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A62101 A militarie sermon wherein by the vvord of God, the nature and disposition of a rebell is discovered, and the Kings true souldier described and characterized : preached at Shrewsbury, May 19. 1644, to His Majesties army there under the command of the high and most illustrious Prince Rvpert / by Edw. Symmons ... Symmons, Edward. 1644 (1644) Wing S6347; ESTC R13172 32,560 38

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the most reformed Church in the woorld by their prophanenesse and Atheisme and the most flourishing Common-wealth in Christendome by their cruelties and combustions They have digged and searched into all the practices of Hell and Rome for policies into the conspiracies and conditions of Catiline Sylla and Sejanus they have looked into all the actions of Nero and Herod into the Schooles of Machiavel and the Jesuites for tricks and devises to further their designes I durst undertake to evidence somewhat of all these in their doings Yea so diligent and industrious have they been that they have acted Satans part in rebelling themselves and seducing others Cains part in slaying and murdering their brethren Chams part in mocking their Father their common Father they have acted Achitophels part in devising destruction unto their Soveraigne Absolom and Sheba's part in lifting up the hand against him Doegs part in slandering and murdering the Priests of God they have acted Ieroboams part in their endeavours to rent the Kingdome from the house of David in their defiling the worship and service of God and in their setting up to be Priests the lowest and basest of the people they have acted Rabshakehs part in railing against the Lords Annointed in the hearing of his Subjects even on purpose to stirre them up to rebell against him and Iudas his part in betraying their Master at least in betraying that trust which he reposed in them Well friends I say but this doe you consider seriously of these things and then judge in your secret thoughts whether the Kings enemies those men of Westminster be not exceeding diligent and industrious Rebels And so I come to the third thing in their discription Their ungodly work Rebellion An evill man seeketh Rebellion for Rebellion some read jurgia quarrels some read contradictiones or contentiones indeed all these tend unto rebellion some read mischiefe or evill for evils and mischiefs only are proper to procreate and uphold rebellion and therefore you may observe in story that rebellious men have alwayes heretofore as well as now allowed of all evills Sects and heresies have pulled up the pales of all Lawes have cried up Liberty and permitted all kind of vill●ny and wickednesse as meanes most sutable to further rebellion the lesson shall be this Rebellion is a worke of mischief●e Nay 't is mischiefe it self wickednesse in the abstract the highest wickednesse I have call●d it * elsewhere and not untruly the sinke of all villany and the puddle of all sinne 't is the breach of all Lawes and relations both towards God and man pride prophanenesse perjury envy wrath malice theft murder cruelty rapine spoile oppression irreliligion and unnaturallnesse are all concentred in Rebellion yea all sins by all names that sins can be named and by all meanes that sins can bee committed do follow rebellion and are to be found among that disordered and disobedient sort of people I wish that experience did not teach that Rebellion were the ruine of Re●igion Church and Commonwealth of states families and men 't is contrary to God in every notion Hee is the God of grace peace and order but Rebellion is diametrically opposite to all these it resists grace it murders peace and destroies order I wish if it were Gods will there were need for me to prove all these unto you but alas alas your owne eyes and eares are my witnesses in this thing and shall serve for proofes of this Doctrine And it must of necessity be so that rebellion is a worke of mischief for 't is the work onely of mischievous and evill men yea of such as have climed up to the very top of wickednesse and saies our Saviour can a man expect grapes of thornes and siggs of thistles any thing but extreme evill from persons extremely wicked tantùm malus quaerit rebellionem onely such men are plotters of Rebellion saies the Text no good man will willingly have so much as a finger in it No you 'l say why we are told that all the good men be on their side whom you call the Rebells and the best Preachers whose Doctrines and lives have been most unblameable yea our selves know many honest and good men who are ingaged in that way and we are told also that none but Papists swearers drunkards and uncleane livers are on the Kings sid● and we see God helpe many of this sort with our owne eyes wherefore either those you account Rebells are not such or else your Doctrine is not true To this I Answer 1. Those I call Rebells are truly such for rebellion as was said before is a resisting the Authority and a violent opposing the will and person of the lawfull Governour and none can deny but these doe resist the Authority and violently oppose the will and person of the King which is the lawfull Governour therefore they are truly called and counted Rebells 2. I answer concerning those wicked on this side we will not deny but we have of them too many and as they are our shame I wish also they were more our sorrow the Lord give them all hearts and grace to amend their conditions that they may cease at length to discredit a religious King and a righteous Caus. 3. For those known good men who are ingaged on the Enemies side I Answer according to my former distinction facere malum is one thing and quaerere malum is another good men through deception may be assisters in but they are not the contrivers of this black Rebellion 4. For those eminent Preachers whose diligence in their callings and commendable lives have so bewitched people as to thinke well of this rebellious way for their sakes because they walke in it I answer I 'le not deny their good gifts but this I 'le say that gifts and grace doe not alway bed together Satan hath more abilities and gifts then any man Nor doe I deny their restraining graces but doe confesse that many of their lives like those of the Pharisees in the Gospell that loved the praise of men were outwardly very commendable before this Rebellion did begin But you must know that Satans tricke hath alwai●● been when he hath endeavoured or done most mischiefe to the Church of God to appeare in the shape of an Angell of light to worke by the persons of such well reputed men He that could make use of Peters tongue to tempt our Saviour when Christ bad that great Apostle get thee behind me Satan no doubt but he can and will and doth make use of the tongues and examples of these men to deceive the common people Samuel from the Lord saies that Rebellion is as the sinne of Witch-craft that is 't is exceeding apt to entice and bewitch people to it self by those specious and religious shewes which the fomenters of it shall make unto the World Or perhaps because people did too much adore the abilities of those men would heare the word onely for their
A Militarie SERMON WHEREIN By the VVord of God the nature and disposition of a Rebell is discovered and the Kings true Souldier described and characterized Preached at SHREWSBURY May 19. 1644. to His Majesties Army there under the Command of the High and most Illustrious Prince RVPERT By Edw. Symmons Chaplain to the Life-guard of the Prince of WALES PROV. 24. 19 20 21 22. Fret not thy selfe because of the evill man neither be thou envious at the wicked For there shall be no reward to the evill man the candle of the wicked shall be put out My sonne feare thou the Lord and the King and meddle not with them that are given to change For their calamity shall rise suddainly and who knoweth the ruine of them both OXFORD Printed by Henry Hall in the Yeere 1644. TO The Honourable Sir MICHAEL wood-VVOOD-HOUSE Governour of Ludlow and Colonell to the Life-guard of the Prince of WALES Noble Sir MY dependance on you and your respects to me did formerly move to some publike manifestation of my service to you and had not the Presse like the poole of Bethesda beene oppressed with multitudes the world ere now had taken notice of it but this following Sermon had the advantage to step in before that which had lyen there longer and this I dedicate to your Name as it was with attention and favour heard by many gallant Gentlemen and Souldiers so I hope by your selfe who are both it will be accepted as agreeable to godlinesse and entertained as a demonstration of the inward affection which is due from Your Servant E. S. To the Readers COurteous Readers in this following ●ermon you will meet sometime with this Title The men of Westminster I desire you would not conceive that thereby is intended the Parliament of England as some are pleased to call them but onely that powerfull Faction there abiding or thereunto relating which doth oppose the Lords Annointed subverting our Religion peace and Nation for if as themselves teach some may notwithstanding their Oath of Allegiance resist by force of armes the person of their Soveraigne Lord CHARLES as he is a man and yet honour him in the meane while as he is King I hope that I a Minister of God may more lawfully by Gods Word oppose the vices of such as they are men and yet reverence them if they be as in their own account Members of the honourable Houses nay I doe not speake against them as they are men but onely as they are transgressors from the holy and righteous wayes of God 't is their evills that I oppose not their persons I am onely grieved at the hardnesse and perversnesse of their spirits and I desire with Jeremy Chap. 9.1 that mine head were a fountaine of water and mine eyes springs that I might weepe day and night for the slaine of the daughter of my people occasioned by them And good Readers if you be true Christians and right borne Englishmen I beseech you let us all strive together with God by our teares for the softening of these mens hearts if it be possible Our Saviour wept for the sins and ensuing miseries of those that sought his ruine we have the lik● object at this time O let us discover in our selves the minde of Christ God expects it from all his Saints Farewell A Military SERMON PROV. 17.11 An evill man seeketh onely Rebellion therefore a cruell Messenger shall be sent against him THe maine scope as I apprehend of this Militarie Sermon is First to discover out of Gods Book the nature of Rebellion and rebellious men Secondly to encourage from the Lord the Kings loyall Subjects and true hearted Souldiers in their opposing such Now the first of these is the Doctrine of this Text and the second is the use of it A Rebell is an evill or wicked man for such a one is he saith the Text That seeks Rebellion sure then Rebellion it self must needs be a wicked worke or a worke of wickednesse because 't is that which in the judgement of Gods spirit wicked men onely seek for or thirst after there is your Doctrine The use followes naturally and 't is this If it be so then 't is the duty of all good men to oppose Rebellion and to endeavour the suppression of all Rebellious men yea if extreme severity be exercised upon such they have but their due portion alloted them of the Lord for saies the Text a cruell Messenger shall be sent unto him Thus you see the Text doth well sute the occasion if my discourse shall but as well sure the Text and your attention noble Gentlemen and Souldiers my discourse I hope through Gods blessing our meeting will not be altogether fruitlesse and unprofitable But for the better knowledge of the Rebells and their work of your selves and your owne duty I le give you a more full description of both and that from the Text too which to my apprehension doth offer a double discoverie one of the Kings enemies and another of his friends or good Souldiers The enemy is discovered by three particulars in the former part of the verse 1. By his naturall disposition He is malus an evill man 2. By his active di●igence in the word quaerit seeketh 3. By his ungodly worke in the word Rebellion or tantùm rebellionem An evill man seeketh onely Rebellion The Kings true Souldier is described by three more particulars in the latter part of the verse 1. By his O●fice He is Ang●lus or Nuncius a Messenger 2. By his Commission in t●e word mirtetur shall be sent 3. By ●is Imployment in the word Cruell a cruell messenger he is so called from the severity he shall use or from that sharpe punishment which shall be inflicted by him therefore a cruell Messenger shall be sent against him of these in order and first of the enemy 1. His naturall disposition he is malus an evill man An evill man seekes Rebellion some read Rebellis tantùm quaerit malum a Rebellious man seekes onely mischiefe so making a Rebell and a wicked man to be all one as they doe mischiefe and Rebellion to be the same thing and indeed so they are adde but most to wicked turne but malus into p●ssimus and they are Synonymaes and may be predicated of each other and then the Doctrine is in these words A Rebell is a most wicked man of a most malignant disposition I say a most wicked man because Rebellion it self as we shall shew anon is the very height and top of all mischief therefore that is arrived at that pitch of wickednesse as to be a Rebell must needs be a most wicked man Now I would have you know that by Rebellion I mean that which is against the King and I define it to be A resisting the Authority and a violent opposing the will and person of the lawfull Governour which being a sinne for●idden in the Commandement of the second Table is more against the light of
and in his method and therefore our Saviour calls those very men in another place serpents broode and generation of vipers now a viper as some write doth destroy its owne damme which gave it being and so did they their Saviour and so do all Rebells yea our Rebells indeavour the destruction of their owne Nation that bred them of their owne Soveraigne that preserved them as Nero ript the Bowels of his owne Mother that bare him so do these patria mater rip up the very bowells of their owne Countrey that gave birth and breeding to them Iohannes Aventinus tells us that Maximilian the Emperour was wont to call the King of Spaine R●x Hominum a King of men because his Subjects like men liv'd in obedience but the King of England he would call Rex Diabolorum a King of Divells because the Su●jects of this Kingdom had divers times rebelled against their Soveraign though alwaies to their owne ruine as in King Iohn Henry the third Edward the second and Richard the second's daies And I would to God that some in this Nation did not now prove themselves worse Divells then ever but alasse they do for the Religion here professed now is more opposite to this rebellious way then that which was practised in those former daies But in this we may more fully behold the malignity and vicious disposition of Rebellious spirits they are not capable of gracious or evangelicall instructions never marvaile if they who offered spight to the cleare dictates of the Gospell do rebell against the King Therefore be not a Rebell Trust not a Rebell 1. Be not a Rebell walke not in the way with them for so to doe will speak you the Devills Child and to have reached to the highest staire of villanie your Titles will be the same which Saint Peter gives to Elimas the Sorcerer Act. 13.10 Full of all Subtilty Child of the Divell Enemy of righteousnesse and perverter of the right waies of the Lord you may remember for the Honour of Rebellion that the worst Title that the evill spirit could teach King Saul in the heate of his wrath to call Ionathan by was this Thou Sonne of the perverse and Rebellious Woman 1 Sam. 20.30 2. Trust not a Rebell 't is Solomons advice Prov. 26 25. Though he speaketh faire yet believe him not for there be seven that is a multitude of abhominations in his heart they that seek Rebellion as appeares by the practice of some in our Nation doe hold that Principle of the Jesuites that they may break their word promise or oath so it be in ordine ad causam to promote their cause and what man that is wise will credit such He that hateth saies Solomon dissembleth with his lips and layeth up deceit within him so did these men of Hope when to get leave to sit as long as they pleased they promised the Reformation of Church and State the payments of the Kings debts and to make him the most glorious Prince in Christendome for how well they have kept or indeavoured to keepe their word let all men judge They make lyes their refuge and confide in them and there 's reason for it they are of their neerest kindred even their owne Brethren Children with themselves of the same Father I could shew you how all the foundation stones of their rebellious building are nothing but Lyes and so are the pillowes that uphold the same cemented they are together with a morter of craft malice and impudency but experience hath too sufficiently taught this to the whole Nation beside I should want time if I should now speake of it onely there is one thing I 'le desire you to note in all Rebells It is their nature being men that like Ahab have sold themselves to worke wickednesse to charge as he did by their lyes their owne conditions and intentions upon others thou art he that troubles Israel sayeth he to Elias when it was himself so Corah and his companions when they rebelled against Moses and Aron did charge them for taking too much upon them when it was onely themselves that did so And Satan when he tempted our first Parents to rebell did charge most wickedly upon the Lord his Soveraigne his own conditions of falshood and envy And so his Brood amongst us how directly have they trod in his steps for seducing the people to rebell against their Leige Lord they have most maliciously accused him of falshood their owne condition and of envy at the welfare and happinesse of them his Subjects and that he intended to alter religion to destroy the Liberties of Parliament and the properties of his people yea and to bring in forraigners to invade the Nation while themselves as wofull experience doth now teach us have indeavoured and in some sort eff●cted all and every one of the same things wherefore from hence I sa● learne to be so wise as not to trust a Rebell and to this purpose remember the example of our Saviour Iohn 2.24 though they speake him faire and made great professions of their good will towards him and of being his Disciples yet he would not commit himself unto them For saith the Text he knew well what was in them they were some of that Serpents brood I spake of before And secondly remember too how they our Rebells I meane will not believe the King off●ring undeserved mercy and pardon unto them although he like that Inhabitant of Heaven Psal. 15. hath kept his word with them to his owne losse do you therefore believe such unbelievers But what should be the reason of this their suspicion some will say why even this they judge of the King by themselves they thinke hee will deceive them because they have already and still thinke to deceive him what paines hath been taken and at this present is by those Councellors of Peace at Oxford to worke faith in these Infidells but to no purpose 't is true which the Psalmist saies of such men Let the Charmers charme never so wisely they will not heare for 't is mischiefe onely which they seeke after and are resolved yea have sworne and taken a Covenant to persevere in A wicked man seeketh onely Rebellion 2. Seeketh this word notes his active diligence seeking is studying and devising occasions and meanes to promote that which is aimed at quaerit tantùm he is diligent for he mindeth nothing else but this he minds alwaies the Lesson or Doctrine is this Rebellious men are exceeding industrious and diligent in their way They are alwaies plotting or acting somewhat to the furtherance Mat. 2.1 They devise iniquity in the night season upon their beds and in the day time they practice what they have devised because saith the Text they haue got power or the Militia into their hands nay sometime they are so great with Egge to act that mischiefe which they have plotted in the Evening against the righteous man that lives quietly by them that they will fetch
of them was lately taken in the act and hang'd for the sin of Buggerie here in this Town if we Preachers should hereupon tell you from the Pulpits that all these blessed Reformers for so they are called by their adorers are even such men and guiltie of that horrid sin I believe for my part we should much abuse them in that particular and yet thus divers of their Ministers are pleased to deale with the Kings Friends the Lord in his good time rebuke them for it But alas gallant Gentlemen and Christian people you all know that there are too great and too manie occasions given by some amongst us to our enemies to report evill of us I beseech you therefore in the feare of God as manie of you are better borne and bred then those are who do accuse you and as all of you are imploied in a more righteous cause then they by your holie God and by your religious King so that you would all indeavour to be more holie in your carriages then they be to walk worthie your imploiment and you that be Commanders I beg of you that you would more strictlie punish sin in those that are under you according to those Militarie Orders set forth by His sacred Majesties your religious Master The profession of a Souldier as 't is honourable so it may be holie if you please we read of holie men of that profession David was a man of warre and did as you do fight the Battailes of the Lord and he was an holie man that great sin which did so blemish his reputation was committed by him afterward when he had left off to follow the Camp the Centurion in the Gospell was a man of your profession and our Saviour himself gives this testimonie of him that he had not found his like for goodnesse in all Israel and so that Captain Acts 10. was one that feared God with all his houshold and whose prayers and almes ascended daily into Gods presence Abraham himselfe the Father of the faithfull was a brave Souldier he with the number of 318. assaulted five Kings with their Armies vanquished them and took the spoile you may read the storie in the 14. Chapter of Genesis where you may also see who were the first men whom the Scripture notes did run away in the day of battell and hid themselves I do not say in Saw-pits but the Text saies in Slime-pits they were men full of guilt and sin even the Princes of Sodom and Gentlemen of Gomorrah Nay to speak all that can be said in one word for the honour and comfort of a Souldier God himselfe is called a man of warre Exod. 15 3. The Lord is a man of Warre and JEHOVAH is his Name I tell you Gentlemen there is not to an honest eye in these sad and dismall daies a more gallant sight then a valiant and religious Souldier Religion causeth courage in a good cause and giveth an high lustre to it especially in men of birth and place what true English heart is not warm'd with joy to see the living flames of ancient valour conjoined with generous minds in Gentile bloud but if thereto be also annex'd Religion I dare say to a trulie pious loyall eye the Sun it selfe is not more glorious Gentlemen your enemies call you Cavaliers a name as they take it of great reproach els you may be sure they would not call you by it will you give me leave in briefe to give you your owne Character or at least the Character of such a man as everie of you ought to be and as we your friends and servants in Christ desire to conceive of you why listen to it 't is this A complete Cavalier is a Child of Honour a Gentleman well borne and bred that loves his King for conscience sake of a clearer countenance and bolder looke then other men because of a more loyall heart He dares neither oppose his Princes will nor yet disgrace his righteous cause by his carriage or expressions He is furnished with the qualities of Piety Prudence Iustice Liberality Goodnesse Honesty He is amiable in his behaviour couragious in his undertakings discreet and gallant in all his executions he is throughly sensible of the least wrong that is offered to his Soveraigne and is a professed enemy to all Rebells the aimes of his sword are onely to dissever the malignity of those forces that have conspired the ruine of Monarchy and Innocency he feares no evill thing to come upon himselfe but contemns all dangers that look towards him he dares accept of deaths challenge to meet it in the field and yet can embrace it as a speciall friend when it comes into his chamber where he is alwayes making provision for its better entertainment in a word he is the onely Reserve of English Gentility and ancient valour and hath rather chose to burie himselfe in the Tombe of Honour then to see the Nobility of his Nation vassalaged the Dignity of his Countrey captivated by any base domesticke enemy or by any forraigne fore-conquered foe This is a compleat Cavalier and if any of you be not according to this Character believe me you are not right nor the men you ought to be And so much Gentlemen for the first particular in your description I come to the second and that is your Commission in the word sent shall be sent namely by him who hath power from God to send and that is only the King or Supreme Magistrate all the Commissions which God grants to Souldiers are signed by the Kings hand who is as Moses was the mouth of God unto his Subjects in things of this nature and such a Commission so signed doth constitute a lawfull Souldier the Lesson is this A right Commission makes a lawfull Souldier Yea a right Commission makes the Warre it self lawfull to the Souldier although it were undertaken by the Prince upon unjust grounds for the Subjects duty is to mind his owne call rather then the Cause for though in matters of Religion we disclaime and abhorre the Doctrine of blind obedience yet in matters of State and order wee professe allowance of it quae supra nos nihil ad nos things above us belong not to us if we pry into the reason of Princes undertakings we may prove our selves to be the Busie-bodies whom as we noted before the Apostle yoakes with murderers and evill doers And I thinke these times doe sufficiently declare the due concatention of these conditions But as I was saying though the Justice of the Kings Cause which is as cleare as the Sun to all unlesse to those that are given up to blindnesse and to believe lies were not so manifest and apparent nay were it an unjust cause on the Kings part yet were it not so to those Souldiers that are authorized by him for according to the point a right Commission makes a right Souldier and that cannot be given by any nor derived from any but the King
ordained and allowed of God I could tell you also of Ieroboam and all the succeeding Kings of Israel that begun and continued the revolt from the house of David how there was not one good man of all the number and how they and the people that adhered to them by heresie idolatrie prophanesse and villany grew worse and worse as being alwaies attended with Gods curse for their Rebellion till they were carried away God knowes whither no man can tell what became of them to this day I could also tell you out of your owne Chronicles the fearfull and dismall ends of those together with their families who have opposed their Soveraigne in former ages but the time will not permit 2. I could assure the downfall of the Rebells as they are men delighting in Warre from Psal. 68.30 Rebuke the company of the speare-men the multitude of the Bulls with the Calves of the people till every one submit himself with pieces of Silver scatter thou the people that delight in warre It is a rule in Divinity that a propheticall prayer is of the nature of a prophesie Rebuke thou O Lord is as much as the Lord will rebuke and scatter O Lord is as much as the Lord will scatter now by the speare-men in that verse you may understand those degenerate Gentlemen that have lifted up the hand against their Soveraigne or have consulted in this Rebellion by the multitude of Bulls you may understand the rich fat Citizens who by their wealth and money have administred strength to this Rebellion and by Calves of the people you may understand those Country folk that came bleating up to London from the adjoining Counties with their Petitions against the present established Government all these or all such as these shall bee rebuked by the Lord as the Psalmist teacheth and made to submit themselves with pieces of silver they shall be glad to offer money for the ransome of their lives even because they are a people that delight in warre and they that will not do so shall be scattered and blowne away as dust is before the wind 3. I could prove that an heavy woe is belonging to these Enemies of the King as they are spoilers and treacherous persons from that place Easy 33.1 Woe unto thee that spoiledst when thou wert not spoiled and to thee that didst deale trecherously when they did not deale treacherously with thee when thou shalt cease to spoile thou shalt be spoiled and when thou shalt cease to deale treacherously others shall deale treacherously with thee This is verbum Domini the word of the Lord and manet in aeternum 't is an eternall truth in all ages it hath beene made good and so for ever shall be upon all those unto whomsoever it is appliable 4. I could pormise their assured punishment as they are bloudy and deceitfull men from Psalm 5.6 where 't is said that God shall destroy them that speak leasing the Lords abhorres the bloudy and deceitfull man and Psal. 55.23 't is concluded hhat bloudy and deceitfull men shall not live out halfe their daies And I thinke none can denie that the Kings Enemies whom you are to oppose are such persons they have practised nothing hitherto but deceit and lies under the cloake of Piety and they breath forth nothing but warre and bloud Kill Slay and Destroy hath been their language a long time and the way of peace they will not own But I le take these men only in the notion of Rebells to evidence their assured ruine for in that respect they are the people of Gods curse the Lord himselfe doth so call them Esay 34 5. My sword saith he shall be bathed in heaven behold it shall come downe upon Idumea upon the people of my Curse to judgement The Idume●ns were the Edomites or childen of Esau they are called the people of Gods curse for they were Rebells against the people of Israel unto whom in Iacob the superiority over them was given and by David seized upon and we may doubtlesse conclude that all such Rebells are in the very same condition the people of Gods curse as well as they Now what conditioned Rebells these Edomites were we shall more fully see in the 35 of Ezekiel where also God vowes their destruction As I live saith the Lord God I will prepare thee unto bloud and bloud shall pursue thee sith thou hast not hated bloud even vengeance shall pursue thee thus will I make Mount S●ir most desolate and cut off from it him that passeth out and him that returneth And I will fill his Mountaines with his slaine men in thy hills and in thy valleys and in all thy rivers shall they fall th●t are slaine with the sword I will make thee perpetuall disolations And thy Cities shall not returne and ye shall know that I am the Lord because thou hast said these two Nations and th●se two Countri●s namely of Israel and Iudah shall be mine and we will possesse them Therefore as I live saith the Lord God I well even do according to thine anger and according to thine envy which thou hast used out of thine hatred against them and I will make my selfe knowne amongst them when I have judged thee c. In all which words of the Prophet beside the certainty of Edoms ruine evidenced by the oath of God twice over as I live observe these their conditions 1. They did not hate bloud they delighted to make themselves instruments of wrath when they had no call thereto God did at sundry times punish the Israelites by all their neighbour Nations by the Egyptians Moabites Midianites Philistims and the rest but never by the Edomites these were alwaies voluntiers in wars aginst Israel never imploied by the Lord in that businesse for they were brethren to the Israelites being the children of Esau Iacobs brother and they were to live in obedience to them by Gods ordination disposing the superioritie to Iacob and his seed and 't is not Gods Custome to set Brethren at odds one against another or Subjects against their Soveraignes the God of nature and order is no breaker of natures bonds or of his own Laws that is Satans work rather the father of divisions so that the Edomites were Rebells unnaturall and bloudy Rebels they did not hate bloud 2. They were also sacrilegious and covetous rebels they were the Edomites that cryed out against the Temple as some do now against Churches down with it down with it even to the ground and they were these that swallowed up in their expectation the estates of Israel and Iuda after that manner as the men of Westminster with their Abettors do the Inheritances of the Lords and Gentlemen that are with his Majesty they said these two Nations shall be ours which is a sin mightily provokeing God to wrath and jealousie the fire of my jealousie saies he Ezekiel 3.5 is against the Idumeans because they have in their own thoughts appointed