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

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my body for the sinne of my soule when they could not endure what is told them Verse 8. hee hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee surely to doe justly and to love mercy and to humble thy self to walke with thy God Any thing but that they should doe they pretend to be willing to doe like children who like any manner of education but that their parents would bring them up in If in a trade oh if they might follow their book any thing but that they should and their Parents would have So with these they know not or will not know their owne heart which is naturally irreligious and never will like that is commanded but would goe a whoring with their owne imaginations and ever will like that they may not have or will not be accepted when they contemne that they have and not respecting these they cannot but contemne that is otherwise enjoyned as Luke 16.30 31. he said Nay father Abraham but if one come unto them from the dead they will amend their lives Then he said unto him if they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rise from the dead againe They are like to a woman to whom one making love and desiring her person she disliking his answers him she will give him any thing but her selfe her riches jewels bracelets and such like onely to put him off because she sees he desires her person onely and the other if he would desire she would soone deny him To teach us how wee ought now with all diligence and frequency performe these Vse 3 and offer these sacrifices more than they these were common to us and them they were burdened with others of which we are eased which were chargeable and toylesome Acts 15.10 As 2 Kings 5.13 it was with Namaan his servants came and spake unto him and said Father if the Prophet had commanded thee a great thing wouldest thou not have done it how much rather then when hee saith to thee Wash and be cleane So say I if he had laid that burden also upon us ought we not to have done both how much more when he hath eased our shoulders And if we should not how should we be justly condemned of unthankfulnesse The Wife that newly married had a wise and strait Husband knowing her frailty and infirmities and therefore set a watch over her and appointed servants to observe her till her affection and faith were setled when she ought and did honour and obey and love him If he free her from them and set her at liberty from that grievous bondage and tedious thing will she then honour him the lesse Questionlesse she ought not but if she doe as the corruption of all is to waxe worse by liberty then is she condemned of unthankfulnesse the more So 't is with us Incense The worship prayers and service of the Gentiles is resembled by this not onely familiarly to shew to them of that age but to teach that their service works and worship is acceptable unto God as such things are acceptable to the smell and sences of men for in them God tooke no delight at all neither could doe his nature being spirituall The works of Gods children Doctrine their worship service and spirituall sacrifice is delightfull and acceptable to him as sweet perfumes are to the smell of men And a pure offering It is opposed to the Jewes sinnes who offered unto God polluted and unperfect sacrifices not such as they ought and such as were according to the Law But now their offering shall be pure The works actions Doctrine and worship of such are truely called and converted are holy and pure Thus prophesieth Malachy that the Gentiles converted unto God their workes and worship of him shall be a pure offering Thus St. Paul speakes of the offering of the Romans Chap. 12.1 that it is holy Jude calls their faith most holy vers 20. There were a few in Sardi truely religious and converted their garments were undefiled Revel 3.4 Because they are done according to his Word Reas 1 now they walke by that rule things before they did at randome now they know his Will and after that they doe And it is a rule that worship performed according to the Word in themselves are good and pure as the sacrifices which were according to the Law were pure and cleane for the matter of them Because the parties are holy they are a holy Priesthood Reas 2 1 Pet. 2.5 now a good thing done in matter by holy men must needs be holy But how can they be holy when there is eadem ratio totius partis And the Church for spots is compared to the Moon Object Cant. 6.9 This is answered that he is so because he is in Christ Answ and hath his righteousnesse imputed to him both to his person and his obedience 1 Cor. 1.30 non radiis solaribus sed ipso sole amictus Revel 12.1 as the Church is said to be cloathed with the Sunne Hebr. 13.15 1 Pet. 2.5 Thirdly because of his inward sanctification Reas 3 the ground of it the party being regenerated by the works of the Spirit and so every action is in him part holy and good and well pleasing to God as comming and proceeding from his Spirit though having a tang and tast of his infirmities as water passing through a pipe or channell Rom. 8.26 and 15.16 This teacheth what to judge of the works and worship of all that are uncalled and unconverted Vse 2 not onely of Heathen and Infidels but of unbeleevers in the Church they must needs be impure and unholy else were it nothing that is here affirmed of these after their calling And indeed needs must it be for Tit. 1.15 Vnto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled So farre is it that they should be merita praeparatoria as some Papists speake of them for unholy things cannot please him lesse procure or deserve good things from him though they doe the things for matter good yet a good thing is oftentimes marred in the handling and more when they are done by some men and such men Secondly Vse 2 this proves that mens callings are free without deserts when the things that they doe before even their best are impure and unholy such as God shewed his great patience in that he did not confound them for them and more the riches of his mercy that for all them yet he called them This comforteth every one that is truely converted unto God Vse 3 his works and worship is pure and holy and so accepted of God even then when he carryeth the body of sinne about with him Rom. 7.21 when in himselfe he finds many infirmities yea and when his heart tells him that his best work is not without the taint of his corruption yea and when his heart may misdeeme him as Jacobs did
escaped a serpent and is fallen into the power of a Lion Therefore let every one examine whether it be a blessing to him to be thus delivered if the patience of God hath brought him to repentance and reformation but otherwise thou art delivered rather in anger then in mercy and art deceived as the sicke man that thinks a good turn is done him when he hath what meat and drinke he desires unlesse that which the fire could not soften the sunne do and that thy heart relent as Sault at Davids kindnesse who had spared his life when he might have taken it away 1. Sam. 24.17 VERS XVI Then spake they that feared the Lord every one to his neighbour and the Lord hearkened and heard and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his name THen spake they that feared the Lord. The Prophet having reproved the blasphemy of the wicked shewed their grounds on which they denied the providence of God he now answereth them First in this vers by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of these who did truly fear God Secondly vers 17. By a sweet promise on Gods part of great goodnesse and mercy towards the godly who rested in his pomises Thirdly verse 18. Denouncing a judgement which the wicked should have experience of when they should see the difference betwixt them and those who feared him Then spak they that feared the Lord. In this verse the Prophet brings in the godly answering and incouraging one another contrarie to that which the wicked had said And so it is i. The godly of those times though happily but few at what time the wicked spoke thus blasphemously did mutually exhort one another not to faint or be dismaied by those speeches of the wicked or by them to be drawne from their pietie to wickednesse and corruption but they had their mututall speeches to further one another in their good course as the others had to harden one another in their wicked courses But what said they St. Hierom and some others thinke that the Prophet hath not told us but that telling us the just did speake it must be supposed that they spoke fitting and good things in defence of the providence of God and his government and such things as they had learned by the Scriptures and had received from the instruction of their teachers but saving their judgments I rather encline to those who think the words following to be theirs and not Gods words who seemeth not to speake till the 17. verse Thus then in comforting one another they sayd The Lord harkened and heard i. Howsoever they imagine that the Lord sees and heares nothing respecteth nor regardeth what is done or said yet he hath heard and doth most diligently observe what is said and done for so much hearkening doth carry and will import namely care and diligence As Psalm 5.2 2 Chron. 6. And so by this they confirme the contrary to that which the wicked had said that God did not regard that it is manifest that he heares their words not a word drops from them which is unknowne to him much more all their actions are diligently and attentively regarded And that it may appeare it is not for a space or a short time but perpetually therefore he hath a booke of remembrance which is not spoken as if God had any such booke or stood in need of it as if he were subject to forgetfulnesse but it is spoken in respect of men by which they may be assured that the will and decree of God touching them and the wicked is certaine and constant which is better expressed by a booke then by words for that which is written is more durable and permanent whereas things spoken vanish away and are blown away in the aire For them that feared the Lord. That is for such as feare him that he will not forget their labours and obedience but will recompence and reward it even to their very thoughts and intents thinking and remembring his commandements to observe and doe them Therefore spake they who feared the Lord. The Prophet answereth the blasphemy of the wicked in this verse by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of those who did truely feare God And in this First their encouragement Secondly their ground First Gods hearing and regarding Secondly his certaine decree for shewing good to them The first thing here is the encouragement one of another It is the duty of every one fearing God Doctrine to encourage and strengthen one another in the service and worship of God Here and Heb. 3.13 But exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin And 10.24 And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good workes Mich. 4.2 And here we may make that generall which was spoken particularly to Peter as to all Ministers so to Christians Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not therefore when thou art converted strengthen thy brethren So Baruch and the Princes did helpe one another Jerem. 36.11.13.15.16 When Michaiah the sonne of Gemariah the sonne of Shaphan had heard out of the bookes all the words of the Lord Then Michaiah declared unto them all the words that he had heard when Baruch read in the booke in the audience of the people And they said unto him sit downe now and reade it that we may heare So Baruch read it in their audience Now when they had heard all the words they were affraid both one and other and said unto Baruch we will certifie the King of all these words Because they are Gods such as have received this honour to be called his and to be his therefore reason as sonnes Reason 1 they should not onely themselves but by all other meanes seeke it in others and draw others to it Because they are members one of another Ephes 4.25 Reason 2 therefore as members they ought to strengthen uphold and keepe up one another that as they naturally in the health and good temperature of the body so these spiritually in the good state of the soule To convince their error who thinke it onely a duty appertaining to the Minister to exhort and stirre up others Vse 1 and to strengthen and confirme them Truth it is that it is specially and principally his duty as being Christs Lievetenant upon the earth who doth by them performe that Isaiah 61.1 Namely preach and binde up the broken hearted but yet it appertaines to every one so is it manifestly proved If any say he is not appointed to be his brothers keeper it is but the voice of Caine of a wicked and gracelesse man To condemne their practice who either out of this error of their minde or out of the corruption of their heart Vse 2 altogether neglect this duty to say nothing of those who labour to weaken the strong to coole the zealous
he to hold them to himselfe they to draw them from the Gospell Because saith Chrys the people of Israel who were brought up in Aegypt had polluted themselves with Idolatry would have sacrifices ceremonies so that if they were not permitted unto them they were ready against to fall to Idolatry though God desired a people to worship him in spirit truth yet he granted them unto them dealing as a wise Physitian who having a patient sick of a feaver by reason of heat desiring earnestly cold water and unlesse it be given him he is ready to seek a halter to strangle himselfe or some waies to destroy himself there the Physitian compelled by necessity gives him a cup of water prepared by himselfe and commands him to drinke but forbids him to drinke of any other but that so God gave the Jewes goodly ceremonies but so as it was not lawfull for them to use any other And then were they grieved saith he when he shewed his wrath upon them for making a calfe of their ear-rings c. So in cunning and mischievous policy hath the Church of Rome when they saw how the nature of man was affected with holy things because of the outward meanes when simple and base because the Gospell is such they little regarded them but glorious things were those that affected them therefore have they fallen from the simplicity of the Gospell to that whorish Babylonish pride they are now in when it was with her as Boniface the Bishop and Martyr said to one that asked whether it was lawfull to administer the Sacrament in woodden cups he answered In times past they had golden Priests and woodden Chalices then would they bragge of nothing such a multitude as now when they have woodden Priests and golden Chalices since Pope Vrban hath made all the ministring attire golden and gay and so because they are led by their sences therefore they are violently carried after this superstition This teacheth us Vse 2 why in the Church the meanes of Gods worship his word and table are so little esteemed or regarded because men are so led by their sences and when the meanes are base and simple they thinke so of the worship it selfe as Hierome said putabant altari deesse religionis sanctimoniam quia deerat aedificationis ambitio they thought the Altar was not to be so religiously regarded because it was not richly bedecked and adorned such are they as give no respect to the word because the Minister is of no great respect but a meane plaine man who have not learned more to esteem the earthen vessels for the treasure but lesse to account of the treasure for the earthen vessels Hence many set light by the holy Table because they see nothing here but bare bread and wine very base and meane elements such as they use ordinarily to feed on else where and so as a foole or a naturall if he light on an obligation or a deed he maketh no more reckoning of it then of a piece of parchment a little wax because he understandeth not the contents and end of it So in these things not considering the end and use of them by whom they were appointed As there are some who overvalue these mysteries specially the Sacraments that tye the grace of God inseparably to them and make the opus operatum a matter of sufficient vertue that ascribe some divine power to the very outward elements and so bring a divine adoration of them that of holy mysteries make magicall miracles as the Church of Rome doth so againe are there many in the Church of England that undervalue them that make no other reckoning of them then as of ordinary elements and repaire unto them as to the bodily food because they are in nature and substance the same the Doctrine here being the ground of it they being so dull sighted they can look no further then that which is object to the sence of them they can see no end nor use of them more no secret grace nor vertue in them and that which is worse will not submit themselves to be taught or if taught not believe when oportet discentem credere To teach every one in these actions sursum corda habere Vse 3 and to lift the eyes of his minde upwards as with his bodily eyes he seeth the outward elements here so with the eye of faith to apprehend the matter of it that which these outward things represent to the minde The word of God for letters and syllables is but the same with other humane writings but it hath another manner of worke with it in regard of the spirit and grace of God accompanying it unto those that heare it with a sanctified eare As we see that ordinary water and aqua vitae in a viall or glasse look both alike but they differ much in work and effect because there is a kind of Spirit in the one which is not in the other so the Word and the Sacrament though the same in substance with ordinary Bread and Wine yet they have a farre divers worke and effect with them unto those who receive them with a holy heart and a faithfull in regard of Gods covenant whose seales they are in regard of the mercy of God of which they more assure us in regard of Christs Death that they represent unto us and put us in minde of and in regard of the grace of Gods Spirit that accompaineth them in those that so receive them for the effecting of these former matters VERSE VIII And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice it is not evill and if yee offer the lame and sicke it is not evill offer it now unto thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hostes ANd if you offer the blinde for sacrifice The Lord proceedeth to prove that they despise him and his table shewing how they have erred both against his law and the rule of honesty and comelinesse Levit. 22.21 22. And if you offer the blinde for sacrifice it is not evill These words are read of some by way of interrogation When yee offer the blinde is it not evill Now a negative interrogation ever affirmeth strongly q. d. it is very evill and yet yee doe it Hierom Junius others read these words by way of affirmation God continuing to tax their thoughts you think it not evill you think it is good enough for God you make it no fault and this is the common reading which is more agreable to the context but the matter is not great how we take it both tend to one end and one effect both a disliking disallowing of such sacrifice For the sacrifice here spoken of some understand it only of the sacrifice the Priests offered for themselves Levit. 4.3 Heb. 5.3 Others for the sacrifice the people brought which when they were burnt offerings which were all consumed upon the Altar the Priests nothing regarded but the
irasci 't is a signe of greater displeasure The master that respects his servant corrects him for a small fault if he let him alone Chrysost in Mat. ho. 17. it may be thought he doth it till great faults bee joyned to it land he may either punish more or cast him out of his house so in this Neither will I accept an offering at your hand Because he is displeased with them therefore he will not accept their offerings nor their service and prayers The person of a man must first please God before his prayers Doctrine his offerings or any worke that he doth can be pleasing or acceptable to him That is before reconciliation just sication they are unaccepted It is hence manifest because he rejecteth their offerings being displeased with their persons hereto belongs that Ge. 4.4 that Prov. 15.8 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is acceptable unto him Hence Isaiah 1.13 19. 1 Pet. 2.5 And yee as lively stones hee made a spirituall house an holy priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Christ Jesus Hebr. 13.16 Because all workes are made acceptable to God by faith Reas 1 as all things are made pleasing to men by the light so Chrysost and without it nothing is Hebr. 11.16 Now faith is that which makes the person accepted for by it we are justified Rom. 5.1 and made the sonnes of God Rom. 3.26 Because before they are strangers Ephe. 2.19 yea and enemyes Reas 2 Rom. 5.10 now things done by strangers are not greatly gratefull but by enemies they altogether distaste us This confuteth the Papists who make good workes the cause of our justification and reconciliation to God when Vse 1 as they can not be good so they cannot be acceptable before we be reconciled and acceptable in his sight How doe they then justifie us and reconcile us for that which must justifie and reconcile another must needs it selfe be in favor for as that is true of S. Augustine Opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum So that is as true whensoever they come they are not acceptable in themselves because they are imperfect our evill works are perfectly evill and so deserve to be cast out of favour but our good works are not perfectly good and so cannot procure favor of themselves Object If any object as some of our Papists sticke not to doe that we are justified by works because by faith for faith is a worke I anser faith is not our worke but Gods in us John 6.29 Againe Answ though having received faith we doe beleeve yet it is not faith or the worke of it that doth justifie us but the righteousnes of Jesus Christ apprehended by faith for as a hand that hath taken a treasure doth not inrich us but the treasure and it is not the mouth receiving the meat but the meat that doth nourish us so in this And being thus justified then we work and our works are acceptable because we are first accepted in Christ To stirre up every man to the tryall of his estate and himselfe whether he be indeed reconciled to God or no Vse 2 whether justified or no that if he be not he may labor and endevor to be because while he is in that condition whatsoever things he doe as they are but splendida peccata August so they are altogether unacceptable to God whether he heare or give or receive or pay a heavy condition of a servant that doe what he can yet he can not please But happily thou art desirous to know whether thou art reconciled or not Quest and if not how to come by it I answer thee Answ if thou hast true faith then shall this be like the fait 2 Kings 2.21 which healed the spring of waters and of it may be said as there This comforts God children Vse 3 who are justified in Jesus Christ and so accepted in his sight their works their sacrifice and worship liketh him howsoever they are done in imperfections and in many great weaknesses and are not so fully with their whole foule minde and heart as they should be but carry the touch of mans corruption and are not able to abide the strict and streight judgment of God yet because they proceed from them who are accepted in Christ they please him and the imperfections are pardoned in Christ and they taken for pure and holy Prov. 15.8 1 Pet. 2.5 As a little thing done of a child is more acceptable then much done by a servant VERSE XI For from the rising of the sunne unto the going downe of the same my Name is great among the Gentiles and in every place incense shall bee offered unto my Name and a pure offering for my Name is great among the heathen saith the Lord of Hosts FRom the rising of the sunne Here is the second part of withdrawing Gods mercy from these Jewes And this is the removing of his worship word from Jewes to Gentiles set down by a comparison of dissimilitude betwixt Jewes and Gentiles The proposition of the Gentiles and their great care and respect of his worship verse 11. the reddition of the Jewes and their corruption and carelesnesse of his worship renewing the former expostulation verse 12 13. In this we are to consider the worship of God the circumstances of it In it we consider 1. the ground of it my name is great repeated in the beginning and ending of the verse for more certainty of the thing 2. the matter incense and oblation 3. the manner and quality of it pure opposit to the Jewes prophane and polluted service of God The circumstances 1. persons Gentiles 2. place everywhere Now for the meaning The Papists have wrested this place to establish the doctrine of their Masse but how absurdly shall appeare before we have ended with the Verse in the meane time we will search the true meaning of them as they ly in order For from the rising of the Sunne These words expresse the place some expound them in the time present and these either take them absolutely thus The Gentiles though they have no knowledge of God but by nature as much as they may learne out of the great bookes the Heavens and the Earth and the revolutions and changes of them by the rising of the Sunne and the going downe of the same yet they offer unto God oblations in their kind Thus Montanus But this cannot b e because of the quality of the sacrifice following for it is said to be pure which could not come from them in that dimme light they had Or conditionally that the Gentiles would offer a pure sacrifice if God did reveale himselfe to them as he hath to the Jewes But the words are so absolutely spoken they cannot thus be taken Others with more generall consent on all sides take them in the future tense or time to come that the time should come when
justice of God and so cannot be unlesse he can cease to be God for the instance of David 2 Sam. 12.13.14 and some other of Gods children whose sinne remitted the affliction remained is not against this because in him it was not a punishment but a clearing of the justice of God before the wicked as the place sheweth and in others they are but purgers or preventers To teach the Church and every particular Vse 2 to acknowledge it to be the mercy of God that they live and are not consumed when they see many others are and know themselves to have deserved the like The Church wherein we live and we our selves here present have beene delivered from many and strange dangers and confusions whom shall we ascribe this unto shall we sacrifice to the wisedome of our state to the valor of Marshall men to the power of armes to the multitude of our people to our owne workes and worthinesse to our profession of his truth or practise of piety our justice and equity and such like so may we provoke the Lords anger indeed to consume us Whither else must we ascribe it but to this being taught every where it is the mercy of God that we are not consumed whose compassions failed not and so as the Church begunne her prayer we may our prayses Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give the glory for thy loving mercy and for thy truthes sake For considering the height of our sinnes the greatnesse of our iniquities and rebellions whereto else can it be ascribed And his mercy hath drawne him to spare us partly for our selves and partly for posterity and those who shall come of us As Saint Chrysostome hom 80. ad popul Antioch for our selves that his mercy might draw us to repentance and to fear him for posterity * Parcit frequenter radici ut fructus conservet qualiter audi Terah pater Abrahae fuit Idolorum cultor sed in hoc mundo impietatis poenas non dedit merito Nam si Deus praeveniens cadicem praecidisset unde tantus fidei fructus exortus fuisset Sic Esau fornicator fuit immundus matricida patricida fratricida quantum in ipsius fuit proposito Deo exosus Mal. 1.2 Quarè non perditur quarè non exciditur Bonum est verâ dilectissimi causâ dicere si succisus fuisset maximam eleemosynae fructum justitiae mundus amisisset qualem audi Esau genuit Raguel hic Zara hic Iob. Vides quantus tolerantiae fructus esset perditus si praeveniens Deus à radice poenas exigisset Chrysost hom 8. ad popul Antioch He spares oftimes the roote that he may preserve the fruit And heare how Terah Abrahams father was a worshipper of Idolls yet in this life God punisht not his impiety for if God had cut downe the roote then whence had we had such great fruit of faith as in his sonne So Esau was a fornicator and uncleane and as much as in him lay a murtherer of father mother and brother and of God hated Mal. 1.2 Why is he not destroyed why is he not cut downe Truely beloved to tell you the cause t was good to be so Esau begat Raguel he Zara and he Iob you see what plentifull fruit of patience had been lost if God preventing had stricken the roote So of us that we might leave the seede of the Church and piety behinde us This is mercy but the former the greater else we have as little profit of it as Terah and Esau And it is to be acknowledged the speciall mercy of God when others perish and their workes like that they escape As Saint August de Nat grat 8. c. 5. of the great salvation Vniversa massa poenas debet Qui ergò inde per gratiam liber antur non vasa meritorum suorum sed vasa misericordiae nominantur To teach men when destruction and calamity is at hand Vse 3 and Gods judgements are threatned the way how they may escape and not be confounded is they have Gods mercy towards them and upon them therefore for this must they pray and labour their flying truely to this will be like the City of refuge where the avenger of blood could not slay a man-slayer Then shall they be sure either to be kept from them or delivered from them kept in them or taken out of them for when as Gods mercy doth bring remission of sinne it must needs bring the removall or change of the punishment either it will be gone or if it abide the nature will be changed for sinne taken away that cannot continue or not in the former nature and a man shall be safer and more comfortable with this in divers afflictions then without it though he be never so free * Verius acjucundius gaude bis de bona conscieutia inter molestias quam de mala inter delicias August you shal rejoyce more cheerefully and more truely with a good conscience in the midst of troubles then with an evill in the midst of many pleasures Now thus it is from the feeling of the mercy of God and remission of sinne * Si Deum benevolū habeas licet in furnacem cadas ne desperes sicut si succenseat licet in paradiso sis ne confidas Adae peccanti nihil profuit paradisus pueris benè agentibus nihil obfuit fornax Chry. ho. 4 adpo A. If you have Gods favour despaire not though you fall into a fornace whereas if he be angry you may not be bold in Paradice Paradice did no good to Adam sinning and the hot fornace could doe no harme to the three Children that were innocent And if they obtaine this it shall not onely be their sanctuary thus but it shall be to them as a fountaine whence all blessings as rivers shal rise and spring It will be like the Philosophers stone that will turne all mettall into gold so this all miseries into happy comforts Even like the Arke brought into the house of Obed Edom 2 Sam. 6.11 that brought a blessing upon the house and al that he had So Gods mercy brought into the heart will be the cause that they and their house and all that they have shall prosper and be preserved for ever to his glory and their eternall comfort VERS VII From the dayes of your fathers ye are gone away from mine ordinances and have not kept them returne unto me and I will returne unto you saith the Lord of hostes but ye said wherein shall we returne FRom the dayes of your fathers are you gone away In this verse beginnes the second part of the Chapter containing an expostulation with this people as touching their sins mixt with an exhortation to repentance which of some is accounted the third part of this Chapter Now in this verse are both these a reasoning with them as concerning their sinnes and an exhortation to repentance the
receive the sacrament be diligent in the works of Gods worship but he is unjust covetous unchast c. we say his religion is in vain and this will every one subscribe to we see men just and chast and liberall in almes c. but he is irreligious he regards not Gods day he neglects the word the sacrament prayer and such like we say his righteousnesse is vaine But this will not all subscribe to but they shall know it at one time or other that it is in vaine not onely so farre as Chrysost speakes of workes without faith comparing them with the reliques of the dead * Cadavera enim etsi c. Chrysost carcases though they be covered with pretious and rich cloaths yet have no heate for them so such as want faith though they shine with glorious workes yet they do them no good now where there is not knowledge nor conscience of religion there cannot be faith But further Orig. in Job goes * Omnia quae faciant homines c. Orig. All things which men doe whether in keeping their virginity or in abstinence or in the chastnes of their bodies or in the mortifying of the flesh or in the distributing of their goods they are all to no purpose and to their losse if they do them not of faith And I infer they cannot be of faith where there is not care and conscience of religion In vaine then shall it be unto them for it shall bring them no fruit no profit For of whom should they have their reward Shall they receive from him whom they have not sought Whom they have not knowne Whom they have not believed Verily they shall not receive from him any reward but judgement and anger and condemnation This may admonish every one to adde to their righteousnesse Vse 3 religion to lay hold of that and not to withdraw their hand from this or rather to make their works of righteousnesse to be righteousnesse by labouring to be teligious to have knowledge and faith to have the fear of God and to serve him without which the other is nothing nothing profitable to the doer for as preaching being so excellent a worke as the power of God to salvation to the hearers profits not the preacher if he be unjust unchast impious but it shall be with him as with those who built Noahs Arke so as he that gives almes if he be without knowledge religion and faith he may profit the receiver not himselfe For if the Apostles rule be good Jam. 2.26 faith without works is dead then why not much more saith Chrysost are works without faith which works must needs be where there is not religion and so he shall not have his reward that doth them but they will be unprofitable to him for as he that builds without a foundation loseth his worke and hath only his labour travaile and griefe so is he that would build up works of righteousnesse without faith and religion Orig. And as he saith all the whole year that Noah was preserved in the Arke and the Sun shewed not her selfe nor sent her beames upon the earth the earth gave no fruit for without the Sun it can bring forth no fruit So unlesse the truth of God shine in the hearts of men they can bring forth no fruit of good works or righteousnesse Then must every one endeavour that is just upright chast c. not to rest there but labour to be religious and have knowledge and faith which must sanctifie and make acceptable and so profitable to the other as the Temple the gold and the Altar the offering lest they be to us as Ciprian ser dezelo livore or rather as the spirit of God saith Rom. 14.23 Sin because not of faith THE FOVRTH CHAPTER OF THE PROPHET MALACHY FOR behold the day commeth that shall burne as an oven and all the proud yea and all that doe wickedly shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them up saith the Lord of hostes and shall leave them neither root nor branch 2 But unto you that feare my Name shall the sunne of righteousnesse arise and health shall be under his wings and ye shall goe forth and grow up as fat calves 3 And ye shall tread downe the wicked for they shall be dust under the soles of your feete in the day that I shall doe this saith the Lord of hosts 4 Remember the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded unto him in Horeb in all Israel with the slatutes and judgements 5 Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the comming of the great and fearefull day of the Lord. 6 And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children and the heart of the children to their fathers lest I come and smite the earth with cursing VERSE I. For behold the day commeth that shall burne as an oven and all the proud yea and all that doe wickedly shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them up saith the Lord of hosts and shall leave them neither root nor branch FOR behold the day commeth that shall burne as an even In this fourth Chapter we may observe two principall parts First some predictions which are three First a prophesie of judgement to the wicked Verse 1. Secondly of mercy and goodnesse to the godly Verse 2.3 Thirdly of Iohn Baptist his comming and the fruit of it to the Church Verse 5.6 Secondly aprecept or exhortation to reade and remember the Law Verse 4. Now in this first verse is a prediction or denunciation of judgement even an utter destruction to the wicked by it opposing their former blasphemy who had affirmed that God did not respect the things that were done and had altogether cast off the duty and office of a Judge And in this the first word Behold shews the certainty of it poynting at it as if it were already come and present The judgement God threatens against the wicked he certainly performes Doctrine Vide Cap. 1.5 Doct. 1. The day commeth Many thinke this is to be understood of the day of the second comming of Christ when the wicked shall have their full doome and true it is till then this and the like are not fully accomplished the wicked have not their full portion yet doth God so execute his judgements here as may be to manifest his justice and to confirme the faith of his shewing by some few examples and small things that he doth that one day he will fully judge the wicked Therefore their opinion is the more probable and reasonable who think this was meant of the first comming of Christ that upon their ingratefull rejecting of mercy wheras they boasted of a redeemer and looked for a great day The day indeed should come but not such a day as they imagined but such as should consume them like that day Amos 5.20 a day of darkenes and not light And therfore he addeth it shall burne as an Oven