Selected quad for the lemma: law_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
law_n become_v gain_v weak_a 7,469 5 11.0638 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Sampson himselfe told his minion all his heart being besotted and almost bewitched with her loue and said vnto her There hath not come a razor vpon my head for I haue beene a Nazarite vnto God from my mothers wombe And touching Samuel his mother set him apart to this vow and said before he was borne 1 Sam 1. ● I will giue him vnto the Lord all the dayes of his life and there shall no razor come vpon his head In this number we may after a sort range the Rechabites mentioned in Ieremy chap. 35.6 who though they had wine set before them and were bidden to drinke yet they answered We will drinke no wine for Ionadab the sonne of Rechab our father commanded vs saying Ye shall drinke no wine neither ye nor your sonnes for euer Now this was one part of the vow of the Nazarites and therefore we may account them a kind of Nazarites In the New Testament we see the like in Iohn the Baptist Luk. 1.15 where the Angel forretelleth that he shall bee great and shall drinke neither wine nor strong drinke and he shall be filled with the holy Ghost from his mothers wombe But these are not altogether the Nazarites heere spoken off let vs therefore come to the vow heere mentioned and consider from hence ●●ctrine ●ng the ●es the of the ●arite was ●e and ●ctise that among the Iewes the vow of the Nazarite was allowed and approued of God vsed and practised of that people This doth Amos confirme vnto vs Chap. 2.11.12 I raised vp of your sons for Prophets and of your yong men for Nazarites is it not euen thus O ye children of Israel saith the Lord but ye gaue the Nazarites wine to drinke Of these also we heard before out of the Lamentations where they are set forth Of this sort are they whom Iames and the Elders speake off Act. 21.23 saying to Paul We haue foure men which haue made a vowe them take and purify thy selfe with them and contribute with them that they may shaue their heads and all shall know that those things whereof they haue beene informed concerning thee are nothing but that thou thy selfe walkest and keepest the Law And before Chap. 18.18 20. it is said that Paul tooke his leaue of the brethren and sailed thence into Syria and tooke with him Priscilla and Aquila hauing shorne his head in Cenchrea for he had a vow And as Iames perswaded him ●1 26 ●4 18 so he tooke the men and the next day purifying himselfe with them entred into the Temple to signifie the accomplishment of the dayes of purification vntill that an offering should be offered for euery one of them True it is this voluntary vow was rare and vnwonted vnder the Gospel and so much the more because the Synagogue began now after a sort to be buried and restrained Act. 15.29 howbeit the Apostle is content to retaine some of the ceremonies not that he placed any religion in them or thought them necessary of themselues to be obserued which had now receiued their deaths wound in the death of Christ but he had respect to the infirmities of the weake brethren among the Iewes that were not yet throughly instructed in the liberty of the Gospel and the freedome which Christ had brought them in regard whereof to the weak he became as weak 〈◊〉 9.19 ● 22. that he might winne the weake to the Iewes he became as a lew that he might winne the Iewes to them that are vnder the Law as vnder the Law that he might gaine them that are vnder the Law yea he made himselfe a seruant vnto al that he might gaine the more and became all things to all men that he might by all meanes saue some Thus then we see that among the Iews that were the people of God in the time of the Law were such as vowed a speciall separation to God consecrating and sanctifying and dedicating themselues to his seruice who liued as strangers vpon earth as if they were in another world being as men that had made a diuorse and diuision betweene themselues and the prophane men and manners of the world and were eminent among others and aboue others as the Cedar among the shrubs as the starres among the orbes and as the Sun among the starres The reasons why God aloweth and approueth Reason 1 of this vow are first of all because mē are by nature so proue ready to take vp chuse to themselues certaine sorts and sects of life that there is but a steppe betweene them and falling into superstition Now by binding of them in this sort he doth cast a cord about their loynes put a bridle in their mouthes Pet. Martyr in caput 13. lib. Iudic. so that this is as much as if he had said vnto them Forasmuch as I see into your harts how willing you are to deuise new formes and fashions of seruing and worshipping me ye shal not do what pleaseth you but what I appoint Thus he keepeth them within the compasse of their duty by this vow and permitting them somewhat he restraineth them from more Secondly he doth hereby curbe the people that they should not follow the trades desires of the heathen by finding them worke as it were at home wherewithall to busie themselues and hence it is that he willeth the people Deut. 12.30 to take heed to themselues that they were not snared by following the Cananites after that they were destroyed before them that they enquire not after their Gods saying How did these nations serue their gods euen so will we doe likewise So then God ordained this and such like kind of vowes to the end his owne people should not follow the fond fashions of the idolatrous heathen that dwelt round about them Thirdly Wherein the vow of the Nazarites consisteth that from hence might spring some maintenance for the Ministery whereof in all ages and times God hath shewed himselfe to haue a speciall care This appeareth euidently in the twentieth verse of this Chapter when the Nazarite offereth a Ramme for a sacrifice of a peace offering vnto the Lord a part therof is holy for the Priests vse and therefore in this vow the Lord had a respect to the vpholding and continuing of his seruice by prouiding for those that attended thereunto Now the parts of the vow are to be considered before the vses be pointed out Wee haue heard already that the Nazarites were such persons as vowed a speciall kind of holinesse The parts of their speciall holinesse are two first while they were in this vow secondly when the dayes of it were accomplished Touching the first while they continued in their vow they were bound not only to keepe a temperate dyet but they were vtterly to abstaine from wine and strong drinke from vineger of wine Verse 3.4 vineger of strong drinke and from any liquor of grapes as also from cating moyst or dryed grapes
are commanded to giue no offence to Iew or Gentile or to the Church of God 1 Cor. 10 32 neyther to them that are within nor to them that are without But by such mariages the papists are offended the ignorant people that know not the law are offended the weaker sort that ought to be respected are offended and many of the godly brethren are offended and generally not some fewe but the whole multitude I answer Answer heere is much a doe about offence and this is in effect as much as to say that all men take offence at it howbeit this conceyte is ouer lauish I confesse if this were true in euery part there were iust and necessary cause to forbeare our Christian liberty for a time rather then to giue an vniuersall offence But I neither see nor heare of any such scandals or exceptions taken by the multitude which also are the ignorant sort against such matches Touching the offence of the multitude or ignorant sort which are dayly in vse and practise before theyr eyes neither is there any reason or likelihood that they should take such offence because they were the parties to the law-making in the high Court and Councel of Parliament for the lawfull liberty of such matches and they haue the tables of degrees in manie places hanging openly in theyr Churches to be seene and read of all and carry often about them or at least haue in their houses the English Bibles expressing the same in commō vse Touching the offence of the particular weaklings Touching the offence of the weake such as it may be are or at least may be in any estate when any such appeare and are knowne they are much to be respected and a long time to be borne withall but yet not alwayes for there is a time of ignorance to bee allowed to such or rather a time wherin they are to learne and to be instructed til the Christian liberty be sufficiently made knowne vnto them This hath beene already thoroughly performed to any that haue minds to learne or hearts to enquire or eares to heare and therefore there is no reason that theyr wilfull ignorance and causlesse offence should still hold our Christian liberty in perpetual slauery and seruitude This therefore onely remaineth further to be performd in regard of their offence to proffer the meanes of satisfaction and resolution by opening to them the truth wherein if they wil still persist obstinate and stiffe-necked against the cleere shining thereof in their faces as the Sun at noone day then I may well say the offence is taken by themselues and wilfully holden rather then giuen by others and then they haue more neede to learne a rule of charity of the Apostles mouth then to teach vs one which is not to iudge their brother nor to condemne another mans seruant but themselues seeing he doth stand or fall to his owne master Rom. 14 4 10 and euerie man at the last day shall giue accounts for himselfe to God that iudgeth the quick and dead before whose iudgement seate all must stand And therefore they are not to iudge theyr brother in that which he doth to the Lord with thankfulnesse as did those that did eate to the Lord with thankefulnesse verse 6. and were not to be iudged by theyr brethren therein where if I do not mistake I take the offence to bee the more forcible then in this of the marriage of couzen germans because that offence was grounded vpon the ceremoniall Law of God then buried and abolished whereas this offence in the marriage of cousen germanes is grounded eyther vpon the rotten post of our owne fancy or vpon the ragged peeces of the Popes Canons Besides the fauouring of the weake brethren in those ceremonies of Moses Law was onely in the time of the infancy of the Gospel but when once in farther growth and deeper roote taken of the Gospel they were vanished by the cleere manifestation of the truth then they were mightily oppugned by the Apostles and the offence little fauoured In this case do we stand at this day in this matter of marriage between cousin germans after so long abolishing of those popish Constitutions to the contrary Touching the offence of the Papists and sufficient manifestation of the law of God against them so that the offence of the Papists is little to bee regarded especially seeing it tendeth to the bringing of vs backe againe to their Canonicall seruitude that is the Antichristian yoke which God forbid For seeing we are escaped from them why should wee suffer our selues to be entangled therewith againe and why do we not rather stand for the christian liberty whereunto the Lord hath called vs And if we will soberly and seriously consider of this matter we shall find that offence is rather giuen to a Papist by refraining that Christian liberty of Gods Law then by professing vsing of it in such marriages as are against their Canon And by making scruple of such mariages as are prohibited by the Popes Canon doe we not confirme the Papists in the idoll subiection to the Popish Canon and make them still to iudge amisse of the Christian liberty giuen vnto vs by Gods Law and professed also by our owne Lawes To conclude a Papist no doubt would be more offended in his conceyte to see any refuse theyr Canonicall obedience by approouing or making such matches prohibited by them whereas by refrayning or not approouing such mariages great occasion is giuen to make the Papistes thinke well of theyr Canon and of him that made it Lastly from hence ariseth comfort to those Vse 3 that are already entred into such marriage as now we iustifie to bee lawfull Howbeit as they that disswade marriage in this kinde do notwithstanding professe ingenuously that they seeke not to intangle any mans Conscience that hath so matched so in like manner I write not to perswade or encorage any that are free to match this way neyther doe I see why any should bee discouraged from it or left comfortlesse that are already entred into it Againe albeit I teach the lawfulnes of this marriage yet I would haue no man presume to enter and aduenture vppon the same with doubt of mind and perplexity of conscience because then it becommeth sinne to him forasmuch as hee doeth it not in faith Lastly where the ciuill Magistrate doth restrayn and prohibit this degree it is meete reason that the people should forbeare the same as in all other ciuill ordinances which are not repugnant to the morall law of God True it is in Geneua and other free Cities there is some restraint of this degree as appeareth by the Confession of ●axony sect 18. Harmony of the Church sect 18. touching marriage neuerthelesse touching the lawfulnesse of the marriage of cousin germans Beza is plaine in his obseruations vpon that Confession when he sayth Wee admonish the people diligently that they doe not thinke that this degree is
essentiall parts of that Sacrament I answere Answer they are able to doe this but forasmuch as they doe it without a calling their doing is as no doing their powring on of water is no better then a defiling of it For who gaue them their commission so to do When possession of any house is giuen by deliuering a white wand and turfe another man may do as much in shew he may take a wand turfe as good as the others and make a deliuery of them and yet those actions may bee idle being done without warrant neither can assure the bargaine and sale It is no great matter or hard to doe to take bread and wine and deliuer the same by reciting the words of institution and yet if it be vndertaken without a calling it is a plaine and manifest prophanation of the Supper of the Lord. If they iudge this vnlawfull how can they hold the other lawfull The people of God or any among them were as well able to handle and carry the Arke as the Leuites they were an holy people to God they were all circumcised they did all carry about in their flesh the marke and impression of the Couenant yet the Lord sorted out the Tribe of Leui to beare the Arke of his Couenant Deut. 10.8 to stand in his presence to minister vnto him and to blesse in his Name He will haue vs wholly to obey his word he regardeth not our blinde zeale or purpose to serue him except it be ordered aright To proceede Hath God onely placed order in the Church and not in the common-wealth yes in the common-wealth also wherein euery one both superiours and inferiours must doe their duty He hath appointed the Magistrates their office to minister iustice without partiality and respect of persons 2 Chron. 19. 5 6. considering that they execute not the iudgements of men but of God who will be with them This is the comely order that hee hath set this is the way wherein he will haue them walke this is the ordinance that he hath established If then lawes be bought and sold or if they be made as the spiders webbe to catch the silly flie but to let the hornet escape or if they punish the poore and let the rich escape if the weake that cannot resist be intangled and the mighty be deliuered this is a great disorder and the Lord will not haue these things handled so confusedly Let such set before them the example of God who will reward euery man according to his workes He doth not spare the wicked Rom. 2.6 and reuenge himselfe vpon the Godly but he sheweth mercy to thousands of these and will not hold the other innocent So such as God hath called to execute iudgement and sit vpon the bench of iustice must know what God requireth of them they must not peruert the right ouerturne the Seat of equity they must not turne the edge of the sword vpon the poore because they are poore nor put it away from the rich because they are rich or from the mighty because of their might or from the greater sort because they haue many friends but they must smite them with the sword of Iustice that deserue to be smitten and defend them from that wrong that the malice of the oppresser would lay vpon the innocent On the other side God requireth that such as are inferiours should obey Princes and Magistrates submitting themselues vnto them reuerencing both their places and persons They therefore are reproued as breakers of this order of God and ouerturners of States and Common wealthes that rebell against them and moue sedition among the people Such walke in the steps of Corah and his company who were consumed and destroyed according to their deserts as appeareth afterward in this Booke ●hap 16. These proud spirits and ambitious men haue neuer preuailed but euer beene punished Such are they that Salomon speaketh off Eccle. 10. ●ccles 10.6 7 Folly is set in great excellency and the rich set in the low place I haue seene seruants on horses and Princes walking as seruants on the ground Such persons as seeke to take away the crownes and kingdomes of Princes are the very plagues of humane societie and goe about to take away as it were the Sunne out of the firmament and to leaue vs in miserable darkenesse nay to take from vs the breath of our nostrils and to expose vs as a prey to all violence and villany Let all such know that they fight against God and therefore cannot prosper or preuaile All sedition is pernicious to the contriuer and author thereof and no iniury receiued can bee any sufficient cause for any man to plot Treasons and rebellions Let euery soule therefore be subiect to the higher powers considering there is no power but of God and that whosoeuer resisteth the power resisteth the Ordinance of God and therefore purchase to themselues damnation Vse 3 Lastly seeing God requireth orderly obseruation of his ordinances we learne this duty that we must be carefull to obserue it and practise it with a due regard of his Commandement This is the generall rule that the Apostle commendeth vnto vs 1 Cor. 14. 1 Cor. 14 40. Let all things bee done decently and in order Order is nothing else but the meanes of peace and the auoiding of confusion or it is a disposing of diuers things August de ciuit dei lib 19. cap. 12 C●cer de effic lib. 2. giuing to euery one his proper place The end of all good order tendeth to profit as on the other side the end of confusion to losse and destruction The more common generall a good thing is so much the better it is and the more to bee esteemed aboue all other The benefit of good order stretcheth farre to the land and Sea and to the house and ship to the Common-wealth and Church If it be commendable to appoint a profitable order in the lesser charge of a priuate family it is a great deale better and more excellent to manage a Common-wealth prudently and to gouerne the Church wisely Gouernment that is right presupposeth order because it is vnpossible that any man should rule rightly and duely without order For gouernment is a right disposition of those things whereof a man taketh charge to bring them to a conuenient end This is done in the Church of God when there be Pastors and Teachers to preach the word truely and to minister the Sacraments sincerely when the people hearken to them are ready to seeke the law at their mouthes This is seene also in the obseruation of these rules First Rules of order to be obserued in the Congregation when one alone prayeth for many cannot pray with a loud voice together without confusion The Minister is to bee the mouth of the people to God his voice is in publike place to be heard that the people may ioyne with him with pure and humble hearts and
and yet faileth in one point he is guilty of all for he that said Doe not commit adultery said also Doe not kill Now if thou commit no adultery yet if thou kill thou art become a transgressour of the Law Whosoeuer breaketh one commandement and maketh no conscience thereof but saith he doubteth not to be dispenced withall for it and that he shal finde God mercifull vnto him therein hath made himselfe guilty of the whole Law and of the punishment due to the transgressours of it Fourthly there is nothing done of vs in Reason 4 this flesh but GOD will bring it into iudgement We run into many euils because they seeme little and the hedge of Gods word is easily leaped ouer The wise man teacheth vs Eccl. 12. Eccle. 1● 1● that God will bring euery worke vnto iudgment with euery secret thing whether it be good or whether it be euill If he said God will bring many things to iudgement wee might haue hoped some things should be exempted But forasmuch as we must account with him for all things 〈◊〉 12.36 euen for euery idle word as our Sauiour teacheth it followeth that wee ought to make conscience of all our wayes and workes whatsoeuer Fiftly all things commanded of God from Reason 5 the greatest vnto the least are most iust and equall and therefore to be obserued diligently without all parting or partiality The Prophet reprooueth the house of Israel that said The way of the Lord is not equall But the Lord saith 〈◊〉 18.29 O house of Israel are not my wayes equall are not your wayes vnequall This reason is vrged by the Prophet Dauid 〈◊〉 119.128 172. Psal 119. I esteeme all thy precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate euery false way His testimonies are righteous and very faithfull which he hath commanded and therefore he hateth from the bottome of his heart all wicked vngodly wayes So then whether we consider the nature of God that he is perfect or the redemption of Christ that it is perfect or the dignity of the law that it is perfect in all these respects we conclude this truth as hony gathered from many flowers That it concerneth euery one of vs to yeeld obedience to all the Lawes and commandements of God Vse 1 Now let vs come to the vses which giueth an edge to the doctrine it selfe And as it serueth to reprooue so the reproofe is of diuers sorts ●e first re●●efe First of all it condemneth those that waste themselues and spend their strength chiefly about the things of this world and neuer labour after regeneration and the things of the Lord. These men neuer thinke of any obedience How farre then are they from perfect obedience when will these come to the iourneyes end that are not yet set forward in the wayes When will they finish their saluation that haue not yet made a beginning How do they looke to receiue the price that sit still and doe not yet runne in the race or how shall they obtaine an incorruptible crowne that doe not striue for the mastery These thinke they haue no soules to saue or that there is no God to serue or that there is no life to come or else they would not liue as beasts or as the horse and mule that are without vnderstanding If they liue as men that regard not the kingdome of heauen they shal one day know that there is an hell and if they regard not to obey God they shall heereafter reape the fruit of their disobedience Samuel teacheth ●am 15. ● that rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft and stubbornnesse is as iniquity and therefore all such as reiect the word of the Lord he will also reiect them from his kingdome and from the glory of his presence ●e second ●roofe Secondly such are reprooued as content themselues with a small measure of knowledge and obedience of faith and repentance For many there are in the Church that thinke they know enough or at least that much knowledge is not necessary like to the Deputy mentioned in the Actes of the Apostles that the doctrine of Christ was a matter needlesse friuolous impertinent and vnnecessary and a curious question about words and names whereof a man might bee ignorant without danger Thus doe these iudge of religion and of the Law of God they account basely of it as a thing that may best bee spared If they had truely tasted of the sweetnesse of Gods word it would bring them altogether into loue of it Let vs therefore labour to grow in grace vntil we come to perfection 2 Pet. 3. For whosoeuer thinketh he hath already attained vnto it greatly deceiueth himselfe we haue as yet scarse laid the foundation and doe we as men besotted with folly and spirituall pride imagine we are come to the toppe We are like vnto them that are in a dreame that thinke they are eating to the full and behold when they awake they are hungry and empty or they that deeply conceit they are drinking and when they arise they see they are thirsty so is it with these men they are fast asleepe and doe but dreame when they suppose all the world is made of knowledge whereas if they had shaken off this spirit of slumber and were throughly come to themselues they would bewaile their owne ignorance and as poore blinde soules condemne their owne foolishnesse Let vs therefore store our selues with it we shall herein if in any thing beside finde the prouer be most true that store is no sore It is the ground of our obedience forasmuch as we can obey no farther then we know The seruant can obey his masters will no farther then he knoweth it An ignorant seruant must of necessity be a disobedient seruant So is it with euery Christian man his obedience cannot go beyond his knowledge Thirdly The third reproofe it serueth fitly and fully to reproue those that do halt with God and yeeld a maimed obedience vnto him The sacrifices of God vnder the Law must be whole sound not halt not maimed not lame so should our obedience be vnder the Gospel Men will not allow of a seruant that performeth such seruice as he requireth at his hands when it is done to halfes and doe we thinke to be accepted of God when we cut off his worship in the middes Wee deale with God as the king of Ammon dealt with Dauids messengers hee shaued off the one halfe of their beards and cut off their garments in the middle 2 Samuel chapter 10. verse 4. So doe we shaue off halfe of his seruice and thinke to make him be content with that or with nothing If Christ Iesus had so rewarded vs in performing the worke of our redemption and had left off before hee had brought it to perfection wofull had our condition beene it had beene good we had neuer beene borne For if he had not throughly finished it wee could not haue beene
sound out Achan who had stollen the Babylonish garment and wedge of gold he had hidden it priuily and conueyed it closely into his tent howbeit he could not hide himselfe but the eye of God easily espyed him so that the hoste of God could not prosper so long as he remained in it Iosh 7.4 but receiued an ouerthrow at the siege of Ai. Wherefore what shal it profit vs to be absolued by the voices and sentences of all men or to be winked at as if we were cleare innocent when our conscience accuseth vs before God or he be displeased with vs and angry against vs We must enter into our selues and consider how the case standeth betweene God vs and not thinke it enough to know how the case standeth betweene man and vs. What though we can bribe them and stoppe their mouthes and make them hold their peaces and cause them to be content to take a little at our hands when we haue done them much wrong rather then they will goe to law with vs because they are weak and we mighty they are poore and we rich they are empty and we full we shall not be able to bribe the Lord who is stronger then we are and taketh the cause of the oppressed into his hand When we haue offered iniury vnto them it is not enough to confesse our fault vnto them and to humble our selues before them and to seeke to make amends vnto them all this we may doe and then goe to hell yet there are many that doe not come thus farre So then we must remember whom we offend that is God and thereupon to account all sinne heinous and capital forasmuch as it is against the highest Maiesty of infinite power and authority The greater the person is that is offended the greater the sinne is If a man speake euill of the Iudge or Iustice he shall be imprisoned howbeit it is not so heinous as to raile at the Prince because his person is greater and higher But what are all Princes but mortall men whose breath is in their nostrils whose bodies must goe into the graue and turne into dust out of which they were taken in comparison of the immortall God who is a person of infinite and incomprehensible Maiesty If he giue vs once the sight of our sinnes and touch our hearts with a feeling of them though they were as hard as steele as sencelesse as the dead and seared as with an hote yron he can make them aliue quicke and tender enough that we shall goe roaring all the day long and finde comfort in nothing if his hand be heauy vpon vs he will turne our moisture into the drouth of Summer and make all our bones that are broken to clatter so that our life shal abhorre bread and our soule dainty meate and our flesh shall be consumed away that it cannot be seene It is not therefore for vs to dally with him as with a childe or to play with his iustice as the fly doth with the candle til she be consumed but rather let vs remember the exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 12.28 Let vs haue grace whereby we may serue God acceptably with reuerence godly feare because our God is a consuming fire If his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that trust in him As then we are to mark what we doe so we are to marke against whom wee doe it lest wee taste of destruction at the last and then would giue all the world if we were owners of it to be eased and released of our horrible plagues as it fared and fell out with the rich man in the Gospel Luk. 16. Let vs not thinke to escape from him by denying our sinnes as the reprobate shall doe at the last day who being accused of sin committed against God Matth. 25.44 shall answere When saw we thee a stranger or naked or hungry or thirsty or in prison but Christ Iesus will reply against them and take away all excuse from them and so stop the mouth of iniquity Verely verely I say vnto you inasmuch as ye did it not to one of these little ones ye did it not to me And heereby we may try our selues whether we haue truely repented of sinne or not if this note that abounded in Dauid be found in vs. For his conscience doth not so much accuse him for any fact and offence committed against Vriah as against the Lord himselfe and from hence came the liuely feeling of his sinne So if our conscience accuse vs much more for offending of Gods infinite Maiesty then for the iniury which we haue done vnto man if we stay not beneath vpon the earth but lift vp our hearts vnto God and consider that we haue to doe with him we haue attained to a good measure of true repentance But so long as we regard nothing but men we shall neuer behold the true face of sinne nor see it as it is in his owne likenesse To conclude let vs learne that of all enemies God is the most fearefull and terrible if he set himselfe against vs. Secondly seeing God is the person that is Vse 2 hurt and offended we learne that vengeance belongeth vnto him onely When iniury is done vnto any we must esteeme the wrong as done not onely vnto men but to God and therefore is to be left vnto him whose commandement is transgressed For except the Law of God had beene violated the creature should haue had no cause to complaine of any iniury It is the law that maketh it a sinne and an iniury as we shewed before out of the Apostle Rom. 7. No man therefore is to reuenge his owne cause but must commit vengeance vnto God and to that person that sustaineth Gods person on earth to wit the Magistrate who beareth not the sword in vaine whose iudgement is the iudgement of God whose reuenge is the reuenge of God This doth the Apostle set downe as a rule to guide vs Rom. 12.19 Dearely beloued auenge not your selues but rather giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord. A lesson often vrged alwayes confessed and yeelded vnto but smally regarded and seldome practised For as if there were no God in heauen no Gods on earth that beare his name and title men runne together like wilde beasts or as horses that rush into the battell and reuenge their owne quarrels as if sinne were wholly committed against themselues and not at all against God as if they were specially interessed in it and God had litle to doe with the matter as if the wrong touched them and no way concerned him From hence it commeth to passe that whiles they goe about greedily to reuenge wrong done vnto them iudgement falleth vpon their owne heads and God executeth vengeance vpon them for their reuenge and so while they goe about to hurt others the greatest hurt falleth vpon themselues and while they shew themselues
not Calfe or any Cattell should vndergo the punishment for sinne because the soule that sinned shall die the death Ezek. 18 verse 4. and the threatning must be true that because man sinned he should die Gen. 2. Thou shalt die the death So that it was necessary eyther that all man-kinde by reason of sinne must perish euerlastingly Heb. 9 15. or else Christ the Mediator of a better testament must become a surety for vs and satisfie the wrath of God kindled and conceiued against vs for sinne If any aske the question Question if the blood of Buls Goats could not take away sinne why did God command them to be offered and to what end were they appointed I answer Answer this was not done in vaine but to good purpose For albeit they could neuer take away sinne nor purge the conscience from dead workes yet they serued fitly to shadow out the death of Christ and to assure the heart that it is washed by the blood of the Messiah This was a notable comfort to the people of God from the beginning taught them to looke for redemption through him Obiection If it bee farther said that God speaketh euery where in the Law that the blood it selfe of Buls and Beasts clenseth and purgeth sinne as Leuit. 17 11. The life of the flesh is in the blood and I haue giuen it to you vpon the Altar to make an attonement for your soules for it is the blood that maketh an attonement for the soule I answer Answer that place speaketh not properly but sacramentally as in the new Testament he calleth in the institution of his last Supper Math. 26 26. the bread his body because it is a figure of it so in this place to the outward signe he giueth the name of the thing signified and to the type he ascribeth the proper effect of the blood of Christ which onely is the blood that is able to make attonement for our sinnes Otherwise those offerings of beasts should be called in vaine Heb. 9 24 10 1. the similitudes and shadowes of good things to come As for those heretikes that dreame that those oblations did really and indeed clense away the sinnes of the fathers not by their naturall operation but by the acceptation of God and therefore were not types of Christs sacrifice washing away sinne they are euidently conuinced by the places before alledged and throughout the Epistle to the Hebrewes Obiect If any aske how these can bee figures of Christ seeing GOD witnesseth in his word that he neuer required them When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Psal 40 7. Heb. 10 verses 5 6. If then God would haue none of them how could they be the figures and images of better things I answer Answer God may be said to allow them and yet to disallow them to reiect them and to regard them in diuers senses Hee willed them as he commandeth them and commendeth them as a sweet sauour vnto him performed in faith and as types referred to the comming of the Messiah and the time of reformation Heb. 9 10. On the other side he may be said to refuse and reiect them for these three causes First when the manner of doing is euill doing that which God requireth but doing it in a corrupt manner to wit without faith and obedience as the Prophets in euery place reprooue the sacrifices of hypocrites wicked persons as Esay 1 11 12. I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs who hath required this at your hand Your new Moones and your appointed feasts my soule hateth and the reason of this is rendered in the words following Verse 1● Your hands are full of blood Againe God would not that they should remaine continue for euer but that though they had place in the Church for a time they should ceasse at the coming of the Messiah Therfore Christ being come into the world and manifested in the flesh God willed thē no longer but would haue them abolished And this sense doth the Apostle principally intend in this place that the shadowes must giue place when the body it selfe was come in person Lastly it may after a sort be said that God neuer willed them that is approued allowed of thē as the principall part of Gods worship and as the very price of our redemption the ransome for our sins our reconciliation vnto God albeit he would haue them obserued of his people and vsed for a time as certaine rudiments rites to bring them to Christ to confirme their faith in him Let vs shut vp this with the comparison that the Apostle expresseth Heb. 9 13 14. If the blood of Buls and of Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience frō dead workes to serue the liuing God In these words he compareth the shadow the body the type the truth the ceremony and the substance together Doctrine Christ Iesus hath made a● attonement between G●● and vs by h●● blood Frō hence we learne this doctrine that the blood of Christ taketh away our sins reconcileth vs to God the Father Christ Iesus hath in the performance of his Priesthood freed and deliuered vs from the guilt punishment of our sins This appeareth euidently vnto vs by considering laying before vs the end the parts and fruite of his Priesthood The end of the Leuiticall Priest-hood and of this figured by it was to offer sacrifice for the ignorances Hebr. 9 ● that is for the sins of the people The distinct parts of it are two satisfaction and intercession His satisfaction consisteth partly in suffering and partly in obedience The second part of his Priesthood standeth in intercession in that he is become our perpetuall and perfect Aduocate that therby God might be appeased for them and we reconciled vnto him The fruite thereof is this that we are deliuered redeemed ransomed iustified and freed from the guilt of sin from the burden of ceremonies from the curse of the Law from the wrath of God and from feare of condemnation This truth is taught in many places Ioh 1 29. Iohn seeing Christ coming vnto him saith Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sin of the world And the same Apostle in his first Epistle chap. 2 ver 1 2. If any sinne we haue an Aduocate Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes the Apostle magnifying the mercy of God and setting out the merites of Christ he saith chap. 3 verse
out before you and the land is defiled therefore I will visite the wickednesse thereof vpon it and the land shall vomit out her inhabitants The Prophets are full in all places of the like threatnings There is a notable testimony to this purpose Ier. 5.7 8 9. where the Lord complaineth of this iniquity and of the abuse of his manifold benefits Though I fed them to the full yet they committed adultery and assembled themselues by companies in the harlots houses they rose vp in the morning like fedde horses euery man neyed after their neighbours wife shall I not visite for these things saith the Lord shall not my soul be auenged on such a natiō as this We reade in the booke of Genesis that when Pharaoh at the commendation of his Courtiers had taken Abrahams wife into his house the Lord plagued him and his house with great plagues 〈◊〉 12 17. and they ceassed not vntill he had restored her againe and giuen his seruants commandement to doe him no hurt The like we might also speake of Abimelech the king of Gerar when he also sent and tooke her though he had not yet come neere her but onely purposed euill yet the Lord came to him in a dreame by night ● 20.3 and said vnto him Behold thou art but dead because of the woman which thou hast taken for she is a mans wife So then there is ordained for all adulterers and fornicators both temporall and eternall punishments These sinnes shall bring a man to beggery euen to a morsell of bread Prou. 6.26 they shall roote out his house destroy his posterity consume his flesh waste kingdomes yea shut out of Gods kingdome and bring to the condemnation of the diuell forasmuch as no vncleane thing shal enter into the heauens but all murtherers and sorcerers and idolaters and whoremongers shall haue their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death Reason 1 The reasons hereof are these First the wrath of God is kindled against such In his fauour is happinesse but if his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all that trust in him For this cause the Apostle saith Ephe. 5.6 Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for because of these things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience In the words going before he had shewed that no whoremonger or vncleane person hath any inheritance in the kingdome of Christ and of God the reason is because such lye vnder the heauy wrath of God He is angry with them and therefore woe vnto them If the child see the father angry with him how is hee greeued what saith the Lord vnto Moses concerning the sinne of Myriam his sister Numb 12.14 If her father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seuen dayes And the Apostle to the Hebrewes chap. 12 9. We haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs and we gaue them reuerence shall we not much rather be in subiection vnto the Father of spirits and liue What subiect can beare the displeasure of a Prince The feare of a king saith Salomon is like the roaring of a Lyon Prou. 19.12 and 20.2 and 16.14 who so prouoketh him to anger sinneth against his own soule If the lyon hath roared who would not feare as testifieth the Prophet Seeing then the wrath of a king is as messengers of death what shall we thinke the wrath of the King of kings to be who is euen a consuming fire Hebr. 12.29 and deuoureth all as straw and stubble before him Secondly it appeareth to bee a greeuous sinne because it is worse then theft as Salomon Reason 2 maketh the comparison Prou. 6.30.32 Men doe not despise a theefe if he steale to satisfie his soule when he is hungry c. but whoso committeth adultery with a woman lacketh vnderstanding he that doth it destroyeth his owne soule It is an odious name to be called a theefe but it is more odious to be called an whoremaster A theefe when he hath stollen is carried to the gallowes but the adulterer deserueth it much more What an horrible offence is it to destroy a mans owne soule we pittie him that layeth violent hands vpon his owne body and killeth himselfe Who doth not account Saul and Achitophel and Iudas most infamous who perished with their owne hands but the adulterer doth a thousand times worse he destroyeth his owne soule which is a greater price then the body Thirdly adultery and vncleannesse defile Reason 3 the land not onely the persons and the houses but whole cities and countries vntill all become abominable and the land become full of sinne and therefore no marueile though it be punished of God To this purpose the Lord speaketh in the Law of Moses Leuit. 19.29 Doe not prostitute thy daughter to cause her to be a whore lest the land fall to whoredome and the land become full of wickednesse This sinne is of an infectious nature aboue other suffer it but a little and it will quickly encrease like fire that is kindled in dry wood which suddenly taketh hold and easily passeth from one to another vntill the whole be enflamed Fourthly we must know what our calling Reason 4 is The Gentiles that knew not God and were ignorant of his law defiled themselues with these abominations and were cast out before his face for the land did spew them out as loathsome But we haue learned better things and God hath vouchsafed vs greater mercy he hath called vs to be an holy people to himselfe and redeemed vs that wee should serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues This the Apostle noteth 1 Thess 4.3 4 5 7. This is the will of God euen your sanctification that ye should abstaine from fornication that euery one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in sanctification and honour not in the lust of concupiscence euen as the Gentiles which know not God c. for God hath not called vs vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse To this we shall adde sundry other reasons afterward when we make vse of this doctrine Vse 1 This serueth to teach vs sundry instructions both touching our knowledge and concerning our obedience First let no man flatter himselfe in this sinne It is accounted of the greatest sort a small and sleight matter a veniall sinne a tricke of youth Such scoffers as these it seemeth were in the Apostles times but now they are more common as the sin is more commonly practised and aboundeth euery where This doth the Apostle declare 1 Cor. 6.9 Know ye not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God be not deceiued neither fornicators nor adulterers nor the effeminate shall inherit the kingdome of God It is a fire that shall deuour to destruction and bring strange punishments vpon the workers of such iniquities The first reproofe Iob 31.3.12 This serueth to reprooue diuers sorts of men
as we haue noted in sundry particulars before We sinne against God because we resist and withstand his will whose pleasure it is that wee bring forth the fruites of sanctification wee pollute and prophane the holie ordinance of Matrimony wee make the members of Christ the members of an harlot and so seeke to draw as much as in vs lyeth our blessed Sauiour into a filthy fellowship of our sinne Down Lectur on Hos 4 2. we defile the Temples of the holie Ghost and turne them into stewes Against our neighbour because this sinne is not committed alone but we draw some other to be partakers with vs in the same wickednesse punishment we sin against the wife or husband of the married-party whom we wrong in the cheefest treasure possession that she or he hath we sinne against the fruite of our owne body whom we disgrace brand with a note of perpetuall infamy which for the most part proue a degenerate brood through want of good-education and especially thorough the secret iudgement of God we sin against our owne families which wee oftentimes ouer-turne by defiling of them turn our houses into stewes we sin against the Cities societies kingdomes where we abide because we defile the land and cause it to vomit out the inhabitants we sinne against the church of God both by hindering the propagation thereof Malach 2 ●5 which encreaseth by an holye seed and by causing it to be euill spoken of by others as if it wer a company of vnclean persons Against our selues because we make our bodies the instruments of sin and sathan we weaken them and make them subiect to diuers diseases and we plunge soules bodies into the pit of hell which burneth with fire and brimstone Such then as are adulterers do not goe into hell alone they carry other company with them If then the iudgements of pouerty beggery infamy infirmity folly and impenitency will not mooue vs to make conscience of this sin yet let this preuail with vs that thereby we destroy our owne soules and exclude our selues from his presence Let vs threfore be watchful ouer our own wayes let vs pull vp the roote of this sinne and all other of the same sort and mortifie the deedes of the flesh Col. 3 5. Let vs cut off all occasions that may draw vs to them as surfetting drunkennesse idlenesse wantonnesse prophane company and such like And aboue all these things let vs obserue these three things First let vs remember that as God is holie so he requireth an holy people to serue him It is his wil that we liue in sanctification so that without holinesse no man can see God or haue fellowship with him Heb. 12. Secondly we must learne to feare God in his word and mark the commandement that forbiddeth adulterie Nothing maketh vs to fall into sinne but the forgetting of the Law which saith thou shalt not sin This stayed vp Ioseph in a strong tentation which being yeelded vnto did set before him a faire shew and goodly traine of all pleasures profits honors but being withstood did threaten him with a multitude of miseries hatred pouerty sorow shame imprisonment destruction and death it selfe yet he eschewed the sin by this means Shal I do this Genesis ●5 3● and sin against God The word of God must be made our wisedome and direction our guide and our counsellor it is able to deliuer vs frō the stranger that flatteteth with her wordes This is it that Salomon setteth before vs My sonne keepe thy fathers commandements Prou. 6 ●● ● 23 24. and forsake not the law of thy mother binde them continually vpon thine heart and tie them about thy necke c. For the Commandement is a lamp and the Law is light c. to keepe thee from the euill woman from the flattery of the tongue of a strange woman He teacheth that the lips of a strange woman drop as an hony combe and that her mouth is smoother then oyle but her end is bitter as worme-wood and sharpe as a two-edged sword how then shall we bee deliuered from her if the word of truth bee not in our mouthes and that which is more in our hearts to rule and reforme vs and to order our pathes aright Such as are ignorant of the word are soonest ouer-taken and they that haue not the loue and power of it dwelling in them The foolish woman that sitteth at the doore of her house and calleth the passengers that goe right in their waies Prou. 4 ● maketh choyse of such as are simple and want vnderstanding to turne in vnto her Lastly let vs keepe inuiolable the Couenant of marriage made in the presence of God of Angels and of men let the married persons make one another the delight of their eyes and the ioy of their hearts and be carefull to performe the duties they owe one to another And as the vnlawful impure coniunction of man and woman is detested of God so is holy matrimony euer accepted of him and adorned with many blessings and crowned with a continual supply of the fruits of his loue and fauour The Prophet sayeth Blessed is euery one that feareth the Lord walketh in his waies 〈◊〉 28 1 2 for thou shalt eate the labour of thine hands happy shalt thou be and it shal be well with thee thy wife shall bee as a fruitfull Vine by the sides of thine house thy children like Oliue plants round about thy table behold that thus shal the man be blessed that feareth the Lord. Riches are the inheritance of parents but a prudent wife is a speciall gift of God and wee receiue her as at his hands The Apostle doth beautifie it with an honorable title when he calleth it honorable in all It is the spirit of error which calleth that vncleane which God hath sanctified Adultery is foule and vncleane but the marriage bed is vndefiled Damnable then is the decree of Pope Syricius that marriage it selfe is the pollution of the flesh that the married cannot please God Diuellish also is the law of forced chastity restraining some orders and degrees from it whereas to auoid fornication euery man is commāded to haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband 22 And when he hath made her to drinke the water then it shall come to passe that if she be defiled and haue done a trespasse against her husband that the water that causeth the curse shal enter into her and become bitter and her belly shall swell and her thigh shall rot and the woman shall bee a curse among her people 28 And if the womā be not defiled but be clean then she shal be free and shall conceiue seed Wee haue shewed already that in setting downe this law of triall Moses obserueth 3. things First the cause is propounded Secondly the question and controuersie is determined And lastly the euent of the whole is deliuered The two former haue bene
without which we haue no saluation we must examine our harts by this note that is found in all the members of the body one toward another If any member be hurt or endangered the rest are ready to helpe euery one according to his office the foote runneth for it the eie looketh vpon it the hand stretcheth out it selfe for the good thereof If it be so with vs in the dangers and desolations of the Church we haue comfort in our owne hearts we carry a witnesse about vs that we are liuely mēbers of Christ But if we haue no feeling no compassion no pitty toward them that suffer for Christs sake we are dead and rotten members we want life and quickening in Christ wee cannot assure our selues that as yet we are engrafted into his body Therefore the Apostle saith Gal. 6 2. Beare you one anothers burden and so fulfill the Law of Christ Againe Who is weake I am not weake Who is offended and I burne not 2 Cor. 11 29. And in another place Be of like affection one to another reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe Rom. 12 15 16. Hereunto the Apostle accordeth in the Epistle to the Hebrewes chap. 13 3. Remember them that are in bonds as though ye were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if we were also afflicted in the body teaching vs heereby that their condition must be as our owne condition and their trouble as our owne trouble So the Prophet vttereth his affection Lam. 2 11 13 20 that although he should bee preserued from the iudgement executed yet beholding Sion lying waste he cryeth out Mine eies gush out water for the destruction of the daughter of my people thy breach is great like the sea And afterward he stirreth vp his zeale Behold O Lord and consider to whom thou hast done thus Wherefore whensoeuer God offereth vs the sight of any chastisement vpon our brethren at home or the neighbour-Churches abroad we ought not to be as those that are dull sencelesse and past feeling but to haue a simpathy of their sorrowes and draw out the bowels of compassion toward them Vse 2 Secondly woe and woe againe to them that are secure that laugh when the Church weepeth that liue in brauery and excesse whē the Church putteth on sackecloth and ashes that fill and feast and fat themselues with all delicates when the Church fasteth that awake not out of their sleepe when the iudgements of God are heere vnto them This the Prophet reproueth Esay 22 12 13 14. In that day did the Lord of hoasts call vnto weeping mourning and to baldnes girding with sackcloth behold ioy gladnes slaying oxen killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine for to morrow wee shall die When we are once come to this carelesnesse and contempt of our brethrens condition the threatning denounced in these words following shall fall vpon vs Our iniquities shall not be purged from vs vntill we die A fearefull sentence of a greeuous iudgement to teach vs humility and to driue away all security Hereunto also cometh the saying of Amos chap. 6 1 2 3 4.5 6. Where we see he pronounceth the wofull estate and condition of those that liued without feare and regard of Gods iudgments neither remembred their brethren carried into captiuity and liuing in great aduersity We liue in the time of the distresses and wants of the Church This calleth vs to practise this duty of seeking the good of the Church and vsing all good meanes by supplication to God and by petition to men for the redresse thereof Especially let vs be mindfull in our prayers of the peace of Ierusalem Because of the house of the Lord our God 〈◊〉 ●2 6 9. 〈◊〉 ●8 This was the prayer of the Prophet Lord be fauourable to Sion for thy good pleasure build the wals of Ierusalem If then we would haue both the Common-wealth and our priuate wealth to florish we must tender the good and florishing estate of the Church we must be tender-hearted to procure the prosperous estate therof C●●rch ●ommon 〈…〉 For the Church and Common-wealth are as those twins which are said to weepe together and to laugh together they florish together they fade together they fall together So long as pure religion and preaching of the Gospel are maintained it cannot goe ill with the common-wealth they are as a brazen wal as a strong fortresse and bulwarke as a Castle of defence to keepe out all inuasion of enemies and crying in our streetes For the one addeth strength vnto the other whilest the Common-wealth fighteth against the visible enemies of the Church by counsell and authority August epist 1. poster the Church fighteth against the inuisible enemies of the Commonwealth by praier and supplication If then the Church be spoiled the publishing of the Gospel be hindred the Commonwealth cannot long goe free but the foundation thereof is dangerously shaken which hath no promise to be kept in good estate but as it is a Nurse to the Church and a Lanterne to hold the light of the word The like might be said of priuate families and of particular persons wee haue no assurance of the protection of God of the continuance of our estate in peace farther then wee promote his glory and giue entertainment to the Gospel We see in the second booke of the Chronicles ch 36 15. when the people of Israel came to this height of iniquity to mock the messengers misuse the seruants of God which he sent vnto them rising early Because he had compassion on his people and on his habitation then he brought vpon them the King of the Caldeans who slew their young men with the sword in the house of their Sanctuary spared neither yong men nor virgins ancient nor aged God gaue them all into his hand So Christ saith Mat. 23 37. O Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets stonest thē that are sent vnto thee how often would I haue gathered thy children together as the Hen gathereth her Chickens vnder her wings but yee would not Now what followeth this contempt of the word and neglect of the Gospel Behold your habitation shall be left vnto you desolate To conclude therefore let vs promote true religion and then we shall prosper and be safe otherwise we haue no promise of blessing Lastly this doctrine of pittying the Churches Vse 3 troubles serueth most fitly to condemne the contrary practise of those miserable and mercilesse men that are without all humanity naturall affection that are borne of wolues nourished of tygers and haue sucked y● milke of most sauage beasts or rather the poyson of aspes and vipers whose very bowels of mercy are the breathings out of cruelty as the wise man speaketh Prou 12 10. who are so farre from pittying the miseries of others and helping them in their distresses that they adde to the heape of their afflictions oppresse
his perfection that wee may offer our selues to our most louing Father and obtaine of him the blessing of righteousnes And this some of our aduersaries themselues cannot but approue Pigb de fide iustifie con ro 2 and haue giuen their own fellowes the slip Besides this Doctrine standeth best with the glory of God which shineth more clearely in our saluation obtained by iustice imputed then by iustice inherent For suppose there were a miserable and desperate debter perishing and languishing imprison were it not farre more honourable gracious for a Prince wholly to pay the debt and to cancell the bond hand-writing standing against him then to put into his hands a stock of money wherby himselfe might be enabled to worke out his debt Therefore the Apostle teacheth that we are made the righteousnesse of God in Christ and are saued by grace thorough ●ith not of our selues it is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Eph. 2 8 9. Thus Paul concludeth also concerning Abraham the father of the faithfull Rom. 4 2. Thus doeth Christ determine this question drawing a comparison frō the brazen serpent Iohn 3 14 15 16 for he teacheth that the sonne of man must be lift vp on the crosse as the serpent was on the pole in the Wildernes that whosoeuer bel●eueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Let vs then renounce all met it and righteousnes in our owne selues flye to the merits and righteousnes of Christ according to the practise and example of the Apostle Phil. 3 8 90 I haue counted all things losse and do iudge them to be dung that I might win Christ and might be found in him not hauing min● owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnes which is of God through faith Hereunto cometh the reason of the same Apostle Abraham beleeued God and it was counted to him for righteousnesse now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that ius●ifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse Rom. 4 3 4 5. True it is works are necessarily required as the fruites of faith and of iustification by faith but our iustification is one thing our sanctification is another for they are made seueral graces distinct gifts 1 Cor. 1 30. neither is it likely that the Apostle would repeat the same thing twice without cause And in another place he concludeth that a man is iustified by faith without the worke of the Law if it be of grace it is no more of works for then were grace no more grace but if it be of works it is no 〈◊〉 gra●e for the● were worke no more worke Rom. 3 〈◊〉 11 6. Therfore it is truely said that good works follow a man being iustified but do not go before in him that is to be iustified Neither let any say It is absurd that one should be made righteous by the righteousnes of another for the righteousnes of Christ is both his and ours His as being inherent in him as in a subiect Ours being giuen vnto vs and imputed to vs so that by i● we are iustified before God and accepted to eternall life And that horrible blasphemy is this to teach that by the Popes indulgences wee should bee made partakers of the merits and good works of the ●●ints and to deny it as most vnreasonable what we should be partaker● of the ●●●ries and righteousnes of Christ Iesus But as the transgression of Adam was both his and ours also not his alone ●●r ours alone but his and lo●●s together because hee stood in on● places and we were in his loyns so is Christs righteousnes and obedience his and ours And why should not the righteousnes be of another Bernard 〈◊〉 1 0 seeing guilt is of another As another maketh vs sinners why should not another make vs righteous and iustifie vs from sinne It might seeme to flesh and blood as vnreasonable that the brazen serpent in this place being an artificiall wor● made with mans hands without sence life should restore health and giue life to such as were mortally bitten yet we see by beholding it they were recouered Moreouer the people stung by the fiery serpents ●ryed out in the anguish and bitternes of the paine yet none was able to helpe himselfe or his brother by his owne power of strength or by any acte wrought by him no nor Moses himselfe could minister any cure o● comfort vnto them but onely the graces of God directing them to looke vpon the brazen serpent set vp for when GOD had appointed them one way they must not seeke another way so although a man feeleth the sting of the old serpent that is sinne Ferus in l● Mato●● yet no man can deliuer himselfe or others nay if he should flye to the works of the Law they can do nothing The Law sheweth the disease it is Christ that must take it away it is God that must shew mercy it is faith that must iustifie vs. We affirme therefore with the Apostle Gal. 2 16 that we are iustified freely not of the Law not by the Law not of works not of our selues not of the works of the Law but by faith all matter of boasting is excluded iustification by grace is concluded that God may be all in all Fiftly great consolation ariseth from this Vse 5 comparison and similitude to all such as ●●e weake in faith feele the corruptions of their hearts pressing them and the tentations of Satan often ouercomming them alwayes assaulting them For we haue great comfort giuen vs to enter into the combate and to fight the battels of the Lord against the enemies of our soules by consideration of these fierce and fiery serpents True it is they did continually bite sting the children of Israel for otherwise there had bin no need of the brazen serpent yet they could not destroy them they did not ceaffe to vexe thē but they could not wound them vnto the death for they had a remedy at hand to helpe themselues they looked vpon the brazen serpent and were healed So hath God restrained the rage and malice of all the enemies of our peace and saluation For howsoeuer the diuell his angels are alwaies tempting prouoking and seeking to 〈◊〉 vs as men do wheat yet their homes and ●ot short and their strength is diminished their will to hurt is greater then their power of hurting so that they cannot execute the c●uelty they desire as the Lord himselfe testifieth from the beginning Gen. 3 verse 15. Albeit therefore the battell be long the skinnis● oftentimes hot bloody albeit we take many a foyle and haue the Bucklers beaten to our heads albeit we be felled with the stroke and driuen to fight vpon our knees yet the victory shall be ours
in battell Let vs euery one learne this vse and apply it to our hearts that the wicked man what face soeuer hee set on the matter can neuer haue a good heart but standeth in feare of euery creature in heauen and earth Genes 4 14. like Cain affrighted at the sight of euery thing and thinking whosoeuer findeth them will slay them Doe they looke vp to heauen there they haue God their enemy Do they looke downe to hell there they see Satan their tormenter and his angelles their executioners Would they take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the sea they shall finde euerie creature to fight against them and to conspire their death and euen to grone to bee deliuered from such an vnprofitable burthen ●●●ea● ca●i●●●cked The heauen saith Why do I couer him The aire saith Why do I yeelde him life and breath The water saith Why doe I not drowne him as Pharaoh his hoast The fire saith Why do I not consume him as Sodom and Gomorrha as the Captaine and his fifty The earth saith Why do I beare him and sustaine him and not swallow him vp as Dathan and Abiram His food saith Why do I nourish not choake him His apparrell saith Why doe I warme him The ground saith Why doe I yeeld him increase and bring forth any other crop then thornes and briars then nettles and thistles Death saith Why do I spare him not strike him Hell saith Why do I not receiue him The sword cryeth Why do I not smite him Famine Why do I not pine him The Pestilence Why do I not waste him and make hauocke of him The Sun and Moone say Why do I giue him light His bed saith Why do I giue him rest Thus euery creature is vp in armes and rebelleth against him that rebelleth against God they sound defiance vnto vs and proclaime open warre against vs whē we are not at peace with our God What then Shall he looke homeward turne his eyes toward himselfe There hee findeth and feeleth an accusing conscience as a thousand witnesses against him to whip terrify him Howsoeuer the euill man reioyceth in his wickednesse and glorieth in his owne shame Deut. 29 19. Deut. 29.19 howsoeuer he put away the euil day farre from him and promise peace vnto himselfe yet a man would not haue the heart of a wicked man for a thousand worldes nor possesse his pleasures to haue his paines Thou knowest not the torments of his conscience when he feeleth the strength of the Law the terrors of the Almighty the tentations of the diuel the gripings of death and the flashings of hell fire howsoeuer he seemeth to make a mocke of sinne and foolish men as vaine as himselfe doe flatter him in his sinnes Yet in laughter the heart is sorrowfull Pro. 14 13 14 and the end of that mirth is heauinesse There is a way that seemeth right to a man but the issues thereof are the wayes of death Wherefore seeing the euill man feareth oftentimes where no feare is trembling at the fall of a leafe starting at his owne thought and shaking at his owne shadow we conclude that hee can haue no true might and manhood in him but is a dastard and a coward in regard of true manhood and fortitude which are far from him Secon● y it standeth vs vpon to be at peace with God and learne to leade a godly life For so long as wee liue in our sinnes wee are as a lothsome carkasse and carrion casting out a filthy fauour and stinking in the nosthrils of God A wretched and prophane man lying rotting and rioting in his sinnes is more lothsome to God then any dead body is lothsome vnto our senses So long as wee corrupt our wayes before him the Lord hath a controuersie with vs and will commence an action against vs. And we shal neuer haue true peace with men nor true peace with our selues but shall feele the terrors of our own consciences and be at deadly and dangerous warre with our owne hearts vntill we be reconciled to God But if we be truely godly and religious and be indeed at peace with God we shall be at peace with others and with our selues nothing shall bee able to hurt vs. For whom should we feare or whereof should we be afraid God is become our Father Whom haue we in heauen but him and whom can we desire on earth with him Psal 73 25. The Angels are our attendants they pitch their Tents round about vs to deliuer vs they are charged to keepe vs in all our wayes and to beare vs in their hands that we dash not our foot against a stone Psal 34 7 and 91 11. For are they not all ministring spirits set and sent out to minister for their sakes which shall be heires of saluation Heb. 1 14. The Saints in heauen and earth are our fellow-brethren so that we are Citizens with ●hem of the same kingdome and of the houshold of God Eph. 2 19. The Lord Iesus to whom all iudgement is committed who shall iudge the world with thousands of his Angels is become our Sauiour So that wee shall neuer come into condemation but shall passe from death to life Ioh. 5 24. The creatures are our friends nay as our sworne seruants by the law of their creation to doe vs good and not euill all their dayes The stones of the field are in league with vs Hosea 2 18 and the Beasts of the fielde shall be at peace with vs Iob 5 23. Death shall not be able to hinder or to hurt vs though it be a Scorpion or Serpent the poison is dispersed the sting is pulled out 1 Cor. 15 54 55. The diuels and all the powers of darknesse shall not destroy vs Christ hath spoiled Principalities and Powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them vpon the Crosse as a mighty conqueror in a chariot of triumph Col. 2 15. He hath bruised his head he hath crushed him at the heart so that the Prince of the world is cast out Iohn 12 31. What then Shall tribulations and afflictions or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or the sword separate vs from the loue of Christ and peace with our God Rom. 8 28.35 37. Nay these proceed from a louing Father and end at our own good who sanctifieth all things and maketh them worke together for the best to them that loue God He will couer them vnder his wings and they shall be sure vnder his feathers they shall not be afraid of the feare of the night nor of the arrow that flyeth by day nor of the pestilence that walketh in the darknes nor of the plague that destroyeth at noone-day a thousand shall fall at their side ten thousand at their right hand but it shall not come neare vnto them Psal 91 4.5 6 7. Lastly as they shall feare no danger that can hurt
not deale faithfully with his people Such as either hide the truth or withhold it in vnrighteousnesse such as conceale or corrupt the word to please mē vndergo the curse of God and bring vpon themselues the heauy wrath of God This appeareth in that charge which the Lord gaue to the Prophet Ieremy chap. 1 17. Thus the Lord dealeth also with the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 3.18 and 33 6. So the Apostle saith A necessity is laide vpon me and woe vnto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9 16. Vse 1 The vses of this doctrine are now to bee handled First of all it followeth that they must know the Scriptures they must not bee young Plants Idol Shepheards blinde guides dumbe dogs sleepy watchmen vnsauory salt which is good for nothing but for the dunghill if for the dunghill Luk. 14 35. Mat. 5 13. It is a shame for a guide not to know the way for a Seer to be blinde for a Messenger to bee dumbe So then all Teachers should make conscience to furnish themselues as wise Scribes and good Stewards with profitable competent knowledge spending their dayes in getting the vnderstanding of the Scriptures that they may minister a word in due season and be able to feed their fellow-seruants with wholesome food leading them to the fountaines of life So then the knowledge of the word of God and the gift of interpretation cannot be separated from the function calling of the Minister and God doth disclaime and disauow such as are without knowledge that they shall be none of his Pastors Teachers Thus he speaketh by the Prophet Hosea chap. 4 6. Because thou hast refused knowledge I will also refuse thee that thou shalt be no Priest to me Who would not maruaile if a Prince should appoint a Messenger or Embassadour to goe to a people which had no legs to goe no tongue to speake no language or reason to deliuer his message Who then can be so absurd as to thinke that the wise God the Lord of Lords and King of Kings would appoint any to be as his mouth and the Messenger of his will which cannot teach and deliuer his will Who is it that hath an house to builde that will chuse such Carpenters and Masons as haue no skill to lay a stone or to hew their timber or to handle their Tooles Who will retaine or entertaine a Shepheard to keepe his sheepe an husbandman to till his ground a Captaine to leade his army a Steward to prouide for his family a labourer to do his work that is altogether ignorant and hath no knowledge to do these things Now God is more prudent and prouident then mortall man and therefore he will reiect and refuse all such as are not able to discharge the Office committed vnto them through ignorance God requireth knowledge in all the people much more in such as take vpon them to be the Teachers of the people which should not onely haue knowledge themselues but teach knowledge to others that they do not perish for want of knowledge The Spirit of God mentioneth this to bee one of the cheefest causes that religion perished among the ten Tribes and that Idolatry was erected and continued among them euen vntill they were carried away to perpetuall captiuity in that Ieroboam made of the lowest and rudest of the people 1 King 13 31 and 13.33 Priests of the high places who would might consecrate himselfe to that calling The condition of the Iewes was neuer more dangerous and desperate and neerer to destruction and desolation then when they had blinde watchmen and such Priests set ouer them as had no knowledge which made the Prophet Esay call for all the beasts of the field to deuoure them and all the beasts of the Forrest to eate them vp giuing this as the reason For their watchmen are all blinde and haue no knowledge Esay 56 9 10. Hence it is that the Prophet Malachi teacheth That the Priests lips should preserue knowledge the people seeke the Law at their mouth for they are the Messengers of the Lord of hoasts Mal. 2 7. This therefore sheweth and condemneth the grosse and greeuous sinne of many amongst vs that occupy the places of Pastors and cannot feede that run before they were sent take vpon thē to be lights and yet are darknesse These can haue no comfort in their calling because they were neuer designed or called of God to this place For whomsoeuer he calleth to any function hee enableth in some measure to discharge the duty which hee hath required of them They indanger their owne soules the soules of many other for when the blind leade the blinde both fall into the ditch Greg. hom 11. in Ezekiel and one saith truely that we murther the soules of such as we see runne the way of destruction when we are carelesse and hold our peace Vse 2 Secondly it behoueth all the Ministers of the word of God to make conscience to deliuer the truth and all the truth vnto the people howsoeuer it be taken according to the example of the Apostles Peter and Iohn answered vnto them and saide Whether it bee right in the sight of God to obey you rather then God iudge yee for we cannot but speake the things which we haue seene and heard Acts 4 19 20. And Paul exhorting the Elders and Ouerseers of the Church of Ephesus setteth before their eyes his owne practise that he had kept back nothing that was profitable but had shewed them all things necessary to saluation I take you to record this day that I am pure frō the blood of all men for I haue concealed nothing but haue reuealed vnto you all the counsell of God Acts 20 20 26 27. If we be carefull and conscionable in doing this duty faithfully to God and his people we shall reape and receiue more sound comfort thereby then by the powerfull effect of our Ministery True it is all painfull Teachers esteeme nothing more nor so much as of the people whom they haue gained to God and godlinesse accounting them their ioy their crowne 1. Th. 2 19 20. and their glory and yet we may reape more true comfort and consolation by discharging our duties carefully then by sauing soules and by turning many to righteousnesse if we could winne whole kingdomes to God For we may saue others from death and conuert a sinner from going astray out of his way and yet after this our selues become reprobates wee may be the sweet sauour of life to life to others and not our selues to God Thus was it with many Priests of loose licentions life vnder the Law Thus it was with Iudas who wrought miracles preached the Gospel and conuerted soules as wel as the rest of the Apostles yet was the sonne of perdition And thus no doubt it was with the Scribes and Pharisies that sate in Moses chayre and taught the people what they should obserue and doe like vnto