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A20304 XXVII. lectures, or readings, vpon part of the Epistle written to the Hebrues. Made by Maister Edward Deering, Bachelour of Diuinitie Dering, Edward, 1540?-1576.; T. N., fl. 1577. 1577 (1577) STC 6727; ESTC S114746 295,005 510

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they loue God but hated their owne punishment neither did they striue against sinne but gaue vnto it a kingdome with power and wil to serue it But wee that feele the lawe of the spirite striuing against the lawe of the flesh and in all our sinnes can say with Sainct Paul that which we would not do that we do surely we knowe no sinne against the holy ghoste we are sinners but as Paule was though our sinnes bee moe in number and greater in weight yet God our father through his sonne Iesu Christ doth pardon vs and forgiue vs all our transgressions Nowe beside all this that wee haue hetherto spoken to conclude let vs see the word it selfe by which this sinne is named it is named the sin against the holy ghost not against the Godhead of the holy Ghost for the same God is also father and sonne nor against the person of y holy ghost for it is no greater then the person of the father of the sonne but it is to sinne against the graces of the spirit within vs and so to sinne against them that we contemne despise thē treade them vnder fete accompt them prophane malitiously carry them awaye to all wantonnesle This then is sinne against the holy ghost in a continuall apostacie generall falling from God to sinn against thine owne conscience so y thou despise the graces of God which he had giuen thee to y setting out of his praise and tur●…e them to the contempt of his maiestie and glory Nowe a woord or two to shew this sinne by examples so we will make an end Our first example let it be Satan him selfe and the Angels which did fall with him howe could they be but lightened which dwelt in the presence of the father of light what outward temptation could they possibly haue which neuer had enimie beside them selues nothing could possibly be in these but an apostacie or falling from God after which tho malice of their owne minde did seeke to rob God of his glory despising his goodnesse and withholding y honour which they knew to be due vnto him for their creation thus sinning against the spirite of God they were cast downe into horrible death neither did euer God giue vnto them a redemer by whome they arise againe through repentance Other examples are not easily sound which are cleare manifest before vs yet in many some appearances are by whiche wee may iudge and not lightly be deceiued Caine slue his brother Abel wherefore did hee slaye him because his brothers woorkes were good and his were euill A horible sinne to hate not the man but the vertue of the mā and hate it so deadly that the bonde of brotherhod could not pacifie it neither did he this of ignorance for god instructed him bad him leaue off his anger and lift vp his countenance why should he be malitious to his good brother neither was he prouoked by any outward thing vnto it for Abel was obedient to him as his elder brother neither did Abels vertue hurte him but that in well doing he might be also accepted but the author of sinne who wrought in his malitious heart made him haue no regarde of al this one purpose he had and that he held except his brother would be wicked he would haue no peace with him Another example we haue in the Scribes Phariseis they knewe Christ came from God and that his miracles were wrought by the spirite of God and as Pilate iustly accuseth them of enuie and malice they sought to put him to death their conscience accused them in all their dooinges they corrupted Iudas with monie to betray him they hyred against him false witnesses they bribed the souldiours after his glorious resurrection that yet they should saye his disciples stole him away by night This great wilful malitious working against the sonne of God of men vtterly fallen away from the liuing God our sauiour Christe calleth it sinne against the holie Ghost To these I thinke we may adde Iulianus the Emperour who for his moste wilfull renouncing of the Lord Iesu is called to this day the Apostata who was accoūted at the first as Hilarius calleth him a gratious and religious Emperour but after being spoiled by philosophie and vaine deceite he beganne to account y worde of God to be but foolishnesse persecuted the professours of it with many mockes and taunts that they must do good for euill and blesse where they were cursed and all his life made a mocke of Christ calling him in reproche the Carpenters sonne and the man of Galilie for no occasion but only for this because he woulde maliciously striue against Christe as plainely appeareth in his last wordes nowe euen dying when he lifted his face vp to the heauens and saide O man of Galilie nowe thou hast got the victorie Thus by examples I haue shewed that which before we heard in the worde that the sinne against the Holie Ghoste is a generall apostacie from God with wilfull malice and an vnrepentaunt heart to persecute his trueth vnto y end from which sinne dearely beloued as we are bounde daily to pray that God of his mercie would keepe vs farre from it so in the name of God I dare promise vnto you that as many of you as feare at the remembrance of it you are as farre frō it as the East is from the West for this sinne is a mocking and scoffing at the sonne of God it is not a weeping mourning least you should fall into it Nowe let vs pray c. Why this Epistle was written Gal. 4. 10. Col. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. ●…1 14. Cap. 5. 12. 6. 1. Cap. 12. Galat. 4. vers 9. The Author In Dialog de S. Trin. fo 11. lib. 6. cap. 19. What time this Epistle was written The Argument of this Epistle Christes prophecie Christes priesthood Sonne Matth. 3. 17 Only God must speak in the mouth of all Ministers 1. Pet. 4. 10. Esai Hebr. 4. 11. 〈◊〉 The firste difference Cap. 9. 26. Cap. 12. 26. The secōd difference The third difference The. ii●… difference The fift difference Mat. 2●… 〈◊〉 Iohn 16. 15. Maker of the world Col. 1 ●…5 Brightnesse of glorie in respect of his father Iohn 1. 14. Iohn 5. 36. 2. Cor. 3. 18 Iohn 1. ●…8 Ingrauen fourme Col. 1. 15. Susteiner of al thinges Actes 17. 28. Purger of our sinnes Iude. 6. Iere. 23. 5. Psal. ●…10 4 Heire of all Al things made by him 1. Tim. 4. 3. the bright nesse of glorie Act. 2. 22. Matth. 3. 17. Vpholdeth all things Luke 10. Ter. de ieiunio de Cor. Mil. Cypr. de ●…psis Theo. li. 8. de Mattir Cyril li. 10. c●… 18. in Ios. In E●…he ridio●… c●… 10. The right hande of maiestie Phil. 2. 9. Rom. 1. 23. An argument negatiuely from the authoritie of the scripture is sound good Deu. 12. 32. Esay 1. 11. 2. Pet. 1. 〈◊〉 Ioh. 4. 2●… Cal. 4. 10. 〈◊〉
Angels Where it followeth here that all transgression of that lawe was punished no doubte he respecteth the people of Israel in the wildernesse where of so manie hundred thousandes all died in their sinnes except Caleb and Iosua who were of an other spirite which fearefull example of this people is likewise alledged by Sainct Paule in the firste to the Corinthians the tenth Chapter to admonish the Corinthians that by their example they should learne And where the Apostle addeth Howe shall wee escape if we despise so great saluation howe true this is we cannot doubt if we will open our eyes this day and looke about vs What is become of the Churches of Corinth Galatia Ephesus Philippi Colossos Thessalonica all whiche Paule so highly commendeth What is become of the churches of Pontus Cappadocia Asia Bithynia to which Peter writeth What is become of Smyrna Pergamus Thiatyra Sardis Philadelphia Laodycea y churches mentioned in the Apocalypse In all Asia Graecia Macedonia Syria Palestina and many famous countries else where are nowe their churches Yea to come yet nearer home What is become of the Churches in many Countries and Islands which our eyes haue seene to flourish The famous kingdome of Hungarie the great Countrie of Liuonia howe haue barbarous tyrants layde them waste that scarce one Church of Christ hath peace within them These are the punishementes which God hath executed for the contempt of his Gospell and our eyes and the eyes of our children this day haue seene it If we will not be warned but doe as we do despise the Gospell more then all nations round aboute vs suffer mockers and scorners to make their banquets among vs giue leaue to proude men to haue their pleasures at home and come not once to the church in xiiii or xv yere let the wolues loose whose rauening teeth are yet red and their bellies ful with the bloud of Gods saincts if we will do greater abhominations then these I wil not appoint times and seasons for so God hath not sent me hither a Prophet but as the scourge will surely come so I dare boldly say The wiseman seeth the plague comming and hideth him but the foole goeth on forward is snared It foloweth in the Apostle in the 3. and 4. verse Which at the first began to be preached c. The Apostle continueth yet his reason added to this exhortation of taking heed to the Gospel which as he did before of the excellencie of Christ the teacher of it so repeating that he addeth also for the more glorie of it the way and manner in whiche it was taught respecting heerein the glorious manner how the law was giuen lest thereby any should lesse regarde the Gospel And this manner of teaching he magnifieth first by the authour who was no Angel but the Lord himselfe then by the minissters of it who were not one but many and euerie one in as honourable and assured a calling as Moses himselfe Thirdly that the preaching of it was with signes wonders powers and sundrie special gifts of the holy ghost euen as it pleased God to distribute them So that they shal be without excuse all the despisers of it Heere some haue thought that this epistle can not be Paules because he sayth They which heard this Gospel of Christ himselfe they haue cōfirmed it to vs which thing Paul neuer saith but always standeth vpon this that he receiued it by Reuelation This reason is not vnlikely neither yet is it necessarie for S. Iude being an Apostle yet saith Remember the wordes which before this you haue heard of the Apostles And as Paul would not lightly haue spoken it in his owne person so heere his name beeing concealed and making him selfe one with those to whome hee writeth he might well speake it And it is not to be pretermitted that he saith not it was taught vs but it was confirmed vnto vs which might be said euen of Paule him selfe being confirmed by Ananias and conferring with Peter Iames Iohn c. and manie other wayes Therefore this is a thing still doubtful and whether it were Paule or not Paule we cannot tell That he sayth heere of signes woonders and powers he calleth miracles signes because they were testimonies seales to vs of the doctrine to be from God hee calleth them woonders because they were straunge and shewed an vnwonted woorke not knowen of men he calleth them powers because they had an euident profe of the power of God the sundrie distributions of the spirite hee calleth the extraordinarie giftes which followed those that did heleeue as our Sauiour Christ promised whereof S. Paule speaketh at large 1. Cor. 12. And thus the Apostle endeth this exhortation that we would carefully hearken to the Gospell giuen by Christe preached by the Apostles confirmed by the gifts of the holie ghost whose contempt God our heauenly Father will moste assuredly reuenge Now let vs examine againe the words and applie them to our particular instruction In the firste verse wher it is said we ought more diligently to harkē to the things that we haue heard we learne one lesson verie necessarie for our time and with which we may stopp the mouths of a great many papists when we reason with them about the studie of the scriptures howe all men ought to knowe them if we alledge the moste cleare places as in the vj. of Deuter. These words shal be in thine hart Thou shalt rehearse them to thy children thou shalt talke of them at home in thy house and when thou art in thy way when thou liest down whē thou risest vp Thou shalt binde them for a signe vpon thy hands and they shall be as a frontlet betweene thine eyes Thou shalt write thē in the entrie of thine house and graue them vpon thy gates These and such like places they haue learned thus to answere All that was ment in y olde lawe now Christ hath giuen the holie ghost to the church and it can not erre therefore we must heare her Whether this be not wilfully to be blind see nothing nowe iudge when you heare the Apostle making comparison namely betweene our fathers of the olde testament and vs he sayth that wee are more bounde to the doctrine taught by Christe in his gospel then all our fathers to the law of Moses But they say God hath giuen his holie spirit to the church to guide it in all trueth First I answere this helpeth them nothing for it is a common argument which all sectaries and scismatiques may like wise boast of it But let them proue first that the church of Rome is the church of christ Now touching this gift of Gods spirite powred vppon vs I say it is a promise to the particular comforte of euerie one that wee shall neuer fall from the grace and loue of God it is not a warrant generally to all that the church shal be euer in open rule gouernement no blemish within
are spoken of thee thou Citie of God. There is neither Sunne nor Moone sea nor land golde nor siluer meate nor drinke no elementes of the worlde no obseruations of Moses lawe no traditions of men that is ouer man but man ruleth all and all is vnder his feete Here streight way bothe Iewe Gentile saith These be in deed golden promises but where are these honourable personages you speake of Are not we as our fathers were and doth not death deuour vs To this the Apostle aunswereth I graunt we do not yet see with our eyes how these thinges are but I say againe our eyes are no iudges in this case The glorie is not earthly and the kingdom is not of this world wherof we speak but the riches spirituall and of the spirituall man they are discerned Know thy selfe y by saith thou art Christs and he thine that he died for thee and thou liuest by him that thou art fleshe of his fleshe bone of his bone a member of his bodie and what soeuer is his is thine haue this faith and now come and see and thou shalt see all the glorie of the worlde lesse then the glorie of suche a man for thou seest Christe humbled in deede once that he might suffer death but euen then when he was in the shape of a seruaunt thou sawest him full of grace trueth euen as the onely begotten sonne of God thou sawest him soft of speache but of merucilous wisedome plaine in teaching but full of grace and power simple in countenaunce but of an inuincible courage of lowe degree but of excellent power of no account among men but great in miracles at which man was astonished Thus thou hast seene Christ euen when he was lowest highly exalted that thou hast no good cause to reason against thy dignitie though thine eye see not euen in this time all things subiect vnto thee but see further into our Sauiour Christ and thou shalt see more of thine owne honour Thou haste seene him in thy fleash raysed from the dead and in thy nature ascended into Heauen that man in his person might be crowned with glorie and honour we haue seene him carrie our fleash into the presēce of God his father and it is no more possible to take this glorie from vs as many as bee one with him then it is possible to pul away againe his personal humanitie from the person of his godhead This I see in Christ and know it in my selfe And what though yet a while the outward man be grieued Thou foole that which thou sowest it reuiueth not againe except it first dye a litle corne of wheate it can not haue vertue to becōe thirtie fourtie times better then it was beeing multiplied to so many all as good as it selfe bringing beside fruitfull increase of strawe and chaffe except it firste bee cast in the ground dye And how shouldest thou haue a change but if thou be first corrupt And how much art thou better then a graine of corne y thou mightest surely know whē through corruptiō thou shalt come into incorruption that thy glorie shal be then vnspekable althings shall serue thee to make thy life infinitely blessed more then it is Thy hope now if thou couldst inlarge it a thousand folde yet it shuld be greter thē thou cāst imagine thy faith if it could comprehend more assurance of immortalitie then y eye doth surely of y light of the sunne yet y shalt finde y fruite of it aboue al thy thoughts This thou seest if thou see Christe and this thou knowest to be thine if thou know thy self to be one with him And for thy sinns howsoeuer they cleaue vnto thy bones hate them as thou hatest hell for from thence they are and the diuel worketh them but care not for them for though they were heauie in weight and manie in number what then thou haste thy hope not in thine owne person but in the bodie of Christ into which thou art graffed and in which there is no ▪ spott nor blemish but perfecte righteousnesse euen before God and in him as all other things so sinne also is putt vnder thy feete and thou art ruler ouer●…t And thus farr of the doctrine of the Apostle heere taught vs in this his Exhortation Nowe let vs returne to his other purpose howe he teacheth the humanitie of our Sauiour Christe the first reason whereof is in these wordes That hee might tast of death for all For as to the end he might suffer death it was necessarie he should be humbled because death else could not come into his presence so suffering death that man might bee deliuered by that death it was necessarie that hee him selfe should be man for so were the iust iudgements of God he gaue man a lawe pronounced a curse to him that brake it therfore whē we had all trespassed we were fallen into the punishment of our sinne for y threatnings of God are not as the words of a man that can alter or by some intercession that they can be mitigated but with God there is no change nor shadow of change that whiche with him is once purposed was euer decreed and his words are not weake but what he hath threatened if we fal into his hands all the creatures of the worlde haue no helpe for thee So that this beeing decreed of God Cursed is he that abideth not in all things written in this booke all people must nedes say Amen And The soule that sinneth must nedes dye redemption from this there is none to be loked for but by suffering of it for y Lord had spoken it must be done so our Sauiour Christ sith he would deliuer vs he must be made man like vnto vs and in our nature dye the death Our sinnes are not imputed vnto vs but they were imputed vnto him The punishment of them is forgiuen vs but it was not forgiuen him Righteousnesse is freely giuen vs but it was not freely giuen him He obeyed the lawe of his father euery iot and euery title that he might fulfill all righteousnesse He bare the condemnation of hell and death that he might abolish it He tooke vppon him the guiltinesse of our sinnes and bare them in his owne bodie y he might nay le them vpon his crosse Whē it pleased God our heauenlie father of his greate mercie to accept the obedience of his lawe for our perfecte righteousnesse and to giue vnto it the recompence of eternall life and when it pleased God to accept this for a full punishment of all the sinnes of man if any man could bee found to beare it before God and ouercome it our Sauiour Christ craued no more but this the residue he perfourmed all in his owne bodie and by his eternall spirite ouercame it so that in him is life in him is righteousnes in him is immortalitie in him is the reconciled good wil of God and that excellent wisdōe
righteousnes al the dayes of our life who is our only Sauiour to whom with the father the holie ghost be glorie for euer Amē The seuenth Lecture vpon the 1. 2. 3. 4. verses of the 2. chapter 1 WHerefore we ought diligently to giue heede to the things which we haue heard least at any time we runne out 2 For if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and euerie trangression and disobedience receiued a iust recompence of rewarde 3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great saluation which at the first began to bee preached by the Lorde and afterward was confirmed vnto vs by them that heard him 4 God bearing witnesse thereto bothe with signes wonders and with diuerse miracles and giftes of the holie Ghost according to his owne will WE haue hearde before howe that the Apostle after he had sette it downe that Christ was the Prophet of the new Testament that we might truely giue him this glorie streight hee magnifieth his person by many titles and by comparison with Angels proueing vnto vs that he is verie GOD. Now to shewe more clearely for what purpose all those praises of Christ were rehearsed himselfe maketh his conclusion in the beginning of this second Chapter that therefore we should most carefully hearken vnto him alone And this is the first part of this Chapter before the Apostle came as I tolde you to proue that our Sauiour Christ is also perfect man In this exhortation first the Apostle setteth downe his doctrine then his reason by whiche he will persuade vs vnto it his doctrine is this That it behoueth vs now more carefully to hearken to the woordes of Christe then afore time it behoued our forefathers to hearken to the lawe of Moses For where he sayth We ought more diligently he maketh this comparison plainly with the fathers in the olde lawe in the second verse following And heere we must wisely consider why he sayth We ought to be more carefull then they not that they might remitt any care for expresly they are charged with all care to adde nothing to take away nothing to chaunge nothing not to depart neither to the right hand nor yet to the left but day and night at home and abroade to do always this to studie it continually without intermission as appeareth in Deut. 4. 6. 5. 32. 6. 6. 11. 18. 12. 32. 28. 14. Ios. 1. 8. 33. 6. many other places Nor it is not saide that we be more bound then they as thoughe the authoritie of God were changed but this is spoken after our sense because now Christ hath spoken by himselfe then by angels now plainely then in figures therefore we ought more carefully to hearken not that all care ought not to be in them as wel as in vs but because our punish ment shall be more then theirs euen as we shall be despicers of the greater grace After this the Apostle addeth his reason to persuade vs to this especiall carefulnesse aboue all other people to hearken to the voice of Christe and that is of the perill that insueth Least saith he we run out The Apostle vseth a Metaphore taken of olde tubbes which runne out at the ioyntes and can holde no liquour In such a phrase of speache one sayth of him selfe I am full of creuisses or little holes and I flowe out on this side and on that meaning thereby that euerie vaine thing whiche hee heard he would blab it out so wee if we take into vs the sweete wine of the word of Christ as into old bottels and broken vessels that it runne out againe we become then altogether vnprofitable all goodnesse falleth away and we be as water powred vpon the ground This Metaphore the woman of Tekoa vsed to Dauid when in describing an vtter desolation of the people she said We are as water spilt on the ground which cannot be gathered vp againe And Dauid him self describing the extremitie of all miserie which was come vpon him he said I am like water powred out and all my bones are out of ioynt Likewise when he prayeth that all the plagues of God may fall vpon the wicked til they be consumed to nothing he sayth thus Let them mealt like the waters let them passe away So the Apostle noting the extreame perill and ine●…table death that is in neglecting the worde of Christe this glorious sonne of God he sayeth Take hede lest we be poured out meaning as water powred on the ground and is neuer after profitable any more And if you will see an example what this flowing away meaneth beholde the Iewes this day to whome it is threatened A despised people whose verie name is as a cursse so they haue flowed out and are come to ruine if their example doe make vs wise then this exhortation of the Apostle is not to vs in vaine It followeth in the second thirde verse For if the word spoken by Angels c. saluation In these words the Apostle aggrauateth his reason forceth it the more to feare the people He vseth to this end an argument of the comparison before made betweene Christ and the Angels that if the lawe giuen by angels were not broken without seuere punishment because it was giuen by such glorious spirites how much more shall we be punished if we despise this great saluatiō preached by the sonne of God That the lawe was giuen by Angels the scripture heere is plaine Moses saith of the deliuerie of it The Lord came with tenne thousand of Saincts And S. Paule sayth expressely the same Gal. 5. 19. And Saint Stephan likewise Act. 7. 53. And how can it be otherwise For when there was in the mounteine thunders lightenings tempestes fearefull sounds of a trumpet and the voyce of a man heard I am the Lord thy God that brought thee c. what could this bee but the ministerie of Angels For it must needes be true which our sauiour Christ sayth No man hath heard the voyce of God at any time Neither then could the maiestie of God speake but the voyce of his mouth would haue shaken vnto nothing bothe men and mounteine and all the elementes that were before him For howe can corruption stande in his presence If we doubt because of the wordes that the voyce sayth I am the Lord thy God And againe in the third of Exodus it saith I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaach the God of Iacob true it is that our Sauiour Christ then spake who is the God of glorie but he spake not in the voyce of his Godhead but in the likenesse of an Angel which he tooke vppon him For thoughe it be true that he tooke not the nature of angels nor was made one of them yet in his heauenly wisedome he tooke vppon him the likenesse of an Angel and according to that nature so spake wordes so that still this is true The lawe was giuen by
example of this humilitie is our Sauiour Christe him selfe to reache vs modestie that are but men for he who so loued the people of Israel that he weapt ouer their Citie when they would not repent prayed for them when they houng him on the crosse gaue his life for them when they had cast him off and would none of his saluation he that had this vnchangeable loue to his brethren flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone 〈◊〉 yet when he called his humane thoughts to y consideration of the decree of God he humbled him selfe changed his affections reioyced in other thoughts and said I thanke thee O father that thou hast bid these thinges from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto little ones Whē he saw he was sent their minister for the trueth of God to confirme the promises made vnto their Fathers he had no other longinge but how to winne them when he sawe an other counsell of God that they were not all Israel which were of Israel he knewe this was best reioyced in spirite gaue glorie vnto God and would not reason of his vnsearcheable iudgements Who is he now or of what wisdome that dare dispute against the counsel of God Are we greater then Moses wiser then the Prophets or higher then our Sauiour Christ Or haue all these helde their peace at Gods workes that we should reason against them Let vs then rule our selues or rather let vs be ruled of the Lord that we may say as the Apostle saide and this may be reason of all our beleefe So the Lord hath thought good A place much like vnto this is in the 24. of Luke when the two disciples y went to Ema●…s marueled exceedingly at al the things that had happened vnto Christ so that their faith began to fayle them thus our Sauiour Christe reprooueth them and all the reasoning that was with●… them O fooles slowe of heart to beleue all that the prophets haue spoken must not Christ needs suffer these things and so enter into glorie He referreth them first to the prophets to know y this was the decree of God but thē layeth a necessitie vpon the perfourmance of his word that it must needes be so And if that be not onely good onely iust onely wise in our sight that are but men let vs not boast there is no cause in this worlde of out misliking but because wee bee fooles slowe of heart to beleeue And thus farre the thing it selfe speaketh howe meete it is for vs to humble our selues vnder all the ordinaunces of God. It followeth in the Apostle For whom are al things by whom are all things this is a singular reason why we should be obedient and aske none account of all the dooinges of the lord Is man afflicted Why should he not be so The Lord hath done it and for the Lord hee was made Are the reprobate ordeined to destructiō Why should they not The lord so ordeined it and for the Lord they were made Are the elect freely saued Why should they not The Lord hath saued them and for the Lord they were made Yea but the reason of these things I see not yea but ô man who art thou that takest a contrarie part to dispute against God Are not all thinges for him and art thou onely enuious against his glorie Thus dearely beloued carrie the word of God to leane on beleeue assuredly it shall be fulfilled and thinke that it is best and you shal not be moued for euer If you come in place with those auncient worne creatures who with a colour of gray haire which is the wisest part in them so long deceiue our people they or their disciples if they reason against you Hath God forsaken his Church a thousand yeare and were all our fathers deceiued before Luther was borne such antiquitie vnitie vniuersalitie was it all in errour These wordes taken vp againe in our dayes and countenanced with the gray heads of our Phariseies Watson Fecknam Cole Heath and other like ô Lorde how manie men doe they deceiue For their owne reason lifteth vp it self they say How can this be so So many wise so many learned so many noble all deceiued Had God forgotten to be mercifull First I would aske of these men but this one question and if they will not willingly be deceiued let them answer as they thinke What one word of all these bothe might not and did not the Phariseies say against our Sauiour Christe And howe dare they nowe reason against the Gospell of Christe with the same argument with whiche the Phariseies reasoned against Christ But they will say now Christ hath made a promise to be with his Churche to the ende And had he not made this promise before It not Iesus Christe bothe to day and yesterday and the same worlde without ende Looke in the 18. of Deut. and in the 59. of Esaie as absolute as full a promise then as nowe But they were not so long in errour put case they were not he who punished the transgression of the lawe giuen by Angels with 400. yeres blindnesse may not he punish the transgression against his Gospell giuen by his onely sonne with 800. or a 1000. yeres blindnesse But for your sakes dearly beloued I do more then I woulde and with reason I confute them whiche haue no reason Let vs come to the text answere out of it Was the world deceiued so many hundred yeres Why should it not The Lord ordeined that there should come an apostasie and a generall fall from the faith of Christ that the world might be seduced with the man of sinne whose age began in the Apostles times and shall not vtterly die till the day of christ Thus the Lorde appointed and so let it be for all thinges are for his glorie And here let vs rest in all the thinges that ●…uer our hearts can thinke vpon if we can see no reason of the word of God we can see humilitie to confesse before him ô the deapth of the riches and of the wisedome and of the knowledge of God! How vnsearchable are his iudgements how are his wayes without finding out And because we knowe that of him by him and in him are all thinges let vs speake it To him be glorie for euermore All counsels all doctours all examples all decrees all what you will they are not our scholemaisters but our fellowe scholers that we may learne together out of the worde of God whose decree shal stand for euer whose iudgements are perfect righteousnes That which followeth in the latter ende of the verse To consecrate him by afflictions or to make him perfect by afflictions the meaning is that Christ in his death accomplished a full redemption and so was prepared to receiue an inheritance of glorie not attributing so this worke to his death as though all his life had ben impertinent for in al his