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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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some accident of which Deut. 17.1 of this is meant in this place as the 8. verse sheweth And so here seemes to be a double fault taxed by the Spirit of God one in the people and the other in the Priests and so a double duty exacted of them the peoples fault was in bringing of polluted offerings and presenting them unto the Priests their duty was to have brought such as were sound entire and perfect the Priests fault was in receiving them at their hands and not reproving and prohibiting them his duty was to have instructed them what sacrifice they were to bring and to reject that which was uncleane and not according to the Law Now these sacrifices were to be cleane and pure and perfect ad typum capitis to shew the perfect purity of Christs humane nature 2 Cor. 5.21 1 Pet. 1.17 Secondly ad typum corporis to shew what they should be who are members of him and that offer these sacrifices unto God that they should be perfect to every good worke 2 Tim. 5. and Rom. 12.1 3. So that then besides that which hath been spoken for the sacrifice we may gather out of the peoples fault comparing outward things with inward the type with the truth that seeing God reasons on this sort if they who bring polluted offerings unto me contemne me then such as come polluted in themselves much more They who come to the publique service of God Doctrine and come to offer him any sacrifice must not be uncleane and polluted in their hearts and lives but must come with holinesse and purity for if their sacrifice must be such then themselves and the sacrifices were commanded to be such because they themselves ought to be such When God reproved Israel for it Isaiah 1. and 66.3 and Jerm 7.9 10. he sheweth what he required of them and of others to this purpose is Psal 4.4 5. Gen. 35.2 Joshua 24.16 19 23. Because God else will not accept their service for he first looks to their person Reas 1 and then their service Gen. 4.4 for the sacrifice doth not sanctifie the person but the person it as Haggai 2.13 14. Proverb 15.8 Because else that which God offers and gives to them Reas 2 is made hurtfull unto them not that God gives any evill but because they are evill that receive it As the Sacrament to Judas Christ gave not that which was evill nor did he being the Physitian give the poyson but Judas being wicked it became evill unto him for as the spyder and the adder turn good meat into poyson and as a corrupt stomacke abounding with choler and such like turneth the meat they eate into choler and the finer the meat is it is the sooner turned to corruption so is it in this thing Titus 1.15 Vnto the pure are all things pure but unto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their mindes and consciences are defiled To reprove all such as have no care to purge and purifie themselves before they come unto the house of God Vse 1 to his service that come without repentance without preparation full of their drunkennes whoredomes usuries adulteries and such like sinnes They are more guilty of contempt against the Lord then if they withdrew themselves altogether from his obedience and house A man having committed some offence against his Prince being summoned to appeare personally in his presence if he refuse to come at him and shun his sight may well be condemned of contumacy but not of contempt for he may do it out of fear and contempt and fear cannot stand together in one subject but if he shall confidently come appeare before him as if he had done no such thing or not offended him shew no sorrow for his offence make no promise of amendement nay shall rather stand in it with an impudent face avow it professe to persist in it this must needs be judged a grosse outragious contempt Now the place of Gods worship is his presence and he that commeth thither commeth to look God full in the face as Cain was cast out from the face of the Lord. Gen. 4.16 If he come nor he shall suffer as contnmax as rebellious and disobedient but he that commeth polluted with the filth of his sin unrepented of with a purpose to persist he shall be punished as a contemner They who refused to come were shut out but he that came in his old cloathes was bound hand and foot cast into utter darknes Math. 22. he that is willfully absent excluding himselfe from the society of the Saints in the time of grace shal be barred their company in the time of glory for ever but he that presumeth to appeare there with the guilt of his sinne on him shall have a farre greater portion in Hell fire he shall suffer as in case of contempt like an insolent rebell that bourdeth his Prince to his face in his owne Palace and in the mean time all their prayers are unaccepted yea they are turned into sinne to them they obtaine nothing of God more then he would give them though they never prayed with which he feeds them but for the slaughter yea and hence we profit not them by preaching but make them worse wee are not the savour of life unto them but of death by the word they are hardned in their sins by this two edged sword they are daily wounded because their sinnes are not wounded their persons are and the more fearefully because their wounds are not sensible yea by the Sacraments the Devill as upon Judas so upon them taketh more sure possession and raignes in them To teach every one to labour to be holy when he commeth to Gods house Vse 2 holines becomes it to put away iniquity and sin farre from him when God cals him cast of his patched cloak as did blinde Bartimaeus Mark 9. we deal so when we go before Princes as Joseph did Gen. 41.14 much more we ought to doe so with God Moses and Joshua were commanded to put off their shoes when they approached to God and were to stand upon holy ground we are hereby taught saith Ambrose Ep. 16. to shake off the dust and scoure off the soyle that our soules and lives gathered by fleshly occasions and worldly courses ere wee come to tread the Courts of Gods house There was a Laver of brasse Exod. 30.18 19. for Aaron and his sonnes to wash in before they offered any thing at the Altar to shew what we should doe being made the Lords Preists to this David alluded Psal 26.6 I will wash mine hands in innocency O Lord and compasse thine Altar And this ought we to doe that our prayers may be heard and be acceptable that our hearing and receiving of the Sacraments may be fruitfull unto us else Psal 66.18 If I regard wickednesse in mine heart the Lord will not heare me and we being corrupt this must needs be hurtfull unto us unlesse we
to God if they were preserved and if God would returne in mercy to the City that they might in safety follow their callings againe for I cannot thinke but that most men specially when God came any thing nigh them were affected and touched for the present which usually brings forth such thoughts and such motions If any were not I think their case is marvellous fearefull to be in the fire and no relenting Then you that did remember your vowes and see where is the performance of them it may be sought for but not early seene or seen in a very few And what is to be expected but these curses and more heavy than we have had If your children or servants all the time you are correcting of them and holding the rod over them promise to learne their books better and doe their worke more diligently whereupon you spare them if they after deale deceitfully with you will not your displeasure be doubled and your anger be increased and you thinke lawfully too thinke Gods waies are more equall and just If thou wouldest avoid this then doe as David said and did Psal 66.13 14. I will goe into thine house with burnt offerings and I will pay my vowes which my lips have promised and my mouth hath spoken in my affliction If a man vow when he is in custody or restraint that when he getteth liberty he will goe and dwell in a place where the Word is if the Word goe from thence he is not bound Ruth 1.16 17. Againe in cases of necessity as a man bound to abstaine from Wine yet if Physitians counsell it for his health he may use it as Jer. 35.11 yet so as hee have a speciall eye to the maine end for which his vow was made as suppose Timothy 1 Tim. 5.23 to abstaine yet for his often infirmities he may drinke For I am a great King saith the Lord of Hostes There is Gods first reason why they ought not to corrupt his worship and deale thus deceitfully with him his greatnesse and power who is able to punish them for evill doing Men ought to obey God Doctr. and to avoid evill and corruption as generally and in all things so in his worship for feare of his power and justice Vide vers 6. where is my feare And a great King It is the Kingdome of power not grace he by his power is absolute King great and the greatest The Lord he is the absolute King of all men and Angells Doctr. and all creatures in the world they are all his subjects so is he here called a King and that 2 Chron. 20.6 Dan. 2.21 This his commanding of all creatures sheweth and their obeying Psal 104.4 Isaiah 37. Joshua 10.12 13. Exod. 14.21 Matth. 8.26 Dan. 3.6 Because he hath created and doth sustaine all Reas 1 it is reason he should be their King and they his subjects Because else there would be no order Reas 2 but all confusion Lactantius de falsa religione lib. 1. cap. 3. hee gives this as a reason for the order of things because there is but one God that governes all For as in an Army if there were as many Generalls as there are Bands Companies and Wings of the Battell it could neither be instructed nor governed because every one would stand upon his owne wisedome and counsell and such dissention would rather hurt than profit So in this world if there were multitudes of Governours if God were not the sole King and Governour there would be nothing but confusion and disorder Uses of this we have before Vse vers 4. The Lord of Hosts FINIS THE SECOND CHAPTER OF THE PROPHET MALACHY AND now Oye Priests this commandement is for you 2 If ye will not he are it nor consider it in your heart to give glory unto my Name sayth the Lord of hostes I will even send a curse upon you and will curse your blessings yea I have cursed them already because ye doe not consider it in your heart 3 Behold I will corrupt your seede and cast dung upon your faces even the dung of your solemne feasts and you shall be like unto it 4 And ye shall know that I have sent this commandement unto you that my covenant which I made with Ley● might stand saith the Lord of hostes 5 My covenant was with him of life and peace and I gave him feare and he feared me and was afrayde before my Name 6 The law of truth was in his mouth and there was no iniquity found in his lippes he walked with me in peace and equity and did turne many away from iniquity 7 For the Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts 8 But ye are gone out of the way ye have caused many to fall by the Law ye have broken the covenant of Levi sayth the Lord of hosts 9 Therefore have I also made you to be despised and vile before all the people because ye kept not my wayes but have beene partiall in the Law 10 Have we not all one father hath not one God made us why do 〈◊〉 transgresse every one against his brother and breake the covenant of our fathers 11 Judah hath transgressed and an abomination is commited in Israel and in Jerusalem for Judah hath defiled the holinesse of the Lord which he loved and hath married the daughter of a strange god 12 The Lord will cut off the man that doth 〈◊〉 both the master and the servant out of the Tabernacle of Jaacob and him that offere● 〈◊〉 o●●ering unto the Lord of hostes 13 And this have ye done againe and covered the altar of the Lord with teares with weeping and with mourning because the offering is no more regarded neither received acceptably at your hands 14 Yet yee 〈◊〉 Wherein Because the Lord hath beene witnesse betweene thee and the wife of thy 〈◊〉 against whom 〈◊〉 hast transgressed yet she is thy companion and the wi●● of thy covenant 15 And did not 〈◊〉 take one yet had he abundance of spirit and wherefore one because he sought a godly seede therefore keep your selves in your spirit and let none trespasse against the wife of his youth 16 If thou hatest her put her away sayth the Lord God of Israel yet he covereth the injury under his garment sayth the Lord of hosts therefore keep your selves in your spirit and transgresse not 17 Ye have wearied the Lord with your words yet ye say wherein have we wearied him When ye say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in them Or where is the God of judgement VERS I. And now O yee Priests this commandment is for you THE parts of this Chapter are Curses and Judgements threatned against 1. the Priests 2. the People In the first verse is noted the preface to the Priests He applieth his doctrine to the Priests It is the dutie of the
give them honour and favour and riches and abundance though they never keepe condition with him Fools and blinde who know they cannot live except they eate not reap except they sow not recover health except they use physicke and the means appointed And yet thinke without performing the grand meanes and condition with God they shall have what he hath promised and so happily they may But as Israel had a King in Gods wrath and quails in his displeasure And as the Physitian gives his patient liberty to eate what he list when he is out of all hope and despaires of ever recovering him Many a man perswades himselfe that God will save him though he never was able to performe the condition of the Law neither ever endeavoured to performe the condition of the Gospell Truly this is not to beleeve but deceive himselfe with an opinion of faith he neither having the knowledge of the promises the ground of it nor workes the answerable fruits of it And so hath but a vaine foolish and dead faith But he shall know his folly when God shall manifest unto him that he is not bound to perform promise because he never kept condition To teach every man that hath any desire that God should performe covenant with him Vse 3 to endeavour to performe conditions with God * Cum dominus promittis ne dubites sed illa fac per quae tales attrahere poteris promissiones Chry. hom 25 ad popul Anti. He must first Week to know what they are God requires of him and then do them for without that he cannot do And his searching for knowledge must not onely be for the generall but for the particulars of his place what command is sent to him and then faithfully do it that Gods covenant may stand We must repent beleeve and obey the Gospell and Commandments of God For it is godlinesse that hath the promises and shall have the performance Let such a one remember 1 Tim. 4.8 and Prov. 21.21 Yea he may assure himselfe that if he apply himself to that which God requireth of him and he hath covenanted for he shall be sure to finde him that hath been a willing promiser a most faithfull performer For parum erat promissio etiam scripto se teneri voluit Aug. in Psal 119. And so no good thing that he hath promised shall faile but shall all be made good Joshua 22.15 My covenant with Levi. Here is the honour and dignity he had bestowed upon them having made a speciall agreement and covenant with them The Lord hath specially honoured his messengers and servants the Priests in the old Doctrine and the Ministers in the new Testament for he hath not onely made the generall covenant with them I will be their God they my people but hath made a particular and speciall agreement and covenant with them So here and Numb 8.13.14 Thou shalt set the Levites before Aaron and before his sons and offer them as a shake offering to the Lord. Thus thou shalt separate the Levites from among the children of Israel and the Levites shall be mine 1 Sam. 2.28 And I chose him out of all the tribes of Israel to be my Priest to offer upon mine Altar and to burn Incense and to weare an Ephod before me and I gave unto the house of thy father all the offerings made by fire of the children of Israel Joh. 15.15 2 Cor. 3.6 Because they are of his privy counsell and know his secret Reason 1 Amos 3.7 Surely the Lord God will doe nothing but he revealeth his secrets unto his servants the Prophets Privy counsellours are specially honoured and have a particular covenant made with them Because they are his messengers his embassadours Reason 2 2 Cor. 5.20 they are specially honoured and new sworne a new covenant No reason why the great and rich men of the world should contemne the ministry for their children as too base a thing Vse 1 and not fit for their sonnes when as God hath thus honoured it and taken them so neere unto himselfe In respect of which Amos who was beleeved to be the brother of Azariah the King of Judah thought it no base thing his sonne shoule be a Prophet neither Christ himselfe to be a preacher This may be a caveat for men to take heede how they abuse or injure the ministers who are so neere unto him Vse 2 and whom he hath thus honoured certainly they ought to honour him though it goe against the haire and stomacke with them as with Haman because he would have them honoured but if not but they abuse and disgrace them and use them as the Ammonites did Davids servants Let them take heede they stinke not in his nostrils for if Princes be tender hearted and stone affected with the injuries of their common subjects and will revenge them what will they doe for their counsellours their embassadours And yet meane men will now abuse them in words and contemne as farre as they can for the law of man if they sing not placentia if they teach crosse to their humours but their portion is with the Lord and so is theirs who so abuse them And one day they shall both know whether is better to reprove and lift up his voyce and spare not or to spare and reforme nothing It may comfort the minister against contempt when he is faithfull Vse 3 yet to be still so and bold remembring his honour God hath given him which is better then all the honour man can affoord And though men may thinke their faithfulnesse may hinder them from honour as Balaak said to Balaam Numb 24.11 Therefore now flee unto thy place I thought surely to promote thee to honour but loe the Lord hath kept thee back from honour yet it is not so for that is the true honour which God gives and will give and no man can take and they ought as it is 2 Cor. 3.12 seeing they have such hope to use boldnesse of speech This may teach what manner of men Ministers ought to be Vse 4 how sanctified of what puritie and integritie seeing God hath taken them to be so neer unto himselfe therefore ought they to be carefull that offer them to God and they that receive them when they offer and when they receive not for favour or money or kindred or any such thing A man will be marvellous carefull whom he commendeth but for a common servant to a mean man his friend more to a Prince most to be so nigh to him If the Steward of a house be permitted and trusted to admit such as are fit how carefull will he be If the President of a Princes Councell to take in such as are able men how vigilant and inquisitive will he be that they be such as be competent for the place So should it be in this the like care should be had and wo unto him that hath not And men that are in the place ought to looke marvellous
God by which they may see what he hath done that he regardeth or to see the time to come that he will doe it but onely looking to the present view are thus deceiued and erre To teach us when we heare many men wrangling and jangling against the providence oif God Vse 1 and denying his administration and governement of things here below even from this that those who walke uprightly are under the winde and they who contemne God despise or at least neglect his worship live in Atheisme or irreligion and prophanesse yet they flourish and have all things in abundance as heart could desire for if he did how would he not remedy this and rectifie this confusion Such quarrelling as this is but the old sophystry of Satan and the old corruption of man which hath beene a thousand times confuted in every age and place since it was first invented which might have stopped the mouth of all iniquity in this case were not Satan wonderfull malicious and the nature of man marveylous weake not able to looke to things past or forsee things to come To teach us to take heed oif any such corruption as this is Vse 2 to deny or question about the providence of God when we looke abroad and consider things and finde things thus disposed of which seemes so contrary to the course of the world and to stay us we must consider two things The first is that howsoever other arguments and reasons of Gods divine providence and mercy towards all and particular men is to be seene and is manifest of all both in their lives past and present in all places yet are not the examples of his judgement alwaies to be seene but to be expected in their due time such as are reserved for time to come so that though a man may judge by the time past and present and finde nothing nor to part of mans life without apparent proofes of the power wisedome and mercy of God because he still makes his sun to shine and his raine to fall on good and bad yet that part of providence which is in judgements is to be expected in a fit time but it is the future and time to come And that he will manifest unto every one that he certainely doth governe This advice is given Psa 37.1.2.9.10.35.36 And that Job 27. from 7. to 14. and vers 30. Therefore must we with David goe into Gods Sanctuary and consider not the beginnings nor the present state but the ends of these men which will manifestly prove his providence Gods dealing with them and his owne like to Princes with their Hawke and Partridge oir their states being like the Partridge and the other as the Hawke The second is the time present that this divers dealing of God with them argues his providence because it is the way to salvation for the one and to destruction for the other As it argues the skill of the Physitian and his wisedome having to deale with two patients one desperately sicke and he cares not for his health the other so sick as he may be recovered he useth divers dyets and manner of usage So God deales with his THE THIRD CHAPTER OF THE PROPHET MALACHY BEhold I will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom ye seek shall speedily come to his Temple even the messenger of the Covenant whom ye desire behold he shall come saith the Lord of hosts 2 But who may abide the day of his comming and who shall endure when he appeareth for he is like purging fire and like fullers sope 3 And he shall sit down to trie and fine the silver he shall even fine the sons of Levi and purifie them as gold and silver that they may bring offerings unto the Lord in-righteousnes 4 Then shall the offerings of Juda and Jerusalem be acceptable unto the Lord as in old time and in the yeers afore 5 And I will come neer to you to judgement and I will be a swift witnesse against the soothsayers and against the adulterers and against false swearers and against those that wrongfully keep backe the hirelings wages and vex the widow and the fatherlesse and oppresse the stranger and feare not me saith the Lord of hosts 6 For I am the Lord I change not and ye sons of Jaacob are not confirmed 7 From the daies of your fathers yee are gone away from mine ordinances and have not kept them returne unto me and I will returne unto you saith the Lord of hosts but ye said wherein shall we returne 8 Will a man spoyle his gods yet have ye spoyled me but ye say Wherein have we spoyled thee In tithes and offerings 9 Ye are cursed with a curse for ye have spoyled me even this whole nation 10 Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse that there may be meat in mine house and proove me now herewith saith the Lord of hosts if I will not open the windows of heaven unto you and powre you out a blessing without measure 11 And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes and he shall not destroy the fruit of your ground neither shall your vine be barten in the field saith the Lord of hosts 12 And all nations shall call you blessed for ye shall be a pleasant land saith the Lord of hosts 13 Your words have been stout against me saith the Lord yet ye say What have we spoken against thee 14 Ye have said It is in vaine to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his commandement and that we walked humbly before the Lord of hosts 15 Therefore we count the proud blessed even they that worke wickednesse are set up and they that tempt God yea they are delivered 16 Then spake they that seared the Lord every one to his neighbour and the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his Name 17 And they shall be to me saith the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall do this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him 18 Then shall you returne and discerne between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not VERSE I. Behold J will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom ye seek shall speedily come to his Temple even the messenger of the Covenant whom ye desire behold he shall come saith the Lord of hosts IN this Chapter are two things laid down one an answer to the blasphemies reproved vers 17. of the former which is contained in the 6. first verses The other an expostulation or contestation with them of their prophanesse obstinacy and other impiety ad finem For the first The sum of it is thus Hitherto hath God so shewed himselfe a most equall and upright Judge that yet before
either perfectly which is either in this life by imputation of his holinesse putting on his garments upon them as Ionathan did to David after their league or else in the life to come by full perfection inherent when they shall be like him in holinesse and glory Or it is partially and begunne in this life whereas they are inlightned as the Moone by the Sunne yet have their spots their errors so are they sanctified and put in a new hew as the fuller doth a cloth or garment yet the old threeds appeare in them Of this is it here spoken and for this is he thus called and to this tends that 1 Corinthians 1.30 But ye are of him in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption And Cap. 6.11 and such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God Heb. 2.11 Ephes 5.26 VERS III. And he shall sit downe to try and fine the silver he shall even fine the sonnes of Levi and purifie them as gold and silver that they may bring offerings unto the Lord in righteousnesse AND he shall sit downe to try He shall sit downe to try and fine the silver The third similitude by which Christ is described is from the Goldsmith The summe is that as he sitting in his shoppe by his fornace doth purge the drosse and corruption from the silver so will Christ purge corruption from those which are his He shall sit Noting the dilligence and constancy and care of Christ in this worke i. He shall not doe it lightly or cursorily but seriously and dilligently being marveylous attentive upon the worke for then we sit when we would doe any thing seriously and with all care and endeavour So Psal 1.1 and 50.20 And fine the silver Septuag and fining as silver or as a man that fineth silver for the Hebrewes often omit the note of similitude and the people some thinke is compared to silver because they are so excellent in respect of others which are but iron to them Some because silver hath this of it nature that it is most mixed with other mettalls and mineralls and by the fire is made most pure so they by the vertue of Christs death And he shall purge the sonnes of Levi. The parties whom he should purge understanding not those who were such by nature but such as were spirituall Priests such as were true and lawfull Priests dedicated to the perpetuall and holy service of God And purifie them as gold and silver Hee expresseth the same thing againe and againe that it might be more certaine and firme and to shew that their purity should be very great for these mettals are of all others most accurately purged with the fire lest any rust or drosse should remaine with them That they may bring offerings Here is an effect of Christ purging of them that their sacrifices being polluted and corrupt before should now be pure and holy and be made acceptable to the Lord. In these words are noted the purity of them in the next the acceptablenesse of them Christ is to his as a Goldsmith Doctrine or Goldfiner he that purgeth and purifieth them from their drosse of sinne and corruption which is as the former perfectly in the life to come when as all blots and every spot shall be removed Ephes 5.27 or partially in this life where as all is pardoned so purged but not whole sinne neither if it were can he be perfectly free because living in an infected ayre they cannot but draw in some corruption which though it prevaile not to death yet it will corrupt them still and infect them But Christ he purgeth them and hence is washing of us given unto him Revel 1.5 and cleansing 1 John 1.7 And the baptisme of spirit and fire Matth. 3.11 that as fire he takes away drosse and rust Hence he is said to be Iesus Matth. 1.21 because he saves his people from their sinnes not à culpa onely and à poena but à contagione Hence that Rom. 6.3 we are partakers of his death to make us to dye to sinne and sinne to dye in us Galat 6.14 Because he might make way for holinesse and purity Reason 1 for else the new man cannot be put on unlesse the old man be destroyed men cannot be renued in the spirit of their mindes unlesse they cast off the old man and he be taken from them As the Serpent cannot receive new strength unlesse she first put off her old skin or coate passing and pressed by the straitnesse of her denne or hole So cannot we put on the new unlesse we put off the old August de doct Christi lib. 2. cap. 16. Therefore to make way for that Christ first must purge us from sinne Because he might make us like him Reason 2 he was made like us in all things save in sinne this makes us unlike this then will he take and purge from us that we might be as he without sinne Because we might serve him Reason 3 he desires to have service from us which cannot be unlesse he purge away sinne and destroy it in us for else we shall serve it and we cannot serve two masters Therefore hee destroyes this that wee might not serve it Rom. 6.6 And so might be free to serve him Luke 1.74 To try and fine the silver Drosse is not easily separated from mettall and silver but with the violence and heat of the fire is it tryed and fined insinuating unto us by this how hardly and with what force sin is separated from us how close it sticks by us and with what a doe it is separated The sinnes and corruptions of Gods children sit close to them Doctrine and cleave fast are not to be separated but with much force and violence As drosse to silver Heb. 12.1 To shew this belong those speeches of sacrificing Galat. 5.24 Of mortifying Collo 3.5 of cutting off and pulling out the right hand and right eies Mat. 5.29 30. proved also by that Jer. 13.23 Can the blacke Moore change his skin Or the Leopard his spots Then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evill And Mich 6.7 Men wil give any thing rather then part with sin Because it is naturall unto them as to others Reason 1 brought into the world with them Now as the proverbe That which is bred in the bone will hardly out of the flesh And as naturall and hereditarie diseases stricke the fastest and most heard to be cured so it is of sinne Because besides nature Reason 2 custome and continuance in them is adjoyned now custome is another nature and things bound with such a twofold cord both so strong will hardly be separated Custom oftentimes prevailes much and jura didicit immitare naturae Saint Chrysost But when custome and nature are joyned together who or what shall alter them No
appeares by the next member The Priests duty is to be both furnished and to bring out of his treasure things new and old To be much in preaching to the people Accordingly 'tis thought that some of the Christian Fathers preached every day However it was provided for by Canons that they should preach frequently Such a Canon wee have in the Excerptions of Egbert Archbishop of Yorke Anne 750. Vt emnibus festis et diebus Dominicis Vnusquisque Sacerdos Evangelium Christi praedicet populo That every Priest preach the Gospell of Christ unto the people upon all holy dayes and the Lords dayes And especially for the Lords day in the Canons under King Edgar Anno. 967. Docemus etiam ut Sacerdotes in qualibet die solis populo praedicent Wee require also that the Priests preach unto the people every sunday Since the reformation men have beene frequent in this duty many Bishops being also exemplary to their Clergy The publishers of the lives of D. Iewell sometimes Lord Bishop of Sarum and of the late reverend and godly Bishop of Bath and Wells have made it one of the heades of their Commendation their assiduity in preaching But especially the care of the ancients was much for Catechizing Of Saint Markes Catechizing at Alexandria and then Clements and after him Origens the histories are knowne We have Cyrill of Hierusalem's Catechisms and the Catecheses Mystagogicae which are printed with them which if they were not his are yet of some ancient author We have a Tract of Saint Augustin's de Catechizandis rudibus and another De Symbolo ad Catechumenos And beside the practise of the fathers many Councells ordaining it But the care of no Church hath beene greater then that of ours even in ancient times In a councell held at Clyffe Anno. 747. It was provided that every Priest should instruct his people in the Lords Prayer the Creed and the Sacraments in the English tongue Can. 10. see S. H. Spelmans margin ad locum this Canon is inserted afterward by Egbert into his Excerp 6. See also the Ecclesiasticall lawes of Canutus cap. 22. apud Spelman page 549. an excellent and serious exhortation to this purpose but too long here to transcribe And the Canon 23. of AElfric pag. 578. Yea it seemes by the Capitula incertae editionis which by Sr. H. Spelmans placeing of them should bee about Anno. 1050 cap. 28. to have beene the custome of our Bishops here when they met in their Synods with their Clergy to examine them in the manner of their teaching and how they profited their people After these times Catechising was not much heard of till after Luthers preaching when perceiving that the Protestant Churches wanne much ground by this kinde of diligence the practise was renued by a decree of the Councell of Trent in the Romish Church For our part what ground we got by Catechising wee are most likely to keepe and hold it by the same course and to lose it all againe by the neglect which was the observation of our judicious King Iames That the cause why so many fell to popery and other errors was their ungroundednesse in points of Catechisme Upon such a reason as this it was that an elder Article of a former Synod was renewed in the Synod at Dort That all pastors should Catechise in the afternoone on the Lords day Act a Synodi sess 14 15. The very same with his Majesties Injunctions to the Clergy of England and which is provided for by Canon and enquired into by the Articles of Visitations but on all hands too too much neglected which hath given mee occasion to transgresse my purpose in these shorter notes and to enlarge this discourse which yet I cannot leave till I have noted that observeable passage of the present Reverend Bishop of Exeter in his Preface to his Old Religion That there is nothing whereof hee repents so much as that hee had not bestowed more houres in publique Catechising And That in regard hereof hee could quarrell his very sermons And his sermons are excellent ones as all know that know them to two of them namely his Columba Noae preached to the English Clergy in their Convocation here in England and to another upon Eccles 7.16 preached to the Divines at Dort at their 16th Session I refer the Reader where hee shall finde an eloquent and zealous exhortation in this matter But of this point enough I returne to the Text. And they should seeke the law at his mouth Here the Vulg. reades as before as if it were a promise or their infallibility But it is onely an intimation of the peoples duty and the reason followes For hee is the messenger of the Lord of hosts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lxx and the Vulg. reade The Angell The Priest is called so 1. Because hee ministers to God as the Angels doe before him who stand before him and prayse him but 2. specially and here because hee is Gods messenger to men from God and from men to God Accordingly the Tigurine here Hee is Gods Legat or Embassadour And that learned Knight in his Glossary or Archaeolog hath observed to us out of Ekkehard that the name hath been given even to the Embassrdors of Kings Cedamus Angelo Imper i. We have seen how the former Priests caried themselves The next is III. The degenerating of these Priests from the practise of their fathers in regard of their covenant verse 8. Vers 8 In three particulars First that they were gone from their piety But yee are departed out of the way or out of that way as the Article is in the Hebr. that is either out of my way or out of that way in which your fathers walked You have diverted or turned out or as the Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Declined Your course is opposite to that of your fathers They caused many to returne to me you are returned and gon from me But this opposition is more direct in the next member Secondly that they caused many to fall by their example partly and partly by their corrupt glosses Yee have caused many to stumble at the law Or To fall in the law The Geneva reades it By the law The Vulg. Yee have scandalized many Montanus Yee were a stumbling block or an offence Others yee have caused that men should stumble at the law or goe against the law and so fall into sinne and consequently into calamities So Piscator Lxx. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have weakned many in the law yee have offended snared caused to strike or dash or stumble for all these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will beare Thirdly that they had in summe broken the covenant Yee have corrupted the covenant of Levi saith the Lord of hosts Geneva yee have broken Vulg. yee have made void The Lxx reade as we doe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 corrupted The covenant of Levi that is the covenant made with Levi. A metonymy of the efficient Thus we have seene the
To convince of sinne all such Vse as though they heare yet seeke not nor desire it have no fervent affection to it The Law That is the simple and plaine words of God not trifles and fables and other vanities of wit but the whole Law whatsoever he is bound to deliver The people ought to heare and receive Doctrine to seeke and desire the Law the pure Law and the whole Law from the Ministers As before the Minister ought to deliver all so here they must affect and receive all So is it here and to the same purpose is that Isai 1.3 For the whole Law is his way This is proved Deut. 5.27 Matth. 28.20 1 Thess 5.20.21 Heb. 6.1.2 This by the contrary Matth. 2.11.2 Tim. 3.4 Because they are his people Reason 1 servants children spouse all which requires they should heare and affect his words his lawes his will and his precepts and them all Because the whole is either concerning God or themselves Reason 2 God as it setteth forth his wisedome power justice mercie and so forth Themselves as it offers mercy or threatneth judgement as it reproveth evill or promiseth good This will serve to reprove many Vse 1 and to convince severall men of severall corruptions some in one sinne and some in another who will heare and seeme to desire the Law out of the Ministers mouth but not the whole There are some who think many things needlesse to be knowne and heard many things not fit to be taught as before v. 6. Besides that was then sayd I say let them see if this be not to check the wisedome of God who hath written both and preserved the whole to the Church and if pride did not transport them beyond themselves it could not be they should be so affected As wisedome would teach them that many things are necessary though not the present profit of them appeare For as in instruments onely the strings sound yet are there other things in the whole body as that whereunto they are tied the bridge the pinnes which help the musicke so in the Prophets though all be not prophesies yet they are things to which these are tied and illustrated Aug de Civ D. lib. 16.2 And sometimes for those things which signifie something are those things which signifie nothing added As the ground is onely plowed and rent up by the plow share yet that this may be other parts of the plow are necessary And humility if they had any would teach to suspect their owne wisedome in not seeing the use and end the profit and fitnesse of things rather then questioning and reasoning against God Others can be content to heare all pleasant things as the promises and mercies of God but judgements and reprooses threats and checks that they cannot brooke like unto those who in medicines affect onely the smell or trimnesse or gaynesse of them as pills rouled in gold but cannot away with the force of purging and preserving And see not that a great company more go to hell by presuming in their lives then by despairing at their deaths Some can willingly heare that which concernes other men and their sinnes their lives and manners but nothing touching themselves at all and their owne sinnes As men can willingly abide to heare of other mens deaths but cannot abide to heare of their owne Oftentimes they will make the Minister to beleeve as they did Jerem. 42.5.6.7 Then they said to Ieremiah The Lord be a witnesse of truth and faith between us if we do not even according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee to us whether it be good or evill we will obey the voyce of the Lord God to whom we send thee that it may be well with us when we obey the voyce of the Lord our God But when he shall declare unto them the will of God that crosseth their affections they will entertaine him and answer as Chap. 43.2 Thou speakest falsly the Lord hath not sent thee to say thus These and such like are here reproved and convinced of the breach of this duty that they receive not nor desire the Law of God To admonish every one to labour for hearts willing and desirous to receive the whole law and word of God Vse 2 as he shall put it into the mouthes of the Ministers to dispose it unto them whatsoever it may be whether it be pleasant or crossing For if men deale so with their Physitians submit themselves to their prescripts though often they be unpleasant because they are perswaded of their wisedome and that they worke all by Art and yet may they sometimes erre how much more unto all that which God hath spoken and prescribed when they may well know they cannot erre judging of such thoughts as esteemeth any thing superflous or unfit any thing difficult or too deep for them to looke into as suggestions of Satan and their owne corruption and not rising from Gods Spirit condemning in themselves all such thoughts as gain-say the Word and any part of it delivered unto them as unloyall to their Prince and Master Father and Husband yea censuring all such affections as gain-say and repine at the Word which toucheth them to the quicke and their particular sinnes and corruptions as fearfull fore-runners of some dangerous fall and back-sliding specially when in former times they could endure as much as that and happily more to be spoken unto them or were such as condemned other men for spurning when they were touched And indeed it is fearfull for it argues he was either an hypocrite before or else by reason of some security and carelesnesse over his own spirituall estate he is fallen into a spirituall disease and some sins he had not before and refusing the remedies or the bitter potion which should recover him he must needs putrifie more The body that is sicke and the part that is wounded if either the remedy be rejected or the salve be pulled off when it is applied will doubtlesse grow worse As he that is sore sicke and grievously wounded gives hope of his recovery while he will submit himselfe to his Physitian and take whatsoever he prescribes him but he that is but a little ill and refuseth to hearken or receive any thing gives no hope at all though his hurt be the lesse So in this Therefore men who would save themselves must receive the whole They who will shew themselves dutifull and loyall either his spouse or children must be content to be reproved and chid when they have given cause and never love the lesse as well as cherished And it is a good signe of a good heart that likes his Ministery best which will reprove and chide him and not his that will sooth and flatter him For he is the Messenger of the Lord. The reason of the former The Priest is Gods Messenger therefore must he be such and such The Lord he useth the ministery of man in revealing his will to
his people Rev. 3.14 Doctrine VERS VIII But yee are gone out of the way yee have caused many to fall by the Law yee have broken the covenant of Levi saith the Lord of hosts BVt yee are gone out of the way Or Yee have departed from that way The second part of this dissimilitude followes now in this and the next verse which containes their degenerating and so their corruption vers 8. and the iteration of the judgement vers 9. And in the 8. verse there are three corruptions these Priests be chalenged withall wherein they are most unlike to the former Priests You are gone out of that way that is from the piety and faithfulnesse of those Priests who lived in the first age and with whom I made the covenant at first They neither swarved from that rule but you have forsaken and contemned my law and followed your owne devices and sought your selves and the establishing of your dignity more then my glory and have sought how to make a gaine to your selves of my worship You have done this who have the same place enjoy the same priviledges have the same portion of tythes and offerings they had Yee have caused many to fall by the Law The second difference and diffimilitude That whereas the former Priests by their care and diligence in their places recovered and caused many to returne from their sinnes and the breaches of the Law and to walk uprightly by it They on the contrary by their defect and want in teaching and their passing over their sinnes as if they saw them not that they might purchase grace and procure commoditie to themselves As also by their wicked example they were the cause of the fall of many that is that many have sinned and were not punished as the word sometime signifies By the Law is not meant as if they did so teach and temper the Law as sometime the Priests did in giving liberty by it to sinne as to hate their enemies to lust and covet so nothing were outwardly acted but that they caused many to stumble and go contrary to the Law Yee have broken the covenant of Levi. The third difference They kept my covenant and were faithfull and I performed whatsoever I promised to them but you have broken covenant gone cleane contrary to the agreement which passed betwixt me and your predecessours in whose loynes you were and who made the covenant for you and so by your iniquities have caused me not to performe to you peace plenty and prosperity with length of dayes From the generall I observe this Men Doctrine of what sort and condition soever they be ought to imitate and follow the vertue pietie and faith of their predecessours whether they were in place nature or age And on the contrary it is a great wickednesse and shame to degenerate from their pietie and vertue to be unlike unto them Therefore reproves our Prophet these Priests To this purpose is that Heb. 6.12 and 13.7 and 12.1 inferred upon the 11. and Jam. 5.11 Hence was the commendations of Iehosaphat 1 King 22.43 and of Iosiah 2 King 22.2 On the contrary it was reproved in Iehoram 2 Chron. 21.12 and in the Jewes Joh. 8.39 Because God hath therefore written these Reason 1 he hath written not that they should be knowne as matter of story to be made for delight or speech onely but for matter of life and conversation thereby teaching us what to do in others whose memory is new and fresh that God may have his end Because it will not profit them to have descended from Reason 2 or succeeded such for as he said of Nobility what profiteth it a channell or river flowing from a pure and wholesome spring if it be corrupt and defiled Nay it will the more condemne them as we may well gather from that Matth. 12.41.42 Then are they justly reproved Vse 1 who talk of doing as their forefathers have done being neither willing nor able to examine what they did good or evill but is all one to them so they did it before them Such as our ignorant Papists be who imitate not the faith but the infidelity and errours of their fathers not their vertues and pietie but their vices and prophanenesse their liberty and licenciousnesse No man will condemne their following of that is good in them or rather that which had but the shew of goodnesse in them as their workes which were good for the outward act though not otherwise their workes of mercie and liberality their zeale fervencie and diligence in prayer though their prayers not to be imitated as a man may imitate the diligence and watchfulnesse of a thiefe but not his theft the providence of a bad Steward but not his corruption But to imitate any thing they have done without choyce of their good is that which is justly condemned For if the Apostle must not nor will not be otherwise followed then 1 Corinth 11.1 as he followes Christ If the Prophet forbid us to follow our fathers if they are condemned for following their fore-fathers as did all the Kings of Israel If that be the commendations of Iehosaphat 2 Chro. 17.3 that he walked in the first way of his father David and not that he imitated him in all things Is it approveable to follow those who are farre inferiour to him in all things Nay it is that which shall improve their sin and inhance their punishment as Isai 14.21 with 65.7 To provoke us to read the Scriptures Vse 2 where we may see the truth and patience and piety of our most holy predecessors and when wee see them to provoke our selves to imitate them and to uphold our selves in right paths by them Heb. 12.1 But yee are gone out of the way They had erred from the truth and good wayes of their predecessors The Rulers Governours Doctrine and Ministers of the Church may erre both in matter of doctrine and of Gods worship Let us look into the booke of God and we shall finde this true not in some one or two but in the greatest part of them yea all for ought we know First these things were fore-told for though the people bragged Jer. 18.18 The Law should not perish from the Priest nor counsell from the wise God threatned the farre contrary Ezek. 7.26 and Micha 3.6 That the Sunne should go downe over the Priest And see the event of this Isa 56.10 Zephan 3.4 Jerem. 6.13 and 23.13 But this was in Israel onely yea see it in Judah Jerem 23.14.16 and not in Prophets onely but Priests 2 Chron. 36.14 Because their knowledge be it never so great is but in part Reason 1 Vulgare illud maxima pars eorum quae scimus minima pars eorum quae ignoramus and imperfect 1 Cor. 13.9 Now they who are ignorant in part may erre in some things Ignorantia erroris mater Bernard ad ●●●t nisi ignorando errare non potest August En●hirid Seeing a●●●en are in part ignorant then