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

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that the Lord hath sent me to doe all these workes for I haue not done them of mine owne mind 29 If these men dye the common death of all men Or if they be visited after the visitation of all men then the Lord hath not sent me 30 But if the Lord make a new thing and the earth open her mouth and swallow them vp with all that appertaine vnto them and they go downe quick into the pit then ye shall vnderstand that these men haue prouoked the Lord. 31 And as soone as hee had made an end of speaking c. In these words see the willing obedience of the people to the former Commaundement They were willed to separate from the Tents of those wicked they doe separate and depart from them by and by they gate them vp from their Tabernacles And Moses doth notably confirme them in their obedience by foretelling both the death Doctrine the maner of the death of these rebels We learn from hence God alwayes warneth before hee striketh that God neuer bringeth any greeuous iudgement vpon any people or nation nor vpon any priuat person but hee doth alwaies first forewarne the same and foretelleth it God alwayes teacheth before he punisheth and hee warneth before hee striketh Amos chapt 3. verse 7. Luk. 13 verse 7. 1 Kings 22 17. We reade that the world was once drowned by water and it shall be destroyed the second time by fire Of the first destruction we finde that he foretold it vnto Noah before euer hee brought it vppon the face of the earth Gen. 6. verse 3. Heb. 11. verse 7. 1 Pet. 3.20 And touching the second destruction of the world by fire GOD hath not left vs ignorant but in diuers places of the Scripture hath set it downe vnto vs 2. Pet. 3 7 10. Reason 1. The Reasons hereof are partly in regard of the godly and partly in regard of the vngodly Touching the first he would not take his owne people at vnawares because hee loueth them and would haue none of them to perish but would haue all come to repentance 2 Pet. 3 9. that so they might preuent his iudgements Amos 4 12. Secondly touching the vngodly and such as are not the Lords they shal thereby be made without excuse their mouths are stopped and the iustice of God is cleared they hauing nothing to answer for themselues or to accuse God of any vniust dealing Iohn 15 22. These men therefore must learne to accuse themselues because they had warning but they would not bee warned he would haue healed them but they would not bee healed Ier. 20 6. 51.9 1 King 22 25. Vse 1 Acknowledge from hence the great mercy and wonderfull patience of God whose maner is alwaies to giue warning before hee send iudgement This the Lord needeth not to doe for vpon our owne peril we are bound to take heed of his iudgements before they come yet so good is our God that hee onely deserueth this title to be called the good Lord as Hezekia calleth him 2 Chron. 30 18. The good Lord pardon euery one that prepareth his heart He wold haue vs preuent his punishments before they fall and to send out our prayers as Ambassadors to God to treate of conditions of peace with him He doth not play the part of a subtil enemy to steale vpon vs at vnawares forasmuch as before he striketh he alwaies forewarneth that thereby he might saue all those that belong vnto him and bring vpon others iust condemnation How graciously dealt he with Korah and his fellowes with Dathan Abiran How often did Moses warne them Who is it then that ought not to confesse that God willeth not the death of a sinner Or who can deny but that these malefactors perished most iustly Vse 2 Secondly when we see any ouertaken with any iudgement we must confesse that God is true as in his promises so also in his threatnings If his desire were not that we should preuent them doubtlesse he would neuer giue warning of them If he had a will and purpose to destroy vs he would not tell vs before hād both that he would bring them and shew vs the way how to auoide them There is no man that can iustly say that the silence of God and the holding of his peace is the cause of his security he causeth a trumpet to sound the alarme before hee set himselfe in battell array against his enemies For his manner is neuer to come with any iudgement but he alwaies sendeth a warning peece before Obiect But some man will say It was thus indeed in the time of the prophets but wee haue no Prophets in these daies to foret l things to come as in former times they had and therefore we haue no such direction I answer these men as Abraham did the rich man in the Gospel An wer that his brethren had Moses and the Prophets among them If they will not beleeue them neither will they be perswaded although one rose from the dead Luke 16 31. True it is that Moses and the Prophets were dead long before but his meaning is they had the bookes of the Law and the writings of the Prophets before them they were read preached in their Synagogues euery Sabbath day Acts 15 21. So I may truly say that wee haue Prophets among vs and all that contemne them shall know there hath bene a Prophet among them Ezek. 33 33. For we haue the holy Scriptures wherein are contained the workes of the Prophets and Apostles and beside these GOD hath giuen vs his Ministers that they should as it were put life againe into the dead Prophets that is that they should open declare vnto vs those things that are doubtful and obscure and therefore if any bee admonished by them that such such iudgments shal come and they threaten plagues according to the generall directions which they haue in the word Deut. 28 15 16. Leuit. 26.15 16. Let vs not withstand the Spirit speaking in them for it is the wonderfull goodnesse of God that he vouchsafeth to send them vnto vs and to tell vs before of his iudgements Lastly it is the duty of euery one to make Vse 3 good vse of the word of God to know that God looketh for attention and obedience at our hands that so he may not bee inforced to proceed against vs in iudgement O happy are they that seek the Lord while he may be found and call vpon him while he is neere Esay 55 6. Such then as reiect the Ministery of the word reiect their owne peace and bring vpon themselues sundry iudgements The word goeth before to prepare our hearts and it is a two-edged sword piercing euen to the diuiding asunder of soule and spirit Heb. 4 12. But if we be so hard-hearted made of mettal tougher then brasse and iron Reuel 1 1 that this sword going out of the mouth of God cannot enter into vs hee
and out of which he is shortly to depart Or will he be patching that Tent and Tabernacle which hee hath pitched for a day or two We dwell in earthly Tabernacles as in houses of clay 2 Cor. 5 4. 2 Pet. 1 14. What wisedome then is it to bestow daies and moneths and yeares in plotting plodding for the world for riches and the vanities of this life Let vs also prepare and prouide before hand for the day of our dissolution that such as God hath blessed with this worlds good set their houses and their estates in order as the Prophet in this regard warneth Hezekiah Esay 38 1. Set thine house in order for thou must dye And we may learne this necessary practise of Ahitophel though liuing in wickednes and dying in despaire of whom the Scripture saieth whē he saw that his counsell was not followed he went home vnto his City put his house in order hanged himselfe 2 Sam. 17 23. This duty is to be thought vpon in health as that which deepely concerneth our selues and our posterity When we haue rightly disposed the things of this life let vs prepare for a Nunc dimittis let vs commend our spirits into the hands of God let vs resigne vp our selues willingly to death when we must enter into a particular iudgement For so soone as the soule is departed and separated from the body God holdeth his Sessions to which we are summoned by his messenger death to come into his presence to receiue in part according to our workes whether they be good or euill Euen as we see in the affaires of this life how Iudges and Iustices keepe their sessions and assises wherein malefactors brought out of prison are arraigned so God holdeth his time of iudgement and iustice to reward euery one according to his works We haue all a cause and case to bee tried the greatest the weightiest the worthiest that euer was handled not touching siluer gold not concerning house or land not of titles or inheritances but of the euerlasting saluation or dānation of our soules for euer and therefore it standeth vs in hand to be well armed thoroughly appointed that we come not as the foolish Virgins without oyle in our lampes or as the vnprepared guest without our wedding garment We see in temporall Courts when men haue a cause to be tried and an action to be determined either of goods or good name how carefull they are before hand to reade Euidences to produce witnesses and to search Records that the suite may passe on their sides how much more carefull ought wee to be to answer before the eternall Iudge where no man shall be admitted to appeare by his Atturney but all must come in their owne persons none shall be suffered to put in sureties This wil be a great day whē the whole world shall appeare together at once high and low Prince and Subiect noble and vnnoble according to the description that Iohn maketh I saw the dead both great small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the booke according to their works Reuel 20 12. And was buried there Hitherto of the death of Miriam now of that which followed her death to wit her buriall See heere when life was departed what they did with the body they committed it to the earth The Doctrine from hence is this that it is a necessary duty to bury the dead Doctrine A commendable duty 〈◊〉 bury the dead This appeareth by many examples of the godly which haue practised this duty Gen. 23 4. Abraham the father of the faithfull bought a possession of burial of the Hittites who by the sight and light of nature had their Sepulchers therefore answered Abraham Gen. 23 6. 35 29 50 12 13. Thou art a Prince of God among vs in the cheefest of our Sepulchers bury thy dead none of vs shall forbid thee his Sepulcher but thou maist bury thy dead therein So ch 25 8 9. when Abraham yeelded the spirit and died in a good age and was gathered to his people his sonnes Isaac Ishmael buried him in the Caue of Machpelah in the field of Hephron where Abraham was buried with Sarah his wife The like we see done to Isaac when he gaue vp the ghost being old and full of daies his two sonnes Esau and Iacob buried him Now as Iacob did to his father so his children do to him according as hee had commanded them for his sonnes carried him into the land of Canaan and buried him in the Caue of the field of Machpelah which Abraham had bought The like may be said of Moses Deut. 34 5 6. for albeit the people buried him not neither knew of his Sepulcher lest they shold abuse it to idolatry yet rather then he should want buriall he was buried of God The men of Iabesh Gilead are praised of God and rewarded of Dauid because they buried King Saul and his sonne and aduentured their liues to do vnto him their last duty 2 Sa. 2 5 6. The same might be said of the rest of the Patriarks Prophets Iudges Kings Gouernours and Priests yea of Christ himselfe whose buriall albeit he were able immediately to haue raised and restored himselfe to life is set downe in the Gospel that his death might be confirmed and his farther humiliation manifested These examples teach that it is a christian and commendable duty of the liuing to be performed to the dead of children to bee performed to their parents and of the people of God one to another to commit the body of the deceased to the graue to put dust to dust and so to couer earth with earth And no maruaile For first among all creatures Reason 1 man is most loathsome and vgly when life is departed As in his birth and bringing foorth into the world of all creatures hee is most fraile and feeble without strength to stand without helpe to defend himselfe so being dead he is most fraile filthy and deformed He that a litle before gloried in his beauty comelinesse feature proportion is now become the mirror and spectacle of a deformed and mishapen carkasse Such a confusion and wracke hath sinne wrought and brought into our nature This made Abraham to say to the Hittites I am a stranger a forreiner among you giue me a possession of buriall to bury with you that I may bury my dead out of my sight Gen. 23 4. This is noted in Lazarus who hauing lien buried but foure daies his b●dy stanke Iohn 11 39. Reason 2 Secondly buriall is promised as a blessing from God and the want of it threatened for a plague and iudgement God offereth it as a mercy to Abraham ●5 15. that he should be buried in a ripe age and to Iosiah that he should bee put in his graue in peace ● 22 19 and
in his hart knowing that such outrage hapneth not without great iniquity of men and desiring rather to liue quietly and to maintaine peace and concord with all men as farre as it is possible and as much as lyeth in vs as if our hands were tied behind vs from committing any outrage or euill deeds Lastly because the liberty licentiousnesse of Souldiers is many times left free and is without bit and bridle to restraine them it belongeth to Captaines and Gouernors of the hoast to range the common Souldier in good order and military discipline that they breake not out to endamage or destroy those whome they ought aboue all to protect and defend Warre is iudged and esteemed of them to be the time wherin lawes are silent and al things held lawfull that their owne heart lusteth after Hence it commeth to passe that there is such thirsting after goods deflowring of virgines rauishing of wiues slaughter of parents robbing of houses burning of Churches and scorning of religion and all holy things yea making a mocke of Christ our Sauiour So then if seuere discipline be not vsed order taken that the people liuing in peace bee not abused all thinges will be held lawfull beside right and honesty iniuries will be accounted good dealing and all things taken to be common and to belong to him that first can seaze vpon them It is saide of the Centurion in the Gospell that his authority was such ouer them that belonged to his band that none durst oppose themselus against him or resist his charge that hee gaue vnto them saying I am a man also vnder the authority of another Math 8 9. and haue Souldiers vnder me and I say to one goe and he goeth and to another Come and he commeth and to my seruant Do this and he doth it This was a commendation both of the Captaine that so ordered and ruled them that he had them so obedient and seruiceable vnto him and likewise of the Souldiers that would submit themselues vnto his authority and suffer themselues to be gouerned according to the martiall lawes of a well trained garrison But of this point occasion will be offered to speak in this booke afterward chap. 21. ver 28. and chap. 24. verse 20. and chap. 25. ver 17. chap. 31 7. Verse 5 These are the names of the men that shall stand with you of the tribe of Ruben Elizur the sonne of Shedeur c. As this Booke of Moses beareth the title of Numbers so a great part of it is spent in numbering of the people to assure vs that God hath numbred those that are his he keepeth the tale of them none are hidden from him none escape his knowledge Doctrine 2. The Lord knoweth the number the names of all such as belōg to him or sight Wee learne from hence that the Lord knoweth perfectly who they are that are his both what their numbers and what their names are When Israel had corrupted their wayes and set vp idolatry so that Elias thought himselfe left alone what saide the Oracle of God that made answere vnto him 1 King 19 10 18. Rom. 11 3 4. I haue reserued vnto my selfe seauen thousand men which haue not bowed the knee to Baal Where we see the Lord saw not as man seeth hee knew those whom Elias could not know To this end the Prophet saith Psalme 147 5. Psal 147.5 He counteth the number of the stars and calleth them all by their names albeit to man it be incredible and vnpossible that hee should number and name the starres in the firmament yet this to him shall not bee hard much lesse vnpossible Thus sayeth the Lorde also by the Prophet Esay Esay 40 26. Lift vp your eyes on high and behold who hath created these thinges and bringeth out their armies by numbers and calleth them all by names by the greatnesse of his power and mighty strength nothing faileth Heereunto wee may referre that vsuall phrase of speech in the Scripture that the names of the elect are saide to be written in the booke of life which God hath made Exod. 32 32. Psal 69 28. Philip. 4 3. Reuel 20 12. which is a borrowed speech from such records as are kept in a Citie wherein the names of the Freemen and Cittizens in the same are written All these testimonies are so many consents of the Scripture to prooue and confirme this truth namely that the seruants of GOD are knowne to him and approoued of him not onely in generall but specially and particularly so that he is able both to number them and to name them The reasons are not hard to bee gathered Reason 1 First the knowledge of God is so exact and perfect that most secret things are knowne and the smallest are regarded of him What is a lesse matter or of lesse moment then a Sparrow that doeth fall to the ground Or the haires that fall from the head yet euen these are ordered by him and his diuine prouidence ouerswayeth them This Christ our Sauiour putteth in our minds in the tenth chapter of Saint Mathew and the 29 30. verses Are not two Sparrowes solde for a Farthing And one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father yea and the haires of your head are numbred If then thinges so small and slight and little regarded of men bee numbred of Almighty GOD much more are wee respected of him And if our verie haires bee numbred much more are our names Secondly Christ Iesus setteth foorth himselfe Reason 2 as the true Sheepheard of his Sheepe A Sheepheard knoweth his owne Sheepe whereof hee hath taken the charge and ouersight Christ is the Sheepheard the Church is the Flocke his word is the staffe whereby hee ruleth and the pastures wherewith he feedeth them and therefore hee knoweth them all by their names A good Sheepeheard oftentimes numbreth his Sheepe and misseth none of them but hee seeketh the lost one So is it with Christ hee is a farre better Sheepeheard and more faithfull then those that haue the guidance and gouernance of such as are but for the belly and the slaughter For he giueth his life for the Sheepe This hee teacheth at large in the tenth Chapter of Saint Iohn and the 2.3 and 11. verses I I am that good Sheepeheard that good Sheepeheard that giueth his life for his Sheepe to him the Porter openeth and the Sheep heare his voice and hee calleth his owne Sheepe by name and leadeth them out Seeing then Christ is a faithfull Sheepeheard hee cannot bee ignorant of our numbers or our names or our natures Thirdly all his people are euermore present Reason 3 with him wheresoeuer they bee yea albeit they bee absent from him yea albeit they haue no beeing Hee seeth them when they are from him hee knoweth them when they are not Nathaniel was seene of Christ Iohn 1 47. and knowne by name beeing farre from him while hee was vnder the Figge-tree
Princes hold their Crownes and Scepters by the gift of God and therefore none but hee that gaue them can take them away from them They were accountable to him but to no mortall man whatsoeuer Ambros in his Apol. of Dauid chap. 10. and therefore Dauid saide To thee onely I haue sinned Psal 51 4. And this teacheth them a good lesson to remember that they must one day appeare before the iudgement seate of God and plead before his barre guilty or not guilty as now their subiects doe before them This then is the Regall tenour to hold immediatly from God to whom they must doe homage and fealty for their Crownes and Kingdomes It is not vnknowne what exorbitant courses the Bishop of Rome hath taken exalting himselfe from a Christian Pastour to bee an Antichristian Pope and from a Pope to a temporall Prince and from a temporall Prince to be a supreme Monarch ouer all and to haue omnipotent power as a vice-god on earth Such Almain-leapes in good time there is good hope will breake his backe nay his necke and free the Christian world from his yoke and bondage worse a thousand times then the slauery of the Israelites in Egypt when God shall open the eyes of all Christian Princes to see his vsurped ambition dominion which God grant for the glory of his Name and the saluation of the poore people that are held in more thē Turkish captiuity Lastly we must acknowledge that Magistrates Vse 3 are of great necessity forasmuch as the end of their Office is the good and benefit of the people ouer whom they are placed Lam. 4 20. They serue as a comfortable shadow to preserue vs from the scorching fires of raging persecuters like the gourd of Ionah which came ouer his head to deliuer him from the heare of the Sunne Ionah 4 6 8 which serueth to condemne the Anabaptists which cannot abide any gouernment or gouernors whereas we must learne to pray for them and to be subiect vnto them which are the Lords Shepheards ouer his flocke without whom nothing is to be seene but miserable disorder confusion of all things Iudg. 18. For a Commonwealth without a Gouernor is as a body without an head as a shippe without a Pilot as an army without a Leader or as an house without a Ruler The losse of a good and godly Prince is a great losse and greatly to be lamented 2 Chron. 35 verse 24. Zach. 12 verse 11. CHAP. XXVIII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Command the Children of Israel and say vnto them My offering and my bread for my sacrifices c. 3. And thou shalt say vnto them This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer vnto the Lord Two Lambes of the first yeare without spot day by day for a continuall burnt offering 4. The one Lambe shalt thou offer in the morning and the other Lambe shalt thou offer at euen 5. And a tenth part of an Ephah c. 6. It is a continuall burnt offering c. 7. And the drinke roffering c. 8. And the c. MOSES hauing set downe the numbering of the people proceedeth to handle the lawes vnder which they ought to be wherof some belong to Church-matters and some to the Common-wealth some sacred and some ciuill Such as are holy haue the first place and that worthily which order sheweth that the Common-wealth can neuer be well established vntill the Church be rightly ordered Doctrine The first and chiefe care is to be had of the Church and matters of religion The first and chiefe care is to be had of the Church and afterward of the ciuill state Commonwealth They begin at a wrong ende that begin with matters of policy as if a man should be very carefull to looke to the body but be carelesse of looking to the soule or should haue regard to the foote and vtterly neglect the head It was euermore the manner of the godly religious Kings of Iudah to beginne first with Church-matters and looking to religion and ordering the preaching of the Word and administration of the Sacraments as wee see in Dauid Iehoshaphat Hezekiah and Iosiah So did Zerubbabel immediately after their return from captiuity as wee see in the booke of Ezra Reason 1 And no maruaile for true religion is the soule and life of the Commonwealth without this it cannot prosper and florish but is as a dead carkasse without life it may carry a goodly shew and seeme to promise peace perpetuity but it is not well grounded and will deceiue in the end witnesse the Monarchies of the world which all receiued theyr decaying and declining in theyr times seasons of which before chap. 3. Secondly true religion is that onely which instructeth all sorts in true obedience teacheth them to performe theyr duties which is the meanes to establish a Commonwealth to order it aright when euery one knoweth his standing and no man encrocheth vpon the calling of another and the contrary bringeth confusion Thirdly euery one is charged to seeke the glory of God aboue his owne good and to set vp him before our selues For as he wil not giue his glory to any other so we ought to take heed we do not rob him of it But when we haue the first care to establish matters of religion then we shew that we are zealous of his glory First then they are deceiued that thinke it Vse 1 enough to make lawes for preseruation of publike peace and tranquility that euery man may keep and enioy his owne that wrongs and iniuries may be suppressed and banished The cheefest care ought to bee of Gods seruice and worship otherwise our Common-wealths shall differ little or nothing from the states and gouernments of the heathen Heere then is a lesson for all Law-giuers if they desire to haue Christian Commonwealths to begin with Christian religion and looke to the Church and there lay a good foundation He that would build an house to stand against stormes and tempests that will beate against it and seeke to beare it downe will be sure to begin with the foundation make sure work there so such as desire to haue a flourishing Commonwealth and all estates as a goodly building to grow vp and prosper in it must make religion the foundation and then it shal be sure to stand because that is as a rocke that shall neuer fayle nor fall Vse 2 Secondly hereby also we may try our selues whether we belong to God or not if in the first place we regard duties of piety and godlinesse and be more carefull to feare God thē to feare man then we are truely religious and may assure our selues we are true members of the church We must make him our feare who is able to cast body and soule into hell Matth 10 rather then man who can but kill the body if kill the body Iohn 19. Let euery one of vs therefore bee more
Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God Our aduersaries teach that the Church is the supreame Iudge of the Scriptures and hath absolute authority to expound the same and by the Church they vnderstand the rabble of Priests and Iesuites and Cardinals and Councels and by them all at last the Pope whoe holds the Oracles of God shut vp in his brest whose iudgement also they hold to bee infallible so that he cannot erre Thus they will haue Scriptures Fathers Councels and the Church it selfe passe vnder the sentence of his Consistory Thus b Reason why the ●pists refu●● the Scrip●●●● to be Iud●● all contro●●●sies they do partly because they know and their hearts condemne them that the greatest number of the causes controuersies debated between them and vs haue no foundation of the Scriptures to leane vpon and therefore must of necessity stagger fall downe c Andrad thod expli● vnlesse they bee supported by traditions and partly because they woulde make themselues Iudges in their owne cause which notwithstanding is against all Law of God and man For they disable the Scriptures from being the rule of our faith and cast them downe from the chaire of honour in which they were seated by the author of them and cast all power vpon the Church and then they define the d Bristo 〈◊〉 12. in ma● Catholike Church to bee the Romane Church Rhem. annot in Rom. 1 8. and make the Catholike and Romane faith all one who seeth not heereby and smileth not at it that seeing the Church is made the rule of faith and their Romane Church the true catholike Church of Christ that they meane to stand to no iudgment but their own and bee iudged by no other Iudge but themselues and to receiue nothing for trueth but their owne opinions Indeed we cannot deny but they cast many shaddowes to blinde our eyes and pretend at euery word the Catholike Church but they meane nothing thereby but the Popes determination which verifieth in them the common Prouerbe Aske my fellow if I bee a theefe Thus they are made Iudges that are parties and partially referre all thinges vnto the tribunall of their owne iudgement Wee teach and affirme that the Holy Ghost and the Scripture it selfe haue chiefe authority to interprete the Scriptures the Scriptures must expound the Scriptures and out of themselues the meaning of them must be taken Our Sauiour teacheth a Iohn 5 47. that they which beleeue not Moses writings will not beleeue him The Apostle teacheth b Ephes 2 20 Wee are all built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Christ himselfe beeing the Head-corner-stone in whom all the building is coupled together by the Spirite 2 Tim 3 15 and that the Scriptures are able to make vs wise vnto saluation Thus it is saide c Nehe. 8 8 that the Leuites read distinctly the Lawe to the people and gaue the sense and caused them to vnderstand it by the Scripture it selfe Thus did the men of Berea reade the Scriptures d Acts 17 11. and by them tried the Apostles doctrine whether those things were so or not So then we conclude that the iudgement of all men is vncertaine and doubtful that resteth vpon their sole authority and that the Scriptures are to bee expounded by the same Spirit whereby they were written for heereby onely we can know assuredly the vndoubted meaning of them and from hence we can appeale to no superior iudge Vse 3 Thirdly from this consideration of the Author of the Scriptures we haue a direction to the Minister what he must preach vnto the people not the inuentions of his owne braine not the conceits of his owne wit not the excellency of wordes not the entising speech of mans wisedome e 1 Cor 2 14 which Paul disclaimeth and disalloweth in his owne practise but he must come in the plaine eu dence of the Spirit and of power that the knowledge of God may be furthered and the conscience informed in the wayes of godlinesse He must deliuer nothing to the people but the pure and precious word of God hee must content himselfe with the simplicity thereof and bee able by the scriptures to warrant the doctrine that he deliuereth so that hee may truely say with the Prophets Thus saith the Lord. Thus doth the Apostle ground his doctrine as vpon a sure and certaine foundation f 1 Cor. 11 23 1 Corinth 11 23. I haue receiued from th Lorde that which I also haue deliuered vn●o you This doth the Apostle Peter require at his hands 1 Pet. 4. g 1 Pet. 4 11 If any man speake let him speake as the words of GOD. VVee see therefore what must be the matter and subiect of our Sermons and from whence as from a plentiful store-house we must furnish our selues not from Fathers or Councels or Doctors of the Church much lesse from Poets Philosophers Orators Historiographers to paint our exhortations with the flourishing colours of humane learning which may for a season tickle the eare and delight the outwarde man but can carry no weight to the Conscience nor transforme the inward man into the obedience of the will of God Such as seeke to please men that haue itching eares doe beate the aire and labour in vaine neither must they thinke to winne a sou●e thereby to the knowledge of the Gospell This doth the Prophet Ieremy set downe chap. 23. h Iere 23 22 If they had stood in my counsell and had declared my words to my people then they should haue turned them from their euill waies and from the wickednesse of their inuentions Heere then we haue a direction what to do and in what manner to furnish our selues to the worke of the ministery wee must bee as good Stewards set ouer the Lords house to feede the family with bread not with wine with wholesome food not with chaffe that wee may discharge our duties with comfort and the people bee builded vppe in knowledge and obedience Lastly seeing God onely is the Author Vse 4 of the whole Scripture and of euery particular booke and branch contained therein which are the rule of our life and the foundation of our faith it belongeth as a speciall duty to the people of GOD to reade them to receiue them to study them to reuerence them to obey and keepe the doctrines deliuered in them forasmuch as they proceede from such an Author Wee learne to put a difference betweene the speeches of person and person and wee vse to giue better audience and greater reuerence vnto the word of a Prince then to others wee will not lose a worde willingly that commeth from his mouth and according to the Maiestie of the person so is our respect and so wee attend vnto him If one shoulde contemne a Prince and not regard him speaking vnto him hee would bee iudged worthy of death or of some sharpe and seuere punishment
Iames 2 1. wee should haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons which is forbidden condemned by the Apostle Hence it is that our Sauiour speaketh to his Apostles b Math. 10 20 Luke 10 16. It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father that speaketh within you And to the 70. Disciples and in them to all his true Ministers to the end of the world He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth mee and he that despiseth me desp seth him that sent me For this cause the Thessalonians practising this point are commended by the Apostle that they esteemed and receiued the doctrine deliuered vnto them c 1 Thes 2 13. Rom. 1 16. Not as the word of men but as it is indeed the word of God which is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth They are the Embassadors of God sent out of him to call vs to repentance and therefore their word or rather the word of GOD spoken by their mouth is to be heard with reuerence marked with diligence and practised with obedience The writer of this book was Moses Thus much touching the chiefe and principall Author of this booke as of the other Scriptures to wit God nowe followeth the lesse principall or instrumentall namely Moses The Lord could if it had pleased him haue written this booke as he did the morall Law contained in the ten commandements with his owne finger without the ministery of mortall man but it stood with his will and Heauenly pleasure to inspire his worde into the hearts of some holy men set apart for this purpose and to make their pen d Psalm 45 1 as the penne of a swift Writer The writer of this Book as also of the three former and of that which followeth was Moses faithfull in the house of God of whose stocke parents birth preseruation banishment and return into the land of Egypt from whence he brought the children of Israel wee reade at large in the Booke of Exodus Him God hauing set apart from his mothers womb to be the deliuerer of his people doth call as it is a Psal 78 70 7● 72. saide of Dauid and tooke him from the Sheepfolds euen from behind the Ewes with yong brought he him to feede his people in Iacob his inheritance in Israel so he fed them according to the simplicity of his heart and guided them by the discretion of his hands Him also did God chuse to be one of the Scribes to penne a part of his word the first and most an●ient Scripture sufficient to guide that people into all truth necessary to be beleeued of them For as Princes and Noblemen haue their principal Secretaries whose persons and pennes they vse to what purposes they please so hath GOD his selected instruments to write his will and to endite what things he reuealed vnto them by whose Spirit they were wholy guided and directed that they could not erre b 2 Pet 1 21. for the Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were mooued by the holy Ghost Such a one was Moses the first chosen vessell of God to pen publish his word that it might bee knowne and conueyed vnto all posterities to him c Num. 12 8. Deut. 34 10. God spake mouth to mouth and by vision and not in dark words like to him there arose not a Prophet in Israel whom hee knew face to face These Prophets of God may rightly bee called second Authors of the Scripture all of them Gods Secretaries but Moses as his principall Secretary This consideration of Gods choosing men to be as his organs and instruments to put his Vse 1 whole will and word in writing doth offer to vs diuers good vses which briefly wee will run ouer First it conuinceth all those that thinke and gather that neither this book nor the other foure were written by Moses as now they are left vnto vs but by Esdras or some other more auncient Scribe that liued before his time Adde heereunto d Iren. lib. 3. cap 25. Tertul. lib. de bab mul. clem Alex. lib. 1. strom Hieron aduers Helu Euseb in Chronic. that manie of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church maintayned that when Ierusalem was assaulted sacked by the Chaldeans all the bookes of Moses and other Scriptures were burned together with the Temple and were afterward written againe and brought to light through the help of the diuine memory of Esdras who remembred al that was written in the former copies But this coniecture so much stood vppon by the Ancients be it spoken with their patience and pardon is no better then a fable may bee conuinced by euident demonstration of vndoubted reasons True it is the fourth of Esdras telleth in sober sadnesse this dreame e Esdr lib. 4. c 4 23. cap. 14 21. but euery one knoweth that booke to bee Apochryphall almost as full of lies as leaues insomuch that the Church of Rome ouer bold to adde to the Canon yet f Bel. de verbo Dei lib 1. cap 20. lib. 2. cap 1. are ashamed of this booke to make it Canonicall And we neuer read that the Babylonians euer attempted this sacriledge and if they had it seemeth vnlikely and vnpossible that euer they coulde bring it to passe the bookes beeing dispersed into many mens hands and extant in sundrie copies in sundry places The Assyrians which were sent as certaine Colonies to inhabite in the waste roomes of the ten Tribes the Kingdom of Israel being ouerthrown by Salmanasar when they were disturbed and destroyed by Lyons that tore them in peeces g 2 Kin 1 7 27 were instructed by one of the Priestes in the Law of Moses and no doubt had it among them Antiochus a most bloody tyrant commaunded the bookes of the Law to be cut in peeces burned so many as hee could finde yet did the faithfull preserue them safe and sound with the danger of their owne liues 1 Mach. 1 59. Besides it is not to be imagined that Ezekiel and Daniel continuing in Babylon the seuenty yeares of the captiuity wanted the word law of God all that time to say nothing of Ieremy the Prophet and Gedaliah the Prince were they all so carelesse or forgetfull that in the ruine of the City and spoyling of the temple they would neglect the Law and not saue one booke out of the fire Was there neuer a godly man left that was mindfull of the booke of God But what place is there lefte for any such surmise and suspition seeing the prophet Daniel had both the prophesies h Dan 9 2 11 of Ieremy the Law of Moses Moreouer it appeareth by the testimony of Ezra himselfe the Scribe of God i Ezra 6 18. that the people beeing returned from their captiuity had the Law of Moses amongst them before
appeareth by the Prophet Esay when hee bringeth in the Lord speaking vnto vs c Esay 66 3. To him will I haue respect euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my words The scripture is compared by one to a great and high palace but the doore that entreth into it is very low so that the high-minded and proud presumptuous man that standeth vpon the high conceites of his owne minde cannot run in but it is necessary that he stoope downe low humble himselfe whosoeuer intendeth to haue any passage into it This spirituall pride is the mother of all error but humility leadeth vs into all truth d Iames 4 6. For God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the lowly Lastly we must come to the Scriptures to hearing and reading of them with prayer desiring him to direct vs and crauing his blessing vpon our labors The word of God is as an hidden treasure laide vp in the Lords Coffers Prayer is the Key to open it the way to come to it the hand to receiue it The Prophet Dauid prayeth oftentimes to God to open his eyes and to giue him vnderstanding e Psalme 119 18 34. that he might see into the wonders of his Law We haue a gracious promise from God that hee which asketh shall receiue hee that seeketh shall finde and hee that knocketh shall haue the doore set open vnto him Many of Gods Seruants haue attained to more knowledge and vnderstanding in the mysteries of the Kingdome of heauen by prayer then by their own study labour reading and searching If then we shall ioyne it to our reading and hearing it shall bring a great blessing with it reueal the secrets of God vnto vs. Thus much touching the Title of this booke Let vs now proceede to handle the Vses The ends and Vses of this Booke and speciall ends of this Booke for which it was written and thereby take a general view of the benefit that may redound vnto vs. There are many chapters that seeme to be verie bare and barren and to containe nothing in them but a naked Catalogue of places and persons but we shall plainly perceiue in the particular handling of the speciall matters taught therein that we haue great cause to giue attention and to marke what is offered to our considerations forasmuch as whatsoeuer was written afore-hand was written for our instruction that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. And albeit the vses come after to bee spoken at large yet it shall not bee amisse to giue a taste of them in the beginning thereby to set an edge vpon vs to procure vs an appetite to hunger after them First we see in the state of the Israelites as Vse 1 in a glasse what is the condition of the Church and of all the godly in this life they are as a barke tossed on the Sea ready to suffer Shipwracke and to be cast vpon euery rocke vnlesse they cast out the anchor of hope sure stedfast that they may in time appointed ariue in safety at the hauen desired For euen as the Israelites neuer rested in the wildernesse but trauelled from one place to another vntill they came into the Land of promise so the Church in this world is as in a wildernes they haue no certaine abode no setled dwelling to assure them any continuance but they walke and wander vp and downe as poore banished men vntill they bee translated into their heauenly Country We are heere as pilgrimes and strangers our hope is not in this life a 1 Cor. 15 19 For then of all men we were the most miserable Wee know we must all leaue it and we know not how soone We looke for a life to come and most earnestly desire to bee translated to that heauenly inheritance The Apostle hath many meditations to this purpose Phil. 3. b Phil. 3 20 2 Cor. 5 6 7. Heb. 11 13 14 Our conuersation is in Heauen from whence we looke for a Sau●our the Lord Iesus and 2 Cor. 5. Whiles we are at home in the body wee are absent from the Lord for wee walke by faith and not by sight And Hebr. 11 speaking of the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob he saith They confessed that they were strangers and Pilgrims on the earth for they that say such things declare plainely that they seeke a Countrie We must not looke to finde Heauen vpon the earth we shall heere meete with many afflictions and it is profitable for vs to exercise our faith patience and prayer leste the flesh shoulde waxe proud against the spirit and lift vp it selfe against God Secondly we learne who is the Patrone Vse 2 and protector of the Church namely GOD himselfe he is the shield and buckler of it to defend it How many were the troubles and dangers and enemies and wants of the Isralites while they liued in the wildernesse Yet did God maruailously and miraculously nourish and preserue them Is he the God of the Iewes onely and not of the Gentiles yes euen of the Gentiles also For as hee kept them and carried them as vpon the Eagles wings so he is with his Church at all times when it seemeth most to despaire of help then commeth the helpe and comfort of God from on high and deliuereth them out of their distresse O that men would therefore confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and his wonderfull workes before the sonnes of men Let vs also looke for helpe from him from whence our saluation commeth c 1 Sam. 2 6 Who as Hanna the mother of Samuel singeth in her Song k●lleth and maketh aliue bringeth down to the graue and raiseth vp In dangers therfore let vs trust in him in wants let vs relie vpon him in chastisements let vs humble our selues before him in troubles let vs flye vnto him in temptations let vs fight vnder him and in all necessities let vs pray vnto him and call vpon his name Thirdly we haue in this booke a liuely picture Vse 3 of the state of the Church what it is in this life and of what persons it consisteth it standeth not wholly of such as haue receiued the grace of sanctification but it hath many hypocrites mingled with them and many wicked persons are found among them and come as the Ghest did in the ●ospell whoe came without his wedding garment In this body are many members but are not all liuing a great part are dead and rotten members Yea they which are indeed Saints by calling are not so sanctified that they liue without sinne For as d 1 Cor. 13 12 they know in part and beleeue in part so they are sanctified in part not fully and perfectly which shall not bee vntill the next life when we shall know euen as wee are knowne and see euen as we are seene of God Among the Israelites which did beare the name of the
Church were many wicked liuers of whom the Apostle saith e 1 Cor 10 5. 1 Cor. 10. With many of them God was not pleased but they were destroyed in the Wildernesse Yea such as were the chiefe among them and excelled in godlinesse aboue the rest as the Cedar doth the low shrub had their failings and infirmities as wee see in Aaron in Miriam and in Moses himselfe as we shall see afterward in this booke Wherefore they are deceiued that seeke for a Church in this life without spot or wrinkle Such in former times were the Donatists and such in our dayes are the Anabaptists whoe shall looke vntill their eyes fall out before they shall finde any company or society wholly separated from al contagion of hypocrites Epicures Libertines and such like loose liuers Christ compareth the Church vnto a draw net cast into the Sea which gathereth fish of all sorts both good and bad Againe heere is comfort for the sincere Ministers of the Gospell to whom the dispensation of the Word and sacraments is committed that they ought not to forsake their calling when they behold the greatest part of their charges and Congregations to take no profite and to receiue no instruction by their ministery but to continue and waite with patience vntil f 2 Tim. 2 26. God wil giue them repentance that they may come out of the snare of the diuell of whom they are holden captiue to do his will Fourthly we learne the vnchangeable loue of God toward his people It is euident by Vse 4 this booke more then by the former how diuersly they prouoked him to wrath by their sinnes as their lust murmuring impatience vnthankfulnesse idolatry and fornication they tempted him in the wildernesse whereby they deserued not onely to be depriued of the Land of Canaan but to bee excluded out of the Kingdome of heauen Notwit●sta●●ing God continued their mercifull Lord still so that his election is immutable g Iohn 13 1. and whom hee loueth he loueth him to the end What then shall we sinne that grace may abound God forbid nay how shall wee that are dead to sinne yet liue therein As his graces guifts are without repentance so they must leade vs to repentance and cause vs to expresse backe againe vnfained loue vnto him who loued vs first Vse 5 Fiftly we haue set before vs many fearefull examples of Gods heauy indignation against sinne and sinners Hee punisheth the murmurings of the people fretting fuming against God in their extremities he taketh vengeance on their idolatry and committing fornication he chastiseth their sedition emulation breach of the Sabboth contempt of authority luste tempting of God and such like wickednesse that thereby wee might learne the feare of God and be admonished to auoide the same sinnes which will bring vpon vs the same or gteater iudgements euen temporall and eternall punishments For God is the same God to them and to vs he will shew himselfe iust and righteous in all his wayes a Psal 5 4. that hee is not a God that loueth wickednesse and that euill shall not dwell with him Hence it is that Paul alluding to these famous and remarkable examples of his iustice saith b 1 Cor. 10 11 These things came vnto them for examples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the worlde are come Let him therefore that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall If his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that trust in him Lastly as wee haue fearefull examples and Vse 6 threatnings of the Lawe manifested in this booke so on the other side wee haue comfortable promises of the Gospell touching our saluation and redemption by Christ Iesus who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification For hee is truely and plainely preached in this booke a type of whom wee haue in the brasen Serpent c Num. 21 9. Iohn 3 14 and 12 32. lifted vp in the wildernesse and healing those that were bitten of the fiery Serpents which Christ expoundeth Ioh. 3 to be meant of his death and lifting vp vpon the Crosse That euery one which beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Likewise the Rocke which Moses did strike yeelding vnto them abundance of water as out of a plentifull Fountaine the Apostle expoundeth of Christ for he saith d Num. 20 10 and 21 16. 1 Cor. 10 4. They did all drinke the same spirituall drinke for they dranke of the spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ The like we might say of Manna of the ashes of the red Cow of the Nazarites besides the sacrifices and ceremonies burnt offerings meat offerings and purifications which were figures painting and pointing out the sacrifice ●nd sufferings of Christ Iesus But because we haue spoken somewhat of them before and more remaineth to be spoken heereafter we will passe them ouer at this time without farther consideration This serueth to confute those which hold that all things were carnall to the Fathers that they had no knowledge of the Messiah but onely a carnall imagination of earthly things These are disciples brought vp in the damnable schoole of Seruetus an arch-enemy to the faith who contradict the Apostles in many places and make the Iewes as Swine fatted in a Stie groueling vpon the earth and neuer lifting vp their heads to a better life The Apostle Peter reasoning against such as taught the necessity of circumcision saith e Act. 15 10 11 Why doe yee tempt God to lay a yoke on the Disciples neckes which neyther our Fathers nor we are able to beare but we beleeue through the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ to be saued euen as they doe Thus wee see Christ was onely the way to Gods Kingdome and that by faith in him the Fathers looked for saluation as well as we Our Sauiour testifieth f Iohn 8 56. that Abraham reioyced to see his day and saw it and was glad So the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes saith g Heb. 13 8. Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same also is for euer As therefore the Couenant of GOD touching life and saluation is for substance one and the same so there is one faith one hope and way to attaine to the Kingdome of heauen for the Fathers in the time of the Law and for vs in the time of the Gospell Thus much of the generall vses of this booke The last point which wee propounded in the beginning to be handled h The diuision of this booke into his parts is the diuision of this booke that we may orderly proceede in the seuerall parts of it Some do diuide it into two parts according to the Chronology or computation of time obserued heerein for in the first nineteene chapters he handleth those things which happened in the wildernesse from the second yeare of their departure out of Egypt to the fortieth yeare
one and opinion of the other The godlye speake of themselues according to their present feeling and vtter such wordes while the tentation is heauy vpon them howbeit at that time they are vnfit iudges of themselues of their condition how it standeth betweene God their soules They are ready to speake according to their tentation the vngodly vtter their rash and vncharitable opinion the diuell broacheth his false and forged suggestion The faithfull indeede do oftentimes cry out in the bitternesse and anguish of spirit Psal 13 1. and 42 9 11. 44 23.24 25 26. and 74 19. 77 7 8 9 10. How long wilte thou forget me O Lord for euer How long wilt thou hide thy face from me And againe I will say vnto God which is my rock why hast thou forgotten me Why go I mourning when the enemie oppresseth me Why art thou cast downe my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Waite on God for I will yet giue him thankes he is my present helpe and my God And Psal 44. Vp why sleepest thou O Lord awake bee not farre off for euer wherfore hidest thou thy face forgettest our misery and our affliction For our soule is beaten downe vnto the dust our belly cleaueth vnto the ground rise vp for our succour and redeeme vs for thy mercies sake And in another place Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer and will he shew no more fauour Is his mercy clean gone for euer doth his promise faile for euermore Hath God forgotten to be mercifull Hath hee shut vp his tender mercies wholly in d●spleasure And I saide This is my death c. Thus do the faithfull cry out and complaine as if they were without both faith and feeling of any fauour of God and yet in all these distresses and afflictions God is not absent from them neither hath forgotten them Some diseases of the body are so forcible and violent that they seeme to haue taken away al life and to haue broght present death yet afterward there is a recouery and raising vp again contrary to the feeling of the person diseased and the iudgment of the beholders thus standeth the case with many deare seruants of God who in the extremity of affliction and brunt of tentation seeme to themselues and others to haue vtterly lost the life of faith and light of grace which in former times they haue felt and enioyed The trees in winter seeme to be dead without sap without leaues without life nothing appeareth to yeeld any hope of future fruit in time to grow vpon them but when the winter season is passed the Spring approcheth they shew forth by liuely effects that they had life in them and were not dead The houre of tentation with the faithfull is the time of Winter they seeme benummed for a short season but as they gather strength and faith beginneth to spring vp they shall finde and feele a present operation of vnspeakeable comfort And heereunto our present doctrine in hand maketh a way when it teacheth that God wil shew his helpe in time of need seeing he knoweth the numbers and the names of vs. When the Church was in great misery in Egypt so that his people sighed for the bondage cried their cry for the bondage came vp to God and hee saide Exo. 2.23 and 3 7. I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry because of their Taske-maisters for I know their sorrowes The Prophet Esay to this purpose ioyneth together their affliction and Gods compassion chap. 49. But Sion said Esa 49 14 15. The Lord hath forsaken me and the Lorde hath forgotten me Can a woman forget her child and not haue compassion on the sonne of her Wombe Though they should forget yet will I not forget thee behold I haue grauen thee vpon the palme of mine hands c. Loe heere what comfort is giuen against all the discomforts that happen vnto vs and against all the disgraces and distresses that are throwne vpon vs though men will not know vs but stand farre from vs yet GOD will know vs and not bee ashamed of vs. Our particular estates our particular names are not vnknowne to him so that we may euery one of vs say with the Prophet The Lord hath called me from the wombe Esay 49 1. and 43 1. and made mention of my name from my mothers belly Let vs apply this promise vnto our selues and esteeme little to be iudged by the corrupt iudgement of man neither let vs sit in iudgement vpon our selues to esteeme of our selues by our present feeling for we are not vpright iudges in time of tentation and we must walk by faith not by feeling For there may bee faith when we are void of feeling as we heard before in the former examples wee suffer a kinde of eclipse as the celestiall lights do but in the end recouer the light which we seemed to haue lost Secondly wee may gather from hence the Vse 2 wofull and wretched estate of all the vngodly that thinke themselues happy and blessed men and yet they finde in the end that they are the onely vnhappy men in the world and that it had bene good for them if they had neuet bene borne For better neuer to be borne then to be borne to hell and destruction Gal. 4.9 Now as it is a great part of the comfort of all Gods children that he will know them who as they haue a regarde to know God in this life to know him in his word and other meanes appointed for their saluation so shal they bee knowne of God in his kingdom and acknowledged before the Angels in heauen so this is not the least of the misery belonging vnto all that worke iniquity that God will not know them Heere some man may say Obiection It skilleth not what they do or how they liue if GOD will take no knowledge of them I answer Answere these men might thinke themselues in good case if God were ignorant of them and knew not their liues But all things are naked to him open before his eyes with whom wee haue to doe Heb. 4.13 This the Prophet Ieremy confirmeth in his prayer to God Thou shewest mercie vnto thousands Ier. 32 18 19. and recompensest the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of the children after them O God the great mighty whose name is the Lorde of hostes great in counsell and mightie in worke for thine eyes are open vpon all the wayes of the sons of men to giue to euery one according to his wayes and according to the fruite of his workes If then he know and vnderstand all things past present and to come and all persons are euermore in his eye how can hee bee saide not to know the vngodly The answere is there is a two-folde kinde of knowledge spoken of in the Scripture One is that knowledge whereby he alloweth
accepteth and approueth of his creatures to bee his vouchsafing to them his speciall fauour louing them as his own children of this the Psalmist saith The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous or godly Psal 1 6 but the way of the wicked shall perish So the Apostle saith Rom. 11 2. God hath not cast away his people whom he knew before that is whom hee approued and loued The other is that knowledge whereby he disalloweth of the wicked and disavoweth them to be his and therefore he wil not shew forth his mercy toward them and of this we now speak which setteth forth the greatnesse of their misery and vnhappines Though he know them by the general knowledge of his power and prouidence Psal 34 16. Iob ●9 21. Psalme 31 3. Ieremy 9 12. Exod. 6 6. Psal 110 1. 114 7. 27 8 9. yet he wil not see them with the eie of his pity nor touch them with the hand of his fauour nor heare them with the eare of his bounty nor speake vnto them with the mouth of his goodnes nor compasse them with the arme of his protection nor come vnto them with the feete of his presence nor behold them with the Face and countenance of his louing kindnesse Can there be a more miserable condition described and felt then this is Yet these are they that count themselues happy and entitle themselues to the Kingdome of heauen But as soone shall they bring heauen and earth together and make an agreement betweene fire and water betweene God and the diuell betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse as procure the loue and fauour of God toward them so long as they walke in their euill waies For as they regard not to know God in his word so hee regardeth not to know them with his grace in this life and to crown them with his glory in the life to come These are they that Iob speaketh of chap. 21. ver 14 15. Who say vnto God Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Who is the Almightie that we should serue him And what profit should we haue if we should pray vnto him Though they speake not this with their tongues nor vtter such words with their mouths yet such corruption and Atheisme is in their harts For there is a double kinde of voice and a two-fold speaking One with the tongue the other with the heart and the foole speaketh with them both sometimes with the former and sometimes with the latter On the other side the Lord recompenceth them according to their words and workes and meeteth with them according to their sinnes for hee will professe vnto them his despising of them as they haue despised him and his passing by of them in the day of iudgement as they haue passed by him in the day of his mercie This is it which Christ himselfe speaketh in the manifestation of the iust condemnation of the Reprobate Math. 7 23. Then will I professe to them I neuer knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity Heere is a description of the estate of all vnreformed and vnrepentant persons God disclaimeth them commandeth them to depart out of his sight Both these are ioyned together and both of them are most fearefull If God once disclaime vs who can lay claime to vs but the diuell If we may not enioy the presence of God whose fellowship shall we enioy but the diuels And mark with me how God iustly repayeth such men and findeth them out in their owne wickednesse They say to God in their life as we heard before out of Iob Depart from vs and God in the last day shall say to them Depart from mee They say in their life to God wee desire not the knowledge of thy wayes and he shall say in the end of the world I know you not ye workers of iniquity They will not know the Lord who he is and the Lord will not know them with his fauour but with his furie not with mercy but with iudgement not with glory but with shame and contempt poured vpon them Hence it is that in another place amplifying the last iudgement he saith Then shall they begin to say Luk 13 26 27 We haue eaten and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets But he shall say I tell you I know ye not whence you are depart from me ye workers of iniqu●ty Let vs therefore all betimes seeke to know the Lord to haue him dwelling in our hearts to call vpon him and to attend vnto his word with feare and reuerence that he may know vs and accept of vs. When a certaine man going downe from Ierusalem to Iericho fell amongst theeues was robbed of his goods Luke 10 31 32 33. stripped of his raiment wounded in his body and lefte halfe dead did it not increase his sorrow and misery that a certaine Priest saw him and passed by on the other side And that likewise a Leuite came neere to the place looked vppon him and departed his way without counsell or comfort without succor or assistance This did adde to the heape of his miserie but how much more lamentable shall it bee when wee shall lye not halfe dead but without any life of God in vs without any pitty shewed vnto vs without any Samaritan to haue compassion vpon vs to binde vp our wounds to poure in oyle and wine to giue vs any ease or to make prouision for vs When God will not know vs none of his creatures shall acknowledge vs or comfort vs or call vs by our names It shall bee with vs as with the rich man to whō the Scripture vouchsafeth to giue no name as not worthy to be spoken of Luke 16 19. verifying the saying of the Wiseman Prou. 10 7. The memoriall of the iust shall be blessed but the name of the wicked shall rot Seeing therefore God promiseth to take notice of all such as are his it followeth he wil not know that is loue or allow the wicked or their deedes and therefore their condition must needs be miserable as being out of his number Vse 3 Thirdly seeing all that are Gods are numbred of him and haue their names written in his booke this serueth to seale vp the assurāce of our saluation and election to eternall life For if God know vs euen by name our names shall neuer be blotted out of his account but remaine there grauen for euer This the Apostle teacheth 2 Tim. 2 19. The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his and let euery one that calleth on the name of Christ depart from iniquity Where he sheweth that Gods decree is infallible and vnchangeable and built vppon a sure foundation that cannot bee remooued True it is Satan will not cease to winnow vs the world to allure vs the flesh to corrupt vs and sundry other tentations to set vpon vs yet the elect shall
feare of troubles that may come vpō her True it is the Church of God hath many enemies that threaten the ruine thereof and imploy all their wiles and fetches to worke the subuersion of it as if an huge and heauy milstone were cast at it or as if a mighty tempest were fallen vpon it or as if a sudden flood of waters did ouerflow and ouerwhelme it Neuerthelesse the Church is set in a safe place they shal not be able to hurt it it hath a safe keeper that neither slumbreth nor sleepeth they shall not be able to destroy it the gates of hell and the power of the deuill are set against it but they shall neuer haue victory ouer it They may well assault this City of our God cast their trenches against it build Forts and Barricadoes against it yet they shall neuer winne it but their losses shall be greater then their gaines Let vs comfort our selues in this that it is vnpossible the Church should fall being borne vp and vpholden by so strong a pillar For as when we become the enemies of God despise his maiesty he is able quickly to consume confound vs so whē we be in his safe keeping he wil maintaine defend vs in such sort as the Lyons aspes the dragons wild beasts wherof we are most afraid shal not be able to destroy or annoy vs. Therefore the Lord speaketh Deut. 7. Deut. 7 21 22 Thou shalt not feare them for the Lord thy God is among you a God mighty and dreadfull he will root out all these enemies before thee by little and little First hee willeth them not to be afraide of their enemies and afterward he addeth the reason because God is among them We are all of vs as in the Tabernacle and tuition of God let vs put on the shield of faith to repulse all feare he will not leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord my deliuerer I will not feare what man can doe vnto me Let vs hold our selues to his promises and assure our selues of his succour Vse 3 Lastly this situation of the Tabernacle serueth to conclude the full and finall happines of the faithfull which is begun in this life but shal be consummated in the end of the world Then will God dwell with vs and we shall dwell with him then we shall bee admitted into his presence and neuer be cast out then no euill shall touch vs or come neere vs and no good thing shall be wanting vnto vs that we can desire Heereunto the Apostle alludeth Reuel 21. Reuel 21.3 I heard a great voice out of heauen saying Behold the Tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himselfe will be their God c. Consider heere the blessednesse of that people that shall euer enioy the immediate presence of such a God as is the fountaine of all happinesse True it is God doth dwell among his people in this life and he is not farre from euery one of them inasmuch as they haue their spirituall life and birth from him howbeit it doth not appeare to others nor sometimes to our selues what we shall be The Tabernacle of God seemeth now to be remoued out of our sight and to be set in a darke corner where it lyeth hidden We are heere subiect to many temptations of sinne to many sicknesses and sorrowes to many paines and aches to many losses troubles which often cause vs to sigh and lament we haue not hearts of yron and steele nor bodies of stone or oake that cannot be touched with any feeling We must all passe through these afflictions and tribulations as the children of Israel passed through the red sea But when the Lord who is an infinite and endlesse treasury of all good things shall bring vs into his heauenly Tabernacle in the new Ierusalem we shall stand in need of no good thing wee shall stand in feare of no euill thing in both which consisteth true felicity The olde Ierusalem though it were called the holy City and place of Gods worship had many vncleane persons dwelling in it the Tabernacle of the Testimony though it figured the coniunction of God with his Saints had many prophane persons resorting to it but in the heauenly Ierusalem and the heauenly Tabernacle which is the Kingdome of glory there shall be no vncleane thing there shall rest no vile person all shall be holy and pure indeed In them shall be no confusion no disorder no broiles no tumults no turmoiles no tempests no sinne no sinfull thing no effect of sinne The Apostle saith We looke for a new heauen a new earth according to his promise 2 Pet. 3 13 wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Then we shall weepe and lament no more there shall be no more death nor sorrow nor pain nor crying the teares which we shed shal be wiped away the sinnes which prouoke God shall be blotted out the kingdome of the diuell shall be throwne downe and the kingdome of Christ set vp death and hell shall be cast into the lake of fire and whosoeuer is not written in the Booke of life long white robes shall bee put vpon vs we shall hunger and thirst no more neither shall the Sunne shine vpon vs neither any heat come neere vs Reuel 7.17 For the Lambe which is in the middes of the throne shall gouerne them and shall leade them vnto the liuely fountaines of waters c. This is the dignity vnto which we are aduanced by Christ our Sauiour we shall dwell with God the great king of glory Now wee are tossed with many stormes and tempests Sometimes we are persecuted and banished from our countrey sometimes we are imprisoned and destitute of things necessary poore hungry thirsty naked weary cold faint and feeble yea subiect to a thousand mischiefes and dangers miseries and encombrances In the middes of this boysterous sea of confusions this is our comfort that God will rid vs and release vs out of them all and bring vs into the quiet hauen of rest and happinesse Why then should we be cast downe in our tentations or why should we thinke that God hath forsaken vs Wee shal shortly be with the Lord and the Lamb which taketh away the sinnes of the world he will feed vs with all heauenly and spirituall dainties Here we assembled together in tabernacles and Temples and Churches for the performance of diuine duties where God vouchsafed to be present according to his promise Matth. 18.2 Where two or three are gathered together in my Name there I am in the middes of them There were the Sacrifices and Sacraments there was the Law and the Gospell taught These were worthy and notable signes of Gods presence But the heauenly Ierusalem the mother of vs all hath neither tabernacle nor Temple nor materiall building nor place of instruction nor sacrifices nor Sacraments nor signe of the presence
giue sleepe vnto their eies nor slumber to their eie-liddes Let the sluggards goe to the Ant and learne wisedome by her waies which hauing no guide ouerseer nor ruler prouideth her meat in the summer and gathereth her food in the haruest Prou. 6 7 8. Thirdly seeing it is required of vs to haue Vse 3 contented mindes it putteth vs in minde of this duty that we auoid couetousnes which is directly contrary to contentation It is a common corruption that taketh hold of our corrupt nature a fruite of the old man which must be mortified of al the children of God and so much the rather because it stealeth vpō vs at a sudden and draweth away our hearts from God and godlinesse This is the vse directly touched and taught by the Apostle Heb. 13. ●●b 13.5 Let your conuersation be without couetousnesse and be content with such things as ye haue The greatnesse of this sinne is such that it causeth a man to be an idolater as Ephe. 5.5 Col. 3.5 This ye know ●●h 5.5 CoI ● that no whoremonger nor vncleane person nor couetous man who is an idolater hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God and of Christ ●ow the co●●●ous are ●dolaters The couetous are idolaters or worshippers of idolles two wayes First because they preferre their riches in their affections before God the gift before the giuer of them depending vpon them as vpon God trusting in them ●●b 31.24 as in God saying vnto them Thou art my confidence as we heard before out of the booke of Iob. Secondly because they account their life to consist in their riches and to rest vpon their wealth rather then to stand on the prouidence of God failing of all comfort and hope and ioy when their wealth faileth them Sathan vsed this bait to bring Christ himselfe to idolatry when he offered vnto him the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them How easily we slippe into this sinne appeareth by the example of the rich man that came vnto our Sauiour when he was bid sell all that he had hee went away pensine and sorrowfull Matth. 19. Hence it is that he saith in another place ●●k 12.15 Take heed and beware of Couetousnesse for a mans life consisteth not in the aboundance of the things which he possesseth We are ready to flatter our selues and to say to our soule Thou hast much goods layd vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merry vntill it be said vnto vs Thou foole this night shall thy soule be required of thee then whose shall those things be ●ouetousnes ●y be in the ●ore as well in the rich that thou hast prouided This is a sinne not onely in the rich but also in the poore True it is such as are in want and necessity do wash their hands as innocent in this matter but they do it as Pilat did touching blood which notwithstanding did cleaue so fast vnto his loynes that all the Fullers earth and all the waters in the Sea could not wash away the guilt and staine therof from him So the poore for the most part put this sin farre from them and thinke it doth not belong vnto them they cry out against the rich because they are couetous as blinde men deceiuing themselues and beholding their owne faces in a false glasse For first of all they vse vngodly shifts and vnlawfull meanes to store themselues which is right couetousnesse They care not how they come by meate money corne or any thing so they may haue it Againe they beare not the burden of pouerty patiently but murmure and grudge at it nay at him that sendeth it but whosoeuer disdaineth his present state because it is not higher richer and better is couetous therefore the poore may be couetous Furthermore they are oftentimes idle and liue by the sweat of other mens browes and breake out into pilfering and stealing and so not onely couet but catch and conuey vnto themselues other mens goods This also is couetousnesse and this is a common sickenesse and disease of the poore For as pride may walke and iet vp and downe in a russet coat so may couetousnesse lodge in a simple and smokie cottage But in whomsoeuer it be whether in the rich or poore it is a dangerous euil it bringeth the couetous man to destruction of body and soule 2 King 5.22 It brought the leprosie vpon Gehazi that coueted the siluer and garments that Naaman offered Elisha refused but he accepted It brought a more heauy plague vpon the soule and conscience of Iudas Matth. 27.5 for when he had betrayed his master for thirty shekels in horror of himselfe and of his fact he went and hanged himselfe Hee was brought vp with Christ and liued with him who had instructed him not to couet after siluer nor gold he heard his doctrine and beheld his miracles yet hee was infected with this disease worse then the dropsie or the hungry euill The description of a couetous man It seeth nothing in another without grieefe and sorrow and is neuer well contented vntill he haue it himselfe and then hee cannot bee satisfied but still hee would haue more The more he hath the more he thinketh he hath not The more full his coffers are the more he iudgeth them to be empty for as much as he wanteth as well those things that he hath as those things that he hath not It is a great blessing of God Chrys in Math. 26. homi 81. that the earth yeeldeth the fat of wheat but the couetous man is not a little greeued that in stead of eares of corne it doth not shoot and send forth leaues of gold that euery riuer doth not runne with streames of gold and that the barraine mountaines haue not gold to bee digged out of them in stead of stones He is oftentimes greeued at the seasonablenesse of the weather at the fruitfulnesse of the seasons at the plenty of all things at the increase of the earth and at the sweet influence of the heauens hee taketh it heauily when there is store and aboundance that there is no want nor crying in our streetes because he cannot fell his corne his cattell and commodities at the dearest rate He hateth all men both rich and poore the rich because he doth not possesse that which they haue and seeth them to abound as well as himselfe whereas he cannot abide that any should enioy any thing and thinketh it lost that passeth by his doore the poore because they craue somewhat of him which he is as vnwilling to leaue as his life and therefore as if he were hurt and wronged with all he is angry and offended with all The more he hath The more the couetous man hath the more he coueteth the more he craueth and coueteth Euen as the drunken man is more vexed with thirst then he that vseth to drinke with sobriety and moderation and is therewith contented so
sinne that is their offering strange fire with strange fire we shall speake afterward in the fift Chapter Heere we will obserue that this fact of theis may seeme in the eyes of many to be a small offence and not to deserue so heauy a censure and so grieuous a punishment For it may be said in defence or them either that they had a good intent and meaning though they missed in the manner or that this fire which they offered would serue to burne the incense as well as any other and what skilleth it by what fire it be done But all these are Doctrine 3 vaine pretences forasmuch as God had commanded the contrary a Gods wor●●ip we must ●ot be led ●our owne ●euices but ●y God di●ection We learne from hence that nothing in matter or forme concerning the worship of God or the administration of the Sacraments ought to be added or altered or detracted but all must be done as God hath determined and directed Our owne dreames and deuises must not sway vs in the matters of God but it is his will and word that must will and gouerne vs. The Lord himselfe challengeth and defendeth his authority in laying downe the maner and way of his own seruice not leauing it to the liberty of any creature men or Angels to intermeddle with it forasmuch as he will haue all things done as himselfe hath prescribed He is well pleased and contented that men shall make Lawes and statutes for humane matters concerning their temporall estates in this world as shall be fittest for the places where they rule and for the persons whom they rule as touching treasons murthers thefts oppressions slanders routs riots and such disorders but for the diuine worship how God shall be serued we must leaue it vnto him he onely can prescribe what must be done he onely will appoint what must be left vndone It is true the strange fire that Nadab and Abihu tooke was as well able to burne the incense as that which burned euermore vpon the altar and yet because God had not sanctified it for that purpose they were fearefully and dreadfully deuoured with fire from God When God instituted the Passeouer in remembrance of his mercifull deliuerance in passing ouer the houses of the Israelites when the first borne of the Egyptians were destroyed Exod. 12.3 the whole order is set downe both for the matter and manner of celebrating and solemnizing that ordinance hee instructeth what they shall take what ceremonies they shall vse what gesture they shall obserue and what he will haue them not to do Moses doth many times in the booke of the Law giue this direction Deuter. 4.2 Deut. 4.2 and 12.8.32 Ye shall not adde vnto the word which I command you neither shall you diminish ought from it that ye may keepe the commandements of the Lord your God which I command you and in the 12. Chapter ye shall not doe after after all the things that we doe heere this day euery man whatsoeuer is right in his owne eyes and afterward What thing soeuer I command you obserue and doe it thou shalt not adde thereto nor diminish from it On the contrary we see how Saul was punished with the losse of his kingdome because hee would offer sacrifice contrary to the expresse will of God made knowne vnto him 1 Sam. 15.23 The like might bee saide of Ieroboams two golden calues erected at Dan and Bethel without warrant and worshipped without warrant it was the ouerthrow of himselfe and his posterity 1 Kings 14.7 c. For this cause the Apostle speaking of the institution of the Lords Supper saith 1 Corin. 11. 1 Cor. 11.23 I receiued of the Lord that which also I deliuered vnto you that the Lord the same night in which he was betrayed tooke bread c. whereby it appeareth that it is no small matter it is no toy or trifle to worship GOD otherwise then he in his word appointeth vnto vs considering the saying of the wise man Adde not thou vnto his words Prou. 30.6 lest hee reprooue thee and thou be found a lyar This crosseth mans deuises which are Reason 1 bolde to steppe vp in Gods place and therefore let vs see the reasons First God will be acknowledged to be the only Law-giuer the king of his Church and the onely Prophet to instruct it in the will of God This is that which the Apostle Iames witnesseth Iam. 4.12 chap. 4. There is one Law-giuer who is able to saue and to destroy that can cast body and soule into hell fire Matth. 10. He is the master of the house that must set downe orders for the gouernement of his house None can make a Law in the kingdome but by authority of the king none can alter it being made but the king So is it in the Church none can appoint any word any Sacrament any worship but God himselfe none can reuerse any institution without him So that additions or detractions or alterations or any mixtures whatsoeuer are so many abuses of the Sacraments of the word and of the worship of God Reason 2 Secondly there is promise of blessing to them that serue him with a perfect heart and there is threatning of most heauy curses and iudgements to come vpon their soules that worship him after the commandements and precepts of men Our Sauiour chargeth his disciples to obserue all things whatsoeuer he commandeth them Matth. 28.20 and then he addeth Loe I am with you to the ende of the world Matth. 28.20 It appeareth in many places of the booke of Iudges the Israelites are deliuered ouer to their aduersaries for transgressing in this kind Iudg 2.12.14.15 2. Chron. 26.18 19. euen for worshipping him after other waies then he had appointed There is a fearefull denuntiation in the shutting vp of the Reuelation against all that shall dare either to adde or detract any thing in the holy things of God Reuel 22.18 19. I testifie vnto euery man that heareth the wordes of the Prophesie of this Booke If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall take away from the words of the Booke of this Prophesie God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from the things which are written in this Booke Wherefore it is no small matter to follow the priuate willes of men in the worship of God and not to suffer our selues to be guided and directed by his word and commandement Obiection This may seeme to tye vp the desires of man too strictly and therefore his wisedome that he hath by nature Ministreth many obiections against this trueth to which wee are to giue answere as briefly as we can First the question may be asked whether Princes haue not power to make lawes in the Church haue they nothing to doe with the Church may they
deformed both wayes they haue too little one way and too much another way and yet alasse they see it not they know it not they feele it not Or if they do know it they will not acknowledge it or if they feele it they will not reforme it and if they see it they glory at it and reioyce in it It were a strange thing to see any body to bee merry and make a triumph of it because it wanteth an eye or an hand or a foot But thus the case standeth with many Churches they consist of confused bodies one member encroching vpon the office of another they want their eyes to see withall and yet they dreame of perfection and despise other that are more faire and forward in good things then themselues Nothing continueth long at one stay in this life nothing is so well ordered but Satan and his instruments seeke to put it out of ioynt Wee must pray to God to open our eyes to see our wants and wrinkles and to labour earnestly as well to restore that which is wanting as to cut off that which is abounding Christ is the King of this Church shall any presume in his kingdome to set vp or pull downe to place or to displace to plant or to destroy This is Gods office it belongeth vnto him onely to do them such therefore are no better then vsurpers Vse 2 Secondly this serueth to reprooue the state of the Iewes as it stood in the dayes of Christ It was time for him to come to reforme and restore all things they had many strange plants growing in the garden of God which his right hand had neuer planted that were as naughty and noysome rootes to bee pulled vp and as byles and blisters in the body We heard before that in the Church vnder the Law there was found no other Ecclesiasticall ministeries which were ordinary then those orders of the high Priest the inferiour Priests and the rest of the Leuites all which were appointed by the law of God And if any were raised vp extraordinarily the same had their calling confirmed from heauen eyther by inward motion of the Spirit or by working of miracles or by euident testimonies of the mouth of God But this gouernment of the Church stood not long without change and alteration for though the field were sowne with good seed yet the enuious man sowed tares in it so that in latter times there arose many sectes and sorts of teachers among thē who by schismes were ready to rent that body in sunder departing from the simplicity sincerity that was established by Gods instistution Epiph. cont haer lib. 1. Some of the ancient that haue taken paines to discouer to the world the heresies that sprung vp and grew apace where once they tooke rooting and footing and so to giue notice of them that they might be auoyded doe testifie that seuen seuerall and principall sects arose among the Iewes Seuen sects among the Iewes whereof some are mentioned in the Scriptures and other are not The first was that of the Scribes Scribes who were Interpreters of the Law but withall as if the law were too base a thing to sticke onely vnto it they deliuered many traditions as from their Elders not contained in the Law and sought taking counsell of humane wisedom to bring in a more exact kind of the worship of GOD then Moses and the Prophets euer taught consisting in many voluntary obseruations and customes deuised by men which they are wont to magnifie preferre before the Commandements of God Mat. 15. Colossians 2. Thus would man become wiser thē GOD Deut. 4 2. who forbad all adding or taking from his word The second sect were the Sadduces Sadduces which were of the race of the Samaritans and had their name of one Sadoc a Priest these denied the resurrection of the body and beleeued not that there is any Angell or spirit Acts 23 and consequently ouerthrew all religion as 1. Corinth 15. For if there be no resurrection of the body or immortality of the soule then are wee of all men the most miserable that professe Christ In vaine wee beleeue in his Name and in vaine wee fight with beasts at Ephesus in vaine we suffer crosses and afflictions for the Gospels sake it were better for vs to do as the most doe and to bee wicked and vngodly if there were no other life or reward in another world If the dead rise not 1 Cor. 15 16 17. then is not Christ raised and if CHRIST bee not raised our faith is vaine we are yet in our sinnes The third sect were Pharisies Pharisies these were the strictest of all others and most reuerenced and best esteemed these beleeued the rising againe of the dead at the last day and that there were both Angels and spirits as the Scribes also did and that all shall come vnto iudgement to receiue according to the things they do in this flesh whether they bee good or euill Acts 23. Acts 23 6 7. When Paul beeing accused by his enemies perceiuing that they were partly Pharisies and partly Sadduces he cryed out in the Councell Men and brethren I am a Pharisie the sonne of a Pharisie of the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question They much honoured virginity and single life they paied tithes of the smallest things they possessed Luke 18 verse 12. They washed cups platters beds and all kinde of vessels that they vsed they fasted twice euery week and differed in their habite from other men Against these are many woes denounced by our Sauiour Christ in the Gospel Math. 23 verse 23 for their hypocrisie that delighted more in outward shewes then in the truth of the heart The fourth sect were the Hemerobaptists Hemerobaptists or Quotidian washers who thought that no man could be saued if hee were not washed euery day that so he might be clensed from the impurity and filthinesse of sinne It is not the water in the whole sea nor any fountaine can wash away the sinnes and corruptions of our life or of our heart It hath no force in it eyther by any naturall power or by any voluntary vse Christ is our Purgatory and purification it is he that must wash vs or else wee remaine vnpure and vncleane He is the water of life whereby our consciences must be sprinkled Heb. 10 22. he is the lauer of regeneration by whom wee are borne againe and washed as with pure water If he make vs cleane then we are clean indeed His passion and the shedding of his blood must be communicated to vs and the sanctifying grace of the Spirit of God And this is necessary vnto saluation not any outward washing of the body which may clense the flesh but cannot touch the soule This is made auaileable three waies First by faith which serueth to apply Christ vnto vs and all his benefits Secondly by repentance from dead workes whereby
perswaded though one rose from the dead He vnderstandeth heereby the writings of the olde Testament these he opposeth against all visions and reuelations as we also do against all traditions these these I say are sufficient to bring vs to Christ to saluation to heauen These are sufficient to keepe vs from hell and destruction and euery euill way Wherefore whatsoeuer belongeth to doctrine or to good life is found in them we haue direction by them to all things whatsoeuer belong vnto vs to do It is the commendation of a good Law to leaue as little vndecided and vndetermined and out of the compasse of the Law as is possible Such as write of the gouernment of Common-wealths do giue this rule that it behoueth these rules that are well made Arist 1 be● li. ● 1. cap. 4. as neere as may be to determine of all things and to leaue as few as they can to the arbitrement and discretion of the Iudges Men are oftentimes passionate passions hinder iudgment and the finding out of truth The Iewes to whom were committed the Oracles of God were directed by them in the least things they had to do Our estate is not left worse then theirs who beside the same direction that they had haue also the noble addition of the new Testament which were written that we might beleeue and in beleeuing haue euerlasting life Iohn 20 31. Secondly this doctrine serueth to direct informe the Ministers what to teach preach Vse 2 vnto the people and the people what to beleeue wherein to rest whereupon to builde their faith and to settle their conscience The matter giuen them in charge to deliuer and commend to the care and consideration of the hearers is the word of God They are to teach nothing else but what Christ their Lord and Master hath commanded to be obserued Mat. 28 20. We must follow the example of Paul 1 Cor. 11 23 who deliuered nothing to the Corinthians but what he had receiued of the Lord. If they strike at sinne any otherwise their weapon is not sharpe enough to cut it downe for whereas they should draw out the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Eph. 6 17. they giue it a blow with a leaden dagger and whereas they should ouerthrow it with the push of a pike they runne at it with a bulrush It is the word that is mighty in operation and entreth into the soule is able to cast downe euery thing that exalteth it selfe against the kingdome knowledge of Iesus Christ It is the word onely that is the food of the soule and is able to affoord wholesome nourishment Let vs not teach the people our owne deuises which is to feed thēwith chaffe that hath no strength in it Let vs deale as workemen that need not be ashamed diuiding the word of truth aright 2 Tim. 2. And concerning the people they must not affect such teaching as is most plausible but such as is most profitable not that which may please the eare but that which may moue the heart The end of our comming to the house of God must not be to delight our selues but to reforme our liues Neither ought we so much to attend what learning they shew as what sin they reproue that so we may come to repentance The more they open our vnderstandings by the key of the Scriptures the better we are to account of them Thirdly it serueth to reproue those that Vse 3 do rush headlong headstrong in their actions and course of life not caring what they do as desperate men that feare not their flesh or as foolish Marriners that runne their Ship vpon the Rockes and neuer aske counsell at the mouth of the Lord. If any aske how this may be done ●ct and say we desire nothing more then to know the mind of the Lord but how can this be seeing he is in heauen and we are vpon the earth I answer ●●●●er it is not hard or vnpossible for vs to consult with God and to resolue as from God and to know his will We must search into his word for hee yet speaketh vnto vs in the Scriptures When the word speaketh know that God speaketh vnto thee and set it downe with thy selfe as a certaine truth that is surer then the heauens that when thou hearest the word thou hearest him and whensoeuer thou despisest the word thou despisest him The Scripture is as the voice of God and therefore the Prophets so often repeate this to the people in all their sermons ● 1 4 22 ●d 23.2 Heare ye the word of the Lord thus saith the Lord. A man will not aduenture vpon a temporall possession without the aduice of his learned counsell nor a sicke person vpon strange meates without the aduice of his Physition How then shall we dare in matters that concerne our soules and may put vs in hazard of our saluation to vndertake sundry actions without knowledge of the word and so without warrant assurance whether they please God Hence it is that God oftentimes reproueth his people because they did that which he had not commanded the Prophets charge them with this as a sinne against him because they entred vpon those things whereof hee had not spoken and which neuer entred into his heart as Ier. 7 31 32. They haue built the high places of Tophet which is in the valley of the sonne of Hinnom to burne their sonnes and their daughters in the fire which I commanded them not neyther came it into my heart And to that purpose saith the Prophet Esay chap. 30 verse 2. They walke to go downe into Egypt and haue not asked at my mouth c. Neither let any obiect that this is spoken in matters of great weight and importance as in points of faith or of the worship of God without which a man cannot be saued and which the word in other places hath determined for this were great iniury to the word of God to pinne it and pound it vp in so narrow a corner so short a compasse that it should be able to direct vs only in the cheef principall points of our religion and not in matters of lesser moment of our profession This doth mightily shrinke vp the sinewes of the Scripture and binde vp the armes of it which otherwise extend farre and neare Remember that in the booke of Ioshua ● 9 14. the children of Israel are charged by the Prophet that they asked not counsell at the mouth of the Lord when they entred into couenant with the Gibeonites and yet that couenant was not made contrary to any commandement of the Lord. For howsoeuer it seemeth to many that they ought to haue beene put to the sword and to haue dyed the death because they were in the number of those Nations that dwelled in the inheritance of the people of God promised to Abraham and his posterity long before yet if
transgresse this rule and Reason 2 break those bounds that God hath limited vnto them cannot prosper For as Christ our Sauiour maketh this a generall rule as the ordinance of the eternall God which none must dare to violate Those things which God hath ioyned together let none put asunder Matth. 19.6 So is this also a certaine rule to be obserued to the end of the world That whatsoeuer things God hath separated no man must presume to ioyne and iumble together For as the Lord knew this order of distinguishing offices to be very expedient and good for the Church so he hath not ceassed to punish the breakers and to reuenge the contemners of it most seuerely of what calling and condition soeuer they were This we see verified in Corah Dathan Abiram they presumed aboue their vocation would needs take vpon thē the Priesthood ●ob 16.10 to burne incense before the Lord contrary to the ordinance of God therfore went down into the pit and dyed not the common death of other men for the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them vp with al that they had and fire came downe from heauen and consumed the residue When Vzza supported the Arke being ready to fall for the oxen stumbled the anger of the Lord was kindled against him ●ro 13.10 he smote him because he put his hand to the Arke so that there he dyed before God The like we might say touching Azaria the king of Iuda who was stricken with an incurable and vnrecouerable leprosie because in the pride of his heart he forgate the office of a Prince and vsurped the office of the Priest and went into the Temple ●ro 16.18 to burne incense vpon the Altar All which direfull and dreadfull examples ought to teach vs how acceptable this comely order of seuerall callings is to God both to breed in our hearts a care and endeauour to keepe it and a feare and terrour to breake it Reason 3 Thirdly Christ is as a wise master of the house that fitteth to euery man his standing he is the Lord of the Church he appointeth callings and hath in himselfe fulnesse of grace from which euery one receiueth his measure Ioh. 1.16 Col. 1.19 Hence it is that he is compared to a great Prince who going into a strange countrey called his seruants and deliuered them his goods ●t 25.14 15 to one he gaue fiue talents to another two and to another one to euery man after his owne abilitie and straightway went from home As we haue wisdome skil knowledge and experience giuen vnto vs to deale so God dealeth with euery man A Captaine in warre is carefull to set euery one in his proper place that he may know his Captaine his colours his standard his march out of his standing he dareth not to remoue that he may please him that hath chosen him to be a souldier ●h 5 14. Christ is the Generall of his Church the faithfull are his souldiers all their life is a continuall warfare which costeth them great paines and much sweating sometimes they must resist vnto blood ●b 12.4 striuing against sinne As then souldiers in warre haue and hold euery one his standing place in the sight of their captaine so euery Christian should keepe his seuerall calling in the presence of the Lord of life who hath in great mercy and wonderfull wisedome appointed them thereunto Vse 1 Now the vses remaine to be opened expressed for our edification And first of all it teacheth that distinct callings in the Church and commonwealth are the ordinance of God and his appointment not the inuentions and deuises of men The Apostle saith He gaue some to be Apostles and some Prophets Eph. 4.11 and some Euangelists and some Pastors and Teachers and elsewhere he addeth Are all Apostles 1 Cor. 12. ● are all Prophets are all Teachers are all workers of miracles haue all the gift of healing doe all speake with tongues doe all interpret The like he speaketh of the priuate families and of the duties that belong to euery one therin both to husbands and wiues to masters and seruants to parents and children As then God hath distributed to euery man as the Lord hath called euery one so let him walke 1 Cor. 7.17 This is ordained to be obserued in all Churches We shall neuer learne to performe our duties to God and to each other except we be perswaded and resolued in this point The husband will be ready to forgoe his authoritie and the wife will presume to step vp into the place of her husband The child will behaue himselfe proudly against the ancient and the base against the honourable Esay 3.5 We shall see folly set in great dignity and the rich sit in low place it will not be strange to behold seruants aloft vpon horses Eccle. 10.6.7 and Princes walking as seruants vpon the earth Hath God placed vs in the calling of a seruant and set masters ouer vs We ought to learne know whence this is and to consider from whom it came It is the Lords doing who can abide no disorder and confusion but will haue some inferiours and some superiours according to his owne law Honour thy father and thy mother Exod. 20.12 This doctrine serueth to establish that commandement and to make it a perpetuall ordinance to remaine for euer God hath not made all men excellent alike he hath not qualified them alike but hath giuen more to one then to another and would haue one to receiue profite from another And herein doth his infinite wisedome wonderfully appeare and diuersly shew it selfe God is in himselfe most excellent worthy of all honour and reuerence and hauing all things vnder his feete he would haue a patterne of that excellency and subiection imprinted in his creatures In the Angels he hath set a difference and made degrees and orders among them one an Archangel other principalities other thrones Col 1.16 other dominions some are called Seraphims other Cherubims and therefore there is a distinction betweene them as he hath made euery starre to differ from another in glory 1. Cor. 15.41 He created man to rule ouer the foules of the ayre ouer the beasts of the earth and ouer the fishes in the sea The Apostle teacheth that in a great house are diuersity of vessels some to honour 2 Tim. 2 20. and some to dishonour There is no man great but he hath his greatnesse from him that is the greatest There is no man made low but he must acknowledg that the Lord hath set him there The seruant must know that God hath put him in that seruice and not seeke to breake the bonds wherwith he is tyed but thereby receiue encouragement in the performance of such duties as lie vpon him Vse 2 Secondly this serueth to reproue sundry errours and abuses of such as transgresse against the truth of this doctrine And first heereby falleth to
immediately going before where he willeth them to heale the sicke to clense the leapers to raise vp the dead and to cast out diuels If they be extended farther because he willed them to goe and preach ●ath 10 7. saying The Kingdome of God is at hand he forbiddeth them to set the Gospel to sale as that which standeth at offer and proffer so that the Minister must not be giuen to filthy lucre 1 Tim. 3 3. Tit. 1 7. So then they do giue freely who do not intend gaine as the reward of their labours nor set it before their eyes as the marke they aime at but desire nothing more then the glory of God and the saluation of the Church and referre thereunto all their studies and endeuourss They that onely or cheefely seeke their owne wealth are truly called hirelings whereas the seruants of God haue him before their eyes of whom they are sent that so they may feed the flocke with knowledge and doctrine ●biection Againe it may be saide that Paul witnesseth he tooke nothing of the Corinthians and that he laboured with his owne hands Acts 20 34. 1 Cor. 4 12. I answer ●nswer the Apostle in taking nothing of that Church considered what did belong to the edification of that Church neuerthelesse the brethren that came from Macedonia supplied his wants and helped him in his necessities But of this we spake more at large in the former doctrine Vse 3 Thirdly let no man presume to refuse and reiect the Ministery as thinking themselues or their children too high or this calling too low for them thinking themselues too honourable and this office too contemptible for their persons No man is too good to serue God at the Altar and to minister in his Sanctuary If any refuse the Ministery in regard of his birth and his wealth or worth or gifts he deceiueth himselfe and ouervalueth his owne condition for who is sufficient for these things Cor. 2 16. We are a thousand fold more vnworthy to be Ministers then the Ministery can be thought vnworthy of vs. Noah was the Prince of the world yet a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2 5. Melchizedech was both King of Salem and a Priest of the most high God Heb. 7 1. Gen. 14 18. Samuel was both a Iudge of the people and a Prophet of God 1 Sam 3 20. and 7 15. Dauid was both a King a Prophet And albeit certaine Kings haue beene Prophets yet it was no greater credite to the Ministery that Kings were Prophets then commendation to Kings themselues that they were Prophets as it was a greater glory to Kings that they haue beene Philosophers then credite to Philosophy that Kings haue studied professed and imbraced it The Son of God our Lord Iesus Christ before his incarnation was the Teacher of his people for by his Spirit he spake in the Patriarkes Prophets and was the Messenger of God and therefore called the Angell of the Couenant and after that he tooke our flesh and nature vpon him being the seed of Abraham he professed that he was sent to preach deliuerance to the captiues the acceptable yeare of the Lord Luke 4 18 19 43. He was equall in glory with the Father yet this was his calling and worke while he liued vpon the earth God the Father thought it a meet office to be committed to his onely begotten Sonne and should it seeme a reprochfull office to his seruants If he were annointed to be both our King Prophet and Priest let not vs despise prophesie Nay not onely the Sonne of God as he was man disdained not this function but God himselfe in Paradise was a Preacher of the Gospel Gen. 3 15. The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpents head Math 17 5. and the Spirit of God is as it were a fellow-worker with the labours of the Ministers Besides the Angels themselues most glorious creatures that alwayes behold the face of the Father that is in heauen haue not refused to be the publishers of this message Luke 2 9 10. Wherefore all such as GOD hath blessed with forward and toward children as a speciall mercy toward them and withall bestowed the goods of this world vpon them enabling them to maintain them in schooles of learning ought to further the building of Gods Church and to thinke it no disgrace or disparagement vnto them to apply their sonnes to be workmen in this spirituall building and so to dedicate them vnto God as godly Hannah gaue Samuel vnto the Lord that so long as he liued he might bee giuen vnto the Lord 1 Sam. 1 28. It is a thing greatly to be lamented that this high office of preaching the word is so contemned by all of high calling that the Nobility vtterly shunne it the greatest part of the Gentry of the Land generally refuse it eyther as base in it selfe or at least as base to them or in them Great mens children are set to study mans law but it beseemeth not their greatnesse to study Gods law To be sent on Embassage in the affaires of a Prince is a great honour but to be sent with Gods message in his mouth is esteemed a disgrace Ye fooles and blinde whether is greater God or man Whose message is most honourable Gods or else mans We see in the Popedome how men of countenance and estimation are not ashamed to giue their children to the Popes seruice and beare the mark of the beast and refuse not to haue thē neerely and ill-fauouredly shauen vntill they haue scarce one haire of an honest man left vnto them Cardinal Pool nay some of the blood royall haue taken vpon them the orders or rather the disorders of that Hierarchy as we haue examples in our owne Chronicles Princes themselues haue renounced their crowns and kingdoms and entred into Monasteries haue put their sonnes and daughters into Cloysters It is very apparent that Princes among the Heathen were also Priests Shall not these being poore blinde Idolaters that knew not GOD aright stand vp at the day of iudgement against vs to condemne vs that haue so little care or loue to the Lords Temple that the seruing of him there is become so vile a thing as it is not beseeming a mans sonne of any countenance and reputation in the world So that they will not set their hand to the Lords Plough but scorne it almost as much as to go to plough and cart The Prophet Esaias as it is probably collected was of a very noble linage See the Argument of the Geneua translation Prolego Vrsini in Esay sonne to Amos who was brother vnto Amaziah King of Iuda and therefore thought to be of the blood royall as the Hebrew writers agree who had the bookes of Genealogies extant among them The Prophet Daniel with Hananiah Mishael Azariah were of the Kings seed Dan. 1 3. We heard before that Christ himselfe the Lord of life and the most honourable person
the high Maiesty of God Is not euery other word almost an oath can they speake without it Is it not become in the opinion and practise of the most sort a grace and ornament to their speech and a gentlemanlike exercise Are they not accounted fools and Puritanes that vse it not themselues or seeke to reprooue it represse it in others Some wil say It is a foolish custome that I haue gotten and I cannot leaue it but I meane no harme or hurt by it to any man Thus doe men goe about to excuse sinne which they haue no purporse to forsake but rather a desire to continue in it Doe you call it a foolish custome nay it is a vile wicked custome Giue it his true name and disguise it not name the child aright call it with Christ a diuellish custome it commeth of that euill one Matt 5 3● This is so common a sin among men and women among old and yong hath taken such deep roots that the axe of Gods word and of his iudgements cannot cut it downe The fathers infect their children and one learneth of another vntill the greatest part are become licentious and abominable Let vs come to the sanctification of the Sabboth the more many heare of it the oftner the commandement is vrged vnto them and pressed vpon them the more dissolute and disordered they grow in the prophanation of it They cannot be ignorant that they ought not to follow their pleasures on that day but to call the Sabboth a delight 〈◊〉 8.13 and honour him on it not doing their owne wayes nor finding their owne pleasure nor speaking their owne words but when this holy day of the Lord cometh they forget all their pleasures so round them in the eare that they runne madding euery one after his owne vanities and the least occasion draweth them from the exercises of religion as if they meant to bid defiance to God and to prouoke him to battell which they doe against their owne soules For are we stronger then he or able to make our party good against him No no we deceiue our selues we are no fit matches to deale with him who is able to arme the smallest weakest creatures to our confusion Vse 5 Fiftly we haue al need of patience without which we shall neuer be able to goe through with our obedience It is no easie thing to yeeld obedience We haue many enemies and oppositions that stand in our way to hinder vs. We haue many corruptions within vs we haue the world a thousand allurements without vs all of them set in battell aray to encounter with vs. We are like ground that yeeldeth nothing of it selfe but thornes and thistles without much labor and paines without often ploughing and tilling and turning vp Hence it is that the Apostle intreateth the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 13.22 and beseecheth them to suffer the words of exhortation We doe not easily brooke and digest the word but with great difficulty It is hard meat lying heauy vpon the stomack and will not soone concoct To mortifie sinne is to deny our selues and as it were to cut off the right hand and to pluck out the right eye Mat. 5. It is not done without great greefe and anguish It is almost death to the Swearer to obey this exhortation My brethren sweare not at all Iam. 5. It is as painefull to him as if you cut off a peece of his tongue or sewed vp his lips or dashed out his teeth It is in effect to strike off a limbe to tell the drunkard he must liue sober and not run into excesse and that drunkards shall not inherite the kingdome of God he iudgeth it so hard a doctrine as if he were in danger to die for thirst Seeing therefore obedience to the word is painefull wee haue need of patience to stay vs vp that wee shrinke not away and goe cleane backeward Besides we do not by by enioy the promises that God maketh vnto vs they are for an appointed time he will try vs in waiting for thē So he dealt with Abraham he had promise of a sonne but it was not immediately accomplished he was faine to expect long time for it So the Psalmist speaking of Ioseph confirmeth notably this point He had sundry dreames which were predictions and presages of his future aduancement yet after this he was solde for a seruant his feet were hurt with fetters Psal 105.19 and he was laid in yron vntil the time that his word came the word of the Lord tryed him Wee must bee faithfull vnto the death and then we shall receiue the crowne of life God tryeth vs all at one time or other and one way or other wee see not his promises by and by performed vnto vs let vs wait for them with patience and put on the hope of saluation as a shield for surely they wil come and he that hath spoken the word cannot lie Lastly we must here endure sundry afflictions and shall meete with many scornes and scoffes of wicked men seeking to turne vs from our due obedience to God and his word and therefore we haue need of patience to hold vs constantly in the faith without wauering Heb. 10.36 Christ Iesus forewarning his disciples what troubles hanged ouer their heads that they shal be persecuted and deliuered vp to the Synagogues and into prisons and be brought before kings rulers for his Names sake giueth them this exhortation Luke 21.19 In your patience possesse ye your soules As Ismael persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit euen so it is now and euer will be Gal. 4.29 Many haue turned backe from the trueth through these tentations They cannot abide to be reuiled though it be for righteousnesse sake Let vs not thinke the Christian mans life to bee an easie and lazy life nor the way to it pleasant nor the gate that leadeth and openeth to it broad and wide it is a continuall warfare 2. Tim. 2 3. suffer affliction as a good souldier of Iesus Christ Heerupon we are charged to striue to enter in at the streight gate Mat. 7. There is no saluation without striuing we must suffer many a blow and endure many a wound We must be content to beare many showers and sharpe stormes The husbandman suffereth much labour before he reapeth We must not dreame of the victory before the battell Our Sauiour speaking of the good and sauing hearer of the word such as all of vs ought to be describeth him by these notes Luke 8.5 that with an honest and good heart he heareth the word keepeth it and bringeth forth fruit with patience This is so excellent a vertue that God vouchsafeth to be called the God of patience Rom. 15. When once wee beginne to yeeld obedience to the word and to frame our liues according thereunto and to bring forth the fruits worthy amendment of life when we are freed from the tyranny of Satan and made citizens of
separated frō it that were neuer of it or in it And touching the elect they can neuer fall from the grace of election the foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. ● ● hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his so that it is vnchangeable Besides such are also engrafted into Christ and cannot be separated from his communion according the saying of Christ Iohn 6 ver 37. All that the Father giueth mee shall come to me and him that commeth to me I will in no wise cast out And the Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn ● ● saieth They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would no doubt haue continued with vs but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of vs. If then the reprobate were neuer of this communion and the elect can neuer fall from this communion it may seeme that none can be said to be truely excommunicated that is to be separated from that spirituall communion which wee haue with Christ and with all the Saints by faith ● hope and loue I answer that which is affirmed of the elect and reprobate is most true neuerthelesse that which is concluded from thence is most false as the learned haue well obserued For first of all touching the reprobate that being hypocrites were once in the Church though they were neuer of the Church neither truely partakers of this spirituall communion of the Saints yet then they are saide to bee separated from it when they are manifested declared to haue beene alwaies strangers vnto it and separated from it as when Dauid praieth in the Psalms that they might be blotted out of the booke of life Psal 69 28. as if he had said declare it shew it plainely that they were neuer written in the booke of eternall election Secondly touching the elect the question is more difficult and yet the knot is not so intricate or intangled but it may be loosed For albeit they cannot be cut off from the grace of election because his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. neither can be wholly and altogether excluded from that communion which they haue by faith with Christ and by loue with the Church both by reason of the stablenesse of Gods promises and by reason of the efficacy force of Christs praier heard of the Father 〈◊〉 ●7 21 ● Luke 22 32. Yet in some sort in some respect they separate themselues as much as lyeth in them when they fall into greeuous sinnes as Dauid when he committed adultery and Peter when he denyed his Master The guifts of the holy Ghost are as a flame of fire kindled in vs such sinnes are as water powred vpon them to quench it and except GOD did grant his Spirit to dwell in them and preserue it as fire hidden vnder the ashes they would lose it wholly be quite and cleane excluded from this spirituall communion Notwithstanding our saluation is sure for his promise sake who hath promised to put his feare in our hearts that we should not depart from him and for Christs praier who praied for Peter all the elect that their faith should not faile Hence it is that he keepeth a remnant of grace in them and cherisheth the fire of his Spirit that it should not goe out so that the flame is slaked and the heat is diminished But in his good time he kindleth the fire and stirreth vp the heat somtimes by his word and sometimes by his corrections and therefore the Apostle willeth Timothy to stirre vp as coales 〈◊〉 1 6. the gift of God that was in him Dauid hauing experience hereof praieth vnto him to create a new heart in him and not to take away his Spirit from him Ps 51 10 11. Thus we see how the faithful are not wholly but yet in some part separated frō the communion of Christ because they are depriued of the sweet comforts that they felt before of the large measure of grace which they finde greatly diminished by the committing of sinne and continuing in it This is the spirituall communion The externall communion standeth in a common partaking together in the word in praiers in the receiuing of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another as Luke speaketh of the Church of Christ after his ascension Acts 2 42. They continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and in praiers Excommunication separateth from all these But some will say Obiect doth excommunication take away all commercing and conuersing one with another May not one in any sort liue with such Or doth it dissolue all bands of nature and pollicy I answer Answer no. There are some bands so firmely and closely knit tied together that nothing can loose them and abrogate them Some duties are naturall some domesticall and some ciuill which no excommunication can diminish or dissolue or dispense withall The Apostle giueth this as a generall precept If thine enemy hunger Rom. 12 20. giue him meate and if he thirst giue him drinke If an excommunicate person be in want and in any distresse we must helpe him and minister vnto him such things as are necessary for his preseruation wee must not cast away all care of him and all loue vnto him forasmuch as God hath made vs keepers one of another Againe it is lawfull to buy of him to sell vnto him and to bargaine with him albeit we should not conuerse and commerce with him as with a friend Moreouer if we owe personall duties to such a one as is in the family with vs we cānot shake them off vnder any colour or pretence of excommunication The wife must performe due beneuolence to the husband the children must obey their parents the seruants must count their masters worthy of all honour and contrariwise prouided alwayes that they do not ceasse to pray for thē to admonish them and to hate their sins and that they looke to themselues that they do not defend them in their wicked courses and ioyne with them in opinion for then we make our selues partakers of their sins Lastly let vs set before vs the ends of excommunication which also haue bin considered in part already One end of it is the good of the person excommunicated that if it bee possible he may be won Tit. 2 11. Rom 1 6. Christ deliuereth the doctrine of saluation the Gospel is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth For wheras Christ Iesus saith of himself Math. 10 34. that he came to send fire and sword into the world and that hee is appointed for the fall of many in Israel Lu. 12 46 2 34. that the Gospel is the sauor of death vnto death 2 Corinth 2 15. Yet this is not the proper end of Christ or the Gospel but as it were beside their purpose
not cleere the wicked Although Princes doe not make statutes against it yet the statute law of God hath decreed against it and condemned it set a great penalty vpon the breach of it We haue sundry lawes that none abuse our names but we haue none for the preseruation of Gods Name and therefore God will looke to it and take order for it No commandement hath had more visible iudgments executed vpō the breakers of it then this The plague of God shall not depart from his house that is a swearer one iudgment or other shall ouertake him and if he do escape the greater torment is reserued for him in the life to come The Prophet Zachary Zach. 5.4 telleth vs that God will consume the timber and stones of his house The sonne of the Israelitish woman that blasphemed the Name of the Lord and cursed is brought foorth without the campe and stoned to death Leuit. 24.14 15. and thereupon a Law established Whosoeuer curseth his God shall beare his sinne It is lamentable to consider the wretchednesse of prophane men notwithstanding the greeuousnesse of this sinne Many are of such a ruffian-like spirit that they feare not to teare in peeces the Lord of life and to crucifie againe the Sonne of God as much as in them lyeth We our selues are iealous of our own names and the names of our parents and posterity no maruell then if God be exceeding iealous ouer himselfe If we wil not glorifie him he will glorifie himselfe and his Name in our destruction He may winke at vs for a time as also at our manifold and monstrous oathes but he hath not forgotten them he keepeth a booke of accounts as a register against vs and when the great day of the Lord shall come he will bring forth the records and set our sinnes in order before vs. Let vs not thinke to escape Eccles 8.11 because sentence is not speedily executed the more he delayeth the more he hoardeth vp punishment for vs. The longer the arrow is in drawing the deeper it will pierce when it is shot out against vs. Hee suffereth them to liue in security for a time but they shall taste of seuerity in the end Iob 24.23 and 21.30 The wicked is reserued to the day of destruction they shal be brought forth to the day of wrath 23 And the Priest shall write these curses in a booke and he shall blot them out with the bitter water 24 And he shall cause the woman to drinke the bitter water that causeth the curse and the water that causeth the curse shall enter into her and become bitter 25 Then the Priest shall take the iealousie offering out of the womans hand and shall waue the offering before the Lord and offer it vpon the Altar 26 And the Priest shall take an handfull of the offering euen the memoriall thereof and burne it vpon the Altar and afterward shall cause the woman to drinke the water Hitherto wee haue seene the things that goe before the tryall now we come to such as are more neerely ioyned with it which are these He must write the curses in a booke and then blot them out with the waters of bitternesse before remembred But before the woman drinke of the waters he must take the offering out of her hand and waue it before the Lord and then offer it vnto the Lord. Lastly he is to burne a part of it vpon the altar and afterward cause the woman to drinke the water Obiect Heere the question may be asked wherefore the curse must be written and afterward blotted out If it must be blotted out what need it to be written If it must be written why should it be blotted out I answer Answer it was written to note out the stablenesse of Gods iudgements and the certainety of his trueth And therefore also it was vttered in words expressed in actions and established by writing In word of the adiuration in worke of the drinking vp of the water in writing of the whole fact as it was done before the Lord. Neuerthelesse this writing was so extant that it continued not long but was so cleane defaced that none could reade it because God would not haue the remembrance of such filthy causes and iealouses and suspicions to remaine to posterity lest any be inflamed with the like passion and so bring into imitation such like practises Verse 23.24 c. And the Priest shall write these curses c. We see in this place the former ceremonies and circumstances farther vrged and pressed neere to the conscience of her that was suspected and stood before the Lord to be tryed She is caused and commanded to drinke of these waters prepared for this purpose These waters that cause the curse shall enter into her and become bitter This is the meanes that God wil vse to manifest things that yet are hidden in secret and such as should bring an heauy iudgement vpon her that was guilty We learne from hence Doctrine Adultery ● albeit sec● co●●●● punished of God that whoredome is alwaies punished of God and neuer escapeth vnpunished Howsoeuer adultery be not regarded among men and thought either no sinne or a little and veniall sinne yet God findeth it out and ceasseth not to plague and punish it both temporally and eternally both in this life and in the life to come This we see set foorth before vs at large throughout the whole booke of God Gen. 6 1● What was the cause that brought the flood vpon the old world and swept away the inhabitants thereof was it not for their vncleannesse and the lusts of their eyes and the loosenesse of their life The like we might say of Sodome and Gomorrha and the cities about them who giuing themselues once to fornication Iude 7. and going after strange flesh are set forth for an example suffering the vengeance of eternall fire When Balaam was not suffered to curse the people of God he gaue the Moabites and Midianites this damnable counsel to allure them to commit fornication by which meanes many perished as we shall shew afterward in the 25 chapter of this booke whereunto also the Apostle alludeth 1 Cor. 10.8 when he saith Neither let vs commit fornication as some of them committed and fell in one day three and twenty thousand It must needs be a greeuous sin that brought downe so greeuous a iudgment A like fearefull example we haue in the booke of Iudges when the Leuites wife was abused vnto death there followed the destruction of the beniamites 〈◊〉 20 35. 〈◊〉 21.3 so that there fell of them fiue and twenty thousand almost one whole tribe of Israel was wanting This is it which the Lord threatened to his people Leuit. 18.24.25 20. Ye shall not defile your selues in any of these things among which this was one to defile themselues with their neighbours wife by carnall copulation for in all these the nations are defiled which I will cast
secretly purloyning them away and we hold our peace are we not accessary to his theft and partakers of his sin So if wee heare any raising euill reports of him and robbing him of his good name which is more in value then all things in the world are we not slanderers as well as hee while we ioyne with him so become guilty of the same transgression A good name is many a mans liuing take that away and impaire his credite he is vtterly vndone not able to maintaine himselfe you hurt him as much as if you tooke away house and land corne cattell from him or any other thing of worth that is deare vnto him If then it be so rich and precious a treasure we must bee carefull to maintaine our brothers credite estimation being made keepers of his life of his goods and of his good name doing the same vnto him which we desire he should do vnto vs. This is a signe of true loue that we loue him indeed when we will not spare to take vpon vs his iust defence and on the other side it is an euident token of cold loue or no loue at all when wee see them abused and do not regard it the Lord will raise vp others in his righteous iudgement who shall do as little for vs as wee doe for those that stand in need of vs. Vse 6 Lastly as this doctrine hath offered vnto vs sundry good meditations of duties concerning God and our brother so it sendeth vs not away without comfort concerning our selues Are wee slandered and reuiled Are we falsely charged with things which we neuer spake or did Let this be our comfort the time shall certainly come when the slanderers shall be detected and put to silence It ought not to seeme strange to vs when such flying tales are noised abroad rather it might seeme most strange as a great wonder if it were not so The diuell will be the diuell still who is the head and prince of all slanderers and all his instruments will be like him Gods people aboue all others are falsely accused they are not of the world Iohn 15 19. but chosen out of the world and therefore the world hateth them Ioseph was accused to be incontinent Iob was condemned to be an hypocrite Daniel was charged with disobedience Amos of conspiracy Eliah of troubling Israel Dauid of seeking Sauls life Paul was suspected to bee a murtherer Christ our Sauiour was reputed an enemy to Caesar and his Disciples were accused and iudged worthy of stripes and censured to bee mouers of sedition among the people howbeit all this is but as a cloud which will quickly be dispersed as a darke mist that shall suddenly bee scattered away It is a notable comfort to heare these things that GOD will not suffer vs to sinke downe vnder taunts and rebukes of men but lift vp our heads and pronounce sentence of absolution on our side Let it not trouble vs to be condemned of men so that wee be assured to be iustified of God If a man were wrongfully condemned in an action of slander or fellony in an inferiour Court of iustice and there iudged to be guilty of some hainous crime yet if he were sure to bee acquitted and discharged by appeale to an higher Court where he is perswaded hee cannot but haue iustice because there is no corruption of Iudge or witnesse how would he be comforted and how little should the ouerthrow he had taken be regarded forasmuch as hee knoweth the next triall will set all to right againe So is the case with vs. It is our lot and condition heere to bee persecuted and reuiled for righteousnesse sake Mat. 5 1● 1● and we shall be condemned of wicked men vniustly howbeit this ought not to trouble vs how greatly soeuer they resist vs and rage against vs this is but a condemnation of men vpon the earth wee may lawfully appeale from them to an higher Court and to a greater Iudge When Paul was falsely accused by the Iewes and could haue no iustice at the hands of the high Priests he appealed to Caesar that is Acts 25 12 from inferior Gouernors to the Emperour that was supreme So must we doe when wee are burdened and oppressed by the poison of euill tongues and condemned as euill dooers of all men we know there is a Iudge that sitteth in heauen who will acquit vs when wee come before him and take the cause into his owne hand And if we see not this alwaies accomplished in this life it shall most certainly be performed in the life to come when all the secrets of euery mans heart shall be opened Sometimes he maketh their light so to shine in this world that they reape great fruite of their godlinesse and the Sunne beames as it were to refresh them and make them aliue againe But if it happen not in this life yet it shall not faile in the next life when Christ shall appeare in glory and say Come yee blessed of my Father inherite yee the kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world Math. chap. 25 verse 34. When hee shall breake the heauens and come to iudge the quicke and the dead let vs lift vp our heads and reioyce for our redemption draweth neere This is the time of our refreshing heere we are ouerwearied with bearing the burden of other mens malice Then shall all teares bee wiped from our eyes and we shall see as wee are seene and know as we are knowne as we reade Math. chap. 13 verse 43. Then shall the righteous shine foorth as the Sunne in the kingdome of their Father he that hath eares to heare let him heare To this purpose speaketh Paul Colos chap. 3 verses 3 4. Your life is hid with Christ in God when Christ who is our life 1 Iohn 3 ● shall appeare then shall ye also appeare with him in glory If then our righteousnesse bee couered heere as with a garment and bee hidden as a treasure that is buried in the earth yet our life shall not alwayes lye in obscurity for when the night is past the day will appeare and when falsehood hideth her face the truth will be made manifest Let vs acknowledge the power of God that is able to do this and let vs rest patiently in him that is our stay Let vs not fret our selues because of him that prospereth in his way and bringeth wicked deuises to passe Contrary-wise the vngodly haue from this doctrine matter of sorrow and heauinesse because howsoeuer they rule heere for a time and will not bee controlled they say their tongues are their owne who is Lord ouer them they thinke themselues priuiledged to deuise and disperse what lies they list and none may call them to an account yet God will one day call them to an account when they shall receiue according to their workes For yet a little while 〈◊〉 37 10 13 and the wicked shall not
fully and freely attend and intend the learning of the Law and giue themselues to the contemplation and consideration of the workes and wayes of God and of godlinesse separated and sequestred themselues for a time wholly from the company and conuersation of men resigning vp themselues into the hands of God and seeking to cut off all occasions whatsoeuer that might quench their zeale and hinder their deuotion Secondly the publike sanctification of the whole Church whereof God is the authour Moses the teacher and the interpreter This is the summe of this Chapter Touching the former point handled in the 21. first verses which is concerning the vow of the Nazarites before we come to the matter it selfe it shall not be amisse for the farther declaration and demonstration thereof to remooue two doubts that stand in the way arising the one from the diuers acceptation of the word the other from the distinction of the seuerall kindes of this vow Touching the seuerall significations of the word The word Nazarite is diuersly taken lest we be deceiued by the ignorance thereof we must vnderstand that there are foure acceptations of it distinct the one from the other Some are called Nazarites some Nazarens others Nasarites which words because they are oftentimes by diuers confounded as if they were all one and the same it is needfull to haue them distinguished aright the one from the other The Nazarites of whom wee haue mention in this place haue their name of separation and are written by the letter Zain Iunij paral lib. 1. c. 8. Analys in Numer these by obseruation of certaine ceremonies of which we shall speake more particularly afterward dedicated themselues vnto God in a more holy manner then the common sort The second sort called Nazarens or Nazarites are distinguished from the former and written with the letter Tsadi and so to be called Natsarites or Natsarens so named of the word Netzer which is oftentimes vsed by the Prophets and signifieth properly a branch growing out of the roots of trees frō whence the Syriack word Notzera or Notzerath or Natzerath is deriued and thereof commeth the name of the City or Village of Nazareth in Galilee Danaeus comment in August de haeres because it was situate in a place planted with store of trees and flowers as Danaeus testifieth out of Bernard Now Christ our Sauiour being conceiued and brought vp in this place is in the New Testament called a Nazarene Matthew chap. 2. verse 23. and Iesus of Nazareth Ioh. 19.19 Act. 2.22 and 3. 6. Matth. 26.76.71 Mar. 1.24 and 10.47 and 14.67 and 16.6 Luk. 4.34 18.37 24.19 Act. 4.10 and 16.14 and 10-38 and 22.8 and 26.9 From hence also the disciples of Christ were first called Nazarites but afterward they were called Christians Acts 11.26 at Antioch which professed the faith of Christ and the doctrine of the Gospel The third kind of Nazarites differeth from both the former both in the originall of the word and in wanting warrant from the authority of the Scriptures For they are otherwise written thē the other were to wit with the letter S and are deriued from the Syriack word Nesar which signifieth to cut off or to abolish because they helde that the bookes of Moses and the Prophets howsoeuer they carried their names were fained and counterfeit things and withall maintained it to be vnlawfull to kill any liuing thing Epiphan lib. 1. haeres 18. or to eate of the flesh of any creature wherein the spirit of life had bin and consequently condemned the bloody sacrifices prescribed in the Law The fourth and last sort of those whom Eusebius remembreth among the Ebionites Euseb lib. 6. histor Ecclesi cap. 17. howbeit others reckon and range them among other heretiks did after a sort beleeue in Christ and acknowledged him to be the promised Messiah for as the former sort were Iewes so these would bee accounted Christians D. Field of the Church lib 5. cap. 7. howbeit they taught that the ceremonies of the law of Moses were necessary to saluation and thereby did couertly and cunningly ouerthrow the liberty of the Gospel againe they boasted of their false miracles and priuate reuelations as the Anabaptists doe in these last dayes Now as Christ our Sauiour was commonly called Iesus of Nazareth so to be called Nazarites after his name as Christians of Christ was at the first receiued as a name of praise and commendation howsoeuer the vnbeleeuing Iewes and Gentiles vsed or rather abused it as appeareth Acts 24.5 Where Tertullus the declayming Oratour accuseth Paul to be a ring leader of the sect of the Nazarens and therefore these heretikes gloryed and boasted in that name as in a name and note of honor as the fittest which they found as with a veile to hide and with a cloude to couer the poison and pestilence of their damnable sect who vnder the colour of the Christian religion did indeed decline and depart from the true doctrine of Christ Luk. 1.26 Thus much of the names of the Nazarites the first whereof is of such as are mentioned in the old Testament the second of such as are expressed in the new so named of Nazareth a City of Galilee the third of those that altogether abrogated and abolished the old Testament the fourth of such as taught that Christians were bound to obserue the ceremonies of Moses These two last haue no footesteps in the Scriptures but they are found in Ecclesiasticall histories Hauing thus opened the name let vs consider the seueral kinds of these Nazarites mentioned in the first place They are of two sorts Two kinds 〈◊〉 Nazarites first such as were Nazarites by commandement secondly such as were Nazarites by vow Now both these kinds were such among the Iewes as were separated from the rest of the people to a more strict and pure course of seruing God then others were of which the Prophet speaketh in the Lamentations chap. 4.7 Her Nazarites were more pure then snow they were whiter then milke they were more ruddy in bodie then rubies their polishing was of Saphir By commandement were such as God from the beginning did extraordinarily call to that solemne profession of a special holinesse These were perpetuall Nazarites whose separation from the common sort by a stricter kinde of life continued all the dayes of their life Of this sort we haue sundry examples some in the old Testament and some in the New In the Old we haue first the example of Sampson then of Samuel and afterward the Rechabites Concerning Sampson we reade that the Angel of God appeared to the wife of Manoah his mother Iudg. 13 3● and 16.17 and said to her Behold now thou art barren but thou shalt conceiue and beare a son and now drinke no wine nor strong drinke neither eate any vncleane thing for the childe shall be a Nazarite to God from the wombe vnto the day of his death and afterward
and false measures to make triall of themselues of whom I may say as the Lord doth of Belshazzar Dan. 5 27. Thou art weighed in the ballances art found wanting for while they measure themselues with the mete-yard of others they keepe a false measure in their owne house which is an abhomination vnto the Lord Prou. 11 1 16 11. Euery one must weigh himselfe if he wold not be found too light with the weights of the Sanctuary and measure himselfe with the standard of the Scripture comparing his workes with the word of God and not with the life of other men then he shall be sure not to bee reprooued Euery Christian is like the Sunne that neuer standeth still but is euer in motion If our conuersation be in heauen we must be goers walkers runners goers in the right way walking toward our iournies end and running in a race that we may obtaine We must be as plants growing in the house of the Lord Psal 92 13. Such as are planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the house of our God There must be none of Gods seruants that must be idle and stand still doing nothing they must be labourers that looke to receiue their penny when the euening cometh Math. 20 verse 8. Hee that had receiued a talent and digged and hid it in the earth was accounted an euill and vnfaithfull seruant Math. 25 26. Who will entertaine a seruant to giue him meate drinke and wages that will do nothing but looke about him and neuer set his hands to worke and shall we think that God will receiue such seruants into his house as sit still and will doe him no seruice at all Shall we put our hands into our bosome and neuer pull them out againe to imploy them as we ought to do Let vs euermore bee doing somewhat that may please God blessed is that seruant whom his master when he commeth shall finde so dooing Thirdly such deserue to be reproued and Vse 3 to be ranged in the number of the former who hate and scorne those that go before them and beyond them in the duties of piety in gifts of knowledge and vnderstanding But we must take heed we do not oppose our selues against any worke of grace that is euident and eminent to be seene in any of Gods seruants For this is as much as to hate and scorne the word of God nay the Lord himselfe the Gospel of peace nay Christ Iesus the author and first Preacher of it It argueth a malicious heart against our brethren and that in the highest degree like Caine who hated his brother Gen. 4 ● Heb 11 4 because God accepted his offering Malice against any man is an euill roote that bringeth foorth bitter fruites to maligne any for his riches for his peace for his prosperity is very dangerous but to enuy him repine at him for heauenly riches for his soules health for the peace of a good conscience and for matters that concerne his euerlasting saluation in Gods Kingdome is a thousand times worse then the malice of Saul against Dauid or of Pharaoh against Moses and the Israelites True it is these sought their liues but such desperate malicious persons that enuy glory and immortality and heauen it selfe to others do seeke the life of their liues the other were guilty of the blood of their bodies whō they hated and persecuted but these are guilty of the blood of mens soules and their thirst cannot be quenched but by rasing them out of the booke of life These are stamped with the image of Satan the old deceiuer and the first enuious person that euer was who being fallen into condemnation himselfe enuied the standing of mankinde in the state of grace 〈◊〉 4 5. and therefore could not rest nor be quiet vntill he had plunged man into the same gulfe of condemnation So is it with these men they are backward in the feare of God themselues and they desire to haue all like them to be backeward as themselues Let vs take heed of such enuie let vs barre no man of Gods Kingdome Vse 4 Fourthly it is our dutie to proceed in sanctification and labour to bring foorth fruite euermore in old age Psal 92 15. Let vs leaue the principles of the doctrine of Christ go on vnto perfection not laying again the foundation Heb. 6.1 Let vs not thinke wee haue attained vnto perfectiō but forget that which is behinde and endeauour to that which is set before vs let vs presse toward the marke for the price of the high calling of GOD that so we may apprehend that for which we are apprehended of Christ Iesus Phil. 3.13.14 Let vs cleanse our selues from all filthynesse of the flesh and Spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7 1. True it is that albeit the good worke begun in vs be but as a sparke of fire kindled in wood or a yong plant newly grafted in the stocke or as a drop of raine fallen into the earth yet Christ Iesus doth accept of the truth sincerity of the new work wrought in vs be it neuer so small howbeit we must not euermore be as smoaking flax as bruised reeds and as new-set plants wee must not still be weaklings but as the graine of Mustard seede which is one of the least of the sorts of seedes but it groweth great and becommeth as a tree and the birds of the aire builde their nestes in it Math. 13 32. Or like vnto leauen which though it be small yet being hidden in three measures of Meale the whole is leauened verse 33. Therefore it behooueth vs as we haue receiued how wee ought to walke and to please God so to abound more and more 1 Thess 4 1. Notwithstanding we must take heed that we doe not glory in our owne strength as if we were able to do the will of God touching our sanctification of our selues without the helpe and assistance of the Spirit of God without which we can do nothing at all True it is the Apostle willeth vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling howbeit lest any should trust in himselfe as if hee were something or build vpon the freedome of his owne will he addeth in the next words It is God that worketh in vs the will and the deede of his good pleasure Philip. 2 12 13. It is a notable token of our continuance in good things and a comfort to our consciences that we shall perseuere vnto the end if we haue a care to goe forward and to make our good workes moe at the last then they were at the first Verse 2. The Princes of Israel Heads of the house of their Fathers offered Here we haue another circumstance to be considered to wit a description of the persons that offered they were the Princes and Rulers the heads of the people And albeit they onely are expressed yet they brought their offering in the name of
the children of Zebulun did offer 25 His offering was one siluer charger the weight whereof was an hundred and thirty shekels one siluer bolle of seuenty shekels c. Behold heere how the other Princes are not inferiour to the first that offered nor the other Tribes to the Tribe of Iudah Obserue heere that the spirit of God accounteth it not sufficient to set downe what was offered in generall neither in particular what Nahshon the sonne of Aminadab of the Tribe of Iudah offered the first day or what Nathaniel the son of Zuar Prince of Issachar offered the second day but he goeth forward to set downe the speciall offerings according to euery mans name and according to the day assigned vnto him Obiect It may be demaunded what was the cause why these offerings are thus particularly pointed out why are the same chargers the same bolles the same spoones so often repeated might not all these things heere mentioned haue beene more summarily concluded what need more words haue bene vsed when fewer would haue serued I answere Answer we must not account any thing idle friuolous fruitles or superfluous in holy Scripture The Lord knoweth best what is fittest to bee dilated largely and what to be comprehended shortly If there were no other reason then this so it pleased the Lord it ought to content vs and to make vs rest in it The like example we finde Psal 136.1 2 c. Where in euery verse and at the recitall of euery blessing this reason is repeated for his mercy endureth for euer Adde heereunto Reuel 7.5 6 c. where this is repeated according to the number of the Tribes that twelue thousand were sealed of them Hee might haue said briefly of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand but he repeateth the words twelue times so in this place the offerings are repeated twelue times particularly according to the number of the twelue Princes The reasons may be first to teach vs to be content to heare the same things though they be oftentimes repeated as Phil. 3.1 The Apostle saith It is not grieuous to me to write the same things often and for you it is safe Wee are ready to forget the best things and therefore must haue them continually sounding in our eares as many strokes giuen with a hammer to make vs heare Secondly that wee should apply these examples vnto our selues and if wee passe ouer one of them without regard yet we should take holde of the next Thirdly to teach vs that no man shall haue that forgotten to the vtmost of his praise who is any way forward in doing good because he will honor those that honor him but they that despise him shall be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 The doctrine Doctrine from this particular rehearsal and enumeration of the gifts of those Princes is this Euery good worke of gods children is knowne and shall be rewarded that all the good workes of Gods children done to the setting forth of his glory to the aduancement of his worship to the maintenance of true Religion or the good of his children shall be reckoned vp rewarded and come vp in account before him he taketh notice of them all and will neuer forget any one of them As their deeds are here registred in the booke of God so the doers of them are registred in the booke of life Matth 10.42 Our Sauiour teacheth that a cup of cold water shall not go vnrewarded that is giuen to drinke in the name of a disciple to one of these litle ones And afterward it is said Matth. 25.7 A certaine woman came vnto him hauing an alabaster boxe of ointmēt very precious and powred it on his head as he sate at table and because she had wrought a good worke vpon him verse 10. he sayth Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospel shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her verse 13. To this purpose speaketh the Angel that appeared to Cornelius Act. 10.4 Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp for a memoriall before God So then euery thing shall be remembred no one worke shall be forgotten Reason 1 For God is a righteous God giuing to euery one according to his workes Hee is the Iudge of the world Gen. 18. and cannot but iudge vprightly Hereupon the Apostle saith Heb. 6.10 God is not vnrighteous to forget your workes and labor of loue which ye haue shewed toward his Name in that yee haue minstred to the Saints and doe minister He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward for he will reward very bountifully euery good worke If we be not barren in good workes he will not bee behind with vs to recompence vs. Secondly how can they but come into an account seeing he accounteth them as done to himselfe Matth. 25.40 When any thing is giuen to the Saints it is esteemed as done to the Sonne himselfe and when it is bestowed vpon one of the least it is regarded as bestowed vpon the greatest and highest The seruant receiueth it but the Master will reward it Vse 1 Touching the Vses we may first conclude the happy estate and condition of them that leaue this world and depart this life in the true feare of God because we heare their workes shall be remembred and therefore the doings of his seruants be rewarded with eternall glory being done in the loue of God and of his trueth none of them are forgotten but they shall follow them nay goe with them and beare them company This we reade in the Reuelations of Iohn chap. 14.13 I heard a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Write blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the spirit that they rest from their labors and their works follow them to wit at their heels as the word importeth Death cannot cut them off though it be a cruell and mercilesse tyrant and hath as it were a sithe or sickle in his hand to cut downe such as come in his way yea though it cut off riches reuenewes honours pleasures dignities delights wife children houses lands and life it selfe according to the saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.7 We brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out with vs yet it cannot cut off good workes neither bereaue vs of the fruits of a liuely faith which are of such great force and efficacy that they are able to breake in sunder the chaines of death and the strength of the graue and cannot be holden in darknes and obliuion It were therefore a point of great wisedome and good policy so many as would willingly die the death of the righteous as Balaamites and all wicked men will seeme desirous to doe to prouide a goodly traine of good works which death cannot keepe backe they will presse so fast and knocke so hard at heauen
manner or sit downe at the table with a Ruler with foule and filthy and vnwashen hands Euery man of any note would be much ashamed heereof and yet it is to be feared that many repaire and resort vnto the house of God with foule and filthy and vnsanctified hearts Howbeit all formall seruice is vtterly reiected They are pronounced to be blessed that are pure in heart Math. 5 8. but the vnpure are accursed The sacrifices performed by the wicked are abhominable he heareth not the prayers of the prophane and impenitent but casteth off as an vncleane thing both them and their oblation God requireth no such sacrifices nor no such sacrificers The Prophet speaking of obseruing the Sabbath of offering vp prayer of bringing oblations and of assembling themselues together saith To what purpose is all this And when you appeare before the Lord who required this at your hands to tread in his Courts His soule hated their appointed feasts and he was weary to beare thē And wherefore was all this Did not God command all these things Were they not his own ordinances Yes they failed not therefore in the matter performed but in the manner of their performing the things were good but they did them in an euill manner and this did corrupt the whole worke and made it vnprofitable nay hurtfull to the doers What then should they do none of the former thinges Should they neither keepe the Sabbaths nor make prayers nor bring oblations nor offer Incense Must they leaue all vndone because God was not pleased with that which they had done Obserue what the Prophet sayeth afterward Wash you make you cleane put away the euill of your doings from before his eyes cease to do euill learne to do well and then though their sinnes were as Scarlet they shold be made as white as snow Esay 1 18. So then we must not leaue or intermit the doing of good works but put away the euill of our good workes and then God will accept both of vs and of our good workes Secondly it teacheth that as the Leuites Vse 2 in this place when they drew neere to God in the execution of their office must be washed so the Ministers of the word much more must be Lanthornes of light to others shining before the people in holinesse of life as the stars do in the Firmament to which they are oftentimes compared that by walking in an vnreproueable and vnblameable course they may adorne the gospel of Christ which they preach and professe It is not enough for them to bee sound in the faith but they must bee also sincere in life lest it be saide vnto them What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my couenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my word behind thee Psal 50 16 17. If then they that preach the word to others do not preach vnto themselues and bring light to others do liue in darkenesse themselues how shall they draw neere to God and execute his commandement in holy manner May not the Prouerbe be turned vpon them Physitian heale thy selfe Luke 4 23. and the reproofe be iustly verified in them Thou that teachest another teachest thou not thy selfe Thou that preachest a man shold not steale dost thou steale And thou that makest thy boast of the Law thorough breaking the Law dishonourest thou God For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you Rom. 2 21 22 23 c. Woe then to such as are of offensiue life and lay stumbling blockes thereby before the people to discourage them from the faith to draw them from the truth to opē the mouthes of wicked men to speake euill of the name of God of the word of God and of all the true seruants of God We haue a more glorious calling then the Leuites had For if the ministration of death written and engrauen in stones was glorious how shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious For if the ministration of condemnation be glory much more doth the ministration of righteousnesse exceede in glory and if that which is done away was glorious much more shall that which remaineth be glorious 2 Cor. 3.7 8 ● 11. If then the Leuites of the old Testaments minister after a sort of the letter but not of the Sp●rit that saw onely the shadow but not the body must notwithstanding neuer presume to handle the holy things of God with vnwashen hands how much more is it required of the Ministers of the new Testament to be of holy conuersation and to labour to bee sprinkled with the blood of Christ as the ceremony importeth least while they preach saluation to others themselues be reprooued and condemned For as a Cooke dresseth and prepareth meate for others and oftentimes tasteth least thereof himselfe being cloyed with the sauour of it so is it with many in the Ministery they prepare the food of the word and breake the bread of life for others but digest nothing of it themselues nor receyue strength and nourishment from it as appeareth in Iudas who was one of the twelue sent out with the rest to preach the Gospel but yet he was the sonne of perdition and perished for euer It is required of the Ministers to bee examples to the flocke 1 Pet. 5 3. that so they may conuince the gainesayers both by their doctrine and by their life If there be not an harmony between these two but that we preach one thing and practise another wee disturbe and distract the faith of the people and worke such a confusion among them when they see our speaking and liuing doe not accord that little or no profit ariseth to the Church by all our labours When our words do cal for righteousnesse and our workes do proclaime vnrighteousnesse what do we but build the tower of Babel Gen. 11 4. and binde heauy burthens greeuous to be borne and lay them vpon mens shoulders but will not mooue them with one of our fingers Math. 23 4. How shal the people follow our example and the liues of their Pastors 1 Cor. 11 1. Phil. 3 17 18 21. 1 Thess 1 6. if we make no conscience to goe before them in the waies of godlinesse Vse 3 Thirdly it is our duty to prepare our selues to the duties which we performe to God wee must clense and purge our hearts and follow sanctification without which no man shal see the Lord Heb. 12.14 The Prophet willeth vs to plough vp our fallow ground that we sowe not among thornes Ierem. 4 3. We must circumcise our selues to the Lord and take away the foreskinnes of our hearts Euery man knoweth euen he that is most simple that if a mā should cast his seede vpon the earth before it be manured and broken vp it is the losse both of his graine and of his gain Is there any person so weake in iudgement that he vnderstandeth not these things doth not common sence and
second and the second with falling into a third Sin is like the infant that is in the mothers wombe where it groweth by little and little vnto the birth ●am 1.15 and neuer stayeth till it come to perfection This must Vse 1 teach vs that there is no dalying with sin it is not barren but very fruitfull Many think they may stretch their conscience a litle and make bold with God and his law for once but they deceiue themselues for they sow that seede which in short time will spring vp and grow a monster For as the sluggard saith yet a little more sleepe so the sinner saith yet a little more sin He is like the couetous man that saith euermore Bring bring and as he thinketh he neuer encreaseth his substance enough so the sinner supposeth he neuer encreaseth his sin enough This will bite as a serpent in the end though it delighteth in the beginning Againe it teacheth vs to acknowledge Gods great mercy toward his children in staying them back that they goe not forward being once entred into the practise of it When Paul would haue entred in among the furious people it might haue cost his life if the disciples had let him alone howbeit they suffered him not Act. 19.30 So if God should suffer vs to runne on it might cost vs our liues and cause vs to bee condemned with the world When we open a port and passage for sinne wee are as a man that is falling or rouling downe a very high mountaine how can he escape death except he be stayed by a very strong hand So is it with vs if once we make a breach into our conscience it is vnpossible to stop it if God himselfe do not set to his hand If he take the matter in hand and determine to shew mercy vpon the poore perishing soule that beginneth to suffer shipwracke though we had one foote in hel he can bring vs backe again And how should not that soule so deliuered and seeing the snare of death and hell broken and hauing experience of the power and mercy of God in raising him to life but in a sweet feeling of them cry out Blessed be the Lord who hath not giuen me as a prey vnto their teeth Psal 124.6 and againe My helpe is in the Name of the Lord who made heauen and earth ver 8. This mercy is the greater both because it is rare for not one among an hundred maketh vp the breach that sinne hath made and because it is wholly gracious and freely bestowed the sinner deseruing to be forsaken vtterly who hath fearefully forsaken God God hath fast hold vpon all that are his from their election Ier. 14.7 and therefore hee will neuer withdraw his hand from them nor suffer them to be drowned Lastly it must be our care to stop the beginnings of sinne Iosh 24.14.15 and then we shall be sure it will neuer come to perfection Againe these murmuring Egyptians seeing the mighty works and miracles of God in Egypt would needs become proselites they ioyne themselues to the people of God and seeme so forward that they forsake their idolatry their countrey and kinred their owne people and their fathers house neuerthelesse they starte backe as a deceitefull bow and they reuolt backe to their olde manners as dogs to their vomit and as swine to their former mire filthinesse ●●ctrine 〈◊〉 are in 〈◊〉 profession 〈◊〉 are not 〈◊〉 members 〈◊〉 church Wherby we learne that many are in the profession of the faith which are not indeed faithfull neither true members of the Church as wee see in Ismael Gen. 21 9. and Caine chap. 4 3. there are many temporizers that beleeue for a season Luk. 8 13. Others are offended and fall away Iohn 6 66. Such professe that they know GOD but they deny him in their workes and become abhominable and disobedient Tit. 1 ver 16. 1 Iohn 2 vers 19. And no maruaile for many loue the praise of the world more then the praise of God and neuer had found rooting and therefore though they go farre in the right way yet they returne backe and are neuer the neerer nay they are set farther off then euer they were The Church had alwaies such all are not the true seed of Abraham that are of Abraham neither the Israel of God that came of Israel Good fish and bad fish are taken in the net Math. 13 and good wheate and Vse 1 chaffe are mingled together This teacheth vs good vses First that it is not enough to saluation or sufficient to entitle vs to Gods kingdome to make an outward profession The diuell himselfe may this way go as farre as the best for Satan can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light 2 Cor. 11 14. a wolfe may put on a sheepes skinne Math. 7 15. Yea a Parot and an Ape can imitate and therefore trust not too much to the outwarde appearance and profession if thou goe no farther neither account it sufficient that thou art baptized and made partaker of the Word and Sacraments and of the praiers of the church this is no better then to trust in lying words which shall not profit nor prosper Ier. 7 4. Secondly we must ioyn to our profession sanctification and holinesse of life Ier. 7 5. Such as content themselues with outwarde shewes are like the tree that hath leaues without fruite are ranke hypocrites like weeds that grow among good herbes God hath chosen and redeemed vs that wee should bee holy Eph. 1 4. Luke 68 75. The condition of such is no better then of the heathen and infidels Math. 5 20. Nay it is not so good Lastly let vs heereby try and proue whether we be in the faith or not 2 Cor. 13 5. Many liue in the Church that neuer examine themselues whether they be of the Church nor consider that they may deceiue themselues many others forasmuch as an hypocrite and a reprobate may go farre in christian religion Many haue in them the first beginnings of christian religion as it were the foundation of a building and there they stand at a stay but wee must build forward vntill the spirituall building be perfected It is not enough to runne except we obtaine the prize He that doth perseuere to the end shall be saued and he that is faithfull to the death ●●●trine 〈◊〉 euil man ●pteth a●er shall receiue the crowne of life Moreouer see heere how the Israelites are led by the example of the Egyptians to murmure with them and therfore one euill person entiseth corrupteth and infecteth another as Eue did Adam and the serpent did Eue Prou. 13 20. Psal 106 35 36 39. For sin is as leauen 2 Tim. 2 17. 1 Cor. 5 6. and as a contagious disease Woe therefore to the world because of offences Vse 1 Mat. 18 6.8 and they are pronounced to be accursed that lay a stumbling block before the blinde to make them to fal Deut. 27.
mastery they wil hardly leaue their hold We shall finde it little better then to wash a Tile or brick and go about in a manner an vnpossible worke they are become a Cart-ropes which are not easily vntwisted Esay 5 18. Or as a threefold cable which is not quickly broken Eccles. 4 12. Cōsider the truth of this in these three things Drunkennesse whoredome and swearing what meanes soeuer are vsed to take these away they are vnprofitable the drunkard will follow it still Pro. 23 35. Such as comit whoredome sildome returne againe and take holde of the paths of life Prou. 2 19. when a man hath once accustomed himselfe to swearing he cannot but sweare at euery word he neuer feareth an oath Custome taketh away feare of sinning where no fear is to offend men are bold to sin when men are growne bold and past shame they haue no sense of sinne You shall heare them sweare ordinarily and horribly and yet they know not of it or at least neuer consider it Rom 2 4. Eph. 4 19. Vse 5 Lastly it behooueth vs to vse all the meanes we can to keepe vs from sinne as wee would do to keepe vs from the pestilence least wee grow secure and senslesse and think our selues in good case when we are neerest to destruction and farthest off from saluation ●nes sanc● or God 〈◊〉 vs 〈◊〉 The meanes which God sanctifieth as so many preseruatiues to worke in vs a conscience of sinne and to stay vs from falling into the same are many First the ministery of the word I range this in the first place both because of the power of it and because it giueth force vnto the rest God commandeth his Ministers to cry alowd and spare not to preach the doctrine of repentance and to tell the people their sinnes Pro. 1 20 21. and 9 2 33. Ephes 4 11 12. Thus hee sent Ionah to the Niniuites Ionah 3 4. Nathan to Dauid 2 Sam 12 1. and the prophets continually to the Israelites 2 Chronic. 36 14 15 Acts 2 37 38. Secondly the benefites and blessings of God which are many and great daily continuall vpon soule and body hee saueth and preserueth vs in him we liue and mooue who reneweth his mercies to vs euerie morning Psal 68 18 Lam 3 23. be daileth loadeth vs with benefits wonderfully Moses telleth the people that the Lord bestowed so many benefits vpon them that they should loue the Lord with all their hearts and with al their soule Deut. 10 12. That they should cleane vnto him and knit their hearts vnto him Iosh 23 8. and 24 14. 1 Kings 14.7 8. Paul beseecheth the Romanes by the mercies of God to offer vp their bodies as an holy sacrifice vnto God Rom. 12 1. God hath made vs to abound with this argument and hath often spoken vnto vs. Thirdly he hath bestowed vpon vs his own Sonne the greatest blessing in heauē or earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of vs Rom. 8 32 He spared not his owne Son but deliuered him vp for vs all Ioh. 3 16. He gaue his owne his onely Sonne for vs his enemies euen vnto the death that wee should be reconciled vnto him If the consideration of this and the earnest meditation in it will not mooue vs to repent of sin nothing in the world will put life into our hard hearts Fourthly the corrections and chastisements which are laide vpon vs Psal 89 31 32. Iob 33 16. The Lord openeth the eares of men euen by their corrections which he hath sealed so that we should humble our selues when we feel them Heb. 12 6 11. It is our duty therfore to mourn for sin betimes which wil bring with it comfort in the latter end Luk. 6 21. Blessed are yee that weepe for ye shall laugh This vse did Dauid make of them Psal 119 71. To this wee may ioyne the chastisements of God sent vpon others though we feele them not ourselues for if we see them or heare of them they should be as so many warning peeces to our selues to call vs to repentance Esay 26 9. Fiftly priuate admonitions and exhortations yea reproofes and threatnings of iudgement when the former will not serue Leu. 19 17. Prou. 9 8. Rebuke a wise man and hee will loue thee Math. 18 15. Iames 5 20. Thus he may be wonne by his brother Psal 141 5. Let vs not therefore refuse this meanes but make good vse of it Lastly the inward motions and inspirations of the holy Spirit which he stirreth vp in our hearts as it is saide of Dauid that God caused his owne heart to smite him 2 Sam. 24 10. and Psal 16 7. We haue all of vs at one time or other some good motions and desires put into our mindes let vs make much of them and entertaine them into our soules lest hee withdraw his Spirit from vs and giue vs ouer vnto our selues 40. And they rose vp early in the morning and gate them vp into the top of the Mountaine saying Loe we be heere and will goe vp vnto the place which the Lord hath promised for wee haue sinned 41. And Moses said Wherefore now doe you transgresse the commandement of the Lord but it shall not prosper 42. Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you c. Heere we haue the behauiour of this crooked and peruerse people hearing from the mouth of Moses the minde of God that they must go backe againe by the way of the red sea and shall wander vp and downe fourty yeares in the wildernesse for the false report which the spies had brought vp of the Land and for their own beleeuing of that report Now they will not obey but will needs goe forward though God had commanded them to retire and returne See heere the peruersenesse of our nature as if we had made a generall conspiracy neuer to obey him but to oppose against him whatsoeuer he say so we euermore striue against that we are forbidden They refused before to goe into the Land now they will needs in a Brauado proceede when they are forbidden When they should go forward thē they will go backward and make them a Captaine to conduct them into Egypt When they should go backward then they will goe forward though they perish for it This is our corrupt nature that which God willeth vs to do we will not do and that which he willeth vs not to do that we will do whereby we see that the lustes of the flesh are enmity against God Againe obserue that when God is not with a people they cannot prosper his presence is the cause of victory 2 Chron. 20 27. If he be gone from vs and goe not foorth with our armies we fall by the sword of the enemy wee cannot stand before them we go out one way and flie before them seuen waies Deut. 28 25. Moreouer we see in the example of this disobedience that God oftentimes punisheth one
word of God is preached and deliuered hee speaketh to vs and calleth vpon vs to heare him If then wee would haue God regard vs when we cry to him we must respect him whē he calleth to vs. We cry by prayer he calleth vs by his word Therefore it is that the Lord often denounceth and threateneth all impenitent persons that hee will despise them that despise him and will not heare them praying vnto him that will not heare him preaching vnto them as Pro. 1.24 26 27 28 29. Zach. 7.11 12. Mic. 3.4 Prou. 28.9 Of all comforts that we feele in this life none is greater then to pray vnto God in our troubles with assurance to be heard this the vngodly with all their rage and cruelty can neuer take from vs. Therefore this is a sore iudgement when God openly professeth and proclaimeth that hee will not heare our prayers crying vnto him in our miseries When wee are reiected and forsaken of men in our afflictions yet we haue our recourse and refuge vnto GOD and wee are comforted How wretched therefore is the estate of all vnrepentant sinners who stopping their eares at the hearing of the Law doe make all their prayers to be abominable So did God threaten his people to number them to the sword because saith he I called Pro. 28.9 Esay 65.12 and ye did not answer I spake and ye heard not but did euill in my sight and did chuse that thing which I would not If then wee would haue God open his eares to heare vs let vs acknowledge it to be our duty to open our eares to heare him God will neuer stop his eares against any but those that haue stopped their eares against him Vse 4 Lastly learne to acknowledge the greatnesse of Gods mercy and louing kindnesse and returne the praise and glory of his owne workes to his great Name As he hath heard vs graciously so let vs beare our selues thankfully in rendring to him the calues of our lips and offering to him the sacrifice of praise Euen as he filleth vs with his mercy let vs fill our mouthes with his praise and the memoriall of his Name Psal 116.12.13 and 145.18 19 21. and say What shal I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits toward me I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. This vse the Prophet teacheth Psal 145. hauing declared that God sheweth himselfe neere to those that call vpon him and feare him he addeth My mouth shall speake the praise of the Lord and all flesh shall blesse his holy Name for euer and euer If I can say when all men forsooke me the Lord took me vp I haue beene running into the pathes of death and was neere to destruction but thou hast brought me backe shewing me the wayes of life and saluation I haue beene ignorant and thou hast instructed me If I haue this experience of his goodnes so many waies toward me he openeth my mouth to praise his mercy and I can neuer sufficiently magnifie his Name that hath brought so great things to passe for me This practise is likewise taught Psal 107. Psal 107.8 15 21 31. where the Prophet mentioning sundry deliuerances that God sheweth his people in times of famine and in the dayes of affliction by land or by sea he doubleth oftentimes his affection Let them therefore confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and his wonderfull works before the sonnes of men He deliuered them the Canaanites and they vtterly destroyed them See heere the vncertainety of warre The Israelites after their ouerthrow fight againe and haue the victory They were at the first ouercome and taken prisoners by their enemies but now they preuaile get the vpper hand Albeit the righteous fall for a time yet they are not cast off for euer Psal 37.24 and 144.1 2. for the Lord putteth vnder his hand Great deliuerances giueth he to his seruants he teacheth their hāds to fight and their fingers to battel he is their strength and their fortresse their tower and their deliuerer their shield and in him they trust The horse indeed is prepared against the day of battell Prou. 21.31 1 Sam. 14.6 but saluation is of the Lord to whom it is not hard to saue with many or with few This the Prophet setteth downe Psal 81. Psal 81.13.14 Oh that my people had hearkened vnto me and Israel had walked in my wayes I would soone haue humbled their enemies and turned my hand against their aduersaries Heereby we learne that howsoeuer God thinke it meete that his Church lie vnder the crosse yet in his good time hee helpeth he forsaketh it not for euer Doctrine Though ●● Church lye long vnder the croffe ● God lear●● it not for e● uer but returneth againe in great mercy and compassion Albeit affliction dwelleth vpon the seruants of God not onely for a moment but oftentimes presseth them for a long season that they haue no breathing time Iob 7.19 No not to swallow their spittle as Iob speaketh yet in due time God is not vnmindfull and forgetful of them Hereunto commeth the saying of the Psalmist Hee endureth but a while in his anger Psal 30.5 but in his fauour is life weeping may abide at euening but ioy commeth in the morning This the Lord expresseth in the Prophet Esay 54.7 For a little time haue I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee for a moment in mine anger I hid my face from thee for a little season but with euerlasting mercy haue I had compassion on thee We see this point largely declared in the booke of Iudges Iudg 3.8 ● when God raised vp enemies against the Israelites and sold them as a vile thing of base account for whom he tooke no mony yet when they called and cried vnto him he sent them a deliuerer who saued them out of the hands of their aduersaries This appeareth in the histories of Ioseph of Iob of the Church in Egypt of Dauid of Daniel Gen. 41. 1● Iam. 5 11. Exod. 12 ● Psal 18.1 Dan. 6 23 who first indured shame and the reproach of the crosse yet afterward hee returned vnto them when the time of refreshing came from the presence of God The reasons are plaine First his eares are Reason 1 alwayes open to the cryes of his children hee putteth their teares in his bottle of remembrance and writeth them in his Register Psalme 5● so that when they cry their enemies shall turne their backs for God is with his This he saith Exod. 2. the children of Israel sighed for the bondage and cryed and their cry for their bondage came vp vnto God Exod. 2 2● and 3 7. Then the Lord said I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt I haue heard their cry and moane for I know their sorrowes and I will deliuer them verifying that in the Psalme Psal
brazen serpent was a figure of Christ crucified and hanging on the crosse who is made of the Father to bee a Sauiour vnto vs. This Christ himselfe testifieth Ioh. 3.14 15. As Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the Sonne of man bee lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life Heereunto likewise hee alludeth Chap. 8.28 29. Then Iesus said vnto them When ye haue lift vp the Sonne of man then shall ye know that I am he and that I doe nothing of my selfe as my Father hath taught me so I speak these things In both these places our Sauiour hath respect and reference to the brazen serpent in the wildernesse shewing that as it was erected to heale the body so must Christ bee crucified to cure the soule therefore this serpent set vp was a type of his death Caluin in I●han ●ap 3 2● 14. And howsoeuer some of reuerent account in the Church doe vnderstand this lifting vp of the preaching of the Gospel which is as a banner displayed that all men may behold him and esteeme the referring of it to the Crosse neither to bee pertinent to the matter nor to agree in the text yet if we compare the former places phrases with another like Testimony of Iohn chap. 12.32 33. the true interpretation of the words will easily and euidently appeare where Christ speaketh thus to the Pharisees Now is the iudgment of this world now shall the Prince of this world be cast out and I if I were lift vp from the earth will draw all men vnto me Heere by lifting vp Calu. in Iob. 〈◊〉 ver 28. we must necessarily vnderstand the death of Christ vpon the Crosse on which he was lifted vp on high and seene a farre off as the Euangelist himselfe expoundeth it in the verse following saying Now this said he signifying what death hee should die The reasons of this similitude shadowing Reason 1 out the manner of Christs death are very euident and apparent For first as the brazen serpent in the wildernesse had the shew and shape of a serpent but within there was no venemous or deadly thing as the true fiery serpents had so Christ tooke vpon him the shape of a seruant he was made like vnto men he was sent of God in the similitude of sinfull flesh and was counted among the wicked Rom ● 3 Mark 15. ● Esay 53 1● yet he was pure and voyde of sinne neither could be charged of his enemies with any sin so that this is no vnpropper or far-fet similitude but fit and naturall Secondly euen as the brazen serpent was Reason lift vp on high vpon a pole appointed for that purpose so was Christ first lift vp vpon the wood of the Crosse and was after exalted by the Gospel and set in the sight of all as the Prophet Esay teacheth Esay 11.10 12. And as the brazen serpent before it could be a type of healing must be aduanced and lifted vp so before Christ Iesus could be a Sauiour of his people to saue them from their sinnes he must be fastened vpon the Crosse 〈◊〉 14 15 he must haue his hands his feet pierced that he might spoyle the principalities and make a shew of them openly with triumph As therefore it was not sufficient once to make the brazen serpent and so to looke vpon it but it must as well be mounted as at the first made so it was not enough to bring vs to life and saluation for Christ to be conceiued by the holy Ghost and borne of the virgin Mary vnlesse he also suffer death for our sinnes and so beare our sinnes in his body on the tree Thirdly as the Israelites which obeyed the Reason 3 commandement of God embraced his promise beleeued his word and so beheld the brazen serpent standing on the pole were healed of the deadly bitings of these fiery serpents so all men who are moued with the commandement of God embracing the promise do behold Christ hanging on the tree of the crosse with the eyes of faith 〈◊〉 3.16 are cured of the sting of that old serpent the diuell and recouer of that mortall wound being freed from death and restored into the glorious liberty of the sons of God A serpent did hurt a serpent did heale the Israelites Man did destroy vs man did restore vs. 〈◊〉 5.19 The first Adam did draw into condemnation the second Adam draweth vnto saluation The brazen serpent albeit it were lift vp neuer so high and mounted into the open ayre profited none but such as stedfastly beheld it and looked vpon it so Christ crucified profiteth none but such as beleeue in him by faith Many beheld him with the bodily eyes that reaped no benefit by him they heard him with their outward eares and handled with their hands that word of life yet it auailed them nothing to know him after the flesh 〈◊〉 5.16 neither furthered them in their saluation Reason 4 Fourthly as it seemed to humane wisdom a most foolish and ridiculous thing to be healed by the bare and onely sight of a brazen serpent so to all naturall wise men of the world it seemeth as vnlikely and vnreasonable that any shold be saued by faith in Christ crucified ●r 1.23 as the Apostle sheweth We preach Christ crucified vnto the Iewes euen a stumbling blocke and vnto the Grecians foolishnesse onely to them that are saued Christ is the power of God and the wisedome of God So then it is cleere and euident that the serpent set vp vpon the pole signifieth Christ hanging on the Crosse Vse 1 The vses of this type and similitude are many directing vs to sundry points of religion As what sin is whence it came what it worketh and bringeth forth likewise what the force of the Law and Gospel it who Christ is how we must vse and apply him to haue comfort and saluation in him First seeing the serpent was a signe and signification of Christ we learne that Christ was preached and published in the time of the law albeit darkely and obscurely For as there is but one saluation so there is but one way to attaine vnto it to wit faith in Christ The faith of the fathers is one and the same with the faith of the children There was neuer any man saued without the knowledge of IESVS CHRIST neyther is at this day saued neither shall be hereafter to the end of the world This the Apostle teacheth to the Hebrewes Heb. 13.8 Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same also is for euer And to this truth Iohn giueth witnesse All that dwell vpon the earth shall worship the Beast Reuel 13.8 whose names are not written in the booke of life of that Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world Albeit he were manifested in the flesh and crucified on the Crosse in the last age of the world when the fulnes of time was
Captaines and Moses himselfe disdained not to set their hands to worke No doubt many of the people ioyned with them as helpers forward but the principal men and heads of the families are heere named because they did direct strengthen and encourage others that were vnder them by their good example The doctrine arising from hence is this That publicke persons vnto whom God hath granted honor and principality Doctrine All Supe● must giue e●ample to ● Inferiors and preferred before their brethren are not only to informe their inferiors and giue directions vnto them by word but by their example and practise to go before them All superiors are to teach by example of life as well as by word of mouth their inferiors So then we are all from this example of the zeale of Moses and forwardnesse of the Princes of the Tribes to consider that it is required of cheefe personnes whose heads are aduanced aboue others to haue in them a zeale and forwardnes to further good things in others that so their care may be answerable to the place wherein God hath set them This is proued vnto vs in the example of Eliud one of the Iudges who hauing slaine Eglon King of Moab and knowing there was a greater worke behinde to do it is sayde he blew a Trumpet in Mount Ephraim he assembled the people and he went before them saying vnto them Follow me Marke here how he thought it not enough to shew the Children of Israel what was to be done and to direct them in the way but himselfe ioyneth with them nay goeth before them hee followeth not his owne ease hee seeketh not his owne pleasure he layeth not the burthen vpon them to keepe at home himselfe but being fitted called of God hee began the enterprize and looked for the issue from him His example not onely in speaking but in going before them was very auaileable The like we see in Dauid whose zeale for the Lords house had euen eaten him vp hauing an intent to cal the Arke home to Sion from the house of Abinadab he called the people together ● 6 1 5 he praised God with instruments of musicke he danced before the Arke and gaue a notable testimony how feruent he was and with what ioy of heart he went about it The like practise wee see in Salomons sonne who sate in his Throne when once the Temple was builded when the worke of the Lord was finished and when the people were assembled hee in their sight and hearing doth dedicate the Temple with a fruitfull comfortable and passionate prayer and intreateth the Lords gracious presence when in that holy place they should call vpon him 1 Kin. 8 22. The like forwardnes in the workes of the Lord wee finde in Iehoshaphat Hezekiah Iosiah Ezra Nehemiah Zerobabel Mordecai and sundry others these went before others in zeale and accounted it a shame reproch vnto them to be matched in goodnesse of those whom they ouer-matched and ouer-mastered in greatnesse This made Iosua say who was Gouernor of the people I and my house will serue the Lord Iosh 24.15 This made Dauid say Psal 101 2. I will walke in the vprightnesse of my heart in the midst of my house This made the Apostle say 2 Thes 3 7. speaking of the idle that walked inordinately and would not worke Ye your selues know how yee ought to follow vs for wee behaued not our selues inordinately among you vrging his owne example to prouoke and pricke them forward Reason 1 This truth will yet further appeare vnto vs when we shall consider how it is proued and vnder-propped by strength of Reason ●irst it is the Lords dooing to make them a distinct people and order by themselues Hath he aduanced them to no purpose had he no end in choosing them from among their brethren and setting them in degree of dignitie before them We know that all Gods workes haue som end which he respecteth he worketh nothing idlely euery action hath his special and proper end His separation of them to rule in the Land or Church is that they should execute the things that concern Gods glory with all zeale This we see in the booke of Ester ver 4 when she was desirous to shrink backe and not aduenture her selfe beholding the hazard of her life and the danger of death before her eyes except the king did graciouslie respect her and fau●urably hold out his golden scepter Mordecai presseth her with this reason Who knoweth whether the LORD hath brought thee to the kingdom for such a time And Nehemiah aimeth at this in chap. 6. ver 10 11. where being counselled to hide his head and to shut the doores of the Temple vpon him because the enemies would come sodainely vpon him and slay him hee opposeth his calling Should such a man as I fly Who is he being as I am that would go into the temple to liue I will not go in As if he shold say God hath promoted me to this place of honor hath brought vpon me the dignity that I neuer looked for and therefore I will aduenture to stand out in the discharge of the worke of the Lord inasmuch as promotion commeth neither from East nor West but from him Secondly such as are aduanced aboue others Reason 2 lye open to wrath and iudgement as well as others Albeit they bee great in the world and can plead with men yet they cannot pleade with the Lord seeing the greatest men lye open to the greatest punishments If therefore they would not kindle Gods wrath against themselues against their houses and against their posterities they must go before others in all godlinesse and instruct them by word and by example This is the reason that king Artashasht vseth Ezra 7 23. Whatsoeuer is by the commandement of the God of heauen let it be done speedily for the house of the God of heauen for why should he be wroth against the realm of the King and his children So in Num. 25 4 9. the Lord commaunded a thousand of the Rulers of the people to be hanged before him against the Sunne because they stayed not the people from ioyning themselues to Baal ●cor In like manner because Eli reformed not his sonnes but suffered them to run forward in their sins who through their extreme wickednes caused all Israel to abhorre the offerings of the Lord his house was destroyed 1 Sam. 2 31. his sons were slaine and himselfe brake his necke with a fall from his seate The Vses are these First of al see how comfortable Vse 1 it is to all inferiours when the Lord blesseth a land and people to giue them faithfull Rulers godly Princes zealous Nobles righteous Magistrates painfull Ministers by whose example and practise they are led and guided to all wel-doing It is an ancient saying Of what disposition soeuer Princes are ●laudianus the people will not be vnlike ●hem Experience in all ages and places teacheth vs
compelled to giue testimony and witnesse to the truth of God the Lord as it were wringeth and wresteth it out of the mouths of those that be ignorant of him as we see how Balaam in this and the chapter following vttereth excellent and heauenly things albeit against his will of God of the enemies of God of the Church prospering and flourishing thorough his fauour yet he was lewd in life and prophane in heart louing neyther God nor his truth This we see in the Sorcerers in Egypt when they saw and felt the plague of Lice but could not with their enchantments bring foorth the like they confessed This is the finger of God Exod. 8 19. This appeareth farther in the history of Gideon when one of his enemies had told a dreame to his neighbour which hee had dreamed his fellow answered and saide This is nothing else saue the sword of Gideon the sonne of Ioash a man of Israel for into his hand hath God deliuered Midian and all the Hoast Iudg. 7 14. This likewise we see in the Centurion and souldiers that were with him watching Iesus Math. 27 54 when they saw the renting of the veyle the trembling of the earth the opening of the graues the cleauing of the stones and arising of the dead bodies they feared greatly saying Truely this was the Sonne of God Hereunto cometh the confession of Caiaphas an enemy to Christ and to the doctrine of saluation which he persecuted for hee vttered a Prophesie of the death and passion of Christ Ioh. 11 49 50 51 52. It was an extraordinary motion of God that guided his tongue to Prophesie of Christ So he spake afterward in thē that cryed out at his arraignement Mat. 27 25. His blood be vpon vs and vpon our children which was plentifully performed in its time and season The like we may obserue in Pilate when he was admonished by the Iewes to amend this title of Christ set on his Crosse Iesus of Nazareth the King of the Iewes Pilate answered What I haue written I haue written Iohn 19 22. wherein at vnawares hee is made after a sort a Preacher of the kingdome of Christ who gouerned his tongue as heere hee did the tongue of Balaam The Reasons remaine to bee considered Reason 1 First to leaue the wicked without excuse when they heare the truth For God neuer leaueth himselfe without witnesses no not among the Infidels as the Apostle declareth Acts 14 16 17. Now if the powring downe showers of raine sending the fruitfulnes of the earth feeding all creatures with bodily food be the Lords witnesses and testimonies of his power how much more is the word of God which is the sauour of life vnto life to all that beleeue Forseeing God opened the mouth of Caiaphas as we shewed before to vtter a Prophesie concerning Christ the obstinate incredulity of the Iewes was conuinced when both the cause and vertue of his death was vttered by their owne high-Priest albeit hee spake it in another meaning Secondly he speaketh often in wicked men to encrease their iudgement and bring vpon Reason 2 them the greater damnation If God had not reuealed his truth vnto them their punishment should bee the lesse This wee see set downe Luk. 12 47 48. This appeareth by the words of Christ to his Disciples Math. 7 23. Luke 13 25 26. Many will say to mee in that day Lord Lord haue we not by thy Name prophesied And by thy Name cast out diuels And by thy Name done many great works And then will I professe to them I neuer knew you depart from me yee that worke iniquity Thus Christ vpbraideth the Cities wherein most of his great works were done because they repented not and telleth them it shall be easier for Tyre and Sidon for Sodome and Gomorrha at the day of iudgement then for them Math. 11 22. Thirdly to strengthen confirme his childrē Reason 3 in the truth reuealed vnto them Great is theyr wauering and weaknesse when God maketh knowne his word vnto them sealeth it vnto them by his signes and sacraments they are full of doubting and theyr faith is mingled with infidelity as wee see in the example of Gideon Iudg 7 14. God appeared vnto him at the thressing-floore commanded him to goe in his might to saue Israel promised him the victory and strengthened him by the signes that he asked yet he remained fearefull faint-hearted after these so many meanes vsed to giue him courage confirmation Iudg. 7 10. Hence it is that God raised vp one in the hoast of his enemies and guided his tongue to be a Preacher and publisher of his truth telling this dreame of his to his fellow that loe a Cake of Barley-bread tumbled from aboue into the boast of Midian and came vnto a Tent and smote it that it fell and ouerturned it that the Tent fell downe which is expounded and interpreted to be the sword of Gideon Wherby we see that God opened the mouth and directed the tongue of this Idolater for the strengthening of Gideon and the furthering of him in his work Now let vs make vse of this Doctrine First Vse 1 behold heerein the greatnesse of his power Name causing his enemies to professe and acknowledge it We see how they resist rebell against God We see how they abide not to submit their necks to his obedience but cast away the cordes of discipline from them yet he ouer-ruleth them ordereth their tongues and disposeth the words of their mouth to his owne glory This is it which the Prophet declareth Psal 8 1 2. This also appeareth in the example of Saul and of the messengers that he sent to take Dauid For the Spirit of God fell vpon them and they prophesied therefore it was a Prouerb Is Saul also among the Prophets 1 Sā 10 11 and 19 24. This verifieth the saying of the wise man Prou. 16 1. The preparations of the heart are in man but the answer of the tongue is from the Lord that is howsoeuer a man many times m●streth an whole Army of thoghts in his minde as it were in battell array and concludeth with himselfe both what how to speake yet man is ruled by a superior power shal speake as God guideth his mouth not as himselfe purposeth and determineth Seeing therefore God frameth vnfit instruments to his owne purpose and maketh them serue for the aduancement of his owne glory we must conclude againe with the Prophet O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the world Secondly it is not hard with God to retaine Vse 2 and reserue a people to himselfe in all ages albeit there be neuer so many enemies albeit the Church bee not alwayes visible to the eye and kept in outward beauty He is not tyed to any Nation people or place Let vs neuer feare the decay or destruction of the Church he that did gaine it to himselfe will maintaine it against all the practises and
the sonnes of God for this cause the world knoweth you not because it knoweth not him God is become our Father the Sonne is our Redeemer the Holy-ghost is become our sanctifier the Angels are become our attendants the Scriptures are become our euidences the Sacraments are our seales the creatures are become our seruants our afflictions are our instructions This the Apostle teacheth the Church 1. Cor. 3 21 22 23. They are blessed that haue their sinnes pardoned and not imputed vnto them as the Prophet teacheth but God saith to euery beleeuer Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee They are blessed that heare his word and keepe it but the sheepe of Christ heare his voyce and follow him They are blessed that delight in the Law of the Lord and in his Law meditate day and might but the godly make it their counsellour to be aduised by it This vse that now we stand vpon is directly vrged by the Prophet Psal 84. where hauing made his complaint that hee could not haue accesse to the Church of God to make profession of his faith and to profite in Religion hee breaketh out into this passionate exclamation being touched with an inward feeling of the want of those holy assemblies Psal 84 4 5. O Lord of hoasts how amiable are thy tabernacles thereupon concludeth the point which wee haue stood vpon Blessed are they that dwell in thine house they will euer praise thee blessed is the man whose strength is in thee and in whose heart are thy wayes Howsoeuer the vngodly that sauour nothing but of the earth want spirituall eyes to behold the beauty of the Church and account it no part of their happinesse to liue within the compasse and bosome of it yet the children of God haue taken nothing so neere to heart as when they haue bene driuen from the place of his worship The Prophet is grieued that the sparrowes and swallowes had better accesse and freer recourse to the houses of men to build their nests to lay their young and to rest and repose themselues then he had to the Lords Tabernacle and therefore preferreth their condition before his owne We see how the Iewes wept and pittifully lamented by the riuers of Babylon and hung vp their instruments on the willowes saying Psal 137 1 2 3 How shall we sing the song of the Lord in a strange land If I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget to play If I doe not remember thee let my tongue cleaue to the roofe of my mouth yea if I preferre not Ierusalem to my chiefe ioy No doubt they might haue prayed to the Lord in Babylon and in banishment as well as in Iudea and at Ierusalem the Lord heareth in all places and willeth that men pray euery where lifting vp pure hands without wrath or doubting 1. Tim. 2.8 but they mourned because they could not visit the Temple of God in Ierusalem there to make publicke confession of their sinnes and of their faith toward God They therefore plainely testify that they haue no feeling either of the weakenesse of their faith or of the greatnesse of their offences that glory in their owne shame and say they beare as good a soule to God as they which resort so often to the Church and delight to heare the preaching of the word and that they can serue God as well at home as in the Church These are led by another spirit then Dauid was who if he were a man after Gods owne heart Psal 42 1 2 3. hauing such an earnest desire after the seruice and worship of God and saying As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God when shall I come and appeare before the presence of God surely these must needs be guided by the spirit of the diuell who so openly scorne all Religion and are at defiance with God robbing God of his honour committing sacriledge in keeping their tongues from the publick praises of God entring themselues off from the mysticall body of Christ condemning and contemning the congregation of the faithfull giuing offence to others by euill example and despi●●ng the ordinance of God who hath appointed commanded the assembly of his people to meet together to acknowledge their sinnes to confesse their faith to pray for things necessary to praise him for his blessings receiued to heare the word expounded and to receiue the Sacraments deliuered so that such as flye from these doe fly from God himselfe they fly from their owne saluation they seeke a worship by themselues and they imagine an heauen by themselues But let them take heed their worship proue not a false worship and their heauen a false heauen and a true hell Secondly we must all labour to bee members Vse 2 of the Church rather then of any other place in the world We see how carefull men are not onely to be in great societies towns but to be of them to haue the freedome of priuiledged places and incorporations Act. 22 28. Yea to obtaine it purchase it with a great summe of money because it hringeth worldly commodity How much more should wee endeauour to be members of the Church whereby we are made free men and haue interest in the blessings of God yea wee become free denizens of the Kingdome of heauen How doe men esteeme their freedome to be of earthly cities If wee be part of the Church wee haue accesse to the truth Now if wee shall know the truth the truth shall make vs free Iohn 8 32 36. If we be belonging to the Church we haue our interest in Christ now if that Sonne shall make vs free then we shall be free indeed This made the Apostle say Phil. 3 20. Our conuersation is in heauen from whence we looke for a Sauiour If we become limbes of the Church of God wee haue the spirit that beares witnesse to our spirit that we are the sonnes of God now the Lord giueth his Spirit 2. Cor. 3 17 and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Such as are free of cities and incorporations haue diuerse priuiledges that others want obtaine many benefites that others want obtaine many dignities that others desire and haue their names enrolled among the free-men but how much greater is the preheminence of all those that are brought into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God being made parts of the Church which is the freest citty vnder the heauens This city of our God hath the priuiledges of the communion of Saints of the forgiuenesse of sinnes of the resurrection of the body to eternall life and all such as belong vnto it haue their names registred and enrolled in the booke of life What shall it profite thee to obtaine an earthly freedome in earthly cities and to be the seruant of sinne the bondslaue of the diuel and to want the freedome of the sonnes and daughters of almighty
wooden crosse as a god they call it the ground of our saluation and salute it by the name of theyr onely hope 2 The second commandement requireth that we worship the true God purely according to his most holy word and forbiddeth all false and forged worship of the true Iehouah The Church of Rome directly ouerturneth the intent and end of this Law by theyr imagery they teach it to bee lawfull to make images of the true God and to worship them with religious worship 3 The third Commandement prescribeth vnto vs to giue al honor and glorie vnto God that is due to his great name The Church of Rome teach men to giue this glory to some things else they holde that the people are to be barred from the free vse of the Scripture allow to sweare by Saints Angelles Crosse Rood and such like 4 The fourth Commandement appointeth the sanctification of the Sabbath The church of Rome keepe the dayes of Saints more duly and strictly more solemnly and precisely then the Lords day and abrogate the liberty of the sixe dayes 5 The fift Commandement establisheth the seuerall degrees amongst men The church of Rome challenge an immunity for their clergy and a freedome from answering before the secular power they deny that their holy father oweth subiection to Princes or Emperors They teach hee hath power to depose Princes Bel de pontif Rom. lib. 5. ca. 6 and to discharge their subiects from their allegeance and may dispose of all kingdomes at his pleasure Lastly they free Children from the obedience of their parents Bel. de Monach lib. 2. cap. 6. and allow them to enter into Cloysters and Monasteries without their counsell and consent 6 The sixt Commandement bindeth vppe our hearts and hands from all cruelty willeth vs to preserue life and shew foorth the fruites of mercy The Church of Rome open wide gappes for the free committing of murther and shedding of blood They giue Pardons nay promises of heauen to destroy and poison Princes they appoint sanctuaries and priuiledged places for wilful murtherers contrary to the law of God who wold haue such pulled from his Altar and no religious place to giue them succour or protection Exod. 21 11. 1 Kin. 2 31. And concerning the murthering of soules a great part of theyr Doctrine leadeth the highway to it and giueth them a deadly wound 7 The seuenth Commandement condemneth all impurity and vncleannesse of soule body and commandeth vs to possesse our vessels in holinesse and honour The Church of Rome shaketh the foundation of this Commandement Hard confutat of the Apologie Parson confut of Ioh. Nichols and crosseth the purpose of God therein by forbidding marriage by accounting it an vncleane life by establishing vowes of single life by tollerating and defending the stewes by giuing liberty for Incest by allowing the brother to marry his brothers Wife the vncle to marry his neece and lastly by forbidding such degrees as God hath not restrained to open a way for the Popes dispensations 8 The eight Commandement chargeth vs with the goods of our neighbour The church of Rome teach it to be lawfull to make sale of mens soules out of Purgatorie as cunning The common practise of the Pope nay cozening Merchants they set all things at offer and proffer they sell Crosses Images Prayers they sell the remission of sinnes and the kingdome of heauen for money yea they rob men of their inheritance defeating defrauding their posterity to maintaine their ydle bellies 9 The ninth Commandement forbiddeth all false witnes bearing The Church of Rome do beare false witnesse against God falsifying the Canon of the Scriptures and make God speake that which he hath not spoken They teach that neither faith nor promise nor oath must be kept with Heretickes they maintaine and practise the Doctrine of Equiuocation See the examinations of the priests Iesuites of mentall euasion and secret reseruation vnto themselues of an hidden sence contrary to the common vnderstanding of the same wordes thereby ouerthrowing al equity the course of iustice among men The tenth Commandement restraineth the motions of the mind and commandeth a pure heart toward our neighbour The Church of Rome teacheth that the motions without consent are no sinnes at all so that they expresly repeale this Commandement and euidently declare they neuer vnderstoode the meaning of it Notwithstanding these are those Teachers that boast themselues to bee the successors of the Apostles and to haue the onely right calling yet we see how corrupt they are in doctrine glorying in the naked name of the Church and ouer-turning the foundation whereon it is builded Vse 4 Lastly this teacheth sundry duties both to the Pastors and people committed vnto theyr charge First of all it putteth the Ministers in minde to looke to their flocks to take heed to them that they be not seduced Wee are all of vs naturally inclined to falshood and error and loue darkenesse better then light that so we may walke at liberty and not be controlled But our danger is greater by reason of false seducers which are deceitfull workmen and the instruments of the subtle Serpent by whom they are inspired This duty being so necessary in regard of the common danger of the Church is diuers times vrged by Christ and his Apostles Christ warneth his Disciples to be watchfull because of false teachers that should arise in the last dayes Matth. 24 24. The Apostle Iude testifyeth chap. 3 verse 4. that he gaue diligent heede to write vnto them of the common faith which was once giuen vnto the Saints because there were certaine vngodly men crept in which turned the grace of God into wantonnesse and denyed GOD the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ The Apostle Paul exhorting the elders of Ephesus propounding vnto them his owne example foretelling the danger that hung ouer their heads to wit that their faith shold be assaulted and their zeale tried by false teachers springing vp from themselues sayeth Take heed vnto your selues and to all the Flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made you ouerseers to feed the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne blood Watch therefore remember that by the space of three yeares I ceased not to warne euery one night and day with teares Actes 20 28 29. So the same Apostle chargeth Timothy before God and before the Lord Iesus Christ Which shall iudge the quicke and dead at his appearing and in his kingdome to preach the Word in season and out of season because the time will come when they will not suffer wholesome Doctrine but hauing their eares itching shall after their owne lusts get them an heap of Teachers turning from the truth and giuing heed to fables Secondly this serueth to instruct the people of God to be throughly furnished and well prepared against such seducers that they may be able to stand our against them and to resist
they haue gone into warre to fight with their enemies they haue called vpon his name and receyued great comfort This we see euidently in the practise of Ioshua who prayed vnto him in the day when hee gaue the Amorites before the children of Israel Ioshua chap. 10. verses 12 14. Sunne stay thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon and there was no day like that day before it nor after it that the Lord heard the voice of a man for the Lord fought for Israel When the Philistines were assembled against Israel the children of Israel sayde to Samuel Cease not to cry vnto the Lord our God for vs that hee may saue vs out of the hand of the Philistines 1 Samuel chapt 7. verses 8 9 10. Samuel cried vnto the Lord who heard him and thundered with a great thunder that day vppon the Philistines and scattered them so they were slaine before Israel And there is a notable example hereof recorded in the first of the Chronicles the fift chapter and the 20. verse touching the sonnes of Reuben of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh They were holpen against the Hagarims who were deliuered into their hand and all that were with them for they cryed to God in the battell and hee heard him because they trusted in him If then God do in mercy heare the prayers of those that call vpon his most holy name going vnto the warre and preparing themselues vnto the battaile wee cannot doubt of the lawfulnesse of the worke it selfe seeing almighty God vseth not to heare those that goe about euill but sendeth his curse vppon them Fourthly the word of God setteth downe Reason 4 the duties of those that manage the matters of the field as of the King of the Captaine of the common souldier which it would neuer do if the callings were vnlawfull For as wee conclude marriage to be lawfull and an honorable ordinance of God because the Scripture setteth forth the duties of maried persons aswell of the husband toward the wife as the wife toward her husband so in as much as we finde the duties of such as go to war aswel of those that are commanders as of those that are vnder commandement described plentifully and fully in the booke of God wee cannot call the lawfulnes of their office in question Hence it is that the Lord teacheth Ioshua the duties of his calling Iosh 1 6 that he should be strong and of a good corage that he shold meditate in the booke of the Law and assure himselfe that he would be with him and not leaue him nor forsake him so that there shold not a man be able to withstand him all the daies of his life So when the soldiers came to Iohn Baptist to bee instructed how to leade their liues and to bee directed how to escape the wrath of God to come Luke 3.14 he said vnto them Do violence to no man neither accuse any falsely and be content with your wages The particular handling and setting downe of these duties inforceth the acknowledgement of the lawfulnes of the calling Reason 5 Lastly we shall see the lawfulnes of warres if wee consider the lawfull causes of a lawfull warre The first is the defence of true religion against the oppugners thereof as appeareth by the words of Ahijah to Ieroboam and all Israel 2 Chron. 13 6. The second is that such as are oppressed for religion may bee freed and deliuered as we see in the histories of the Iudges who raised wars to deliuer the opprested and distressed people out of the bloody hands of the cruell oppressors The third is for the necessary defence of the Commonwealth by repulsing iniuries offred Iudg. 11 13 ● Sam. 10 4. ● Chron. 14 9 1 Sam. 30 18. Genes 14.16 1 Chron. 18.1 by reuenging indignities and assaults and by recouering things lost as their wiues their sonnes their daughters their goods their possessions their cities their substance dominions The ouerthrow of the Commonwealth bringeth the ruine of the Churches peace For as the flourishing estate of the Commonwealth maintaineth and furthereth the Churches peace Ieremy 29 7. so when the Common-wealth is spoiled the libertie and freedome of the Church is diminished as appeareth in sundry places of the Lamentations ●amen 1 4 5. Vse 1 Let vs now make vse of this doctrine and apply it to our instruction First it is required of euery one to haue courage Wee must not grow feeble and faint-hearted we should not feare nor be discouraged but be bold as in the worke of the Lord assuring our selues that the Lord is our strength who teacheth our hands to fight and our fingers to battell Psalme 144 1. When Hezekiah saw that Zaneherib was come and that his purpose was to fight against Ierusalem he said to his Captaines souldiers Be strong and couragious feare not neither be afraid for the king of Ashur neither for all the multitude that is with him for there is moe with vs then is with him with him is an arme of flesh but with vs is the Lord our God for to helpe vs and to fight our battels 2 Chron. 32 7. This appeareth in the exhortation of Nehemiah when Sanballat and Tobiah conspired to come to fight against Ierusalem to hinder the building of the wall he said Be not afraid of them remember the great Lord and fearfull and fight for your brethren your sonnes and your daughters your wiues and your houses Neh. 4.14 The heathen Captaines that carried their men to battel were alwayes wont as we see in prophane histories to put courage into them not to feare to looke the enemy in the face but their onely or cheefest reason to mooue them was earthly glory that either they should liue in wealth or dye with honor It is not so with the people of God they haue greater Reasons to worke in them the gift of valour and hope of victory True religion therfore doth not weaken the hearts of men and make them Cowards It is no enemy to true fortitude and manhood The Reasons why true Religion giueth courage in battel For first it teacheth and informeth the conscience that the cause and quarrell in which the warriour fighteth is good iust and warrantable by the word of GOD which maketh him stand vpon a sure ground without which knowledge in the heart how vgly how foule how sauage how cruell a thing is the effusion and shedding of blood What an horrible and grisly a spectacle is it to see Villages and Townes burned Cities and Castles ruinated Churches and religious places ouerturned bodies dismembred with Ordnance the ayre infected with stench the ground embrued with blood the country wasted grasse and corne troden downe and spoyled and all places with feare and terror filled Is it not to be esteemed rather a practise of all inhumanity then an exercise of manhood Secondly as true religion establisheth the conscience touching the lawfulnes
the reason is rendred for what cause the Midianities were to be destroied to wit because they had a chiefe hand and were principall doers in the seducing of the people of God and drawing them into sin The Moabites and Ammonites were actors in this tragedy but the chiefe part was assigned to the Midianites The Moabites and Ammonites came of Lot by committing incest with his daughters Gen. 19 37 38. The Midianites came of Midian the fourth sonne of Keturah which she bare to Abraham Gen. 25 2. They ought being so neerely ioyned to the people of God to haue performed all duties of humanity and kindnesse vnto them whereas they sought their ouerthrow and wrought their destruction We heard before how the people of God were beguiled and punished heere wee may behold those threatened and afterward destroyed that did trouble them with theyr wyles as concerning Peor Before wee saw the chasticement of them that were seduced and ledde into sinne now they are threatned that were seducers Before we saw the iudgment that fell vpon them that followed now we may see the iudgements that ouertooke the Captains and Ringleaders From hence we learne Doctrine The seducers the seduced shall be punished together that the seducer and the seduced the Ringleader and they that are misled the deceyuer and the deceyued shall perish and be punished together The Lord will punish not onely false Teachers and such as leade the way vnto wickednesse but theyr schollers and disciples such as are brought to lewdnesse and euill by them This Moses declareth very euidently Deut. 13 15. If a false Prophet arise and draw an whole City to Idolatry Gods iudgements shall be not onely against that false Prophet but against the City so that not an Oxe or a Sheep should be spared they should perish and be destroyed together When Gamaliel gaue counsell to take heede to themselues what they intended to do touching the Apostles he bringeth in the examples of Theudas and Iudas Acts 5 36 37 which drew away much people after them but they perished all that obeyed them The Prophet Ezekiel denounceth That if the watchman seeing the sword comming did not giue the people warning nor admonish them of their wicked waies the wicked should die in their sinnes but their blood should be required at the watchmans hands We see this confirmed vnto vs euen from the beginning when the diuell abusing the tongue and body of the serpent had drawne our first parents into sinne the diuell was the principall author of this apostacy and falling from God the serpent was the instrument the woman did hearken to the diuell and was before her husband in the transgression Adam followed the counsell of his wife and yeelded to sinne against God through her perswasion The diuell was a seducer Adam was seduced Enah was both a seducer and seduced Gen. 3 1 2 3 for she was seduced by the diuell and a seducer of her husband deceiuing and being deceiued so that when God called them to an acount and brought them before the barre of his iudgement seate he punished not onely the diuel the serpent that were the authors but also Adam and his wife that were the followers Heereunto commeth the saying of our Sauiour Mat. 15 14. Let them alone they be the blinde leaders of the blinde and if the blinde leade the blinde both shall fall into the ditch not onely the leader but he likewise that is blindly led The Lord Iesus reproueth the Church of Thyatira that they suffered a wretched woman which called her selfe a Prophetesse and threatneth to punish not onely her Reuel 2 12 but those that were her disciples with great afflictions And afterward in the same booke they that receiued the marke of the beast are put out of the booke of life as well as the beast This truth will be more manifest vnto vs if Reason 1 we marke the reasons ●or first such as are misled and moued to heresie and wickednes in life o● doctrine in faith or manners in opinion or practise are culpable of the same sins and abhominations and therfore right●ously to be pu●ished and condemned with such as are the leaders and perswaders vnto the same The Lord himselfe rendreth the reason why those that were seduced should bee destroyed because they had forsaken his waies and commandements Deut. 1 ●● They then that are seduced that are t●●●ed from the Lord that are thrust out of the right way wherein they should walke and commit abhominations against him as well as the seducers are culpable of the same sinnes together and therefore shall partake of the same punishment Reason 2 Secondly what is the reason that men are seduced Is it not theyr owne sinne and ignorance They are wilfully blinde they are not careful to learne and stand in the truth as they ought The Prophet Hosea speaking of false Prophets and of the people misled by them saith That they shall all full the people by day the Prophet by night with them Hosea 4.5 This is it which the Apostle vrgeth 2 Thess 2 10 11. Because they receiued not the loue of the truth that they might be saued therefore God shall send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies that all they might be damned which beleeued not the truth but had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse Vse 1 Now let vs come to the vses of this Doctrine First from hence we are to conclude that pretences or excuses shall not beare out the followers and fellowes of wicked seducers and lewd leaders from God his truth but they shall beare theyr sinnes and punishments themselues We see how ready many are to answer for themselues A lasse we are poore simple men we haue no learning wee know not the letters wee are not able to try whether the Doctrine bee good or bad true or false right or wrong we hope God will hold vs excused and not lay it to our charge These couerings to hide our shame as so many figge-leaues shall be pulled from vs and fall to the earth as weake and vnable to vphold themselues What did the vaine coloured shewes auaile Adam and Eue feeding themselues with vaine hopes Gen. 3 12 13 and excusing themselues with fayre pretences Adam saide The woman whom thou gauest to be with me deceiued mee and I did ea●e The woman saide The Serpent beguiled me and I did eate The Serpent might haue said the diuell entred into me preuailed ouer mee and abused me to be his instrument Heere are many delayes and deuices the man excuseth himselfe by the woman the woman by the serpent the serpent by the diuell but God cannot be mocked he will not be deluded and therefore none of them escaped all of them ●re punished as they were willingly and wittingly deceiued For the diuell had his iudgement the serpent had his iudgement the man and the woman had also their iudgment Let this be assu●ed to the consciences or all of vs
12. how is it then that he omitteth this miracle Doubtlesse if he had receiued so great miraculous a benefit he would not haue forgotten it neither indeede could without note of vnthankfulnesse which was farre from that deuout and religious man Furthermore the setting vp of this miracle of the new-found fire hid in the pit and after discouered by the Priests and kindled by the Lord is the weakning and shaking of a great mystery and foundation of the Christian religion For it is written that the Iewes were stirred vp by the Prophets to proceed cheerefully in building of the Temple because the glory of that latter house should be greater then of the former Hag. 2 9 which prophecy is agreed vpon to be fulfilled in that Christ was borne while the second house stood which he made famous and renowned by his presence by his doctrine by his miracles Luke 2 46 7 8. There also did the Apostles begin the preaching of the Gospel which taking his beginning from Sion and Ierusalem was spread abroad from thence into all the earth Many were the priuiledges and prerogatiues of the Tabernacle framed by Moses and of the first house builded by Salomon they had the fire from heauen the Arke of the Couenant the pillar of the cloud the Vrim and Thummim and the succession of the Prophets but the second house built after their returne from captiuity wanted all these therefore while it stood the Messiah must come being greater then all these that through his presence who was to be the ruler in Israel Mic. 5 2 the glory of the latter house might be greater then the former and so the prophecy should be fulfilled But if this story were true which is broached by the writer of that book the latter Temple should bee more glorious and famous through this miraculous fire then the former For in the former the sacrifices were onely consumed with fire that fire was sent from God and nourished by the continuall ministery and attendance of the Priests but in the latter temple they should haue had not onely the same fire with the other but the fire preserued by a wonderfull miracle that in a contrary element Fire burned ●nto water water into fire yea heere are many miracles heaped together for as that fire was preserued in water so of that thicke water into which it was changed was the fire kindled againe 2 Macab 1 22 and that which is more when the sacrifice was consumed Nehemiah is said to haue commanded the water that was left to be powred on the great stones whereby was kindled a flame which was consumed by the light that shined from the altar verse 31 32. And this is so apparent that the Iewish Rabbines that haue the vayle before their eyes or rather before their harts haue acknowledged the truth herof that the 2 house had not that fire which the former had contrary to the opinion of that writer And yet notwithstanding the euidence of the former reasons and the confession of the Iewes themselues hee sticketh not in the next chapter to alleage the Prophet Ieremy as if he had commanded them that were carried away to take with them the Tabernacle the Arke and the fire as hath beene signified 2 Maccab. 2 1. But to leaue all these assertions deliuered with warrant let vs come to the doctrine offred to our considerations in the destruction of the 2. Doctrine It is a sin to decline from the worship of God sons of Aaron because they offred strange fire to wit that it is a sin impiety which the Lord leaueth not vnpunished for any man in the outward worship of God to decline from the Law of God He appointed to burne euery sacrifice with fire taken from the Altar which was continually kept and nourished for that purpose They altered Gods ordinance and are therefore striken suddenly from heauen so that it is a great sinne for any Church or particular person to swarue from the Law of God in the worship of God as appeareth by many examples testimonies of holy Scripture 1 Sam. 13 12 13 14. 2 Chro. 26 16 17 18. Math. 15 9. Col. 2.20.21 22. The grounds are plaine first because the Reason 1 word of God is the rule of all things that wee are warranted to do and more generally it is the rule of Gods worship so that to decline from this rule to the right hand or to the left must needs be a great sinne which GOD abhorreth Deut. 12 8 13 32. In an art to vary from the rules of the art is a great errour thr carpenter and mason are guided by their line and leuell the Law of GOD is the square and rule of his worship the more closely wee keepe our selues to this rule the more warrantable are our workes if wee decline and depart from it wee wander in errour and the farther we goe from it the more we are out of the way Secondly that starting and swaruing from the Law reprooueth and checketh the wisedome of God who is Wisedome it selfe Pro. 9 1 as if we were able to direct him and knew what belongeth to his worship better then himselfe An artificer in his worke cannot abide to bee checked and controlled by those that know not so well what belongeth vnto it as he doth Iam. 4.12 so the wise GOD the supreme Lawgiuer cannot endure that men should decline from the order which hee hath settled and established in his worship and prescribed vnto them in his Word and therefore he accounteth it a great sinne and impiety in any that attempt the same This reprooueth the Church of Rome Vse 1 which is as a body infected with many diseases and running sores For their whole worship in a maner is an apostacy from God full of dangerous wounds that cannot be cured as wee may see by their worshipping of images prayer in a strange tongue communion vnder one kind and an hundred such like horrible corruptions which are so many prophanations of the worship of God These men set the Law of God at nought and thinke themselues wiser then he and preferre their owne traditions before his commandements and so worship him by the precepts of men Math. 15.6 which is a vaine worship and maketh his Law of none effect Secondly it serueth as a direction to the Vse 2 Church what they receiue to godly Magistrats what they establish by their authority that in the worship of God they alwayes set the law of God before their eies allow nothing but that which is grounded vpō the rules of the same that they adde nothing to it take nothing frō it For this cause the King must write him a coppy of the Law in a booke that it may be euer with him that he may reade in it all the dayes of his life and learne to feare the Lord his God Deu. 17 18 19. This was taught to Ioshua chap 1 8 and
our selues True it is he is mindfull of a few that serue him and ready to shew mercy to one of a City and two of a Tribe that feare his Name Though they be contemned derided of the vnthankfull world yet they are deare to him and they come vp in remembrance before him When all flesh had corrupted their waies he remembred Noah and his family saued eight persons when he destroyed all the rest Gen. 7 1. So he deliuered righteous Lot 2 Pet. 2.7 when hee ouerthrew the cities of the plaine and would haue spared Sodome if ten righteous persons had beene found in it Ge. 18 32. On the other side if multitudes trespasse against him and rush on in euil as the horse into the battell he will not spare them for their multitude sake It is a great encouragement vnto many to walk in the broad way Math. 7.13 because many there are that go in thereat they are much discouraged and terrified from entring into the strait gate narrow way because there be few that finde it they shal haue litle company to go with them but if wee would consider the end both of the one of the other it were sufficient to make vs wise vnto saluation It is a very notable remarkeable iudgment that is remembred vnto vs that fell vpō this multitude the exceeding goodnes kindnes of the Lord onely toward two persons of those sixe hundred thousand that were brought out of the land of Egypt forasmuch as albeit he saued them from the hands of Pharaoh yet afterward he destroyed them that beleeued not Iude 5. Who doth not desire rather like Caleb Ioshuah to be had in euerlasting remembrance Psa 112 6 to haue our names written in the booke of life then to perish with the multitude and to be cast into destruction Vse 2 Secondly it warneth and warranteth the Ministers of God to be bold to reproue sinne in all though they be neuer so great and gracious in the world though they be many yea a whole multitude yet if they be a sinful company they haue a commandement and commission giuen vnto them to reprooue them without respect of persons without care of the multitude and without feare of their faces This is a certaine rule a multitude may not stoppe our mouthes from reprouing sinne and it serueth as a shield and sure defence for the Ministers against those that vpbraid them for their faithfulnesse in their callings asking them what they need to trouble themselues and the people by reproouing these and these things doe you not see that all men practise them It is no matter who or what they are that offend whether they be many or few al or some he is not to be silent because of the multitude but is rather to open his mouth the wider and to lift vp his voyce the louder For if Gods hand will not be stayed when great cities are sinfull when the whole world corrupted their wayes but his iudgements will certainely come according to our sinnes the Minister ought not to be dumbe and tongue-tyed though a whole land be corrupt and sinfull In the dayes of Noah all flesh became obstinate and disobedient stiff-necked and abominable yet he is made a Preacher of righteousnesse to reproue the world of sinne 1 Pet. 3 20. If a Prince send forth his Herald to proclaime warre against a company of rebels shall the Herald because he findeth them to be a great multitude returne backe and not pronounce the sentence and yet thinke himselfe discharged No certainly hee may not do so but rather he should doe it the more speedily and earnestly and boldly because they are a multitude how then should the Minister hold his peace and haue his mouth stopped because generally the times are corrupt and the dayes are euill whereas he should consider that the moe doe sinne the more God is offended dishonored and prouoked In the time of a generall plague or infectious sicknesse will any well in his wits or in his right minde say to the Physician Take no care to cure or recouer any it is a vaine labour to goe about it for the plague is generall Is it not rather the honour of a Physician that will still stay and do his endeauor euen then when the disease is dispersed and scattered farre and neare And shall it bee thought the dishonour of the Minister of God when the plague of sin is spread as a leprosie ouer all that from the sole of the foote euen vnto the head there is no soundnesse but wounds and bruises putrifying sores if he shall then lift vp his voyce as a Trumpet and reproue sin with zeale and boldnesse No doubtles he ought to do it if he be faithfull and painefull in his place hee will do it yea though he see little hope when the euill is growne common and hath preuailed the hearts of the multitude through custome are hardened For if the blood of one soule that perisheth be a burden too heauy to be borne how then shall he bee able to beare the weight and the cry of the blood of many soules If the blood of Abel which was but the blood of the body and that but of one only Gen. 4 10. did notwithstanding cry for vengeance against him that shed it doubtlesse the blood of the soule much more of many soules redeemed by the precious blood of Christ shall cry vnto God and bring wrath vpon their heads that shed it as water vpon the earth Forasmuch as they must answer for them if they perish through their negligence and ydlenesse What though no repentance or reformation follow our reproofes yet we must not giue ouer but continue constant in our caling knowing that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord but our reward is layde vp with God in the life to come to remaine for euer Vse 3 Lastly it must teach and admonish vs to take heed that we doe not follow a multitude to do euil nor be caried with the time as with a streame to commit wickednes as if we must needs be safe and out of gun-shot because we follow the multitude and do as the most doe For it is neuer a whit the lesse sin neyther are lesse iudgements to be looked for In the gouernment of a priuate family if al the seruants and children should conspire together against the gouernor of the houshold shall their multitude ioyning in one euer a whit excuse or lessen their conspiracy No certainely rather it will make the master of the family to bee far more angry and displeased with them so is it in this point thogh they be many that rebell rise vp against God yet they shall therby nothing at all protect themselues from his wrath and displeasure Iude ver 4. There are many thousands in hell ordained of old to this condemnation yet none of them hath the lesse torment or the
serpent that was lift vp on the pole but such as were able in particular to looke vpon it and assented and beleeued the promise that they should be cured and restored by it Christ calleth himselfe The liuing bread of which we must eate but what is eating saue an application because whatsoeuer a man eateth or drinketh that he applyeth vnto himselfe and receyueth it to be his so touching faith whatsoeuer a man doth beleeue the same he doth apply vnto himselfe or else it can be no truth fayth but a counterfeyt faith Marke the grounds of this point First true Reason 1 Faith standeth of two parts whereof one is an acte of the vnderstanding the other is an acte of the wil according to the saying of the Apostle Roman chap. 10. verse 10 With the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse The mind informeth vs to see and know God and his sonne Christ and the promises made in him the heart seeketh desireth and loueth that which it knoweth which cānot be without a particular application Secondly euery man is commaunded to beleeue Marke chap. 1. verse 15. 1 Iohn chap 5. verse 15. Now it is not enough that we beleeue except wee also make application or else we beleeue no otherwise then the diuels beleeue for euen they beleeue God Christ Iames chap. 2 verse 19. But to make particular application of Christ as to say Christ is mine and I am his and haue remission of sins by his death is more then any or all the diuels in hell can do The Angel that was sent to be the first preacher of the Gospel saide to the shepheards Luke 2. Behold I bring you tydings of great ioy which shall be to all people for vnto you is born this day a Sauiour that is to you that beleeue for except they had beleeued it and applyed it to themselues they could neuer haue conceyued any ioy at all nor receyued any benefite at all by it Thirdly the promises of GOD howsoeuer they are deliuered in generall tearmes yet they are particular also and euerie one is bound to gather a patticular to himself out of the generall As in a Proclamation albeit it bee conceiued and published in generall words yet the matter is that which belongeth to euery one in particular and must be so applied as if his owne name were set downe in it Marke 16 26. Iohn 3 16. The Gospel is as a Princes proclamation offering pardon and forgiuenesse and though the promises of God be generall yet they doe containe a particular because that which is spoken to all beleeuers is spoken vnto euery one that is a beleeuer and that which is spoken to all penitent persons must bee applyed to euery seuerall penitent soule Fourthly God hath ordained the Sacraments in the Church to be the seales of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4 11 and that they should be deliuered particularly to euery man thereby to assure him of grace and mercy in particular When men once come to know that Christ offereth remission of sins by his death by the receiuing of the Sacraments particularly we come to apply Christ and his merits to our selues so that the deliuering of them vnto vs is thus much in effect Thou beleeuest these generall things then draw neere and take this vnto thy farther comfort that thou mayest bee assured that the promises of righteousnesse doe belong vnto thee as if indeede thy name were particularly specified therein All these things being considered it followeth necessarily that the generall knowledge is not sufficient but a particular application is necessary to saluation Vse 1 This serueth for confutation of an errour of the church of Rome denying that a man may particularly beleeue that God is his God or that Christ is his Sauiour or that remission of sinnes belongeth vnto him and why so Forsooth because in the Gospel all runneth in generall and it is not there written that such and such are Gods and shal haue benefite by Christ But where there is a general as for example Whosoeuer beleeueth and repenteth shal be saued there is the particular also If thou beleeue thou shalt be saued and the faithfull by vertue of this do beleeue and are saued by this their application The Apostles said to the Gaoler Acts 16 31 Beleeue on the Lord Iesus Christ thou shalt be saued and thy house If the Keeper of the prison had replyed Sirs how doe you know that I shall bee saued by Christ Is my name written in the booke of God that I may bee assured it is written in the booke of life Would not they haue told him that his particular name was included in the generall albeit it were not expressed The Papists doe presume to giue absolution vpon confession and yet they do not find any man in the Gospel particularly named When Christ our Sauiour saith Whose sinnes soeuer ye remit they are remitted Iohn 20 23 they are not afraide vpon this generall to giue absolution to particular persons and to tell them that their sins are forgiuen And will not these men be so fauorable to vs as to suffer vs from a generall to infer and gather a particular as well as themselues to wit that when Christ saith Whosoeuer beleeueth in me shall not perish but haue euerlasting life the Minister may speak to the conscience of this or that man particularly Beleeue thou in the Lord Iesus and thou shalt haue eternall life But Bellarmine goeth farther and obiecteth Obiection That this is not a simple promise but conditionall if they repent and beleeue then they may indeede apply these things to themselues and bee assured of them but a man cannot haue any certainty of these things that they do beleeue and repent and therefore they cānot in particular apply them to themselues Answ I answer this is to builde one error vpon another and to dawbe them both with vntempered mortar For wherefore doth the Apostle command euery man to try and examine him selfe whether he be in the faith and haue Christ Iesus dwelling in him 2. Cor 13 if after this proofe hee cannot know what his estate and condition is This is a certaine rule whosoeuer truly beleeueth knoweth that hee beleeueth though no man knoweth it but himself He that is the Lords hath a new name written Reuel 2 17. which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it But he which hath receyued it knoweth it as wel as he knoweth he liueth For no man doth know the things of a man saue the spirite of man which is in him euen so the things of God knoweth no man saue the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2 11. So then euery man both may and ought to haue assurance of his own saluation and therefore this we beleeue let them teach and write what they will For what if a franticke man should run vp and downe boast that all the wares which come to such a Port or hauen are his shall the Merchant be
established by Arcadius and Honorius the Emperors God lib. 5 tit 4 de nuptiis that the marriage of cousin germans shall be allowed and the children borne of them shall bee holden legittimate and succeede their fathers in theyr inheritance And heereunto doe the ancient Councels also accord Epann Concil about the yeare of Christ foure hundred ninety seuen Concil Turon 2. in the yeare fiue hundred and sixty Now the first that did forbid the marriage of cousin germans was Theodosius the Elder as many testifie and that by the counsell and aduice of Ambrose Lib. 8. Epist 66. which hee calleth the Theodosian Law and in his time Austine testifieth it was in force This is wholly or at least for the most part taken out of Zepperus The next witnesse to be produced is Amand Polanus professour in the vniuersitie of Basil in Syntag. Theol lib. 10. cap. 53. who teacheth that the sonnes and daughters of brethren and sisters may lawfully marrie by the law of God whatsoeuer the Popes canon law say to the contrary as Iacob married Rahel his cousin german Of the same iudgement also is Chemnitius in his Examin Chem. exam part 1. For he sheweth that the prohibition of this degree is meerely humane established for no other cause but that the prohibitions of God might bee kept with greater reuerence and where such prohibitions are they ought to bee obserued which is not denied of vs howbeit that is not our case where no such prohibitions are I will annexe to these one forraine testimony more that is of Zanchius a man of eminent note who proouing that the incestuous marriages betweene the brother and sister De oper creat part 3 lib. 4. c. 2 whether they be borne of the same father and mother or of one of them onely are vtterly vnlawfull as also betweene the Nephew and the Aunt and the Neece and her vncle he hath these words The marriage betweene the sonnes and daughters of naturall brethren is lawfull as all the learned and godly agree without any controuersie for as much as we neuer read the same forbidden in holy Scripture in any place but rather allowed by many examples which were neuer condemned by any man And albeit he wish that in all such places as is a restraint heereof men should be subiect to the Magistrate according to the Doctrine of Christ yet hee spareth not farther to deliuer his opinion in this manner For my part I could wish for many causes and those of no smal moment and importance that marriages might simply bee made by warrant of the word of God that whatsoeuer God himselfe hath left free and made lawful the same might also be left vnto men as lawfull I speake freely that which I conceiue of this matter These are the forraine testimonies which I thought good to alledge at this present to which it were not hard to adde infinite others who because they speake the same things and run the same course that the former doe I will not trouble the reader and my selfe any farther in rehearsing of them I will conclude the whole with one more that is our owne countrey-man M. Perkins Mast Perkins a very iudicious godly learned Diuine as any that this age hath brought forth who in a Treatise prouing that a reprobate may in truth be made partaker of all that is contained in the Religion of the Church of Rome and that a right papist by his Religion cannot go beyond a reprobate sayth thus To go further by Gods word they which are distant 4. degrees in the transuers equall line are not forbidden to marry together as cousin germans thus the daughters of Zelophehad were married to their fathers brothers sonnes This example as I take it may be a warrant of the lawfulnes of this Marriage howsoeuer the church of Rome do ouerthwart the Lord in it Let me adde one thing more and then I will end Whereas wee are aduised by many in this question to haue due consideration of offences that may arise in making such matches I would wish also and desire all those that are contrary minded to haue good consideration of such offences as may bee giuen by two earnest disprouing the vnfitnesse and inconueniency of such matches and especially by leauing in doubt and suspence the lawfulnesse of them forasmuch as betweene parties of very good account both in calling and Religion there haue beene and are many matches in this Land of that kinde that betweene high and low rich poore noble and vnnoble which haue beene vndertaken and finished by the iudgement of the godly and learned so that it were not hard to produce sundry examples of Emperors Kings Princes Dukes Earles Barons Knights Gentlemen other of all sorts which now to bring in question for the offensiue conceits of some were more offensiue to the truth to the Church to the learned and to men of all conditions yea more dangerous to the state of those parties and preiudiciall to theyr yssue then any man of iudgement or godlinesse would approoue Thus much of this point of this chapter and of this whole booke The Lord almighty the author of all number of whose vnderstanding there is no number Psal 147 5 who hath ordered all things in measure number waight with whom our dayes are determined and the number of our months are set Iob 14 5 by whose onely mercy wee haue receyued strength to finish this booke of NVMBERS containing the iourneys of the Israelites through the desert from Mount Sinai vnto the plains of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho and admonishing vs of the state of the Church in this life lying vnder the crosse and at length receiuing deliuerance from the Ancient of daies grant vnto vs that being numbred among the children of GOD we may haue our lot among the Saints and be in the number of them that are sealed out of all the Tribes of the children of Israel Reuel 7 4. and so rest for euer in the heauenly Canaan among the soules of iust men perfected and the innumerable company of angels Heb. 12 22. Vnto him be praise and glorie in the Church Amen FINIS Gentle Reader let me intreate thee to amend these faults which otherwise may leade into errour PAg. 18. Col. 2. line 6. had made pag. 79. col 2. l. 37. the iudgement pag. 80 c. 1. l. 1. desired p. 137. c. 1. l. 60. rule and p. 140. c. 1. l. 56. censor p. 167. c. 2. l. 5. not to do p. 206. c. 2. l. 22. vnprobable p. 301. c. 1. l. 26. the Cushite p. 394. c. 2. l. 18. the Cushite p. 422. c. 1. l. 5. his iudgements p. 451. c. 1. l. 30. tender p. 473. c. 2. l. 36. profitable p. 536. c. 2. l. 28. the staffe p. 588. c. 1. l. 47 a double A Table of the principall Contents of this Booke the Figures note out the Page the Letters the Columne If no Letter be
expressed the whole Page is to be vnderstood AArons rod. p. 677 729 Abuses of excommunication pag. p. 571 a Accessaries to others sins p. 379 b. Actions how to be directed p. 170 a of vnbeleeuers are sinne 171. b. such as are in themselues vnlawfull are by a calling made lawful pag. p. 1068 Adam could not merit 89 a. his sinne how great p. 161 b. Additions to Gods worship euill p. 141 Admission of vnworthy persons a great sin p. 219 a Adultery punished of God 378 b. the seueral kinds 387 b. the greeuousnes of this sin p. 389 Afflictions why sent to the Church p. 21 b. the godly often lye vnder them p. 576 Afflictions of two sorts 78. wee must loue God vnder them ibidem they are many laid vppon the Church by enemies 756. not simply euill Ibid. Be not offended at them p. 757 a Afflictions of excellent vse 779 884. better for many to be vnder them 780 a. what comforts we haue in them p. 967 a Agreement neuer generall p. 1037 Almes not the onely worke 453 a. See liberality Alterations in the Roman religion some insensible 1105. some are knowne p. 1106 Ambition in vs by nature 54. a. it sheweth it selfe against the best teachers 557. no greater plague to the church 555. it reigneth in the byshops of Rome ibid what it is 556. remedies against it ibid. meanes to pull it downe 183 b. examples of the end of it p. 184 b. Amen what it signifieth 369 a. the vses of it ibid Anabaptists confuted 696 b. 839 b. 1108 1128 a. they are enemies to the Scriptures 7 6.16 b. they ouerthrow Magistracy 64 181. their obiections against Magistrats ibid. against taking an oath p. ●71 Angels cannot helpe p. 733 b. 785 b. Angels that appeared to Balaam p. 902. Anger not simply euill pag. 567 656 b. how it is a breach of the whole Law 657. all sin p. 656. Anthropomorphites p. 422. Apochryphall bookes p. 973 a Arithmeticians best who are p. 26 a. An army before battell must be leuied 1173 a being leuied it must be sent out ibid. b by lawfull authority ibid. Asse of Balaam speaketh 900 how it was p. 901. Assemblies of the faithfull commaunded 83. the godly are greeued for lacke of them 482. the vngodly not so 483 they must be loued 432 457 b. 496 b. See Sabbath Atheisme confuted p. 877 b 906. Attempts against the church cannot hurt it p. 964. Attonement made by Christ p. 339 b. Auricular confession p. 313 b Authority resist not 1108. the Papists do ibid. Authority of parents great 1164 b. of Husbands p. 1169 b. B Balaam what he was 869 no true Prophet Ibid. p. 1175 b. Baptisme wanting see infants it is not common to all 488 a. it was by the cloud and sea p. 498 a. Beggery not to be vowed p. 154 155. Beginnings in good not enough 932. of sin preuent p. 620 1062 1064. Bellarmine confuted p. 459 b. 492 1134 b. 1162 Best things must be giuen to God 445 b. they must be preferred p. 530 b. Binding and loosing p. 289. Birthright what priuiledges it had p. 40 b. 159 a. Bishop of Rome not Peters successor 151 he takes vpon him to excommunicate Princes and to take away their crownes 502. he cānot forgiue sinnes p. 310. Blessing to haue godly Magistrates 67. diuersely taken 421 b it maketh manie the worse 443 rare to be bettered thereby ibid. Blessing sometimes denied to his creatures p. 536 Blessing of God giueth all things p. 630. Bondage vnder sinne p. 176. Booke of life p. 20 a. Brazen serpent and the vses to vs p. 812 b 813. B●ed●●● of the first Table how gre●ter then of 〈◊〉 ●●ond p. 642. Bre●ch Moses stood in p. 671. Brethren taken diuers waies p. 749 a. Br●therhood among all mankinde p. 750 b. Brownists confuted denying set formes of praier 424 512. See formes of set praier and separatists Buriall of the dead 728 b. Abuses of it 729. It strengthneth our faith in the resurrection p. 730 Busie bodies p. 225. C Calling 840 841 euery one hath double 186 walke in the duties of both Ibid. 507 b. Rules to be obserued in callings 187 a. euery one is to know the duties of his owne calling 224 b. calling sinne not against p. 693. Canaan the borders thereof p. 1225 a. Candles burning in the day p. 459. Canonicall Scripture See Scripture Cardinals new creatures p. 154. Carelesse persons p. 489 b. Carnall men preferre carnall things p. 530 Cautions to be obserued in laying vp p. 101. Censures of the Church 270 they must be executed without partiality p. 289. Chasticements mingled with mercie p. 573 b. Chastity two-fold p. 387. Childrens duties p. 1202 b. Christ hath made attonement for vs 339 b. in him is happinesse 342 how he taketh away sin 478 a we must apply his merits ibid. he is not seuered from the Crosse 481 he is the substance of all Sacraments 497 b. his comming to iudgement shall be fearefull p. 505 b. Christ is head of the Church 151 b. how the first borne 162 b. he is our onely Mediatour 675 not Saints or Angels ibid. hee was preached vnder the law 813 he is the day-starre p. 1015. Christian liberty p. 181. Christians are free and how 181 b. they should haue fit places of assembling p. 493 b. Churches authority 3 a. it is subiect to many trobles 11 it hath many hypocrites in it Church-assemblies See assemblies Church triumphant p. 84. Church a perfect body 148 a. corrupt in the daies of Christ 149 it ought not to tollerate open offenders p. 288. Church what 436 a. what office it hath 463 b. Church of Rome wholly out of order p. 508 a. Church is one body and ruled by the same lawes 627 driuen to seeke helpe of enemies 747 b. it is a selected company from the world 925 it aboundeth with many children 520 927 it hath the purity of the word 962 in the ende it hath victory ouer all enemies p. 967. Church more excellent then other places 988 b. labour to be members of it 940 b. it hath the vpper hand of strong enemies 991 b. 1012 b. it is first to be cared for p. 1135 b. Church and commonwealth as two twins 755 a. it must bee left in good estate after our departure 768 770 it euermore continueth 769 when the cheefe parts are taken away the rest should mourne 772 b. sometimes it hath rest p. 1009 b. Church must haue helpe of all p. 1206 b. 1207. Church deliuered from danger and bondage p. 1212 Ciuill men 251 a. ciuill honesty p. 641. Cleargy of Rome exempt themselues from Magistrates 64 b. their Obiections answered p. 65. Cloud figured Christ p. 497 b Comfort vnder the Crosse 73 how to comfort our selues in trouble p. 74 b. Comfort to godly Ministers 156 to such as haue meane gifts 708 a. to such as are slandered 402 to such as lie vnder the crosse p. 404 b. 405. Commonwealths why instituted 82 which they are