in it even so we that be the house of God Almighty must not be wavering and inconstant but we must stand sure and hold fast the graces we have received There be two things which we must hold fast faith and hope the boldnesse that we have by faith to come into the presence of God to whom we have accesse by Christ apprehended by faith and by vertue whereof we may boldly call God Father and open our minds freely to him that is the nature of the word Vnto faith must be annexed hope faith makes a Christian hope nourishes and susteines a Christian we must hold both fast As we have begun to put our trust in Christ so we must make him our pillar to leane upon continually as we have begun to hope for eternall happinesse purchased by Christ so we must still stand in a stedfast expectation of it Though persecution arise for the Gospell though we be clapt up into prison banished out of our country though we be put to the fire for the name of Christ yet let us not cast away our hope let us not deny Christ and sleepe in an whole skin let not the pleasures and profits of this world carry us away from Christ though death it selfe come yet let us trust in him We are wont to be hold-fasts in our money none shall easily get that from us but let us chiefly be hold-fasts in the Pearles and graces of the Spirit Whatsoever comes let us hold faith and hope fast let Houses and Lands Wife and Children yea our owne life goe rather than them Thus if we hold the confidence that we have in CHRIST and the rejoycing of our hope to the end we shall be Gods houses in this life and be received up into that house which is made without hands in the heavens He doth not simply say hope but the rejoycing of the hope the glorying of hope Satan and his instruments goe about to overthrow our hope and mocke at it It is a goodly thing I warrant you which you hope for What fooles are you in hope of an imaginarie kingdome hereafter to deprive your selves of so many pleasures in this life bee wiser than so A bird in the hand is better than two in the bush Take your pleasure whyle you be here and hope not yee cannot tell for what To that hee opposeth this glorying and rejoycing Yea boast of your hope even before your enemies faces what excellent things are reposed for you and rejoyce in this hope as if you had the kingdome of heaven already Not as if these did make us the house of GOD but by these wee shall have an assurance to our selves that we are the house of GOD. A Father sayes to his Sonne if thou wilt be no Ale-house hunter but doe as I will have thee thou shalt be my Sonne this doth not make him his Sonne for he was his Sonne before but it assures him to be his Sonne A Captaine sayes to his souldier if thou wilt play the man and not shrinke in the wetting thou shalt be my Souldier yet hee was his Souldier before so here if yee hold fast faith and hope ye shall be my house that is all the world shall see indeede that you are my house not for a while but to the end So as neither we faint in persecution nor in the time of prosperity bee drowned in the pleasures and profits of this world Be faithfull to the end he that continueth to the end shall be saved The second argument is desumed from the testimony of the Holy Ghost In the allegation of the testimony first a charge not to shut up their eares and hearts against this worthie and heavenly Prophet but to entertaine him
come out then they murmure against God despaire of his providence and are ready to exclaime against God This was the Israelites fault and thus often times they tempted God in the wildernesse If they wanted water to quench their thirst withall then they must needs dye God was not able to provide them water If they wanted bread So they did likewise and in a pelting chafe were ready to stone Moses and Aaron Then they would back againe to Aegypt then they wished themselves dead as if the same God that had miraculously beyond the expectation of men provided for them heretofore was not able to doe so still So when some told them of the walled townes that were in the land of Canaan of the mighty Gyants that were in the Country in comparison of whom they were but Grasse-hoppers then they brake forth into this exclamation God is not able to bring us into this land wee and our Children shall perish in this wildernesse They had seene with what a strong hand God had brought them out of Aegypt how miraculously he divided the red Sea that the waters stood as a wall on both sides till they safely passed over yet for all that when they were in any difficulty then God was no body of no power or willingnesse to doe for them This was a vile tempting of God which highly displeased him But there is no reason why we should thus tempt God casting off the hope and confidence we have in him He is subject to no changes yesterday and to day the same for ever Men may change but God changes not a man may be strong to day and weake to morrow whole to day and sick to morrow rich now and poore afterwards alive now and dead a while after a man may love us this houre and hate us the next as Amnon did his sister therefore we may make a question of the helpe of man But God is one and the same continually not a shadow of turning in him his arme is never shortned the welspring of his mercy and goodnesse is never dryed up Therefore in all distresses let us trust in him though all worldly meanes fayle us in sicknesse and health in poverty and wealth in death and life let him be our pillar to leane upon The Prince that would not believe the plenty that GOD had promised was troden to death 2 Reg. 7.17 and the carkasses of these men that thus tempted God fell in the wildernesse therefore let us beware of incredultie As Faith is the best vertue so infidelitie is the greatest vice CHRIST could doe nothing among his owne kinsfolke because of their unbeliefe Shall any thing bee impossible with God Indeed that which he wills not that he cannot doe it is his will that CHRIST in respect of his humanity should be in heaven till the day of judgement therefore he cannot doe this make his body to be here on the earth The Papists set Gods omnipotency on the tainters and stretch it too farre as some bad clothiers deale with cloath But if God have once given us his faithfull promise to doe this or that let us believe it though all the world say nay to it God had promised to bring them into the land of Canaan though there were never so many blockes in the way they should have depended on this promise So God hath promised us the kingdome of heaven feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome Luke 12.32 though now and then through weakenesse we fall into sinne though Satan and his instruments rage though we be sicke dye be buryed our bodyes consumed to dust and ashes yet let us certainely know wee shall have this kingdome This is amplified by an excellent meanes which they had to pull them out of this infidelity which was a continuall view and contemplation of the wonderfull workes of God although they saw my workes in the Hebr. they saw the Aegyptians drowned in the red Sea and themselves safely walking through it they saw the cloudy pillar conducting them day and night water gushing out of a stonie rocke Manna descending from heaven that the clothes on their backes and shooes on their feet did not waxe old many yeares together they might have felt with their hands the power and goodnesse of GOD protecting them yet they would not believe in him whereas the sight of Gods former workes should strengthen our faith in all future calamities That use did David make of the workes of GOD. The LORD delivered mee from the clawes of the Beare and pawes of the Lion therefore hee will deliver mee from this Philistim GOD was gracious to mee in such a sicknesse therefore hee will be in this GOD provided for mee when I was a child and could not shift for my selfe therefore hee will provide for me being a man growne GOD preserved mee in such a plague and pestilence therefore I will depend on him still when I was in such an extremity GOD helped me therefore he will helpe me still God delivered England in the yeare one thousand five hundred eightie eight therefore if England serve him hee will deliver it still When Queene Elizabeth the mirrour of the world was taken away we looked for a wofull day yet God gave us a joyfull day after it therefore alwayes let us trust to him let the sight of his wonderfull workes dayly before our eyes be as oyle to nourish the lampe of our faith that it never dye The last circumstance appertaining to this sinne is the time how long it continued they tempted and proved him 40. yeares though they saw his workes These words in the Hebr. are coupled with that which followeth 40. yeares was I grieved with that generation Yet there is no jarre betweene Paul and David for these two are convertible and depend the one on the other They be both true they tempted God 40. yeares and he was grieved with them 40. yeares If they tempted him 40. yeares then he must needs be grieved with them and if God was grieved with them 40. yeares then they tempted him so long so that the one cannot be separated from the other They dwelt in this sinne a long time and would not bee plucked out of it VERSE 10. THe punishment of the sinne Gods wrath was kindled against them In the end after hee had borne the burden of their sinnes many yeares together his wrath did breake out against them for it They were irksome and tedious to me I could beare them no longer after that I had striven with them fortie yeares when there was no remedy I cast them off God is grieved similitudinariè That rebellious that obstinate generation Hee was not grieved with their Children but with them The Children doe not smart for the fathers faults if they make not their fathers sins their own sinnes Their Children went into the land of Canaan though they did not Least it should seeme to be a griefe or anger without reason
he shewes the equity of it they were a blind ignorant and perverse people that would not heare mee therefore I was worthily grieved with them They are a vagrant and wandring people straying out of the way He doth not say they have erred but erre continually erring ever Not in their outward lives and conversations only but in their heart which carryeth the whole man after it there hee points out the fountaine of this sin the corruption of their hearts If the heart be blind the whole man must needs be blind Wayes that is my lawes and commandements These bee the wayes wherein wee ought to walke or my workes quia per ea ad nos venit to impart his benefits to us and to open himselfe to us They had meanes enough to come to the knowledge of my wayes my servant Moses and others were ever teaching of them but they willingly continued ignorant and would not know my wayes For this cause I have cast them off this is that corruption which is in us all by nature an ignorance of the will of God that carries us from Gods wayes to the Devils wayes Ephes. 4.17 18. Yet there is in men a double ignorance the one is simplex insita the other is composita affectata All by nature erre and are drowned in ignorance Paul saw at Athens an inscription on an Altar ignoto deo but many of them if God send the candle of knowledge amongst them skip for joy and imbrace it with both armes Others though they live in those places where the light shineth before their eyes where there is continuall preaching yet they remaine ignorant still some through carelesnesse and negligence not regarding it others even upon will and stomacke they close up their eyes and will not see the light Such were many of these Israelites they would not know the wayes of God A fearefull thing to live in the Church where God is preached and not to know him VERSE 11. WHereupon God proceeds to a definitive sentence against them which he ratifieth with an oath Seeing they be such an obstinate people hee doth not say but sweare not in sport and merriment but being much moved hot and angrie against them for their sinnes If they shall enter Constructio est defectiva ad modum irati qui truncat verba sua it is a passionate speech when a man is so moved as that hee cannot bring forth his words an usuall Aposiopesis Something must be supplyed If they shall enter into my rest let mee be counted no GOD let mee never be believed hereafter The suppressing of these imprecations doth argue that they should bee seldome used by us So did Abram Gen. 14.22 Christ Mar. 8.12 Saul 1 Sam. 14.44 whereas we in our anger cannot containe our selves but furious speeches come by and by out of our mouthes If I be not even with him I pray God I may sinke where I stand never enter into the kingdome of heaven c. We should not be so rash in producing of them God as ye see sweares so may wee doe if we could keepe our selves within those limits that he did 1. God sweares seldome the Scripture doth not bring him in swearing often at every word as we doe 2. When God sweares it is by himselfe by no creature wee sweare by bloud wounds fire bread cheese c. 3. It is a matter of weight that makes God sweare he doth not sweare upon every trifling occasion as wee doe it was a matter of importance that made him sweare now even the establishing of his justice that men should beware how they provoke him by their sinnes 4. God sweares not rashly in heat and choller as wee doe if our bloud be stirred then wee sweare vengeably Though it be here said hee sware in his wrath yet it was a just and advised anger not a cholericke furie as ours is There bee two things that make God sweare the one is the confirmation of his mercie and gracious promises to his Children Hebr. 6.17 The other is the strengthning of his justice and threatnings against the wicked as in this place and let us beware when God sweares If the King doe not only say such a man shall dye but sweares to it then there is little hope of life for him God hath not only said but sworne that all contemners of his word that harden their hearts against it shall perish eternally Therefore there is no dallying let us looke to it An horrible sinne that wrings an oath from God It is called his rest because he in his eternall counsell prepared it for them and promised it to them long agoe and it was he that brought them into that rest This rest is double 1. The Land of Canaan which is called a rest in regard of their continuall toyles and turmoyles in the wildernesse where they were alwayes molested with flitting up and down but when they came into this land they should rest Heere they rested under their Vines and Figtrees hence it hath the name of rest 2. By it also is meant the Kingdome of Heaven where wee shall rest with Abraham Isaac and Iacob for ever Now were all they that dyed in the wildernesse excluded from that rest too no. Moses never came into the Land of Canaan yet he came into the Kingdome of Heaven I dare not say that all that were overwhelmed with the flood went to hell nor that all were deprived of the celestiall Canaan that missed of the earthly but the wicked persisting in their sinnes without repentance undoubtedly lost both The cause why they were deprived of this rest was their stubborne contempt of God in his Servant Moses speaking to them from time to time He perswaded them by a true and lively faith to depend upon God assuring them that as he had promised them the Land of Canaan so what difficulty soever came he would one day put them into a peacefull possession of the Land but they would not beleeve it when any thing crossed them then they would goe to Aegypt againe Therefore let us take off that sinne that we be not partakers with them of the punishment As Christ said behold a greater than Salomon is heere So say I of the ministery of the Gospell a greater than Moses is heere If the ancient Israelites lost the land of Canaan and some of them the Celestiall Canaan too for despising Moses and for murmuring against him and grieving him how shall we escape that contemne Christ the Apostle and High Priest of our profession which is so farre greater than Moses as the Sonne and heire of the house is above the servant in the house Christ spake by Saint Paul and the rest of the Apostles in their time and he speaketh by us which are His Ambassadours at this day therefore harden not your hearts against his preaching least he shut you out of his rest but reverently embrace his preaching let Christ enter into your hearts by His Word
good thing but to obey that which we heare is better Not every one that saith Lord Lord but he that doth the will of my Father shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Mat. 7.21 Christ shall come from heaven to render vengeance to them that obeyed not the Gospell 2 Thes. 1.8 The ancient Israelites were banished out of Gods rest because they obeyed not His voyce I was not disobedient sayes Paul to the heavenly vision Let us by their example learne to obey God that we be not excluded out of His everlasting rest VERSE 19. IN the last place he poynteth out that maine and capitall sin for the which they were debarred this rest and he introduceth it in Emphaticall termes In the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a conjunction copulative but often it hath the force of an illative as 1 Cor. 15.21 It is as cleere as the noone day we may behold it with our eyes Not that they would not it may be they had a minde to enter into that rest but could not why what barred them out unbeliefe Infidelity is a grievous sin The Noble man on whose hand the King leaned was troden under foote in the gate because he believed not the Word of the Lord. If the Lord would make windowes in heaven might this thing be it cost him his life for it The ancient Israelites were heere excluded out of the Land of Canaan and many of them out of the Kingdom of heaven too because of their unbeliefe Can God give us flesh to eate can he prepare a table for us in the wildernesse thus they mooted on Gods power and called it into question ô the townes of the Land of Canaan are walled up to heaven the inhabitants are Gyants we as Grashoppers in comparison of them Can God bring us into this land for that cause they entred not into it therefore let us labour to pluck up this bitter roote of infidelity out of the hearts of us all Neverthelesse it is the proper vice of this age it reigneth exceedingly among the professors of the Gospell we believe neither Gods threatnings nor His promises God saies whoremongers I will Iudge a poynt for his judging we will be whoremasters still God resisteth the proud yet we will be proud men still Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruite c. We reade of no hurt that Dives did to Lazarus hee did not set his dogges on him nor cudgel him from his gate yet because hee did no good hee fryed in Hell wee will not believe this for all that wee will keepe that wee have to our selves and doe no good with it The curse shall not depart from the house of the swearer yet we sweare still we laugh in our sleeves at the threatnings of God And as for his promises we believe them not God hath promised us a Kingdome where though we be consumed to dust and ashes yet we shall rest with Christ for ever yet we believe not this A Bird in the hand is better then two in the bush We will not leave our earthly pleasures in hope of this Kingdome Our unbeliefe is in a manner as great as theirs therefore God may worthily shut us out of his rest But let us remove this infidelity out of our hearts This is the time of the yeare that we remoove tenants out of houses unbeliefe is a bad tenant that will not onely pay us no rent but will also rend Gods Kingdome from us hath dwelt in the houses of our hearts many yeares together let us now at length give him a remoove thrust him out of doores let us beleive God in all his sayings in this life that we may rest with him in his eternall Kingdome in the life to come CHAP. 4. IN the former Chapter he excited us to a reverend attention to Christ the Doctor and Prophet of the Church by a fearefull example of the wrath of God that fell upon the ancient Israelites for hardning their hearts against his voice and contemning him for this cause they were excluded Gods rest Now in the beginning of this Chapter he makes a more large and evident application of that example to us in the time of the Gospell wishing us not to tread in the steps of the rebellious Iewes least we drinke of the cup of Gods wrath as they did This Chapter divides it selfe into two branches 1. The remainder of Christ his prophesie to Verse 14. 2. A transition to his priesthood In the remainder the former example is applied to us In the which application wee have first a dehortation from incredulitie which was the barre that kept them out of God's rest to Verse 11. 2. An exhortation to a diligent studie to enter into that rest Touching the former 1. A propounding of the dehortation 2. A preventing of an objection that might bee made against it In the propounding of it 1. The substance of it 2. A reason whereby it is strengthened The substance of it is comprehended Ver. 1. VERSE 1. SEeing we have such a terrible example of Gods wrath in the ancient Israelites which for their unbeliefe and contumacie were shut out of Gods rest let us being subject to the like frailety and as little able of our selves to stand as they let us feare that we fall not as they did What is it that we must feare Least any of us should seeme to come short of his rest for there is no time to sin and goe to hell in our youth or elder age How lest the promise being left cast behinde our backe and not regarded the cause of infidelity is a carelesse neglect of God his promise Where read we of any promise made of entring into his rest we read of a commination or threatning that some should not enter into it but in the former testimony there was contained no promise True not directly yet indirectly and by necessary consequent for if God sware that they should not enter which disobeyed him then a secret promise was included that the faithfull and obedient should enter in therefore let us feare least forsaking this promise of entring into his rest c. Any of you For I love you all and would be loath that one of you should perish Seeme not simply say be deprived Some thinke the Apostle so speaketh that he might not exasperate the Iewes which would have taken it in great snuffe Therefore he sayes if any seeme but that word may have his force Seeme and that worthily even in the judgement of all the world by neglecting so great salvation to be deprived To come short The word is very significant To be left behind If among them that travell by the way some being weary of the length and tediousnesse of the journey slacke their pace sit downe and will make no hast the rest enter into the towne or City to the which they travell but they are left behind So if we goe not on cheerefully in the way following God calling us that leadeth
1.20 From the testimony cited in the former verse he reasons in this They did not enter therefore some others shall for Gods promise shall take effect and not fall to the ground If a man having prepared a sumptuous dinner shall say if these dine with me then never trust me againe thereby we may safely collect that there bee others that dine with him Hath he said it and shall he not doe it They that shall not enter into this rest are described by a prerogative vouchsafed to them and by the contempt of that prerogative The Prerogative hath two branches the 1. is the preaching and manifesting of this rest to them 2. is the order of time in respect whereof they were preferred before others They were the first that had this glad tydings of peace offered to them yet they were stubborne froward and disobedient they would not beleeve GOD and his promise for that cause they never sate a foote into that rest Yet some there be that shal take possession of it namely they that believe in God heaven and earth shall passe away but not one jot of Gods word shall be unfulfilled Though diverse regard it not and thinke it to bee but a fooles Paradise yet undoubtedly some shall have it There be first that shall be last sayes CHRIST Many may have this priviledge to have the Gospell first preached to them and yet not be saved by the Gospell Christ gave commandement that his Apostles should beginne their preaching at Ierusalem The Gospel is the power of God to salvation to the Iew first Yet easier for Tyrus and Sydon at the day of judgement then for many of them We in England in this last age of this world have had the Gospell againe revealed unto us before a number of places in the world we even in these parts have had it a long time in most plentifull measure above and before sundry places in the land yet let us not flatter our selves in that Some of them that be still in darkenesse may goe to heaven before us Howsoever they that have the first offer which is a singular priviledge regard it not yet some out of all question shall have it Many come from the east and from the West and shall set downe with Abraham Isack and Iacob in the kingdome of heaven and the children of the kingdome shall be cast out into outer darkenesse Matth. 8.11.12 Those that were first bidden to the marriage would not come they made excuses yet the Lord sent into the high wayes and hedges and his house at the length was filled God is not tyed to any If the first refuse the last shall have it therefore while this rest is preached to us let us take hold of it and not reject it as the ancient Israelites did VERSE 7. 2. HEE proves it by the circumstance of time For David spake this a long time after they were setled in the land of Canaan by Iosua even foure hundred yeares after therefore he must needs meane another rest then the land of Canaan In David 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Hebr. 1.1 2. Not that voice that spake in the wildernesse but which soundeth now in the preaching of the Gospell Christ speaketh to us at this present day he that heareth you heareth me As if God did beseech you through us Therefore let us take heede that wee harden not our hearts against him VERSE 8. Iosua which was a type of CHRIST hath the same name with our Saviour CHRIST yet in a diverse manner Iosua was a Saviour for them in temporall things CHRIST in spirituall and eternall things hee saved them from the Canaanites earthly enemies CHRIST from sinne death hell and Satan spirituall enemies He gave them a land flowing with milke and hony in this world CHRIST gives us an everlasting habitation a celestiall paradise in the world to come If Ioshua had given them this rest then would not the Holy Ghost have spoken of another VERSE 9. WHereupon hee inferreth the conclusion 1. Introduced then confirmed Verse 10. There remaineth therefore By necessary consequence by the force and strength of reasoning A rest besides the land of Canaan wherein yee now rest In this place he reteineth the Hebrew word There remaineth a sabbatizing a keeping of a Sabbath in heaven for whom not for the people of the Devill but of GOD an holy nation a people zealous of good workes Many Atheists make a mocke at the kingdome of heaven The Preachers talke much of a glorious and wealthie kingdome which we shall have after this life but God send us wealth peace joy and pleasure in this world let them looke for that kingdome I but there remaineth a rest a Sabbath where we shall never be molested any more For whom doth it remaine and who be this people of God All nations in the world are his people by Creation but these bee his people by adoption whom hee hath adopted in his Sonne Christ Iesus whom he hath constituted a Prince and ruler over this people Rebels and traitours are not the Kings people they be the kings people that obey the Kings lawes 1. Every people is gathered together by some meanes or other a people is a collection of many men So we that are the people of God are gathered together with the trumpet of the word 2. A people gathered together must have lawes to rule them by otherwise they will soone be out of order leges à ligando because they are the bond that ties the people together otherwise they will range beyond limits even so Gods people have Gods lawes set downe in his word 3 Every people must have a King or ruler which is lex loquens even so the Ruler of Gods people is Iesus Christ they that will not have him to rule over them are none of Gods people 4 A people must have some Country to dwell in some in Denmarke some in France c. So the Country where this people dwell is the Church militant in this life and triumphant in the life to come 5 All people are distinguished by some outward habite and attyre French men goe not as English men Spanyards goe otherwise then Turkes c. So GODS people have the Sacraments to distinguish them Baptisme which is Christs marke and the Supper which is his Seale 6 People must live in obedience to the lawes of their King Traytors and rebels are not the Kings liege and loyall people So we that be GODS people must live obediently to Gods lawes If we be abominable swearers that rend GODS name in pieces contemners of his word if wee bee beastly drunkards and impure adulterers and adulteresses if we wallow in the mire of all sinne we are none of GODS people neither can we have any assurance of this rest therefore let us shew our selves by our workes to bee GODS people in this life that we may have this rest in the life
forsake mee the Lord will take me up sayes the Psalmist Even then at the houre of death hee will command his Angels to take our soules and carry them up into Abrahams bosome there to praise him for ever world without end CHAP. 5. IN the latter end of the former Chapter was contained a transition to the Priest-Hood of CHRIST now he enters into the discourse of it wherein he is very ample because many excellent points of celestiall doctrine be comprized in it 1. A proposition concerning the Priest-hood from the first Verse to the eleaventh evinced by a comparison betweene the High Priest and him 2. A large explication of it wherein 1. An entrance to the explication by a new exordium preparing them to it Verse 11. to the end of the sixth Chapter 2. The explication it selfe Chap. 7.8 and 9. The proposition concerning the Priest hood is set downe 1. Generally by an enumeration of the qualities required in a Priest in the foure former Verses 2. An Application of them to Christ from the fifth Verse to the eleaven●h In the setting downe of the proposition in generall these circumstances are unfolded to us 1. His affinitie with the people 2. The end why the Priest is ordained 3. The object whereabout he is occupied 4. One principall po●nt wherein it doth chiefly consist 5. The manner how he executes his office with a fellow feeling of the infirmities of his brethren ratified by the cause having himselfe an experience of the same infirmities Which is confirmed by an effect whereunto he is bound 6. His calling to his office illustrated by an example In the Application of it 1. He shewes that Christ hath a lawfull calling to his office as the Priests had which is confirmed by two divine testimonies 2. That hee is faithfull in the execution of his office 1. In respect of the things he was to doe with God 2. In regard of that which hee did for us which he concludeth with the repetition of the calling the foundation of all Before he comes to the explication of the proposition he prepares them to it by a new preface shewing the difficultie of the matter and the dulnesse of the hearers Which he prooveth by the effects they that have beene a long time at Schoole and have profited little are dull hearers but you have beene a long time at Schoole and profited little Ergo you are dull hearers For wee have neede to teach you your A. B. C. againe which he illustrateth by a similitude first set downe Then unfolded with both the branches belonging to it The conjunction For is not alwayes copulativa but sometimes inchoativa set for a grace and ornament in the beginning of a sentence yet it may have this coherence with the former having a great and a loving High Priest let us goe with boldnesse to the throne of Grace for this our high Priest hath all things that appertaine to an High Priest as shall appeare by the particulars Not one or two but all every one not one exempted Aaron Eleazar Iehojadah Iehosuah yea Melchizedec himselfe though his father and mother are not expressed in Scripture yet hee was taken from among men So was our SAVIOUR himselfe being made of a Woman and found in the true shape and similitude of a man Not only every inferiour Priest but every High Priest the Highest of all was taken from among men God taketh him by the hand separateth him from among his brethren and setteth him in a chaire of dignity above them all Hee was not taken ex volatilibus that he might not mount up above others not ex reptilibus because he should not be too much glewed to the earth not ex piscibus then in another element not ex angelis then he could not converse familiarly with his brethren nor have compassion on their infirmities but the High Priest was taken from among men he is a man as others be When God had brought all Creatures before man he found not an helpe meete for him So God thought it not meete to make an High Priest for men but among men All Ministers and Preachers are taken from among men it did not seeme good to the wisedome of GOD to call Angels to this office The Angell appeared to Philip and sent him to instruct the Eunuch but the Angell did not teach him himselfe It was not an Angell that preached CHRIST to Cornelius but Saint Peter that was a man as hee himselfe was As CHRIST tooke not on him the nature of Angels but the seede of Abraham So GOD hath not appointed Angels Preachers but men wee have this treasure in earthen vessels The Preachers that bring the pearle of the word are vessels of earth as you your selves be And take heede that yee doe not contemne them GOD hath honoured them with an high and magnificent office therefore doe not you dishonour them A number thinke basely of the Ministers because they be but men as they are A father is but a man yet the child honours him yea though he be a man growen himselfe as Salomon did Bathshebah A Master is but a man yet the servant though elder and stronger then he reverences him The Maior and Bayliffes of a Towne are but men yet the whole corporation yeelds honour to them Iustices of Peace are but men yet feared in regard of their places A King is but a man taken from among men and dyes as other men yet wee doe not despise him because he is a man So though the Preacher be a man as others be it may be a weake and poorer man yet in regard of that office wherunto God hath exalted him to be his Ambassadour and steward to be his arme to pull you up to the kingdome of heaven hee is to bee reverenced by you all God hath taken us from among men to carry men into his owne kingdome therefore love and honour us To what use For the salvation of men God by a man will save men not for himselfe alone but for other men he is not ordained for beasts for the building of houses the tilling of ground the making of Cloath but to build up men to life everlasting to breake up the fallow hearts of men and to sow the immortall seed of the word in them Not ordained for Angels but for men the good Angels need him not the bad Angels shall have no benefite by him He is ordained for the saving of men not of Angels not for rich men alone but also for poore not onely to tell meane men of their duties but great men too whatsoever their authoritie bee in the world So is the Magistrate ordained of God Rom. 13.4 therefore the distinction followeth in things that are to bee done with God the one in temporalibus the other in spiritualibus the one is occupied about the goods names and bodies of men the other about the soules of men Hebr. 13.17 The Ministers office is to preach the Word to teach the
of sores at his gate ever under one Crosse or another If there were no resurrection where this should be righted that sentence of the Psalmist might bee inverted verely there is no reward for the righteous verily there is no God that judgeth in the earth The third pillar is the Solemne funeralls that be in all nations All which are so many glasses wherein wee may behold the resurrection When we goe to a buryall we goe to a sowing the seede that is sowen lies covered in the earth all winter in the spring it shoots up againe and a goodly harvest ariseth of it So the body is sowne in corruption it rises in incorruption more beautifull then ever it was before The fourth pillar is that which Saint Paul urgeth to Christians 1 Cor. 15.12 Christ is risen therefore we shall ryse As Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly So Christ was three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth on Thursday he kept his Maundy he eate the Passeover and supper with his Disciples on good Friday he suffered and was crucified all Saturday being the Iewes Sabbath he lay in the earth on Sunday morning the first day of the weeke the Lords day the Lord Iesus rose triumphantly from the dead and this is the day of his resurrection on this day hee rose victoriously from the dead This is the day that the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and hee glad in it for Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours The first fruits are in heaven therefore the second fruits shall be there the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be there The Husband is in heaven therefore the Wife shall bee in heaven also we shall mee●e him with joy in the clouds and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever After the resurrection comes judgement it is appointed to men once to dye and then commeth the judgement Death were nothing if there were no judgement The Assi●es were nothing if there were nothing if there were no Gallowes no execution but as we must arise so wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it be good or bad Let us all thinke seriously of this eternall judgement It is called eternall judgement 1. Because it is of things eternall eternall life or eternall death 2. Because the sentence of that judgment is eternall the force and power thereof remaines ever both to the elect and reprobate they all goe eternally to the place appointed by the Iudge 3. Because the Iudge is eternall 4. Because the persons judged are eternall Some are to enjoy eternall happines some to suffer eternall punishment The judgement it selfe is not eternall that lasteth not ever but the fruit and event of it is eternall Oh that the cogitation of this judgement were deeply fixed in the harts of us all A great number even in the lap of the Church laugh at it in the closet of their hearts the Preachers talke much of a generall judgement that shall be after this life but if God let us alone till that day we shall doe well enough GOD grant we may escape the judgements here a flie for that judgement Yet Felix himselfe trembled at 〈◊〉 when Saint Paul spake of righteousnesse and the judgement to come though he were a judge himselfe he quaked at it Let us all feare this eternall judgement after an holy and religious manner and tremble at it In these judgements we may have Lawyers to plead for us then none shall be for us all against us especially our owne consciences as a thousand Lawyers and witnesses if our sinnes are not washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Therefore let us judge our selves here that wee bee not judged by the Lord hereafter let us bewaile our sinnes here that wee come not into the place where is weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for ever Let us remember this eternall judgement that it may bee as a bridle to restraine us from sinne That godly Father St. Hierome professed of himselfe whether he did eat or drinke or whatsoever he did this trumpet rang alwayes in his eares surgite mortui venite adjudicium When wee goe to bed in the evening when wee arise in the morning when we are about the affaires of our calling when Satan provokes us to stealing lying coofening purloyning c. Let us remember this eternall judgement let us call our selves to an account for our sins in this world repent seriously of them let us cast away our sins not as we do our coates when we goe to bed and put them on againe in the morning but throw them away and have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee shall have fellowship with Christ both in this life and in the life to come then we shall not need to feare this eternall judgement The Iudge is our SAVIOUR our elder brother our head our husband to whom we are married therefore we may lift up our heads at that day because our redemption is at hand we may rejoyce at his comming for we shal sit on the bench with him and judge the world and reigne with him for ever The Iesuits collect from hence that the Christians had a Catechisme delivered to them by tradition which they learned before they were acquainted with the Scriptures If every one should pick his faith out of the Scripture there would be madd rule Indeed if they had such heads as the Papists have that are bold to call the Scripture a nose of Wax But to answer 1. These Hebrewes to whom St. Paul writeth were exercised in the Scripture for Rom. 3.2 Vnto them were committed the oracles of God 2. Here is nothing in this Catechisme but is derived out of the Scripture 3. How shall men picke their faith out of the Pater-noster Ave-Mary c. being in an unknowne tongue Here wee have a short Catechisme consonant to the Scripture that was used in the Primitive Church Such as is at this day the Lords prayer the ten Commandements and the Articles of our beliefe These be profitable points but we that professe the Gospell must not always be in these they are to be propounded continually in the Church unto Children to them that bee rude and ignorant but Christians must not dwell in these wee must bee carryed to perfection till wee come to a ripe age in CHRIST IESUS wee must be able to answer all Heretickes and gaine-sayers and to defend the sacred truth of Christ his Gospell against them all VERSE 3. LEst hee should seeme to have presumed upon his owne strength when he said let us be lead forward to perfection here he referreth all to God that must be the leader of us all hee must give us feet to walke to perfection by Wee both we that are to teach and you
and not in his heart It hath beene an ancient custome in the Church of Rome to sweare by Saints and by their relikes But consuetudo sine veritate erroris est vetustas Cypr. l. 2. ep 3. The laying on of the hand on a Bible or a testament when we sweare This may bee excused for properly to speake wee doe not sweare by the Bible it is only an obtestation as the words of this bible are most true so is that which I sweare and it is an outward token whereby wee declare to the world that wee sweare by him which is the authour of the Bible or because in this booke are contained the promises and threatnings of the LORD to them that sweare truly and against them that sweare falsely so among the heathen they touched the altar when they swore yet they swore by him whom they worshipped on that altar for they would lift up their hands to heaven when they swore denoting by that bodily gesture of theirs that they did sweare by God alone who made the heavens We may sweare by God primariò principaliter but we may sweare by the creatures Secundariò This is but a meere shift and fond evasion Zephan 1.5 for they sware by the Lord primarily by malchum secondarily yet God was offended with them Besides there is none greater than man but God The Angels are creatures as well as we they are our fellow-servants and one fellow-servant must not sweare by another therefore we that be creatures must sweare only by the Creatour 3. Here wee see what a reverent estimation wee are to have of an oath it must be the end of contradiction after men have sworne wee should be as mute as fishes not have a word to say An oath was sacred among the heathen 1 Sam. 30.15 Abimelech and Phicol his Captaine were satisfied when they had Isacks oath Gen. 21.22 but with us small credit is to be given to oathes the oath of a Christian is no sure foundation to build upon Iesabel had false witnesses at her elbow to condemne Naboth withall the Pharisees had two false witnesses in a readinesse to sweare against our SAVIOUR CHRIST And now a dayes such is the corruption among Christians that small credit is to be given to many mens oathes for they say it is an easie matter in London and I would to God it were not in the country to procure men to sweare to what they will So that now a dayes an oath is rather the beginning then the end of controversies whereupon so many perjuries are found in the land a manifest argument that Atheisme growes among us The foole that is the wicked man sayes in his heart there is no God and I thinke many sweare by God if there be a God but all false swearers shall one day know to the terrour of their conscience that there is a God who will be avenged on them for abusing his name Let an oath be such an holy thing with us that there may be no more controversie after we have sworne Then why should we doubt of our salvation God hath bound himselfe by oath and promise to bring us to his kingdome and shal wee bee as reeds wavering with the winde I for our salvation dependeth in some sort on our workes pendet ex certitudine operum quae conjectu ralis atque imperfecta certitudo est It dependeth on works not as causes but as inseparable effects of faith not upon their dignity or perfection but upon their being with faith Be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the crowne of life I but who can tell whether he shall persevere to the end or not We may be good to day and bad to morrow Noah David Peter fell Yes we may be comfortably sure of our perseverance for hee that hath begun a worke in us will finish it to the day of Christ and though we fall yet we shall rise againe for the Lord putteth to his hand whom he once loveth hee loveth to the end and never forsakes them till hee have brought them to his kingdome Onely let us not bee rocked a sleepe in the cradle of security but work out our salvation with feare and trembling VERSE 17. Ἐφ ' ῷ̔ wherein in the which thing or in the which oath or for the which cause God did it willingly not by constraint none could enforce him to it More abundantly then was necessary for his bare word had beene enough save that the weakenesse of man required it See here GODS dealing with us after the manner of men To shew that is to make a lively and evident demonstration Vnto the heyres of promise not to Abraham alone but to all the faithfull The immutability which cannot be transposed or altered Not of his promise but counsell arguing that it was no sudden or fickle promise but such as proceeded from wise and deliberate counsell and the counsell or decree of God standeth for ever That of Hezekiahs and the Ninevites had a secret condition unlesse he had prayed earnestly for life and the others repented Ier. 18.7 8. or it was rather a commination then the pronuntiation of a decree or counsell Interposuit se as if CHRIST the Mediatour had made this oath and interposed himselfe in it betweene the father and us for the greater ratifying of it Oecumen Annexed to his promise Here we have the dignity of the godly they are heyres not of a Knight of a Lord a Duke c. but of God and the promises that is of the joyes of heaven which GOD hath promised to them in his word The kingdome of heaven belongs to Children not to servants the faithfull are the Children of God and joynt heires with Christ so that the inheritance of the celestiall Canaan pertaines to them how then dare you despise the lest of the heyres of promise 2. This may comfort us against the crosses of this life Art thou a poore man hast no money in thy purse to relieve thy selfe and thy family withall as Peter and Iohn had not hast thou not a bed to rest thy weary body on nor an house to hide thine head in as Christ had not the foxes have holes and the birds of the ayre have nests but the Sonne of man hath not whereon to lay his head yet faint not neither be discouraged for thou art an heyre of promise and shalt one day have a full fruition of the heavenly inheritance prepared from before the foundations of the world were laid The heyre of a Gentleman is kept under Tutors and Governours in the time of his nonage but as soone as that is expired he is at liberty and free from all so though we be the heyres of God yet in the time of our minority and nonage in this world we are kept under many austere masters yet the day of our redemption drawes nigh when as all teares shall be wiped from our eyes and we shall have full
hath promised heaven to mee Tit. 1.2 and hath sworne that I shall have heaven therefore I hope for it 3. CHRIST hath purchased heaven for mee with a deere purchase even with the shedding of his owne bloud therefore I hope for heaven 4. God that hath promised it to mee in Christ is able to fulfill his promise he doth whatsoever he will in heaven and in earth therefore though I be unworthy of it being a wretched sinner though I have many strong enemies to wrastle withall by the way even all the devills in hell against mee though I meete with crosses passe through a Sea of tribulations yet I will hope for heaven and I know I shal one day have it this is the ancre that pierces the waters of troubles and entreth into that within the vaile This is the hope of a Christian which makes not ashamed as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.5 this makes us with Abraham Rom. 4.18 to believe under the hope of grace against the hope of nature and our owne worthinesse The hope of the hypocrite shall perish Iob 8.13 Pro. 10.28 but the hope of a godly man that believeth in Christ shall never perish There may be weakenesses in hope as in faith but it shall never be quite overthrowen A man may bee sicke yet not dye the Sunne may be eclipsed yet not extinguished we have this as an ancre of the soule and by vertue of it we arrive at the haven of happinesse in the life to come Therefore let us desire God to increase our hope and to strengthen it daily more and more But this ancre being in heaven already may put us in an assured hope of heaven and the Lord in mercy so fortifie this ancre that no stormes of afflictions may bee ever able to prevaile against it Lord increase our hope VERSE 20. HEre wee have a pledge of our entrance into heaven which is Christ Iesus Our ancre is in heaven but as for us poore soules how can we come thither Well enough Christ is there therefore we shall bee there The argument is drawne from the relatives Christ is gone into heaven before and we shall goe after him he is praecursor and wee postcursores Iohn Baptist was Christs forerunner and Christ is our forerunner the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be in heaven the husband is in heaven therefore the wife shall be with him the first fruits are in the barne of heaven Christ is the first fruits of them that sleepe therefore we that are the second fruits sanctified in him and by him shall one day be in heaven with him Let this strengthen our faith and hope too our forerunner is entred into heaven before us and we shall follow after him This may uphold us against all the suggestions and temptations of Satan Flesh and bloud is ready to object against us oh it is a long way to heaven an irksome and tedious way through many tribulations wee must enter into the kingdome of God You shall meete with many enemies by the way and your legges are weake to carry you in this way how is it possible for you to come thither To all these we must oppose this buckler Christ our Saviour is gone before us and we shall follow after Christ had a body as well as we compassed with naturall infirmities as well as we he dyed as well as we yet he is in heaven therefore though I be full of weaknesses though I dye yet I shall rise againe and meete Christ in the ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory This is our hope of eternall life and the Lord strengthen this hope in us all to the end Now least any should bee ignorant of whom hee meanes hee points him out by his name and office CHRIST had good authority to enter into this sanctuary because he is the true high Priest As the High Priest in the time of the Law went into the earthly sanctuary So is he gone into the heavenly Thus hee is returned to Christs Priest-hood from whence hee digressed Hebr. 5.11 CHAP. 7. IN the last Verse of the former Chapter of purpose hee made choyse of such a similitude to set forth the nature of hope withall whereby hee might justly take occasion to returne to the Priest-hood of Christ againe from the which hee hath digressed Verse 11. Chap. 5. ad finem 6. In the explication of this his excellent Priest-hood according to the order of Melchizedeck 1. He intreateth of Melchizedeck the type and figure Verse 1. ad 11. 2. Of our Saviour Christ prefigured by him speaking 1. Of his calling to the office of Priest-hood Chap. 7. and 8. 2. Of the exequution of it Chap. 9.10 In the type 1. A narration of the dignity and excellency of Melchizedec Ver. 1.2 3. 2. An amplification of his greatnesse Verse 4. ad 11. In the narration of the dignity of Melchizedec 1. A description of him out of Moses 2. An interpretation and application of it by the Apostle Melchizedec is described by his offices he was both a King and a Priest which are first affirmed then confirmed Melchizedec Some take it to be a noune appellative because of the signification that he was so called of the people because he was a just King 1. Then the names of Abram Sarai Iacob Benjamin should be appellatives because they signifie something 2. Then Salem should be an appellative Some of the late Hebrewes whom others follow say it was a common name to the Kings of Salem as Pharaoh to the Kings of Aegypt and Caesar to the Emperours of Rome but it is an invention of their owne it was the proper name of the man Melchizedecks kingdome is illustrated by the place where hee ruled King of Salem Ierome in locis Hebraicis is of opinion that this Salem is that which is called Sichem Gen. 33.18 where he affirmeth the ruines of Melchizedecks palace were to be seene in his dayes and that it is that Salem which is mentioned Ioh. 3.23 that was neere Iordan and in the Greeke and Latine tongue it is called Sicina Yet the same Ierome epist. 126. ad Euagrium reckons up a great number of learned men which thinke it is Ierusalem which at the first was called Salem after Iebus and at the last Ierusalem which as some suppose is composed of Iebus and Salem B. being turned into R. for Iebusalem Ierusalem Ioseph lib. 1. antiq cap. 11. lib. 7. c. 3. de bello Ind●ico l. 7. c. 18. is also of opinion that it is the same that was after called Ierusalem Sundry Hebrewes were of the same minde as Ierome testifieth in traditionibus Hebraicis in Genesim and the Chalde paraphrase doth translate it Melchizedec Rex Ierusalem And indeed it is most probable that it was Ierusalem 1. The name of Ierusalem hath Shalom peace in it ●●ru Shalom they shall see peace 2. Shalom and Sion are all one Psal. 76.2 now Sion is Ierusalem therefore
vengeance on men Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge Lying is an unprofitable thing men may gaine by it but what advantageth it a man to winne the whole world and loose his owne soule these are unprofitable simply in themselves But the ceremoniall Law is unprofitable in respect of the Gospell that could only shadow out heavenly things but it could not give us heavenly things The washings that were in the law could signifie our washing in the bloud of Christ but they could not purge us from sinne as the bloud of Christ doth the sacrificing of Sheepe Oxen Rams could tell them there was a Lamb to come that should be offered on the Altar of the Crosse for the sins of the world but they could not take away sinne in this respect the law was weake and unprofitable On the contrary side the Gospell is a strong and profitable thing profitable to illuminate us in the mystery of our redemption to justifie us and cloath us with the righteousnesse of Christ that we may appeare unblameable in the sight of God to sanctifie us and make us new Creatures in Christ Iesus to assure us of the remission of all our sinnes and to carry us up into the kingdome of heaven Godlinesse is profitable for all things sayes Paul So the Gospell is profitable for all things It is profitable for the things of this world GOD blessed the house of Obed Edom where the Arke was and God blesseth those Townes and Citties where the Gospell is sincerely and truely practised but especially it is profitable to bring us to the joyes of heaven in the world to come An argument from profit is very forcible This was Hamans coozenage It is not for the Kings profit to suffer them and it prevailed much Nothing so profitable as the Gospell therefore let us all be greedy of it Why are men so desirous of Sheepe because they are profitable creatures Why doe men give so much money for an office because it is profitable and bringeth great gaines with it Why do men strive to make their Sons Lawyers because the Lawyers goe away with all the profit The Gospell of all things is most profitable profitable for this life to procure us the peace of conscience in this world and to save us in the world to come Therefore let us embrace the Gospell with both armes When the Merchant heard of a Pearle that surpassed all others he sold all and bought it the Gospell is the Pearle of Pearles above thousands of gold and silver therefore let us redeeme it though it be with the losse of all our worldly goods the Gospell is profitable for all things therefore make much of it The reason of the abrogation of the law is to be observed by us it was d●sannulled because of the weakenesse and unprofitablenesse thereof whereby wee may gather that all weake and unprofitable things that are not availeable to the kingdome of heaven shall be abolished such is the witt the wisedome the learning the eloquence of the world they be fine things of great price with worldly men yet because they are unprofitable for heavenly things they are and shall be abolished Where is the Scribe and the disputer of this world their place is no where to be found We our selves are weake and unprofitable touching spirituall and heavenly matters when we have done all that we can we must say wee are unprofitable servants We are all weake and unprofitable for heavenly matters therefore we our selves also must be abolished and Christ Iesus must be all and in all VERSE 19. THe weakenesse and unprofitablenesse of the ceremoniall law is proved by the inability thereof Nothing that is no man Ioh. 6.37 the neuter gender is fittest ad universitatem designandam Theophyl This is illustrated by the contrary effect in the Gospell Some referre both branches to the Law but was an introduction of a better hope as Porphyrius Isagoge to Aristotles praedicaments as the Apostle sayes the Law was our Schoole-Master to bring us to Christ Gal. 3.24 But 1. It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not an induction but a superinduction that is the Gospell superinduced upon the abrogation of the law 2. Then he would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a better hope not of a better hope It is rather to bee referred to the Gospell opposed to the Law and the verb in the Text to bee repeated not a new verb supplyed out of the Text but the Gospell bringing in a better hope maketh perfect through IESUS CHRIST the author and object of the Gospell We could not hope for salvation by the ceremoniall Law but we may be bold to hope for it by the Gospell By the introduction of which hope we draw neere to God The people in the time of the ceremoniall law stood without when the Priest was offering within as Luk. 1.10 and at the delivery of the morall law they might not come neere the mount where God was but in regard of the good newes that the Gospell bringeth our reconciliation being made by Christ wee may boldly come neere as Priest to offer our prayers to him in the name of Christ and to beg any thing at His hands Hebr. 4.16 yea by him we may draw neere to God in heaven The Tabernacle Temple the purifications and washings the observation of new Moones and Sabbaths the oblation of Rams Sheepe Bulls Oxen in the time of the Law these did lead them by the hand to Christ in whom they should have all perfection but these did not perfect the people On the contrarie side the bringing in of a better hope by Iesus Christ the Author and subject of the Gospell that doth perfect us What better hope is this had not the Fathers in the time of the Law as good an hope as we Yes verily Though some fondly collect from hence that they had hope only of temporall things we of eternall that is crooked and broken Divinity The fathers did eate of the same spirituall meate and dranke of the same spirituall drinke that wee doe Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad as we be they had the same hope of everlasting happinesse by Iesus Christ that wee have here is the onely difference they had that hope by faith in the promised Messiah not by the observation of the Law The opposition is here made not betweene the persons that lived in the time of the Law and those that live in the time of the Gospell but betweene the Law and Christ or betweene the Law and the Gospell The Law could not put us in good hope of everlasting happinesse or the favour of God but the Gospell did that hath brought in a better hope One sweet and comfortable fruit of that hope is this that by it we draw nigh to God By nature we are Gods enemies and runne away from God as Adam did when hee had sinned but by grace in Iesus Christ being justified by
and holy men yet let us strive in some sort to attaine to that holines which is in him Thou canst not bee so rich as such a man is wilt thou therefore labour for no riches at all A Scholler cannot write so well as his sample shall hee not therefore endevour to come as neere his sample as hee can So wee cannot attaine that holinesse that is in CHRIST shall wee therefore not imitate it Yes wee must bee an holy nation a royall Priest-hood a people zealous of good workes Learne of mee said CHRIST for I am humble and meeke So learne to bee holy as he is holy As the oyle powred on Aarons head stayed not there but ranne downe to his beard yea to the very skirts of his clothing So the heavenly oyle of holinesse powred on Christ our high-Priest must be conveyed to all yea to the lowest that be in the Church Thou art none of Christs if thou beest not holy as he is But alas for the most part we are unholy yea even we that professe ourselves to be the members of Christ. A great number that would seeme to belong to Christ that have Christ and his Gospell in their mouthes but are impure unholy prophane in their lives beastly drunkards that stincke of drink wheresoever they become filthy adulterers like fed horses neighing after their neighbours wives covetous misers meere mucke wormes that scarce believe there is any heaven but in this world We should be Saints in some measure as Christ the Saint of Saints is but a lamentable case we are Devills in our conversations we should be Eagles mounting up into heaven where Christ our high-Priest and Saviour is but we are Swine wallowing in the puddle of all iniquity As Christ is holy so let us endeavour to be in some poore measure else wee shall never set foote into the kingdome of heaven It is called the holy Ierusalem no dogs enchanters Whoremongers uncleane persons that bee not sanctified by the Holy Ghost shall come into it therefore let us be holy as Christ our high-Priest is that being partakers of his holinesse we may be partakers of his glory in the life to come Christ was a simple man all the treasures of wisedome were hid in him he was wiser than Salomon then any politicke Achitophel then any Matchiavel whatsoever yet a simple man He would not imploy his wits and wisdome about such things as might be hurtfull to any So Iacob was a plaine man and Nathaneel a true Israelite in whom there was no guile Such must all Christians bee though GOD have given them never so sharp a wit so reaching a head never so great wisedome experience and learning yet they must not use it to the hurt of any but to the good of all so neere as they can We must bee harmelesse as Christ wise as Serpents yet as innocent as Doves Yet a number there be that have the Serpentine wisdome and want the Dove-like simplicity they thinke they cannot be wise men unlesse they be crafty and hurtfull men they are more like the Devill then Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Devill hath a plaguie wit a subtile pate of his owne but hee never doth any good with it but all the mischiefe he can so doe those that are the Devills brood they have wit and wisedome enough the children of this world are wiser c. but what good doe they with it Nay what hurt how dangerous be they in a towne or a Country we must so live that wee be harmelesse as Christ was Yet a pittifull thing it is we are altogether set upon hurt we are harmefull and not harmelesse persons as CHRIST was There be two kindes of harmefull men in the Church covered with the Cloake of Christianity the one open the other close and secret and yet not so close but that God can disclose them and make their treacheries knowne to all the world the one are Foxes the other are Wolves the one Serpents the other Beares and Lions Some there bee that blush not to offer open harme and violence to their neighbours Such a one as Iesabel was that slew Naboth and tooke away his Vineyard all the world might see the injurie Such are they that grinde the faces of the poore that wring house and land from them and as Zidkiah smite their brother on the face that all may see the blow these be impudent wretches yet few of these Owles dare appeare in the glorious Sun shine of the Gospell Now men are waxen not more religious but more cunning they will be no hurtfull persons they doe no harme to any not openly perhaps yet secretly not above hand but under hand As he said I will kill Ismael and no man shall see it We will undermine the Preacher supplant our neighbours doe hurt and mischiefe in a towne and no man shall see it These are worse than the other those dogs are worst that will bite before they barke and the Serpent that lyeth in the greene grasse destroyes more than those that bee in high wayes a man may espie the one sooner than the other These are like Iudas that would kisse Christ at the same instant when hee betrayed him these will speake faire to a mans face and yet by secret perswasions by politicke devices by alienating the affections of others cut his throat behinde his backe A vile generation of Vipers yet all their plotting consulting their devising of mischiefe is knowne to him that knowes all secrets who will one day reveale them to their open shame before God and his Angels unlesse they repent fie upon this dealing let us labour to bee harmelesse as our Saviour Christ is It is an easie matter to bee harmefull if we will sell our selves to the Devill Let us strive to doe good to all but harme none neither openly nor secretly by word nor deed by our selves not by others We that bee Christians must bee good men as Barnabas was full of good workes as Dorcus was but not bad men hurtfull men full of evill workes Let us all so carry our selves in the Towne and Country where we dwell that it may bee affirmed of us we are harmelesse as Christ was Yet as we reade of one that was famous for nothing but for burning Diana's Temple so some are famous for nothing but for the hurt they have done and doe dayly they doe not only no good themselves but disswade others from doing of good As Christ is undefiled so must we be These are they that have not defiled their garments that have not defiled themselves with women Though we live in a filthy and defiled world yet we must not bee defiled with it Like the Sun that shineth on a dunghill yet is not polluted with the dunghill so though we live in the dunghill of the world yet wee must not be defiled with it wee must bee undefiled from covetousnesse drunkennesse pride malice envy and other sins that reigne amongst
head of it is in heaven and their conversation is in heaven the Church which is termed the kingdome of heaven should be purified with these that is with earthly things like to themselves They were earthly and they ought to bee purified with earthly things the ashes of an Heifer the bloud of Calves Goates c. But the heavenly things themselves that be under the Gospell which is a Gate and entrance into the kingdome of heaven the Church in the time of the Gospell the true Tabernacle and faithfull Citizens of heaven it was necessary that these should be purified with better sacrifices above these namely with the sacrifice of Christ himselfe else we could never have had any right to the kingdome of heaven Christ's one sacrifice is here called by the name of many because it is compared with the many sacrifices in the Law and opposed to them Not because there be many Masse Sacrifices to represent this one sacrifice Here wee see how wee are advanced above them in the time of the Law they had the patternes wee the things patterned they painted flowers we the flowers themselves they the shadowes wee the body they the picture we the man they the lineaments of the house we the house it selfe How are we beholden to God happy are the eyes that see what we see O that wee could walke worthy of them Better No comparison betweene them no more than betweene the creatures and the Creator What are Bulls Goates Calves to the Son of God that hath offered himselfe for us VERSE 24. THe Holy of Holies was a type of heaven Not made with the hands of Aholiab and Bezaleel Which were antitypes as it were pictures in waxe to represent this a stampe of this Into heaven it selfe whereof that was a type Act. 1.11 Manifestly and openly Not for a little while to goe out againe as the High-Priest did when he had prayed and sacrificed for the people but now and continually Not for himselfe but for us By the demonstration of his own sacred body wherein hee hath suffered for us to make intercession for us So long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare in the sight of God Of themselves they cry up to heaven for vengeance but Christ our Advocate and High-Priest is in heaven to answer for us Indeed father they are grievous sinners but here am I which in my owne body have borne the burden of their sins In the Courts here on earth men have Advocates and Proctours that appeare for them Christ our Advocate appeares in heaven for us therefore wee neede not to feare Who shall lay any thing to the charge of GODS elect It is CHRIST that appeareth in heaven for us 2. As hee is gone into heaven so we shall one day bee in heaven with him In the time of the Law the High-Priest went into the Sanctum Sanctorum but hee could carry none of the people with him Our High-Priest will bring us all into the true Holy of Holies the kingdome of heaven Father I will that they also whom thou hast given mee be with me where I am The fore-runner is gone before us and we shall follow after hee himselfe hath told us that in his Fathers house there be many mansions and he is gone to prepare a place for us What a dignity is this that dust and ashes should sit in the heavenly place with CHRIST Let this comfort us against all the crosses and calamities of this life What though wee be sicke many weekes together What though wee bee pinched with poverty for a time in this world and with soares as Lazarus c. all these one day shall have an end and wee shall bee in heaven with Christ have Palmes in our hands Crownes on our heads where all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes for ever VERSE 25. HHimselfe Hebr. 1.3 Often as the High-Priest offered often Every yeere whereas Christ but once Other bloud of Goates Calves c. Let us remember that which St. Peter telleth us we are redeemed from our old conversation wee are washed from our sins by the bloud of Christ therefore let us not wallow like swine in the dunghill of sin againe VERSE 26. BEcause there were sins in all ages of the world to bee done away CHRIST 's death was prefigured from the beginning of the world by the death of Abel by the oblation of Isaac by the sacrifice of many beasts in the time of the Law yet hee suffered but once Now not in the precedent or future time but now in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4.4 End of the world 1 Cor. 10.11 1 Ioh. 2.18 Hora. Though 1600 yeeres and moe are passed since yet a thousand yeeres are but as a day with the Lord. Hath he beene manifested 1 Tim. 3.16 appeared in the nature of man truly like to us in all things sin only excepted To the abolishing so as hereafter it shall bee of no force to accuse and condemne us or to shut us out of heaven There is sin still remaining in us but the guilt and punishment thereof is put away how not by the sacrifice of a Lamb Goate Calfe c. but by the sacrifice of himselfe Why did not GOD send CHRIST at the beginning of the world 1. Hee would have sicke man for a time to bee humbled with the sight and feeling of his disease that the Physitian might bee more welcome when he came 2. He would have the prophesies concerning Christ to bee fulfilled before he came A sharpe and evident knife to cut the throat of the Masse withall If CHRIST be offered up in the sacrifice of the Masse then hee suffers at every Masse for there can bee no offering of Christ without suffering but he suffers not even in the judgement of the Papists neither Bellarmine nor any of them all can though full of shifts tell handsomely how to elude this argument for here their unbloudy sacrifice hath a deadly wound There can bee no oblation of Christ without the suffering of Christ. The world then is not eternall as some Philosophers dreamed it had a beginning and it shall have an end onely GOD is without beginning and ending for the Angels themselves had a beginning If the end of the world was in the time of CHRIST and of his Apostles then now it must needs bee at an end now it lyes a gasping and is ready to yeeld up her breath that day is at hand when the world shall passe away with a noyse Therefore why doe wee dote so much on the world wilt thou sit feasting and banquetting in a rotten house that is ready to fall on thy head Such an house is the world therefore rather hasten to bee out of it The wicked are called the men of this world wee that bee the faithfull are men of another world ye are not of the world sayes our SAVIOUR CHRIST yet for all that wee are meere worldlings following the pleasures and
offer any sacrifice for sin but remaining in heaven still he patiently abideth Then let us waite The foot-stoole of his feete Donec imports a continuation of time Sinne the Devill and his instruments death it selfe If Christ tarrieth for us shall not we tarry for him Luk. 12.36 2 Pet. 3.12 The soules of the Saints that lay under the Altar cryed how long Lord but this answer was returned to them that they should rest for a little season untill their fellow servants and brethren were fulfilled Apoc. 6.10 11. The patient abiding of the poore shall not perish for ever Let us by patience and long suffering passe through the sea of afflictions in this world that we may be with Christ in the haven of eternall happinesse in the world to come Let us tarry for him till the breath bee out of our bodies and let our flesh rest in hope till the day of judgement 2. This phrase doth signifie the greatest and basest part of subjection that can be Ioshua made the men of War to set their feete on the neckes of the Kings that fought against them Ios. 10.24 Adonibezeck made them whom he subdued to gather crumbes under his table Iud. 1.7 The Psalmist sayes of the enemies of Christ they shall licke the dust under his feete and Rom. 16.20 The God of peace shall tread Satan under our feete I will lay thee at my foote we are wont to say Now as they shall be Christ's footstoole so our footstoole too Wee shall be conquerours yea more than Conquerours by him that loved us but this full and compleate victory shall not be till the day of judgment when death the last enemy of all shall be subdued In the meane season while we be here we must look to have our enemies on our top to spit on our face to smite us as they did Christ to make long furrowes on our backes to offer us the greatest indignity that can be but let us be of good comfort the time shall come when they shall be our foot-stoole to their everlasting shame and we shall be as Kings with crownes on our heads and palmes in our hands for ever and ever VERSE 14. THere is great reason he should sit still at the right hand of God in heaven because with one offering he hath perfected that is hath gi-given them all things that were requisite reconciliation remission of sins sanctification redemption Not for a time but for ever Not all the world in generall but those that are sanctified they that remaine dogs and swine still have no benefit by this sacrifice but those that are sanctified Eph. 1.4 1 Cor. 6.11 All have not benefit by the sacrifice of our Saviour Christ only they that are sanctified Acts. 20.32 This is the will of God even your sanctification If we be not sanctified we shall never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Dogges Enchanters Whoremongers are without Follow peace and holinesse without which no man shall see GOD. Except a man bee borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 Such were some of you but yee are sanctified c. 1 Cor. 6.11 This is little considered of us We falsely imagine that we may wallow like swine in the mire of our sinnes and yet goe to heaven when wee dye That cannot bee None are perfected by the offering of CHRIST but they that are sanctified If thou remainest a covetous miser still and beest not sanctified from thy covetousnesse if thou continuest a drunkard still and art not sanctified from thy drunkennesse if thou dwellest in thy fornication adultery stil and beest not sanctified from these sins If thou beest a proud man still and art not sanctified from thy pride to have a lowly opinion of thy selfe thou shalt never have any comfort by the oblation of CHRIST Wee must be Saints in some measure while wee are here on the earth or else wee shall never be Saints in heaven hereafter Paul writeth to them that are sanctified 1 Cor. 1.1 Therefore let us entreat the Lord to sanctifie us in soule spirit and body throughout that we may enter into the holy Hierusalem in the life to come VERSE 15. FOr the HOLY GHOST testifieth this also to us 2 Pet. 1.21 For after hee had said before these are the words of the Apostle making a collection out of the Prophet He doth not say for Ieremie beares us witnesse but the Holy Ghost The whole Scripture was given by inspiration from God it was inspired by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 The HOLY GHOST speakes in the bookes of Moses in the Psalmes and in the Prophets in the writings of the Evangelists in the Epistles of the Apostles and in all the rest In other writings men speake but in the Scripture GOD Almighty speaketh therefore how reverently are they to bee read and heard of us wee that bee the Preachers speake yet it is not wee but the Spirit of GOD that speaketh in us the HOLY GHOST speaketh by the mouth of all his servants therefore let us take heed how we resist the Holy Ghost VERSE 16. AFter he had promised a New Covenant instead of the Old After those dayes namely of the old Testament those being expired Then saith the Lord concerning the New Covenant that was promised Two things Renovation and Remission of sins Verse 17. God doth not promise to put his lawes in our eyes that wee might look on them in our mouthes that we might talke of them or on the fringes of our garments as the Pharises had the Law of God but if wee feare Him Hee will put his lawes into our hearts that the heart being possessed with the Law of God it may set the tongue and all the members of the body on worke VERSE 17. NEither the guilt nor punishment of them This testimony was cited Chapter 8. to prove that there was a New Covenant to abolish the Old Here it is alleadged to prove that remission of sins is effected by the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament which was only figured out by the sacrifices of the Old Testament So that one and the same Scripture may be applyed to diverse purposes The foundation whereupon the remission of sins promised by God was built was the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament otherwise this testimony should not be alleadged to purpose That which we minde to punish we will remember I remember Amalek said the Lord. A master being displeased with his servant sayes I will remember you anon but God will not remember our sins he will rase them out of the booke of his remembrance An happy turne for us for if he should remember but one sin against us it were sufficient to cast us into hell As God remembers not our sins So let not us remember the injuries done to us Ioseph would not revenge himselfe on his brethren for the injurie they intended against him and practised but
Iesus Christ. What a singular prerogative is this that we which are but dust and ashes should have an entrance yea a bold entrance into heaven None that wore sackcloth might enter into Ahasuerus pallace though we be never so poorely attyred so as we believe in Christ we may enter into the pallace of heaven Every one may not enter into the Kings Privie Chamber none but great states and those admitted by the Groomes and Gentlemen of the Chamber all of us that are engraffed into CHRIST may goe boldly into the Privy Chamber of the King of Kings David said of the kingdome of Iudea what am I and what is my fathers house that he hath brought me hitherto So we may say what are we or what were our fathers that we should come into the holy place of heaven By prayer we may be bold to enter into it in this life and if we send up any prayers to heaven let us doe it boldly in the name and mediation of Iesus Christ. At our dying day our soules may boldly enter into heaven there will be none to stay them If one offer but to goe into the Chamber of presence some of the guard will be ready to put us back but here the Angels Gods guard in heaven will be ready to receive us and to carry us into heaven as they did Lazarus At the day of judgement we may be bold to enter in soule and body because CHRIST will meete us in the ayre and translate us into it with himselfe Therefore let us magnifie God for this our sweete and comfortable entrance and that with boldnesse into the holy place of heaven 2. By whom or by what meanes have we an entrance into heaven Not by the bloud of Thomas of Peter of all the Martyrs in the world put together not by any inherent righteousnesse that is in our soules not by the merit and dignity of our prayers fastings almes deeds and other workes but by the bloud of Iesus alone If CHRIST had not shed his bloud for us we could never have entred into heaven O the wonderfull love of the Lord Iesus Let this constraine us to love him againe to count nothing too deare for him no not our owne bloud if he will have it for the confirmation of his truth and Gospell 3. Here wee see that Heaven is an holy place they that bee unholy cannot enter into it dogges enchanters c. are without We are all by nature unholy such were some of you 1 Cor. 6. c. Therefore let us entreat the LORD to make us holy in some measure in this life that wee may enter into this holy Hierusalem in the life to come VERSE 20. SOme might say thou speakest of our entrance into heaven but which is the way that leadeth to it Hee that goes to London must goe by a way and there must bee a way to carry us to heaven That he pointeth out with the finger this way is the sacred and undefiled flesh of our Saviour Christ wherein he payd the price of our redemption Which is here resembled to a vaile His flesh is called a vaile sayes Gorrhan quia sub velamine specierum sumitur in viaticum The High-Priest went into the Holy of Holies by a vaile and so by the flesh of CHRIST wee goe to heaven As the vaile covered the mysteries that were in the Holy of Holies and hid them from the people so the flesh and humanity of our Saviour Christ covered his deity in that his deity was hid and concealed from the world though it was manifested by his workes speeches and actions This was for the qualities 1. A new way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 occido that which is newly killed It fittly agreeth to the flesh or body of our SAVIOUR CHRIST that was lately killed for our sinnes But it is put for any new thing whatsoever as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a new opinion It is not called a new way because it was now newly found out never heard of or knowne before for Abraham saw this way a great while agoe and went into heaven by it So did all the faithfull in the time of the Law But it is called a new way because it was now newly manifested to the world being before obscured under types and figures 2. New things retaine their vigour and strength whereas old things wither away This is alwayes a fresh and a new way the power thereof shall never bee dryed up 3. New things are acceptable to men a new Preacher shall be heard more attentively then an old this is a new way therefore let it be welcome to us all 4. It may be termed a new way because none but they that be new men new creatures in Christ Iesus can tread in this way A living way It is improperly adscribed to a way yet it is emphaticall 1. So called because it is opposed to the dead way in the time of the Law There the High-Priest went into the Holy of Holies by the bloud of beasts that were dead when they were sacrificed our Saviour Christ was sacrificed alive 2. This way is ever living and remaining for men to enter into heaven by Some wayes dye and cannot be seene this way lives to be seene of all the faithfull to the worlds end 3. It leadeth to life therefore it may be termed a living way 4. They that take this way shall live for ever So Christ is called living water Ioh. 4. This way hath Christ dedicated for us hee hath gone it in his owne person that wee may bee bold to follow him in it Ioh. 14.2 All Antisthenes Schollers had new bookes pens writing tables and here is a new way for all Christ's Disciples He hath renewed it againe that is the force of the word It was in the time of the Law and the Fathers trode in it but it was renewed by Christ at his death The Iesuites gather from hence that none went this way before Christ. But when the Temple was dedicated it was before So this way now dedicated by our Saviour Christ was before though not so conspicuous as it is now CHRIST alone is the way to heaven I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth to the Father but by me Then in what a wofull case are they that be out of this way Turkes Iewes and all that professe the name of Christ but blaspheme it Surely they must needs be in the high way to Hell Yea and also a number besides that will have Christ to be but the halfe way to heaven He is one part of the way and their workes are the other part A way is for men to walke in so in Christ and by Christ we must walke to the heavenly Hierusalem Let us keepe this way with all diligence that we may get to heaven VERSE 21. I But this is a thorny and rugged way full of many dangers how
beasts the Arke ready to rush on rockes and mountaines So the Children of God shall bee saved yet through many tribulations Apoc. 7.14 Wee must looke to be tossed with the waves of many afflictions before we come to the kingdome of heaven but let us bee of good comfort in the middest of them all The Arke was hoysed but not drowned so though we be afflicted yet we shall not perish God kept the Arke by the hand of his providence and so will he us too Hee that hath loved us will love us to the end and will keepe us to his everlasting kingdome the gates of hell may availe but shall never prevaile against the Church GOD in all extremities prepareth for his Children Gen. 19.30 he prepared a place in Aegypt for his Church in the time of famine he prepared Pharaohs daughter and drew her to the river to save Moses from drowning he prepared a Whale to receive Ionah as soone as he was cast out of the ship and caused him within three dayes to set him safe on the dry land hee prepared Pella for the Iewes unto which they fled and escaped the fury of the Romans he prepared an Arke by the hands of Noah for the saving of him and his house-hold Let us be thankfull unto him and depend on him There be many things that condemne a thiefe The Iudge condemnes him hee gives sentence against him the evidence condemnes him and the witnesses condemne him but the chiefest of all is his owne sinne the theft which he hath committed So many concurre in the condemnation of a wicked man God condemnes him as a just Iudge his conscience brings in evidence against him and condemnes him the holy and righteous men that have shined as Starres among them condemne them but the greatest of all is their owne sin The Queene of the South shall condemne the Israelites She came from the uttermost parts of the earth to heare the wisedome of Solomon They had Solomon at home and regarded not the hearing of him The Ninevites shall condemne them they repented at the preaching of one Ionah The Iewes repented not at the preaching of many Ionahs The Scripture shall condemne us there is one that judgeth you even Moses in whom yee trust The plentifull preaching of the Gospell and the small reckoning that is made of it shall condemne us Noah condemned the world and our Noahs shall condemne us if wee regard them not We for our parts had rather save you then condemne you Therefore receive with meekenesse the engraffed Word that by it yee may be saved in the life to come The good actions of godly men that were as reall Sermons to preach to the wicked shall condemne them at the latter day The holy and unspotted life of Lot that vexed his righteous soule in Sodom shall condemne the Sodomites The Synagogue set up by the Centurion shall condemne those miserable wretches that will give nothing to good uses the continuall praying of Annah them that never pray The garments that Dorcas made for poore widdowes them that except Law compell them will give nothing to the poore the diligence of a good Scholler shall condemne all the loytering Schollers in the Schoole Therefore let us profit by these examples let them be as spurs to pricke us forward to the practise of those good things which we see in them especially in the Preachers of the word such as Noah was If we contemne their preaching it shall rise up in condemnation against us in the world to come Faith as yee see makes us heyres not of silver and gold houses and lands mannours and Lordships but of the righteousnesse of Christ by whom wee have a right to all things 1 Cor. 3.22 Wee thinke highly of one that is heyre to a great Gentleman a Knight a Lord c. There comes such a Noblemans heyre I but poore Lazarus that believes in Christ is in better estate than he if he want faith Therefore let us pray to God for faith that may assure us of the inheritance of the kingdome of heaven which surpasseth all the inheritances in the world And what manner of faith is it that makes us heyres of this kingdome not a verball faith that hath nothing but faire words and a glorious profession like the figge tree but a working faith such a faith as worketh by love that is full of good workes as Dorcas was All these that be in this Catalogue had workes for the expression of their faith Abel had his sacrifice Enoch walked with God Noah had the building of the Arke Abraham the offering of his Sonne Moses the leaving of Aegypt Rahab the preservation of the spies None of them but had workes Therfore if we say we have faith and have not workes wee deceive our selves Let us shew our faith by our workes make up our calling and election sure by them then we are heyres of the blessed inheritance reserved for the Saints in the life to come VERSE 8. WE have had the faithfull before the floud Now to them after the floud before the possession of the land of Canaan and after The first is Abraham who because he was the Father of the faithfull entreating of faith he is more plentifull in him Here are three things for the celebration of his faith concerning himselfe his Wife and his Sonne 1. His obedience to GOD calling him out of his owne Country 2. His patient abode in a strange Country whereunto hee was called Or 1. His egresse out of a Country which he knew 2. His progresse to a Country which he knew not The vulgar translation hath it hee that is called Abraham which before was Abram At the first hee was called Ab ram Pater excelsus now Abraham Ab rab gnam the Father of many Nations That dreadfull name of GOD Iehovah hath two Hehs in it GOD say some gave Abraham a letter of his owne name because GOD was to come of his loines for our SAVIOUR CHRIST who is GOD above all blessed for ever was of the seed of Abraham that is somewhat too curious The change of his name did signifie that hee was a great man highly esteemed of GOD and worthy to bee honoured of men The Iewes boasted of him as of their Father therefore above all others hee propoundeth him as an example of faith that they his Children might tread in his steps He was of great fame among the heathen as Iosephus writeth many ancient Historiographers make an honourable mention of him Berosus Damascenus c. He went not of his own head upon an idle and phantasticall brain he had a calling so to doe whereof Gen. 12.1 that was his warrant his passeport and licence to travell withall If all travellours had this calling they might be secure in their journeys Some goe into strange countries in a male contended minde because many things crosse them at home Some because they cannot live at home some to see fashions for the satisfying of
their owne countrey as Themistocles Howsoever God dealeth with us in this world wee shall have an abundant recompence in the life to come therefore let us goe whithersoever G●d shall call us as Abraham did he that forsaketh not father and mother houses and lands nay he that hateth them not for Gods sake is not worthy of him VERSE 9. 1. THe manner of his abode 2. The cause of it 1. Factum the fact 2. Motivum the motive that stirred him to it The land of promise which was so called because it was promised to him by God and that often Hee went not backe againe in a discontented minde but though hee found few outward encouragements to tarry yet hee stayes by it The manner of his abode is set forth 1. By the quality of the place 2. By the forme of his habitation How did he abide in this land not as a Lord and master in it but as a stranger it was a strange Country to him he had no house no land in it no not the breadth of a foot hee was faine to buy a piece of ground to bury his Wife in It was inhabited by a strong and mighty nation that were meere strangers to him This might have shaken his faith Is this the Country that I and my seed shall have what likelihood is there of it yet by faith he abode in it wayting for the accomplishment of Gods promise 2. What was the manner of his dwelling in it he dwelt not in a stately and magnificent Citty in a strong and defenced Castle in a costly and sumptuous house not in a Tower the height whereof reached to heaven as the Tower of Babell did not in one tent but in many remooving his tent hither and thither He dwelt in tents that were soone set up and soone pulled downe againe partly because he might be at Gods call ready to remove when hee would have him as indeed Abraham was a continuall flitter partly also because hee knew his seed should goe into Aegypt and the time was not yet come when he should have a full possession of the land of Canaan Therefore in the meane season he contented himselfe with Tents In commemoration whereof they had the feast of Tents or Tabernacles Yet he kept great hospitality in his Tent a poore house yet a rich house keeper hee sate of purpose daily at his Tent doore as a bell to toll strangers and passengers to him It was wont to be said golden Chalices and wooden Priests so now a dayes it may bee said golden houses wooden house keepers a great house a large house yet little meat in it It may be sufficient for themselves strangers nay neighbours seldome drinke of their cup a great sort of brave chimneys but little smoake in them many a Noble mans house scant smoakes once in a yeere Cornelius a Captaine had no stately house yet his almes were great Gaius had no glorious house yet an hoast to the whole Church wheresoever we dwell though in a Tent or booth yet let us doe good with that which wee have as Abraham did our house shall be the better blessed for it Abraham dwelt in a Tent yet GOD protected him from all enemies and dangers Wee never read that thieves brake into his Tent and spoyled him of that which he had In a tempest thundering and lightning the Tent was not set on fire It is better to bee in a poore cottage under Gods wing than in a magnificent Pallace without his favour Ahaziah dwelt in a sumptuous building yet hee got a fall that cost him his life Michah had a strong house yet the Danites came and tooke all in his house Lot had an house in Sodom Abraham had but a Tent yet Abraham was safer in his Tent then Lot in his house GOD kept Daniel in the Lions denne the three Children in the fiery furnace Ionah in the Whales belly hee preserved Abraham in his Tent and hee will for ever keepe his Children in the meanest Cottage in the world The manner of his dwelling in the land of promise is illustrated by his companions not he alone but Isaac and Iacob Whether he and they dwelt together in Tents at the same time cannot bee defined If wee respect Abrahams age they might for hee lived after Isaac was borne seventy five yeeres and after Iacob was borne fifteene yeeres yet whether that be the meaning of the Holy Ghost or not I dare not affirme they in their time dwelt in Tents as Abraham did in his time because the promise was made to them all to Abraham and his feed They were intailed in the promised land with their father The Canaanites had Cities and beautifull houses to dwell in Abraham Isaac and Iacob dwelt in Tents the wicked may have fairer dwellings in this world then the godly Now wee have sumptuous and magnificent buildings immediately after the floud they erected a Tower the height whereof reached to heaven The Canaanites had townes and Cities that were walled up to heaven Ahab had his Ivory pallace Nebuchadnezar his stately Babel There are many gay buildings in all places but as CHRIST said of marriage from the beginning it was not so What manner of house did Adam and Eve dwell in Abraham Isaac and Iacob these worthy and renowned Patriarcks dwelt in Tents and incommemoration hereof there was instituted among the Iewes a feast of Tents and Tabernacles which was kept with great solemnity by the space of seven dayes they sate in Boothes Let us not be too carefull nor too curious about our dwellings Our Saviour Christ the Lord of all had not an house to hide his head in at his dying day he commended his mother to Saint Iohn who tooke her home to his house There is as free a passage to heaven out of a poore beggarly Cottage as out of a Kings Pallace Let us not spend too much cost about our earthly houses but labour to build up our selves as houses to God in this life that when we must remove out of these buildings be they greater or lesser we may be received up into that house that is made without hands in the life to come GOD doth not immediately performe his promises hee will exercise our faith and patience in the expectation of them This land was Abrahams now by promise yet his seed had not the possession of it many hundred yeares after yet Abraham by faith waited for it he that believeth will not make hast Wee must not be too hasty but tarry Gods leysure So the heavenly Canaan the kingdome of heaven is ours by promise feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome yet we must passe through many tribulations into this kingdome Let us with patience beare them all and at the length though it be at a long runne first wee shall bee sure to be partakers of it for heaven and earth shall passe but not one title of Gods Word shall fall to
what Country man he was he answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mundanus The whole world is my Country all Countries are alike to me Yet in truth wee have no Country in the world England is not our Country Heaven properly to speake is our Country as Christ sayes call no man father here on earth so call no Country your Country on the earth Now heaven is our Country so we must seeke it it is worth the seeking and we cannot have it without seeking seeke the kingdom of God We must seeke it by prayer reading of Scripture hearing of Sermons by godly and fervent desire of the heart by heavenly meditations Our whole life ought to be a continuall seeking of heaven but alas we seeke for silver and gold Sheep and Oxen houses and lands and let heaven goe we are like Aesops dogge that snatched at the shadow and lost the substance We seeke more for shadowes then for the substance all the weeke long we are seeking of the world and scant on the Lords Day no day in the weeke doe we seeke heaven VERSE 15. THis is illustrated 1. By a declaration of the Country which they sought 2. By the fruit and reward of their seeking Object They professed themselves strangers because they were out of their soile the land of Chaldea Sol. That cannot be the Country which they had longed after for if their minde had run on that they had opportunity and time enough to returne in they had leysure but they would not take it 1. He shewes what Country it was not which they sought VERSE 16. 2. WHat it was which is first described comparatively then plainly pointed out with the finger The reward 1. A favour or prerogative in this life 2. In eternall happinesse in the life to come Exod. 3.15 he is the God of the whole world in generall he is the God of the wicked for temporall blessings of the faithfull for spirituall and eternall He that is the God of the whole world is now the God of three men Chrys. It is a glory to servants to have a denomination from their Lords and Masters I am servant to such a Noble man but it is no honour for a Lord to say I am the master of such a poore man such a beggarly fellow is my servant yet God glorieth of us that hee is our God Master and Father He makes this a piece of his style as if a puissant Prince would be called the King of Pigmies He hath prepared Hebr. 13.14 Ioh. 14.2 They doe not merit it GOD in mercy prepares it for them When Vide Matth. 25.34 God prepares many excellent things for us in this world but none comparable to this He prepared the world as an house furnished for man at the first We can but prepare temporall houses for our Children Some by this City understand the Church which though it bee on the earth is called heavenly because her chiefest part Christ her head is in heaven and her conversation is in heaven Hyperius But they were in the lap of the Church already within the walls of that City they needed not to seeke that which they had Heaven then is better than earth it is better by many degrees Men chuse that which they thinke to be best we choose earth rather than heaven therefore in our opinion that is the better What fooles what dolts be we men are ready to change for the better who would not change a beggars cottage for a Kings Pallace a patcht Cloak for a Princes robe We say heaven is the better yet we are loath to change our dwelling on earth for it by our good wills we would tarry here still We say heaven is a better country then this but we would faine continue in the earth still Many a Child is ashamed of his Father when hee comes to great honour We were base and ignominious wretches yet God was not ashamed of us If a great man have a kinswoman that is poore yet if a faire and beautifull woman haply he will not be ashamed of her We are all fowle and black by reason of sin yet God is not ashamed of us and shall we one of another A King is not ashamed of a beggar and shall one beggar be ashamed of another Shall one earthen Pot though it be a little guilt and tipt with silver be ashamed of another earthen Pot Though thou beest a rich man and hast more silver and gold than thy brother yet be not ashamed of him thou art earth as well as he yee are Pots of one Potter Constantine was not ashamed of the Bishops the Angels are not ashamed of us they acknowledge themselves to be our fellowes and brethren and shall we be ashamed one of another Though he be never so poore a man if he believe in Christ be not ashamed of him 2. As God is not ashamed of us so let us not be ashamed of him though Christ be afflicted here on earth yet let us not be ashamed of him and his Gospell for if we be he will be ashamed of us when he commeth with his holy Angels How doth it appeare he is not ashamed of us because he disdaineth not to be called our God He doth not say to be called their Lord and Master but God I thank my God that we read often This comprehendeth all good things for this life and that to come happy are the people that be in such a case blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. The Lions shall be hungerbit but they that have God for their Lord shal want nothing that is good This may strengthen us against poverty sicknes and all calamities against sin Satan and death it selfe Will any child feare want that hath a rich and loving father our God our Father is rich heaven and earth are his he is most loving he tenders us as the apple of his eye therefore wee can want nothing that is good The Lord is our God our shield Protectour and defender therefore let us feare nothing If God be on our side who can be against us Nay this may comfort us against death it selfe From this one word our Saviour proves the resurrection he is not the God of the dead but of the living for all live to him Though we dye God is our God he will raise us up againe at the latter day and translate us into his kingdome This may be a pillar of comfort for us to leane upon that God is our God By what token doth he shew himselfe to be our God because he hath prepared a City God is an excellent preparer Hee prepared the world as an house well furnished against the comming of man into it he prepared a Table for the Israelites in the wildernesse he gave them water out of a stony rocke and Manna from heaven he prepared a kingdome for Hester when she was a poore banished maide hee prepared a Whale for Ionah when he was cast into the
one that is thy junior thy inferiour lifted up in wealth honour and dignity above thee grudge not at it it is Gods doing be contented with it 3. Here we have a patterne in old father Iacob how to behave our selves at the time of death when wee see and heare death knocking at our doores then especially we must be occupied in heavenly duties we must not be cursing but blessing as Iacob was then above all other times we must be worshipping of God praying to him praysing and magnifying him for his mercies as Iacob was upon our beds and upon our staves Though we be weake and impotent wee must be glorifying of God when Hezekiah received that message set thine house in order for thou must dye then hee turned his face to the wall and prayed earnestly to the Lord. When our Saviour was going out of the world he was blessing his Disciples and here Iacob is blessing and praysing to his dying day so must we be We must not then be swearing cursing and banning quaffing and swilling as many be like the Epicures let us eate and drinke for to morrow wee shall dye Then we must be preparing of our selves for a better life where we shall remaine for ever The neerer the time approcheth that a tenant must goe out of his farme the more carefull he will be to improve it to his best commodity the lesser time that a man is to enjoy money lent to him the greater advantage he will make of it if hee can even so when we perceive wee must depart out of the farme of this world let us use it most to Gods glory and seeing God hath lent us our life as a summe of money to be payd to him praestituto die the neerer the day of payment comes the more conscionably and diligently let us be in the use of it to the honour of God and our owne profit When the steward in the Gospell saw that he was to goe out of his office he makes the best of it he can so let us doe of our life when we are to part with it They that be actours in a Comedy or Tragedy will have a speciall eye to the last act that they may have a joyfull plaudite of the people So this life being as a stage whereon wee play our part let us chiefely look to the last act at our departure out of the world that it may be joyfull to our selves and all those that be round about us our whole life should bee a continuall glorifying of GOD but especially the closing up of our life with death that wee may leave a testimony behind us of that lively faith which wee have in the Lord Iesus Let us be praying meditating blessing talking of heavenly matters to the last gaspe VERSE 22. IN Ioseph there be two things 1. A memorandum given to the Israelites 2. A Charge for the removing of his bones which were both lively demonstrations of his faith Hee presaged his death Gen. 50.24 either by the nature or quality of his disease or by divine revelation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawing to his end Memoriae prodit brought to memorie Out of Aegypt often promised by God which he had received from his fathers he makes a certaine prediction of it He bound them with an oath Gen. 50.25 Not so much for feare of Idolatry lest the Aegyptians should worship him when he was dead as Chrys. in Genesin and August de mirabilibus Sacrae Script l. 1. c. 15. they had opportunity to doe it before his bones were removed but to confirme the faith he had in the promises of God he was so sure that they should have the land of Canaan as that hee would have his bones carryed away before-hand 2. Because the land of Canaan was a type of heaven he would be there buryed 3. Because in life and in death he would be with the godly Rhemists the translation of reliques or Saints bodies and the due regard and honour wee ought to have to the same are proved hereby Bel. l. 2. de reliquiis Sanct. c. 3. upon this example concludeth non ergo superstitiosum neque novum est transferre ossa Sanctorum 1. The Israelites were bound by oath to translate his bones not so they 2. They kept not those bones to shew to the people or to carry them about on festivall dayes but they buryed them Ios. 24.32 3. Those were translated into the land of Canaan because it was a type of heaven So is no speciall Country now Therefore that is no president Ioseph a great man the ruler of Aegypt yet dieth death over-rules us all The rich man dyed as well as poore Lazarus It is appointed to all once to dye He rubbed their memories put them in remembrance of their departure out of Aegypt whereupon the booke of Exodus hath his name containing the departure of the Children of Israel You are well seated here in the land of Aegypt you are planted in Goshen the fattest of the land It is like for my sake ye shall finde favour for a time yet set not up your staffe here but remember yee must depart hence the land of Canaan is your Country promised to Abraham Isaac and Iacob let your mindes run on that land As for this world it is a kind of Aegypt flowing with all pleasures and profits yet let us know that this is no place of abode for us we must depart from hence The time of my departure is now at hand sayes St. Paul 2 Tim. 4.6 Luk. 9.31 If he had need of such a Memorandum much more we for this end Philip had his Vsher who daily said to him memento Philippe te esse mortalem The Israelites were too much wedded in their affections to Aegypt they desired to be againe with their Onyons and such like fare as they had in Aegypt We are all too much in love with this wretched world it likes us as well as the Mount did St. Peter Many wish that they might make Tabernacles here for ever yet let us all know that this is no abiding place wee must all depart eximus è vita tanquam è theatro Farmers from their farmes Gentlemen Knights Lords from their beautifull houses yea Kings must depart out of their Pallaces A voice came from heaven to Nebuchadnezar Oh King thy kingdome is departed from thee Let us seriously thinke of this departure of ours When a Travellour comes to his Inne hee lookes about him and sayes here is a fayre Inne here I have a brave Chamber and I have plenty of all things for my money yet this is not my home I must not tarry here I must depart even so though we have the world at will and all things as heart can wish beautifull houses large lands ample possessions yet here is no place to abide in we must depart leave all goe away with a Coffin and a winding sheete Let us use this world as if wee used it not let our
hearts bee on a better world that in the end wee may depart in peace with Simeon and reigne with CHRIST for ever in the world to come Ioseph had beene a brave Courtyer trained up and bearing sway in Pharaohs Court many yeeres together abounding in all wealth honour pleasure and prosperity yet all this while hee forgets not God he lived well and dyed well he is heavenly minded at his departure out of the world he is not now talking of his honours as Haman was the day before he dyed not talking of the injuries which his Mistris offered to him in casting him into prison and taking order for the revenge of it he is not now conferring with his brethren about the solemnizing of his funerall with what pomp they should carry him to the grave but now he is talking of matters belonging to the kingdome of heaven Though we live in never so prophane a place as irreligious as Aegypt as full of carnall entisements as Pharaohs Court yet let us keepe our integrity as Ioseph did let not the pleasures of the earth pull us from the joyes of heaven Obadiah kept his zeale and sincerity in Achabs Court Daniel in Nebuchadnezars Palace Nehemiah in the Kings buttery and at his table and there were rare and excellent Christians in Neroes house most of all they of Caesars house-hold they were more mindfull of the poore Saints of Philippi then others Let us not condemne them that be in heathenish and irreligious places GOD can preserve his pearles even in dunghills his roses among thornes hee will have a Rahab in Iericho a Lot in Sodom a Ioseph in Aegypt wheresoever wee bee let us keepe our selves unpolluted of the world 2. Here we are taught what must be the object of our talke of what matters we must be talking when death approacheth not of worldly matters but of heavenly as Ioseph was Elias was talking with Elisha about profitable matters when he was taken from him into heaven as they were walking and talking the fiery Charriot tooke him away Our Saviour was talking with his Disciples about matters belonging to the kingdome of GOD till the cloud tooke him away and Ioseph here dying is speaking not of those things appertaining to the earthly Court but to the Court of heaven Navita de ventis de tauris narrat arator every man for the most part both in his life time and in the time of death is speaking of those things which hee most mindeth the things that be most in the heart are most in the tongue A covetous miser is talking of his gold and silver houses and lands of the trash of the world even when he lyes on his death bed A drunkard will then bee talking of drinke an adulterer of fayre and beautifull women but a godly man will be talking of Gods matters as Ioseph was It is very like that Ioseph ere this time had made his will and set his outward estate at a stay therefore that doth not trouble him now his minde runs about better matters it is not good to deferre the making of our wills till we see no other way but death the last thing we talke of should be celestiall not terrestriall things 3. Wee must not bee too scrupulous about the place of our buryall Now no land is a type of heaven as the land of Canaan was before the comming of CHRIST Out of any Country on the earth yea out of the bottome of the Sea out of the Lions mouthes out of the fire wherein we are burnt to ashes for the name of Christ we shall have a comfortable passage into the kingdome of heaven yea our buryall with the wicked shall not prejudice our entrance into heaven Saint Peter sitting at the same table with Iudas when he was alive was not hurt by him much lesse should he have beene hindred out of heaven if hee had lien in the same grave with Iudas Though wee bee buryed among Thieves Traytors Idolaters Drunkards Murderers Adulterers c. If our lives have beene good that cannot keepe us out of heaven Yet if conveniently it may be superstition being avoyded as we lived with the godly so let us be buryed with them as we were companions with them in their life so let us be in death if it seeme good to the prouidence of God Ruth sayes to Naomi where thou art buryed I will be buryed and Ioseph would have his bones to lye with the bones of Abraham Isaac and Iacob So wee shall give notice to the world how deere the Saints were to us when they were alive Yet let not the place of our buryall trouble us at our dying day as some take too much thought for that wheresoever wee be buryed God will send his Angels at the latter day to gather our bodies from all the ends of the world and to carry them up into heaven Hee gave no commandement touching his flesh he knew that would be consumed before Then why should we pamper this flesh so much that is so soone brought to dust and ashes caro mea inimica mea onus meum laqueus meus paramus escam vermibus Let us subdue our bodies lest like horses they overthrow their Riders His bones were durable therefore hee gives a charge of them If hee had not looked for the Resurrection of those bones hee would not have beene so carefull for the translating of them into the land of Canaan Psal. 34.20 Ezek. 37.1 The bones of a dead man are scattered hither and thither tumbled out of one grave into another yet these shall rise and come to their place againe Bucers bones were burnt in Queene Maries dayes yet the same bones shall rise againe and be a witnesse against the enemies of the truth Not our bones alone but our flesh every part and member of our bodies shall be restored to us againe with these my eyes shall I see him the very palmes of Iezebels hands that were eaten up with dogges shall rise againe Let us not sing the Epicures song let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall dye Let us not give our selves wholly to pampering of our flesh and the fatting of our bones but let us employ all our members to GODS service in this life that we may be partakers in soule and body of his eternall glory in the life to come VERSE 23. BEfore of the Patriarcks now of the Lawgiver Where wee have 1. The commendation of his Parents faith 2. The commendation of his owne faith The faith of his Parents is commended by a worthy act of theirs the preservation of their Child which is amplified 1. By an attractive cause that drew them to it the beauty of the Child 2. By a retractive or disswasive cause that might have withdrawne them from it 1. The Kings commandement which in an heroicall magnanimity they feared not Moses Exod. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catachresticè he useth this word because his
us shake them off as St. Paul did the Viper and say what have I to doe with you my God must be dearer to me then you all Because the kingdome of Aegypt and Gods glory could not stand together Moses refused a kingdome then let us be content to forsake a Lord-ship a small quantity of ground a simple house a little silver and gold for the Lord whatsoever we have be it more or lesse let us count all as dongue for Christs sake In the time of prosperity let us weane our selves from the pleasures and commodities of this life that in the time of tryall and persecution wee may not bee glewed to them as the young man to his riches but may be willing to forsake all for Christs sake and so much the rather because wee know not how nigh tryall is how soone the wind of affliction may rise and make a difference between them that love Christ and his Gospell sincerely and betweene them that love this present world as Demas did If wee have but a little house and land one hundred or two hundred and should bee loath to leave it for CHRISTS sake how would wee leave a kingdome for him as Moses did It must bee Gods worke not our owne Therefore it is said that Moses did it by faith he did it not by any naturall strength or power by vertue of education though he had famous Schoolemasters and was trained up in all the learning of the Aegyptians he did it not by the advice of any witty or politick Achitophel he did it by faith Faith in the promised Messiah mooved him to it As Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad so Moses saw Christ and the kingdome of heaven by the eye of faith this made him not to set a rush by the kingdome of Aegypt I shall be heyre of a far more glorious kingdome then a straw for Aegypt The kingdome of Aegypt lasts but a while death one day will remove me from it but I shall have a kingdome that cannot be shaken that endures for ever and ever Therefore let Aegypt goe If wee have a true and lively faith in the promises of God a sight of the joyes reserved for the faithfull in the life to come it will withdraw our mindes off from these earthly things A worldly man can never doe it he will say it is good sleeping in an whole skinne a bird in the hand is better than two in the bush I know what I have here I cannot tell what I shall have afterwards but faith is an evidence of things that are not seene This caused the Martyrs in Queene Maries dayes some to leave their Bishopricks as Cranmer Latimer Ridley some their lands and great revenewes as the Dutches of Suffolke some their liberty some their Country for the Gospell and if we have a true and lively faith indeed it will make us to leave all for a good cause therefore let us make this prayer Lord encrease our faith let it bee so strong as that neither riches honour nor any thing else may separate us from thee When not when hee was a Child for then it might have beene deemed to be want of witt and discretion as Children refuse gold and take Apples but when he was great of a good and convenient stature about fourtie yeeres of age when he knew well enough what he did he did it not puerili temeritate sed judicio virili when he was in the prime and flower of his yeeres Young men about fortie are most fit for honour and promotion This may be an admonition to young men to consecrate their best yeeres to the Lord. Wherewithall shall a young man clense his wayes I write to you young men sayes St. Iohn Timothy was exercised in the Scriptures from his Child-hood We read of a young man in the Gospell that said he had kept all the Commandements from his youth he was no swearer blasphemer rayler fighter quarreller stealer cutter whoremonger but our young men cannot abide to heare of godlinesse tell them of forsaking of pleasures and honour as Moses did they cannot abide to heare on that eare As the Devill said to Christ why commest thou to torment me before the time So this is a torment to them When they be old they will thinke of Religion in the meane season they will bee swash-bucklers as Lamech haters as Esau Ruffians with Absalom they will follow their lusts with Amnon It seemes a paradoxe for a young man to be a Martyr to leave the Court the honours and pleasures of this world as Moses did VERSE 25. WHy did hee refuse to be called the Son of Pharaohs daughter did she refuse him or was he in hope of a better kingdome in the world no verily it was put to his owne choyse hee was not compelled to it neither the King nor his daughter gave him over but he gave them over How did he choose it not halfe against his will but rather he had rather a great deale have this than that Which is amplified by the thing elected and rejected What did hee chuse to suffer adversity rather than to reigne in glory Electio ex duobus ad minimum here two things were propounded to Moses choyce pleasure and paine the one is welcome to all by nature the other abhorred of all by nature yet Moses chuses paine and refuses pleasure To Hercules appeared virtu● and voluptas the one horrid promising labour and sorrow yet hee chose it A travellour sees two wayes the one fayre that leadeth him quite another way the other fowle that carries him to his journeys end hee chuses rather the fowle way because it is most commodious for him Pharaohs Court was a fine and delicate way the afflictions of the Israelites a foule way yet because that lead to hell this to heaven Moses rather chose it this was not the worke of nature but of faith He chose to be afflicted to be evilly intreated malis premi As if a man should refuse honey and take worme-wood before he lived in honour and dignity now hee chose to live in contempt and disgrace before hee was at a table every day furnished with all delicates now hee comes to his leekes and onyons with the Israelites before he was in all jollity now in all affliction The affliction is illustrated by the companions with whom hee was afflicted and they were the people of God Affliction simply is not to bee chosen but affliction with the people of GOD that is the sugar that sweetens afflictions To bee afflicted with thieves for theft with Traytors for treason with Idolaters for Idolatry hath no comfort in it but to bee afflicted with Gods people is full of comfort for Gods cause he had rather be afflicted with Gods people then to live with the Aegyptian Courtyers in Pharaohs Court which were none of the people of God Then to have the temporary fruition of sinne But the word importing such a fruition as is joyned
LORD will repay them with the like In this he will be a Pythagorean he will use jus talionis and mete the same measure to them that they have meted to others The same Sea that gave way to the Israelites drowned the Aegyptians the same fire that had no power over the three Children slew those men that cast them into the hot fiery furnace the same Lions that touched not Daniel devoured his enemies the same Angell that smote the Sodomites preserved Lot the same earth that swallowed up the rebellious route of Core Dathan and Abiram bore those that were loyall and obedient to God As all worke for the best to them that love Gad so all things worke for the worst to them that hate God Here is a strange and wonderfull miracle a glasse wherein wee may behold the power and goodnesse of God This was the sole finger of God Almighty Yet there have beene some Atheists that have gone about to extenuate the glory of it this was nothing say they but the cunning of Moses to delude the world withall he being trained up in all the learning of the Aegyptians had great skill in Astronomy he was well acquainted with the course of the Moone with the ebbing and flowing of the Sea immediately after the tyde was gone he found a shallow place where the sand was drye there hee carryed the people over and makes us believe that they went through the Sea and the Aegyptians having not that wit but leaping into the Red Sea were drowned This is plainely confuted by the Scripture 1. Moses did it by faith not by art or cunning 2. The waters were not gone away as they be at an ebbe they were still remaining as a wall on both sides of the people 3. The Aegyptians were as skilfull Astronomers as Moses and knew every hole in the Sea as well as hee therefore there is no probability of this fabulous devise it was the Lords doing and it ought to be mervailous in our eyes let us admire it not carp at it 4. They passed through the Sea on dry land Now though the tyde be gone yet the land is not dry the sand still is moist but God by his omnipotent power divided the waters of the Sea and made a dry path in the middest for them to goe over Exod. 14.29 Baij abashah in arido The note of similitude is left out 5. Moses did this on the suddaine he had no leysure to make choyse either of time or place but when God had dryed up the Sea then hee went into it with the Israelites God made a way for them where there was no way Let us admire it not goe about to smeere it with the mire of mans invention This their passage through the Red Sea was a figure of baptisme 1 Cor. 10.2 They were baptised unto Moses that is to obedience to the doctrine of Moses in the Red Sea 1. The Israelites had no way out of Aegypt into the land of Canaan but by the red Sea They must passe through it into the land of promise So we ordinarily as the Fathers teach have no way to heaven but by baptisme We must passe through baptisme into the kingdome of heaven 2. The waters being as a wall on both sides they passed through the Sea as through a deepe grave and ditch so baptisme must be the grave and buryall of sinne 3. They came out of the Sea So we in baptisme must rise out of the grave of sinne 4. As they in the Sea had the waters on both sides so wee that are baptised must expect the waves and surges of temptations on all sides 5. In the Sea the Aegytians were drowned which were enemies to the Israelites so in baptisme sinne Satan Hell damnation all the enemies of our salvation have their overthrow 6. By the Sea the Israelites were saved and by baptisme we are saved as St. Peter speaketh it is the salvation of Gods elect Therefore this passage of the Red Sea is not lightly to bee passed over wee must dwell in the meditation of it the Lord doth often harpe upon this string in the Scriptures because it doth afford us sweete musicke VERSE 30. HItherto of those at their departure out of Aegypt now to them at their entrance into the land of Canaan Before they were setled in it and after Before wee have two examples the one generall of Iosua and the people together the other speciall of Rahab a peculiar Citizen The faith of Iosua and the Israelites shewes forth it selfe by their vanquishing and subduing of Iericho wherein consider 1. The fall of Iericho 2. The meanes whereby it was effected Not by any strength or policy of theirs It is not like it had many walls In the Hebrew there is a noune of the singular number and here the Apostle useth a Synecdoche It was environed with a strong wall by vertue whereof they thought themselves safe as in a Castle yet the wall fell it fell down to the ground not one piece of the wall but the whole wall on every part and side of the City in so much as it lay all open and the Israelites entered in on all sides at their pleasure How what winde blew them downe so many as were prefixed by the Lord. The manner of the compassing was this Seaven Priests went before the Arke with seven trumpets of Rammes hornes before and after the Arke went the people armed The first sixe dayes they compassed the City but once on the seventh day they compassed it seven times at the length the Priests sounded with the trumpets at the hearing whereof they gave a great shoute and then on the suddaine the walls fell downe The Israelites enter into the Citty spoyle it and put them all to the Sword This the Apostle adscribeth to faith and indeed it was wholly the worke of faith 1 What was the blast of trumpets of Rams hornes to hurle downe a Citty withall 2 The compassing of it so many dayes together might seeme childish and ridiculous once compassing to mans judgement had beene as good 3 All this while they make no noyse they might not speake a word which was an exercise of their faith especially if there were any women in their company 4 Every day they went in danger of their lives when they went about the wals Some might have cast downe Milstones upon them and have brained a great number of them as a Woman served Abimelech or when they were in their procession about the City they of Ierico might have made an irruption and set upon them but for so much as GOD had sayd within seven dayes Ierico shall be yours they believe the promise of GOD despising all things that might oppose themselves to it this was an act of faith But why doth the Holy Ghost insist in this why doth hee not rather say by faith Ioshua made the Sunne to stand that was greater then the fall of Iericho Some answer because in the overthrow
make gatherings for the poore we may quench a fire we may fight with our enemies if wee be urged and there bee necessity for in all these and the like cases that rule must take place I will have mercy not sacrifice VERSE 31. THe second example of them before the full possession of the Land of Canaan is the harlot Rahab who by faith was preserved from the common destruction of the whole Citty whose preservation is amplified 1. By the instrumentall cause 2. By the estate of the party preserved 3. By the goodnesse of God extended to her 4. By the motive of her preservation Not by any strength or prwes of her owne for shee was a woman and by force could not have wrastled out of this danger Her faith shineth cleerely as in a Chrystall glasse Ios. 2.9 1 By faith she was perswaded that GOD had given them the Land although as yet they were not firmely settled in it 2 She reckons up the wonderfull workes which God Almighty had done for them 3 Shee shewes how the feare of GOD had fallen upon them all 4 Shee acknowledgeth the supreame power and the authority of their God 5 Shee requires no better security and assurance for her delivery then a sacred oath in the name of God All these are lively demonstrations of her faith Though shee did speake nothing of the promised Messiah the true and proper object of faith yet it may bee shee had some glimmerings of that heavenly mystery specially before the spies departed out of her house they perceiving good affections in her already might Catechize her further in the principles of religion certaine it is that she had faith Where first it may be demanded how she came by faith Rom. 10.14 faith comes by hearing of the Word there were no Preachers in Iericho the trumpet of the Word Preached did not sound in that Citty It pleased God to bring her to faith by the report of Gods wonderfull workes which he had done for his chosen people The Preaching of the Word is the ordinary meanes whereby wee come to faith but God is not tyed to that he may worke faith in men and women by extraordinary meanes 2 In all Countryes and Nations God hath His faithfull and elect though they be not knowne to the World In Vz he had Iob in Syria Naaman in Ethiopia a worthy Eunuch For her former condition of life shee had beene an harlot Some of the Rabbies supposing it to bee a blot of ignominy to their Nation that any of them should be reputed harlots they will have the word to bee derived from another roote of Zun and translate it an Hostesse or Inkeeper Rahab that Vitler or Inkeeper but harlot she was none But 1. the most native signification of the word is an harlot neither is it otherwise taken or by probability can be in the Old Testament Let all the places be examined where it is used 2 The 70. translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so doth the Author of this Epistle and the Apostle Iames now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth import nothing save an Harlot that sels her chastity makes a gaine of her body It doth never signifie an Inkeeper therefore undoubtedly before her conversion she was an Harlot yea a famous and notorious strumpet Hazzenah Here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Harlot which was publikely knowne all the Citie over 1 Let none take occasion from hence to set light by preaching where it is God can save mee without preaching therefore a flye for it what need I goe to Church and bee such a diligent hearer there As if a man being at a Table furnished with all kinde of dishes should say wherefore should I eate GOD can preserve me without meat as if a sick man having learned and expert Physitians about him should say Why should I take Physick God can restore me to my health without it as if a man should say God can give me light without the Sunne therefore I will close up my eyes when the Sun shineth or as if a man being on the top of a Pinnacle as Christ was should say wherefore should I goe downe by the stayres though I cast downe my selfe headlong God can keepe me If God vouchsafe thee the preaching of the word beware how thou contemnest that Ladder Let us say with the Prophet David Lord how love I thy Law It is deerer to me than thousands of gold and silver 2 Therefore let none say of any Countrey as Nathaneel did of Galilee Can any good come out of Turkie Muscovie Indie I surely God is not the God of the Iewes only but of Spaine Ireland England of France Italy c. Of all Tribes some were sealed and of all Nations some shall be saved They shall come from the East West North South into the Kingdome of Heaven 3. Even among Publicans hee had a Zacheus among persecutors hee had a Paul an Abraham among idolaters among them that were possessed of devils hee had a Mary Magdalen among the Pharisees a Nicodemus among Harlots he had a Rahab Therefore let us peremptorily condemne none Let us not shoot our fooles bolt rashly with the Barbarians doubtlesse this man or this woman is a reprobate there is no hope of salvation for such an one the mercy of God is wonderfull As the wind bloweth where it will so the Spirit breatheth where it pleaseth him notorious sinners may be called when glorious hypocrites shall be condemned Whereupon Christ said that the Publicans and harlots enter into the Kingdome of Heaven before the conceited Scribes and holy Pharisees as they seemed Many may be written in Gods book whose names we would scorne to set downe in our bookes Let us examine our selves whether Christ be in us 4 Though we be egregious sinners have led a loose life and defiled our selves with many sins yet let us not suffer our selves by the malice of Satan to be plunged in the pit of desperation I have beene an Harlot an Adulterer therefore I can have no place in Heaven Indeed the Scripture saith Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge he will judge them though they bee his owne children with temporall plagues in this life for their owne instruction and the terror of others as he did David The childe borne in adultery dyed all his fasting and crying would not serve the turne hee lay with Vriahs Wife GOD stirred up his owne Son to lye with his wives David lay with Bathshebah in secret Absalom lay with his wives in the open sight of all Israel Thus God judged him for it Yet David escaped eternall judgement There is no sin but the sponge of repentance will wipe it away If they that have sinned against the Holy Ghost could repent they might have beene saved It is impossible for them to be renewed to repentance therefore they are damned but at what time soever a sinner repenteth c. Let drunkards thieves murtherers harlots repent and GOD will receive
Righteous man a true dealing man So some as Zacheus had faith he wrought righteousnesse the one halfe of his goods he gave to the poore and restored foure fold where he had done wrong but now men make profession of faith but have no righteousnesse The first table hath eaten up the second Men will not sweare not commit adultery in some sort they will keepe the Lords day they will come to Church heare Sermons talke of religion but come to the duties of the second table they make no conscience of them they will lye cozen flatter dissemble oppresse the fatherlesse deale unkindly and unmercifully with widdowes grinde the faces of the poore wring from their neerest and deerest by hooke and crooke a manifest argument they have no faith Luk. 1.6 for a faithfull man is alwayes a righteous man and he that loves God will love his brethren else he is a lyar and all his religion is in vaine The very Turkes and heathen that never heard of Christ are more full of the workes of righteousnesse then we There is more upright and mercyfull dealing among them then among Christians therefore they shall rise up in judgement against us at the latter day wherfore let us ad vertue to our faith that as we are faithfull so we may be righteous in our dealings 3 They obtained the promises that is some particular promises made to them As the Israelites had the possesion of the Land of Canaan promised to them Caleb had a speciall portion in it Ios. 14.13 David obteyned the Kingdome promised to him Abraham a Son when he was an hundred yeers old but that generall promise concerning Christ and eternall happinesse in soule and body in heaven together they obteyned not yet they were faine to waite a long time for these promises and endured much in the meane season There is a Kingdome promised to us Luk. 12.32 By faith we shall obtaine this promise if we can be content by many tribulations as God hath appointed to enter into it 4. They stopped the mouthes of Lions Samson Iudg. 14.6 not with his cloake but by faith David 1 Sam. 17.36 Benaiah 2 Sam. 23.20 Dan. 6.23 we also by faith shal stop the mouth of that roaring Lion VERSE 34. THe violence of fire that is the force or power Dan. 3.27 If wee have faith no creature shall hurt us The mouthes of the Swords Swords have mouthes as the mouth devoureth so doth the edge of the Sword The Sword devoureth one as well as another sayd David The Israelites escaped the swords of the Aegyptians that were at their heeles ready to thrust them through if the red Sea had not made a passage for them David often declined the Speare of Saul wherewith he was purposed to fasten him to the wall Elias escaped the sword of Iesabel who had threatned to take away his life wee escaped the swords of the Spanyards in eighty eight If they had landed there had beene no mercy with them they would have put all to the sword For God put valour into them they were made strong for their weakenesse Isa. 38.9 Psal. 38.3 and 10. Was it not valiantly done of Abraham with the servants of his owne house to encounter with five Kings was it not valiantly done of little David a young stripling never acquainted with warre to fight with that huge Gyant Goliah that had beene a man of warre from his youth up did not our English men fight valiantly with their little ships against the huge ships of the Spanyards ours being but molehils to their mountaines This valour was of GOD who taught their fingers to fight and hands to warre Weaknesse is twofold in body and soule Hezekiah was brought to great weakenesse when lying on his death bed as he thought hee turned his face to the wall and wept taking his leave of the world yet God made him strong againe David was weake in soule and faint hearted when hee brake forth into this lamentable speech one day shall I perish by the hand of Saul but God made him strong againe Let us entreate him to strengthen the weakenesse of us all When we are sicke what doe we some which is monstrouse to speake send to the Divell for helpe to witches sorcerers c. but to speake the fairest then their is posting to the physitian pils potions all kinde of medicines must be received That is not amisse so as they come in the second place and wee trust not in the Physitians as Ala did The Physitian wee should seeke to in the time of weakenesse and sicknesse should be God Almighty with the eye of faith wee should looke up to him When all earthly Physitians have given us over hee can set us on our legs againe Faith is the best medicine for the recovery of health and strength Tents It is a metonymie put for armies As Gideon with his three hundred men vanquished the Midianites As Ionathan David Asa Iehosaphat c. did their enemies they were not able to stand before them When there be rumours of wars mustering preparing of Horses c. Let not our hearts be troubled faith is the best weapon if you have a strong and valiant faith one shall chase a thousand and tenne shall put ten thousands to flight Let us intreat the Lord to make our faith stronger to our dying day As the Psalmist speaketh of the Church Wonderfull things are spoken of thee thou Citie of GOD So wonderfull things are recorded of faith By that men remove mountaines cast out devils subdue kingdomes nothing is too hard for him that beleeveth All of us by faith shall subdue the kingdome of Satan which is stronger than all earthly kingdomes By faith we shall tread the devill under our feet therefore GOD strengthen the faith of us all Before we had their actions now follow their Passions 1. An enumeration of them 2. An amplification The enumeration is first generall then speciall generall some concerne name body Vers. 36. life 37. The speciall is their flight An amplification 1. By a commendation of the men 38. 2. By a commemoration of the events of their faith 1. Affirmative 39. Negative as the reason Vers. 40. VERSE 35. WOmen received their dead 1 Reg 17.18.23 2 Reg. 4.18.36 Their passions are of three sorts 1. the suffering of those things that goe before death and might provoke us to a defection from God 35.36 2 The kindes of death which they suffered 3. A miserable flying and hiding of themselves The miseries going before death are greater as racking lesser some appertaine to the name some to the body The first going before death is racking as many were under Antiochus in the time of the Maccabees Timpanum was an Instrument like our Rack whereunto the parties were straight tyed the nerves of their hands and feet stretched out their bodies also cruelly beaten even to death thus was Eleazar tormented 2 Mac. 6.30 The which is amplified by their Constancy not receiving deliverance
shew thy dislike of that But we are so far from being at peace with all as that wee are not at peace with our neighbours with them that dwell in the same towne and professe the same Religion with us there is heart burning envy and malice strifes and contentions even among us nay some are so farre from being at peace with all men as that they are at peace with no man like Ishmael whose hand was against every man Wee are so farre from following of peace that wee will not accept of it when it is offered They seeke peace and we refuse it Such is our folly wee had rather be following the Lawyers to our cost and smart then to follow peace home to prevent Law Let us all bee followers of peace let us follow it let us seeke it by all meanes possible The hunter followes the deere though it run away so let us doe peace and lay hold on her whether shee will or no. Peace is a singular thing God is stiled the God of peace he is not called the God of faith c. 2. Mat. 5.9 he doth not say blessed are they that can talke gloriously of religion but blessed are the peace makers Why for they shall be called the Children of God They that be at peace are Gods Children they that live in strifes and contention are the Devils Children The envious man sowed tares hee it is that soweth the tares of discord and dissention 3. Wee are members one of another and shall we be at warre Ioseph would not have his brethren to fall out by the way We are brethren and have one elder brother which is Iesus Christ shall we fall out one with another and that upon every trifling occasion It is a wonder to see what jarres there are betweene the professours of the Gospell betweene neighbour and neighbour scant two in a towne that love heartily and sincerely There be two especiall things that hinder peace pride and covetousnesse Prov. 13.10 Pride is the Nurse of contention There is I proud and Thou proud I stout and Thou stout none will bend none will yeeld as Abraham did though he were better than us every kinde of way The second is Covetousnesse We are so much wedded to the world the valour of an halfe penny will make us to contend Why rather suffer yee not wrong If every man were content to put up a little wrong what peace would there be in the Towne how should it flourish to the credit of the Gospell and comfort of us all The second vertue is holinesse It might be objected if we follow peace with all men then we must bid holinesse adieu For some will not be at peace with us if we be holy I but if peace cannot be joyned with holinesse away with it doe not so follow peace as that ye should let holinesse goe Above all things lay hold on holinesse Apoc. 1.7 They shall see him when he comes to judgement but they shall not see him in his kingdome Or if they see him it shall be afar off as the rich man in hell saw Lazarus they shall not be partakers of his joy and glory Without learning without variety of tongues without riches honour beauty men may see the Lord but without holinesse none shall see him By nature we are all unholy comming of unholy parents borne and conceived in sin but we must be holy before we can goe to Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 Be ye holy as I am holy The kingdome of heaven is called the holy Ierusalem No uncleane or unholy thing can enter into it The Angels for their unholinesse were cast out of Heaven and shall we thinke that GOD will take unholy men into heaven A great number scoffe at holinesse O yonder goes an holy man Indeed if he be a whited Tombe and a painted Sepulchre whose holinesse for the most part consisteth in the laying open the unholinesse of others he is worthy to be despised But except we be all holy we shall never see heaven Let us be holy first in heart then in our eyes tongues hands feet and all the members of our body being truly holy we shall see the Lord to our eternall comfort Perfectly holy we cannot be in this world there will alwayes be some drosse cleaving to the best golden Candlesticke but let us be sincerely holy and we shall triumph with Christ for ever VERSE 15. THese two are particularly unfolded 1. Peace then holinesse Verse 16. For the preservation of peace they must take heed there be no Apostats nor backsliders among them Apostasie from true religion will breake the bond of Christian peace 1 A Caveat for the performing of it 2. A meanes for the fulfilling of it Watching one over another playing the Bishops and Overseers one of another Not 1 Pet. 4.15 busie-bodies in other mens matters Not onely that your selves fall not away but as much as lyeth in you that there be not one Apostata in the whole Church It is a metaphor from Travellours that lagge behinde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saint Chrysostome By the grace of God in this place is not meant the everlasting love and favour of GOD but the Doctrine of the Gospell which he of his grace and goodnesse offereth to us 2 Cor. 6.1 Let none revolt from the truth of the Gospell but Continue in the grace of GOD. As a remedy for the effecting of it let no root of bitternesse c. Deut. 29.18 Any bitter root of Heresie of false and erroneous Doctrine as appeareth in Deut. Besides that any bitter rootes of malice and envie pride and ambition covetousnesse c. All these will breed strifes and quarrells among you therefore let them not spring up beate them downe so soone as they arise He perswades them to keepe them from springing up by two pernicious effects the one hath relation to themselves the other to others Trouble you as a multitude running upon you And by this meanes many shall be defiled for whose perdition you must answer One scabbed Sheepe infects an whole flocke 2 Tim. 2.17 1 Cor. 5.6 Iudas having fallen away from Christ came howling to the Pharisees and said I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud What is that to us say they looke thou to that So though some round about us fall from the Gospell to Popery Atheisme Brownisme it never toucheth us we are ready to say What is that to us am I my brothers keeper I verily according to our place and ability Let every one of us in that place wherin God hath set us take heed that no man fall away from the grace of God Let us all as much as lyes in us keepe them from falling especially let Pastors looke to their sheepe and Householders to them of their owne houses If a fayre and beautifull Apple fall from thy Tree thou art somewhat grieved at it and shall it not grieve us to see Trees fall out of Gods Orchard Sinne as ye see is a
offerebant antequam Aaron in Sacerdotium eligeretur Hier. trad Hebr. in Genesin So must wee in speciall manner bee consecrated to the Lord and as so many Nazarites serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Israel is my first borne though all the world bee mine All the world is Gods yet wee are his first borne What an honour is this A noble man hath many sonnes the yonger may goe a begging the elder hath all the land Among us there is never a yonger brother all elder brethren and shall all have the inheritance of the Kingdome of Heaven Let us be thankefull to GOD for it Israel was his even so wee being Gods first borne are his not our owne wee are bought with a price and must glorifie God in our spirits and bodies which are his The third point is the Stabilitie of the Church which are written in Heaven Not mentioned with the tongue which soone vanishes but written Littera scripta manet hee hath written us on the palmes of his hands wee are ever in his sight GOD needs no pen paper writing tables for helpe of memorie but this is spoken for our capacitie The Senatours of Rome were called Patres Conscripti because a Register was taken of their names A Captaine sets downe the names of his souldiers in a booke So GOD Almighty to shew what account hee makes of us hath our names written Where not in water not in loose papers not in the earth where peradventure they may be blotted out but in heaven whither none of our enemies can have accesse to race out our names In what Booke are our names written not of death but of life Whose the lambes booke of life Wee are not in the hands of an Angel but of CHRIST himselfe To what end A King takes the name of one of his owne subjects to preferre him to make him a Lord c God takes our names to preferre us to a Kingdome How shall wee know whether our names be written in heaven A posteriori not à priori 2 Tim. 2.19 First the Elect know Christ Ioh. 17.3 2. They beleeve in Christ Gal. 3.26 They are plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ they adde vertue to Faith This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrys. termeth it 1 Cor. hom 3. to conclude by workes I have workes therefore I have Faith I have Faith therefore I have Christ I have Christ therefore I have heaven Tàm certus esse debes de requie de foelicitate si mandata ejus custodieris quàm certus es de perditione si ea contempseris Ob. 1. Workes may bee hypocriticall 2. uncertaine 3. imperfect But being sincere they may assure us of our salvation A ring may be imperfect not fully perfected by the skill of the Artificer it may have a crack in it yet it assures us of the love of him that gave it so imperfect workes may assure us of Gods love and of the Kingdome of Heaven too issuing from the roote of unfained Faith Therefore unfaithfull doubting is excluded Let us make our calling and election sure by good workes then an entrance shall bee ministred unto us abundantly into the everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour IESUS CHRIST Psal. 37.24 Yet wee must not dormire in utramque aurem I care not how I live I shall bee saved There may bee a Christian assurance but no unchristian securitie nusquam securitas sayes S. Bern in Psal. 15. Nec in coelo nec in paradiso nec in mundo In coelo cecidit Angelus sub praesentia Divinitatis in paradiso cecidit Adam in loco voluptatis in mundo cecidit Iudas in schola Salvatoris Let us never be high minded but feare with a reverent feare all the dayes of our lives I feare all my wayes said that holy man If you abuse this comfortable doctrine setting all at six and sevens then thou art most unsure As ye beleeve in Christ so be plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ and as your names are in heaven and ye looke for a place in heaven so live as Cittizens of heaven live not as earth-wormes alwayes groveling on the earth but live as men of another world by having your conversation in heaven 1 Here it is as cleere as the noone-day that the Catholicke Church consists onely of the elect Notwithstanding it is an axiome with Bellarmine Non solum praedestinati sed etiam reprobi ad ecclesiam pertinent A strange position indeed as Augustine distinguishes excellently well the wicked are Paleae inter frumentum In domo Dei sed non domus Dei de bapt cont Donat. l. 7. c. 12. Cant. 4.12 CHRIST's Spouse is a Garden enclosed a Spring shut up and a Fountaine sealed up Haec intelligere non audeo nisi in sanctis justis de bapt cont Donat. lib. 6. cap. 27. It a munitur sayes Greg. ut nullus reprobus ingrediatur Ecclesia est Templum aedificatum ex diis quos facit non factus Deus Aug. Tom. 3. Enchyr. ad Laur. c. 6. p. 172. A. Our blessed Saviour affirmes of the Church Ioh. 10.3 for it is the Church of the first-borne whose names are written in Heaven 2 It is evident that the elect cannot perish Non perit filius promissionis sed filius perditionis August De corr grat l. 2. cap. 9. The third person to whom we are come is the founder and defender of the Church Who is described by his nature and office For his nature he is God for his office a Iudge The Lord chiefe Iustice of all the world God is a consuming fire Heb. 12. ult and dare we be so bold as to come to him He is ignis consumens to the wicked ignis muniens to the godly Zach. 2.5 I a wall of fire round about Ierusalem to protect her from all her enemies All are come to God secundum praesentiam Whither shall I goe from thy face Secundum potentiam his power is over all none can avoide it but we are come to him Secundum bonitatem Happy is the people that be in such a case blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. He is Dominus omnium more peculiarly he is Deus fideliū The Philistims said God is come into the Host woe be to us but we are come to God and joy with us Not onely to God as he is a Father but as he is a Iudge too yea the Iudge of all High and low rich and poore just and unjust good and bad Iren. l. 1. c. 9. writes of some called Gnostici who had their name of knowledge which affirmed they were incomprehensibilis judicii The Iudge could not catch them at the latter day But he will finde them out A Writ shall be returned reperti sunt in baliva nostra We must all appeare either ad judicium discretionis or damnationis as S. August speaketh of Absolution being severed from the Goats or
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and if every Mystery should be a Sacrament there should not be seven but seventy Sacraments and more neither doth he speake of mariage but of the conjunction of Christ and his Church in that place We will fight against them with their owne weapons 1. As the covenant is common so ought all Sacraments the Seales of the Covenant to be common If mariage be a Sacrament why is it not common to all Christians Why doe they deny Ministers to marry 2. Every Sacrament must be celebrated by a Minister Goe teach all Nations baptising them c. A Minister as Bell. contendeth is not necessary in the celebration of mariage the parties contracting are sufficient Therefore to speake properly it is no Sacrament Though the Councell of Trent of late hath taken some further order in it We may not honour mariage so farre as to make a direct Sacrament of it yet it is honorable A number there be that have exceedingly dishonoured and disgraced it Marcion as Epiphan recordeth of him called matrimony inventionem Diaboli mulierem ipsum opus Diaboli Saturnius Basilides as Iren. lib. 1. cap. 22. writeth of them blushed not to affirme that Nubere generare were à Satana Hier. treading in Tertullian's steps wrests some sentences of Saint Paul to the disgrace of mariage Saint Paul sayes Melius est nubere quàm uri A goodly commendation As if a man should say it is better to have a lame leg than none at all Melius semper comparationem deterioris respicit That is not so it is better to take Physick than to live in paine is it therefore evill to take physick So it is better to marry than to burne is it therefore evill to marry Let them all say what they will mariage is honourable and to be honoured by us all 1 It was instituted by the most honourable person that ever was namely by GOD Almighty he saw it was not good for man to bee alone therefore Hee provided an helper for him Hee cast him into a deepe sleepe tooke a rib out of his side of it hee made a woman and brought her to the Man 2 It was ordained in the most honorable place that ever was on the face of the earth namely in Paradise the Garden of the Lord. 3 It was appointed in the most honourable time that ever was in the time of innocency Then a woman was needfull for a man much more now in the time of corruption 4 It was preserved in the most dangerous time that ever was in the great deluge that overflowed the whole World Noah and his wife his sons and their wives were saved in the Arke An argument that GOD made a precious and honourable account of mariage 5 It was honoured with the presence of our Saviour Christ and graced with the first miracle that he wrought 6 By the judgement and practice of all Nations it is ratified to be an honourable estate For they that bee maried in all places have the upper hand they have the higher roome in all meetings in the Church and at the Table which argues that honourable estimation which all have of it in their hearts 7 It hath honourable effects by it the number of Gods elect is accomplished the kingdome of Heaven replenished the Church is furnished with worthy Preachers that are as Gods arme to pluck up men into the Kingdome of Heaven The Common-wealth is provided of wise Governours of stout Souldiers of all kinde of estates and conditions mariage is the pillar that upholds the world the seminary of Church and Common-wealth Therefore it must needs be confessed to be a glorious and an honourable estate Let none open their mouthes against it 8 Because it is an excellent meanes to keepe our vessels in holinesse and honour as we are commanded 1 Thes. 4.4 And now seeing mariage is an honourable estate let us be bold as occasion serveth to flye to it If thou hast deflowred a virgin that is none of thine as Amnon did Thamar though it have beene in thy secret chamber the doores fast locked up be ashamed of it If thou art an impure strumpet as Iesabel was tyring thy head and painting thy face to allure lovers withall be ashamed of it for if thou persistest in that sin without repentance Christ will be ashamed of thee when he commeth in his glory with his holy Angels In regard thereof thou mayest be ashamed but be not ashamed of mariage This is no sin in it selfe nay it is an honourable thing thou needest not to be ashamed of it When Mordecai was carried through the City with the royall apparell on his back with a crowne set upon his head with this Proclamation so shall it be done with the Man whom the King will honour was there any cause why he should blush at it No because it was an honour appointed to him by the King If the Lord have given unto thee a godly wife being a man or a wise husband being a woman thou needest not be ashamed of this crowne which the King of Kings hath set upon thy head We may be bold as occasion serveth to flye to this honourable Sanctuary Yet let us not rush rashly and unadvisedly into this honourable estate When S. Peter being in the Mount saw the externall glory of his Lord and Master that his face shined like to the Sun by and by he is enamoured in a love of that place and saith Master it is good for us to bee here but the Text witnesseth that he wist not what he said even so a great number of rash and heady young men set their love upon a maide before they have learned to love GOD. When they are carried up as it were into the Mount where the glory of mariage is shewed unto them and by by they say in their hearts It is good for us to bee here But if they were rightly examined of the things appertaining to mariage they might take up that speech of S. Peter's and say We speake we cannot tell what Though it is a most worthy estate yet it is not without a godly premeditation to be undertaken we must take a diligent view of those spurs that put us forward to mariage It must not be the bare satisfying of our greedy lusts and raging affections though a respect may be had unto them but the glory that we may procure to God by it our mighty Creator and Mercifull Redeemer The good that we may purchase unto the Church and Common-wealth in that estate must be set before our eyes A wise choyce must bee made with great advice deliberation of that yoke-fellow which we propound to our selves We must not onely fixe our eye upon the externall beauty of the body as Shechem did upon Dinah because she was faire Beauty indeed is the good gift of God and many godly women have had it as Sarah Rebeccah Rachel Hester and such like neither is it to be contemned unlesse it
on their bodies fornicatio quasi formae necatio many loathsome diseases are on them as the French-pox consumptions c. Men are afraid to drinke of their cups and their bodies many times wast and consume away 3 On their goods the sinne of Adultery hath brought many a rich man to beggery The prodigall Childe quickly wasted his goods on harlots they be as sponges to drink up a mans wealth their riches melt as wax 4 On their good names they be odious to all men Yea one Adulterer will speake ill of another and upbraid one another by this sin one principall thing that the Oratour cast in Catelins dish was his beastly and incestuous life Cane pejus angue 5 On their children Sometimes they be fooles and ideots sometimes lame in their hands in their feet In ancient times they might beare no office in Church or Common-wealth Sometimes they are taken away by an untimely death as Davids childe was which he begat of Vriahs wife they cannot inherit the Lands of their Fathers One way or other the brand of Gods wrath is on their posterity So that the truth of this sentence may be apparent to us all GOD will judge Yea though there bee never so great men in the world against whom the sword of mans authority cannot easily be drawne forth yet GOD will be sure to meet with them Amnon was a Kings Son yet because he defiled his sister GOD slew him and he was slaine at a banquet when his heart was merry with wine and did not so much as dreame of death when he had little time to repent him of his wicked life Absalom was heire apparent to the Crowne nay for the time he was King having put downe his father yet because he had played the incestuous beast the Lord in justice caused him to be hanged by his owne hayre and so he dyed miserably Iesabel was a Queene yet because her adulteries were in great number she was cast out of a window and eaten with dogs Whole Cities have beene destroyed for it as Sodome and Gomorah with those adjoyning to it All the males in Shechem were put to the sword for ravishng one mayde The wrong offered to one woman was almost the utter overthrow of the whole Tribe of Benjamin Therefore let us tremble at this sentence Though men judge them not yet God will judge them though the Iudge of the Assizes will not punish them though for a little money they may escape in the Courts yet the Iudge of the World will punish them severely If for some causes best knowne to himselfe they escape his fingers in this world yet they shall feele the heavie hand of his indignation in the world to come This ye know all that be in the Schoole of Christ know this that no whoremonger wanton buggerer shall inherit the kingdome of GOD. Without the gates of heavenly Ierusalem are Dogs Enchanters Whoremongers Lyars A terrible sin that excludes us out of Heaven Therefore let us all beware of it It is a sweet sinne to the flesh but God hath provided sowre sauce for it therefore let it be detested by us all If we feele the fire of lust burning in us let us not sit at the wine goe to an whore or harlot that will but increase the fire and make us fit matter for the fire of hell But let us fast and pray or let us flye to mariage for the quenching of it for the avoiding of fornication let every man have his wife Mariage is honourable among all and the bed undefiled but whoremongers and adulterers God will judge Demosthenes went to Lais the strumpet for a nights-lodging she asked ten thousand drachmes nay soft sayes Demosthenes nolo tanti emere poenitere So if an harlot say to us as Potiphars wife to Ioseph Come lye with me c. Let us abhor it and say I will not buy repentance so deere We shall one day repent us for it either to our griefe or amendment in this life or to our condemnation in the life to come The Sodomites burned in Lust one towards another now they burne in hell fire They suffer the vengeance of eternall fire as S. Iude speaketh A full sin that banishes us out of Heaven Plutarch makes mention of a certaine King named Lysimachus that being exceeding dry sold his Kingdome for a draught of water after he cryes out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heu pro quàm exigua voluptate regnum perdidi so may the adulterer say for what a little pleasure have I lost the Kingdome of Heaven VERSE 5. 1 AN admonition 2. The reason the admonition consists of a dehortation from covetousnesse and the prescription of a remedie against it He doth not say be ye without covetousnesse but let your conversation all your manners behaviour and actions bee voide of covetousnesse Without the love of silver a part put for the whole Whatsoever some men doe it smels of covetousnesse their buying and selling all the bargaines they make all the journeyes they take all the words that issue out of their mouthes the cloathes on their backs the meat they put in their belly all savours of covetousnesse Any commodity they have they will sell deere they will buy cheape they will watch poore men whom necessity constraines to sell and they will have it of them for little or nothing They will goe meanely fare hardly all that they doe hath a sent of covetousnesse Therefore sayes he so converse among your neighbours that all may see that the world is not the principall marke ye aime at buy and sell without covetousnesse Let your house keeping bee without covetousnesse Let your talke and speeches be without covetousnesse Pay the Minister his due without covetousnesse Let covetousnesse be banished from all your actions 1 It is the root of all evill ye cannot abide bitter roots in your Gardens no root is so bitter as covetousnesse and it will draw all evill after it A covetous man will lye sweare steale kill for mony therefore root it out of the garden of your hearts 2 It excludes men by name out of the Kingdome of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.10 That is provided for liberall men that cloath the naked feed the hungry relieve the oppressed c. Not for greedy covetous misers that doe no good with their wealth 3 It ought not once to be named among us When we speake of filthy and uncomely things we doe it with a preface saving your reverence c. So when thou speakest of Nabal say there is such an one saving your reverence a covetous man it should not be named much lesse practised by us that be Christians 4 Covetousnesse is idolatry A covetous man makes an Idol of his money If the Idolaters Idoll be gone all is gone What have I m●re said Michah So if his money be gone his god is gone An Idolater makes a strong Chappell to put his Idoll in a covetous man makes a strong Chest
require it we eate that which is on the Altar the Altar it selfe we cannot eat Therefore it is a figurative speech Which serve the Tabernacle that be servants unto it The direct meaning of the place is this we have a Sacrifice on an Altar Iesus Christ that was sacrificed on the Altar of the Crosse for us whereof they have no authority to eate that are still wedded to the Tabernacle and the rites of the Ceremoniall Law The Tabernacle and Christ cannot stand together If ye will needs retaine the shaddow still ye have no right to the Body If in this cleere light of the Gospell when Christ the end of the Law hath appeared ye will keepe the Law still then ye have no interest to Christ no benefit by him Gal 5.4 Therefore away with the Ceremonies of the Law The like may bee affirmed of the observation of any thing with Christ for the obtaining of eternall life either have Christ alone or have him not at all VERSE 11. THE confirmation of this proposition Where first the type secondly the thing signified by it They that served at the Altar could not eat that which was burnt The bodies of the beasts representing Christ were burnt without the host therefore they could not eate of them no more can they that now cleave to the Tabernacle eat Christ. VERSE 12. THE thing signified is Christ. Whereof the bloud of the beasts was but a type Not within the Citie of Ierusalem but without in the place called dead mens skuls as malefactors at this day for the most part suffer without the Towne and Citie the Gallowes stand without They that thinke to bee sanctified by any other thing than by Christ cannot have the benefit of his passion Iesus the Saviour of the world the Sonne of the High and eternall God Which otherwise could not be sanctified The bloud of Goats would not serve the turne It must be his owne bloud After a most base and ignominious manner he was crucified betweene two thieves He humbled himselfe to the death yea the death of the crosse O the wonderfull love of Christ Christs love should constraine us that as he hath dyed for our sins so we should dye to them We are redeemed from our old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Iesus the Son of God Let this constraine us to forsake our sins David would not drinke of the water for the which the Worthies ventred their lives and shall we drinke of the water of sinne which cost Christ his life Christ shed his bloud for our drunkennesse and uncleannesse pride malice c. And yet shall we wallow in them We lay not to heart the price of our redemption We forget the Lord that hath bought us Wee are bought with the bloud of God Acts 20.28 Therefore let us not serve the devill but him that hath bought us We are Christs not our owne he hath paid deerely for us even his owne bloud therfore let us serve him VERSE 13. THE Vse is double 1. A departure out of the world Without the Campe of this miserable world where wee have so many enemies This is enforced 1. By the example of Christ. When Christ went out of the Campe he bore reproach he bore his owne crosse a while till he could no longer for faintnesse he was nailed to the crosse shamefully reproached many wayes A Crowne of thornes in derision was set on his head because he said he was a King All that went by mocked him We goe out of the world two wayes actu at our dying day affectu in our life-time We are in the world but we are not of the world We are Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem therefore our conversation must be in Heaven Let us goe out of our faire houses sweet gardens pleasant pastures Let us goe out from our sheepe and Oxen gold and silver wives and children Let us so use them as if wee were ready to depart from them The time must come when I must leave you all Therefore in the meane season let us goe out of them Let us set our hearts on nothing in the world but on God alone Let us use this world as if we used it not for the glory thereof fadeth away Yet for all that we are loth to goe out nay we dwell in the world continually we are in the world all the weeke long yea even on the Lords-day too We are like them Phil. 3. Whose belly is their God which minde earthly things the world the world nothing but the world Let Heaven goe whither it will If it were possible we would make our Tabernacles here as S. Peter would have done in the Mount Goe out of the world that is an hard saying who can abide it Let us follow Moses in refusing a Kingdome Monica whose song was volemus in coelum How must we goe out of the Campe of the world not dreaming to live in a paradise here but preparing our selves for afflictions being content to be reproached as Christ was We must not thinke to goe to Heaven in a feather-bed to sayle alwayes with a faire wind through many tribulations we must passe thither and be tossed with the winde of many reproaches by the way Christ was reproached and shall we imagine to goe to heaven without reproaches Let us arme our selves for the bearing of reproaches and let us in a manner glory of them I beare in my body the markes of the Lord Iesus It is better to have Christs markes than a purple gowne on our backs or a triple Crowne on our heads as the Pope hath and let this be a comfort to us our reproach if it be for Christs sake is Christs reproach If men mock us they mock Christ if they imprison us or kill us for his Gospell they kill Christ and let us suffer with him that we may be glorified with him VERSE 14. 2 IT is inforced by an argument taken from our estate and condition in the world If we have no time of continuance here then let us be content to goe out If a Tenant know that his lease is expired he must be willing to goe out Wee have not so much as a lease no not for a yeere moneth weeke day nor houre therefore let us be willing to goe out But why should we goe out of the Campe of the world The world is a warme nest and we have a long time to continue in it Nay we are deceived the Cities themselves are of no continuance the windes blow them downe the enemy may sack them and make them even with the ground waters may overflow them fire consume them many goodly Cities have beene burnt At the furthest they shall all downe at the day of judgement then the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt with fire We our selves have no time of continuance in them The Major of a Citie dyes the Aldermen dye the Citizens dye there is dying of
joy which they cannot doe if you be peevish perverse and froward therefore submit your selves to them What though wee grieve them what care wee will such a thing grieve him hee shall be sure to haue it then we will doe it for the nonce Some are at this passe But you shall have no benefit by that you hurt your selves more then them Vnprofitable 1. in this life and that two kinde of wayes 1. being grieved they cannot discharge their ministerie so well to your edification they cannot studie so well preach so well as otherwise they might doe and that makes against your profit The worse they preach the worse it is for you They cannot till the ground of your hearts so cheerefully they cannot build you up as an house to GOD so comfortably as it were meete Thus you gaine nothing by grieving of them but loose by it Griefe overthrowes any worke a clothyer cannot labour in his calling well that is grieved Griefe hinders any man much more a Preacher It deprives him of his sleepe and makes him unfit for any thing 2. The Preacher and Pastour being grieved must needs powre out his griefe into the bosome of GOD Almighty whose workeman hee is hee cannot but complaine to God of it Lord what untoward people be these and doe yee not thinke God will take his cause into his hand looke upon the griefe of his steward and by one meanes or other by the pestilence sword famine plague the people for it that are the Authours of his griefe therefore grieve them not You shall finde it very unprofitable for you in the end 2. It shall bee unprofitable you in the life to come if yee repent not of it CHRIST will say to all them that have opposed themselves to his Ministers come you are they that haue vexed my servants depart from mee I know you not Therefore so behave yourselves that they may performe their Office with joy not with griefe In grieving of them you grieve the Holy Ghost and Christ too It is not wee that speake but the Spirit of Father that speaketh in us If wee bee grieved hee is grieved and as Christ said to Saul Why persequutest thou mee So hee sayes to all peevish persons that set themselues to grieve his Ministers Why grieve yee mee Yee shall finde the incommoditie of it in the end Therefore grieve them not give them all the encouragement you can that they may doe their dutie with joy to the Salvation of you all In the former verse hee enjoyned Obedience to their Spirituall Governours now hee requires their prayers for them 1. He requests their prayers 2. hee affordeth them his prayers verse 20. In the former 1. the suit is propounded 2. prosequuted verse 19. In the propounding 1. what they are to doe 2. why they are to doe it VERSE 18. BY all probabilitie it was Paul and the rest of the Ministers that were with him that put up this grace to be prayed for 1. Wee will pray for them whom wee love most Wee are not commanded in the Word of GOD to love any so dearely as the faithfull Preachers Have them in exceeding love sayes the Spirit of GOD. Excesse is dangerous in all things yet wee must exceede in our love to the Ministers Paul hath exceeded in the choyce of his Word and wee must exceede in our Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abundantly had beene enough yet hee abounds above that hee puts an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to it then an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee could not goe higher Above all abundance in love Wee love them best that doe most for us The Preachers doe more for us then any in the world under GOD. Our Fathers give us our bodies but not our Soules they make both Soule and body new creatures in Christ Iesus Our Fathers bring us into the light of this world which wee must one day loose againe they bring us to the light of the heavenly Ierusalem which wee shall enjoy for ever these then are most to bee loved therefore most to bee prayed for If that heathen King and mighty Emperour did thinke himselfe more beholden to his Schoole-master then to Philip his Father because from the one hee had his Esse from the other his benè esse Truly wee are more to praise GOD for the Preachers by whom wee are made new creatures in Christ Iesus and Citizens of Heaven then for our earthly Fathers by whom wee are made Citizens of the earth 2 We pray for you we sequester ourselves from worldly businesses that wee may give our selves to the word of God and prayer Acts 6. there is never a day but we pray for you wee count it sinne with Samuel to cease praying for you therefore pray you for us Vnum orare pro multis is a great matter and requires much boldnesse and confidence sayes Chrys. But multos orare pro uno nihil est onerosi When one man prayes for many oratio fit unius virtutis intuitu when many pray for one oratio fit multitudinis concordiae intuitu qua Deus ubique potissimum placatur Multi animi dum unanimes congregantur fiunt magni therefore you being many may more boldly pray for us then we for you 3 There is singular use of the Preachers Acts 16.17 we are GODS Torch-bearers that carry the flaming Torch of the Word of God before your eyes to shew you the way to the Kingdome of Heaven They are the Charets and horsemen of Israel Without us ordinarily you cannot be saved how can they heare without a Preacher Saint Peter saved three thousand Soules at a Sermon Saint Paul saved Sergius Paulus the Proconsul Dionysius a Iudge of Mars street Damaris a noble Gentle-woman and sundry others and ordinarily not one man or woman can goe to heaven unlesse a Preacher carry him on his shoulders not one sheafe can get into the barne unlesse a harvest man do carry it and thou canst not bee carryed as a sheafe into the barne of the Kingdome of heaven unlesse some of CHRIST's harvest men carry thee thither therefore pray for them 4 If we doe well the profit is yours postulamus quidem ut pro nobis oretis totum autem fit pro vobis in vos istae divitiae redunda bunt Chrys. If a Nurse have a full dugge it is the better for the Infant If the householder have refertam villam they shall fare the better that be in the house If our gifts of wisedome knowledge discretion of love zeale c. encrease the commoditie shall be yours Then pray for us and that heartily in the Church and in your houses that the Word of God may runne may have free passage may have nothing to stay the running that it may be glorified throughout all England to the joy and comfort of us all Pray for the Reverend fathers of the Church that they may use the Sword of authority which God hath put into their hands to the cutting
The Hebrewes have no fit name for it in all the old Testament the word conscience is not to be found Yet the old translation hath foisted it into the Text Gen. 43.22 Non est in nostra conscientia quis posuerit eam in marsupijs nostris as also Prov. 12.18 It is in the booke of Wisedome and Ecclesiastic but they were written in Greeke But the Hebr. put leb the heart for it Davids heart smote him that is his conscience Give not thine eare to every word that men speak of thee for thy heart knoweth that thou also hast cursed others that is thy conscience In Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latin conscientia a joynt knowledge or a knowledge with an other either cum alio that is with the high and eternall God for none besides God and a mans owne selfe hath an immediate knowledge of himselfe or rather scientia cum alia scientia there is a knowledge whereby we know that we know and that is conscience but the nature thereof shall better be manifested by a definition I might propound sundry to you Damascen defines it thus it is lex nostri intellectus Origen est correptor paedagogus animae Saint Bernard est inseparabilis gloria vel confusio uniuscujusque The Schoolemen say it is applicatio Scientiae ad factum seu faciendum The best of the new wryters est practicus Syllogismus hominem excusans aut accusans In my poore judgement it may bee thus defined conscience is a function of the understanding whereby wee apply the generall knowledge that is in us to our particular thoughts words and actions 1 It is not a part of the will but of the understanding not of that which wee call theoricall but of that which is termed practicall Therefore it is in worke and action As a dead man is no man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So a dead conscience is no conscience but nomine tenus A seared conscience that is past feeling and doth nothing Whereupon the Schoolemen contend that it is neither habitus nor potentia but actus His whole worke is to apply the generall knowledge engraven in us by the pen of nature to our particular thoughts words and actions There be generales notitiae or maximes written in our hearts as it is an horrible thing to commit murther a beastly thing to commit adultery a fowle vice to lie and dissemble to have an heart and an heart whereas God hath given thee but one heart This the law written in our hearts teacheth us Now comes conscience and doth her duty Thou hast committed murder thou art an adulterer a lyar a dissembler therefore thou art abhominable in the sight of God The knowledge that is in us gives us the major Conscience infers the minor and the conclusion necessarily followes of it selfe This is conscience in generall whereby it is easie to see what a good conscience is One defines a good conscience thus Quae habet in corde puritatem in ore veritatem in actione rectitudinem and it is not amisse yet it expresseth not the power of a good conscience A good conscience is a comfortable applying of the knowledge that is in us to the joy of our hearts whereupon ariseth boldnesse and confidence so that a man thinkes himselfe as it were in heaven I will give you an example of it in a minister Knowledge gives Saint Paul the major every minister of CHRIST that hath walked faithfully in his calling shall have a crowne of righteousnesse a good conscience in Saint Paul makes the minor and brings in the conclusion I have fought a good fight kept the faith therfore for mee is reserved a crowne of righteousness This is a good conscience which ought in some measure to be in us all That wee may the better be assured that we have a good conscience as Saint Paul had let us examine our consciences in these things First for our entrance into the ministery then for the execution of our ministery being entred First let us examine our conscience about our entrance into this high and magnificent calling wherein two especiall points are to be observed namely the gifts passive and active 1 Let us call our selves to accompt what passive gifts we have received from GOD Almighty A Bishop sayes Nazianz. is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a vaine and empty name he must be well furnished in some measure with gifts fit for the office A Scribe sayes CHRIST that is taught to the Kingdome of Heaven must be as a rich householder that is able 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to tumble out of his treasury 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such are all Ministers of GODS sending Ezra was a perfect scribe in the law of God So Artashastes doth entitle him in the beginning of his letter To Ezra the perfect Scribe of the law of the Gods of heaven Apollos was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and mighty in the Scriptures Saint Paul boasted of himselfe after an heavenly manner I thanke my GOD I speake with tongues more then they all But a number there bee that thanke GOD they speake but with one tongue namely their mother tongue Indeed the man of GOD ought chiefely to bee seene in GODS booke and though he have never so great skill in Logicke Rhetorique Philosophy History c. he must dissimulare eloquij venustatem when he speaks to the people as Saint Ierom. sayes yet for all that he must not bee a rudesby a meere stranger in them Moses that man of GOD was brought up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all no art excepted and this Saint Stephen records to his singular commendation Saint Paul was not to seeke in Aratus Epimenides and others Meletus Bishop of Alexandria whom alluding to his name they called mel Atticae hee was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all acts as Euseb. testifies of him Didymus used rhetorique poetry philosophy Philo Iudaeus was an excellent divine in his age for his learning in these externall arts he was called an other Plato Origen was wonderfull in them in so much as Porphyrie his enemy was compelled to admire him for it The Papists at this day many of them give them their due are very learned men Oh that GOD would turne the edge of learning the right way And shall the Ministers of our Church bee unlearned wilt thou leape into Moses Chaire or rather into Christs Chaire and hast no gifts in any comparable measure to teach the people out of it The King in the Gospell sayd to the man that came to the marriage without the wedding garment Friend how camest thou hither So will hee say to all saucy and insufficient Ministers Friend how came you hither who made you the dressers of my vineyard that have no skill to dresse it who made you dividers of my word that mangle it and cannot cut aright who made you builders of my house that know not how to square a stone or frame a piece
over-seething pots that send forth a fome or from over-charged stomackes that must needs belch Salomon saith of the foole eructat stultitiam he belches out foolishnesse Belchers yee know are odious to all so be all pratlers With what With malicious words As they said of Moses and Aaron Yee take too much upon you So Diotrephes said of Saint Iohn hee tooke too much upon him as if none should rule in the Church but hee Hee prated that hee did exhaust the treasury of the Church that hee overburthened them with a multitude of strangers sent to them It may be that he breathed out some points of erroneus doctrine too He prated against him he could not tell what inaniter ac irrationabiliter saith Lyra vainely and without all reason Zenophanes was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a spurre to Homer and Diotrephes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a spurre of Saint Iohn of whom hee was not worthy to be named the same day A common sinne yet a grievous sinne more grievous than we are aware of to be pratling in corners of other men 1. Therein they sin against God who gave them their tongues to be as trumpets to sound forth his praises and bells to toll their brethren to God not as coales of Iuniper to burne withall nor as sharpe rasors to cut withall 2. In this they imitate the devill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Saint Basil they have their character and denomination from the devill hee is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the accuser and slanderer of the brethren so are they Hee is the old devill and they are the young devills 3. The object where about they be occupied is the good name of men now a good name is above silver and gold Hee doth not a man so great wrong that robbeth him of his silver and gold as hee that robbeth him of his good name 4. Hee is a man-slayer and no manslayer hath eternall life he kills three men at once with the sword of his tongue himselfe the hearers and the man whom he trusteth through with the speare of his malevolent speeches vnus est qui loquitur unum verbum profert he is one that speaketh he bringeth but one word out of his mouth yet in uno momento multas aures inficit multas animas interficit in one moment he infects many eares and kills many soules 5. He banisheth himselfe out of the Kingdome of heaven raylers by name are excluded therefore let us leave this pratling least hereafter we chatter and burne in hellfire Major est machaera linguae quam ferri saith Saint Augustine the sword of the tongue makes a deeper wound than the sword of yron It goes to the heart of many Saint Chrysostome professes he knew some Quos verba magis affecerunt quam vulnera whom words have more affected then blowes and no marveile saith he the body receives the one the soule the other But let us not be so faint hearted words are but winde as wee use to speake let them passe away like the winde especially being undeserved 1. What be those pratlers they be not lupi rapaces sed pulices mordaces Not ravening wolves but back-biting fleas they bee but as a company of whelpes that follow us wapping at our heeles 2. We draw in the same yoke with Christ and all the Saints Some kept a pratling against Christ that he was a perverter of the people that hee denyed to pay tribute to Caesar. Tertullus the oratour made a declamation against Paul Wee have found this man a turbulent fellow a mover of sedition throughout the world What a number of false accusations were commensed against Athanasius that he embeaseled the Kings treasure that he had killed Arsenius his owne deacon In this wee have a cloud of witnesses many companions in this affliction Wee may happily keepe out of the clawes of men but wee shall never keepe out of the jawes of men The servant is not above his master Daemonium habet he hath a devill audit Dominus patitur audit servus indignatur this heares the master and puts it up quietly this heares the servant and stormes at it impatiently 3. Men speake against us but God speakes for us It is Origens observation Nunquam tantas laudes dixit Deus de Mose ac postquam Miriam Aaron ei maledixerunt God never spake so much in the commendation of Moses as when Miriam and Aaron discommended and spake evill of him Were ye not afraid to speake against my servant even against Moses They disprayse God prayses what neede we to regard them 4. What is our rejoycing save the testimony of a good conscience there is joy within why should there be sorrow without Those pratling tongues croake in our eares like Ravens an excusing conscience sings like a Nightingal in our hearts let this inward musicke countervaile the outward jarring for a good conscience is a continuall feast 5. Consider him that endured such speaking against of sinners hee that knew no sinne boare the contumelious speeches of sinners shall not wee that bee sinners beare the reviling speeches of sinners 6. We are no losers but gainers by it Blessed are ye when men hate you when they separate you and revile you putting out your name as evill for the Sonne of mans sake rejoyce and be glad behold your reward is great in heaven Hereunto accords that worthy speech of S. August Quisquis volens detrahit famae meae nolens addit mercedi meae Whosoever willingly detracts from my good name doth unwillingly adde to my reward in the Kingdome of heaven therefore let us be so farre from vexing at them as rather let us rejoyce in them This is the least though it be fowle enough there follow greater from words he goes to actions 1. He receives not the brethren himselfe 2. He forbids them that would 3. Hee casts them out of the Church Yet he doth not simply say he receives not the brethren but not content with his malicious prating still he goes on from one degree of sinne to another There is a kinde of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of covetousnesse in sinning a covetous man is not content with that which he hath though he have the riches of Craesus yet still he would have more So hee that hath begun to drinke of the water of sinne must needs drinke more and more Haman was not content to put Mordicay to death that refused to bow to him but he must needs have the lives of all the Iewes in the provinces of Ahasuerus Herod was not content to kill Iames the brother of Iohn with the sword but he clapt up Peter into prison intending to serve him with the like sawce The Iewes at Thessalonica could not be content to have persecuted Paul in their owne Citty but they must pursue him to Berea likewise One witch-craft one adultery would not content Iesabel her
Crowne them with the Crowne of eternall glory therefore let us be plentifull in good workes Now he doth earnestly wish their increase and continuance in all goodnesse These verses containe an heavenly prayer that Saint Paul hath for the Hebrewes wherein hee desires two things for them 1. The vertue of diligence 2. A removall of the vice of slothfulnesse opposite to it ver 12. The former is amplified 1. By the persons to whom it is wished 2. By the manner how it is wished shewed 3. By the qualitie of it the same 4. By the fruit 5. By the perseverance of it VERSE 11. WEE as labourers together with God desire the same we wish it with all our hart at the hands of God Prayer is nothing else save a fervent desire of the heart we lift up our hearts and our hands to thee Lam. 3.41 All men have their desires a covetous man desires silver and gold houses and lands an adulterer desires a faire Dinah and a beautifull Bathshebah in a corner to sport himselfe with all a malicious man desires the fall of him whom he takes to be his enemie as Esau the dayes of my fathers mourning are at hand and then will I slay my brother Iacob Gen. 27.41 The ambitious man desires honour as Absalom but a godly man desires the spirituall good of himselfe and others Oh that I were dissolved and were with CHRIST and here Saint Paul desires the continuance of the Hebrewes in all good things let the like desire be in us all He doth not pray for some alone but for every one A father wishes well to all his Children a good Shepheard would not have one sheepe in his flocke to perish I would to God that all that heare mee this day were as I am said Paul we desire the salvation of every one of you yea of our enemies if we have any It is the joy of the Ministers to see the people continue in well doing my Crowne and my joy they desire this above all earthly profit and preferment and they pray heartily to God for it He doth not desire that they might have the same diligence but that they doe shew the same diligence openly abroad that men may point at it with the finger and ye may be ensamples to others Matth. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they seeing your good workes may glorifie your Father in heaven 2 Cor. 8.21 providing for honest things not onely in the sight of the Lord but in the sight of men Wee must not only bee godly but shew our selves godly wee must not only have faith but shew it as Dorcas did shew me thy faith by thy workes we must not only have zeale but shew it as Phinees did we must not only have patience but shew it let your patient mind be knowne to all men we must not only have love to the Saints but shew it Yet we know that there is an outward shewing without an inward an outward shew and an inward too both must concurre Some are all in shew nothing in truth some in shew and truth too The Pharisees made a shew of Religion fasted prayed gave almes c. but it was nothing but a shew When they fasted they looked sowre when they gave almes a trumpet was sounded at their gate they prayed in the corners of the streets Our shew must be outward and inward too as the outside of the cup and platter is cleane so must the inside too we must be Nathaniels within and without too wee must walke before God with Zacharie and Elizabet as well as be just before men thus let us shew dayly the graces that be in us I desire that yee goe not backeward but bee as diligent as ever yee were yea if possible that yee may excell your selves and be better He wishes the same diligence in quality though he would have it to exceede in quantity We will be diligent in our trades and callings The Merchant in his the Clothyer in his c. We will be diligent in them for the trash of this world The hand of the diligent it maketh rich but we use small diligence in heavenly matters Give all diligence sayes Saint Peter 2 Pet. 1.10 Wee cannot goe to heaven without diligence A Scholler must be diligent before he can get learning and wee must be diligent Schollers in the Schoole of Christ before wee can learne him as we ought to doe and reigne with him in the life to come Therefore let us be diligent if by any meanes we may attaine to the resurrection of the dead and let us not be diligent to day and negligent to morrow but let us use the same diligence It was Socrates commendation that he was Semper idem Let us not be semper idem in evill things but in good things semper idem Let us rather mend then pare and let our last workes be more than our first This vertue of diligence is amplified by the fruit and continuance of it That yee may be fully assured in your hearts and consciences of that kingdome which yee hope for Some men may be assured of their good estate St. Paul is so sure of it that he sings a triumph over all his enemies Ro. 8.33 34 c. Neither is it his song alone but the song of all the faithfull I am sure my Redeemer liveth Iob 19.25 2 Cor. 5.1 For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternall in the heavens How come we by this assurance not by revelation from heaven but by good workes practised by us here on the earth 2 Pet. 1.10 When Saint Paul was ready to depart out of the world he was sure of the Crowne of life how not by revelation but by the godly life which he had lead 2 Tim. 4.8 2 Tim. 2.19 depart from sin bee full of good workes as Dorcas was and thou mayest have a full assurance of the kingdome of heaven It is not a bare and naked faith that can assure thee of heaven but such as worketh by love Men in this age flatter themselves in a supposed faith and cast away the care of good workes Wee cannot merit heaven by our worke therefore wee will not worke at all as if good workes served to no end but to merit They are as pledges of eternall life by them we may know whether our names are written in heaven or not wee must know that not à priori for who at any time was Gods counsellour but à posteriori hast thou workes then thou hast faith are there fruits then there is a roote hast thou faith then thou hast Christ hast thou Christ then thou hast the kingdome of heaven Therfore let us all be abundant in good works let us excell in good works Tit. 2.8 These are good and profitable to men there is a necessary use of them they are infallible tokens
of faith faith of Christ and Christ of the kingdome of heaven therefore let us shew all diligence in them to the full assurance of the hope of eternall life But how long must we be diligent Not for a time but to the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 referre it to the verb show that yee may shew the same diligence to the end holding out in the race of Christianity to the end of your life So run that ye may obtaine It is a folly to run at all unlesse we run to the end a folly to fight at all unlesse we fight to the end Remember Lots Wife she went out of Sodom but because she looked back she was turned into a pillar of Salt Let not us be diligent for a time but to the end we must be working to our lives end so long as any breath is in our body it is not enough to bee young Disciples but we must be old Disciples as Mnason was as we have beene diligent in prayer almes-deeds in hearing of Sermons in crucifying of sinne so we must be diligent to the end hold that which thou hast lest another take thy Crowne be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the Crowne of life VERSE 12. THat yee be not slothfull like the sluggard yet let mee lie a while in the bed of sinne Let us shake off all slothfulnesse and be not weary of well doing like lazie travellers that will goe no further If we served a bad master that either would not or could not reward us for our service then there were some cause why we should be slothfull we serve a most loving rich and bountifull master therefore let us not be slothfull Diligent servants may be a spurre to them that be negligent Marke such a one be thou like him So St. Paul to whet this diligence propounds worthy examples to them He doth not simply say be yee followers of the Saints but hee points out the vertues wherein we must follow them Examples prevaile much Though wee should rather live by lawes then by examples yet examples have a mervailous attractive power The Iewes especially were carryed away with examples therefore the Apostle propoundeth some to them We honour the Saints non adoratione sed imitatione we doe not make gods of them but we imitate the vertues that were in them there is exemplar primarium secundarium 1 Cor. 11.1 CHRIST is certum indubitatum exemplar he knew no sinne therefore we may be bold to follow him in all things the which hee did as man Wee must not follow him in his fasting forty dayes in walking on the Sea c. but follow him in his humility modesty patience c. In these things wee may follow Christ without exception but the holyest men of all have sometimes beene exorbitant therefore we must follow them with limitation They were laughed at that counterfeited a kinde of purblindnesse to follow Alexander that imitated Plato in his crooked shoulders when they goe straight let us follow them but when they goe crooked let them goe alone Wee must not follow Noah in his immoderate drinking David in adultery and murther Peter in denying CHRIST we must tread in their good steps not in their evill wee must imitate them in faith and patience c. Faith inlayed with charity is regina virtutum Temperance meekenesse patience c. are the maidens of honour that waite upon her By faith wee live the just man shall live by his faith that is his life By patience we possesse our soules after wee begin to live in CHRIST Patience is a pillar for the just to leane upon while he liveth By Faith we have an interest into the kingdome of heaven by patience we saile through the tempestuous Sea of this world till we come to the haven of rest By Faith we apprehend the promises which is a metonymie whereby is meant the joyes of heaven promised to us patience is an yron pillar to uphold us against all crosses and afflictions Patience is a most necessary vertue yee have need of patience Hebr. 10.36 A Souldier hath need of his armour So have we in this warfare of the armour of patience Here is the patience of the Saints Apoc. 14.12 if yee bee Saints yee must have patience many are the troubles of the righteous these are they that came out of great tribulation Apoc. 7.14 Wee cannot get to heaven without tribulations therefore wee must have patience by the way Innumerable are the crosses we meete withall crosses in our soules bodies many sicknesses and diseases in our goods they may be taken away by thieves fire and other casualities in our names wee must passe through good report and evill report What godly man lives without his crosse therefore we have need of patience to beare them all I but what is patience many talke of it that know it not In Christian patience there must be these foure things 1. Not a Stoicall apathie a sencelesnesse a blockishnes that it should be as pleasant a thing to us to be in equuleo as in lecto Christ Himselfe felt paine his soule was heavy to death and Christians feele paine in their afflictions but they patiently endure it they are not overcome with it 2. If we suffer any misery it must be in a good cause Thieves by land and Pyrats by Sea suffer much hard-ship Catiline did patiently abide cold and other extremities yet hee was not patient Baals Priests endured cutting and slashing and covetous misers and earth-wormes will endure much to get money yet that is no patience miranda est duritia sed neganda patientia Patience must be in a good cause in Christs quarrell and in the suffering afflictions imposed on us by God else it is no patience 3. In our sufferings there must be a good affection and a good end Saul was patient when men despised him he gave them not a word but that was in policie not in Christianity Some have patience perforce because they cannot be avenged they have no power to doe it that is dissimulation not patience and some suffer much for vaine glory as Heretickes have done but wee must suffer for Gods glory for the magnifying of him and his Gospell that is right patience to keepe faith and a good Conscience 4. Our patience must be continuall As our crosses are perpetuall while wee are in this world So our patience must bee perpetuall Wee must dye with patience in our mouthes patientia est honestatis ac utilitatis causâ voluntaria ac diuturna perpessio rerum arduarum Cicer. Take the Prophets sayes Saint Iames as an ensample of patience But I will commend one example to you instead of many Take our SAVIOUR CHRIST for an ensample of patience that endured such contradiction of sinners As his life was full of miseries from his cradle to his grave so was it full of patience He was reviled and reviled not againe he was called Beelzebub
with his owne bloud And that he should goe but once with his owne bloud he proveth ab impossibili If he should often have offered himselfe he should often have suffered but he cannot dye or suffer often therefore hee cannot often offer up himselfe 3. There the High-Priest by his sacrifice did signifie the expiation of sins that was to be accomplished our High-Priest hath appeared to put away sin which is amplified by the time when and the instrument whereby The 4th is the application of the use The use of the Leviticall Priest-Hood was to shadow out our redemption to be wrought by Christ the use of Christ's Priest-Hood is to procure to us eternall happinesse Which is set forth by an antithesis betweene the common estate and condition of men and the grace we have by Christ. The common estate of men consisteth in two things 1. In death then in judgement These happen to all and cannot be avoyded Both members are applyed to Christ. 1. Death 2. The judgement where Christ's second comming is described To mans once dying is opposed Christ's once dying amplified by the finall cause To the fearefull judgement to come is opposed the second comming or appearing of our Saviour Christ amplified 1. By the persons to whom hee shall appeare with comfort 2. By the manner how hee shall appeare without sin not only in himselfe but in his members in his body the Church neither head nor body shall then have any sin in them 3. By the end VERSE 21. THe consecration of the Tabernacle was with bloud Where 1. The sprinckler 2. The things sprinckled 3. Wherewith The sprinckler was Moses which was Gods deputie the things sprinckled were the Tabernacle and the vessells of ministration that is wherewith they did publikely serve and minister that wherewith they were sprinkled was bloud At the first dedication of the Tabernacle it was annointed with oyle but afterwards Levit. 8. it was sprinckled with bloud The Altar and all other ministring vessells Aaron and his sons themselves were sprinckled with bloud All Christians are Gods Tabernacle hee dwells in us as in a Tabernacle and Temple we are likewise Gods ministring vessells to serve him Therefore wee must be sprinckled with the bloud of Christ Iesus or else we cannot be consecrated as an holy people to the Lord. Likewise as well as he did the people and the booke VERSE 22. THe second rite no purgation could be made without bloud Almost 1. A qualification 2. An asseveration Saint Chrysostome and Theophylact referre it to the verb all things are by the Law almost purged with bloud Not wholly but in part almost because the bloud of the beasts did but purge the flesh not the heart and conscience As Agrippa said to Paul almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian. But by the grammaticall construction it is rather to be referred to the noune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Almost all things for there were some things purged by water some by fire Num. 31.23 But howsoever some things might be purified without bloud yet there is no remission namely of sins without bloud Where then is the unbloudy sacrifice of the Masse If there be no shedding of bloud in it as they affirme the bloudy sacrifice was on the Crosse this of the Masse is unbloudy then it cannot be propitiatory for sins as they contend Bellar. lib. 1. de Missa c. 27. hath three answers or rather three cavills against this place 1. The Apostle here speakes de sacrificijs veteris legis But 1. Then hee would have used a verbe of the time past rather than of the time present hee would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. He cannot speake of the sacrifices of the Old Law but he must needs have reference to CHRIST 's sacrifice prefigured by them Secondly sayes Bellarmine this is not to bee understood as if without actuall shedding of bloud there could bee no remission but absque virtute without the power of shedding of bloud there can be no remission Now the power of Christ's sacrifice on the Crosse is applyed to us in the Masse and so by it we have remission of sins I but First the sacrifice of the Masse doth rather abolish the power of Christ's Sacrifice on the Crosse then apply it to us for if that were a full and perfect sacrifice for sinne then there needs no other the sacrifice of the Masse is a blasphemous sacrifice robbing Christ of his honour 2. Here it is said without bloud shedding no remission not without the power of bloud shedding Bellar. saw hee should bee driven to this therefore hee hath a third refuge In the Masse there is shedding bloud 1. Mystically by a mysticall signification 2. Really for as the body of Christ is broken subspecie panis so under the forme of Wine is his bloud shed But if CHRIST 's bloud bee really shed so often as a Masse is said or sung then CHRIST suffers often Certainely a man suffers when his bloud is shed but Verse 26. therefore in the Masse no shedding of bloud and for that cause no remission of sins for the same 2. Vnder the Vizzard sub specie they may cover any thing In the Masse there is no propitiatory sacrifice offered up that 's most certaine That doth plainely signifie to us that if CHRIST 's bloud had not been shed for us we could never have had remission of sins Then how are we beholden to the Lord Iesus There is a base fellow in the land that hath committed high treason he must needs dye unlesse the Kings Son shed his bloud for him We were vile wretches dust and ashes Traitors and rebels against God If the Son of God had not powred forth his bloud for us we should have beene tormented in hell for ever CHRIST hath bought us with his owne bloud O the wonderfull love of CHRIST remember sayes Saint Peter yee are redeemed from your old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ. O that the consideration of this deere price were deepely imprinted in our hearts Being washed from sinne in the bloud of CHRIST shall wee tumble in the mire of sinne Thou art washed from thy covetousnesse pride uncleannesse drunkennesse with the bloud of CHRIST and yet wilt thou wallow still in them We are bought with a price we are not our owne wee are CHRIST 's hee hath deerely payd for us therefore let us glorifie him in our spirits and bodies which be his VERSE 23. IT was therefore necessarie 1. because God commanded it to be so 2. Because it was meete they should by these ceremonies be consecrated to God 3. That they might the better signifie the things that were to come Patternes such as did lively set before their eyes as by certaine examples the things to come Of things in the heavens that is of the Church in the time of the Gospell that is called heaven because the