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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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of God Such are ready to say with the Apostle Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feete of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things Dan. 1.3 4. Nebuchadnezzar chose men to waite on him among the Iewes such as were of the kings stocke comely witty and euery way well qualified both for lineaments of body and ornaments of mind he required that the chiefest should attend vpon him he would not haue the refuse to stand in the kings court Shall they then that are to stand vp in the Name of the LORD be of the basest and of the off-scouring of the people If a man haue many sons such is the contempt of the Ministery the eldest he must be the heire if any be more beautifull or personable then the rest he must be a Courtier if any be disfigured or vncomely he is set apart if he list to the Ministery This is not to honour God with our first fruites this is to serue him with the blind and the lame and to giue vnto him such as are not fit for any thing else But of this wee shall haue better occasion to speake farther afterward Secondly The second reproofe this sanctifying vnto God the best thing that we haue serueth to reprooue such as neuer offer vnto God the first and florishing part of their age neither sanctifie vnto him their yong yeeres but as if they were too good for him they will serue sinne and Satan first and afterward when they can follow them no longer then they will thinke of sadder matters Hence it is that yong men for the most part doe thinke themselues exempted and priuiledged by their age to commit sinne with greedinesse and without controlment and that they are free to doe what they list to fetch their vagaries and to runne into all excesse at their owne pleasure But the holy Ghost is so farre from giuing liberty vnto them that he prouoketh them in good time to dispose of their life and euen then especially when their affections beginne to boile in them and endeauoureth to pull them in as it were with the cords of discipline and the Law of God Salomon is so farre from allowing this reason to warrant the loosenesse of young men that is to say We are yet as youths and therefore we may be let alone a while we will bee wiser hereafter that rather with a sharpe but yet iust taunting laughing it to scorne he speaketh to this age Reioyce O yong man Eccle. 11.9 in thy youth and let thy heart cheere thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the wayes of thy heart and in the light of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into iudgement As if he had saide If thou wilt needes goe forward and wilt not be reclaimed be it so take thy pleasure passe on thy dayes in thy delights follow the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eies and the pride of life glut thy selfe with chambring and wantonnesse and take thy fill of daliance yet know that at the last thou shalt be called vnto iudgment giue account for those things which thou hast cōmitted The children that mocked the Prophet and reproched him for his infirmitie were torne in pieces with Beares that came out of the wood 2 King 2.24 Therefore doth Salomon exhort them in another place Eccle. 12.1 to remember their Creator in the dayes of their youth while the euill dayes come not nor the yeeres draw nigh when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them God hath honoured them as his first borne and giuen many gifts vnto them as learning wit knowledge beauty strength health quickenesse and readinesse to doe all things which are not so common to euery age let them not abuse them but honour him with them that gaue them If you spend your first dayes loosely and licentiously and offer your olde age to the LORD when you can follow the pleasures of sinne no longer that endure for a season he will not accept such a seruice and sacrifice at your hands If you would haue God to bee your God in your old age serue him in your youth lest as you regarded not to know him in your youth so he giue you ouer and know you not in your elder yeeres For if an earthly man haue the wisedome and discretion not to admit and receiue into his seruice a doting and decrepid man such a one as can stand him in no stead but will readily answere him Go thy wayes thou art no seruant for me let him that had the vse of thy yonger daies take that fruit of thy old age that thou canst yeeld vnto him Shall not the Lord the most wise God reiect and cast vs off in age if we passe the flower of our youth in seruing sin Satan and the world What assurance can we haue to be accepted when and at what time we list may he not iustly say vnto vs Thou hast all thy life time serued mine enemies of whom I said vnto thee Serue them not and now at last when thou canst serue them no longer commest thou vnto me How often haue I called thee and offered ro be a master vnto thee but thou refusedst to become my seruant now it is iust with me to stopppe mine eares at thy cry Go thy wayes Let him that had thy youth take thine age also let him that had the beginning take also the ending If we spend our strength in vanity and our dayes in folly thus will the Lord answere vs God is the creator of the yong man it is he that hath made him and not he himself he is subiect to death in his youth as well as the olde man in his age the glasse that is newly made is as brittle as the old the Lambe goeth to the shambles as soone as the sheepe And the yong man shall be brought to iudgement for his trickes of youth for God shall bring euery worke to iudgement with euery secret thing whether it be good or whether it be euill Eccle. 12.14 Wherefore to conclude let yong and olde honour the Lord with the first fruites of their increase giue the best things that they possesse yea the more we haue the more he requireth of vs. Such as are rich and haue this worlds good must not be as barren trees and vnfruitfull in good workes Whatsoeuer we enioy we haue receiued it of his goodnesse it is as a streame issuing from his fountaine and therefore we must returne the glory to him and communicate the benefit therof vnto our brethren Vse 2 Secondly another spirituall application of this type and figure of the first borne is that it calleth to our remembrance what we are both by nature and by grace What we are by nature By nature that we are all the children of wrath and destruction without the mercy of God freeing deliuering vs from the
to take paines to teach them in their youth what trade they shall take but we cannot giue a blessing vnto our owne labours The husbandman may plant and sow yet he cannot bring downe the early and the latter raine and if he could doe this he could not make the corne grow for the vse of man So is it with vs we may teach and reproue exhort and admonish but except GOD open the heart the heart remaineth vnreformed It is not to be doubted but Samuel bestowed great labour and diligence in discharging this duty both because he was a faithfull and godly man Heb. 11.32 Heb. 11.32 And because hee had seene with his eyes an example of ouermuch lenity in Eli and had heard with his eares a fearefull threatning of iudgment against him reuealed by the Lord yet his children followed not his steppes but declined from the wayes wherein he walked Let all godly parents therefore comfort themselues in the consideration and contemplation of such like examples knowing that they can onely vse the meanes and that it lyeth not in their power to make them truely religious In deed if wee haue beene negligent in bringing them vnto God and let them runne into all riot and not restrained them we haue cause to lay it to our consciences and to thinke with our selues that we that gaue them life haue also beene instruments of their death But if wee haue done what lyeth in vs to doe if we haue warned them and they would not be warned if we haue taught and trained them vp in the feare of God which is the beginning of wisedome and they haue broken the bands asunder and cast the cordes of duty and discipline from them we may comfort our selues as the Minister doth when he seeth his labour is spent in vaine If he haue beene faithfull and conscionable in his place whether men regard the word or not regard it whether they beleeue or doe not beleeue whether they obey or doe not obey he is the sweet sauour of Christ 2 Cor. 2.15 euen in them that perish because euen then it worketh the will of God and accomplisheth that for which it is sent The Prophet prophesying of Christs comming among the Iewes bringeth him in with this complaint I haue laboured in vaine Esay 49.4 I haue spent my strength for nought and in vaine yet surely my iudgement is with the Lord and my worke with my God God respecteth vs according to our worke not according to the euent or successe of our labour he will reward vs according to our conscience in teaching not according to the peoples diligence in hearing of vs. Thus it shall be with all Christian parents to their endlesse comfort God will not be vnmindfull of their paines that they haue taken albeit they see not that fruite of their labours that they desire Obiect Heere some man peraduenture may obiect that the Apostle saith The woman shall be saued in child-bearing if they continue in faith and charity and holinesse with sobriety 1 Timothy chapter 2. verse 15. 2 Tim. 2.15 Where hee seemeth to hang the saluation of the mother vpon the faith of the children as if she could not be saued except they continued in the trueth I answere Answer this place is in deed so vnderstood and wrested by many interpreters but that cannot be the true meaning Ierome an ouer-great prayser of virginitie and none of the greatest friends of matrimony draweth the words to that sense that he may by this meanes commend the single life and withall withhold women from marriage while they heare that they can no otherwise bee saued then if their children continue faithfull vnto the death The purpose of the Apostle in this place as appeareth by the the circumstances going before is to comfort the woman that shee should not cast away all confidence as one without hope as being the cause of one of the greatest sinnes which brought the ruine of all mankinde The feeling of this heauy burden lying vpon her conscience might terrifie her and work much feare and amazement in her soule and apprehension of the wrath of God and therefore he comforteth her and giueth her hope of saluation But if the former exposition be receiued that her saluation bee suspended vpon many others hee should cast downe Thunder and Lightning vpon her head able to apall and dismay her he should not comfort her but terrifie her he should not lift her vp with hope of life but cast her downe into despaire through feare of death when she should vnderstand that she could not possibly be saued except her children did perseuere in the faith Againe it lyeth not in the power of women to giue them faith and loue much lesse the grace of perseuerance to continue constant vnto the death so that the Apostle should lay a burden vpon their shoulders and put a yoke about their nekes which neither they nor their fathers were able to beare This is not the easie Yoke nor the light burden of Christ For albeit they striue with all their strength and labour with all their power to bring vp their children in godlinesse yet oftentimes they are obstinate stubborne headstrong froward peruerse and rebellious so that they can doe no good with them because they will not obey them nor hearken to their commaundements Furthermore this care of the instruction and institution of children is a dutie required rather of the father who is better able then of the mother who is euery way the weaker vessell as appeareth by the Apostle Ephes 6.4 Fathers prouoke not your children to wrath but bring them vp in the nourture and admonition of the Lord. Lastly the vertues heere commended bebelong rather to the mothers then to the children as when he requireth of them holinesse with sobriety as Tit. 2.3 4. it appeareth The aged women that they be in behauiour as becommeth holinesse c. that they may teach the yong women to be sober c. If any farther obiect ●biect that if the Apostle had meant to referre these last words to the woman he would haue said if she continue in faith and charity not if they continue I answere Answere nothing is more common and vsuall then the change of number especially one of the words being a nowne of multitude For it is plaine and manifest that the Apostle doth not point out some one certaine woman but speaketh in generall of woman-kinde or of all women Thus doth the Apostle vary and alter the number in this present Chapter sometimes speaking in the plurall number as of many In like manner that women adorne themselues in modest apparell Verse 9. sometimes speaking in the singular number as of one Let the woman learne in silence with all subiection Verse 11. This is also easie to be shewed in other places as Galat. 6.1 Ye which are spirituall restore such a one in the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be
vs which we noted before to be careful liberally to maintain the Ministery that they may teach vs in the word otherwise we commit sacriledge against God and indeed rob our own soules because if we sow sparingly wee shall reape sparingly The Prophet Malachi bringeth in the Lord speaking and charging the people with no lesse crime then robberie and against no lesse person then himself Wil a man rob God Mal. 3.8.9 10. yet ye haue robbed me But ye say wherein haue we robbed thee In tyths and offerings Ye are cursed with a curse for ye haue robbed me euen this whole nation Secondly it teacheth Parents that are willing to offer to the calling of the Ministry any of their sons to serue the Lord in that calling to offer to him the fittest not the foulest the best not the worst The best is fittest for the Lord and doubtlesse hee is most worthy of him But of this we haue spoken at large in the 3. chap. Thirdly we giue to God the best and fattest when we serue him in our youth and with all our strength The young man offereth to God the best thing hee hath when hee remembreth his Creator in the daies of his youth Eccle. 12.1 while his senses are sharp his memory quicke his wit ripe his capacity readie his vnderstanding deepe But if he say to himself now I will take my pleasure a while I wil reioyce in my youth Eccle. 11. I will walke in the wayes of mine owne heart and in the sight of mine eies I will repent at the end of my daies serue the Lord when I can serue the lusts of the flesh the pleasures of sin no longer if I say we reason thus and offer to God our worne and withered old age when wee can serue sathan no more what do wee but offer to God the lame and the blinde which he abhorreth How far are we from following Abel who offered the best forasmuch as we offer the worst of all to God Fourthly we must not serue the Lord by halues we haue no other sacrifice to offer but our selues let vs therfore offer vp soule body and not serue him for company or for fashions sake or coldly and negligently or thorough compulsion and feare of the Law If we offer no otherwise our sacrifice and seruice is no better then the offering of Caine who was reiected both his person and his oblation Iude ver ● Wo vnto such that walke in the way of Cain that do not season their first fruites that they bring with faith God wil haue al that is in vs or nothing If we do not consecrate our selues wholy to his seruice we cannot be his seruants It is giuen as a speciall commendation of good King Iosias that he turned to the Lord with all his hart and with all his soule and with all his might 2. King 23. according to the law of Moses not that he was able to fulfill the whole law without failing in one point but hee did striue with might and main to serue the Lord to the vtmost of his ability and endeuour with hart life to please him Lastly we honor God with our substance when wee are mercifull in helping the needie with that which is ours We must not giue almes at another mans cost nor releeue our neighbour by our neighbours goods but we must honor him with our owne substance not with the substance of others as couetous persons vsurers theeues seruants do who giue away that is none of their owne Therefore when God giueth vs all things abundantly to vse let it not grieue vs to honor the lord with them and distribute them to the necessities of the Saints cheerfully Matth. 25. ● The Lord Iesus accounteth it as done to himselfe which is done vnto one of the least of his brethren Neyther let vs feare any want our selues or falling into decay through our bountifulnes and liberality inasmuch as God will make vs the more to aboūd in all things 2 Cor. 9.9 for hee is of power to make vs abound in all gifts The widdow that had bene the wife to one of the sonnes of the Prophets so long as she powred Oyle out of the vessell or pot that was her owne into the empty vessels she perceiued the oyle stil to increase but when she poured out no longer 2 Kin. 4.6 the oile ceased and stayed Euen so so long as we shall helpe the poore with our goods as it were fill the vessels with oile our riches shall encrease multiply but if we stay our hand frō giuing our store will quickely faile and our fountaine dry vp The more commonly you draw water out of a well the more plenty you shall haue so likewise the more liberall we are toward those that want the more we shall encrease our owne weath Neither let any man delay the time promise to giue away much when he dyeth for that is to giue them away when we can keepe them no longer He that will not giue almes till after his death is like to a man that carieth a light behind his backe The houre of death is not the fittest time to doe good then we should looke to reape the fruit of a wel led life these are like to a simple souldier that prepareth his armour when he should fight or like the foolish virgins that went to seeke oyle when they should vse it ●●h 25.10 A ship that leaketh must bee mended in the hauen not in the sea a wall that is broken must be made vp in peace not in warre If we forget God in our life how can we looke that he shold remember vs in our death and when we lie at the last cast To conclude seeing we must serue the Lord with the best things that we haue let the people be ready to maintaine the Ministery in the best maner let godly parents giue to God their best children let the yong man dedicate to God his best yeeres let euery Christian offer to God his best member 〈◊〉 23. to wit the heart let all rich men doe the best good they can with their goods and lay vp for themselues a good foundation for the time to come thus shall the people and parents and yong men and rich men and generally all Christians follow the example of righteous Abel who offered to God the best sacrifice he had On the other side if we maintaine the Ministers in the worst manner if we spend the flower of our age and the prime of our life in the worst vanities if wee giue our best part I mean the heart to the worst deseruer that is the diuel if we imploy our riches to the worst vses we follow the example and offer the sacrifice of Caine and therefore may iustly feare to be reiected with him and after this life to bee rewarded with him 24 On the third day Eliab the sonne of Helon prince of
out and told the people the words of the Lord and gathered c. We haue in these words to the end of the Chapter the third point to wit the execution both of that which God had promised in mercy and of that which he had threatened in iudgement Heere then is a double affect one touching the fellow-helpers ioyned in commission with Moses as his assistants They were as it were of his priuie counsell he prepareth them and God furnisheth them and communicateth his Spirit vnto them which is amplified by a double euent the first is common to all the seuenty elders they prophesied whereby God sealed vp vnto them the assurance of their calling and procured them reuerence among the people as we see in Saul 1 Sam. 10.10 and in Salomon 1 King 3.16 28 The second is speciall two of these Elders abode behind in the tents and came not to the Tabernacle shewing themselues by this drawing backe vnwilling and accounted themselues vnable and vnworthy to vndergo the charge as Saul when he was annointed to be king hid himselfe among the stuffe 1 Sam. 10.22 as also Moses and Ieremy did when they were called knowing that none is sufficient for these things Heereupon a yong man who he was or to what end he did it it is vncertaine because it is not expressed made report of their prophesying to Moses at the hearing whereof Ioshua desireth him to forbid them by his authority hee was too much addicted to the person of his master as many hearers are to their teachers as Paul complaineth that some did hold of Apollo and some of Cephas 1 Cor. 1.12 as in our dayes many conceiue too highly of Luther otherwise a very worthy man howbeit Moses tendring the good of all the people more then his owne glory reproueth his corrupt affection Enuiest thou for may sake and sheweth a contrary disposition in himselfe desiring that all the Lords people could prophesie c. The other effect is touching the flesh prouided and supplied which is enlarged by the instrumentall cause a winde went foorth from the Lord by the place from whence they came from the red sea out of Africke in great plenty and abundance by the miserable issue and euent of all While the flesh stucke betweene their teeth they were striken with a great plague and perished in great numbers and lastly by a memoriall of the sinne and of the punishment the name of the place was called Kibroth Hattaauah that is the graues of lust for there they buried the people that lusted In this diuision it is to be noted that Moses going from the presence of God relateth nothing but that which God had spoken vnto him and commanded him to speake vnto thē and therefore the Ministers are warned thereby to teach nothing but what they haue receiued from the word as it were from the mouth of God Num. 6 22 18. 1 Corin. 11 23. Mat. 28 20. They are his messengers and embassadours emploied by him Mal. 2 7. This condemneth vnwritten verities and traditions maintained in the Church of Rome vnder which they would conuey vnto vs a fardell fraught with their owne inuentions But let the Ministers giue attendance to the reading of the Scriptures and consult with God by them 1 Tim. 4 13 15 16 and let al Gods people shut their eares against humane deuises open their eares and hearts to receiue whatsoeuer God shall teach them in his word 1 Kin. 13 15 16 17. c. There ran a young man and told Moses and said Eldad and Medad do prophesie in the campe Ioshua said My Lord Moses forbid them Ioshua feared lest the credite and reputation of Moses should bee lessened among the people by this communication of his spirit He had a good intent howbeit he was iealous of his master amisse which proceeded from the corrupt fountaine of enuy for which he is reproued Out of which I might generally obserue that it is the duty of masters to reproue their seruants ●octrine 〈◊〉 the duty 〈◊〉 masters to ●●●roue their ●●●●ants as Christ doth oftentimes his Disciples Priuate men that haue onely a generall charge are bound to reproue Exod. 22. Leuit. 19 17. much more such as haue the ouersight of the waies of others Againe conniuence concealing of sinne is a kinde of consenting vnto sinne he that hideth and reproueth not his friends faults maketh them his owne As it is in prouision for the family so it is in instruction he that prouideth not for the good of their bodies is guilty of their death if they perish through want of temporall things so he that regardeth not the good of their soules their blood shall be required at his hands if he suffer them to perish through want of instruction This reproueth all such masters as encourage Vse 1 or flatter their seruants in euill or suffer them to do what they list These cast away all care of their seruants as Caine did of his brother saying Am I my brothers keeper so do these say Am I my seruants keeper Gen. 4 9. are they not old enough to looke to themselues to take charge of themselues shall wee make them alwaies as babes children He is iustly accounted a cruell master that would suffer his seruant to drowne himselfe when hee may hinder him and saue him aliue Eli is punished for suffering his sonnes to run on in euill Secondly inferiours must suffer reproofe of their gouernours willingly and patiently and not breake out into choler against them like brute beasts that are vnteachable and vntractable which kicke spurne at the handling of their wounds and sores because they want reason to conceiue what is good for themselues so are these vtterly ignorant what is good for their soules The patient loueth the Physition though his potions be bitter and the Surgeon mortifieth corrupt members fooles doe hate correction saith the wise man Prou. 5 22 17 10. and it is oftentimes the cause of ruine of vnbrideled youth these do in truth hate their own soules which is a fearefull kinde of hatred Lastly let all gouernors superiours haue an eye euer watchfull ouer the waies of such as are vnder them that so they may encourage them in well doing and reproue them for euil doing This was in Elisha toward Gehazi running after Naaman and hunting after bribes 2 Kin. 5 25. Thus also did Salomon hee had an eye ouer Shemei and quickly found out his departure out of Ierusalem and wandering beyond the bounds set vnto him 1 Kings 2 43 44. Let euery one therefore take heed to their charges My Lord Moses Note heere the title which Ioshua giueth to Moses he contenteth not himselfe to call him by his bare name but before it he prefixeth a title of honour This teacheth that inferiours must vse speeches of reuerence subiection toward their superiours Doctrine Inferiours must shew reuerence towa●d their superiours as Mal. 1 6. 1 Pet 2 14
Euery worde of God is the word of a great person and euery part and parcell of it is the Decree of a King nay of the King of Kinges to whom all Kinges and Princes are subiect and must rise vppe from their Throne when they appeare before him whose Throne is the Heauen and though they bee Lordes of the Earth they must resigne their Crowne vnto him that hath the earth for his footestoole and therefore the greatest regard and respect must be giuen vnto it For a Heb. 2 2 3. as the Apostle teacheth Hebr. 2 2 3. If the word spoken by Angelles was stedfast and euery transgression and disobedience receyued a iust recompence of reward how shall wee escape if we neglect so great saluation which at the first began to be preached by the Lorde and afterward was confirmed vnto vs by them that heard him Woe vnto them therefore that reiect the food of their soules and surfet of this heauenly Manna and do not hunger and thirst after the sincere milke of the word that they may grow thereby Neither let any obiect Obiection If God did speake we would heare and if he did call wee would answere if hee did threaten wee would feare and if hee did teach we would obey but so long as all proceedeth from man as sinfull as our selues wee cannot be so affected Answere This was the Obiection of the Reprobate rich man in the Gospell who albeit his Brethren had Moses and the Prophets yet hee would haue Lazarus sent from the dead vnto his Fathers house to testifie vnto them b Luke 16 28 29 30 31 Lest they should come into that place of torment But what was the answer of Abraham If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neyther will they be perswaded to amend their liues though one arise from the dead againe If we reason on this manner with the rich man and put on his affection let vs also take heede lest wee haue that recompence of reward that the rich man had He supposed that extraordinary meanes would worke extraordinarie effects and vndoubtedly procure the conuersion of those to whom they were sent but therein hee was vtterly deceyued and if wee were not Fooles and blinde we would not follow so foule and fearefull an example Wherefore to informe our iudgement aright and reforme our affection we are to obserue two points first we must acknowledge that it is Gods mercy to speake vnto vs by men like vnto our selues and subiect vnto the same infirmities and passions that we are who applyeth himselfe to our weakenesse and respecteth our capacity who are not able to abide his presence who is so glorious in holynesse fearefull in praises doing wonders We see this in the Israelites at the deliuerie of the Law when the voice of God sounded in theyr eares they ran away and could not abide it they feared to be consumed at once cryed out vnto Moses c Exod. 20 19 Talk● thou with vs and wee will heare but let not God talke with vs lest wee dye When the Lord reuealed a part of his glory sitting vpon an high throne the angels couered their faces were not able to abide the beauty brightnes of his maiesty the lintels of the doore cheeks moued the house was filled with smoke the Prophet himselfe said d Esay 6 5. Woe is me for I am vndone because I am a man of polluted lippes and I dwell in the middest of a people of polluted Lippes for mine eyes haue seene the King the Lord of hostes In like manner if God should appeare vnto vs and vtter his voice from heauen we should feare and quake and fall downe as dead men and cry out with great astonishment Alas we shall dye beecause we haue seene and heard the Lorde as many of the Fathers did then we would make request to haue the Ministers of the worde speake vnto vs whom now we despise and whose word wee contemne as base and contemptible It is therefore to bee accounted and receyued as a notable token of his great mercy toward vs that he sendeth vs to school to learne of our Brethren to whom wee may freely and familiarly resort for counsell in our doubtes for comfort in our afflictions for knowledge in our ignorance for instruction in godlinesse and for resolution in all our wants Secondly we must labour to perswade our owne hearts that it is his word which we heare and his Ministers that speake vnto vs and that it is our duty to heare them as the Lord himselfe whose Messengers they are whose calling is from him and whose mouths he hath opened to speak his word with boldnesse as it ought to be spoken Let vs craue this mercy at Gods hands to resolue vs of this point and to settle our consciences in the full assurance of it This will be a forcible means to make vs heare it and regarde it as Gods owne ordinance ought to bee heard and regarded And vntill wee haue learned this Lesson we can neuer reuerence the preaching of the worde as is required of vs either for the aduancement of Gods glory or the comfort of our owne soules Let vs therefore perswade our selues of this and set it downe as a principle and firme conclusion that as the words of the Prophets and Apostles are of great authority euen the word of the eternall God most vndoubtedly to bee receyued and most assuredly to bee beleeued so likewise the words of all Gods true and faithfull Ministers truely expounding and faithfully giuing vnto vs the naturall sense and meaning of the Scriptures and gathering sound doctrine out of them for the instruction and edification of the people of God grounding all they teach on the sure foundation of the Prophets and Apostles the words I say of Gods Ministers in these dayes are no lesse to be esteemed and acknowledged the word of God himself then if Esay or Ieremy thē if Paul or Peter or any of the rest did write or speak vnto vs. For the Scripture standeth not in words letters or syllables but in the sense vnderstanding So long then as the Minister vttereth not the conceits of his own brain nor deliuereth the traditions and precepts of men but holdeth himself to the doctrine of the Scripture which is the touchstone to try truth from falshood to descern the word of God from the word of man hee is no otherwise to bee heard and the Gospell no otherwise to be receiued from his mouth then if some Prophet of God or Apostle of Christ were among vs. For wee must not haue the Faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons but when the same faith the same truth the same word is preached both by the former Prophets and Apostles and by the ordinary Ministers of the Church of the times wherein wee liue if it should bee receiued when it is published by them and reiected when it is deliuered by these a
and spake vnto you but yee would not heare nor answere I saide Obey my voyce and I will be your God and ye shall be my people and walke ye in all the wayes that I haue commanded you that it may bee well vnto you but they would not obey nor encline their eare but went after the counsels and stubbornnesse of their wicked heart went backward and not forward I haue sent vnto you all my seruants the Prophets rising vp early euery day and sending them yet would they not heare mee but hardened their neckes and did worse then their Fathers Thus hee layeth open their sinne therefore no maruaile if that hee threaten to stretch out his hand against them so that the famine should pinch them the sword shoulde slay them the pestilence should waste them the dogges should teare them the wild beasts destroy them and the fowles of the heauen deuoure them Secondly as it reproueth those that refuse to heare The second repr●ofe so it condemneth such as onely heare and go no further these rest in it as if they had done their duty and as if no more were required at their hands But know this and marke it that outward seruice separated from inward obedience is not respected but reiected of God This naked hearing is an halting with God which he cannot suffer If we keepe from him the heart he careth not for the eye or the tongue or the eare This is it which the Prophet saith When ye fasted and mourned in the fift and seauenth Moneths Zach. 7 5 6 7 euen these seuenty y●ares did ye fast vnto me Doe I approue it Should ye not heare the words which the Lord hath cried by the ministery of the former Prophets when Ierusalem was inhabited and in prosperity and the Cities thereof round about her when the south and the plaine was inhabited To like purpose is Esaiah bold and saith What haue I to doe with the multitude of your Sacrifices Esay 1 11.12 13.14.15 saith the Lord I am full of the burnt offerings of Rammes I desire not the blood of Bullocks when ye come to appeare before me who required this of your hands to tread in my Courts Bring no moe Oblations in vaine Incense is an abhomination vnto me I cannot suffer your new Moones nor Sabboths c. they are a burthen vnto me I am weary to beare them and when you shall stretch out your hands I will hide m●ne eyes from you and though you make many praiers I will not heare Were not these his owne ordinances Did not hee appoint the solemne times of his worship and command sacrifices and oblations to be offered vnto him Yes he set them in his Church and was the Author of them but they perfourmed them in an euill manner without faith without repentance without loue without conscience and therefore as they did them God loathed them So may it be saide of our common and customary hearing remoued from faith obedience Who required it at our hands The Lord cannot abide it he cannot suffer it it is a burden vnto him that he cannot beare God ioyneth hearing and obeying together and cursed is hee that maketh a diuorce betweene them This doth the Prophet Ieremy denounce against all hypocriticall hearers chapt 11. Thus saith the Lord God of Israel Iere. 11 3 4 5 Cursed be the man that obeyeth not the words of this Couenant which I commanded vnto your Fathers c. He protested vnto them and their Fathers rising early and saying Obey my voyce yet they would not obey nor incline their eare but euery one walked in the stubbornnesse of his wicked heart thus they made a conspiracy against God and hee brought his curses vpon them Thus our Sauiour teacheth it shall bee with many in the last day that saw his person and heard his doctrine they conuersed and continued with him and were partakers of his miracles and ministry who shall then begin to say We haue eaten and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streetes Lu. 13 26 27. but he shall say I tell you I know you not whence ye are depart from me all ye workers of iniquity Woe shall then bee to all such hearers and cursed shall their state and condition be These haue an heauier account to make then such as neuer were hearers and neuer had so great mercy offered vnto them Hence it is that Christ pronounced sundry woes against Bethsaida Corazin and Capernaum who had the worde and other meanes of saluation offered vnto them yet liued without repentance and are pronounced to bee worse then the Sodomites For the greater mercies are abused the deeper iudgements are deserued Let vs sette this Capernaum a Citty in Galile before our eyes and looke vpon it as in a glasse that therein we may behold our selues The Lord Iesus was brought vp there and because hee did so much frequent it and was conuersant there many thought hee had beene borne there so that it is called his owne City Mat. 9 1. Secondly the miracles which he wrought there were many he healed the seruant of the Centurion and a man that had an vncleane spirit Math. 8 5. in so much that the Nazarites as it were enuying and repining thereat that that place should be preferred before them saide vnto him Whatsoeuer we haue h●ard done in Capernaum do it heere likewise in th●ne owne Country Luc. 4.23 thereby implying that the greatest part of his miracles had not beene done among them but among the Capernaites Thirdly there he began to preach saying Repent Math. 4.13.17 Mark 1.14 Iohn 6 59. Luc. 4.31.32 for the Kingdome of heauen is at hand and there he preached of the eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood likewise hee taught on the Sabboth day in their Synagogue with power and authority so that they were astonied at his doctrine In all these respects and priuiledges partly of the presence of his person partly of the working of his miracles partly of the preaching of his Gospel Christ pronounceth that they were lifted vp to heauen Mat. 11 23.24 highly aduanced aboue many other Townes Cities that wanted the seeing and hearing of him but because they became vnthankfull and to all these did not ioyne true obedience hee denounceth against them that they should be brought downe to hell the reason hereof is rendred in the next wordes For if the great workes which haue beene done in thee had beene done among them of Sodome they had remained to this day but I say vnto you that it shall be easier for them of the Land of Sodome in the day of iudgement then for thee An heauy doome and a most fearefull sentence and yet most iust and righteous if it bee weighed in the ballance of iustice The sinnes of Capernaum greater then of Sodome Gen. 19 3. Rom 1 27 28. Ezek. 16. Sodome indeede was guilty of vncleannesse and
is to bring them vnto him and to make them seeke him early and vntill affliction worke in vs repentance newnesse of life we haue no right vse nor true fruite of it Fourthly it is required of vs to praise the name of God for his mercy and goodnesse in sparing of vs and not pouring out the full viols of his wrath and indignation vpon vs and not coming out with all his fury and forces against vs. The practise of this praise we see in Dauid after the plague was ceassed 2 Sam. 24 25 hee built an Altar vnto the Lord and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings and the Lord was appeased toward the Land and the plague ceassed from Israel Hee did not onely call vpon God but offered the sacrifice of thanksgiuing vnto him Except we follow his example and practise this duty we rob God of his honour and prouoke him to take away his blessings from vs. When we are in affliction we are eloquent enough and haue tongues to vtter many prayers to haue the plague vpon vs remoued from vs but when we are helped and the iudgement is taken away we forget both Gods mercy and our owne dutie we consider not from whence our deliuerance commeth nor what it challengeth at our hands Fiftly we must remember that we thinke not our selues hardly dealt withall but take heed to our selues that we be farre from murmuring and complaining against God The Lord complaineth by his Prophet against such hypocrites Iere. 3 4 5. Ieremy 3 Diddest thou not still cry vnto me Thou art my Father and the guide of my youth will hee keepe his anger for euer will he reserue it to the end Thus they flattered with their lippes when malice was in their hearts they spake faire to God and pretended a great desire they had that they would faine please him while his hand is vpon them and while he striketh them with his rodde But what answere doth GOD giue and they receiue It followeth in the next words Thus hast thou spoken but thou doest euill euen more and more And as it was with this people so is our case when God at any time taketh vs in hand we speake him faire we humble our selues before him and stoope downe to take correction but eyther wee thinke the time too long while his rod is vpon vs and so wil prescribe him the time when to take it away or else we fret fume against him as doing vs wrong and wee sustained iniury at his hands But if we were acquainted eyther with our iniquity or with his mercy we would be otherwise minded and would confesse that all kindes of punishments are due to vs and indeed too little for vs yea we would easily perceiue that GOD is more sorrowfull for the correction which he is constrained to lay vpon vs then wee are greeued for the sinnes which wee haue committed against him If these things be found in vs if we acknowledge Gods mercy toward vs in our troubles if we call vpon him earnestly if we turne vnto him vnfainedly if we praise his name cheerefully and do not think our selues hardly dealt withall we shall not want comfort in our sufferings but be able to comfort both our selues and others Lastly it is our duty to bee patient vnder Vse 3 the crosse not to discourage our selues in our troubles whatsoeuer or how great soeuer they be nor to murmure and repine at them seeing our doctrine teacheth vs that he neuer powreth vpon vs all his wrath nor giueth vs a full cup to drinke vp euen the dregs thereof but tempereth seasoneth it in such sort that together with the affliction we may taste of his compassion Now to the end we may not despise the chastening of the Lord neyther faint when we are rebuked of him but may possesse our soules with patience and endure constant vnto the ende we are to consider three things First of all we must remoue all lets and impediments that may hinder vs in the course of patience Secondly we must learne and marke the motiues that may moue vs to the embracing of this Christian and heauenly vertue Thirdly we must examine prooue our selues whether this grace of GOD be in vs or not seeing vpon it as vpon a pillar resteth the life of our christian profession as we shall shew afterward Touching the first it standeth vs vpon to cut off and to cast away from vs all such things as may any way hinder our patience The Apostle writing to the Hebrewes and commending the constancy and patience of the Saintes draweth this exhortation Wherefore Heb. 12 1. let vs also seeing that wee are compassed with so great a Cloud of witnesses cast away euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on let vs runne with patience the race that is set before vs whereby he declareth that the meanes to hold on our course with patience is to remoue the lettes and impediments that stand in our way The first hinderance is selfe-loue The hinderances of patience the very bane and poyson of all good and holy duties Wee loue our selues and our skinne so well that we shrinke backe our shoulders and pull in our heads when any perill beginneth to hang ouer vs as if some storme and tempest were imminent and ready to fall vpon vs. So long as this thorne sticketh in the flesh wee cannot loue the Lord nor yeeld obedience vnto him in bearing the crosse Hence it is that our Sauiour Christ saith Math. 16. verse 24. If any man will follow me let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me It is to our nature and the naturall man hard to suffer who desireth to sleepe in an whole skinne The second hinderance is desire of reuenge For these two patience and reuenge are as contrary one to the other as peace and warre as fire and water as light and darkenesse If Ioseph had looked to the iniurious dealings of his brethren toward him and to their wicked purposes intended against him he would neuer haue saide vnto them Gen. 45 5 8. Bee not sad neyther greeued with your selues that yee solde me hither you sent me not hither but God who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and Ruler throughout all the Land of Egypt If Iob had rested and contented himselfe in the attempts and robberies of the Sabeans and Caldeans hee would neuer haue broken out into these wordes The LORD hath giuen Iob 1 15 17 21 and the LORD hath taken away It belongeth not vnto vs to take or to seeke reuenge but to commit our selues and our causes to the God of vengeance The third lette is infidelity when we haue in vs an vnfaithfull heart and cast off all confidence in God who maintaineth the lot of all those that trust in him and depend vppon him What was the cause that the Iewes suffering want in the wildernesse
heauen is not giuen but to those to whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 and 25.34 But election is not of works but of grace and therefore is called the election of grace Rom. 11.5 This appeareth Ephe. 1. Ephe. 1 5.6 He hath predestinated vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will c. No man could be saued except Christ had come and had satisfied the iustice of God for the sinnes of the world by his precious blood for there is no other name vnder heauen wherby we must be saued Act. 4.12 but all his benefites proceed from grace and the euerlasting loue of God toward vs as Ioh. 3. Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the word that hee hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life No man can be saued except he be effectually called to Christ and his Gospel outwardly by the word and inwardly by the Spirit but whence proceedeth this grace but from grace as the Apostle testifieth 2 Tim. 1. 2 Tim. 1.9 Gal. 1.6 He hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was No man can be saued except he hath faith in Christ for the iust shall liue by faith Hab. 2.4 and without faith it is vnpossible to please God Heb. 11. But from whence haue we faith By grace as the Apostle witnesseth Ephe. 2. Ephe. 2.8 By grace ye are saued through faith that not of your selues None can be saued except he be iustified as Psa 34.15 16. The eies of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open to their cry but the face of the Lord that is his anger and indignation is against them that do euill to cut off their remembrance from the earth But our iustification commeth from grace as Rom. 3. Rom. 3.24 We are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus No man can be saued except being iustified by faith he be also sanctified and renewed by the spirit of regeneration for except a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3. But whence haue we this but from the grace of God as the Apostle expresseth Tit. 3. Tit. 3.6 The bountifulnesse and loue of God our Sauiour toward man appeared and according to his mercy he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the holy Ghost which he shed on vs aboundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour No man can be saued without good workes and a carefull and constant endeuour to walke in them for we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath ordained that we should walke in them Ephe. 2.10 But how are wee inabled to performe them but by the grace and free gift of God as Ezek. 36. Eze. 36.26 ●● A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you an heart of flesh and I wil put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and ye shall keepe my iudgements and doe them The like may bee saide of remission of sinnes No man can be saued without continuall forgiuenesse of sinnes for into many sinnes and offences we fall daily Iam 3.2 But this is giuen vs through his grace onely as the Prophet teacheth Esay 43. Esai 43.25 I euen I am hee that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake that is for no deserts of thine but thorough grace and fauour and will not remember thy sinnes and Ephe. 1.7 We haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Lastly no man is saued except he perseuere and continue in faith in loue in Christ in repentance in Christ and in all good works as Matth. 24. he that endureth vnto the end he shall be saued and Reuel 2.10 Be thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life but from what root and fountaine proceedeth this gift and from whence hath it his beginning The Apostles and Prophets tel vs most plainely and directly as Iere. 32.39.40 Ier. 32.40 ● I will giue them one heart and one way that they may feare me for euer I wil put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from me Phi. 1.6.29 and 2.13 God that hath begunne his good worke in his Saints will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Now as we haue said of all the rest so we may say of eternall life Rom. 6.23 that it is the free gift of God and therefore all his giftes and our saluation come not from our our merits but from his mercies not from our deseruings in whole or in part but from his free fauour in Christ Iesus Let vs come to the reasons and consider Reason 1 aright the causes hereof First of all God wil haue the praise and glory of his owne works and will not giue and grant ouer the same to another But if the graces of his Spirit were well deserued of vs and not freely bestowed vpon vs wee had matter of reioycing in our owne selues and of boasting against God The Apostle hauing shewed that the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the Law saith Where is then the reioycing Rom. 3.27 and 4.2 It is excluded And touching Abraham th● father of the faithfull he sayeth If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce but not with God Likewise writing to the Ephesians chap. 2. By grace ye are saued through faith Ephe. 2.8.9 and that not of your selues it is the gift of GOD not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe So then he giueth all his gifts freely that he may haue the whole praise of his mercy But so much as we take to our selues so much hee loseth of his glory Reason 2 Secondly he knoweth we haue nothing of our owne we craue our daily bread and drinke at his hands We are beggers and destitute of all good things and neuer are able to supply our owne wants Our owne penury is such that we haue nothing to boast off but our misery pouerty blindnesse nakednes and wretchednesse We were saith the Apostle dead in trespasses and sinnes ●he 2.1 2. wherein in times past we walked according to the course of this world and after the Prince that ruleth in the ayre euen the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience We are vnable to thinke or to doe any thing it is God must worke in vs the will and the deed it is he must draw vs before we can runne after him or come
a thousand fold because he selleth it to Christ the best rewarder All men are content heere to sell to him that will giue most Christ is the best chapman the best buyer he giueth eternall saluation to vs. To draw vs from our sinnes that do vs the greatest hurt and bring infinite danger vpon soule and body he offereth to recompence vs an hundred fold more for withdrawing our hearts from our sinnes then the world can reward vs for the vsing of them Art thou not stedfast in religion but as a reede shaken with the winde sometimes carried one way and sometimes inclined another way Sell this thy doubting and wauering vnto Christ be no longer vnstable vnsetled and he will giue thee constancy to continue vnto the end Psal 68 28. and will strengthen that which he hath wrought in thee Art thou puffed vp with pride in apparell Sell this corruption and he will garnish thee with better garments he will cloathe thee with his innocency and righteousnesse that the filthinesse of thy nakednesse shall not appeare Art thou poore and needy Christ saith vnto thee The Foxes haue holes Math. 8 20. and the birds of the aire haue nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Wilt thou prouide for thy children thy houshold Dauid saith I was young and now am olde yet I haue not seene the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging bread Psal 37 25. Now in this selling of our sinnes and parting from them we must obserue these particulars First that it must not be for a short time or for a season but for euer We must not sell our sinnes for a season onely but renounce all right title interest and propriety in them we must depart from them with a full purpose and resolution neuer to take them vp againe neuer to practise them any more To sell any thing is to alienate the property of it from our selues Blessed are all such sellers In this point therefore we must not be lenders as they that chalenge the right of being owners but quite and cleane put from our selues all title to our former sinnes Many indeede lay them downe for a time as hypocrites doe wiping their mouthes with the harlot and returning to their vomite with the dogge Prou. 30 20. 2 Pet. 2 22. or to their wallowing in the mire with the swine Thus it fareth with such as come to the word and Sacraments of God with prophane and vnreformed hearts They seeme godly while they are in the Church but their righteousnesse is but as the morning dew they hang downe their heads as a bulrush for a time afterward they are as bad or worse then they were before This is nothing in the sight of GOD except we vtterly forsake our sinnes True it is the faithfull and godly man may fall into some sinnes which they haue forsaken Gen. 20 2. as Abraham did in denying his wife but they must do it as strangers to it not as owners of it for it is none of theirs they haue giuen ouer the vse of it and the right vnto it It is the man that is vnregenerate he may lay lawfull claime vnto it as for vs it is no more ours then the house that we haue solde and so alienated it from vs. Secondly there is another kinde of sale that is faulty and deceitfull which is when we are content to sell some of our sinnes but we will not sell all of them Some there are so couetous that they wil part from nothing they will sell nothing Though they be neuer so well offered they are so in loue with their owne faults and folly that they will keepe them still albeit to their infinite hindrance losse euen the losse of their soules Others are content to lend their sinnes but they will not leaue them they are willing to abstaine from them for a time but they will not renounce them for euer These are like the Israelites who albeit they were brought with a strong hand out of Egypt Numb 11 5. yet they had a minde to returne thither againe they thought vpon the fish which they did eate there and remembred the Cucumbers and the Melons the Leekes the Onions and the Garlicke these they lusted after with all their soule Or as Lots wife being deliuered out of Sodome as a firebrand out of the burning or as two legs or a piece of an eare out of the mouth of the Lyon Amos 3 12 and 4 11 euen a little remnant out of the common destruction of the City Gen. 19. Luke 17. she looked backe againe toward Sodome and hadde her minde there vpon such things as she had left behind which sheweth she had not sold all but as he that lendeth his goods looketh for them againe so would she faine returne to those things that yet shee retained in her heart If the case be better with vs and that our righteousnesse exceed these yet let vs not flatter our selues and deceiue our owne soules forasmuch as wee must goe farther and step many degrees beyond them For albeit we can be content to sell and to sell for euer yet there is more required of vs so that we may say with Christ One thing is wanting we must sell all and must keep back nothing We must not sell as Ananias Sapphira did they kept backe part of the price so many make sale but they are deceitfull Merchants they will not passe all but leaue out somewhat in the bargaine So do many deale doubly with God they desire to forgoe their sinnes but they will keepe somewhat But he cannot bee mocked or cousened of vs. We must renounce our sweet sinnes our profitable sins with all the appurtenances and dependances vnto them We must abstaine from all appearance of euill We must pull vp these weeds by the rootes that they grow not in the gardens of our heart againe God will haue all that is ours left or else hee accounteth nothing truely left Herod was cōtent to heare Iohn to feare him to reuerence him to do many things that he required Mat. 14 4. and to reforme many euils that he reproued and himselfe had practised but when he told him he must not marry his brothers wife he stopped his eares and would not heare he was determined to keep that one sin The hypocrites in Micah are ready to come before the Lord and to bow themselues before the most high Mic. 6 6 7 ● to offer Riuers of oyle and the fruite of their body for the sin of their soule neuerthelesse the Prophet telleth them that God liketh not of this bargaine inasmuch as he requireth of them to do iustly to loue mercy and to walke humbly with their God We are like vnto the young man mentioned in the Gospell whom Christ is saide to haue loued Mar 10 22 When he was bidden to sell all that he had he was sad at that saying and went away
family which was the Church of God not onely Isaac the sonne of promise in whose seede the nations of the earth should bee blessed but Ismael that was borne after the flesh that mocked his brother persecuted him that was borne after the spirit and in the end was cast out of the Church Gen. 21.9 10. Gen. 21.9.10 Gal. 4.30 Gal. 3.30 And as it was with the father so was it with the son for we see this in the children of Isaac who stroue and struggled within the wombe of their mother Gen. 25.22 and when the time of her deliuerance came she brought foorth not only Iacob Gen. 32.24 who afterward was sirnamed Israel obtaining a farre more honourable name then all the Affricani or Germanici or Asiatici among the Romanes whose praise was wholly from the earth and a blast of the mouthes of mortall man whereas he wrastled with God in Peniel and preuailed but also prophane Esau Heb. 12 16. so branded as it were in the forehead by a marke of yron by the Spirit of God who sold his birth-right for a messe of pottage For the children being not yet borne neither hauing done any good or euil that the purpose of God according to the election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said vnto her Iacob haue I loued but Esau haue I hated Rom. 9.11.13 Rom. 9.11.13 Samuel was a man that feared God exceedingly and gouerned the people vprightly so that he appealed to the people and to the consciences of all men to witnesse his innocency and integrity what wrong he had done them whose oxe he had taken and whose asse he had taken or at whose hand he had receiued any bribe to blinde his eyes 1 Sam. 12.3 1 Sam. 12.3 Yet when hee was old and made his sonnes iudges ouer Israel they walked not in his wayes but turned aside after lucre they tooke bribes and peruerted iudgement 1 Sam. 8.3 1 Sam. 8.3 Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart yet he had not onely Salomon that was beloued of God 2. Sam. 13.14 and 15.16 1 Kin. 1.5 but also incestuous Amnon ambicious Absolon and trecherous Adonijah the first defiled his owne sister and wrought folly in Israel the other two rebelled against their father and sought to take away the kingdome from him The like we might say of Eli who sate vpon a seat by a post of the Temple and by his residence on his charge and daily attendance to giue answeres to the people that came vnto him gaue testimony of his godlinesse yet his sonnes were the sonnes of Belial and knew not the Lord 1 Sam. 2.12 1 Sam. 2.12 To conclude for the examples that might be brought to this purpose are infinite who was more Godly then Iosiah who remembred his creator in the dayes of his youth and reformed religion betimes in his kingdome yet his children followed not the wayes of their father but did euill in the sight of the Lord according to all that their wicked forefathers had done 2 King 23.32 37. 2 King 23. Iere. 22.18 Iere. 22.18 To all these testimonies of Scripture if we adde also the testimony of common experience of all ages and times and places and persons we may gather that all the children of the faithfull haue not beene alwayes continued vnder the covenant of God nor followed the steppes of their faithfull parents to be like vnto them Now because this is a point diligently to Reason 1 be marked of vs let vs consider the reasons whereby it may be better confirmed vnto vs. First to shew the election of God which is the highest steppe of our saluation to stand vpon the free wil and purpose of God and not vpon ordinary succession or naturall generation or any causes in our owne selues to the end that all both parents and children should confesse that such as haue receiued this power and prerogatiue to beleeue in the Name of Christ Iesus are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1.13 Ioh. 1.13 This reason is noted concerning Iacob Rom. 9.11 that the purpose of God might stand according to election not of any workes but by him that calleth this was it that made difference betweene him and his brother Secondly that the best seruants of God Reason 2 may acknowledge that they can by no means conuey to their posterity the graces of God the gifts of sanctification repentance from dead workes which themselues haue receiued from God by supernaturall meanes and not by naturall they begetting naturally children of wrath as well as other men euen sinfull children tainted and defiled with originall corruption Adam begate Seth in his owne image that is in his naturall inclination to euil Gen. 5.3 Gen. 5.3 Hence it is that Dauid acknowledgeth he was shapen in iniquity and that in sinne his mother did conceiue him Psal 51. Psal 51. So then as the corne that is purged from the chaffe and made cleane bringeth vp corne againe together with the chaffe and as the father that is circumcised begetteth children that are vncircumcised so such parents as are sanctified themselues cannot leaue to their issue any sanctifying graces which must come onely from aboue from the Father of lights Reason 3 Thirdly God hath a purpose to shew his iustice in the destruction of the stubborne and disobedient as he doth his mercy in the saluation of those that are godly and obedient This is the reason rendred by the Spirit of God that albeit the sonnes of Eli were reproued by their father yet they hearkened not vnto his voyce because the Lord would slay them 1 Sam. 2.25 ● Sam. 2.25 God is determined to glorifie himselfe and his great Name in their destruction as they resolued and setled themselues their whole liues to dishonour him to their confusion Reason 4 Lastly the children euen of faithfull and godly parents doe oftentimes want the good meanes of a godly education and therefore no maruell if their hearts not being ploughed vp doe bring forth cockle and darnell in stead of good corne For the children of God doe themselues through humane frailty and infirmity sometimes faile in the performance of this duty They cocker them and are too choice and nice ouer them they dare not offend them or speake a word against them which ouerweening and suffering of them to haue their will too much God punisheth in their children whereof we haue a worthy example in Dauid toward Adonijah who exalted himselfe against his father saying I will be king and he prepared him chariots and horsemen and fifty men to runne before him The occasion of this presumption and rebellion is noted to be thus King 1.6 His father had not displeased him at any time in saying Why hast thou done so He failed toward him more then Eli did toward his sons for he said
be as a toy or trifle vnto vs yet at least let vs alwaies haue before vs the iudgement of God vpon our selues and be well assured that the wrongfull and vniust detaining of the Lords portion from the Lords Pastours shall bring such a curse vpon the rest of our substance that it shall be as the eares of corne that are blasted yea it shall kindle such a fire in the middest of our houses that it shall consume them with the timber thereof and the stones thereof The Lord hauing by the Prophet Malachi charged his people with spoiling him in tithes and offerings he addeth this in the next words Ye are cursed with a curse for ye haue spoiled me Mal. 3 9. euen this whole Nation The zeale that Dauid had for the house of GOD was very great so that he professeth it had euen eaten him vp Psal 69 and indeed he sheweth no lesse by his owne practise For when Araunah the Iebusite as a King in the willingnesse of spirit offered to giue to Dauid Oxen for burnt sacrifice and the threshing instruments for wood that he might build an altar and offer thereon he would not accept of it at his hands 2 Sam. 24 24. neither offer to the Lord his God that which cost him nothing as one esteeming in so doing the precious things of GOD light and of small account O how farre are these men from this heauenly affection of this holy seruant of God He accounted nothing too good to giue to God but they account it an happy turne if they might goe away scot-free and pay nothing at all toward the maintenance of the Ministery of the word It is strange to see how bountifull many are and euen prodigall that they care not what they waste and consume in following their owne pleasures pastimes and vanities of their corrupt hearts and yet how backward and pinching they are oftentimes for one halfepeny that is going from them and comming eyther toward the poore or toward the Minister But marke the secret and iust iudgement of God vpon them and tremble at it or rather feare him that inflicteth it and paieth them home in their owne kinde punisheth them proportionably according to their sinne for he detaineth his graces from them and sendeth them poore and leane soules that are ready to famish and perish through want of heauenly and spirituall food Two extremes touching the Ministers True it is there haue beene two extremes in the world both touching the estimation of their persons touching the compensation of their labours In former times the people did so highly account of them that they did sticke and cleaue too much to their persons and therefore Paul saith 1 Cor. 3 5 7. Who is Paul and who is Apollo but the Ministers by whom ye beleeued euen as the Lord gaue to euery man so then neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that gaue the increase but in our times there appeareth not such forwardnesse wherein they are contemned despised This is one extreme Likewise in former times they were ready to giue all and yet they thought al to be too little now they would willingly if they might take away all so that if some positiue lawes did not stay them and restraine them their consciences are so large How the Ministers are dealt withal that they would suffer them well enough to take the corne and feed the Minister with the straw they could be content to fill themselues with the Calues out of the stall and to eate the fattest of them and then to reserue the refuse for the Minister and to giue them the bones to gnaw vpon which they offer to their dogges and yet thinke that too good for them A goodly recompence for their great paines They are not ashamed to share the wool of the flocke among themselues and to cloathe themselues therewith and then to cast the tailes to their Teachers and to stoppe their mouthes with the dung and drauery that is good for nothing Thus are they affected toward religion and the promoting of the word and worship of God they care not though all rudenesse and barbarisme were among vs and the world were become a receptacle of all atheisme like a wildernesse ouergrowne with nettles bryars and all noysome weeds if so be they might get any aduantage by the ruine and ouerthrow of the Gospel In the late daies of superstition which many now liuing can yet remember the people generally were most bountifull to their sacrificing Masse-Priests who fed them with corne that is musty and mouldred or rather with huskes fitter for swine then for the seruants of God and yet they thought nothing too good for them nothing too much to bestow vpon them as the idolatrous Egyptians nourished their idolatrous Priests in the yeares of famine Gen. 47 Gen. 47 22. so that their Land was not set to sale hauing a portion assigned vnto them of Pharaoh and eating the portion which he gaue them Now our people are better taught yet they pay all duties and demands for the most part grudgingly and murmure at all things that go from themselues as if a man did cut a peece of flesh out of their sides or let them blood at the hart veine Then they had a zeale though not according to knowledge and a conscience though it were blinde now indeed by reason of the labours of the Ministers which stretch out their hands all the day long spend their strength among them they haue science but little or no conscience the Gospel would be welcome vnto them at least in word prouided that it do not any way displease them or disease them neither be costly or burdensome vnto thē otherwise if they must depart with any of their morsels they care not for it nor esteeme any thing of it nor will be ruled by it nor order their liues after it 33. Of Merari was the family of the Mahlites and the family of the Mushites these are the families of Merari 34. And those that were numbred of them according to the number of all the males from a moneth old and vpward were sixe thousand and two hundred 35 And the chiefe of the house of the families of Merari was Zuriel the sonne of Abihail these shall pitch on the side of the Tabernacle Northwards 36. And vnder the custody and charge of the sonnes of Merari shall be the boards of the Tabernacle and the barres thereof and the pillars thereof and the sockets thereof and all the vessels thereof and all that serueth thereto 37. And the pillars of the Court round about and their sockets and their pinnes and their cords 38. But those that encampe before the Tabernacle toward the East euen before the Tabernacle of the Congregation Eastward shall be Moses and Aaron and his sonnes keeping the charge of the Sanctuary for the charge of the children of Israel and the stranger that commeth nigh
When Christ came to Nazareth and as his custome was went into the Synagogue on the Sabboth day to preach the Gospel the eyes of all them that were in the Synagogue were fastened on him Our eyes either are not fastened on the speaker or if they be they are soone remoued Euery fancy caryeth vs away that we seeme to mind nothing lesse then the busines in hand or as if it were of so smal importance that it skilled not what we did or as if our friends that come into the Church were to be respected aboue God In the time place of Gods worship our minds ought to be setled and attentiue to the work we haue in hand that we should know no friends nor gaze after the commers in but cut off all lets and impediments that may hinder the sauing hearing of the word When we haue done all that we can laboured earnestly to gather home our wittes from wandering straying from the matter we are about we shall find all to be little enough but if we nourish occasiōs to withdraw our minds and are glad to catch hold of them when they are offered we shall neuer want occasions but an army of them will present themselues before vs and so intangle vs in their snares that we shall neuer profit our selues by the word nor suffer others that would to profit but hinder them greatly that desire to be better employed Our feet which haue brought vs into the house of God and set vs in our places ought there to rest vntill the time of our departure The Psalmist saith Psal 221.1 Our feete shall stand within thy gates O Ierusalem We must not therefore stirre vp and down and remooue out of our seates to the losse of Gods word wherunto we should attend It is noted to the commendation of king Iosiah when the Law was read in the eares of the people 1 Chr. 34.31 that he stood in his place and made a couenant before the Lord to walke after the Lord and to keepe his commandements This also shall be our praise and profite if in time of hearing the word of God we keepe in our places and abide in them without remoouing to other men We vse our hands to pull in others when we should vse our owne eares to hearken after the sound of the word we vse our tongues to talke vnto them whereas the fittest ornament that becommeth the Church is the silence of the hearer to giue audience to the speaker Neither let any obiect they can doe both attend the word and intend others heare and speake at one time and vse their eares and mouthes together For the one is an occasion to distract and disturbe the other Our minds are not infinite but finite we cannot occupy them about matters of a diuers nature but one obiect is ready to thrust the other out of place Besides the word is so precious that it worthily craueth all the powers and faculties of the soule Whosoeuer busieth himselfe in other things as remouing talking beckning nodding and such like gestures while he is hearing heareth but with halfe an eare if with halfe an eare whereas both are too little for so high a worke For as the Apostle speaketh of preaching the Gospel so we may say of the hearing of it 2 Cor. 2.16 Who is sufficient for these things The occasions that hinder the sauing hearing of the word are many in number I will reckon vp a few of them which all are to be cast away as clogges and impediments from vs and enemies to our attention The first is straying wandring thoughts whereas the powers of the soule should wait vpon the voyce of the Preacher and follow him whithersoeuer he goeth our mindes are musing vpon other things sometimes vpon our coffers sometimes vpon our pastures sometimes vpon our pastimes sometimes vpon our companions sometimes vpon our worldly businesse whereby it commetth to passe that being present we are absent being in the Church we are out of the Church being hearers we are no hearers For albeit we be present in body we are absent in mind and make our selues idol-hearers The Scripture noteth a kind of idle and Idoll Pastours that haue mouthes and speake not so the number is not small of idle and idoll hearers which haue eares and heare not who sit in their seats as images in glasse windowes or like to the pictures of dead men vpon their tombes bending their knees lifting vp their eyes holding vp their hands keeping silence and yet are neuer the wiser nor the better nor the holier So doe these liuing images they make shew of one thing with the outward man performe another with the inward We must desire of God to giue vnto vs constant steady and stayed hearts that hauing eares to heare wee may heare indeed The second vnseemely and vnsauory gesture which is another great impediment is a wandring eye gazing and gaping after euery occurrent and occasion that is offered It is wisely spoken of the wise Salomon The eyes of a foole are in the ends of the earth Pro 17.24 Eccle. 2.14 and on the other side he saith The wise mans eyes are in his head Take heed to this abuse which quickely draweth the heart after it The third hinderance is remoouing of the body not onely shifting and stirring of it vp and downe but arising out of our places and remoouing to place other or beckning with our hands or nodding with our heads which bewray manifestly that the mind is otherwise occupied and exercised then about the present worke which we would seeme to regard and ought indeed to attend One thing saith Christ is necessary Luk. 16 4● busying of our selues in other matters is not necessary but bringeth with it apparent hurt and detriment to the soule The fourth impediment is vnreuerent talking and vnciuil laughing as if the Temple of God which is the house of prayer were a Theater for sights or a place of mart and exchange for commodities where euery man might single out companions When any man heareth the voyce of a cryer ready to vtter a Proclamation in the name of the Prince he is ready to hold his peace and keepe silence The Ministers are as Gods Heraulds or as the voyce of a cryer Mar. 1.3 they come as sent on a message vnto vs from God and therefore all must hearken what they bring vnto vs and none withdraw his eare from hearing of the Law The fift is a secure and senselesse sleeping when we haue drowsie eares and cannot hold vp our heads an houre for some are no sooner in their seates but their hearts and bodies are asleepe Some men regard not the word at all they care not for it they will not come vnto it albeit it come vnto them and be brought home vnto their dores The world accounteth this no sinne at all or at lest a venial sinne because the lawes of men lay not hold on them
Lord plagued him and his house with great plagues vntill hee had restored her If a bare purpose to commit adultery and that ignorantly called for iudgment vpon an heathen king how much more shall the liuing in this sinne bring moe stripes vpon vs that liue in the light of the Gospel haue the truth plainely reuealed vnto vs forasmuch as he that knoweth his masters will doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes The third crying sinne is the oppression of such persons as are destitute of helpe which is ioyned with cruelty as for example such as are widdowes fatherlesse strangers poore innocents whose cry God hath promised to heare and to helpe them This we heard before out of the booke of Exodus If you afflict them in any wise and they cry at all vnto me Exo. 22 ●● Deut. 154. I will surely heare their cry and my wrath shall waxe hot and I will kill you with the sword and your wiues shall be widdowes and your children fatherlesse The Prophet Habakkuk prophesieth against such and painteth out their sinne in liuely colours chap. 2 9 11 12. Woe to him that coueteth an euill couetousnesse to his house that he may set his nest on high that he may be deliuered from the power of euill c. The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beame out of the timber shal answer it One shall say Woe to him that buildeth a Towne with blood another shall make answer and stablisheth a City by iniquity These oppressers do sucke out as it were the blood and life of the needy that haue none to whom to cry out for redresse but in the eares of the Lord. They dare not buckle and encounter with the mighty for as when the pot of earth and of yron meet together the earthen vessell is dashed in peeces so when the mighty and the needy striue the poore man striueth against the streame and bringeth much misery vpon himselfe Their helpe is onely in God the Father of all consolation If men stop their eares against them and will not rescue them out of the snare of the fowler and the net of the hunter let them abide vnder the shadow of the Almighty and shroud themselues vnder his wings who wil couer them with his feathers and heare them in their afflictions The last crying sinne is the poore labourers wages that are wrongfully and vniustly deteined this also cryeth aloud and neuer ceaseth vntill God hearken to the cry of it Many thinke it goods well gained that can be gotten from the poore but they shall finde it fret as a canker and consume as a moth the residue of their substance Hereunto commeth that law of the Lord Deut. 24 14 15. Thou shalt not oppresse an hired seruant that is poore needy c. thou shalt giue him his hire neither shall the Sunne goe downe vpon it for he is poore and setteth his heart vpon it lest he cry against thee vnto the Lord and it be sinne vnto thee Where wee see that this consideration of committing sinne against God ought to enter into vs to restraine vs from doing wrong against any especially the poore and needy brother or the stranger that is in the Land And to this purpose speaketh the Apostle Iames chap. 5 4. Behold the hire of the labourers which haue reaped downe your fields which is of you kept back by fraud cryeth the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of Saboth ●ld ●cry● Whereby it appeareth that there is a double kinde of crying one of iniquity and wickednes the other of the oppressed and afflicted If one of these ceasse yet the other shall neuer ceasse crying It falleth out oftentimes through the power and might of the greater sort that the poore dare not mutter or murmure if they begin to cry out and complaine their mouthes are soone stopped because their angry lookes make them afraid of their displeasure their seuere threatnings are too heauy a burden for them to beare but the other shall neuer giue ouer crying the sinne of the oppressors shall cry against them for vengeance as we see whē Abel could not cry yet his blood cried and was heard Sinne hath a voice more shrill then the sound of a Trumpet for that be it neuer so loud vanisheth in the aire cannot pierce the Clouds whereas the noise that issueth and proceedeth from sin out-reacheth the Clouds entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts What then Must we imagine that sinne is a bodily thing ●he cry ●e it that hath a mouth to speake a voice to cry No this cry is nothing else but the vnchangeable order of Gods iustice punishing sinne euen as at the instance and importunity of the innocent party a iust Iudge cannot but releeue the oppressed and punish the guilty and so doe iustice according to the office committed vnto him As if it were said blood will haue vengeance vncleannesse will haue vengeance oppression will haue vengeance fraud and deceit will haue vengeance God cannot but punish all these crying sins because he is a iust Iudge otherwise he were vnrighteous It is the nature of all sin to prouoke God to enter into iudgement with the sinner but especially these horrible and abhominable crimes mentioned before And as it is the nature of sinne to cry out to GOD for vengeance so it is the nature of God to punish sinne and to take vengeance of it Therefore they greatly deceiue both themselues and others that make him like to one of the gods of the Gentiles not to be offended at all or very little displeased with sinne and not to regard what men doe As if iustice were not essentiall vnto him or as if he could deny himselfe or as if he could ceasse to be God for as soone he may do these as the other But if it can in any sort agree to him ●ent Pa● in Gen. 4. that he can bee not willing to punish sinne then he can also not hate sinne forasmuch as to hate is nothing else but to be willing to punish reiect And if it be incident to him not to hate sinne then also it will follow that hee can loue and like sinne If he can loue sinne he can deny himselfe and destroy himselfe he can like of the workes of the diuell which is vnpossible to do and horrible blasphemy to affirme Lastly seeing whatsoeuer is of the nature of sinne is against God it directeth vs what Vse 5 we are to do when we haue any way sinned and desire to haue peace of conscience we must not goe to Saints or Angels whom wee haue not offended who are not able to be reuenged of vs but it is our duty to call for mercy at his hands against whom onely wee haue sinned and to seeke to be reconciled to him whose lawes we haue transgressed and who is able to cast body and soule
heed how we heare Luk. 8 whē we come into his house Christ teacheth that in hearing the Ministers we heare him and in refusing them we refuse him Math. 10. The Apostle commendeth the Galatians for the performance of this duty that they were as carefull to heare him as to heare Christ himselfe chap. 4 14. My tentation that was in my flesh ye despised not nor reiected but receiued mee as an Angell of God euen as Christ Iesus What could he say more for them Or how could he better set foorth their zeale then to giue this testimony of them that they accounted of him in regard of his paines in the Ministerie not as an ordinary man not as a faithfull Minister onely not as an elect Angell onely but as Christ himselfe the head of men and Angels whose person he did represent and whose Church he did feed with wholesome doctrine This example should all of vs follow this doth the Lord require of all true Christians that they receiue his Ministers as his Messengers and reuerence them as himselfe in regard of their doctrine and haue thē in singular loue for their workes sake This we see to be worthily practised by Cornelius as well became a religious Captaine and a deuout Christian Acts 10. ● 10 33. We are all heere present before God to heare all things that are commanded thee of God Loe how great the dignity of the Ministery of the Church is loe how great the excellency of the Ministers of God is we must heare them as if we heard God forasmuch as they are sent of him they preach his word they deliuer no more then they haue receiued and he hath commanded them to publish it in his Name But alasse it is most horrible to behold the contempt that they suffer and the basenesse that is cast vpon this calling which is one of the causes of those greeuous plagues and iudgements that are brought vpon the world The disgrace and ignominy vnder which they lie greeueth the hearts of all the godly and not only greeueth their hearts but pierceth the Clouds and doth not onely pierce the Clouds but reacheth vp to heauen and doth not onely reach vp to heauen but entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts and not onely entreth into his eares but doth stretch it selfe vnto God himselfe and returne vpon Christ the Prince of all Prophets which ought indeed to pierce and enter into the hearts of all prophane persons and serue to terrifie all those that reuile them and speake all manner of euill against them for the truths sake Let vs remember the saying of the Apostle touching the Thessalonians 2 Thess 2 13. When ye receiued the word of God which yee heard of vs ye receiued it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that beleeue This is a worthy commendation of this Church and a notable example which we ought to set before vs to follow it so that we must heare the word as Gods word whose force it carrieth with it Many heare it that do not heare it as Gods word It is a rare thing to finde such an hearer Some heare and then rage and storme when they are reproued Acts 7 57 17 18 and 22 23. Others refuse to heare at all and thinke such as make conscience of hearing to be more curious precise then there is cause Others embrace the word but yet not as the word as we see in Papists and hypocrites The Papists affirme that the Scripture or word written hath no authority in it selfe except it be allowed approued of the Church What other thing is this then to embrace the word but not as the word The hypocrites also doe not receiue the word with due reuerence nor expresse it in true obedience as their life doth witnesse against them These haue men onely in their thoughts and haue not God in their sight they may be said after a sort to receiue the word but they cannot be said to receiue it altogether as the word For if they did seriously and earnestly acknowledge it to bee of God and to haue him the author of it they would not leade their liues in that loose manner that they do Thirdly it reproueth those that contemne the doctrine of the Gospel The third reproofe for the poore and obscure conditiō of the Ministers that preach it For what I pray you was the estate of the Apostles Were they rich and renowned in the world Peter and Iohn going vp together into the Temple at the ninth houre of praier answered the lame man that expected to receiue something of them Siluer and gold haue I none Acts 3 6. Were they much befriended applauded of men The Apostle declareth and complaineth that all men had forsaken him and no man stood with him 2 Tim. 4 16. And Christ himselfe foretelleth that they should bee hated of all men for his Names sake Math. 10 ver 22. Were they honoured and magnified aboue others Or did they liue at ease and in pleasure Paul spareth not to paint out their life 1 Cor. 4 9 I thinke that God hath set foorth vs the Apostles last as it were appointed to death for wee are made a spectacle vnto the world and to Angels and to men Were they clad in purple and fared they deliciously euery day Did they dwell in gorgious houses and Princely pallaces In the words following he telleth vs how it fared with him and the rest of his brethren they were not attired in soft raiment they did not surfet through excesse Verse 12. but euen vnto this present we both hunger and thirst and are naked and are buffeted and haue no certaine dwelling place And yet notwithstanding these manifold aduersities and trials the Sonne of God pronounceth of them He that heareth you heareth me and iudgeth the wrongs to be done to himselfe which they suffer Let not vs therefore require honour or riches or glory or pompe or outward dignity in the Ministers of the Gospel but rather consider the goodnesse of God toward vs who knowing that we are not able to beare and abide his infinite Maiesty hath instituted the Ministery of his word that by men equall vnto vs and like to our selues he might teach vs his will and instruct vs in his word We shewed before that when the Lord himselfe in his owne voice preached to Israel at Mount Sinai they were so terrified and afraid that they asked for Moses that he might speake vnto them If the matter stood thus with them that had seene the wonders of God in the Land of Egypt and not many daies before had passed the red sea as it were by dry land what shall befall vs if he should vtter to vs his terrible voice as a most mighty thunder If then we heare patiently and obey readily the word that is brought vnto vs by weake and fraile man it
a sinne as to iustifie the wicked Wee ought none of vs to doe that which is abhominable in the sight of God the which he greatly abhorreth A Iudge may offend two waies both by oppressing the innocent and by deliuering the guilty person by pronouncing the transgressor righteous and the righteous man a transgressor This is set downe Prou. 17 verse 15. He that iustifieth the wicked and hee that condemneth the iust euen they both are abhomination vnto the Lord. Such a one spareth the wolfe and hurteth the lambes turneth the edge of the sword vpon the godly and the backe of it toward the wicked and vngodly Reason 4 Fourthly God would haue no man put to death without witnesses For wherefore doth he often establish this in the Law that the witnesses shall come face to face be heard but that no man should perish beeing innocent Wherefore doth hee ordaine that one onely witnesse shall not be taken as sufficient but that hee would haue the cause cleered by moe witnesses This is the decree of God Deut. 17 verse 6. At the mouth of two or three witnesses shall he that is worthy of death die but at the mouth of one witnesse shall he not dye Hee will not by any meanes haue innocent blood shed Reason 5 Fiftly innocent blood cryeth to heauen for vengeance and shall not suffer him that sheddeth it to escape It is one of the crying sinnes as wee shewed before in this chapter which ascend vp and enter into the eares of the Lord of hosts There is indeed no sinne so little but commeth vp in remembrance before him against whom it is committed his eyes see and his eares heare all the workes of men 〈◊〉 4 13. which are all naked and open before his eyes and nothing kept from his knowledge neuerthelesse to note out the horrour and hainousnesse of some sinnes in comparison of others the Scripture teacheth that they cry vnto the Lord. Moses to shew the greatnes of Caines sinne committed against his naturall brother bringeth in God speaking vnto him Behold the voice of thy brothers blood cryeth vnto me and to shew the barbarous cruelty and inhumanity of the vexing and exacting Egyptians whereby they ouercharged and ouerburdened the people of God he saith to Moses I haue seene I haue seene the oppression of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry because of their Taske-masters Exod. chap. 2 verse 9. Thus also he speaketh to Samuel at another time of their oppression by the Philistims I haue looked vpon my people and their cry is come vnto me 1 Sam. chap. 9 verse 16. Thus God heareth the cry of the afflicted Iob chap. 34 verse 28. They haue caused the voice of the poore to come vnto him and he hath heard the cry of the afflicted This is the reason vrged by the Lord himselfe Exod. chap. 23 verse 7. And Ieremy protesteth and professeth as much to the face of his enemies and persecutors that sought his destruction chapter 26 verse 14 15. As for mee behold I am in your hands doe with mee as yee thinke good and right but know yee for certaine that if yee put mee to death yee shall surely bring innocent blood vpon your selues and vpon this Citty and vpon the inhabitants thereof for of a truth the Lord hath sent me vnto you to speake all these words in your eares Thus we see how God sheweth himselfe an enemy against all wrong iudgements and he will not suffer them to escape vnpunished but will enter into iudgement with such partiall and corrupt Iudges The vses heereof are to bee marked diligently Vse 1 of vs. First this serueth to reprooue all rashnesse headinesse and heedlesnesse of such as make haste to inflict punishment before an exact knowledge of the fact and fault Such are no better then cruell wolues that seeke and sucke the blood of the innocent lambes This was the sinne of wicked Iezabel that caused Naboth to bee stoned to death 1 Kings 21. We reade in the Acts of the Apostles how the chiefe Chaptaine commanded that Paul should be scourged that he might know wherefore they cryed so against him Acts 22 verse 24. Heere is a preposterous course to punish first and to enquire of the fault afterward so that the punishment shall be certaine whiles the offence is vncertaine But this is the lot and euer hath beene of Gods children they are punished heere oftentimes as malefactors and euill dooers and their enemies both rage and rush most furiously vpon them that doe possesse their soules with patience and doe not by violence resist against them They are more hungry then Beares more mercilesse then Tygers more rauenous then Wolues more greedy then Lyons more fierce then dogges against them they shew no mercy and they extend no compassion at all toward them They hate them in their hearts they slander them with their tongues they smite thē with their fists they grin and grinde their teeth at them they nod at them with their heads they circumuent them by fraud they oppresse thē with sorrow they take oftentimes their liues from them Thus did the persecuters deale with Ioseph with Ieremy with Dauid with Daniel with Paul with Silas with Iohn Baptist with Stephen with Iames with Peter and many others But God will in the end make their innocency knowne and the iustice of their cause manifest to all men It is noted by the Euangelist touching Pilate that albeit hee confessed hee found no fault at all in Christ yet hee would scourge him let him go He was the Iudge yet by his owne mouth he may be iudged himselfe that adiudged him worthy to be scourged that was vnworthy to receiue a stripe in whom he could finde nothing blame worthy He called together the high Priests and the Rulers and people and saide vnto them Ye haue brought this man vnto mee as one that peruerted the people and behold I haue examined him before you and haue found no fault in this man of those things whereof ye accuse him no nor yet Herod for I sent you to him and loe nothing worthy of death is done of him I will therfore chastise him and let him loose Luke 23 14 15 16. And as it befell the Master so the lotte fell vnto the seruants that they might drinke of the cup that he dranke off and be baptized with the baptisme wherewith hee was baptized For the Apostles were diligent in preaching Christ and teaching in his Name so that their enemies were not able to withstand the Spirit of God that spake in them and albeit they oftentimes examined them yet their best arguments and cheefest reasons and strongest motiues to put them vnto silence were beatings scourgings threatnings and imprisonments for otherwise they were not able to deale against them Hence it is that when Gamaliel exhorted them to take heed to themselues Acts 4 35. what they intended to doe touching those men to refraine from them
to the people of God and to prouide for them in their necessities and to deliuer them from the oppressions of the mighty in consideration whereof he is bold to intreate the Lord to thinke vpon him for good according to all that he had done for his people Neh. 5 19. So is it lawfull for vs to craue of God to be mindfull of vs in goodnesse according as we haue done to others and dealt toward them If we remember God we may be assured that he will remember vs. If we be carefull to heare his word he is carefull to heare our prayers according to his promise He will returne like for like care for care hearing for hearing and blessing for blessing If we be carefull to heare his voyce his eares are open to heare vs and if we blesse him he will blesse vs. And as he hath promised to heare them that heare him so hee hath threatned not to heare them that will not heare him Prou. 1 28 29. They shall call vpon me but I will not answer they shall seeke me early but they shall not finde me for that they hated knowledge and did not chuse the feare of the Lord. And to this purpose speaketh the Lord in the Prophets Micah 3 4. Zach. 7 13. They shall cry vnto the Lord but he will not heare them hee will euen hide his face from them at that time as they haue behaued themselues ill in their doings This is a greeuous threatning and full of all discomfort It is as it were the top of all misery to haue God stop his eares against vs. To liue in this sort is worse then a thousand deaths If a Subiect had a petition to put vp to the Prince and knew he would turne away his face from him how neare would it goe vnto him and how would he bee discouraged Or if a childe knew that whatsoeuer he asked of his father should be denied vnto him except he obeyed his father in that whereunto he exhorted him I suppose it would stirre vp the sonne to doe the will of his father In like manner it ought to be with euery one of vs. Seeing God hath bounded and limited his hearkning vnto our voyce when we speake vnto him with this condition that wee hearken vnto his voyce when he speaketh vnto vs it ought to moue vs to heare his word with feare reuerence and to expresse the power of it in obedience that so we may comfort our selues with assurance of Gods mercy toward vs in regard of our zeale and affection toward him Thirdly from hence we may learne to bee Vse 3 patient vnder the punishments that do befall vs. For seeing God will punish vs in the same manner that we offend when we feele perceiue that he meeteth with vs and hath found vs out and that we can no longer be hidden nor our actions from his eyes let vs stoope downe vnder his hand and hold our peace because he hath done it Let vs not fixe and fasten our eyes vpon the earth beneath nor dwell vpon the meditations of mens dealings toward vs but lift our hearts vnto God who alwaies punisheth vs iustly he being the righteous Iudge of all the world to whom is incident no vnrighteousnesse If we bee slandered and defamed by others let vs consider whether we haue not done the like to others and therefore the Lord recompenceth vs in the same kinde and as it were taketh our feet in the snare that we haue laid for others and casteth vs into the same pit which we digged for them as it fell out to Haman who was hanged vpon his owne gallowes so that as we haue wronged others it falleth out that we must receiue wrong from others This is the vse that Salomon pointeth out in the booke of Ecclesiastes Eccl. 7 21 ● Take no heed vnto all wordes that are spoken lest thou heare thy seruant curse thee for oftentimes also thine owne heart knoweth that thou thy selfe likewise hast cursed others Let vs therefore be patient in iniuries let vs not slander them that slander vs nor reuile them that reuile vs nor speake euill of them that speake euill of vs. Moses is commended that when Miriam and Aaron rose vp against him and moued sedition by reason of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married he possessed his soule with patience and bare all their reproches with meeknesse of spirit for hee was very meeke aboue all the men that were vpon the face of the earth Numb 12 3. Numb 1● 1 It is said of Saul being made King of Israel that when the children of Belial saide How shall this man saue vs and they despised him in their hearts he gaue them not taunt for taunt nor rebuke for rebuke hee commanded not the standers by to take away their liues albeit they deserued it and he had power in his hand to do it but he held his peace 1 Sam 10 1● and passed by their reproches as a blinde man that saw them not as a deafe man that heard them not and as a man without sense that felt them not When Shemei reproched Dauid and cursed him with an horrible curse Dauid with patience abstaineth and with perswasion refraineth others from reuenge that offered themselues to take off the head of that dead dogge so that he saide Let him alone 2 Sam. 16 ●2 it may bee that the Lord will locke vpon mine affliction and requite good for his cursing this day Hee could haue returned vpon him curse for curse nay wounds for words but he knew well enough and teacheth it to others in another place that hee which loueth cursing the same shall come vpon him Ps 10● 1● ● and hee that delighteth not in blessing it shall be farre from him because as he cloathed himselfe with cursing like as with his garment so it shall come into his bowels like water and like oyle into his bones It is well said of an heathen man Sent●● Feare none more then thine owne conscience This is the right and ready way to get a good name and to keepe it being gotten to iudge of others with right iudgement and christian equity carrying a charitable opinion of euery one thinking well of them speaking the best of them and couering the multitude of infirmities as Shem and Iaphet did the nakednesse of their father This is true charity indeed and heereby we may assure our owne hearts that wee loue not in word and tongue onely but in deed and truth The counsell of the Prophet is good wholesome to this purpose Psal 34.12 13 14 15. What man is hee that desireth life and loueth many daies that he may see good Keepe thy tongue from euill and thy lippes from speaking guile depart from euill and doe good seeke peace and pursue it The reason is because the eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto their cry whereas the face of the Lord
that no man can accuse them or witnesse against them or any way suspect them yet notwithstanding God will finde them out and arraigne them at the barre of his iudgment seate This we shall see proued vnto vs from the beginning When Adam had sinned he called him conuinced him pronounced sentence against him and caused it to bee executed Genesis chap. 3.9 We see this in the murther of Abel committed by his naturall or rather vnnaturall brother the which albeit it were done out of the sight of man so that he presumed to deny it and conceale it yet he calleth him to a reckoning for it What hast thou done the voyce of thy brothers blood cryeth vnto me from the ground Gen. 4.10 Dauids secret whoredome and shedding of innocent blood were committed closely yet they were discryed and discouered by God 2 Sam. 12.12 Thou hast done it secretly but I will doe this thing before all Israel and before the Sunne So the secret idolatry of the Iewes is shewed to the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 8.6 Son of man seest thou what they do euen the great abominations that the house of Israel committeth heere that I should goe farre from my Sanctuary but turne thee yet again and thou shalt see greater abominations When the wise men that were come out of the East began to enquire after the king of the Iewes that was new born Herod being troubled at this news and fearing the losse of his kingdome sent them to Ierusalem to seeke him and willed them when once they had found him to come and bring him word that he might goe and worship him Matth. 2.8 but God warneth the wise men that he sought to kill him he hid the secrets of his heart but God can reueale them no man could discerne what he meant howbeit God law into him and his counsels well enough Whereby we see that sinnes hidden from the face of men and neglected by them are found out and to be accounted for before God forasmuch as all secret things shall bee brought to iudgement whether they be good or euill Reason 1 And as by the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word must be established 2. Cor. 13.1 so by the force of two or three reasons shall this doctrine be confirmed First it is vnpossible that any thing in heauen or earth should hide vs or our workes from the knowledge of the Lord our God There is neither darkenesse of the night nor secresie of place nor cunning deuises and fetches of politicke men can helpe vs or conceale vs. This the Prophet teacheth Psal 139.9 10 11. Whither shall I goe from thy spirit or whither shall I fly from thy presence if I ascend vp into heauen thou art there if I make my bed in hell behold thou art there If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the sea euen there shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand shall hold me If I say Surely the darknesse shall couer mee euen the night shall be a light about me c. There is nothing can hinder his sight Reason 2 Secondly it is the office of God and an essential property attributed vnto him to be the searcher of hearts When men before the flood had corrupted themselues their works and the earth it selfe vpon which they went and walked it is said God saw that the wickednesse of man was great in the earth and that euery imagination of the thoughts of his heart was onely euill continually Gen. 6.5 This is it which Dau●d layeth before his sonne Salomon 1 Chron. 28.9 The Lord searcheth all hearts and vnderstandeth all the imaginations of thoughts This also the Prophet Ieremy setteth downe chap. 17.10 I the Lord search the hart I try the reines euen to giue euery man according to his wayes and according to the fruit of his doing The Scripture is full of such testimonies 2 Sam. 16.7 Psal 7.10 and 26.2 and 139.13 Ierem. 11.20 and 20.12 This is an attribute proper vnto God Thirdly the most deepe and hidden things Reason 3 that mans eye cannot search into are notwithstanding knowne vnto God When no man with all his cunning can diue or delue so deep as into the darke corners of the earth yet the eye of God pierceth into them as Pro. 15.11 Hell and destruction are before the Lord how much more then the hearts of the children of men Who can pierce so farre as to looke into the heauens or who can behold the things laid vp in the center of the earth who can discend into the bottome of the sea to descouer the treasures that are hidden in the waters or what man knoweth the things of a man 1 Cor. 2 1● saue the spirit of man that is within him so the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God He is able to make all darkenesse to be light and all secret things to be open and manifest to the world Fourthly can any thing bee hidden from Reason 4 him of whom they had their being of whom they were created of whom they haue whatsoeuer is in them is not the worke knowne to the workeman the art to the artificer and the pot to the potter He seeth not only neere but a farre off he knoweth our downe sitting and our vprising he vnderstandeth our thoughts that we conceale from others he is acquainted with all our wayes our substance is not hid from him he couered vs in our mothers wombe Heereupon the Prophet saith Psal 94.9 He that planted the eare shall he not heare he that formed the eye shall he not see he that teacheth man knowledge shall he not know the Lord knoweth the thoughts of man that they are vanity Seeing then God giueth life and being to euery creature and that they haue receiued breath and motion from him we may conclude that the most secret things committed in the most secret corners of the world are well knowne to God and cannot be hidden from him This principle being strongly confirmed Vse 1 and so carrying authority to our conscien●es let vs see what vses may be made of it First seeing our secrets are not secrets with God and our counsels are not counsels to him let vs be perswaded of this most certaine trueth and haue it written in our hearts that all men in this world their hearts their thoughts their dealings their desires their delights their words their actions and all things belonging vnto them are perfectly known vnto the Lord according to the saying of the Apostle Hebrewes chapter 4. verse 14. There is not any creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and opened vnto the eyes of him with whom we haue to doe It is true indeed if men were asked whether they beleeue that GOD is present euery where to behold all things that we doe they would freely frankly confesse it with their mouths be ready to seal vnto it with their tongues It
which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry by reason of their Taske-masters for I know their sorrowes and I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hands of the Egyptians c. He is not ignorant what teares we shead but keepeth them in a bottle of remembrance he knoweth what prayers we poure out for they ascend vp into his presence as incense hee heareth the sighes and grones that come from vs for he vnderstandeth that language The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what wee should pray for as we ought 〈◊〉 8.26 but the spirit it selfe maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And albeit he hold his peace for a time and seeme to winke at their cruell practises as if he saw them not or heard them not or knew them not yet when the appointed time commeth he will no longer keepe silence but shew himselfe to be the deliuerer of his people and the reuenger of his and their enemies We saw before out of the booke of Exodus what mercy he promiseth to his people being in misery He had a feeling of their afflictions and after a sort felt what they felt Behold what words of comfort sweeter then the hony the holy combe he vttreth I haue seene I haue heard I know I am come downe He saw their afflictions he heard their cryes he hath knowne their sorrowes he came downe to deliuer them from their persecuters If the Lord had vsed only one of these words I haue surely seene the affliction of my people it had beene as balme to refresh vs it had beene as marrow vnto our bones and as wine and oyle powred into our wounds but when he vseth foure words it is more then a doubling and a trebling of our comfort to asswage the bitternesse of the crosse so that albeit it be more sharp then vineger more bitter then gal wormwood yet they are sufficient to allay the one the other Reasons why God holdeth his peace in our afflictions God doth sometimes after a sort hide himselfe and hold his peace turne his back from vs whē we are in trouble to manifest the more the greatnesse of his power and mercy in our deliuerance to stirre vs vp to prayer and calling vpon him for helpe to teach vs to remoue all confidence and trust in our selues or in the sons of men to weane vs from the loue of the world to encrease our zeale to try our faith and patience and to harden the hearts of our enemies that he may gaine glory to his great name in their destruction He doth not delay to helpe vs and put off the time to deliuer vs because he hath forsaken vs or forgotten vs it is not because he is not able to restore vs it is not because he cannot represse and quaile the fury of our enemies it is not because he hath cast off the care of vs forasmuch as he knoweth what they practise and what we suffer according to the heauenly saying of the Psalmist Psal 34.11 The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto their cry but the face of the Lord is against them that doe euill to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth Let vs therefore comfort our selues in God while we finde no comfort at all in men Let vs put on the armour of prayer and teares these are our spirituall weapons strong to throw downe mountaines and mighty to preuaile against the greatest tyrants that seeke to deface the trueth and destroy the Church The weapons of the Church are not swords and staues or speares and shields or munition and multitudes of men but as the warfare of it is spiritual and that it wrastleth not against flesh and blood but against principalities powers against the rulers of the darkenesse of this world and against spiritual wickednes in high places so the weapons thereof must be spirituall answerable vnto the battell which we are to make and fit to encounter such aduersaries as oppose against vs. To this purpose doth the Prophet bring in the Church putting their confidence in him Lord in trouble haue they visited thee Esay 26.16 17 they powred out a prayer when thy chastening was vpon them like as a woman with child that draweth neere the time of her deliuery is in paine and cryeth out in her pangs so haue we beene in thy sight O Lord. The like we see in Iehoshaphat when many enemies came against him and his people to cast them out of the possession which God had giuen them to inherit he rested not in his owne power neither trusted he in his owne policy but dependeth vpon God and flyeth vnto him saying O our God wilt thou not iudge them for we haue no might against this great company that commeth against vs neither know we what to do but our eyes are vpon it hee and all Iudah stood before the Lord with their little ones their wiues and their children 2. Chron. 20.12.13 On the other side as this consideration of Gods infinite knowledge and discouery of all secrets ministreth exceeding comfort to the godly that lie vnder the crosse and putteth them in assured hope of future deliuerance so it serueth as a terrour to all their enemies that oppresse them and trouble them they shall not escape him that seeth their counsels though they digge neuer so deepe to hide them hee heareth their slanders and reprochful taunts though they seeke to couer them neuer so cunningly and secretly God that is omnipotent cannot be vniust he will reward euery one according to his works and therefore Elihu saith in the booke of Iob His eyes are vpon the wayes of man and hee seeth all his goings there is no darkenesse nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselues Iob 34.21 22. They thinke they goe closely to worke but alas poore blinde men they see not that God seeth them They thinke they haue a vizard ouer their faces and cannot bee knowne whereas their foule offences are written in their forehead They thinke they are in the darke and couered with the night whereas the light shineth round about them more cleerly then the Sun at noone day This ought to strike a feare of Gods power and presence into the hearts of all wicked men No man is so impudent and past shame to commit euill in the Magistrates sight and before his eyes whom he knoweth to bee endued with authority armed with power and to beare the sword of iustice in his hand to cut off all euill doers Shall wee then dare doe that before God which we dare not doe before men or shall we presume to doe that in his sight which we are ashamed or afraid to doe in the presence of mortall man He is all an eye to see all he is all an eare to heare all he is all an heart to vnderstand all Or shall we be so
when we striue to exceede and excell our selues and haue bent all our strength to serue the Lord in speciall manner yet we haue need to aske pardon and confesse that wee are vnprofitable seruants Wee are neuer so perfect but we are stained with some imperfections we cannot be so pure but we are defiled with some impurity and contagion of sinne so that howsoeuer wee desire chearefully and constantly to please God in all things yet euill is present with vs Rom. chapt 7. verse 21. and sinne doth easily beset vs Hebrues chap. 12. verse 1. so that we all stand in need of the pure and perfect sacrifice of Christ the author and finisher of our Faith without which wee cannot be accepted of God the Father We must therefore from hence learne to acknowledge that albeit wee desire to offer vp our selues wholly vnto him yet we can merit nothing at his hands nor attaine vnto perfection but are guilty of his iudgements if hee enter into iudgement with vs Psalme 143 2. For in his sight shall no man liuing be iustified It is the sacrifice of Christ for which hee is well pleased from the merite thereof commeth our merit our merit is his merit and the Fathers mercie He knew no sinne neither was any guile found in his mouth Esay 53. And hence it is that we shall be acquitted and discharged of sinne so that none shall bee able to lay any thing to our charge and though we bee in our selues debters yet hee hath payed our debt and set vs free to whome bee all glorie and prayse for euermore Amen 22 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 23 Speake vnto Aaron and vnto his sonnes saying On this wise ye shall blesse the children of Israel saying vnto them 24 The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee 25 The Lord make his face shine vpon thee and be gracious vnto thee 26 The Lord lift vp his countenance vpon thee and giue thee peace 27 And they shall put my name vpon the Children of Israel and I will blesse them Touching the vow of the Nazarites the first part of the Chapter wee haue spoken hitherto howbeit of vowes in generall wee shall haue fitter occasion to intreate in the twenty one and the thirtieth chapters following Now we come to the second part of the Chapter containing the forme of blessing the people prescribed vnto the Priestes from the mouth of God But first let vs see the meaning and the method of the Words Touching the Blessing obserue that sometimes God is saide to blesse man sometimes man to blesse God and sometimes one man to blesse another God blesseth man when he bestoweth good things vpon vs which we want and remooueth euill things from vs which wee feele The good things which hee giueth vs are partly earthly and partly heauenly and in both hee blesseth vs. Touching earthly we reade in the word Genesis chap. 24. verse 35. where Abrahams seruant sayeth that GOD had blessed his Maister greatly and he was become great then hee telleth wherein Hee hath giuen him Flockes and Heards and Siluer and Gold and men Seruants and maide Seruants and Camels and Asses The like we see Deut. 28 3 4 5. Blessed in the Citie blessed in the field blessed in the fruite of thy bodie c. Touching heauenly it is saide Hee blesseth with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things thorough Christ Ephes 1 3. Againe somtimes man blesseth God when he praiseth God in word and deed with mouth hart and returneth thanksgiuing to him both for bestowing vpon vs his blessings and remouing from vs his blessings When thou hast eaten and art full Deuter. 8 10. then thou shalt blesse the Lord thy God for the good land which he hath giuen thee So Psal 103 1. Luke 1 68. Now this our blessing of God is nothing but an effect of the former For as we loue God because hee loued vs first so wee blesse God because he blessed vs first We can neuer returne him the glory but from a feeling of his owne mercy We cannot open our mouth to praise him except he opened his hands to blesse vs. Genes 14 19. Lastly man is said to blesse man we blesse one another when wee pray one for another Rom. 12 14. Blesse them which persecute you which is expoūded by the words of Christ Mat 5 44. Pray for them which despitefully vse you To apply these things to our present purpose we must marke that in this place the word is thrice vsed and to be vnderstoode diuersly for when the Lord commanded Aaron and his sons to blesse the people the meaning is they must pray for them and heartily desire good things vnto them Again when it is said The Lord blesse thee and when the promise is made I will blesse thee the meaning is the Lord wil bestow all good things on thee and take away all euil things from thee so that they blessed the children of Israel by desiring and praying God blessed them by giuing and bestowing Moreouer the priests of God are taught to craue that God would make his face shine Obiection lift vp his countenance vpon the people It may be asked hath God any face visage or countenāce I answer these things are ascribed to God Answ not properly but for our better capacity vnderstanding It was the error of the Anthropomorphites who because the Scriptures speak of the eies eares mouth hands heart head and armes of God did therfore imagine that God is like vnto vs and had a bodily shape whereas he is a Spirit as also he wil be worshipped in spirit and truth Iohn 4 24. This the Apostle teacheth The Lord is that spirit and where the spirit of the lord is 2 Cor. 3 17. there Obiect 2 is liberty But these heretikes obiect that God made man in his owne image and likenesse Gen. 1. This is true Answer but their consequent is false For we are said to be created according to the Image of God not because he hath any bodily shape for that is against his nature who is infinit and against his word which teacheth the contrary The essence of God is spiritual inuisible and most simple he is a iust and mercifull God loue it selfe holines it selfe goodnes it self In these we were made like vnto God in these we resemble him beare his image being created in righteousnes and true holines Ephes 4 24. True it is some place this image of God in dominion ouer the creatures others in his immortall soule onely others in reason by which we are distinguisht from beasts but these let passe the principall point which the heathen man saw when hee said Tully The vertue which is in a man came neerer to the similitude of God thē the figure or outward shape What then can be the shadow of such a substance and the image of such a nature and the resemblance of such a power and perfectnes but that which the
doth yet nothing lesse then pray Many a Minister that getteth vp into the Pulpit doth nothing lesse then preach Many people that come with eares to heare do nothing lesse thē heare and to eate the Supper of the Lord that do nothing lesse then partake of his holy table Wherefore wee must be present in minde at holy things as well as in body or else our presence is no better then an absence Secondly we must yeeld to this principle that it is both safer and better to conceiue a prayer then to reade a prayer because it keepeth our mindes constant and freeth vs from wandring thoughts that carry vs oftentimes from the matter which we should altogether minde For we are ready to goe astray and to set our hearts vpon other things whereas by this meanes they are kept close and stedfast to the requests which we make Againe a man may reade a praier that neuer vnderstandeth it or conceiueth the meaning of it and therefore it is more profitable to poure out our petitions our selues then to haue our petitions drawne by the hand of another No man can haue such a feeling of our owne wants as our own necessities will make vs able to expresse neither can conceiue such ioy and gladnesse for blessings receiued as the experience in our selues of Gods benefits will affoord vnto vs. Thirdly no man must condemne such as do conceiue themselues formes of praiers call them conceited praiers or fantasticall praiers These are enuious persons who enuy in others the graces of God cannot abide that any should go before themselues or beyond themselues These are wise in their own eyes and indeed themselues wholly conceited and fantasticall which they falsely charge vpon others being vtterly ignorant both of Gods workes and their owne wants For had they knowne or regarded the gifts and power of the Spirit which helpeth and assisteth his seruants that their tongue is as the pen of a ready writer and findeth sufficient matter to vtter to their Maker or had they knowne themselues throughly what new wants they haue what new sinnes they commit what new assaults they vndergoe what new blessings they enioy which are as so many occasions or rather prouocations to open their mouthes anew to God to sing a new song vnto him they would not blot this ordinance of God with such an odious cauill So then whereas all such should be greeued that cannot frame their petitions according to their present wants nor poure out their supplications according to their particular assaults neither make confession to God according to their particular offences they are rather grieued that any others can performe these duties better then themselues And whereas they should striue with might and maine to be like vnto them and to follow their example they would haue all other men ignorant like themselues and please themselues in that ignorance On this wise ye shal blesse the children of Israel Note in these words the persons that must performe this duty and they are the Priests note also what they are to doe to blesse the people that is to pray to almighty God for them that his blessings may come downe vpon them From hence we see that it is the duty of the Ministers to pray for the people Doctrine It is the Ministers duty to pray for the people So did Melchisedec for Abraham and he was the Priest of the most high God Gen. 14.18 19. So did Moses often for the people when Gods heauy iudgements were vpon them or hanging ouer their heads Exod. 32 33 Psal 106 23. he stood oftentimes in the gappe when the hand of God had made the breach to turne away his wrath lest he should destroy them So did Aaron as appeareth afterward in this booke when the plague was begun among the people he put on incense made an attonement for them he stood betweene the dead the liuing and the plague was staied Numb 16 Rom. 1 2 ●● 47 48. Paul in euery Epistle practiseth this duty and the Apostles committed the charge of prouiding for the poore Acts 6 ● and distributing to the poore to the Deacons that they might giue themselues continually to prayer and to the ministery of the word The Prophets also neuer failed in this duty as we reade almost in euery place of their Prophesies Dan. 5 22 they stood vpon their watch-tower hauing the people continually in remembrance in their holy praiers Christ Iesus himselfe the great Shepheard of the sheepe is a perfect patterne of performing this he prayed for Ierusalem oftentimes Luke 19. and for the whole flocke of God committed vnto him whō he would not suffer to perish but bring them to euerlasting life Iohn 17 20. Thus then we see wee haue the examples of Melchisedec of Moses of Aaron of the Priests of the Prophets of the Apostles and of Christ Iesus the Lord of life as liuely examples to go before vs and as a cloud of witnesses to conduct vs in this duty to proue vnto vs the truth of this point This must the rather be practised first because it is an infallible token of our loue toward Reason 1 them and of an earnest desire that we haue of their good Psal 118 26. And how can we better expresse euen the bowels of our affection and our longing after their prosperous estate from the heart roote then by our daily praying for them Rom. 1 10. Secondly the faithfull Ministers of God haue beene much greeued when they were forbidden and not permitted to performe this duty We see this euidently in Ieremy Ier. ●4 ●● when the Lord had said vnto him Pray not for this people for their good he said Ah Lord God the Prophets say vnto thom yee shall not see the sword neither shall ye haue famine but I will giue you assured peace in this place where we see he layeth the fault vpon the false Prophets and goeth about to excuse or at least to lessen the sinne of the people who were blindly led by those blinde guides that thereby he might make a way to moue the Lord to heare him for that poore seduced people Thirdly the flocke of God is committed vnto them it is no small charge that lyeth on their hands the price of Christs precious blood is committed vnto them and therfore by all meanes they are charged to procure their good especially considering that the blood of such as perish through their negligence shall be required at their hands 1 Pet. 5 2. Ezek. 3.18 Fourthly it is a sinne against God as well as against his people to omit or refuse this duty And therefore when all the people saide to Samuel Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord thy God that we die not he answered As for me God forbid that I should sinne against the lord in ceasing to pray for you 1 Sam. 12 23. If then it be a sinne to omit it it must needs be a duty
adorning the word with this worthy title that it is as a light that shineth in a darke place vntill the day dawne and the day-starre arise in our hearts draweth from thence this exhortation that we must therfore take heed vnto it 2 Pet. 1 19. Who is it that is so simple or senselesse that he will take no heed to the light that shineth round about him Euery man looketh carefully to the light and taketh comfort at the sight of it The whole world lieth in darknesse guilty of ignorance subiect to damnation The Ministery of the word is ordained to bring men out of darknesse into a maruailous light Acts 26 18. to reueale to them the knowledge of their sins and to leade them as it were by the hand the way to eternall life Vse 5 Fiftly let all vnlearned and vnconscionable Ministers know that they ought to be as lights in the world to teach the people in season and out of season If they be without knowledge or without conscience they bee lanthornes without light The dispensation is committed vnto them 1 Cor. 9 16. woe vnto thē therfore that preach not the Gospel whether they cannot or will not whether they cannot through blindnesse or whether they will not through wilfulnesse Againe they offend who as if the word were deliuered in riddles and darke parables rather to worke in them admiration then to bring vnto them instruction do flye aloft far aboue the reach of the people and do not consider that the word is a light and therefore ought to be spoken plainely and euidently that all may see it and discerne it Happy are those lights I meane those Ministers that can humble and abase themselues descending to the capacity of the simple such shall finde greatest comfort of their labours and shall reape the greatest reward for their labours As for others they may please themselues but they please not God They may delight the eare they cannot descend into the conscience They build Castles in the aire but neuer lay a sound foundation of the faith neither shall they euer be able to say with the Apostle 2 Cor. 3 2. Ye are our Epistle written in our hearts knowne and read of all men Vnto these we may adde such as spend their daies and grow old and idle in the Vniuersities who neuer desire to come abroad to take paines neither consider that the Church hath need of them These stand all day doing nothing and will not be hired to labour in the Lords Vineyard They haue liued long in the schooles of the Prophets it is high time they come abroad and leaue their places to others He that ingrosseth corne into his owne hands and will not communicate it to others but keepeth it close to himselfe Prou. 11 26. is cursed of the people but he is pronounced blessed that selleth corne to others in the daies of famine Behold we liue in the daies of famine not of bread but of preaching and hearing the word Amos 8 11. In many places the word of the Lord is precious in these daies 1 Sam. 3 1. Let them therefore looke to it that tender either the glory of the Lord or the saluation of the flocke of Christ yea or their owne good that they do not bring vpon themselues the curse of God and man which haue stored thēselues with much knowledge and learning and as it were filled their garners with abundance of corne yet will depart with nothing but keepe all to themselues and suffer the people of God to starue On the other side thrice happy and blessed are they that considering the necessity of the Church the ignorance of the people the ouerflowing of sinne and the commandement of God do bring foorth the corne which they haue gathered and imploy the gifts that they haue receiued that so none of these for whom Christ died should perish for want of food Let such therfore in no wise hang backe when they are thrust forward et them not say touching building of the spirituall house of God as the people said in building of the materiall Temple The time is not come the time that the Lords house should be built Hag. 1 2. but so soone as they are called let thē not stop their eares but answer with Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth 1 Sam. 3 9. and with the Prophet Here am I send me Esay 6 8. Let not these I say obiect that the time is not yet come to build the Lords house lest they heare as that people did Is it time for you O ye to dwell in your faire houses and sicled chambers and this house lye waste Now therefore sayeth the Lord of hostes consider your waies Hag. 1 4 5. And generally let all such as are entred into this calling beware they doe not hide their gifts Luke 8 1● let them not thrust the candle vnder the bed or vnder a bushell but set it vpon the Table seeing they are made lights for others and not only for themselues Such haue an hard and heauy account to make hereafter much is giuen vnto them and therefore much shall be required of them Lastly here is instruction for all for euery Vse one should be as a burning candle a bright shining light and is bound to let his light so shine before men Math. 5 ● that they may see their good workes and glorifie their Father which is in heauen Euery man ought to bee enlightened with the knowledge of Gods word be willing to hold out the light to others But we cannot giue light to another except we haue the light of knowledge our selues Ignorant persons are darknesse and not light children of the night not of the day The Scripture is able to make a man wise to enlighten his eies to direct his steps and to saue his soule Bellarmine confesseth Bellar. de 〈◊〉 lib. 1. cap. 2 that the Scripture is a light but he telleth vs that the reason is not because they haue light in thēselues but because they bring light when they are vnderstood This is a right fallacy of the consequent for heereby he maketh the effect to be the cause of the cause Sibra L●●● princ●p C●●● lib. 4 cap. ● and so inuerteth all good order turning the cause into the effect the effect into the cause For he would haue the Scripture therefore to be light or lightsome because being once vnderstood it doth enlighten the mind But this needeth no light to discouer the fraud falsehood thereof For it is not therefore called light because when it is vnderstood it doth enlighten giue light And whether we vnderstand it or no it skilleth not for the Scripture is in it selfe a bright shining light For as the Sunne is lightsome though all men were blinde and no man did see it so the Scripture is a light albeit men turne away their eies frō it that they will not see it In the mean season
mine Rom. 12.19 Deu. 32 35. Hath he said and shall he not do it or hath he spoken and shal he not make it good Secondly hee requireth it at the hands of all Iudges and Magistrates to iudge iustly not Reason 2 to accept the persons of the wicked hee giueth commandement vnto them whom hee hath honored with his owne name to defend the poore and fatherlesse and to do iustice to the afflicted and needy Psal 92 2 3. If then Princes which are Gods vpon earth must doe right iudgement then certainely the God of Gods and Iudge of Iudges will iudge the people righteously and gouerne the Nations vpon earth Psal 67 4. This teacheth vs that God heareth and seeth and knoweth all things Though our Vse 1 sinnes bee neuer so secret and men conueigh them neuer so closely and labor to hide them by all the fetches and deuices they can yet they are open to him before whom all things are open and naked Heb. 4 13. Caine the first oppressor tooke his brother aside and carried him into the fielde none was partaker of the murther or priuy to it yet the blood of the dead did proclaime and publish as it were with a loud and lamentable voice both the sinne and the sinner in the eares of the Lord of hostes as fully and shrilly as the voyces of liuing men can discouer any thing Treasons and conspiracies against Princes are plotted for the most part closely for although they prepare many yet they acquaint few with their most secret designes neuertheles God hath many wayes to finde out those persons and practises Eccl. 10.20 Curse not the King no not in thy thought and curse not the rich in thy bed-chamber for a bird of the aire shall carry the voice and that which hath wings shall tel the matter Secondly we may conclude the wofull estate of all wicked men that are oppressors Vse 2 which thinke to ouer-beate the poore needy and sell them for a paire of shooes Amos 2.6 For this should terrifie such vngodly persons from sinning in this kinde they may indeede perswade themselues that they shall escape or relye vpon the fauour and countenance of men or that the poor pitifully wronged dare not mutter against them which are encouragements to the mighty to commit sin and to liue in it howbeit this is a vaine hope and will in the end make ashamed forasmuch as albeit they may conceale their purposes from men and auoid the place of iudgement yet they cannot escape the hand of God Many receiue great wrongs that dare not open their mouthes against their oppressours the poore are troden vnder foote of the rich the weake of them that are strong those of low degree by them that are mighty neuerthelesse God will open his mouth in the cause of the afflicted and stretch out his hand to recompence tribulation to all those that trouble them This vse is handled by the Apostle Iames chap. 5.1 2. Goe to now ye rich men weepe and houle for your miseries that shall come vpon you c. where he threatened these hard-hearted men with sundry iudgments for the wrongs they did to iust men let not such therefore flatter themselues but rather labour to break off their sinnes by righteousnesse and their iniquities by shewing mercy to the poore if it may be a lengthning of their tranquillity Vse 3 Thirdly seeing God is the great auenger of the wrongs of his children that neuer call vnto him for vengeance then much more will he pitty them and take their cause into his owne hand when they call and cry vnto him day and night to saue them The Lord gracious and mercifull hath promised that when the stranger the widow and the fatherlesse child are vexed and oppressed and cry vnto him he will certainely heare them Exod. 22.21 22.23 24. For if God stay not til they cry because sometimes they cannot and sometimes they dare not tarieth not til they opē their mouths to complaine then we may bee assured that when the oppressed in their misery and anguish of their soule sigh and grone vnto him his wrath shall waxe hote and hee will kill their oppressours with the sword of his iudgements Vse 4 Lastly we haue a singular encouragement from hence vnto patience in suffering euen vnto the comming of the Lord. He will take their cause into his owne hand at the length though they suffer long Nay it is the maner of God for the most part to leaue his children in many troubles vntil things seeme to be desperate and past all hope of helpe Why God oftentimes holdeth his peace till things fo●me to be desperate and past all hope partly to stir vp his people to seeke to him with greater earnestnesse of spirit partly to shew the greatnesse of his own power what he is able to do partly to catch the wicked in their owne crafty counsels and deuises and partly to make it manifest that all our helpe commeth onely from the Lord which hath made heauen and earth to the end that the worke being his the glory also may be his We are ready to ascribe our deliuerances to our owne power or policy and to say in vaunting wise Mine hand hath saued me Iudg. 7.2 God is patient and suffereth long but in the end he payeth home so that the godly shall lose nothing by their patience and the vngodly shall gaine nothing but Gods vengeance This might be enlarged by the example of the Israelites when they were in Egypt the Lord could haue deliuered them before any of their miseries were brought vpon them but the time appointed was not yet come and when all things seemed past recouery suddenly God appeard for their deliuery Let vs therefore be patient and stablish our hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth nigh Iam. 5.8 15 And Miriam was shut vp from the campe seuen dayes and the people iournyed not till Miriam was brought in againe 16 And afterward the people remoued from Hazeroth and pitched in the wildernesse of Paran In these words we see the punishment inflicted vpon Miriam God neuer threateneth in vaine but bringeth to passe whatsoeuer iudgement he hath denounced He threatened Miriam for her murmuring with the leprosie behold heere how hee letteth nothing fall to the ground of that which he had spoken Obserue from hence that such as are the principall doers in sinne Doctrine Such as 〈◊〉 the chiefe hand in 〈◊〉 are princip●●ly subiect 〈◊〉 to punishment are principally subiect vnto punishment Aaron was accessary to this mutiny against Moses but Miriam was chiefe in the sinne and therefore is also chiefe in the punishment Simeon and Leui were not the only murtherers of the Sichemites and inuaders of the city but they were the chiefe ringleaders and therefore are onely named Gen. 34.25 and punished Gen. 49.5 Iacob had a great family as Abraham had three hundred and eighteene persons of his house which he armed and conducted
1 4 and pity vs as a father pities his children Ps 103 13 14. Hee will stir vp the hearts of others to whom hee hath giuen this worlds good to doe vs good who hath the hearts of all in his owne hand Such therefore ought then especially to giue themselues to prayer vnto God they must also beare themselues thankfully to men that haue bene raised vp to shew compassion toward them but aboue all to God himselfe from whom euery good gift commeth Iam. 1 17. The dutie of such as are taken with the pestilence The duties of such as are taken with the pestilence are also to be considered They must consider that their sins haue deserued that iudgement that God thereby calleth them to repentance stir●eth them to praier exerciseth their faith driueth thē from security weaneth them from the loue of the world and bringeth them to a loue and desire of heauen Such must renounce all confidence in the flesh and commit themselues wholy to God not doubting of his mercy they must set their houses in order to auoid contention they must giue testimony of their faith in their sicknesse and stir vp those that are about them and come to visit them to the feare of God Especially let them take heede they doe not accuse God of dealing hardly and rigorouslie with them because he striketh thē while he letteth others to escape but let them stoope downe to his correction submit themselues to his heauenly pleasure with all reuerence Lastly The dutie of all men in time of the plague it is the duty of all men to make solemne profession of their humiliation repentance humbling themselues before God by fasting and praier against whom they haue sinned Exod. 15 26. 1 Kin. 8 38. Al brauery and excesse ought then to be laid aside all riotousnesse and luxuriousnesse should be banished far from vs Esa 22 12 13 14. The Prophet Amos reproueth the rich crieth out earnestly against their senslesnesse liuing in all kind of pleasures and delights nothing at al regarding the affliction of Ioseph chap. 6. So was it with the rich Glutton in the gospel though he saw Lazarus lye at his gate in great misery yet he was clad in purple fared deliciously euery day Lu. 16 19. such is the pride and delicacy of our times y● albeit God sweep away many with his fearful visitation and the cry of the poore at such times bee verie great that it might euen moue the stones to relent and that it soundeth with a shrill voyce in the eares of men and ascendeth vp to God yet the greatest sort are nothing moued the Lord of hosts calleth to weeping and to mourning to girding with sackecloth and behold ioy and gladnes slaying Oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die No man almost will diminish any thing of his brauery in apparell of his daintinesse in fare of his costlinesse in furniture and of his excesse in all things Let all such as feare God think vpon the euill day prepare themselues against the time of affliction stoop vnder the mighty hand of God I will disinherite them and will make of thee a greater Nation and mightier then they A most fearefull threatning It is a sore punishment when the father is constrained to disinherite his sonne Gen. 49 3 4 but much sorer when he must disinherite all of them God threatneth in this place to disinherite thousands of Israel and to make of Moses a mighty Nation And as Iohn Baptist said to the Pharisies and Sadduces that came to his baptisme Math 3 ● that God was able of those stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham so doth the Lord say to Moses that he would destroy that whole people for whom he had praied before chap. 10 36. Returne O Lord to the many thousands of Israel but of him hee would raise vp a great and a mighty Nation This threatning we must vnderstand conditionally except his anger be appeased at the prayer and intercession of Moses The threatnings of God are twofold some are peremptory and absolute neuer to be reuoked as it is said of the lawes of the Medes Persians that they could not be changed as Gen. 2 17. If Adā had praied al the daies of his life that he might not die but returne to his former condition the sentence of God had not bin reuersed The like we see concerning Moses Numb 20 12. God threatneth that he should neuer enter into the Land of promise Moses vnderstanding the threatening conditionally Deut. 3 26. besought the Lord that he might goe ouer Iordan into that Land but the Lord was wroth with him and would not heare him but saide vnto him Let it suffice thee speake no more vnto me of this matter The same we might say of Dauid he receiued a threatning against his sin that the childe conceiued in adultery should die 2 Sam. 12 14 neuerthelesse he besought God for the childe with fasting weeping and praier v. 16. he said Who can tell whether God will be gracious to me that the childe may liue Notwithstanding according as the Prophet had denounced the childe died So then we see that some of Gods iudgements denounced against the sonnes of men are absolute and irreuocable and must take effect other of them are limited with a condition and vpon humiliation and repentance are changed altered and so it is with the promises of God some of them are absolute and some are with condition Such as concerne saluation and are necessary to eternall life are promised absolutely in respect of God Doctrine The threatenings of Gods iudgements are conditionall such as are temporall and belong to this present life are promised conditionally We learne from hence that the threatnings and denunciations of Gods iudgments are for the most part conditionall not absolute toward his people and to be vnderstood with this exception except they repent and amend This condition is sometimes expressed and sometimes vnderstood It is set downe expresly Ier. 18 7 8. Sometimes it is suppressed and vnderstood inclusively Gen. 6 3. The reasons First because after threatning Reason 1 if repentance follow it causeth forgiuenes of sin and taketh away the cause of punishment Sinne is the cause of Gods iudgements if the cause be remoued the effect will ceasse Ezek. 33 14 15. Whē I say to the wicked thou shalt surely die if he turne from his sin and do that which is lawfull c. he shall surely liue he shall not die Secondly God is a gracious God of great Reason 2 long-suffering and of much patience and vnspeakable kindnesse ready though much moued to receiue to mercy as soone as we return to him Ier. 3 12. He promiseth mercy to them that repent his anger shall not fall vpon them that returne because he is mercifull and will not keepe his wrath for euer Thirdly
place but that destruction be brought vpon vs If God haue destroyed other nations and rooted them out for the same sinnes that are found among vs what can be expected by vs but that wee hauing the same weight of sinnes should also haue the same weight of iudgement He hath made vs already to drink of many iudgments onely this remaineth that as yet we haue not dranke the dregges we haue not yet tasted of vtter desolation No nation hath brought forth worse fruits or shewed lesse thankefulnesse We haue iust occasion therfore to feare that the day of Gods visitation cannot be far off by the course of iustice and doubtlesse it is the nearer because we are growne sottish and sencelesse and haue put all feare thereof from vs. The land is generally full of retchlesnesse and security and this addeth to our sinne so that we may say as it is Ier. 6.28 29 30. They are all greeuous reuolters walking with slanders ● 9.28 they are brasse and yron they are all corrupt c. Thus was it with the Sodomits immediately before their destruction the Sunne was risen vpon the earth they thought there had beene a faire day comming but it was a day of wrath a day of trouble and distresse for the Lord rained down fire and brimstone vpon them and all the wicked were as stubble So it was also in the dayes of Noah and so it shall be in the end of the world Vse Secondly it teacheth vs who are the greatest enemies to a state to a nation to a kingdome to a land to a people to our townes and cities to our families euen they that are the greatest sinners These are they that bring those dayes of desolation the dayes of darkenesse and gloominesse the dayes of wastnesse and confusion to wit such as sinne with an high hand that are obstinate and hardhearted and setled to continue in the dregs of them When Ierusalem was besieged by Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon Ier. 32.4 who were the chiefe enemies of the citie and kingdome doubtlesse not so much the Babylonians and their army as the citizens themselues they were such as lodged within not they that lay without 2 Chron. 36.16 Dan. 9.10 11. Nehe. 13.17 18. 〈◊〉 it is ●eake●nd wa 〈◊〉 citie The strongest enemies were in the heart of the citie and they were they that did weaken it It is sinne that openeth the gates and throweth downe the walles and letteth in the enemie and maketh hauocke of all The sin of Achan made Israel to turne their backes to their enemies Iosh 7.8 according to the threatning Deut. 28.15.25 The contempt of the word prophaning of the Sabbaths whordome drunkennesse couetousnesse and oppression doe sharpen the swords of enemies and giue them assured hope of victory Hab. 1.3 4 5 6. If we sin against God with an high hand and breake out into all enormities it is in vaine to trust in our fenced cities and multitudes of men If our armies be neuer so strong if our cities were neuer so sure blocked if we had walles flanked with barracadoes and other fortifications that we feared not to haue them surprized by scalado yet if sin be suffered and fostered within it weakeneth all our force it maketh frustrate all our deuises it throweth our castles and citadels downe to the ground it filleth vp the trenches and maketh the way easy to batter our walles and to breake in pieces the towres thereof Sinne is as a Cannon that beareth all before it and where it beareth sway an hundred wals cannot keepe out the enemy Plaut in Persa And this the heathen knew and confessed But where Religion is entertained and godlinesse flourisheth there the citie is notably garded Deu. 4.6 and 28.1.7 Lastly such as haue any loue to their countrey Vse 3 and would haue the people freed from destruction and continue in peace and quietnesse let them shew it by their loue to the Lord and his Law and by seeking to bee at peace with him If we be reconciled vnto him that he hath no controuersie against vs he wil make euen our enemies to bee at peace with him This serueth to admonish vs all to take heede lest we adde sinne vnto sinne We account him an enemy and that iustly that conspireth and combineth with another to open the gates vnto him and to bring him in to destroy the citie and people such an enemie is sinne it taketh part with our enemies and they both ioyne together and tend both to one end to wit to ouerthrew our peace and safty Stay therfore the course of sinne that it grow not to haue the vpper hand Seeke not to be acquainted with it be not any meanes to spred it farther and to conuey it from one to another Marke then from this consideration who are indeed and in trueth the best Citizens and best townesmen in places where they liue Not alwaies the richest not alwaies the noblest not alwayes the strongest not alwayes the most politicke The best citizen is the godly man the best townesman is the man that feareth GOD and walketh in his wayes Such are the chariots and horsemen of the kingdome They are the strength of the land that are strong in the Lord. On the contrary side the worst citizens are the vngodly who pull it downe as it were with their owne hands What hath beene the ruine and ouerthrow of the most famous kingdomes in the world and what hath turned the noblest Cities into dust what hath brought infinite calamities of famine of the sword of the pestilence of fire of slauery and such like but the impiety of men so that the Lord hath beene compelled to reuenge himself of the very places which they possessed of the wals and buildings yea of the cattell and beasts that fedde thereupon Stand fast therefore in the most holy faith and let not sinne enter for when it commeth it layeth all waste from this commeth the ruines of countreyes of cities of houses and of particular persons 26 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Aaron saying 27 How long shall I beare with this euill congregation which murmure against mee I haue heard the murmurings of the children of Israel which they murmure against me 28 Say vnto them As truely as I liue saith the Lord I will surely do vnto you euen as ye haue spoken in mine eares The Lord as a iust Iudge proceedeth to giue sentence against these wicked men whose destruction was concluded They had gone backe from their obedience God charged them to goe backe againe toward the red sea so that they were forty yeeres before any of that people came into the land which might haue beene possessed in forty dayes This sentence pronounced by the mouth of God is either generall against the whole multitude or speciall against the first contriuers and principall authours of this rebellion The generall punishment is concerning themselues or their children Touching themselues as they had spospoken so the
a true miracle But if it were a miracle men might discerne it by sense as all the miracles of Christ were discerned Let them giue vs an instance in any creature in heauen or earth where the Lord wrought any miracle which he did not subiect to the senses of man but heere is nothing that can be discerned by the senses for as much as the bread by the iudgement of all the senses remaineth and appeareth to bee the same in substance which it was before of the same quality quantity colour taste handling smelling vertue and nourishment there is not any one sense or all the senses together that can iudge otherwise of it then it did before therfore it can be no miracle No work is a miracle which cannot bee felt smelled seene tasted or perceiued Wherefore let the Church of Rome teach in their schooles write in their bookes preach in their Pulpits and decree in their Councels neuer so often that there is a miracle wrought in their Sacrament of the Altar yet because we can neither see nor touch nor taste nor feele any thing but the same that it was before we cannot beleeue them But they tell vs Obiect that though the outward forme and accidents of the bread remaine yet the substance of it is turned into the body of Christ which though we cannot perceiue by our senses yet wee are bound to receiue by faith I answer Answer that if the natural body of Christ were there present we might feele him as Thomas did forasmuch as Christ still retaineth his true body albeit it be now glorified Wherefore seeing there is no miracle in the Supper apparent to the senses there can be no miracle at all The difference which is is in the vse before it was common bread ordained for the nourishment of our bodies now it becommeth holy bread sanctified by the Lord not so much to feede the body as the soule To conclude then by this strange and new found miracle they ouerturne the doctrine of the Scriptures touching miracles For wheras we haue shewed that a miracle is a rare worke apparently to the senses wrought by the sole omnipotent power of God they make it to be an vsuall common and ordinary worke wrought by euery Priests pronouncing of fiue words yet so as no sense at all can discerne of it 12 And the children of Israel spake vnto Moses saying Behold we die we perish we all perish 13 Whosoeuer commeth any thing neere to the Tabernacle of the Lord shall die shall wee bee consumed with dying Hitherto of the first part of the Chapter heere followeth the second part to wit the repentance of the people crauing to bee deliuered from present death and from their sinne wherewith they had prouoked God to anger As if they had said We acknowledge that we deserue to die and perish through our sinnes neither did wee know so much vntill the plague that brake in among vs taught vs and the blossoming of the rod conuinced vs to our faces We presumed to meddle with the office of the Priesthood that belonged not vnto vs and therfore we deserue iustly and worthily to die But is there no place for mercy and forgiuenesse We may obserue from hence that this should bee the effect of all punishments which God bringeth vpon sinners to humble vs ●●d explic ●●m to make vs auoide sinne and to submit our selues to God with all obedience Againe we must neuer despaire of Gods mercy which is greater then our sinnes as a garment wider then the body and therfore more then able to couer the nakednesse thereof Thirdly we must acknowledge and confesse our sinnes to God because all sinne is committed against God him onely we haue offended Psal 51.4 Briefly also learne that the first degree of pardon is to know that our sinnes are pardonable this is as a sparke of light in a darke night and giueth hope of great mercy But to leaue these particulars this is the generall doctrine In all chastisements ●trine ●t is to bee ●owled iust in all chastise●ts how grieuous and sharpe soeuer they be God is to bee acknowledged iust and righteous in laying them vpon vs Dan. 9.6 7 8 9 16 19. Ezr. 9.6.10 13 15. Psal 51.4 5. 2 Sam. 24.10 The reasons which are as the grounds of this truth are euident First because his punishments though many times they be greeuous burdens to beare yet are alwayes lesse then our deserts and offences Psal 103.10 He dealeth not with vs according to our offences Secondly our sinnes are the procuring causes of all the euils which we suffer Mic. 7.9 I will beare the indignation of the Lord because I haue sinned against him So then the cause of all our sufferings is in our selues Thirdly in all his corrections and iudgements hee remembreth mercy Hab. 3.2 Wee see this often in this book though the whole people sinned as one man yet iudgment came not vpon the whole but the mercifull God striketh some to admonish and amende others The vses follow First it reprooueth such Vse 1 as stand out with God and are ready to iustifie themselues and accuse God of ouermuch sharpenesse and seuerity These men neuer consider Gods manifold blessings and their owne vnthankefulnesse vnto him who reneweth his mercies toward vs euery morning Lam. 3.23 But we render vnto him euill for good and hatred for his good will We are like vnto stubborne children that murmure vnder the rod and cannot abide correction So it is with vs we can abide to sinne but wee cannot abide to suffer Wee regard not how much we prouoke him but we care not how little he punish vs. It is one of the hardest things in the world to iustifie God and to condemne our selues worthy of eternall death and damnation We see it from the beginning in our first parents they sought shifts and fig leaues to couer the nakednesse of their soules more then they did the nakednesse of their bodies as indeed there appeared much more deformity in the one then in the other and they had more cause to be ashamed of the nakednesse of their soules then of their bodies For sinne maketh vs naked of Gods protection and causeth him to depart from vs it taketh away our shield and defence and leaueth vs in the hands of our enemies We see also in the example of Achan Iosh 7. of Saul 1 Sam. 15. how hardly they were drawne to confesse their sinnes they heard sentence pronounced against them before they would pronounce sentence vpon themselues Let vs not tarry vntill God iudge vs but rather learn betimes to iudge our selues Secondly let vs humble our selues vnder Vse 2 the mighty hand of God 1 Pet. 5.6 and when he draweth out his sword let vs not say wee are righteous like the Pharisee that condemned another but iustified himselfe Luk. 18. rather let vs cry out in the eares of God Spare Lord Ioel 2.17 and confesse that it is
Tabernacle therefore they were worthy to receiue their wages and ought not to be defrauded thereof Before the law Abraham gaue vnto Melchizedek tithes of all Gen. 14 20. And the Apostle to the Hebrewes saith that euen the Patriarke Abraham gaue the tenths of the spoiles Heb. 7 4. It is therefore both lawfull iust that the Minister should require and receiue and the people pay vnto thē that which is due in respect of their labour Reason 1 The reasons are First that thereby the Ministers may be encouraged in their duties 2 Chron. 31 4. It is said of Hezekiah that he cōmanded the people that dwelt in Ierusalem to giue the portion of the Priests and the Leuites that they might be encouraged in the law of the Lord. They had receiued much discouragement and discontentment in the daies of Ahaz his father who regarded neither God nor his word nor his worship nor his Ministers for he tooke away a portion out of the house of the Lord and cut in peeces the vessels of the house of God 2 Chro. 28 21 24. And in our daies I am well assured that the Ministers of the Gospel haue as many discouragements as euer the Leuites had and therefore stand in need of some encouragements Secondly it is an ordinance of God that they which preach the Gospel should liue of the Gospel 1 Corin. 9 14. Thirdly they are to attend wholly vpon that calling and do spend themselues to gaine soules to God 1 Tim. 4 13 15.16 2 Tim. 2 4. Euery art should maintaine the artificer and euery trade the tradesman and euery profession the professour The calling of the Minister is not of the lowest callings and it is none of the least labours so that their maintainance should arise from their great paines that they take in that calling Fourthly it is the law of God and nature that children which haue receiued liuelihood from their parents should recompence thē the Apostle sheweth that if any widow haue children or nephewes let them learne first to shew piety at home and to requite their parents for this is good acceptable before God 1 Tim. 5 4. If then children ought to recompence their parents for their care in their education as Ioseph did his father Iacob much more ought faithfull people to do the same to their faithfull Pastors to whom they owe euen themselues and of whō they haue receiued the life of their liues Gal. 4 14. 15 19. Phil. ● 10. Lastly euery labourer is worthy of his hire and whosoeuer deteineth the wages of the poore labourer is a great oppressour committeth a crying sin Iames 5 4. and the cry entreth into the eares of the Lord of Sabbath How then should that which is due to all laborers be denied to the labors of the Minister And howsoeuer this be an euident truth yet it findeth hard entertainment in the world mens profits doe so rownd them in the eare that they can quickly finde sundry obiections against the same I will touch some of the cheefe and principall First the Apostles had great Obiect 1 gifts yet they preached freely Math. 10 v. 8. Why then shold not the Ministers in our daies do the like I answer Answer this must be vnderstood of the gift of working myracles as appeareth by the circumstances and as I haue prooued elsewhere Hence it is that Elisha would not accept though he were vrged of the blessing that Naaman offred vnto him for the curing of his leprosie 2 Kin. 5 16. Againe if they may receiue nothing for their labours how doeth Christ say afterward The workman is worthy of his meate Mat. 10 10. Besides our Sauiour ioyneth these two together receiuing freely and giuing freely and maketh the former the cause of the latter that they ought to bestow freely because they had receiued freely And how had they receiued freely Surely two waies freely without any of their owne desarts and freely without any their owne labor for they had their gifts by reuelation Gal. 1 1 16 17. True it is we haue our gifts by the gift of God freely without any the least desart of ours but wee haue not receiued them freely without our great labour and industry therefore as in this sense we haue not receiued freely we a●e not bound by this rule to goe about and preach freely That talent which we haue we haue it by our great paines and therfore it is lawfull for vs to take for our paines Obiect 2 Againe the Apostles are forbidden to prouide and to possesse gold and siluer Math. 10 9. I answer Answer so he forbiddeth them to haue two coats or shooes or staues for their iourney v. 10. But to obserue this perpetually were contrary to the practise of Christ himselfe Iohn 12 6. and 13 4. and 19 23. Luke 22 36 and of his owne Disciples who no doubt liued according to the direction and instruction of their master Acts 12 8. 2 Tim. 4 13. So then this precept had place onely for that present sending and was not to binde them for euer much lesse their successours that came after them for now they were appointed to make haste and might carry no prouision with thē but must cast themselues wholly vpon the power protection and prouidence of Christ that sent them gaue them their commission Thirdly Paul preached to the Corinthians Obiect 3 and Thessalonians without receiuing any wages at all of them 1 Cor 9 15. 1 Thess 2 6 7. Acts 20 34. He labored with his owne hands and became a Tent-maker Acts 18 3. I answer Answ the question is not de facto but de iure not what he did or any of them did but what he and they had right and power to do For albeit he did not take wages yet he had authority to do it as himselfe professeth 1 Cor. ● 6 12. yea he saith that at such times as hee freed them he robbed other Churches and tooke wages of some to do seruice vnto other 2 Cor. 11 8. And albeit he were well content to depart from his right yet he ceased not to lay claime to his right 2 Thess 3 8 9. And in other churches where he preached the Gospel he liued of the Gospel and taught all the Ministers by his example to doe the like If any aske the question why he abstained from pursuing his owne right I answer that many things are lawfull in themselues which are not expedient and as circumstances often alter the matter so Paul did this for sundry causes expressed in diuers places First lest he should ouer-burden them that had already an heauy burden of pouerty lying vpon them 2 Thess 3 8. Secondly that he might giue example to those that were idle which abounded among the Thessalonians to teach them to worke with their owne hands and to eate their owne bread 2 Thess 3 9. Thirdly that by this meanes it might manifestly appeare that he sought them rather then theirs that he
are cut off by death do renue the Leuitical priesthood and labour to raise it out of the graue which hath long ago bene buried with honor For this is common to them both to end their daies and leaue their Priesthood to others so that the Dart which the Apostle casteth against the Leuiticall Priesthood pierceth and perisheth the very heart of the Popish priesthood when he saith and proueth that there can bee no other Priests but Christ vnder the new Testament Heb. 7 23 24. because he continueth for euer considering that the multitude of Priests and succession of them one after another ariseth from the imperfection and insufficiency of the Priests which were continually by death taken away If then the vpstart Priests of the Sinagogue of Rome will bee Priests properly they cannot be Priests after the order of Melchizedek as they wretchedly and blasphemously claime themselues to bee who was both King and Priest Heb 7 5. neither cā they be successors of Christ forasmuch as hee hath none to succeede him For if the Iews might not continue to offer their sacrifices and oblations after the sacrifice of Christ was once offered because it was perfect and all-sufficient yea the consummation of all that went before it followeth that the Popish sacrifice being an addition vnto that which is perfect as a rotten and ragged patch to a new garment cannot stand but is to bee throwne downe and abolished like an abhominable idoll Verse 29. All the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty daies when the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead The last point obserued in this chapter is the affection of the people after the death of Aaron one of the chiefe pillars and protectors of the Church and of true Religion among the Israelites They mourne for him not a day or a weeke but a whole month to declare what a sensible feeling they had of the incomparable losse of the Church We learne hereby that when the chiefe members stayes props Doctrin● When the cheefest p● of the C● be takē a● the rest a● bee gree● 1 Thess 4 ● and pillars of the church be taken away the rest of the parts are to be hūbled and touched to the quicke for the same True it is a measure in mourning and lamentation is to be vsed that wee bee not sorry as men without hope yet by this example wee see it is lawfull to mourne for the dead the greater losse the Church hath receyued the greater lamentation and greefe ought to bee expressed This is euident by the practise of Gods seruants in all ages of the Church proportioning their sorrow according to the greatnesse of their losse We see Ge. 50 1 10 11. when God called Iacob to himselfe out of this worlde a Father of the Church and a great light that shined not onely within the dores of his owne family but in the darknesse of Egypt hee was greatly and exceedingly lamented for the space of seuenty dayes so that the Canaanites said This is a great mourning vnto the Egyptians So when Moses the seruant of the Lord died like vnto whom there arose not a Prophet in Israel vnto whom GOD spake not by vision or dreame but face to face as a man talketh with his friend Deut. 34 8. the children of Israel mourned for him thirty dayes whom hee had guided with a fatherly care many yeeres So when Samuel another principall pillar of the house of God dyed 1 Sam 25 1. All Israel assembled and mourned for him and buried him in his own house at Ramah When God took away good King Iosiah like to whom there was no King before him that turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soule 2 King 2● and with al his might according to all the law of Moses who bowed neither to the right hand nor to the left who remembred his Creator in the dayes of his youth and honoured God with the first fruites of his life all Iudah and Ierusalem mourned for him 2 Chron. 35 23 24. yea Ieremy lamented Iosiah and al the singing men and singing women mourned for him in their lamentations and made the same for an ordinance to Israel behold they be written in the Lamentations But touching Iehoiakim the son of Iosia who degenerated from his father walked not in his wayes 〈◊〉 22 1● 19 it is said They shall not lament him saying Ah my Brother or ah my Sister neyther shall they mourne for him saying Ah Lord or ah his glory he shall be buried as an Asse is buryed euen drawne and cast forth without the gates of Ierusalem The like comparison wee see in the new Testament when as Stephen was stoned a faithfull witnesse of Christ a worthy member of the Church and a constant defender of the faith 〈◊〉 8 2. certaine men carried him to be buried and made great lamentation for him But when Ananias and Sapphira filled with Sathan keeping away part of the price of their possession tempting the Spirit and lying vnto God fell downe and gaue vp the ghost 〈◊〉 5 5 10. young men arose tooke them vp and buried them but no mention of any teares or lamentatiō much lesse of any great lamentation made for them God swept them away as dung from the earth for their hypocrisie but the Church lamented not the death of these wicked persons So then to omit many other examples that might bee alledged we see that howsoeuer men may be mourned for in a natural affection compassion by their friends and kinsfolks yet chiefly and principally we are to bewaile the losse of the church whē such are taken away as might do good seruice to God and his people Reason 1 This truth appeareth by good force of reason First the Ministers are as the Chariots horsemen of Israel in their Ministery that is the strength and defence of the Church and Commonwealth Therfore Elisha seeing Eliah taken vp by a whirlewinde into heauen cryed out Kings ● 12. My father my father the Chariot of Israel the horsemen thereof And as Elisha said of Eliah so did Ioash the King of Israel of Elisha For being sicke of his sicknesse whereof hee dyed the King came downe vnto him King 13 14. and wept vpon his face and said O my father my father the Chariot of Israel and the horsemen of the same Thus spake the King himselfe to the Prophet and these honorable Titles he gaue vnto him And no maruell For they fight and bend their forces against swearing blasphemy contempt of Gods word prophaning of his Sabbaths whoredome drunkennesse idlenesse couetousnesse and such like as lay vs open to the wrath of God These and such like sinnes are they that weaken the land and lay it naked to the inuasion of enemies 〈◊〉 32 25. as appeareth Exo. 32 25. Moses saw that by their idolatry the people were naked for Aaron had made them naked vnto shame among
was the ordinance of God to build one Temple and to chuse one place to which man shold resort to worship him yet this order is now abolished euery coast and countrey is Iewry euery towne and city is Ierusalem euery faithfull company and godly person is a Temple to worship God in 1 Cor. 6 1● 1 Cor. 6 1● 1 Tim. 2.8 Psal 127 4. We may call vpon God euery where and lift vp pure hands in all places no land is a strange land no ground is vnholy ground And touching their abstinence from flesh on certaine times for religion sake it is a doctrine of diuels 1 Tim. 4 1 3. Lastly it reprooueth such as propound to themselues false and wrong endes of vowes as conceit of merit and opinion of deseruing the fauour of God and euerlasting life For the ends which we respect must be good as to exercise and stirre vp the gifts of faith prayer obedience repentance and other graces of the Spirit and to testifie our thankefulnesse to God for blessings receiued at his hands The intent therefore and meaning is heere to bee considered and we must be well aduised not onely that our vowes be directed to God but for what purpose and how we vow to God not to binde God vnto vs but to binde vs the closer to God to render all honor vnto him Now if we would examine the vowes practised in the Church of Rome by these things before deliuered we shall easily perceiue the fondnesse and falshood nay the wickednes of them For here are condemned all vowes of pilgrimages and abstinence from flesh for religion noted before Bellar lib. ● de M●●●● cap. 36. their doctrine that children may enter into their orders and cloisters against the counsell and consent of their parents and that persons contracted either to other may vow continency without the liking and approbation of the other party which cannot stand with the doctrine of the Scripture or ancient councels Num. 30 ● Co● G●● cap. 16. For the word establisheth the authority of parents ouer their children which the former vowes abridgeth and cutteth short and teacheth that if a woman vow vnto the Lord and bind her selfe by a bond being in her fathers house in time of her youth if her father disalow her the same day that hee heareth all her vowes and bonds they shall not be of value Lastly by the former obseruations fall to the ground the ordinary vowes of single life voluntary pouerty and Fryarly obedience to vaine and superstitious men which they absurdly make and tye themselues necessarily to obserue For such vowes are directly and flatly against the former rules prescribed deliuered vnpossible intollerable beyond our owne strength calling a will worship Col. 2.16 according to the decrees and traditions of men and directly contrary to the commandement of God 1 Cor. 7.9 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Thess 3. ● Againe they are not in the power of him that voweth for no man can promise perpetuall chastity in single life out of the estate of wedlocke Continency is the speciall and proper gift of God who giueth it not vnto all but to whom he will and as long as he will This our Sauiour teacheth Matth. 19. All men cannot receiue this thing saue they to whom it is giuen he that is able to receiue this let him receiue it To this accordeth and agreeth the doctrine of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. I would that all men were euen as my selfe am but euery man hath his proper gift of God one after this manner and another after that Furthermore they abolish Christian liberty in the lawfull vse of the good creatures and ordinances of God as riches and marriage food and apparell making that absolutely necessary which God hath freely left to our liking and liberty Lastly they are made most commonly to Saints and not to God and they are made for merits sake therby to deserue saluation and the substance of religion and worship of God is made to consist in them whereas the Apostle teacheth 〈◊〉 4 6. That bodily exercise profiteth little but godlinesse is profitable for all things Therefore these vowes practised and defended by the Church of Rome being vnlawfully rashly vnconscionably ●●ontra ●l is ●ref superstitiously meritoriously made and vnpossible to be performed cannot binde the conscience but are better broken then irreligiously kept ●si de beno 〈◊〉 ca. 10 in Leuit. according to the doctrine of the former Churches Thirdly seeing vowes be lawful which are promises made to God 〈◊〉 3. of some duty to bee performed to him to some good end the vow which all beleeuers haue made in Baptisme is to be kept of euery one wherein wee promised to beleeue in Christ to obey God to bring foorth the fruites of true repentance to renounce the workes of the diuell the allurements of this present euill world and the lusts of the flesh which lust against the spirit And albeit wee are bound to these duties by our calling redemption without any new vow yet we may lawfully renew our couenant with God and so binde our selues faster and faster As he that hath bound himself in a bond may yet giue greater and better assurance bind himselfe more then before So bee that is bound to haue faith in Christ and to yeeld obedience to all his commandements may yet further and faster bind himselfe to helpe his dulnesse coldnesse and want of zeale and to make himselfe more forward and seruent in duties of the first and second table according to the practise of Dauid I haue sworne and will performe it ●●19 106 that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements He was bound hereunto without and before his oath yet he kindled his zeale and reneweth his couenant with God by this oath to stirre vp the gift of God that was in him and to helpe his owne infirmity We haue all in baptisme vowed to consecrate our selues euen our soules and bodies to God by renouncing the diuell the world and the flesh if wee goe backe as cowardly Souldiers from this our vow shall wee not bee conuinced as false and vnfaithfull to God And how shall we conscionably keepe any other vowes that breake the first vow we made to God What a fault is it accounted among our selues to promise and then to breake But haue we kept this our generall and common vow Hierom. in Esa lib. 7. cap. 19 August in Psal 7● 131. Lumba sent lib. 4. dist 38. to fight vnder the banner and enfigne of Iesus Christ against the diuell and all his works Or rather haue we not walked and do we not still walke in the workes of darknes after the inuentions of our owne hearts And do not our open sins cry out and proclaime as much to the dishonour of God and our owne reproch So that all such as walke in the blindnes of their own minds haue besides all their other sinnes this great
Secondly we are taught heereby to stand in feare of God Mat. 8 26 27. to tremble vnder this mighty Commander of sea and land and to beware we do not teaze with him or prouoke him to anger indignation against vs seeing he hath so many royall Camps of armed souldiers in readinesse to be reuenged of vs to destroy vs when and how and where it pleaseth him He is able to cut vs downe as grasse to blow vs away as dust to sweepe vs away as dung to tread vpon vs as wormes of the earth he needeth no weapon for the matter hee can scatter vs as chaffe before the winde he can make the least dust to be our death and the smallest vermin to be our destruction If he arme the silly simple flye it is able to work out our confusion and is farre aboue our power to encounter and buckle withall These are the men of war that God chuseth to wage battell for him and to pull downe the hautinesse of our hearts Let vs profite to humility and stoope downe vnder his hand He can as easily send strange plagues strange diseases mortality among vs as hee in former times hath done This the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 5 21 22 24. Heare now this O foolish people and without vnderstanding which haue eyes and see not which haue eares and heare not feare ye not me saith the Lord Or will ye not bee afraid at my presence which haue placed the sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetuall decree that it cannot passe it though the waues thereof rage and rore they cannot preuaile or passe ouer it Lastly this teacheth that none can escape Vse 3 iudgement and though hand ioyne in hand the vngodly shall neuer go vnpunished For as it ministreth comfort to the faithfull in all dāgers to put their trust affiance in God who hath so many souldiers and seruants to protect and defend them so on the other side it assureth tribulation and anguish death and destruction to euery soule that doth euill Looke how many creatures he hath so many meanes he hath to destroy vs and we cannot escape if we be at warre and defiance with him If God be on our side who shall be against vs Rom. 8 31. But if he bee against vs what creature shall stand with vs Nay what creature is not armed against vs If God bee our enemy nothing in heauē or earth can shew vs any good or be in league and friendship with vs but is ready to bid vs battell and to proclaime open warre against vs. Therefore the Prophet saith God is iealous and the Lord reuengeth Nah 1 2 5 ● he will take vengeance on his aduersaries and heere serueth wrath for his enemies the Lord is slowe to anger but he is great in power and will not surely cleere the wicked the Mountaines tremble and the Hils melt before him the earth is burnt at his fight yea the world all that dwell therein Who can stand before his wrath his wrath is powred out like fire and the Rockes are broken by him If a man were compassed about with thousands of his enemies and hemmed in on euery side with a mighty hoast ready to draw their swords and discharge their Ordinance at him would hee not despaire of deliuerance and put his soule in his hand as the Prophet speakes This is the estate of all naturall and wicked men All creatures aboue their head and vnder their feete on the right hand on the left hand and round about them before them and behind them are set against them haue made a generall conspiracy against them It were a vaine hope and foolish presumption for such a prisoner to dreame of freedome deliuerance The murther of Abel lying heauy vpon the heart and conscience of Caine Gen. 4 1● made him stand in feare of euery creature that came to meete him or ouertooke him If then we would be at peace with the creatures and finde peace in our own selues which passeth all vnderstanding labour first of all to be at peace with God Let him haue no quarrell or controuersie against vs. Let vs send out an Embassage of peace ●14 32. and hang out of our hearts a flag of truce that he may call backe his army from pursuing of vs. If he once blow the retreate all his souldiers retire they are all able to doe vs no hurt the stones of the streete shal be in league with vs all creatures shall serue them that serue the Lord. Seeing therfore the least of Gods creatures are made by him too strong for a kingdome who shall bee able to resist his power Seeing in his wrath he can arme all the creatures in heauen and earth against vs the meanest whereof is aboue our strength what vain hearts haue we in our brests and what wicked tongues in our prophane mouthes to thinke and speake it that we will shift well enough with his iudgements Let vs shake at his infinite power betimes lest the fire of his iealousie burne against vs and it cannot bee quenched Let vs tremble at our security and presumption that haue taken hold vpon vs lest the guiltinesse thereof shake and shiuer vs in peeces for euermore seeing he bringeth out his armies by number calleth them by their names Esay 40 26. Verse 7. Then the people came to Moses said We haue sinned for wee haue spoken against the Lord and against thee Marke heere how the Israelites seeke helpe and succour of Moses A man would haue thought that this rout of Rebels of all other would not haue gone to Moses nor haue stooped downe to him whom before they had contemptuously scorned contumeliously abused and despitefully spoken against yet in their misery they making a vertue of necessity come with one accord to Moses to be helped succoured to be releeued and praied for they can finde no comfort nor remedy but in him We learne from hence ●trine ●ked are ● driuen ●eke helpe ●e ●godly ● they ● despised this doctrine Such as are disobedient wicked are oftentimes driuen to seek comfort and helpe of the godly whom they haue scorned and derided reuiled and spoken against I say vngodly men and such as blaspheme God and are enemies to God and to his seruants are many times inforced and constrained to sue to them whom they haue despised and to seeke to them in their necessity and extremity when they are in affliction and the hand of GOD is any wayes heauy vpon them This appeareth in many places of the word of God Abimelech hauing taken the wife of Abraham and wronged him in the most precious part of his possession ● 20 7 17. standeth in need of his praier that he might liue bee healed of the diseases that God had laide vpon him and his people In like manner Isaac was hated of the Philistims they enuied his riches they stopped his wels
peace dwelled in our houses possessed our inheritances enioyed our lands and goods thus long but for the faithfull seruants of God who mind the peace of Sion Doubtlesse he would not spare the world one minute and moment of time but for the godly Hee would haue spared the cities of Sodome and Gomorrha 〈◊〉 18.32 if ten righteous persons had bin found in them For the faiths sake of Rahah who hid the spies and sent them out another way 〈◊〉 26. hee spared her kindred and her fathers house For the faith of Lot whose righteous soule was vexed day by day in seeing and hearing the vnclean conuersation of those sinfull men he would haue saued his sonnes in law 〈◊〉 12 that should haue married his daughters For Pauls sake a chosen vessel to beare the Name of God to the Gentiles he gaue freely those that sailed with him and saued their liues 〈◊〉 ●4 Thus wee see that for the godly he beareth with the vngodly but when they are safe and sealed in the forehead then iudgement shall come vpon the wicked Contrariwise a nation a cittie a towne an house and family is cursed for the society and company of the wicked The Israelites could not prosper at the siege of Ai so long as Achan was among them The Sea could not be calme the ship could not be safe the Marriners could not be at rest so long as vnrepentant and vnreformed Ionah was a burden vnto it for he said vnto them Take me and cast me into the Sea so shall the waues worke no more so troublesomely for I know that for my sake this great tempest is vpon you Wherefore it is a sweet and comfortable thing to bee in the number of the faithfull wee haue benefite by the prayers of the Church which pierce the eares of God and bring downe his blessings in great aboundance Verse 8. And the Lord said vnto Moses Make thee a fiery serpent We heard before how the people repented of their sinnes and how Moses prayed for pardon Now see how God remooueth his hand Psal 103.9 He will not alwaies chide nor keepe his anger for euer hee doth not deale with vs after our sinnes nor rewardeth vs according to our iniquities Indeed he sheweth oftentimes his seuere iudgments but so soone as the sinner is humbled hee receiueth him to mercy the sinne is pardoned and the punishment is remooued Doctrine God is merciful to greeuous sinners when they are penitent The doctrine from hence is this that God is mercifull to all penitent sinners Repentance once going before mercy followeth after albeit we sinne greeuously against him This the Prophet teacheth in the Name of God Esay 1.18 Ezek. 18.21 22 23. and 33.11 Dauid sinned exceedingly in numbring the people for which God sent a pestilence three dayes in Israel that many thousands dyed yet when his heart smote him that he said I haue sinned exceedingly 2 Sa. 24 17.18 1 Chr. 21.15 17. I haue done wickedly but these sheep what haue they done Let thine hand I pray thee bee against mee and against my fathers house and not on thy people for their destruction the Lord repented him of the euill and said to the Angel that destroyed It is enough let thine hand ceasse Let vs consider the reasons of Gods merciful Reason 1 dealing which are first the comfort and releefe of his people that none should to the end of the world despaire of obtaining of mercy For the mercy of God in Christ is aboue all his workes which he extendeth to thousands it is infinite without measure Hee pardoneth such offenders to make them examples to others of Gods great mercy hee receiueth them to fauour and remitteth their offences not onely to manifest his mercy to the offender himselfe but to teach others to resort and repaire vnto him for pardon and forgiuenesse When the Prophet testifieth that by acknowledging his sinne vnto God and confessing his wickednesse against himself he obtained the remission of his sinne and punishment of sinne he addeth immediately Therefore shall euery one that is godly Psal 32.5 6. make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou mayest bee found This is the reason that the Apostle toucheth 1 Tim. 1. teaching that he was receiued to mercy for this cause That Iesus Christ shold first shew on him all long suffering vnto the example of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life So then from these and such like examples of great sinners that haue obtained much mercy we likewise should be assured of the goodnesse of God for our saluation whensoeuer wee can bee brought to beleeue the Gospel repent from dead works Secondly the consideration of the nature Reason 2 of God ministreth a strong and inuincible reason to gaine our affections to yeeld to this truth For his mercy is aboundant and his goodnesse is infinite It surmounteth the reach and vnderstanding of all mortall men It passeth the highnesse of the heauens the depth of the earth the breadth of the Sea the power of the diuel the strength of the Law the measure of the whole world and nothing can be compared with the perfections of the Almighty Iob 11.7 8 9. Paul who before his conuersion to the faith which he sought to destroy was a blasphemer a Persecuter an oppresser maketh this the cause why he was receiued to mercy The grace of our Lord was exceeding aboundant with faith and loue 1 Tim. 1.14 which is in Christ Iesus that is giuing vnto me faith that chased away infidelity and loue that ouercame cruelty So the Lord maketh this the chiefe and principall cause why he spared that rebellious and idolatrous people The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slow to anger aboundant in goodnesse and truth forgiuing iniquity transgression and sinne Vse 1 The vses follow of this doctrine First we learne that there is no sinne that doth exceed the mercy of God None can say without iniury against his owne soule without reproach against God and giuing the lie to the glorious Maiestie of God My sinne is greater then can be forgiuen True it is there is an vnpardonable sinne Mat 12.31 that shall neuer bee forgiuen either in this world or in the world to come the blasphemy against the Spirit but that is because they cannot relent or repent that commit it they are so farre gone that they can neuer returne backe againe not because God is not able to forgiue it or that it doth exceed the mercies of God Seeing then vile sinners finde such infinite and vnspeakeable mercie let vs neuer despaire or doubt of his mercy fauor though we be suddenly ouertaken through infirmitie and fall into diuers and greeuous sinnes He hath mercy in store for such as haue beene exceeding sinners against him If they can repent of their sinnes his mercies are as great as himselfe Consider the examples of Peter that denyed
reserueth wrath for his enemies and taketh vengeance on his aduersaries will helpe to redresse and represse our corrupt affections and make vs able to preuaile ouer them and to withstand them Let vs not recompence like for like let vs not measure euill for euill let vs do good against euill committing our cases and causes to that iust Iudge that alwayes iudgeth vprightly Therefore the Prophet ascribeth this Title as peculiar to God to right and reuenge the quarrels of his Children Psal 94 1 2. O Lord God the auenger O God the auenger shew thy selfe cleerely exalt thy selfe O Iudge of the world and render a reward to the proud It is the proper Office of God to take vengeance on the wicked and vngodly Wherefore the Apostle exhorteth the church Rom. 12 17 19 to recompence to no man euill for euill Dearely beloued auenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord So the Apostle Iohn after the foretelling o● troubles and persecutions addeth Heere is the patience of the Saints declaring thereby Reuel 14 12 what our armour and what our weapons of defence are to giue vs victory ouer our enemies Let these things stay vs in our afflictions from breaking out into impatiency of spirit and from returning wrong for wrong albeit the vnfaithfull rise vp against vs the Drunkards make songs of vs Psal 69 12. and we suffer reproofe and reproch for the Gospels sake yet he whose cause it is will not suffer the water-flouds to drowne vs neither let the deep● swallow vs vp nor let the pit shut her mouth vpon vs. Thirdly it is the duty of his people to prais● Vse 3 him greatly when hee auengeth the cause o● his Children When they see the wicked punished and those that forget God taken 〈◊〉 the snare of their own hands let them reioyce and be glad and giue vnto God the glory due vnto his name This practise we haue in the Prophet Ps 136 1. speaking of the ouerthrow of Pharaoh in the red sea and remembring the slaughter of sundry mighty Kings yea euen the names of those which we now speake of he prouoketh the people by a most earnest exhortation to giue thankes vnto God for their destruction Praise yee the Lord because hee is good for his mercy endureth for euer Heereunto commeth the praier of the Israelites induring the bitter scornes and reprochfull tauntes of most malicious enemies in the daies of their captiuity who as they demanded an heauie curse against those Edomites Psal 137 7 8. so they pronounced a blessing vpon them that shall vexe and trouble them This appeareth euidently in Ester 9 17. when the Church of God saw a great worke wr●ught for them their enimies destroyed and themselues deliuered they reioyced with an exceeding great ioy and kept a feast in remembrance of their deliuerance It is not cruelty to reioyce at the destruction of Gods enemies and to magnify his most great name for it This the Apostle Iohn teacheth Reu. 19 1.2 3 4 5. where the heauenly companies of Angels and blessed soules set foorth their gladnes and triumph that God had iudged the enemies of his people So chap. 18. v 20. O heauen reioyce of her and yee holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath punished her to be auenged on her for your sakes The innocent blood of the patient martyrs so cruelly murthered crieth out for vengeance in the eares of the Lord of hoasts as the blood of righteous Abel and shall not the Iudge of all the world do right It is his office to render into the bosome of his aduersaries seuen fold Now as it is our duty earnestly to desire the accomplishment of his iudgments so when they are performed as surely they will come and not tarry we must glorifie his blessed name with all reioycing that we can conceiue and expresse Lastly this serueth to be a terror to the vngodly Vse 4 when this Doctrine shal sound in their eares that God wil iudge the wicked for persecuting the members of Christ Iesus If they escape in this world the Lord reserueth them for greater iudgement When the Lord Iesus commeth with thousands of his Angels 2 Thes 1.6 7 8.9 hee will render vengeance vnto them in flaming fire and punish them with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power This the Prophet assureth Esai 8 9 10 14. 17 11 12 13 14. where by an Ironicall insulting he setteth downe the ruine of the enemies of the Church who albeit theyr rage be restlesse and their malice endlesse yet they shall not stand and their counsels shall come ●o nothing they do fight against God and against his sonne Christ Iesus who is the inuin●ible Rocke whereon the Church is builded ●gainst which the gates of hell shall not bee ●ble to preuaile So that whosoeuer shall fall on this stone he shall be broken but on whomsoeuer it shall fall it will dash him in peeces Mat. 21. Thus shal all the vngodly be scattered as chaffe before the winde and swept away as dung in the iust iudgement of God So let all thine Enemies perish O Lord but they that loue him shal be as the Sunne when he riseth in his might Iudg. 5 31. Verse 21.22 Let me go through thy Land We will not turne aside into the Fields nor into the Vineyards c. Heere Moses setteth downe another danger of the Israelites greater then the former remembred in the former chapter Thus one trouble followeth in the necke of another As one deepe calleth to another deepe by the noise of his water spouts Psal 42 7. Wee see heere againe how Israel is driuen to the same exigent they were before After they haue compassed the land of Edom they come to the Amorites and craue of them some help and compassion They seeke comfort and an end of their sorrowes at the hands of Sihon a wretched Idolater an enemy of God and of his people Thus low are the people of God oftentimes brought to stand in neede of the fauour of the vngodly as we haue shewed in the former chapter Furthermore Moses assureth before hand what their behauiour shall be and promiseth to abstaine from all hurt wrong From hence we learne this doctrine Doctri● The p● God 〈◊〉 ●staine 〈◊〉 wrong ●ries That the people of God must abstaine from al violent incroching vpon the goods and possessions of others they must not intrude them selues vpon their goodes and substance they must keep their hands from robbing and stealing and their hearts from coueting and desiring that which is anothers and not their owne they must not take of all that is another mans so much as a thred or shoo-latchet to inrich themselues Hereunto come the lawes giuen of God vnto his people Exodus 22 1. If a man steale an Oxe or a Sheepe if a man hurt his neighbours field or
is required there is a difference supposed betweene thine and mine Moreouer there could be no giuing nor buying nor bargaining nor selling nor hyring nor lending if all things were left to the wide world to be catched and snatched according to the lust and pleasure of euery man in all which notwithstanding God by speciall Commandements tieth vp and restraineth the gripings and greedines of couetous men For if the Corinthians had had all things in common no strife could arise among them of things pertaining to this life 1 Cor. 6.4 but inasmuch as they wronged one another in these temporall things and wrangled for them vnder the Infidels it is plaine that euery man had his owne portion distinct from the possession of other men And the same Apostle brideling the gaping and greedy desires of men teacheth that they that vse this world should bee as though they vsed it not and they that buy should be as though they possessed not 1 Cor. 7 30 31. Therefore by this exhortation buying is allowed possessing is granted so that the heart be not set vpon the world This is farther confirmed by sundry precepts of the Apostle Let him that hath stolne steale no more but let him rather labour and worke with his hands the thing which is good that he may haue to giue to him that needeth Eph. 4 28. The wise man saith Prou. 25 17. Withdraw thy foote from thy neighbours house lest he be weary of thee and hate thee But if all were common it were lawfull to enter euery where and vse all things at our owne pleasure Lastly to what ende and purpose should the word of God strictly command almes-giuing and the works of mercy and charity if there were no propriety or seueralty but an equall communion of all worldly goods So to what ende should the Apostle charge the wealthy in this world to do good with their goods 1 Tim. 6 17 18. and those that be rich to bee rich in faith and in good workes to bee ready to giue to such as are in need and to lay vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come Surely the difference betweene rich and poore could not stand betweene high and low but all should be shufled together in great confusion contrary to the order and ordinance of God who is the God of all order and comlinesse among the people Neither let any obiect the practise of the Primitiue Church Obiect Acts chap. 4 32 chap. 2 44 where it is said The multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one soule neither any of them saide that any thing of that which he possessed was his owne but they had all things common For there is a double kinde of communion Answer in respect of propriety and in respect of vse The community in the faithfull stood in the vse of these outward things which they imployed for the good of their fellow-members And therefore albeit some sold their goods and possessions and parted them according to the necessities of the poore members of Christ Acts 5 4. yet the Apostle Peter saieth to Ananias who had sold his possession kept away part of the price While it remained appertained it not to thee And after it was sold was it not in thine owne power But how could they sell their goods if they were not right owners and lawfull possessours of them Neither doth the Text say that those christians sold all they had possessed It is said indeed Acts 4 34. As many as were owners of lands and houses solde brought the prices of those things which they solde and laid it before the Apostles feete The Scripture sheweth they sold and brought the price of that they sold but it saith not they solde all and then brought the price of all for it appeareth that Philip one of them kept his house still entertained the Apostles in the same Acts 21 ● and consequently had it furnished for these vses and fitted to lodge and harbour the godly faithfull brethren This community should be in euery liuely feeling member of Christ who in the publike want of the Church should be ready and willing to dispossesse themselues of somewhat for the succour comfort of other members So then they are ouerthrowne which do affirme that it is vnlawfull for Christians to haue or possesse any riches whereas no man in the Primitiue Church was compelled to make his goods common For Peter plainely auoucheth that it lay in the power of Ananias whether he would sell his Land or not and when he had sold it the money was his owne so that he might haue kept it to himselfe if he had listed His sinne was that he pretended to bring the whole price of that which they had solde whereas they brought a part thereof so lyed vnto God But God requireth at our hands that wee should giue cheerefully not grudgingly willingly not constrainedly readily not backwardly Secondly euery one must looke that hee Vse 2 liue in a lawfull calling wherin he must abide eating his owne bread and labouring the thing that is good So we shall defraud no man but deale righteously and iustly and get by lawfull means we must restore againe that which hath beene vnlawfully gotten and vnconscionably deteined though haply hidden from men so that the world cannot lay it to our charge yet our owne heart knoweth it and chargeth it vpon vs and our conscience will not passe it ouer but we must euermore heare of it and receiue a checke from it The crying of an accusing condemned conscience cannot be stopped but is as a thousand witnesses against vs. Againe goods wrongfully gotten kept from the Owner do cry against vs and do lay bitter accusations to our charge This the Prophet Habbkkuk teacheth chap. 2 9 10 11. True it is the stones haue no mouth to cry neither the timber any feeling to suffer wrong at our hands but the Scripture vseth such manner of speech forme of words to make vs perceiue the better by this vehement raising vp of the dumbe and sencelesse creatures that if we do amisse before GOD and deale wrongfully with men the creatures shal beare witnesse against vs and aske vengeance vpon vs at the latter day Therefore he bringeth in the seuerall parts of the house answering one another and singing one to another one side cryeth out behold blood the other behold murther the one behold deceit the other behold cruelty Thus the Apostle Iames speaketh chap. 5 4. Behold the hire of the Labourers which haue reaped your field which is of you kept backe by fraud crieth and the cryes of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of hoasts Thus we see how the creatures abused do groane to be deliuered from the bondage of corruption cry out against oppression the oppressed crieth in the eares of the Lord and the conscience of the
oppressour as an honest Iurate witnesseth against him and cryeth for vengeance And shall the Lord be deafe and not heare such great and loud out-cryings of so many distressed and oppressed persons entring into the highest heauens and piercing the eares of the Lord of hoasts Shal not God auenge his elect which day and night cry vnto him ●e 18 7.8 yea though he suffer long for them I tell you he will auenge them quickly to the comfort of the oppressed but to the confusion of the oppressour Vse 3 Lastly seeing wrongfull dealing must bee auoided it serueth to condemne all inordinate liuing in no setled or lawfull calling idlely vnthriftily and prodigally For euery man liuing in the Church of what degree or condition soeuer must haue some particular calling to walke in how high soeuer his estate bee how great soeuer his reuenues be which condemneth the wandring vp downe of rogues and beggers the Cloysters of Monkes and Fryars the idlenes of rich men that haue lands and liuings all such as are Drones vnprofitable to the Church or Common-wealth or family wherein they abide Adam in time of his innocency immediately after his creation in the Image of God ●2 15. had a speciall calling appointed him to dresse and keepe the Garden It was likewise said to him and his posterity immediately after the fall ●3 19. In the sweate of thy browes thou shalt eate thy bread till thou returne vnto the earth out of which thou wast taken So the Apostle saith 2 Thess 3 11 12. Christ Iesus the head of men and Angels before the solemne inuesting and entring into his Office liued priuately in Iosephs house and wrought in his trade ● 6 3 ●●tra 〈◊〉 and therefore it is that the Iewes call him not onely the Carpenters sonne but a Carpenter If then we would settle our selues in a lawfull calling eating our owne bread trusting in the prouidence of God contenting our selues with our present estate thinking it the best and fittest for vs we should keepe our selues from oppression wrong But because some liue without any calling some without a lawfull calling others liue distrustfull discontented it driueth them to make vngodly shifts and vse vnlawfull meanes which God abhorreth Let vs lay these things to our own hearts and not spend our dayes in ydlenesse The time is precious let vs seeke to redeeme it Let vs euery day do some good or other Ephe. 5 16. let vs learne some good of others or be teaching some good thing to others But alasse how many are there in all places that spend whole dayes and moneths and years in vanity who if they would call themselues to an account of their liues past might see and perceiue many dayes passe ouer their heads without doing any good whereof albeit they will take no account of themselues yet they must giue an account to God at the day of iudgement Verse 23. But Sihon gaue Israel no licence to passe through his Border and Sihon assembled all his people and went out against Israel into the wildernesse c. The request to giue the Israelites a quiet and peaceable passage beeing quiet peaceable men was iust and reasonable yet the petition is denyed and the people themselues that made it are persecuted They offered no wrong they drew no sword they shot no Arrow they cast no Dart they took away nothing yet they are hated and hurried vnto the death and assaulted without mercy This teacheth Doctrine The wicked hate and persecute the godly without cause that the vngodly do hate and persecute the godly without cause This is the practise of wicked men to pursue the children of God with all iniurious and despitefull dealing albeit they offer no occasion of hurt or harme vnto them We see this practise in Cain who hated his brother Gen. 4 8. and albeit hee spake friendly vnto him yet drawing him into the field he rose vp against him slew him This the Prophet complaineth of Psalm 69 4 and 35 7. Ioseph was sold as a slaue and imprisoned as a malefactor Ieremy was many wayes troubled and clapped vp Dauid was hated hunted frō place to place The Apostles were whipped and scourged in the Synagogues Stephen was reuiled and stoned Christ was scorned and crucified Paul was buffetted and persecuted The Saints were tryed by mocking burned in the fire slaine with the sword they wandred in the wildernesse they were hidden in caues and holes of the earth The Reasons are very plaine direct For first it seemeth vnto them more then strange Reason 1 that the faithfull are not brethren with them in euill but separate themselues from them will touch no vncleane thing If we were of the world the world would loue his owne but because we are chose out of the world therfore the world hateth vs. So long as Paul ioynd with the Pharisies in persecuting the Church imprisoning all those that called vpō the Lord Iesus who was in greater fauor and credit with thē But whē he was called to preach the truth which before he had oppugned and became zealous in the faith which before he destroyed by by the Iewes tooke counsell to kill him Acts 9 23. Christ Iesus the Lord of life before he was installed into his Office Luke 2 52 3 2 4 28 29 was in fauor with God and men but when he was baptized albeit he was alwaies in fauour with his Father yet immediately afterward he was tempted of the diuell contemned of his Country-men and ledde to the edge of an hil to be cast downe headlong This is that which the Apostle Peter witnesseth 1 Pet. 4.4 5. But it is better for vs to haue the hatred of men and the ill will of all the world then faile in any part of our duty vnto God who is able to cast body and soule into hell Reason 2 Secondly no maruaile if the wicked hate the godly for the world hateth Christ He was called a Samaritan he was counted a Coniurer he was esteemed as a drunkard a deceiuer a diuell a friend of Publicans and sinners If they haue thus reuiled the Master of the house no maruell if they respect not the members The Embassadour must not looke to be greater then he that sent him Iohn 13 16 and 16.20 the Disciple must not dreame of a better condition then the Lord if they haue done thus to the greene Tree what will they doe to the dry and withered Luke 23 31. If they deale thus with him that is alwayes fruitefull florishing and liueth for euer we must not look that they should deale better with vs that are vnfruitfull and full of the vnsauory fruites of our corruption This Christ himselfe teacheth in sundry places Mat. 10 24 25. The Disciple is not aboue his Master nor the seruant aboue his Lord it is enough for the Disciple to bee as his Master is and the seruant
the Patriarkes Prophets Prophetesses and other holy men and women in the old new Testament See the examples of Moses singing the praises of God after their deliuerance out of Egypt after the ouerthrow of Pharaoh and after their passage ouer the red sea he footed it not in a low but in a lofty stile praising God in verses not in prose Exod. 15 1. for the greater efficacy of the matter and the better expressing of their affections The like we might say of his sweet song sung not long before his death Deut. 31 19 22. 32 1 2 c. Cygnea cantio which he taught the children of Israel Iudges 5 1. thus did Deborah and Barak And thus did Dauid make an Epitaph in verse vpon the death of Saul and Ionathan after they were slaine by the Philistims not penned after the plaine and vulgar manner but with many rhetoricall flourishes of Tropes and figures according to the nature of the verse and the substance of the matter Reason 1 The Reasons hereof are easie to be conceyued to auouch the lawfulnesse praise-worthinesse of this Art For first euery Art and knowledge is of God Euery good giuing and euery perfect gift saith the Apostle Iames is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of Lights Euery Mechanical trade and handy-craft is the gift of God there is no excelling in any of them but by his special gift who is the God of knowledge which maketh a difference not onely between man beast but betweene man and man Such as found out curious workes in Gold Siluer Brasse in grauing of stones in caruing of wood in making any Needle-worke about the Tabernacle Were filled with the spirit of God in wisedome Exod. 31.3 35 30. in knowledge and vnderstanding As it is God that frameth the hand to such inuentions so it is he that guideth the pen giueth the tongue of the learned to speake or write after an excellent manner The Heathen men were wont to say That Poets were inspired of God to go beyond the reach of the vulgar sort So then this gift being more then ordinary must needs in a peculiar and speciall sort be from God Reason 2 Secondly sundry parts and bookes of holy Scripture are penned poetically and those of excellent worthy note albeit we know not the kinds and measures of them howsoeuer sundry haue laboured to finde out the seueral numbers and natures of them inasmuch as euery Language hath his peculiar frame fashion yet not onely some certaine parts and parcels but sundry whole bookes as hath bin said were Poetically penned and in that respect may be fitly called Poeticall Bookes Of this kinde and nature are the booke of Iob the Psalmes of Dauid the Prouerbes of Salomon the booke of the Preacher and the Song of songs all which seeme to be contained comprehended by our Sauiour Christ vnder the title of the Psalmes when he diuideth the whole Scripture into the Law the Prophets and the Psalms as Luke 24 14. Besides when any thing of greatest note worthy of greatest remembrance and commendation was to bee set downe in the Scriptures the Prophets did choose to speake in this artificial composition of words sentences to giue a greater grace and adde greater glory vnto the same as appeareth in sundry places of the Law and Prophets Vse 1 The vses of this truth direct vs to sundry profitable meditations and weighty considerations For first it teacheth vs in part the maiesty and authority of the Scriptures They are not certain rugged and ragged writings to be contemned for their rudenesse and simplicity and to be condemned for their basenesse and homelinesse as the Atheists and others that boast and brag of their fine wits are not ashamed to giue out but Bookes full of holy excellency and wonderfull statelinesse not only working grace in the hearts of the hearers but carrying a grace to the eares of the hearers Bookes filled with true eloquence and more able to perswade then all the enticing words of humane wisedome Therefore the Lord to deliuer his word from disgrace reproach doth sometimes flye aloft with a maiesticall grauity and stately port able to astonish the outward senses sufficient to draw the whole man into admiration and thereby sheweth what he could doe in the rest of the holy Scriptures if it had pleased him Let a man reade with singlenesse of heart and with the eye of iudgement the 104. Psalme 1 2 3 4 5. verses describing the Maiestie of God or Ecclesiastes 12. verses 1 2 3 4 5 c. describing the approaching of olde age or the first chap. of Esay vers 1 2 3 4 5 c. describing the vnthankfulnesse of the people and hauing diligently read and aduisedly perused them let him tell me whether hee do not despise in comparison of them not onely the descriptions of Homer and Virgil but the Orations of Tully and Demosthenes as froth and scum hauing onely the empty shadow of the true and right eloquence So the Apostle Paul beeing charged to bee rude in speaking doth not confesse any want in his stile or craue pardon for any fault but doth iustify his maner of writing purposely auoideth the wisedom of mans eloquence He opposeth his plainnesse to the set and curious speech of the false Apostles who came in gay appearance and hunted after fine phrases and shew of words as if they had had all the strength of truth that might be on their side yet notwithstanding in this plaine style the Apostle sheweth himselfe most mightie and most eloquent garnishing his words and adorning his sentences with all the figures that Art can affoord so farre as serued to moue affections and to touch the conscience For the power of the Scriptures inspired by God stādeth in the inward force and vertue working vpon the soule piercing the heart casting downe the imaginations that lift vppe themselues against the truth conuerting the whole man and entering through to the diuiding of the soule and spirit of the ioynts marrow Heb. 4 12. yea discerning the thoughts and intents of the heart The Apostles of Christ subdued the whole world not with fire and sword not with carnall and bodily weapons but by the plaine preaching of Christ crucified as Paul himselfe confesseth 1 Cor. 2 2. He regarded to know nothing among them but Christ Iesus and him crucified And in 1 Cor. 2 3 4. I was among you in weaknesse and in feare and in much trouble neither stood my word and my preaching in the enticing speech of mans wisedome but in plaine euidence of the Spirit and of power that your Fayth should not be in the wisedome of men but in the power of God Seeing therefore it hath pleased God to giue vs a taste and to leaue as it were the prints and footsteppes of all learning and Arts in the world insomuch that no forme of reasoning no ornament of speaking
on the left hand we know not what the miserie of slauery and slaughter meaneth we do not behold our Citties besiedged our Countries wasted our Townes entrenched our walles b●tter●d our houses fired consumed blessed bee the great name of our most gracious God therefore for euermore Let vs then take heede that wee abuse not these mercies and good things of Almighty GOD lest hee take them away from vs in his fierce wrath and indignation O that there were in vs wise hearts to consider these things whilst we dwell safely in these our houses and habitations and before the enemie approacheth ne●e vnto vs and casteth a trench about vs. But if we prouoke God and make warre with him how can we haue peace with men how can we looke to liue in safetie any longer with our wiues and children This our Sauiour hath set downe and with ●eares taught the Iewes long before their destruction came vpon them For when he came neere and beheld the City he wept for it and passionately saide Luk. 19 41 42 43 44. O if thou haddest euen knowne at the least in this day those things which belong vnto thy peace But now are they hid from thine eies For the daies shall come vpon thee that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee and compasse thee round keepe thee in on euerie side and shall make thee euen with the ground and thy children which are in thee and they shall not leaue thee a stone vpon a stone because thou knowest not that season of thy visitation Let vs apply these things vnto our selues and if wee desire to liue peaceably with men let vs first seek to be at peace with God and if we would be reconciled to our brother let vs in the first place be reconciled to our God and then all things shall speake peace vnto vs. Verse 29. Woe be to thee Moab O people of Chemosh thou art vndone hee hath deliuered his sons which escaped and his daughters into captiuity to Sihon king of the Amorites Here the Poet rhetorically turneth his speech to the Moabites describing their foolish confidence in their dumbe Idolles Psal 115 4 5. Which are the worke of mens hands which haue eies and see not eares and heare not they haue a mouth and speake not noses and smell not hands touch not feet and walke not neither make they a sound with their throat they that make them are like vnto thē and so are all they that trust in them The Nations of the Gentiles had multitudes of gods and euery Nation his seuerall Idoll-go● As Chemosh was the idoll of the Moabites Baal of the Caldeans Ashteroth of the Sidonians Moloch of the Ammonites Rimmon of the Syrians Dagon of the Philistims These are false gods and had the godhead or diuine nature falsly ascribed vnto them who were not able to saue such as did worship them as the author of this song here declareth Hee hath deliuered his sons and daughters to captiuity and was not able to deliuer them out of the hands of Sihon king of the Amorites 1 King 18 26. For as the Israelites cried for fire to come from heauen from morning to noone O Baal heare vs so no doubt did the Moabites for deliuerāce from their enimies cal to their idol Chemosh O Chemosh heare vs but there was no voyce nor any to answer so that they fel into the hands of the Amorites and receiued no profit or benefit by their idoll seruice Heere then wee see how the idolatrous Moabites worshipping a false god and trusting in their great Idol are defeated and destroyed Hence we learne Doctrine Idolaters shal be confounded and destroyed That Idolaters lye open to iudgement The worshipping of Images howsoeuer it bee coloured with false reasons is the true cause of Gods iudgements We see heere how the Moabites were rooted out of theyr Townes and Cities for this sinne Hitherto come the threatnings of the Prophets against the Nations by Esay chap. 46 1 2. and Ier. 46 44 7 8. for their idolatry We see in Iudg. 2 11. when Israel committed idolatry began to cleaue to strange gods and forsook the Lord God of their fathers God sold them into the handes of their enemies so that they could no longer stand before them This was the destruction of Ieroboam the son of Nebat that made Israel to sinne and of Iehu who set vp idolatry after he had destroyed it This was the cause that the wrath of God brake in vpon the Israelites when they had erected the golden Calfe which sin was reuenged with a greeuous and horrible slaughter Heereunto also the Prophet hath relation Psal 106 34 35. They destroyed not the people as the Lord had commanded them but were mingled amongst the heathen and learned their workes and serued their Idols which were their ruine Thus we see how idolatry turneth to the destruction of the idolater The Reasons follow First God is the husband Reason 1 of his Church and can no more abide to haue his honour and worship communicated to any other then the husband any partner or fellow in his loue Prou. 6 35. ●ho cannot beare the sight of any ransome neither will hee consent though thou augment the gifts Idolatry therfore is spirituall whoredome and God is a iealous God of his honor and glory and will not suffer the same to be giuen to any other Esay 42 8. Exod. 20 5. This is notably declared and woorthily expressed by the Prophet Hosea where the idolatry of the Israelites is resembled to the adulterous and whorish woman that doateth vpon her louers that forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the couenant of her God Their mother saith the Lord by his Prophet hath played the Harlot she that conceiued them hath done shamefully c. As then God is the husband of his C●urch so our spirituall worship is as a certaine marriage of our soules consecrated vnto the Lord therfore all false and forged worship is spiritual whordome and adultery toward him To this purpose speaketh Hosea ch 2 19 20. I will marrie thee vnto me for euer yea I will marry thee vnto me in righteousnes and in iudgement c. Thus also the Prophet Ieremy speaketh ch 2 2. Thus saith the Lord I remember thee with the kindnesse of thy youth and the loue of thy Marriage when thou wentest after me in the wildernesse in a Land that was not sowne Secondly Idols are the workes of mens Reason 2 hands whether they bee of Siluer or Golde they are the worke of the Founder or whether they bee carued or grauen in stone or timber they are the hand of the workeman or whether they bee wrought in blew silke or purple Ieremy 10 9. All things are made by cunning men Heereupon it followeth that they that depend vpon them and seeke helpe of them doe seeke helpe of flesh and doe make stockes and stones their god and therefore they
is a wonderfull miracle aboue nature and gaue her power to speake which is a peculiar preheminence of mankind True it is God hath giuen many giftes to the vnreasonable creatures wherein also they excell man yet to none hath he giuen the vse of speech and benefit of language but vnto man onely among all the workes of his hands And as he gaue her the vse of the tongue to speake with mans voyce so he gaue her the benefit of reason to speake with vnderstanding For she discourseth as a reasonable creature and sheweth forth the Art of concluding from many particulars cleering her selfe of present blame by her by-past actions and appealing to him as a witnesse and iudge in that matter Where she reasoneth after this manner If I haue done thee from the first time I came into thy possession hitherto faithfull seruice then am I at this present faultlesse But I haue hitherto serued thee faithfully Therefore I haue not at this present mocked thee The assumption is prooued and confirmed by an humane testimony for she appealeth to Balaam to speake his conscience what he had euer found in her And albeit God stirred vp the Asse to be his schoolemistris wrought a wonder to checke him to his face yet the wretch is not moued at the matter nor stirred vp at the miracle to lay his hand on his mouth and giue glory to God but bursteth with anger threatneth with words and striketh her with a staffe recompenceth euill for good He chafeth and fretteth that the asse had mocked him he considereth the fact of the asse but marketh not his owne fault which was farre worse who had mocked with God For the authority of God is greater ouer man then of man ouer his beast and there is a greater difference and disproportion between the Creator and the creature then is between creature and creature There is greater equality between man beast between the worke the workman betweene the potter and the clay betweene the saw and him that moueth it betweene the Axe and him that heweth with it then is betweene man whose breath is in his nostrils and the eternall God who is euen a consuming fire For euery creature is finite God is infinite between which is no equality or proportion so that the asse deserued not to be smitten of the man but the man deserued to be striken of God as the Angel witnesseth 〈…〉 But how could the Asse speake or how could a bruite beast which is without reason as the Apostle teacheth discourse and conclude Or where learned she the art of Logick which is nothing else but the art of vsing reason teaching to inuent arguments and then dispose them in order with good iudgement This seemeth to minister matter to Atheists and Libertines to deride all Religion and to scoffe at the Scriptures taking occasion at this and other like places For when they heare that an Asse could speake and reason the case with her master they beleeue it no more then one of Esopes Fables or a strange tale out of Ouids Metamorphosis where trees and birds and beasts are made to speake I answere touching our selues that are nourished in the bosome of the Church and bene instructed in the Gospel of Christ and trained vp in the schoole of the Prophets it is sufficient for our faith and staying vp our consciences in the truth to know that which Moses mentioneth verse 28. the Lord opened the mouth of the Asse the which was as easie for him to do as to giue vs reason and reasonable soules at the first For when thou hearest that GOD opened the Asses mouth it is as much as if it had bene said He that is almighty powerfull and al-sufficient did it that is without want or weakenes with whom nothing is vnpossible who sitteth in heauen and doth whatsoeuer he will aboue the course and order of nature And albeit wee haue not any like example in former times nor in the generations afterward of the like worke of God yet whence hath mankinde the vse of speech and vnderstanding but that God gaue it in the creation Wee see sometimes hee denyeth it to some men that are borne deafe and dumbe and cannot speake to the end we should acknowledge speech to be the gift of God rather then of Nature Sometimes also the Lord hath taken away the vse of the tongue for a time as wee see in Zachariah 〈◊〉 1 20 62 and peraduenture also of his eare that he could not heare inasmuch as the people spake not to him when they came together to bee present at the circumcision of his sonne but made signes to him how hee would haue him called As then the Lord denyeth the gift of speaking and depriueth of it where he once hath giuen it who can limite the holy One from bestowing speech framing the tongue of a beast to vtter a voice and communication as with the tongue of a man or to giue to the creature inferiour in nature that which is proper to the superiour For albeit God hath set setled an order in nature yet himselfe is not euer bound vnto it Neither is this miracle in this dumbe beast more marueilous 〈◊〉 11. 〈…〉 then that of Nebucadnezzar he was driuen from the societie of men hee did dwell with beasts hee did eate grasse l●ke the Oxe and the Asse his body was wet with the dew of heauen till the haire of his head did grow as Eagles feathers and the nailes of his fingers like birdes clawes and to conclude he wanted all vse of reason and vnderstanding Now the Asse did no more in this place resemble man then this man did resemble a beast as the Asse had reason giuen her so had the King his vnderstanding taken from him being striken by the hand of God with madnes and bereft of common reason and iudgement for it is said afterward that his vnderstanding was restored Besides we see the diuell in the beginning vsed the tongue of the serpent to speake to our first parents August de Gen. ad lit lib. 11. cap. 29. If Satan did this in the serpent shall not the author of Nature be able to doe it in the tongue of the Asse for as the serpent by nature can doe no more but hisse so the Asse can doe no more but bray Shall wee not ascribe so much to God as to the diuell Could the diuell vse the serpents tongue as his instrument and cannot God open the mouth of the Asse to teach a false and ignorant Prophet Or if wee confesse that God can worke miracles why not this among others If not this then neither others Now touching Atheists and Infidels that beleeue not the Scriptures nor the power of God to conuince them that are patrons of Nature but enemies of the God of Nature wee see how in Pies and Popin-iayes hee hath left a certaine resemblance of speech and thereby sheweth forth what hee is able to
for vs when we sleep he heareth when we are deafe he riseth vp for vs when we lie downe hee is a buckler about vs when we are assaulted he is the God of knowledge when wee are ignorant And if euer there were people vnder the heauen that hath experience of Gods watchfulnesse in this kinde it is this Nation of great Britaine O vnthankfulnes if we doe not acknowledge it O wretchednesse if we doe not euer remember it O wickednes if we do not teach it to our posterities For hath not God deliuered vs from the most cursed and execrable plot of desperate enemies that euer was contriued against the King the Queene the Prince and the rest of their progeny against the Lords the Commons the whole Church kingdome ●hen the fift 〈◊〉 No●●● An. 〈◊〉 5. determining suddainly to haue blowne vp the whole house of Parliament with gun-powder Now as this was an inuention bloody an intention barbarous and inhumane See Act. 〈…〉 3. so by what meanes were wee deliuered was it by our fasting and prayer was it by humbling our selues before our God and crying strongly in the eares of the Lord of hostes was it by our teares and weeping for our sins saying spare thy people O Lord and giue not thine inheritance into reproch that the Priests and Iesuites should rule ouer them Nay we vsed none of all these we suspected no danger we feared no enemies we dreamed of no diuelish deuices against the land so that to detect and disclose the fore-named cursed conspiracy was the Lords doing onely and it is marueilous in our eyes When an inuasion in the yeere 88. was intended by the supposed inuincible Armado glorying in their strength munition shippes preparations confederates it was indeed the Lords mercy toward vs to crosse and curse their attempt and to raise the windes and seas against them howbeit this was not without vsing of meanes as rigging of shippes arming of men mustering of souldiers yea it was not without sanctifying of fasts calling solemne assemblies and crying vnto the Lord. If then wee did sing songs of thanksgiuing for that deliuerance how should our hearts be kindled and inflamed with ioyfulnesse and with what praises should wee expresse our thankfulnes 〈…〉 but euen vow vnto the Lord our selues our soules and bodies to offer them vp a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto him For as many haue bene the practices of the malicious and bloody Papists yet this surmounteth them all so many haue bene the deliuerances of our Princes of our Rulers of our Magistrates of our Ministers of our people but this surmounteth and surpasseth them all Psal 95 1 2. Let vs therefore reioyce vnto the Lord let vs sing aloud to the rock of our saluation let vs come before his face with praise let vs sing loud vnto him with Psalmes for the Lord is a great God and a great King aboue all gods He sitteth in heauen and laugheth to scorne the deuices of the wicked He ruleth in earth and maketh all his enemies his footstoole Verse 28. Then the Lord opened the mouth of the Asse When Balaam had smitten his Asse three times that had saued his life it pleased God to worke a wonder to alter the course of nature to giue speech to the Asse to make her able to reproue her master God indeed could otherwise haue set his sin in order before him but a dumbe beast is teacher fit enough for the fals Prophet We see hereby Doctrine God oftentimes worketh aboue nature that God so often as it pleaseth him worketh aboue nature ordinary meanes Hereunto come al the miracles which God hath shewed from the beginning of the world He gaue vnto Abraham Sarah a son in their old age who quickneth the dead Rom. 4 17. and calleth those things which be not as though they were He stayed the course of the Sun diuided the red sea fed his people with Manna Heb. 11 33 34. stopped the mouthes of Lions quenched the violence of fire opened the earth to swallow his enemies brought water out of the hard rocke Hee sent signes and wonders in the land of Egypt vnto this day in Israel and among al men hath made him a name as appeareth this day Hee brought his people out of the hand of Pharaoh with signes with wonders with a strong hand with a stretched out arme and with a great terrour He gaue power to a virgin to conceiue beare a son that he might saue his people from their sins Ier 32.20 Math 1 21 23. The reasons remaine to be considered and Reason 1 handled to confirme vs farther First marke the nature of God he is great in counsell glorious in holines fearefull in praises mighty in his workes and in his enterprises Who made the heauen who framed the earth and laide the foundation thereof vpon the depth who brought light out of darknesse Is it not the Lord that doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen in earth in the depth and in all the world This the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 32. Ah Lord God behold thou hast made the heauen and the earth by thy great power Ier. 32.17 by thy stretched out arme and there is nothing hard vnto thee he maketh the barren fruitfull Psal 136.5 ● he brought all things out of nothing who onely doth great wonders for his mercy endureth for euer who by his wisedome made the heauens and hath stretched out the earth vpon the waters for his mercy endureth for euer Againe therby he maketh his name known Reason 2 and his power to bee acknowledged in the world This is declared by Nehemiah in the prayer of the Leuites chap. 9. Thou hast considered the afflictiō of our fathers in Egypt heard their cry by the red Sea and shewed tokens and wonders vpon Pharaoh and on all his seruants and on all the people of the land for thou knowest that they dealt proudly against them Neh. 9 9 10. therefore thou madest thee a Name as appeareth this day Wherefore to the end the power and presence of God may bee knowne both to the Church and the enemies of the Church hee breaketh and interrupteth the naturall order and course of things Heereupon it is that Ioshua calleth the children of Israel and telleth them that by the miracle of diuiding the waters of Iordan Iosh 3 10. they should know that the liuing GOD was among them and would cast out the Canaanites before them Vse 1 The vse of this doctrine may bee made in this manner First it serueth fitly to condemne all Atheists and earth-wormes that aduance nature to throw downe the power of God Indeed if GOD onely wrought by ordinary meanes and according to the strength of second causes some pretence might bee alleaged and some colour of reason produced to doubt of the diuine power But seeing GOD worketh not onely by nature and by meanes but sometimes aboue
behinde them no way was left them to escape the dangers in mans iudgement But as the Church in this world is euer subiect to affliction and to lye vnder the crosse so God doth not incontinently deliuer it out of danger but many times continueth their troubles and augmenteth their calamities to exercise their faith to try their patience and to proue their obedience notwithstanding in the end God maketh an happy issue and sheweth that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against the Church Therefore when the Israelites began to murmure and not so much against Moses as against God and looked more to the danger of death before them then to the power of GOD aboue them and considered more what they did want then what they should beleeue Moses said vnto them Feare yee not stand still and behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to thee this day for the Egyptians whom yee haue seene this day yee shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you 〈◊〉 1. therefore hold you your peace When there was a great persecution raised against the Church at Ierusalem so that the sheepe of Christ were scattered abroad and nothing but threatnings and slaughter breathed out against the Disciples of the Lord 〈◊〉 2 3. Authority being giuen by the High-Priest to imprison all such as called on his Name rather then the Church should bee rooted out the Lord Iesus appeared in the Heauens to Paul as hee was in the way being now come neere to Damascus called him to the knowledge of the truth and appointed him to be a teacher of the Gospel that before hee destroyed 1. Sam. 10 11 so that wee may renew the ancient Prouerbe Is Saul also among the Prophets So when wee see the dangerous times and perillous seasons of the Church let vs not hang downe our heads but rather lift vp our hearts and cry vnto God saying Helpe Lord in the time of neede forsake not thine inheritance which thou hast purchased nor the Vine-yard which thy right hand hath planted And let vs assure our selues that when the cause thereof seemeth most desperate and helpe appeareth to vs to be farthest off 2. Cor. 12 9. then is his mercy greatest and his presence neerest then is his power made perfect through our weakenesse This is that which the Prophet Zachary witnesseth chap. 8. speaking of the returne of the people from captiuity vnto Ierusalem and of the louing kindnesse of GOD to bee extended toward them For albeit the residue that were left were reproached the Citty ruinated the gates burned and the wall broken downe yet hee prophesieth Zach. 8 4 5 ● That old Men and old Women shall dwell in the streetes of Ierusalem and the streetes of the City shall be full of Boyes and Girles playing in the streetes thereof For thus saith the Lord of hostes Though it seeme vnpossible in the eyes of the remnant of this people in these dayes should it therefore be vnpossible in my sight saith the Lord of hostes Vse 4 Lastly as this Doctrine teacheth vs to beleeue the promises of God so it teacheth vs not to doubt or despair of the saluatiō conuersion of our brethren for God is able to cal and conuert them to the sauing knowledge of the Gospel This the Apostle vrgeth intreating of the calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 23. to embrace the faith of the Gentiles And they also if they abide not still in vnbeleefe shall be grafted in for God is able to graft them in againe Likewise when the Disciples saw and heard the difficulty of entring into heauen for those that trust in their riches that they haue need of a singular gift of God to escape out of the snares subtilties of Satan Math. 19 26 Christ Iesus beheld them and said vnto them With men this is vnpossible but with God all things are possible Math. 20 1. He calleth at all houres of the day at the dawning of the day at the third houre at the sixt at the ninth and at the eleuenth houre For as he is bound to no person so he is bound to no time he calleth whom he will he teacheth and toucheth the heart when he will This we see in the example of the Apostle Paul which wee spake of before he was at the first a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1 13 a persecutor and an oppressor yet he was receiued of God to mercy to the encouragement of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life Marke 16 9 So was Mary Magdalen a greeuous sinner an vncleane liuer Luke 7 47. out of whom he had cast seuen diuels yet many sinnes were forgiuen her inasmuch as she loued much was the first to whom the Lord appeared after his resurrection Wherefore albeit we s●e men run on in their wickednesse and shut theyr eares against the wholesome admonitions of the word of God albeit their whole life be a continuall practise of sinne and that they drinke in iniquity as the fish doth the water yet wee must iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4 5. vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the hearts manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God God is not tyed to ordinary causes but as hee fed the people with Quailes in the wildernes so he can inwardly instruct the conscience he can make the least meanes powerfull and effectuall to saluation Math. 19 30. so that as many which are first shall bee last so sometimes the last shal be first He called Iohn the Baptist as it were in the dawning of the day whom he sanctified from his mothers wombe Luke 1 15. He called Timothie and Titus some others as it were at the third houre of the day 2 Tim. 3 15 and 1 5. Who were brought vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of children which are able to make thee wise vnto saluation through the faith which is in Christ Iesus and honoured the Lord with the first fruits of their life Hee called Paul to be an Apostle Mary Magdalene to be a beleeuer as it were at the sixt houre who after their conuersion redeemed the time and though they were inferiour to other in respect of time yet they were equall vnto them or before them in regard of zeale other graces of Gods Spirit He called the theefe vpon the crosse as it were at the eleuenth houre to bee partaker of his kingdome Luke 23.42 43. to whom Christ said This day shalt thou bee with me in Paradise Let vs not therefore enter into iudgment against our brethren let vs commit them to God Acts 1 7. Seeing it is not for vs to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his owne power Let vs pray for their conuersion to God that hee would giue them repentance to know him
First seeing wee can neither see nor heare nor vse the meanes open before vs except God open our eyes let vs pray to God to guide vs in the right vse of our senses as he hath giuen the senses themselues Let vs vse al the meanes that God hath put into our hands alwayes with prayer to God to blesse them to vs and our comfort Especially when we come to heare his Word let vs craue of him to open our hearts as he did the heart of Lydia Acts 16 14. that shee attended vnto the things which Paul spake so hee that hath eares to heare shall heare For by nature wee haue vncircumcised hearts and eares and through our corruption wee are as closed vessels vnfit to receiue the wholsome liquor and pure waters of the Word of God which is oftentimes preached to the condemnation of those that heare it Therefore the Lord speaketh by the Prophet Yee shall heare indeed Esai 6 9 10 11. but ye shall not vnderstand yee shall plainely see and not perceiue make the heart of this people fat make their eares heauy and shut their eyes lest they s●e with their eyes heare with their eares and vnderstand with their hearts and conuert and he heale them euen vntill their cities bee without Inhabitants their houses without possessours their fields without tillers of them He doth not alway take away his Word for the sinnes of men but causeth it to be preached to their condemnation that will not obey it nor expresse the power of it in their conuersations And surely if we would know the cause of the ignorance contempt of the Word of the want of profiting and regarding of the preaching of the Gospel which is the high ordinance of God in his heauenly wisedome sanctified for the saluation of his Elect wee shall finde this to be the chiefest we rest and trust in our selues we thinke it sufficient to bring our naturall eyes and carnal eares with vs whereas we should earnestly desire of God the true vse and comfortable fruite of them otherwise we may see and heare to our further condemnation This we see in the same sort practised by the Prophet Elisha when he was compassed with his enemies hee prayeth God to open the eyes of his seruant 2 Kings 6 17 18 19. to see the helpe that God had sent him he prayed likewise to God touching his enemies first to strike them with blindnes that they might run into danger then to open their eyes to see themselues in danger Let vs also continually giue him thankes so often as wee finde his hand to be with vs and feele him with his gifts to bestow vpon vs the vse of his gifts whether naturall or spirituall to blesse our senses to direct our iudgements to sanctifie our vnderstandings to soften our hearts and to circumcise our eares Now if we must be faine to beg of God the proper functions and right vses of our outward senses which we haue by nature as if we had them not and render praise vnto God for them how much more are wee to aske of God a pure and cleane heart an humble and contrite spirit the gift of repentance and the grace of regeneration which we haue not by nature but are contrary to nature For the Apostle teacheth truely that the wisedome of the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8 7. because it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be And again 1. Cor. 2 14. The natural man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnes vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned It is God that must reueale vnto vs by his Spirit the mysteries of his kingdome Cor. 2 6 7 1. which none of the Princes of this world haue knowne the spirit searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God This we see noted vnto vs in the communication and conference of Christ with the two disciples that went to Emmaus hee drew neere to them to heare their reasoning together of the things that happened at Ierusalem touching the passion of Christ Luke 24.16 ●1 but their eyes were holden that they could not know him His body indeed was not in●isible the change was not in him but in their eyes which after a sort were dimm'd holden backe that they should not discerne him for a season afterward their eyes were opened Iohn 20 15. that they knew him as likewise Mary Magdalen albeit shee were neither blinde nor deafe yet discerned him neither by seeing nor hearing of bim Wherefore wee haue not an absolute power ouer our senses it is God that giueth the eye that must open it much lesse haue we power ouer our vnderstanding will iudgment memory affections least of all concerning heauenly things in which wee are wholly blind as we haue already declared so that it behooueth all of vs to acknowledge all these to be in the power disposition of God either to diminish or restraine them or vtterly to bereaue vs of them take them away from vs at his pleasure that is the giuer consequently wee are alwayes to entreate him to giue vs grace and power that wee may carefully vse them as we ought to the glory of his Name the profite of our brethren and the comfort of our soules and bodies Vse 2 Secondly let vs take heed how wee abuse them to our owne hurt that haue receiued thē to the dishonor of God that gaue them frō whō euery good giuing euery perfect gift proceedeth If we see not but at the pleasure of God who is able to strike vs with blindnes mists that wee shall grope in darknes seeke som to leade vs by the hand or if we haue our eyes open we shall discerne distinguish nothing but haue the outward inward senses dazled vntil he take away the scales from our eyes that couer them The Apostle Peter complaineth in his time of corrupt men led with sensuality 2 Pet. 2.14 hauing eyes full of adultery that can not cease to sin We must beware how we turne our sight to a contrary end then for which God hath lent it vnto vs but rather with Iob We should make a couenant with our eyes Iob. 31.1 that they wander not after folly and pray with the Prophet Dauid Psal 119. Psal 119.37 Turne away mine eyes from regarding va●ity that they be not carried away after couetous affections If we haue eares by nature yet heare at the pleasure of God how shall we thē giue ouer our eares hearing to harken to hateful slanders leud surmises euil backbitings flying tales false accusations hurtfull reproches Luke 1 22. G●n 32 1. Act 1● 11 Lu●e 13 11. raised and forged to the hurt of our brethren Hee is able to try and touch vs with dumbnesse as he did Zachary with lamenesse as he did Iacob with
saluation with fear and trembling seeing the day of account commeth and seeing we must all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ to receyue the things which are done in this body whether they be good or euill so soone as the some body are separated Let vs remember our Creator in the daies of our youth Eccl. 12 1. Let our conuersation while we liue vpon the Earth be lifted vp to the heauens Let vs mortifie the lusts of the flesh and not walke in the wayes of our owne hearts assuring our selues that for al such things God will bring vs to iudgement Therefore the Apostle Peter speaking of the dissolution of the world the passing away of the heauens the melting of the elements the burning of the earth and the destruction of the vngodly draweth from these words this exhortation Seeing therefore all these things must be dissolued what manner of persons ought ye to bee in holy conuersation and godlines looking for and hasting vnto the comming of that day of God 2. Pet. 3 11 12. Let vs set this day before our eyes whatsoeuer we do and then we shall not sinne for euer Let vs arraign our selues at his bar and thereby prouoke one another and be prouoked our selues to our duties For if wee would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11. Let vs be carefull to lay a good foundation of saluation and neuer giue ouer vntill wee haue Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith and receiue the spirit of adoption to cry in our hearts Abba Father For if wee depart out of this life without faith in Christ and without hope of saluation it had beene better for vs that we had neuer beene borne Matth. 26 24. as Christ speaketh of Iudas the son of perdition For what will it profit vs to winne the whole world then lose our own soules To liue in pleasure to haue all that our hart can wish or desire for a season and afterward to be tormeneed in hell fire for euer Vse 5 Fiftly this is a great and exceeding comfort to the childrē of God to know that after this short this weak this feeble this fraile life our soules shall returne to the Lord and be lifted vp to the kingdom of heauen Let vs therfore prepare our selues for death that we may bee fit vessels for eternall l●fe and commend our soules into the hāds of God at our departure This was it which the Apostle practised Phil. 1 23. 2 Cor. 4 18 5 1.2 The greatest afflictions that can befall vs heere are nothing in respect of the blessed reward of immortality as the same Apostle teacheth Rom. 8 18. I count that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shal be shewed to vs. Let vs not feare the enemies of the Church they may separate the soul from the body but they can neuer separate the soule from God They may kill the body but they cannot kill the soule They may take from vs a little momentany pleasure of this life but they cannot keepe vs from the presence of God at whose right hand are pleasures for euermore This is that which Christ teacheth his Disciples Mat. 10 28. Nay they haue no power ouer the body further then God permitteth them as Christ answered to Pilate glorying in his authority saying Knowest thou not that I haue power to crucifie thee and to loose thee Thou couldest haue no power at all against me except it were giuen thee from aboue therefore he that deliuered me vnto thee hath the greater sin So then let vs not feare their feare whose power is limited is limited restrained death with one stroke shall set vs at liberty and free vs from the yoke of all oppression to our vnspeakable and endlesse comfort Contrariwise this is a dolefull and woful doctrine to the wicked and vngodly who liue here after their owne lusts follow their pleasures delighting in vanity and forgetting God to consider the perpetuity immortality of their souls and that they must giue a streight account of all their wayes and workes This must needs be a doctrine of fear and terror vnto them able to break their stony hearts and astonish their inward senses and dash them vpon the rockes of hopelesse and helplesse desperation What can be more heauy newes to a seruant that hath wasted consumed his masters mony with riotous liuing then to heare of a day of reckoning account to be giuen of his Stewardship So is it with all the vngodly they feare nothing more then their appearing before the heauenly Iudge to be tryed according to their workes Oh it were well with them if their soules were mortall that they might sleepe in the dust and lye in the graue for euer to bee buried with their bodies neuer to bee raised againe Oh their case were happy and thrice happy shold they be if they might neuer come to iudgement or had beene borne as toades and serpents or wormes of the earth that liuing their life they might also dye their death But it shall not be so with them their case shall not be so well the end of this life bringeth them into eternal torments and when they haue tasted the first death the second death shall take holde on them Then they shall pronounce a thousand woes against themselues then they shal wish they had neuer bene borne Then they shall weepe and houle without recouery then they shall gnash with their teeth and gnaw their tongues for anger Mat. 22 12. Reuel 6 Luke 23 Thē they shal desire the mountaines to fall vpon them and the hils to couer them from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of ●he Lamb c. For as they are happy that die in the Lord beeing ioyned to him and freed from all sorrowes so they are wretched and a thousand times miserable that depart hence out of Gods fauour haue the sinnes of their youth and age accompanying them to whom he will say Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuell and his Angels Matth. 25 41. We see how the consideration of the Sessions or Assises striketh a terror into the heart and conscience of the guilty malefactor how much more then shall the solemne day of the Lords last iudgement amaze affright and astonish the Reprobate who haue drawne sinne vnto them as with Cart-ropes and haue cloathed themselues with shame as with a Robe This wil be a day of blackenesse and of darkenesse a day of clouds and obscuritie a day of horrour and confusion vnto them that dwell vpon the face of the earth when God shall come to iudge without respect of persons For what rest or comfort can the malefactor take when he is alwayes in expectation of the comming approach of the Iudge Whereas the godly haue peace of conscience and shall lift vp their heads
his countenance from vs. Moreouer this serueth to teach vs that in our troubles and necessities we stand not in need of the intercession of Saints and Angels wee shall not neede to pray vnto them to be our Mediators to God the Father For seeing God the Father is neere vs yea euen at hand shall wee turne our backes to him and goe from him seeing he turneth to vs to giue vs helpe This inuocation of Saints hath neither commandement to moue vs to pray nor example to go before vs in the practise nor promise to assure vs that we shall be heard The direction that we haue in prayer is to go to God and to say to him Our Father which art in heauen Mat. 6 9. This the Prophet acknowledged when he sayde Psal 73 25. Whom haue I in heauen but thee I haue desired none in the earth with thee God is euermore present with vs the Saints departed are absent from vs they know not our particular wants Esay 63 16 Psal 94 9. 1 King 8 39. they vnderstand not our desires they are ignorant of the motions of our hearts and the estate of our liues Besides wee are charged to worship the Lord our God to serue him onely who onely searcheth the hearts tryeth the reines as the God that made them in the beginning Let vs therefore go directly and immediately to God and when wee haue helpe at hand let vs not seeke helpe farre off Let vs still trust in the liuing God for vaine is the helpe of Saints or Angels Were not hee a foolish man and worthy to perish who in extremity would refuse the helpe of an expert excellent Physitian present with him able to helpe him willing to helpe him offering to helpe him and giue him present ease and yet calleth and cryeth to some Mounte-banke a thousand miles from him not so able not so skilful not so ready to releeue release him And are not they much more simple and sottish that when God willeth them to call vpon him in the day of trouble and promiseth to heare and deliuer them will not come to him but fly from him to the Saints Psal 50 14. that know neither him nor his griefe When the Prince is present and calleth to come to him were it not madnes to go to the subiect So forasmuch as Christ saith Come vnto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Matth. 11 28 let our soules answer Lord we will come accept thou the prayers of thy seruants Vse 2 Secondly we learne from hence That as God is neere to all those that feare him not onely in respect of the presence of the place but is with them by the presence of his fauor granting their prayers and succouring them in their aduersities so he is farre from all the wicked and vngodly not in place but in help He will not grant their requests he wil not be their shield and buckler hee will not know them in their miseries He is indeede neere to all that call vpon him euen to all that call vpon him in truth but he stoppeth his eares against the prayers of the vngodly which are abhomination vnto him Psal 145 18. This is it which Salomon teacheth Prou. 15 29. The Lord is farre off from the wicked but hee heareth the prayers of the righteous Great is the iustice of God vpon the wicked and great is his fauour towardes the godly True it is in respect of place God filleth heauen and earth He is not far distant frō vs forasmuch as in him we liue and mooue and haue our being Actes 17 27 28. but touching his grace he is farre from the dwellings of the vnrighteous hee is farre from hearing theyr voyce and regarding their necessities he leaueth them to themselues and withdraweth his holy Spirit from them So then albeit God bee in euery place and nigh to all things yet God will not heare them no more then men heare such as are very farre off when they call and cry out vnto them This is it which the Prophet Dauid setteth downe Psal 119 155. Saluation is farre from the wicked because they seeke not thy statutes And the Prophet Esay accordeth heere unto Chapt. 59 1 2. The Lords hand is not shortned that it cannot saue neither is his eare heauy that it cannot heare But your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sinnes haue hid his face from you that he will not heare They regard not his word therefore he giueth not them his helpe They will not heare him when hee calleth by his word therefore hee will not heare when they call vnto him by their prayers He is far from them because they runne farre from him and will not know his wayes nor regard his truth that he offereth vnto them Wherefore great is the misery and destruction of the wicked that shall come vpon them they shall call but the Lord will not heare they shal cry but he wil not answer The righteous in this world doe seeme to be cursed and forsaken of God but they are blessed and happy and this is not the last part of their blessednes and happines that he heareth their prayers On the contrary side the vngodly seeme to themselues to others to be the onely happy men in the world but they are wretched and miserable and through theyr malice blindnes and obstinacy this is not the last part and portion of theyr misery that they haue no agreement with God hee heareth not their prayers but abhorreth thē their thoughts and all their workes When we are in affliction the cheefest comfort and stay to rest vpon is that God is neere vs and ready to help vs. The wicked want this staffe to leane vpon God professeth himselfe their enemy he refuseth their prayers he forsaketh and casteth them away out of his presence They can haue no peace of conscience nor comfort in trouble they shall houle in their miseries and not be heard Zac. 7 13. This shall especially appear at the last day when the heauen shall not receyue them the Lord shall not know them no creature shall comfort them no mercy shall be shewed vnto them thē they shall weepe and waile without redemption and without release Thirdly it is our duty to behaue our selues Vse 3 in all our actions and dealings as in his presence It behooueth vs to set him alwayes before vs and to know he continually walketh among vs. It is remembred of Henoch that he walked continually before God Genes 5 22. that is all his life time hee considered that the eye of God was euer vpon him knowing that all things are naked and manifest before him Heb. 4 13. Thus the Apostle chargeth Timothy in the sight of God who quickneth all things and before Iesus Christ which vnder Pon●ius Pilate witnessed a good confession to keepe the commandements which he gaue vnto him without spot and vnblameable If the childe
arise from hence we haue considered diuers things before We see how Balak and Balaam proceede in their diuellish purposes if God had suffeted them and not crossed them Hee reuealed his wil to Balaam who spake moued by Gods Spirit and thereby declareth that he speaketh not onely to his owne children but sometimes teacheth wicked men to make them without excuse and therefore he wil not leaue his owne people destitute of instruction that desire to feare his name But of this wee haue spoken before chap. 22 9. Verse 2. Balaam lift vp his eyes looked vpon Israel and the spirit of God came vpon him Moses shewing the prophesie that Balaam vttered describeth it by the author thereof the Spirit of God came vpon him In this part of the title he saith That the things deliuered in this prophesie which were vttered for the Churches sake were hid kept secret before they were reuealed and manifested by God This prophesie containeth not a doctrine that is common or communicated by the light of nature to men but a declaration of such secrets as God reserueth hid to himselfe in his owne counsel which no liuing creature could knowe otherwise then as it pleaseth God to disclose it by a gracious participation of it This teacheth vs this truth That the things of God can no man know but by the Spirite of God Doctrine The things of God are vnknowne til he reueale them The mysteries of saluation and doctrine of godlynesse are secret and vnknown of men and Angels before they be of God reuealed This our Sauiour teacheth Peter hauing made a confession of Christ Blessed art thou Simon the sonne of Ionas for flesh and blood hath not reuealed it vnto thee but my Father which is in heauen Matth. 16 17. And expounding the parable of the Sower to his disciples he sayth To you it is giuen to know the mystery of the kingdome of God but vnto them that are without all things are done in Parables Mark 4 11. The Apostle teacheth that the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnes vnto him neyther can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned And the same Apostle speaking of the gospel Rom. 16 25. Eph 3 9. calleth it A mystery reuealed which was kept secret from the beginning of the world So the Apostle Iohn handling hidden visions and teaching the Church the things that must come to passe hereafter called that Booke The Reuelation of Iesus Christ which God gaue vnto him Reuel 1 1. The truth of this appeareth because they Reason 1 were hid in the treasury of Gods wisedome which is vnsearchable and not to be sounded by any creature and therefore the Apostle calleth them A secret hid in God Ephe. 3 9 so that the Apostles and holy Prophets of God could deliuer nothing of his counsell before he had reuealed it to them So the Lord speaketh Numb 12 6. Heare now my words If there be a Prophet of the Lord among you I wil be known vnto him by a vision and will speake vnto him by dreame The calling of the Gentiles seemed strange to the very Apostles before it was reuealed to Peter Who would euer haue imagined that God would haue redeemed man by such a wonderfull meanes the greatest wonder that euer came into the world by giuing his Son and that vnto the death to ransome and redeem a church by his own blood Acts 20. This no creature in heauen or earth would euer haue thought vpon if God had not reuealed it by his word and assured it by his Spirit Secondly this receyueth further strength Reason 2 for the confirmation of it because the wisest and subtilest that were in the world were herein ouertaken and proued fooles for by al their wisedome though neuer so great they were not able to reach vnto it nor to looke into any the least part of it The Apostle speaking of the mystery of the Gospel reuealed by his ministery alledgeth the prophesie of Esay where the Lord threatneth to destroy the wisedome of the wise and to cast away the vnderstanding of the prudent and after he saith Where is the wise hath not God made the wisedom of the world foolishnes 1 Cor 1 18 19. The Vses remaine to be learned of vs. First Vse 1 for knowledge wee see that the mysterie of godlines reuealed to the world by God in the Gospel is a most worthy glorious mystery greatly to be admired and reuerenced vnto vs that are called it is the wisedome of God and the power of God So the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 1 2● Great is the mystery of godlines which is God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3 16. It seemeth farre otherwise to the foolish world it appeareth to thē a base and vile thing as Paul complaineth in his time We preach the Gospel euen Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling blocke vnto the Grecians foolishnes 1 Cor. 1 23. A stumbling blocke to the Iewes because they dreaming of an earthly king of this world to free them from the bondage of the Romanes and thinking they should be Lords of the earth were offended at the low estate of Christ comming in the shape of a seruant foolishnesse to the Grecians because it seemed foolishnes to the wise Philosophers among the heathē to look for life from death to beleeue in him that rose from the dead and that such as are dead shall rise againe How many are there amongst our selues that are offended at the simplicity of the Gospel that it is not accompanyed with miracles that it is brought vnto vs in earthen vessels These are they that esteeme the Manna as light meate and therefore loathe it But let them alone to loathe this Manna that loathe faith Christ and heauen it selfe yea their owne saluation Secondly for obedience wee must obserue Vse 2 that when these secret things be reuealed vnto vs of God we ought to endeuour to learne them to vnderstand them to publish them speake of them to others Whensoeuer God hath a mouth to speake we must haue an eare to heare Therefore Moses saith Deut. 29 29. Secret things belong vnto the Lord but the things reuealed belong to vs and our children to do them So the Apostle Paul when God had reuealed Christ vnto him and ordained him a teacher vnto the Gentiles saith I was not disobedient to the heauenly vision but shewed to Iewes and Gentiles that they should repent and turne to God and do works worthy amendment of life Acts 26 19 20. This serueth to reprooue all such as refuse to looke into these reuealed things of God but dwell in blindnesse and ignorance Of this sort are the greatest number in our assemblies They are wise enough to look into their own profit but they care not for the wisedome that is of God They are brought vp in the church but know not the Doctrine of the Church They are alwayes learning
Iudea and to carry away the Israelites ●●remy 25 9. ranging ouer the land raging with fire and sword and wasting the neighbour-Nations they spoyled the Kenites bordering vpon the Iewes which doth verifie the common Prouerbe It is some euil to be neere vnto euill And againe when thy Neighbours house is on fire it is high time to looke vnto thine owne and teacheth vs to esteeme as our owne the damage of our neighbour and to feare lest in the ruines of others our destruction bee conspired This calamity and captiuity was brought vpon them by Saneherib who comming to spoyle Israel spoiled them and as they were carried away out of their owne country together so they returned back againe into their Countrey together as wee reade in the holy history of the 1. Chronicles chap. 2 53. And thus as they tasted of the same misery so God made them partakers of the same mercy as they were afflicted together so also they were comforted together Thus much of the method and meaning of these prophesies The doctrines arising from hence are to be considered according to the seuerall prophesies and first touching the first against the Moabites Verse 17. I see that but not now I behold it but not neere there shall come a Starre out of Iacob c. In this prophesie Balaam foretelleth the future condition of the Moabites declaring both that they shal be destroyed and by whom For God wil raise out of the contemptible stocke of Iacob a bright Starre that shall refresh the Church with his sweete influence and giue them comfort against their enemies This we shewed to be performed in the dayes of Dauid afterward therefore he saith I see it but not now nor neere at hand This teacheth vs Doctrine The Church sometimes hath rest and glory That sometimes God maketh the Church to flourish in this life Howsoeuer God oftentimes bring trouble vpon his Church and affliction vpon his people yet at other times he giueth rest and peace and continueth theyr prosperity a long time This truth receyueth plentifull confirmation out of the booke of Iudges chap. 3.11 30. 5 31. 8 28 it is the maine drift and scope of it to shew how God in the miseries thereof prouideth a remedie and giueth rest round about from all their enemies God sometimes giueth them a time of breathing and recouering their strength and will not suffer the rodde of the wicked alway to rest on the lot of the righteous Psalm 125 3. We haue examples of this in the reigne of Salomon Iehoshaphat Hezekiah Iosiah and other godly Kings which were as strong props and pillars in Gods house a sure stay to the seruants of God in well doing he gaue them an outward estate that flourished both in wealth and pe●ce This appeareth euidently in the booke of Ester Ester 8 1 16. after he had deliuered them from the mouth of the Lyon that gaped as it were after his prey to deuoure them the Church prospered the head of Mordecai was exalted comfortable letters were published and sent abroad for their safety and vnto the Iewes came light and ioy gladnes honor So the prophet Zacharie prophesying of their returne from captiuity saith That the streets of the City shal be full of boyes girles playing in the streets thereof Zac. 8 5. The booke of Iosuah is a notable storehouse of Gods mercy vnto his church giuing them rest from their enemies as hee had promised them so that none were able to stand before them Iosh 22 4. And as he dealeth with his Church in generall so hee doth with his seruants in particular as we see in Ioseph Moses Dauid and diuers other turning their mourning into ioy Psal 30 11. loosing theyr sack and griding them with gladnes The Reasons of this dealing of the Lord are many and most euident First his eares are Reason 1 open to heare the cries of his children he seeeth their miseries add putteth all their teares in his bottle of remembrance This is it which the Lord declared vnto Moses when he called him to deliuer his people out of the thraldom and bondage of Egypt Exod. 2 7. I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry be●ause of their Taske-masters for I know their sororwes GOD hath made a couenant of peace with his people hath a compassionate sense of their miseries and a feeling of their afflictions There is a notable agreement and vnion betweene God and his Children They in their crosses and calamities cannot but sigh and mourne and they cannot so soone vtter a groane but by by and by the Lord is touched with compassion This is euidently recorded in the booke of Exodus 2 23 where it is said The childrē of Israel sighed for the bondage and cried and their cry for the bondage came vp to God The prayers of the faithfull preuaile much with God if they be feruent He vnderstandeth the words of their mouth and the grones of the heart and in his good time will heare them graciously Reason 2 Secondly hee giueth vnto his Church oftentimes a sweet taste of earthly blessings to the end his people might haue all occasions and opportunities to serue him If they should alwayes beare the yoke vpon their necks and haue the heauy burden of affliction lying on their backs though they were strong in faith and had their hope fixed in GOD yet they would be soone dismayed and discouraged and ioyne with the wicked falling into the impieties of their persecuters But God is the sunne and the shield of his Church hee will giue grace and glory vnto it and withholde nothing that is good from them that walke vprightly Psal 84 11. He will comfort and defend them in their danger he will exalt them to dignity after their distresses least they should bee too much daunted and discomforted This is the reason vsed by the Prophet The rod of the wicked shall not alwayes rest on the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put foorth their hand vnto wickednesse Psal 125 3. Vse 1 The vses now are to be marked and obserued of vs. First acknowledge from hence with a sweet feeling the infinite loue compassion of God toward his people he delighteth not to be alwayes chiding and his anger endureth not for euer Hee will not haue his Church to be alwayes vnder the crosse but sendeth it some release For hee endureth but a while in his anger but in his fauour is life c. Psal 30 5 6. Thus doth the Lord giue encouragements and comforts vnto those that faithfully serue and rightly worship him whereby hee not onely testifieth his owne loue toward them but allureth others by their example to trust in him and daunteth all their enemies that hoped to haue seene their destruction Such therefore as are not mooued to confesse the loue of God vnto his seruants and see not his kindnesse toward them haue
house like the house of Ieroboam c and also of Iezabel spake the Lord saying The dogs shall eate Iezabel by the wals of Izreel Who are then the greatest enemies to their children but vngodly parents And who bring vpon them a greater woe and ruine then they that should build them vp and leaue a blessing behinde thē When Moses describeth the nature of God that hee is abundant in mercy toward the righteous he addeth Holding not the wicked innocent but visiting the sinnes of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation Exod. 34 8. This must moue parents and gouernours to make conscience of their carriage and conuersation and to bewayle their sinnes that haue endangered their off-spring For God may and doth in Iustice visite with sundry and diuers iudgments those families and societies where wicked Parents and prophane gouernors are All they be cruell tyger-like parents that be vngodly parents for they are the murtherers and butchers of their children ouerthrow of their posterity in time howsoeuer they be spared for a season What vnmercifull vnnaturall parents were Cain Cham Canaan Ieroboam Iezabel Ahab such like that caused euery one of their house that could water a wall to be destroyed and vtterly to haue their race and remembrance rooted out It is therefore a diuellish and wicked Prouerbe Happy are those children whose father goeth to the diuell A diuellish Prouerbe Nay rather cursed are those children whose fathers fall into hell for there is a great presumption that they will follow them without the great mercy and speciall grace of God yea it is a blessed thing to spring from a godly stocke to rise from faithfull parents For often did the Lord spare Israel for Abrahams Isaacks and Iacobs sake When the posterity of Dauid became wicked hee continued them in their kingdome deliuered them from their enemies did not destroy them for Dauids sake When the Lord was angry with Salomon because he had turned his heart from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared vnto him twice and charged him not to follow strange gods he threatned to rent the kingdome from him to giue it to his seruant Notwithstanding in thy dayes I will not do it sayth the Lord because of Dauid thy father 1. King 11 12. This appeareth more plainly afterward in Abiiam the sonne of Rehoboam who walked in all the sinnes of his father which he had done before him yet for Dauids sake did the Lord his God giue him a light in Hierusalem and set vp his sonne after him and established Hierusalem because Dauid did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and turned from nothing that he commanded him all the dayes of his life saue onely in the matters of Vriah the Hittite 1. King 15.4 5. 2. Chron. 21 7. This is it which the Lord promiseth in the second commandement of the Law That he will shew mercy to thousands of them that loue him and keepe his commandements Exod. 20.6 Seeing then wicked and wretched parents are most deadly enemies vnto their children who beare the curses of God vpon them for many generations for the impiety of their fathers this serueth as a great terror to those parents that goe about by fraud and oppression by wrongfull and iniurious dealing to enrich themselues to set vp their names and make their posterity to bee great vpon the earth after them For this is the ready way to bring the curse of God vpon them and to pull downe their houses Where the curse of God entreth it maketh hauocke and wasteth all before it God is an auenger of al such things 1. Thes 4 6. Surely if men were not altogether faithlesse but had faith to beleeue the word of God that all wicked courses and vile practices would ouerthrow their houses and not build them vp that they could not fill them with euil things but they will pul down the plagues of God vpon them and all theirs it would make them feare to offend by fraud and vniust dealing which cryeth for vengeance vnto heauen and the cry thereof entreth into the eares of the Lord of hoasts Iames 5 4 All men by nature haue a loue vnto their children and a desire to leaue them great men in the world but many are greatly deceiued in the meanes and wander farre and wide out of the way For if we wold leaue them a sure inheritance and settle them in an estate to continue wee must take heed that wee doe not enrich our selues with the spoyles of others nor fill our houses with the riches of iniquity lest we fill them also with the vengeance of God which is the reward of iniquity Let vs eate our own bread which wee haue gotten by lawfull meanes There is more comfort in a little truly gotten then in great riches and reuenewes that carry with them Gods marks and curses being wrongfully obtayned and vniustly retayned Lastly it is required of vs to repent beleeue Vse 3 the Gospell that so wee may procure a blessing vpon our selues and our children This duty the Apostle Peter preacheth vnto the Iewes that were pricked in their hearts Amend your liues be baptized euery one of you for the remission of sinnes for the promise is made vnto you and to your children c. Acts 2 38 39. When God promised to Abraham to make a couenant with him and to multiply his seed exceedingly hee requireth this condition at his hands Walke before me and be thou vpright Gen. 17 1. VVee must walke in the midst of our houses with pure and perfect heart and guide them with a watchfull eye wee must looke to their wayes and to our gouernment This would be a great helpe to the Ministery and a singular furtherance to his labours The neglect of this care bringeth vtter ruine to father and childe This appeareth in the example of Eli who through his indulgence and negligence ouerthrew himselfe and his posterity This is the cause of so many cursed youths so many riotous men women which procure the ruines of so many excellent houses their tender age was not sanctified neither they seasoned by their parents with the fear of God So then godly parents must haue a care to bring vp their children families in godlines righteousnes It may be a meanes by the blessing of God to saue thy sonne from death and to deliuer his soule from destruction The Lord himselfe speaketh of Abraham That hee knew him that he would teach his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lord to doe righteousnesse and iudgement Gen. 18 19. The Apostle chargeth parents to bring vp their children in the nurture and information of the Lord Eph. 6 4. No parents must presume that because they haue obtayned to bee faithfull therefore theyr children must of necessity bee so also Faith is the gift of GOD and not of Nature It is not
the kingdome nor he in accepting of it inasmuch as they did it not out of any obedience to the will of God but they did it to ease themselues from the cruelty and tyranny that Rehoboam was likely to vse toward them and therefore they sinned because they had no commandement from God Let vs come to the vses First this confuteth Vse 1 the doctrine of the Anabaptists or Libertines that deny all authority as not fitting for Christians to beare They teach their owne dreames that neyther Christians should bee Magistrates nor yet subiect to Magistrates an horrible impiety in them and it would not be worth the time to shew how they wrest the Scripture to defend their owne errour which otherwise they nothing regard Secondly it serueth to taxe Popery and Vse 2 that out of their owne grounds for the Rhemists haue a rule vpon Iude verse 6 that they are heretiques that deny authority and they would father it and fasten it vpon vs because we deny subiection to the Pope But we retort it vpon themselues For neuer was there any that did cast off the yoke of authority so much as they haue done They haue put downe the mighty from their seates and trod vpon the neckes of Princes they haue dethroned Kings and armed the sonne against the father Vnder a colour of the holy warre they haue sent them abroad and betrayed them into the hands of the Sarazens and in their absence seized vpon their Dominions There was neuer heretique did so shrinke vp the sinewes and shake off the yoke of authority as they haue done It is a rule that they haue that Ecclesiasticall men ought to be free from all ciuill authority whatsoeuer and that Cleargy men must be exempted from subiection to the secular powers so that they not we are the heretiques that despise authority As for the Bishop of Rome wee owe him no seruice neyther may he claime iurisdiction ouer the vniuersall Church eyther by Scriptures Fathers Councels or imperiall Constitutions for many ages Vse 3 Lastly this serueth as an information to vs that wee auoyde all such proud and peeuish conceits as these to imagine there shold be no authority and bee prouoked to bee thankfull vnto almighty GOD that we do enioy authority seeing by it wee are freed from confusion and desolation from much mutiny and misery that otherwise would befall vs. For notwithstanding by the great goodnesse of God we haue authority such is the fury and fiercenesse of wicked men that they breake out into strange enormities and commit many feareful things by poysonings by stabbings by cousenages by oppressions by forgery and falsehood and such like mischeeuous and monstrous practises what then would they presume to do if there were no authority to bring them and their doings into question and to call them to an account for their audacious courses A man should alwayes haue his life in his hand there could be no peace or safety in our houses and habitations if there were no authority to rule to controlle to terrifie to punish and therefore how thankfull ought we to bee to almighty God for that authority which he hath set ouer vs and for the peaceable gouernment we enioy vnder our gracious Soueraigne Now this must withall be acknowledged of vs that no man can be truely thankfull for authority that is not willingly and cheerefully subiect to authority It is a friuolous and vaine thing to pretend thankfulnesse and yet not vndergoe the yoke of obedience with cheerefulnesse Verse 11. Notwithstanding the Children of Korah died not What became of Korah himselfe we haue seene before His name was famous in the Congregation but he became infamous through his rebellion and it is called the gainesaying of Korah to this day Iude verse 11. Notwithstanding marke heere that the sonnes of Korah perished not when their father perished and was punished who spake euill of them that were in authorty for it appeareth that they were preserued aliue and became afterward famous in the Church of God and honourable mention is made of them in the booke of Psalmes and of the Chronicles 1. Chronicles chapter 6 verse 22. Psalm 42 and Psalme 44 and Psalme 45 and sundry others afterward as 2 Chronicles chapter 20 verse 19. From hence ariseth this Doctrine Doctrine It is no disgrace for godlie children to descend of vngodly parents that it is no disgrace for godly children to descend and come of vngodly parents Howsoeuer sinne be a reproch to the parents themselues yet it taketh not hold of their issue except they walke in those sinnes Ezek. 18 14. If hee beget a sonne that seeth all his fathers sinnes which he hath done and considereth doth not the like c. he shall surely liue Iephte is commended for a faithfull man that fought the battels of the Lord subdued the enemies of his people yet he was the sonne of an harlot Iudg. 11 1. Heb. chap. 11 verse 32. This farther appeareth in Saul and Ionathan the one of them the greatest enemy the other the greatest friend of Dauid the one sware his death the other his life the father to kill him the sonne to saue him and therefore it was no dishonor to him to haue such a father The like we might say of Ahaz a most wicked man and Hezekiah a most godly King one of the best sonnes of one of the worst fathers yet who accounteth the worse of good Hezekiah because he had wicked Ahaz to his father Ieroboam king of Israel set vp idolatry and caused Israel to sinne and therefore the Lord threateneth to bring euill vppon his house that the dogges should eate him that dyed in the City and the fowles of the ayre him that dyed in the field 1 Kings chapter 14 verse 10 so that they should all be swept away as a man taketh away dung till it be all gone yet God gaue him one good sonne whom in mercy he tooke to himselfe and saued as a brand out of the fire or as a Sheepheard taketh out of the mouth of the Lyon two legges or a peece of an eare Amos chapter 3 verse 12 and therefore it is said All Israel shall mourne for him for hee onely of Ieroboam shall come to the graue because in him there is found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel The grounds of this truth follow First Reason 1 that election might stand wholly by grace forasmuch as almighty God sheweth mercy where and to whom hee will If religion should descend from father to son in a common and ordinary course of generation or propagation without any interruption it might be thought to bee a worke of nature not of grace and to proceede from parents not from almighty GOD. Therefore bee often breaketh off that course so that wicked parents haue sometimes good and godly children and contrariwise godly parents haue wicked and vile children that the purpose of GOD according to election might stand not of works
it self who notwithstanding are saued in the day of the Lord. This appeareth in Lots wife Gen. 19 she looked backe contrary to the commandement of the Angel and was turned into a pillar of salt Her offence might seeme little at the first and the punishment to be ouergreat howbeit we must not measure sinne by the outward acte but by the commandement and will of God which is the onely rule of righteousnes This her disobedience seemeth to proceed from infidelity vnthankfulnesse curiosity and the immoderate loue of the world of the substance which they had left behind and therefore she is punished and made as a mirror and monument of Gods iustice which Iosephus testifieth to continue to his time Ioseph antiq Iud. lib. 1. ca. 1● yet we doubt not but her soule was saued and she receyued to mercy The like we might say of Iobs childred they were all sodainly slaine by the fall of the house wherin they were assembled yet they gaue good testimony of their godlynesse in their life for as no euil is recorded of them in the Scripture so it appeareth they were wel taught and trained vp in the feare of God by their carefull father euen in the daies of theyr youth God heard their father when he praied for them when bee sent for them they came dutifully and obediently vnto him if they had despised that God whom their father worshipped he would not haue said It may be my sonnes haue blasphemed God and it had beene a vaine thing for him to speake to them of sanctification Moreouer if their bankettings feastings had bene like our Wakes and reuels which they commonly call Yeauals or drunken feasts of such as call themselues good fellowes he ought to haue forbidden their meetings and not to haue prayed to God to pardon their sins which they might commit in their meetings and thereby suffer them to liue in the continual practise of sin forasmuch as that were to mocke and dally with God not desiring pardon for sinne past but to craue free liberty to sin for the time to come And if the father had doubted of their saluatiō no doubt hee would haue bewailed their destruction Lastly it is to bee noted that they feasted in their owne houses they did not run to Ordinaries or haunt Ale-houses or frequent Tauernes neither did they feast euery day like the rich glutton whose daily dinners were daily feasts for hee did nothing else but feast euery day neither did they keepe companie with ruffians swearers drunkards swaggerers and such like but they inuited one another to witnesse their good will and to continue mutuall loue among themselues The like wee might say of Vzzah that stayed vp the Arke and was stricken with sodaine death because he laid his hand vpon the Arke 2 Sam. 6 7. So was it with Vriah the faithfull seruant of Dauid yet he was slain by the sword of the Ammonites 2 Sam. 11 17. Iosiah that good king serued the Lord from his youth yet dyed hee a violent death and was slaine by Pharao Nechoh at Megiddo and al the people of the land mourned for him 2 Kings 23 29. Reason 1 Thus doth God deale with his owne children oftentimes they are chastised in this world lest they should be condemned with the wicked in the world to come 1 Cor. 11 32. Secondly those whom God loueth hee loueth vnto the end Ioh. 13 inasmuch as all his giftes are without repentance Rom. 11. therefore temporall chastisements cannot alter his loue or make frustrate the gifts that once he hath bestowed vpon his children Thirdly euen his owne people sinne against him for in manie things we sinne all Iames 3 ver 1. and therfore when they sinne against him he chastiseth thē with death as with a rod howbeit his mercie he neuer taketh from them Thus did Iosiah offend he would not heare the word of the Lord which was brought vnto him therefore he was smitten by the hand of God Vse 1 This teacheth that it is a false rule and a deceitfull measure to iudge of the saluation of men by temporall things whereas commonly all things fall out alike to the godly vngodly Eccl. 9 12. Many there are that wil take vpon them to iudge and censure men to bee out of the fauour of God because sometimes they dye sodainly and sometimes strangely and contrarywise if they dye in their beddes quietly and calmely they conclude that they must necessarily bee the children of God for that cause onely But if we haue no better testimony to discerne a childe of God then this note we may soone be deceiued for this may often happen more by the nature of the disease then through any grace in the soul of the diseased The constant course of a mans life is the best witnesse what is in man A man may dye rauing and haply blaspheming and yet be the seruant of God by the violence and rage of some sicknesse disturbing the head and the braine For as Paul sayeth It was not hee but sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 7 15 so I may say it is not they that raue and blaspheme it is the force of their sicknesse to which they do not consent and againe a man may go away like a Lambe and yet dye out of Gods fauour and go to hell as Iob chap. 21. verses 13 14. Vse 2 Secondly this reprooueth the Popish sort that commonly condemne Zuinglius a sound defender of the true and Apostolike faith Zuinglius defended because he died in the field as a good Patriot against the enemies of his country Hee did no more then euery true Minister and faythfull man ought to be ready to do Hee was slaine with the sword of wickedmen but that death was an honourable death Hee exhorted the people to constancy in the faith as the Priest is commanded in the Law to do Deut. 20 23 It is no reproach to dye in a good cause and a iust quarrell If he had dyed as Sanders an arch enemy to the Queene and State dyed in Ireland in the rebellion which himselfe had procured who died distracted and in a frenzy to behold the hand of God gone out against him and all his plots and proiects crossed O what outcries would these men then haue made he died as a Traitor against his lawfull Prince in the Popes quarrel and was in the field against his owne Soueraigne whereas Zuinglius dyed with his owne Cittizens in a good cause and was lamented of all good men Lastly we must take heed we doe not iudge Vse 3 rashly and rigorously of the Churches sorrowes and afflictions albeit they seem oftentimes both strong and strange when God feedeth them with the bread of teares giueth them teares to drinke in great measure Psal 80 5. The dead bodies of his seruants haue the enemies giuen to be meate to the fowls of the heauen and the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth their
made and then how performed The making thereof was wont alwayes to be ioyned with prayer to note that the faithfull alwayes lifted vp theyr hearts to GOD crauing his blessing Psalm 61 5. Gen. 28 20. Iudg. 11 ver 30 31 so that such as were fit to vow must be faithfull iustified before God and reconciled vnto him otherwise they can neuer call vpon him aright And as they must be made with prayer so they must be performed with thanksgiuing Psal 61 5 otherwise it were better neuer to haue vowed and promised vnto God that cannot be deceyued Fourthly it behoueth vs to know the right ends of vowes which are these First The true and right ends of vowes concerning Gods glory and the aduancement of his worship Secondly to testifie our speciall thankfulnesse to God for blessings which we haue receyued at his hands Thirdly to chastice our selues that thereby we may preuent the wrath of God for by iudging of our selues we escape his iudgement 1 Cor. 11 Fourthly to make our selues more circumspect and watchfull ouer our owne wayes for when we haue fallen into some sinne we do heereby make ourselues more wary and heedfull for the time to come Fiftly to binde our selues more strongly as by a two-fold cord which is not easily broken to yeeld obedience to God Lastly to strengthen the weaknes of our faith hope and other spirituall graces and to giue vs greater assurance of the mercy of GOD which we shall receyue at his hands Lastly it is a duty belonging to euery one Vse 3 to consider diligently what vowes they haue vowed to God We are ready and not sparing to vow in times of our afflictions troubles O that we were as carefull to performe them Psal 66. But if we haue not vowed this way there is a common vow which we haue all vndertaken the vow of our baptisme that wee will beleeue in God and serue him that wee will forsake the diuell and all his works and this is the answer of a good conscience toward God 1 Pet. 3 21. The master of the Sentences calleth baptisme The common vow because therein men protest promise and professe to consecrate themselues theyr soules bodies vnto God both which are his by right of creation and redemption Ierome maketh holinesse in body and spirit the matter of a Christian vow In Esay lib. 7. cap. 19. And S. Austine to this purpose in many places teacheth that to beleeue in God to hope for eternall life and to liue according to his commandements August in Psal 75 131. are the things which we are to vow to God And in another place What doe we vow to God but to be the Temple of God These Christian duties containe the truth of the Iewish vowes They vowed external sacrifices and oblations bound themselues to the outward seruice in the exercise whereof it pleased GOD for a time to traine that people howbeit in all these he called them to the true practice of piety to the inward affections of praise thankesgiuing Psal 4 5 50.14 23 51 17 107 22 115 17. Ionah 2 9. Hos 14 13. Neyther is the holy Scripture silent what their ceremoniall vowes imported to them and to vs. The vow of humbling and afflicting themselues by fasting did teach them to forbeare their owne desires to renounce their own wils to subdue their owne corruptions and to abstaine from cruelty oppression Esay 58 6. Mic. 6 as appeareth by the reproofe of the Prophet when he chargeth them that in the day of their fast they sought their owne wils verse 3. This wee see notably in the vow of the Nazarites a principall one among the rest of which wee haue spoken before The meaning of the vow of the Nazarits whereby they were separated to the Lord Numb 6 2. And this was the chiefe intendment of that ceremony to signifie the common condition of all that people that the Lord their God had separated them from all other people and therefore they must be holy vnto him because the Lord himselfe is holy and hath separated them from other people that they should be his Leuit. 20 24 26. And this is that which Balaam vttered concerning Israel Numb 23 9 Loe the people shall dwell alone shall not be reckoned among the nations This then was a speciall vow of ceremonial obseruations wherein by abstayning from many outward things as separating themselues from wine strong drinke suffering no rafor to come on their head and other outward things expressed in that place they were diuided from the common and prophane conuersation both of themselues and others among that people howbeit a special spiritual respect was had of preseruing inward piety holines toward him so that such diuided persons were so many spectacles and examples of the condition of all the faithfull of whom Christ our Sauior hath told vs and taught vs that they are not of this world but he hath chosen thē out of the world Iohn 15 19 they must flye the corruption that is in the world 2 Pet. 1 4 and they must heare the voyce of God calling and crying vnto them Come out from among them separate your selues from them and touch no vnclean thing and then hee will receiue them 2 Cor. 6 17. In al which he alludeth to the vow of the Nazarites who were a separated and selected people retiring themselues from others of which see more before chapter 6. So then the vowes that temaine in the Gospel and belong vnto vs are the vowes of prayer of praise thankesgiuing of obedience to God of denying our selues of subduing our sinnes of mortifying the corruptions of the old man of mercy and compassion toward our brethren and briefly of keeping our selues holy vnto God and vnspotted of the world Psal 27 8 58 12. 79 13. 80 17. 86 11.119 34 35.106 Mat. 16 24. Col. 3 5. Rom. 6 13 12 1. 2 Cor. 6 20. These are the holy and solemne vowes that we promised to God in our Baptisme wherein wee were dedicated and consecrated vnto God and these we doe continually renue when we come to the Table of the Lord. Let vs diligently thinke of these vowes and be careful to practise and performe them that God may be duly glorified in vs. 3 If a woman also vow a vow vnto the Lord and binde her selfe by a bond being in her fathers house in her youth 4 And her father heare her vow her bond wherewith she hath bound her soule and her father shall hold his peace at her then all her vowes shall stand and euery bond c. 5 But if her father disallow her in the day that he heareth not any of her vowes c. shall stand and the Lord shall forgiue her because her father disallowed her 6 And if shee had at all an husband when shee vowed or vttered ought out of her lippes wherewith she
11 13 They died in faith and receiued not the promises but saw them afarre off and beleeued them and receiued them thankefully and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth Strangers be not inhabitants and trauailers bee not liegers and continuers in one place This should teach vs to vse this world as though wee vsed it not to buy as though wee possessed not considering that the fashion of this world goeth away and the glory of man fadeth as the flower Wee must cast off all lettes that may stay and hinder vs in our iourney like vnto trauellers who will carry nothing with them in the way but that which may helpe and further them to their iourneyes end If they finde by experience any thing to clogge them they wil cast it from them as the blinde man cast away his cloke Marke 10 50 that he might runne with speed to him that called him and rather lose their present profite then lacke the place of blessednesse to which wee are going For our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall waight of glory while we looke not on the things which are seene but on the things which are not seene for the things which are seene are temporall but the things which are not seene are eternall Let vs therefore learne contentation of heart in euery estate of life which GOD will bring vpon vs. Let vs while wee conuerse vpon the earth haue our conuersation in Heauen and liue as citizens of that kingdome accounting our selues heere to bee from home esteeming this life a place of banishment and sighing to bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption and restored to the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Wee all desire to inherite Gods kingdome as Balaam desired to dye the death of the righteous but we would not willingly bee soiourners heere Soiourning importeth a temporary abode not a setled life but a passing forward in hope of translatiō to a better estate we must all embrace and receiue this as a ruled case A citizen of heauen is a pilgrim on the earth that euery citizen of Heauen is a pilgrim on earth Genes 47 9. 1 Chronic. 29 15. 1 Peter 1 17 and 2 11 12. If then we desire to be citizens of Gods kingdome we must behaue our selues as pilgrims on the earth Wee are as it were exiles and banished men in a forreine land ought we not then to desire earnestly and heartily to come into our owne countrey and among our own people Whosoeuer hath a rich patrimony in his own country great wealth much honour noble friends and is forced for a season to soiourne in a strange land among strangers nay enemies where he is euilly intreated reproched reuiled disturbed and persecuted on euery side certainely he will set his heart and affections vpon nothing there but all his mInde is set vpon his countrey desiring aboue all things to returne and come againe thither Thus it ought to be with vs our countrey is in heauen where wee haue an euerlasting inheritance and an incorruptible treasure and are pilgrims vpon the earth where wee are hated and assaulted by Satan the world and the flesh and are dayly subiect to sundry troubles and infirmities What folly therefore is it to place our happinesse and felicity vpon the earth and to set our hearts vpon earthly things Vse 3 Thirdly the people of God during their abode in the wildernesse after they were called out of the bondage of Egypt did not go forward toward the land of Canaan with a constant and a setled course but made many stayes and delayes sometimes they marched forward with a couragious resolution vnder the banner of God and his seruant Moses and sometimes they retired backward by the way of the red sea toward Egypt and often wished themselues againe in Egypt When they remembred the fish which they did eate in Egypt freely the cucumbers and the melons and the leekes the onions and the garlicke Numb 14 25 and 11 5. These doe the Iewes delight in to this day which maketh them loathsome and vnsauory which dyet theyr fathers learned in Egypt So it is with vs being called with an holy calling to the knowledge of the Gospel True it is we doe heere runne for a prize this life is the race the runner in it is euery true Christian the Angels are the beholders eternall life is the Crown for which we striue the high Iudge of all is God the enemies that seeke to subuert and supplant vs are Satan the world and our corruptions against which wee are to wrastle with might and maine as for life and death yet we beginne slowly and set forward faintly and being entred into the way wee make many starting-holes that stay vs in our course that we do not proceed with such a good courage and setled resolution as becommeth vs. The truth hereof we may behold in all the faithfull throughout all ages of the Church who haue found hard beginnings in their first calling an vnwillingnes to yeeld a difficulty to resolue an vntowardnesse to enter a backwardnesse to proceede and a dulnesse to perseuere The Lord appeared vnto Moses in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush and called him to speake to Pharaoh and to bring his people the children of Israel out of Egypt Exodus 3 2 and 4 1 but he maketh many exceptions and replyes to the call of God And to the end to pull his necke out of the yoke sometimes hee alledged theit infidelity that they will not beleeue that GOD appeared vnto him sometimes he obiecteth his owne infirmity that he was not eloquent but slow of speach slow of tongue and sometimes he breaketh out into open obstinacy denying to yeeld vnto the voyce of God saying Send by the hand of him whom thou shouldest send So Ieremy had many excuses and exceptions when the word of the Lord came vnto him that hee had sanctified and ordayned him to bee a Prophet vnto the Nations for he replyed by and by O Lord God behold I cannot speake for I am a childe Ier 1 3 The like we see in Ionah who fledde from the presence of God because of the charge enioyned to him to go to Nineue Ionah 1 3. Lot albeit a righteous man whose heart was grieued for the vncleane conuersation of the Sodomites yet being called to depart out of Sodome did linger and loyter behinde in his departure his pleasures whispered him in one eare and his profits rounded him in the other so that he prolonged the time and the Angels caught him his wife and two daughters by the hand the Lord being merciful vnto him they brought him forth and set him without the city Gen. 19 16. The disciples that were called of Christ made sundry delayes one would first goe and bury his father and afterward hee would returne and attend vpon Christ Luke 9 39 another would first
but meeteth with them one way or other eyther he striketh them with his owne hand that did lift vp their hands to strike others or he deliuereth them ouer to the Magistrate Some times he maketh them to be witnesses against themselues sometimes to discouer themselues in their dreames sometimes to feele the torments of hell in their owne consciences and sometimes the birds of the ayre to reueale them We see this in Caine that slew his brother for God set a marke vpon him and branded him for his wretched parricide Genesis 4 verse 15. This the very heathen themselues knew by the light of nature that howsoeuer the murtherer may escape out of some danger yet vengeance will pursue and ouertake him Acts 28 4. This we see in Herod that killed Iames with the sword and put Peter in prison intending also the like against him hee escaped not the hand of God long but his deepe vengeance did so dog him at the heels that he was smitten shortly after by the greater stroake of an Angel from heauen and was eaten vp of worms Acts 12 2.23 Thus did Samuel speake to king Agag 1 Sam. 15 33. As thy sword hath made women childlesse so shall thy mother bee childlesse among women and he hewed him in peeces before the Lord. The like we see in Ioab who was smitten with the sword as hee had killed others 1 Kings 2 31 32. And it is to be obserued what Dauid saith of him concerning the blood of Abner that he had spilled 2 Sa. 3 29. Let it rest on the head of Ioab and on all his fathers house and let there not faile from the house of Ioab one that hath an yssue or that is a leper or that leaneth on a staffe or that falleth on the sword or that lacketh bread Thirdly God doth so detest murther that if a beast kill a man it must bee stoned to death and his flesh not eaten Exod. 21 28. What is God offended with the bruite beasts or do they sinne against him and breake his Commandement No but thereby GOD would shew how much hee abhorreth the shedding of mans blood and that man should lay it to his heart Fourthly it is an offence against a mans owne flesh Eph. 5 29 No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it now euery man is as our owne flesh Esay 58 7. We see Beares and Lions and Tigres and wilde beasts doe play together because they are of one kinde mankind is of one kind if we do not agree together but prey one vppon another we are more fierce then Beares more cruell then Lyons more mercilesse then Tygres and more sauage then wilde beasts Fiftly such as slew another violently were taken out of the Cities of refuge by violence God wold giue no protection to such beasts neither City nor Altar nor Tabernacle nor any thing could yeeld them any safegard Deu. 19 11 12 13. 1 Kings 2 31 32. Sixtly it is a crying sinne blood hath a very lowd voice and neuer ceaseth crying vntill iudgement fall vpon the head of the murtherer Gen. 4 10. Beholde the blood of thy brother cryeth from the earth Abel was now dead his mouth was stopped and he could not speak but his blood could speake the which called and cryed in the eares of the Lord GOD of hoastes from the earth for vengeance Hebre. 11 4. Seuenthly no pardon was to bee giuen to such as appeareth in this chapter and verse 32. Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of him that is a murtherer which is guilty of death but he shall surely be put to death Lastly the Land is defiled by it ver 33 34. Blood defileth the Land and the Land cannot bee clensed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that shed it Defile not therefore the Land which ye shall inherite wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel Now let vs come to the vses First we haue iust cause to feare the wrath of God and if he come to make inquisition of blood he shall finde much blood spilt vpon the earth like water that cannot be gathered vp again throughout the whole Land What abundance of iniustice and cruelty is there to be found in euery place and thought to be iust and vpright dealing How many are there to bee found that hauing once conceyued anger and malice in their hearts will remaine whole dayes and moneths and yeares before they will bee reconciled nay speake one to another thereby depriuing themselues of the mutuall comfort they might reape and receyue and by suffering the Sunne to goe downe vpon their wrath doe giue place to Satan to enter into them to possesse them Eph. 4 26 27. And what colour soeuer men set vpon their cruelty it is but a false painting of a foule face as Adams fig-leaues that couered his shame but could not hide his sinne If it be done vnder pretence of law it is a most fearefull sinne the pretence it selfe maketh it more fearefull because fained iustice is a double iniustice When the Law is so wrested that it is made the occasion of murther it must needs be offensiue displeasing vnto God And albeit this sinne be committed by the Magistrate in letting malefactors go vnpunished yet it must needs bee offensiue vnto GOD because it is that which bringeth the guilt of blood vpon the Land nothing can clense the Land from blood but the blood of him that shed blood This made the Prophet say to Ahab Because thou hast let go out of thy hand a man whom I appointed vnto destruction therefore thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20 42. Whē there was a famine in the Land in the dayes of Dauid three yeares yeare after yeare and hee enquired of the Lord the cause of that sore iudgement the Lord answered It is for Saul and for his bloody house because hee slew the Gibeonites 2 Sam. 21 1 and the attonement could not be made vntil seuen men of his sons were deliuered into their hands and they were hanged vp vnto the Lord that his inheritance might be blessed The sinnes of the sonnes of Eli became to be the sins of their father not because he was their father neyther yet because he was the committer of them but because he being a Magistrate did not punish correct them so likewise when iudgement is not executed vpon men for their sinnes the blood of those which are slaine must needs remaine in the Land If this be committed by way of reuenge it is also an heynous sinne against almighty God because he that doth it preuenteth Gods worke and so prouoketh Gods wrath for he taketh Gods office out of his hand and taketh vp his place who hath saide Vengeance is mine Rom. 12. And if we ascend to the higher degree of men shall wee not finde among them little conscience made of shedding
blood Do not our Gentry for the most part think it their glory to haue their hands embrewed in the blood of innocents What conscience is made of fighting quarrelling for point of pretended honour but in truth for assured dishonour and disgrace vnto them to their names and to their posterity for let thē set what varnish soeuer they please vpon their combates they shall carry the marke of an horrible sinne to their graue God grant it bee not to hell and the place of perpetuall torment and if euer GOD open their eyes they will weepe day and night for it and bee humbled for it all the dayes of their liues Secondly Vse 2 it is the duty of Magistrates especially and of all men generally in their places to make diligent search enquiry when blood is shed by whom the blood hath beene shedde and if the murtherer bee not found they shold craue pardon at the hands of God And touching the Magistrates and others I would commend to them the consideration of two things first that they be carefull that no man dye innocently that they put no man to death without cause Ier. 25 14. of which we shall speake afterward in the end of this chapter Secondly when murther is committed all men must do their endeuour to the vtmost of their power and meanes to detect the authors of that bloody acte Hence it is that God requireth that when a body is found slaine vpon the ground in the Land which he had giuen the Israelites to possesse and it is not knowne who killed him then the Elders and Iudges shall come forth to the dead body and wash their hands ouer a Bullocke whose head was striken off and protest and say Our hands haue not shed this blood neither haue our eyes seene it O Lord bee mercifull to thy people Israel whom thou hast purchased and lay not the guiltlesse blood vpon them and the man-slaughter shall be forgiuen them Deut. 21 7 8 9. Where we see that the killing of one man is a defiling of the whole country and what care the Lord hath of the life of euery man For murther is so hated of God that albeit the dooer thereof be vnknowne yet hee would haue a solemne cleansing and cleering thereof to be made And see what God requireth at the hands of the Magistrates and ministers of iustice It is not enough for them to protest that they haue not committed or supported or fauoured any euill when causes and complaints haue beene brought before them but they must search carefully and enquire diligently of disorders albeit no man sollicite or seeke vnto them yet themselues must be watchfull in their places Howbeit this duty is oftentimes ill obserued and slenderly practised For how many are there that thinke themselues fully discharged and flatter themselues with a fond imagination that they are greatly to be commended when they patiently giue men the hearing and make countenance to helpe them But God is not contented with this he will take an account of them of a farther duty and will not take it for a sufficient discharge to bee able to say though it be truly There was no information giuen no man made any complaint If then Magistrates that haue the sword of iustice put into their hands to cut off euill doers from the City of God shall suffer any wickednesse to lurke in any Citty or corner they themselues are guilty thereof and it is as much in Gods sight as if they had giuen theyr consent to the practising of it These are they that must after a sort answer for the whole body of the people if euill doers be suffered to nustle vnder them through their negligence Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of euery one to beware of all occasions and allurements that may draw vs to this bloody sinne For as there is a murther of the hand so there is a murther of the tongue which is therefore in holy Scripture resembled vnto a Razor to a sword to coales to arrowes to poyson to fire all which kill and are the instruments of death and likewise there is a murther of the heart of which the Apostle Iohn sayeth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him Iohn 3 15. So then we are guilty of this sinne euen by anger and malice in the heart onely and shall haue our portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone If any man haue not a feeling of this in his heart hee is more then dead and if he labour not to repent of it it argueth him to be past all grace and so out of the number of those which shall see God to their comfort For albeit such haue the shape and forme of men yet they haue the hearts of the very beasts If they had the right vse of reason in them and the gouernment of theyr corrupt appetites and affections it could not be but that they would haue a care of the life of their brethren and which is more of theyr owne liues also So then euery man should examine himself and try his owne heart how farre he hath bin guilty of this sinne of murther in euery kinde and branch thereof that so wee may humble our selues Albeit it bee but the anger of the heart yet it is murther in the sight of God is therefore as well to be repented of as the outward acte of murther it selfe To this wee may ioyne the sinne of enuy when men so repine at the good of others that they cannot bee quiet or contented because they want that which others haue and haue not so great a portion as they for this also we should humble our selues and labour continually against it To conclude we see also what crueltie and hard-dealing is oftentimes vsed against poore labouring men that get their liuing by the sweate of their browes and yet many thinke they may vse them as they list eyther with turning of them off with an halfe-peny for a peny or else in exchanging other things for their worke which haply are not worth halfe the money or in keeping backe their wages for weekes moneths or yeares which Saint Iames speaketh of Chapter 5 verse 4. Behold the hyre of the Labourers cryeth and the cryes of them are entred into the eares of the Lord of Sabbath Let vs labour by all meanes to keepe our selues free from bloud and not onely from the outward acte it selfe but from the inward thoughts of the heart as enuy hatred and malice as also from the slaughter of the tongue by cruell and cursed speeches Such a murtherer was Shemei when hee railed vpon Dauid True it is hee charged him to be a murtherer but the murther might iustly and fully bee discharged vpon himselfe for he was the man of blood and a sonne of Belial 2 Sam. 16 7 8. Indeed if a man haue an iniury done vnto him it is lawfull for him
Exod. 20 7 and therefore the errour of the Romanists is blasphemous who lay this iniustice vpon God that he forgiueth the faithfull theyr offences but retayneth the punishment All men doe very willingly confesse that it is a very haynous crime to condemne the iust man but they doe not in like manner and with like zeale abhorre from iustifying the vngodly but the Spirit of God testifyeth that they are both abhominable in his sight he abhorreth the one no lesse then the other Why the guilty ought not to bee spated and so it ought to bee with those that sit in place of iudgment otherwise they transgresse the Law of God which commandeth that his blood should be vpon his owne head Againe such persons are for the most part made worse and worse and are neuer brought to repentance as experience commonly teacheth Besides by this sparing and winking at euill the godly are often grieued and sometimes are emboldened to euill Lastly other wicked men by their example are encouraged and theyr hearts are hardned Hence it is that Salomon sayth Prou. 24 24 Hee that saith vnto the wicked Thou art righteous him shal the people curse nations shall abhorre him This equity doth Moses also propound in the Law If there bee a controuersie betweene men and they come vnto iudgement that the Iudges may iudge them then they shal iustifie the righteous and condemne the wicked Deut. 25 2. But it will be said Obiect that the Scripture teacheth that God iustifieth the vngodly Rom. 4 5 and therefore hee that executeth iudgement may do the like also I answere first Answ that is lawfull for God to do which is not lawfull for man Againe God in iustifying the vngodly of vnrighteous maketh him righteous and by paying a deare price for him cleanseth and washeth away his impiety and giueth vnto him another minde then he had before which no mortall man is able to do and therefore it is vnreasonable to pretend the example of God or to alledge it to iustifie themselues when they iustifie the vngodly This corruption must needes be euill because it proceedeth from euill fountaines for iudgment is stayed or peruerted eyther through feare or couetousnesse or hope or hatred or fauour or malice or letters or such like affections which blinde the eyes and stoppe the eares and peruert the wise 2 Chron. 19 6 7. But in the meane season they displease the Lord and by winking at the wicked they make thēselues abominable to the chiefe Iudge of heauen and earth before whom they must come to be iudged and in sparing of greeuous transgressours which ought to be punished they make themselues accessaries to theyr transgressiōs many times like Saul Ahab Pilate they beare a part of the punishment Secondly this admonisheth all Iurers that Vse 2 they take great heed whom they acquit and whom they condemne If they condemne the innocent theyr blood will be required at their hands And if they iustifie any that are guilty of blood which is a crying sinne or other haynous enormities labour the rest of their fellowes companions to ioyne with them they are brethren in euill and stayne the iudgment seat with vnrighteous proceeding which is worse then if they should cast dust and doung in the Iudges face These doe often forget that they are sworne men and giue theyr verdict vpon theyr oth for if they did they would not so lightly set theyr soules to sale These for the most part thinke themselues excused by the Iudge and hang more vpon his mouth then hold themselues to the matter Such persons ought not to be simple men but such as should be able to iudge and to discerne betweene right and wrong Vse 3 Lastly let vs come to witnesses which are other parties in the matter of iudgment and are especially aymed at in this place it directeth and informeth them to know what they do and where they stand Let them take heed what they depose lest by forswearing themselues they renounce the liuing God and bring damnation vpon theyr soules A man would thinke that an oth were such a weight and burden vpon the conscience that no man would dare to steppe forth and lay his hand vpon the booke and afterward sell himselfe to the diuell There is nothing so vile wretched but some will bee found as vile to set it on foot If Ahab be sicke for Naboths vineyard Iezabel can quickly by her letters procure two false varlets and vnthrifts in Samaria to beare false witnesse against him 1 Kings 21 10. So when the malice and enuy of the Pharisees grew to be extreme against Christ and that they feared the fall of theyr kingdome though he were innocency it selfe yet there were found false witnesses to condemne the innocent Math. 26 60 61. Hence it is that the Ecclesiasticall Lawes haue not hand ouer head admitted all without difference and discretion to be brought and allowed as witnesses but haue set downe seuen iust considerations of exceptions against witnesses in this manner Aetas conditio sexus discretio fama Fortuna fides The first point to be respected in witnesses is that they be of age for such as are infants children or yonglings know not the depth of the cause nor the validity of an oth nor the distinction of matters whereupon they are to be produced and therefore they may stand by while the iury is impanelled And to these we may ioyne the old doting age which decayeth in vnderstanding no lesse then it doth in strength of body Secondly the condition of the persons whether they be bond or free The tenant for his land-lord the seruant for his Master the father and sonne one for another are worthily esteemed to be partiall witnesses Thirdly the sexe whether it be man or woman for a womans testimony wanteth much of the weight of the other because many of them are partiall and passionate light creatures if it be opposed against the testimony of a wise and considerate man They are soone ledde aside by affection by pitty or fauor and therefore neuer any of them were admitted to sit in place of iudgement where the Iudge should know neyther father nor mother Fourthly discretion for idiots and lunatike persons or mad men would prooue but mad witnesses to be admitted in tryals of truth who cannot discerne aright of themselues and of theyr owne estate For how should they be able to diue into the causes of other men that haue not the vse of reason or vnderstanding Fiftly fame is not to be contemned in this case for they should bee men of good report and credit in the places of theyr abode not common swearers not lyers not drunkards and ruffians for such as sweare commonly make no more conscience of an oth taken before a Iudge then of an oth sitting vpon theyr ale-bench and such as are tainted and stayned with the reproch of many euils will easily bee drawne to adde one sin of periury
It is no good report that I heare ye make the Lords people to transgresse But Dauid was loth to displease his sonne but sought to please him in all things and behold what came of it it turned to his hurt and in the end to his vtter ouerthrow If then we lay these seuerall points together that God will shew our election and the election of our seed to stand firmely and onely vpon the purpose of his wil and cut off all occasion of boasting from vs that we are able to deriue grace vnto them lest therby we should ascribe their regeneration conuersiō to our selues so take the glory frō God to whom onely it is due vnto our selues to whom in no sort it is due that God in his counsell purposeth to destroy some of them and that they often want education a good meanes to bring them to God wee may truely conclude this point with which we deale namely that godly parents which doe beleeue haue many times vngracious and vnrighteous children that doe not beleeue This often falling out to the most faithful Vse 1 that desire to leaue an holy seed behind them let vs consider what we are to learne from it And first this sealeth vp this truth as a principle that neuer faileth namely that the father is not saued by the child nor the child by the father The Prophet saith truely Hab. 2.4 The iust shal liue by his faith not by the faith of the father nor by the faith of the sonne but by his owne faith The faith of the godly father shal not saue the vngodly child neither shal the faith of the godly child saue the vngodly father Thus are Gods wayes cleared to bee equall which are oftentimes challenged and slandered to be vnequall This doth the Prophet Ezekiel Ezek. 18.4 5.13 14 17 20. and 33.20 handle at large Chap. 18. and 33. Behold all soules are mine as the soule of the father so also the soule of the sonne is mine the soule that sinneth shall die If a man be iust and doe that which is lawfull and right if he beget a sonne that is a robber or an oppresser he shal surely die his blood shall be vpon him But if he beget a sonne that seeth all his fathers sinnes which he hath done and considereth and doth not such like hee shall not die for the iniquitie of his father he shall surely liue The soule that sinneth it shall die the sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father neither shall the father beare the iniquity of the sonne the righteousnes of the righteous shal be vpon him and the wickednes of the wicked shal be vpō him Where he sheweth that if the father that is righteous beget a sonne vnlike vnto himselfe the righteousnesse of the father shall nothing profit or auaile him he shall receiue such a recompence of reward as is due to his impiety He mentioneth in this place three seuerall persons the grandfather the nephew and in the middle betweene them both Calui praelect in Ezek. cap. 18 he setteth the sonne of the former and the father of the latter Of them all he setteth downe this rule that euery one shall be rewarded as he hath liued and receiue according vnto his workes The blessing of GOD shall rest vpon all those that are iust whatsoeuer their posterity shall bee as Esay Chapter 3.10 Esay 3.10 Say yee to the righteous that it shall be well with him for they shall eate the fruite of their doings and to that purpose we reade in the Psalme Psal 58.11 Men shall say verily there is reward for the righteous verily he is a God that iudgeth in the earth God is a iust Iudge and therefore rewardeth euery man as his owne life is They therefore doe greatly deceiue themselues that runne into all excesse of riot and thinke to haue mercy shewed vnto them because of the godlinesse of their parents whereas rather this shall serue to heape vppe farther iudgement vpon their heads On the other side it serueth to comfort those that forsake the wickednesse of their parents progenitors forasmuch as god will accept of them and embrace them in the armes of his tender loue and neuer charge vpon them those sinnes nor vpbraide them with the same Blessed therefore are all that walke in his wayes but vnto them that turne away from righteousnesse and commit iniquity and doe according to all the abominations that the wicked man doth all his righteousnesse that he hath done shall not be mentioned in his trespasse that he hath trespassed and in his sinne that he hath sinned in them shall he die Wherefore to conclude it is required of vs not to stand vpon the goodnesse of our ancestors but vpon that which we finde in our selues inasmuch as many of the godly and righteous seruants of God haue had children appointed to wrath and destruction The people of the Iewes gloried and boasted that they had Abraham to their father albeit they did not the workes of Abraham but of their father the diuell Ioh. 8.44 Ioh. 8.44 Hence it is that Iohn the Baptist exhorteth them to bring forth fruites meete for repentance Matth. 3.8 9. and not to thinke to say within themselues We haue Abraham to our father forasmuch as God is able of the stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham It is a vaine thing in earthly things for a man to boast of his predecessors The heathen man could say Ouid. Metam lib. 13. that stocke and ancestors and such things as our selues haue not done we may scarcely cal our owne Much more doeth this holde in heauenly things and in true religion which goe not by kinde or kinne they descend not from father vnto sonne as temporall inheritances doe no man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and hee to whomsoeuer the Sonne will reueale him Matth. 11. Matth. 11.27 Let euery man labour to know God and to plant the feare of him in his owne heart that so we may liue by our owne faith as his life is maintained and continued by his owne soule Vse 2 Secondly let no man be discouraged though they see their seed vntoward and vngracious Religion cannot be conueyed to children by parents as house and land neither can they leaue it vnto them as they leaue them a possession to descend by a continued succession from the father to the sonne and to the sonnes sonne in one race and generation Godlinesse commeth not to vs by naturall generation Godlinesse is no inheritance from father to sonne but by spirituall regeneration neither hath the first-borne greater title to it then the second That which the Apostle speaketh of the Ministery that Paul may plant and Apollo water but it is God that giueth the increase may be truely spoken of the bringing vp of children in the nourture and information of the Lord. We may and ought
the staues of it 15. And when Aaron and his sonnes haue made an end of couering the Sanctuary and all the vessels of the Sanctuary as the Campe is to set forward after that the sonnes of Kohath shall come to beare it but they shall not touch any holy thing lest they die These things are the burden of the sonnes of Kohath in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 16. And to the office of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest pertaineth the oyle for the light Exod. 30 34. Exod. 30 24. and the sweet incense and the daily meate offering and the annointing oile and the ouersight of all the Tabernacle and of all that therein is in the Sanctuary and in the vessels thereof In this diuision the particular charge beolnging to the sonnes of Kohath is both propounded and confirmed Touching the speciall parts heere remembred First Aaron and his sonnes as ouerseers of the rest are charged when the hoste of God remooueth to couer the Arke of the Testimony the Table of shew bread the Candlesticke of light the vessels of oyle and such like Secondly the duty of the Kohathites is set downe that so soone as Aaron and his sonnes haue made an end of couering the Sanctuary and all the instruments of the Sanctuary they must come to beare both it and them as it was deliuered vnto them prouided that they did not touch any of them or meddle with them vntill they be couered lest they be destroyed Thirdly the office of Eleazar the Priest the sonne of Aaron is specified to him belonged the oyle for the light the sweet incense the daily meat offering and the anointing oyle with all the ouersight of the Tabernacle These seuerall points thus largely laid open may seeme needlesse and vnprofitable to be thus particularly rehearsed but as all things were done in types and figures vnto them so they had their vses to them and serue also for our instruction to the end of the world Touching the instruments belonging to the Tabernacle and the vessels that were vsed as the oyle the lamps the candlestickes the shew bread the incense and what were the significations of them we haue already declared in the bookes of Exodus and Leuiticus Now we wil onely call to remembrance these three points and briefly note what we are to learne from thence First the Tabernacle was remooued from place to place and the parts of it taken asunder and ioyned together This was a figure of the Church and sheweth that the faithfull so long as they liue in this Tabernacle of the body ● Pet. 1.13 are absent from the Lord and so shall continue vntill they obtaine a stable inheritance in the heauens We are not as yet come to the rest Deut. 12.9 and to the inheritance which the Lord our God shall giue vs. We haue heere no continuing citie to dwell in we are as Pilgrimes and strangers in this world We seeke a countrey else-where Let vs therefore vse this world as though we vsed it not 1. Cor. 7.31 Be not deceiued with the glorious and glittering shewes of earthly things If we did consider the frailty and vncertainty of all humane things heere beneath that they are the suttle and sugred baits of Satan which catch and condemne many thousands in the world Tim. 6.6 and bring men to many foolish and noysome lusts that drowne them in perdition and destruction we would not so easily wound our consciences and sell our soules for gaine as the maner of many is who in all things wherin they haue dealings and doings with others regard nothing but their owne wealth albeit it be ioyned with decay and vndoing of our brethren Secondly obserue in this place that the Sanctuary together with all the frame and furniture thereof was couered with badgers skinnes a very sure couering to teach vs that the whole Church euery particular member thereof are vnder the protection of God as it were vnder a couering Hereunto the Prophet alludeth Psal 27.5 In the time of trouble he shall hide me he shall set me vp vpon a Rocke And the Prophet Esay chap. 4. 5 6. The Lord wil create vpon euery dwelling place of mount Zion and vpon her assemblies a cloude and smoake by day and the shining of a flaming fire by night for vpon all the glory shall be a defence and there shall be a Tabernacle for a shadow in the day time from the heat and for a place of refuge and for a couert from storme and from raine This ministreth great comfort to all the faithfull seruants of God to consider that howsoeuer the Tabernacle was subiect to the violence of winde and weather yet it could sustaine no harme because it was most surely and safely couered against all iniuries tempests and stormes whatsoeuer None lie open to such troubles and turmoiles as the Church none are so garded regarded as they are It were vnpossible that we should hold out and continue in our profession against such dangers except we had a couering vpon vs as the helmet of saluation He is our defence and a buckler round about vs. He will neuer leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord is my deliuerer I will not feare what man can doe vnto mee Lastly we see the Tabernacle had diuers and sundry instruments in it belonging to the worship of God and sanctified and set apart to holy vses so is it in the Church of God the word the Sacraments the preaching the praiing the praysing of God the gifts of sundry sorts bestowed vpon the Church are all of them sacred and holy by the speciall institution of God Hereunto doth the Prophet Zachary allude chap. 14. 20 21. In that day shall there be vpon the bels of the horses holinesse vnto the Lord and the pots in the Lords house shall bee like the bolles before the altar yea euery pot in Ierusalem and in Iudah shall be holinesse vnto the Lord of hostes and all they that sacrifice shall come and take of them and seeth therein for in that day there shall be no more the Canaanite in the house of the Lord of hostes The things that God hath appointed to the glory of his Name and the furthering of his worship are al of them holy and there is as it were grauen vpon them Exod. 28.36 as once on the forehead of the high Priest Holinesse to the Lord. Hence it is that the word is called the holy Scripture and all other things belonging to the seruice of God are holy also This teacheth how wee should bee affected when we present our selues in the presence of God and come to be partakers of the ordinances of God Heere are holy things for such as are holy if we come vnto them with sanctified hearts and touch them with sanctified hands Such as come prophanely vnto them receiue no benefite by them He that turneth away his eare from hearing the Law euen his praier is
abhominable If we come wickedly and vnworthily to the Lords Supper we eate and drinke our owne damnation Let vs therefore examine our selues and prepare our hearts before we come that so wee may bee meete partakers of those holy mysteries Obiect Before wee come to the doctrine offered vnto vs in this diuision we are to answer one obiection that ariseth from hence For the question may be asked whether this charge heere spoken of were perpetually enioyned to the Leuites that they should carry the instruments of the Sanctuary and the Arke whether I say they were alwayes to beare the Arke Answer or not I answer this commandement was temporary It was their duty for a time vntill the Priests were encreased and multiplied in number that they were sufficient and enabled to carry it Deut. 31 9. But afterward all the examples of the histories mentioned in the bookes of Ioshua and the Iudges of Samuel and of the Kings do manifestly declare that it was the office of the Priests themselus Iosh 3 6. 1 Sam. 14 18. 2 Sam. 15 29. 1 Kings 2 26 and 8 3 4. For the most worthy things were to be handled by the more worthy persons thereby to testifie the worthines and dignity of the things themselues and to procure the greater reuerence and respect vnto them Wherefore the commandement enioyned in this place was for a season onely vntill there were a sufficient number of the Priests to do it 2 Sam. 6 3. The setting of the Arke vpon a Cart was Dauids infirmity though otherwise a man after Gods owne heart for Princes may erre the best of them may be deceiued They followed not the ordinance of God and caused it not to be carried on the shoulders eyther of the Priests or Leuites but followed the example of the Philistims who made a new Cart 1 Sam. 6 7 11. and laide the Arke of the Lord vpon the Cart so did Dauid and all the people they set the Arke of God vpon a new Cart and brought it out of the house of Abinadab Againe we reade sometimes in the Scriptures that the Leuites did it 1 Chr. 15 2. Then Dauid said None ought to carry the Arke of God but the Leuites for them hath the Lord chosen to carry the Arke of God and to minister vnto him for euer Thus was Dauid made wiser by the former breach of Gods wrath among them whereby Vzzah was destroyed Howbeit we must vnderstand heereby the Priests that were of the Tribe of Leui as appeareth by the 26 verse of that chapter It came to passe when God helped the Leuites to beare the Arke of the Couenant of the Lord that they offered seuen Bullocks seuen Rams Where we see that such as did beare the Arke did also offer sacrifices but the Priests office onely was to offer sacrifice therefore they onely did carry the Arke For all the Priests were Leuites but all Leuites were not Priests The name of Leuites was a common name to all that belonged to that Tribe whereof some were called Priests other by the common name of Leuites But concerning those that executed the Priests office and were not of that Tribe they were no better then intruders and vsurpers Verse 5 6 c. And when the Campe setteth forward Aaron shall come and his sonnes and they shall take downe c. Moses mentioneth and setteth downe in this place the particular calling of all the Leuites what they ought to do and what they ought not to do wherein they are to busie themselues exercise their gifts and how they may approue themselues in their places as if he should bring euery one of them into their proper field that they were to till For euen as a master of a family appointeth euery one of his seruants their taske and worke that he will haue them do so doth the Lord our God deale with his Ministers and all his people he giueth them their peculiar office and sheweth how and wherein they must employ themselues We learne Doctrine 1 from hence that euery man whether out of the Ministery or in the Ministery It is the duty of euery one to know and learne the duties of his owne calling must learne and know the duties of his owne calling what charge God hath laide vpon him and what seruice he requireth at his hands At the giuing of the law in Mount Sion euery one had his standing place assigned vnto him which he might not passe for as God hath set bounds vnto the sea that though it rage yet it can go no farther then hee hath appointed he hath said hitherto it shall goe and it can go no farther so Moses is charged to deale with the people that they do not breake thorough vnto the Lord Exod. 19 12. Thou shalt set bounds vnto the people saying Take heed to your selues that ye goe not vp into the Mount or touch the border of it c. Thus also the Lord speaketh to Ieremy chapt 1 5 10. Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee and before thou camest foorth out of the wombe I sanctified thee and I ordained thee a Prophet vnto the Nations The Prophet Ionah is reproued that being to go to Niniueh Ionas 1 3. rose vp to flye vnto Tarshish from the presence of the Lord. Thus doth Paul speake to Timothy for hauing set downe before him the duty of his calling he saith 1 Tim 4.15 16. Tit. 1 5 and 2 15 and 3 ● Meditate vpon these things giue thy selfe wholly to them that thy profiting may appeare to all Euery one is taught to labour with his hands the thing that is good Eph. 4 28. and to withdraw himselfe from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not according to the doctrine receiued The reasons to confirme vs Reason 1 in this truth are many First we can neuer practise the duties of our callings except we know them This is the eie that leadeth vs to the doing of thē from the beginning to the ending of them The blind man cannot see his way Ioh. 13 17. If ye know these things blessed are ye if ye doe them When once we know what duties are laid vpon vs we are already entred into the way to do them and performe them Reason 2 Secondly such as transgresse the bounds set before them shall surely perish and be punished When the people before the Law was giuen were limited how farre to passe Moses addeth ●d 19.12 whosoeuer toucheth the mount shal be surely put to death and the Apostle prosecuteth the threatening further 〈◊〉 12.20 If so much as a beast touch the mountain it shall be stoned or thrust through with a dart So then the consideratiō of the punishment threatned denounced against all that breake the listes set vnto them which is farther confirmed by sundry examples of Vzzah and of Corah and his company ought so farre to preuaile with vs as to teach vs to continue in the workes