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A55917 A commentary upon the divine Revelation of the apostle and evangelist, Iohn by David Pareus ... ; and specially some things upon the 20th chapter are observed by the same authour against the Millenaries ; translated out of the Latine into English, by Elias Arnold. Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Arnold, Elias. 1644 (1644) Wing P353; ESTC R14470 926,291 661

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Touching the Canonicall authority of the Revelation NOw by these things the divine Authority of the Booke doth necessarily follow For if the Apostle Iohn be the Author the Divine and Canonicall Authority cannot justly bee questioned For the Apostles writings are Apostolicall Besides the Author doth againe and againe testifie that he received his Revelation from Christ and wrote the same by the Augels command This also the testimony of the Ancient Church confirmeth Concil Ancyran in appendice For the Revelation is alledged under the name of John and as Canonicall Scripture by the most ancient Councell of Ancyra which was before that of Nice also in the Councell of Carthage III. Can. 47. and some others following The Revelation also hath bin alwayes of Canonicall authority with the Greeke and Latine Fathers although certaine Graecians before Dionysius Alexandrinus did some what scruple the same as of old some of the Latine Church had their doubts touching the Epistle to the Hebrews because it did seeme to favour Novatus as Ierome writeth unto Dardanus But the scruple of one or a few of the Ancients can no more disanull the authority of any Canonicall Book of Scripture then the scruple of a few now can doe And howsoever Luther in his first Edition of the New Testament in the Germane tongue Published anno 1526. Sixtus Senensis Biblioth Ribera in Apoc. Prooem cap. 1. did not reckon the two latter Epistles of Iohn the Epistles also of Iames and Iude among the Apostolicall and Canonicall Scriptures Not indeed as some Papists write because he could not beare those words Chap. 14.13 Blessed are the dead c. because their workes follow them which verily doe notably overthrow their fiction of the Soules of the Saints going into Purgatory but rather because he thought that such obscure Visions and Figures were not so well agreeable unto the light of the New Testament notwithstanding in another Edition Anno 1535. hee speaketh more liberally in the Preface touching these Bookes neither do they who at this day are called Lutherans any longer question the Canonicall authority of the Revelation Alcas Vestig nota 2. Prcoem For our part we did not judge the Revelation was therefore to bee received that we might abuse the darke and obscure sayings of the Booke to vomit out the venom of our malice against the Pope of Rome as that upstart Interpreter before mentioned hath begun to calumniate us but because the reasons before laid down and many more do confirm our beliefe and because by the Revelation we are manifestly taught that that son of perdition lifting himselfe up against whatsoever is called God and sitting in the Temple of God as if he were God is no other but that Capitoline Iove even to this day treading down all powers under his feet But a man might justly wonder that Popish Writers do not tremble at the very sight of this Booke and how they are not afraid to explicate the Prophesie by their Commentaries Why Papists write Commentaries upon the Revelation but that the thing it selfe speaketh they chiefly doe it seeing they can neither wholly extinguish it nor keepe it any longer from the people at least to deprave the oracles thereof by their false Interpretations the which notwithstanding they labour for in vaine seeing it is as cleare as the Sun at Noon day that under the Image of the Beast and False-Prophet seducing the Inhabitants of the Earth and of the whorish woman committing fornication with the Kings of the Earth and of the great Citie on seven hils ruling over the Kings of the Earth is represented the Monarchicall and Papall Sea of Rome and under the Image of Locusts the innumerable vermine of the Clergy and Monkes under the Type of Merchandize which no man Antichrist beeing discovered shall buy any more are set forth Romish Indulgences and buying and selling of Soules c. CHAPTER III. Of the obscurity of the Booke What it is and whence with the remedies of the same AUGUSTINE writing of the darkenesse of the Revelation saith Lib. 20. de C. D. ca. 17 In this Booke which is named a Revelation are contained many darke things that the Readers mind might be exercised and in it are a few things by the clearnesse whereof the rest with labour may be sought out chiefly because it so repeateth the same things after a diverse manner that whereas it may seeme to speake of different matters by diligent search we shall find that they are the selfe same things diversly expressed And JEROM Tom. 3. ad paul Ep. 1. In the Revelation saith he is shewed a Booke sealed with seven Seales which though thou give it to a man that can rend to read it he will answer thee I cannot it is sealed And afterward The Revelation of Iohn hath as many Sacraments as words I have said but little in regard of the worth of the Booke It is beyond all praise In every of the words are hid manifold understandings So indeed it is for the sharpnesse of mans wit is blinder then beetles in the true understanding as of other divine Scripture so of this also unlesse it be enlightned by the beames of the Holy Ghost but the causes of this obscurity are plain First the whole Booke is Propheticall touching future things Write The causes of the darknesse of the Revelation saith the Angell the things thou hast seene which are and which shall be afterward But future things as future because they are not in any sense are either altogether unknowne or being foreknown are conceived not so much by the understanding as in hope Adde That these future things are not declared by plaine words The difference of Visions neither defined by notes or markes of times places and persons but are revealed unto Iohn and so written in darke and aenigmaticall Visions It is true many Visions in Scripture were plaine as set before the eyes of the mind or bodie Dan. 5.5 1. Kin. 6.17 Exod. 3.2 Act. 10.11 Act. 23.11 so King Belshazzar saw a hand writing upon the plaister of the wall Elisha saw fiery Charrets round about him and Moses the bush burning before him Peter a sheet with foure-footed Beasts let downe from Heaven unto the Earth Paul saw the Lord standing by him in the night c. In these there was no great difficultie But there are other Visions more intricate when the Images or Representations signifying some secret thing are exhibited unto the minds of men either sleeping or awake the mysteries of which except they be revealed are so obscure as that they cannot be found out by the understanding of mortall man Of this kinde were the dreames of Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar the Visions also of Ezechiel Daniel and Zacharie unto which we worthily may compare the Visions of the Revelation The secrets indeed of the aforesaid dreames God not onely revealed unto the singular benefit of them which dreamt the same but also would have them
wedding song after the manner of a Drama which saith he is a Song of many Personages like as a Fable is acted on the Theater where diverse persons are brought in some comming and some departing that the Text of the Narration may be made up by diverse and unto diverse men and he calleth that wedding Verse a Spirituall Interlude of foure Personages which he saith the Lord revealed unto him in the same viz. the Bridegroom and Bride with the Bride her virgins with the Bridegroom his flock of Companions The same thing I more truly may say touching the Revelation that it seemes unto mee the Lord Iesus revealed the same unto Iohn by his Angell after the manner of a Dramaticall Representation and that it is an Heavenly Dramma or Interlude not onely of foure but of diverse persons and things by Typicall Speeches and Actions exhibiting to Iohns sight or hearing those things in the Heavenly Theater which God would have him to understand and us by continuall prayers meditations and observations to search out touching the future state of the Church And that ye may understand this to be so I will endeavour to delineate and pourtray the method of the Revelation now indeed briefly as in a Type reserving the rest to the Preface of every Vision But the order of the Personages by whom this Propheticall Interlude is Acted I will by and by set downe in a short Table CHAPTER IX Touching the generall Method of the Revelation TO speake accurately of the Method and Order of this Prophefie whither the generall by which the propheticall visions do all cohere one with another or the speciall by which the Apparitions of every of the Visions doe follow each other is not for me to do although I have imployed my study more then thirty yeers this way Yet I will say to stir up the endeavours of others as much as the Lord in mercy hath for the present revealed unto mee It is now fiftie two yeers ago since I first heard the Table-Propositions as they call them of my Master Zacharie Vrsinus that great Divine in Wisedomes Colledge out of the Old and New Testament He for five yeers together as often as the Reader had ended with the Epistle of Jude READ said he Matthew I desired to heare the Revelation also being ignorant of the difficulties which either my Master shunned or else would not as yet commit unto his Disciples At length Anno 1570. being again come in course of reading of the Scriptures unto the Revelation he bade the Reader goe forward Then the Revelation was read which he illustrated with briefe notes in so many dayes yea halfe hours as there are Chapters in the Booke yet accurately as hee was wont to doe all things these his Observations I with all attention gave heed unto and as much as might be set them downe in writing and thereby I began to observe somewhat of the obscurity about the distinction and analogie of the Visions Fourteene yeeres after I my selfe being called to the Government of the said Colledge wherein also I continued so many yeers running over seven times at least the explication of the Revelation I at length seemed unto my selfe to observe some kind of Harmony in certain Visions and as it were some distinct Acts of most of the Visions Here specially of the Ancients Augustine and of the latter Nicolaus Collado a Divine of Lausanna did most effect me Lib. 20. de C. D. cap. 17 For Augustine in his Commentary de C. D. after hee had taught that the last judgement should certainly come to passe both by other Scriptures and largely also by the Revelation at length he saith In this Booke many things are obscurely spoken to exercise the mind of the Reader and in it are a few things by the manifestation whereof the rest might with labour bee found out chiefly because it so repeateth the same things after a diverse manner as if it seemed to speake of different things whereas wee shall finde that it speakes of the very same things after a diverse manner By which words Augustine seemeth to me wittily and truely to say three things First that many darke things are contained in this Booke to exercise the minds of the Reader Secondly that some things in the Booke are plaine by the understanding whereof the other more obscure things might with study be dived into Thirdly that it principally conduceth unto the searching out of the mysteries of this Booke to observe that the same things are spoken of in diverse Types after a different manner although different things seeme to bee spoken of The first of which touching the obscurity seemeth plainely so to be as hath before been shewed in Chap. 3. by which indeed the Holy Ghost hath involved this Prophesie of the New Testament not because hee would not have the same to bee understood by the Readers but to have their mindes and understanding exercised with labour studie and prayer as appeareth Chap. 13.18 17.9 c. The second doth notably respect the speciall method Augustines animadversions touching the method of the Revelation For almost in every Vision there are some few if not many things whence the plaine understanding of the other more obscure may bee found out either because they are properly spoken or because the significations of the Types are declared by the Spirit himselfe or lastly because the Types themselves are so manifestly agreeing to the matter signified as they yeeld no difficult understanding unto such as diligently mind the same For example It is plaine that in the very beginning it is said that here those things are revealed which must shortly be done Rev. 1.1.19 14.1 15.1 Rev. 14.14 19.11 20.11 and John is commanded to write those things which then were and which should afterward come to passe and expresly those last plagues and oftentimes the last Iudgement whence two more darke things are easily dived into First that the Types of the Revelation do not represent the foregoing Historie of the Israelitish Church but the future state of the New Church Secondly that they shaddow out not a few Ages onely after the Revelation nor yet the last times and Tragedie of Antichrist alone but the whole period of the Church Thus it is plaine that the starres are the Ministers of the Churches the great starres renowned Teachers Whence it is not obscure what is meant by the great starres falling from Heaven Moreover also it is plaine Ezech 16.2 Ier. 3.1 Ose 2.5 that in Scripture a whorish woman doth denote the Apostaticall Church Whence it is cleare that the woman clothed with the Sun signifies the true Church the flight of the woman into the wildernesse her being out of sight riding on the Beast and sitting upon seven hils the adulterous and domineering Church of Rome It is also plaine that most of the Visions doe end with the last Iudgement Hence it is manifest that the periods of
are for the most part to bee fully accomplished neer the very last times which is distant from the time this was revealed more then 1500 years some extend this to the whole time of the new Testament which though it were to continue more then a 1000 of yeers yet is called short both in regard of the age of the world then al●ready past Iohn 2 18. 1 Cor. 10 12 Psal 90 4. 1 Thess 5.3 as also in regard of eternitie in which shall bee neither shortnesse nor length of time For this cause the whole time of the new Testament is in scripture called the last hower the last times the ends of the world For the whole time and age of the world is but a moment in the eyes of God or as yesterday when it is past and as a watch in the night Which is the reason that Christ saith chap. 21. 12 that he will come to judgement quickly or shortly that is sooner then men imagin suddenly in which sence the words following come to passe were of necessitie to bee restrained to the full accomplishment of this prophesie which may not bee for it is to bee extended to the whole time and currant of those things which were foretold So that by shortly is meant the beginning and progresse of the fullfilling thereof Shall shortly come to passe that is shall begin for things are said to come to passe shortly not which are eyther already past or else are to come a long while after but which are beginning to bee effected are even in doeing Signifying that the stormes of afflictions were not to bee differred to the last times but that they were suddenly while the Apostles yet lived to rush in by heaps upō the Churches Ioh. 16.12 the which Christ also foretold his disciples and histories manifest the accomplishment of it For the first persecution of Christians began straightways under Tiberius and Nero which tooke away Paul and Peter the other under Domitian in whose time Iohn was banished Wherefore hee foretels them not to terrify but to animate the godly against the dangers at hand that it might not come upon them unawares as Christ saith Iohn 16 1 these things have I spoken unto you that ye should not bee offended for the darts which are foreseen are the lesse hurtfull withall hee teacheth what is the portion of the Church in this world namely to suffer afflictions least wee should fayn delights unto our selves So likewise hee comforteth us from the brevitie of the afflictions and certainty of the promised deliverance For as afflictions must shortly come so also shall deliverance shortly and certainly come because Christ foretold the one as wel as the other unto Iohn Lastly it appeareth that the revelation treateth not of things past but to come wherefore they misse of the scope who apply a great part of the types to the state of the Iewish occurrences and Roman Empire then allready past And signifyed it by his angel that is Christ signified it He declareth the faithfulnesse of Christ in executing the charge committed to him of God and shewing this revelation to Iohn his servant and dear Apostle by sending his angel who instructed him in every particular of it And signified that is who also signified the same c. for so it is expressed in vers 6 16 of chap. 22 where the Lord Iesus saith that he sent his angel to shew these things to Iohn to his servants in the Churches So wee see that the scriptures compared together interpret themselves Wee need not restrain the word signified to a typical and dark manner of revelation but rather it noteth a plain and manifest discoverie made unto Iohn because that which is here said to bee signified is in the fore alledged place expounded by the words shewing and testifying c. And hee sent Gr. sending this whole verse retaineth the Hebrewe phrase 3 Argument of the deity of Christ and is as if it were read thus who also sending his angel signified the same to his servant Iohn Hence wee gather a third proofe of the God-head of Christ much like to the second for as Iohn is a servant so also is the angel and both are imployed by Christ as his proper servants who is Lord of them both and therefore God for the angels are servants to none but to Iehovah God of whom it is said Psal 104.4 who maketh his angels spirits c. it is true Christ is Lord of the angels in that hee is the mediator but unles hee were God hee could neither bee mediator or Lord of the angels by this argument Hebr. 1.6 the Apostle proveth the God-head of the son because the angels of God adore him Vers 2 Who bare record of the word of God hence it appeareth Iohn the Euangelist the writer of the revelation that the Euangelist Iohn is the writer of the revelation for hee bare record of the word of God in the very entrance of his Gospel saying in the beginning was the word this is the testimonie of Iohn when the Iews sent unto him and ye sent to John and he bare witnesse which things though spoken of Iohn the Baptist yet were written by Iohn the Euangelist who bare record to the word in setting downe of the testimonies of the word of God besides none of the writers of holy scripture have more expresly testified the divinity of Christ then the Euangelist Iohn For who but Iohn nameth of the person office and benefits of Christ Of the ministries of Angels happines of the triumphant church with the crosse and comfort of the militant withall teaching us to imbrace Godlinesse to bee constant in afflictions to hold fast faith and love to take heed of false prophets to Go out of Babylon and beware of Antichrist c. To be short it containes many worthy comfortable sentences as blessed are the dead that die in the Lord. c. Promises also of the deliverance of the Church of the mariage of the Lamb with threatnings of destruction to the enemies All which things how profitable and usefull they are it is manifest unto all For the time is at hand A reason to stir up a diligent care in us to read hear and keepe this prophesie Because the time both of the furie of the adversarie against the Godly as also of the deliverance of the Church is at hand The knowledge of evill and Good things even at the dore is not to bee neglected but the diligent reading of this prophesie causeth us to know both evill and Good things at hand therefore it is not to be neglected It admonisheth us therefore to watch lest unawares we be overwhelmed with the present troubles It comforteth us also that we be not disheartned for feare of the present battles but with full assurance of the presence of God and promised victorie we hold out manfullie unto the end That the time was then at hand histories
make manifest for Iohn being banished in the ●le of Patmos began alreadie to feel the fury of Domitian And here the dream of such is refuted who binde the fulfilling of this prophesie to the last three years before the end of the world 4 Iohn to the seven Churches Those things being forespoken of which served to gain autority attention to this booke John dedicates the revelation to the sevē Churches of Asia wishing Grace and peace unto them By seven Andreas understandeth all the Churches Because in scripture the number seven is a number of perfection but because the seven Churches in Asia are as it were nominated by a marke to be knowen therefore I understand that it was purposely dedicated unto them not that the revelation belongeth not to others but because the first vision doth directly concerne them the rest generally belongs to the whole Church Of Asia He speaketh of Asia the lesser or that part of Asia Ptolo. lib. 5 geogra cap. 2. which is invironed from the East with both countries of Armenia from the west with the Aegean sea from the North with the Euxine sea from the south with the Mediteranian sea Here Iohn had planted seven Churches of note whereof that of Ephesus was the greatest but after he was banished the teachers carelesly performing their office he is commanded in the first vision to reprove admonish them of their duty Grace to you and peace be or be multiplied as in 1 Pet. 1 2 by a familiar salutation he seekes to gaine the good will of those whom he was afterwards more sharply to admonish The Apostolical salutation hath beene opened in the Epistle to the Romans and Corinthians Grace is that free favor of God from which doth flow all the mercies of God and every good thing which we enjoy The Glosse doth wel understand it of the free forgivenes of sins Peace the effect of Grace is the tranquillity and joy of the conscience Rom. 1.2 of which the Apostle speaketh being justified by faith we have peace with God The Hebrews by the word peace understand all maner of prosperitie and hence the Apostles in the beginning all most of all their Epistles doe not with out cause wish the same unto the faithful Which is and which was and which is to come It is manifest that this is a paraphrase of the name of God who alone is the author and giver of Grace peace But others do interpret it otherwise Some of the father alone from whom the Apostles generally desire grace to the Churches Rom. 1.7 Grace and peace be to you from God our father he is called which IS because he is from none but the beginning of the deity is from him And which was because he was before all time in eternitie And which is to come Iohn 5.12 because he wil come to judge the world by the son that the father is said to judge no man is to be referred to the immediate judgement For the father hath not so given over the judgement to the son as not to keepe the power of judging stil in his owne hand Others refer all to the person of the son For he is he which is because Christ is the same God with the father which was because the word was in the beginning and which is to come because he will come in the clouds to judgement vers 7. Others will have the three persons to be noted by three differences of time attributing the severall times to the severall persons that is which is to the father which was to the son and that which is to come to the holy Ghost his coming in to the Church by proceeding from the father the son so Andreas grace be to you peace from the Godhead which subsisteth in three persons To be short others thinke that God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 essentially described and doe apply all the words to every one of the persons for the father is he which is which was and which is to come so is the son and so is the holy Ghost What then all these expositions were right and godly if Iohn in these words had ended his prayer but he addeth and from the seven spirits and from Iesus Christ by which hee declareth that he directeth his prayer in the behalfe of the Churches to the holy Trinitie But not indeed in words commonly used yet such as are convenient to his purpose for the stile of this prophesie hath many things proper and excellent fitted to the argument of visions which not being observed by some interpreters they vainly wearie themselves and go astray For seldom the name of God or of the father or of the son or of the holy Ghost is found in the revelation in expresse words But John speaking of God useth for the most part propheticall descriptions Therefore this prayer is set downe in words agreeing to the excellent proprieties of this prophesie and in stead of the ordinarie forme of salutations used of the Apostles Rom. 1.7 as grace and peace to you from God our father and from the Lord Iesus Christ or the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Iohn useth this kind as more proper and secret Grace and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven spirits and from Iesus Christ c. in which words the true God three in persons one in essence is described as the divine attribute and prayer of the Apostle doe plainly manifest Now I come to the particulars From him which is Thus he describeth the person of the father by attributes proper to the divine essence yet common to every one of the persons Hereupon Christ assumes the same to himself vers 7. which is a most evident argument of his divinity And it is a description of eternity including and exceeding the three differences of the time present past and to come that is from him which is was and shall bee the words which is to come being put for shall be as in that of John 16 13. He will shew you things to come Act. 18 21. that is things that shall be so I must keepe the feast that cometh in Jerusalem And it seemeth that he altogether intended here to expresse that name of God in Exodus Exod. 3.14 EHIEH I wil be from which cometh the name Jehovah in which word as Vatablus wel observeth the Hebrewes take notice of those three differences of time It serveth for the great comfort of the Church in that he prayeth for grace peace not simply from God the father but from him which is which was and which is to come who alwayes remaineth the same and with whom is no variablenes Iam. 1 17. nor shadow of turning Indeed in the world the Church hath experience of diverse changes but in God alone she findeth constant
eyes Secondly spirituall when we behold the appearances of things either a wake or a sleepe yet understand them not thus did Phurao Nebuchadnezar and Peter The third they call intellectuall that is when the minde being illuminated by the holy Ghost understands the mysteries of those things which are presented Thus Ioseph understood the vision of Pharao and Daniel that of Nebuchadnezar this Iohn saw the visions of the revelation in the spirit that is the holy Ghost gave him to understand them Others expound these words in the spirit as opposite to the being present in the body not as if such which saw visions in the spirit did not still retain their real bodies but being ravished they seemed for the present to themselves as out of the body even as Paul in the 2 Corinth 12 3 caught up to the third heaven knew a man in Christ whither in the body or out of the body he knew not This kind of visions is one of the gifts of the new Testament which Christ ascending up on high poured forth upō the Church according to the oracle in Ioel. Ioel 2.28 Your young men shal see visions c. yet was this not given to all but a special grace and bestowed onely on such as the Lord pleased Neither was it perpetual but ceased with the gift of miracles after the doctrine of the Gospel was sufficiently propagated and confirmed in the world and hence we must beware of such who now a days boast of visions Isay 8 20. Luk. 16 29. Ioh. 5 39. as if they were inspired but they are deceivers to the law and testimonie For God hath tyed the church to the written word of the law and Gospel they have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them search the scriptures for though an angel from heaven preach any other Gospel let him be accursed On the Lords day He calleth the first day of the weeke on which Christ rose again the Lords day He saw the revelation on this day which Christians kept holy to God being by the authority of the Apostles set apart for Church meetings in stead of the Iewish sabbaths as we way gather from 1 Cor. 16.1 where the Apostle commandeth that on the first day of the weeke gathering be made in the Church for the brethren in Iudea So Acts 20.7 In one of the sabbaths that is the first day of the weeke the Christians are said to come together to break bread So then the observation of the Lords day is warranted by an Apostolicall tradition Hence Gagneus and Ribera infer that the Church besides yea and contrary to the scripture may impose some things to the observed as divine let no man thinck saith he that those things onely are to be observed which are contained in the scriptures but they do erre For first there is great difference betweene articles of faith and the Lord Mat. 15 9. Isay 29 13. day no man doubteth but the Church may lawfully appoint dayes and outward rites belonging to order and decencie so it be don● without scandal opinion of worship and intruding upon the liberty and conscience But the question betwixt us and the papists is touching points of faith necessarie to salvation which they affirme that the Church or Bishops may ordaine without the authority of scripture the which thing wee denie For God is worshiped in vain by the commandements of men Besides the authority of the Apostles is one thing and the authority of Bishops and the Romish Church is another For they were not onely divinely inspired in their writings but also in whatsoever they instituted touching Church orders Wherefore they not onely appointed the Lords day to bee kept but also made it apart of scripture now as for other ministers they have not the same authority so that it cannot hence bee gathered that any thing should bee beleeved as necessarie to salvation besides what is contained in the holy scripture For though the Lords day is a matter not of faith but of fact yet the observation thereof is according to the word of God Here it may be demanded whether John saw the whole revelation upon one Lords day Indeed it may seem by the coherence of the matter so to be not withstanding I thinke that Christ did not at one time burden the minde of his servant with so many different and large visions neither is it probable because the like distinctions of time which other prophets had in their visions appears also to be in these visions of John as in Chap. 4. vers 1 2 is evident After this I looked c. and immediately I was in the spirit so that after he had seene the first vision he was come to himself ere he was again ravished saw other visions and in like-lihood this was upon another Lords day The like wee may gather from chapter 17.3 So he carried mee away in the spirit into the wildernesse and often it is said after these things But I doe not conceive all of them import a distance of time but the things which I specially minde are in Chap. 4.2 and 17.3 and 21.1 besides all things were not revealed to John in one place but some things he saw in Patmos some in the heavens some on the sea shore some things in the wildernesse But seeing we cannot certainly determine of the thing I will therefore leave it to the readers choise Heard behinde mee a great voice By this great voice Iohn whither sleeping or waking was stirred up to observe the visions least otherwise he should have neglected them as vain fansies The voice was great either in regard of the great mysterie of the visions or because it was the voice of the great God or lastly in regard of the lowdnesse and shrilnesse thereof As of a trumpet Whose sounde is high loud and heard a great way off signifying that those things which Iohn saw ought continually to sound in the eares and hearts of Gods people And hence the prophets were commanded to cry aloud not to spare but to lift up their voice like a trumpet that all might hear and have no pretence for their ignorance Alcasar untruely affirmes that this voice was altogether like unto the sound of a trumpet But the text saith it was the voice not of one founding but speaking Againe by this voice is signifyed how we should be stirred up to incounter with al our spiritual adversaries as souldiers by the found of the trumpet are imboldened to the battel In that hee heard the voice behinde him is signified that Iohn added nothing to these visions but that they were altogether divine for the things which are behind us we see not Or otherwise he heard a voice behind to denote how the things he heard were suddenly to come to passe even immediately upon Iohns departure 11. Saying I am Alpha Omega the first the last In this great voice are contained three things First the eternity of Christ is testified
there shall be no such ministery in Heaven that the Apostles are said to lay the foundation of the wall of the the holy City whereas rather that belongs to Christ Lastly that the Kings of the Earth are said to bring their glory unto this Citie ver 24. and that in it shall be medicine for the Nations which things are not to be understood of Heaven but of the Earth But there is nothing here touching these things which may not easily be applied unto the state of the glorified Church if wee well minde the scope of the Allegoricall Vision and observe other things which doe not at all agree with the state of the Church here on Earth as we shall shew in its place Certainely the glory of the Church shall never be so great in this life as to bee altogether without tares that there should bee none in her but Elected Ones that she should be stained with no scandals and feined Christians in a word that there should be no Temple nor Sun shining in her c. He saith secondly that the vocation of the Iews unto the Church Whether this Resurrection of the dead be the calling of the Iews is in Scripture often called a Resurrection of the dead as Rom. 11.15 for if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world what shall the receiving of them be but life from the dead Isa 26.19 Thy dead men shall live my Carkasses shall rise againe c. Ezech. 37.12 I will open your graves O my People and cause you to come up out of your graves c. Dan. 12.2.3 And many of them that sleepe in the dust of the Earth shall awake some to everlasting Life and some to shame and everlasting torment Hosea 13.14 I will ransome them from the power of the grave I will redeeme them from death But verily it would bee a long worke for him to prove that these places of Scripture the first excepted doe at all belong to the calling of the Iews seeing Some doe manifestly speake of their deliverance out of Babylon Others of the Spirituall Redemption of the whole Church by Christ Others of the last Resurrection of the body Onely the Testimony of the Apostle is to the matter but proves nothing For neither doth it follow from the particular because there the conversion of the Iewes is called a Resurrection therefore here also There the thing is cleare here not so Nay here is no mention of a Resurrection but it is set forth under other figures And all the circumstances doe most evidently represent the Type of the last Iudgement AND I SAW A GREAT WHITE THRONE After these things saith AVGUSTINE Lib. 20. de C. D. c. 14 he briefly declareth the last Judgement it selfe and how it was revealed unto him which shall be at the second Resurrection of the dead viz. of their bodies First therefore he describes the Iudge with his preparation in this verse Secondly them that should be judged ver 12. Thirdly the processe and sentence ibid. Lastly the execution of the sentence viz. the casting of the adversaries into the Lake of fire vers 13.14.15 but the placing of the Elect in the Heavenly Jerusalem in Chap. 21. 22. This is the summe of the things remaining A Great Throne As set up for the Great that is Vniversall Iudgement of the whole world White bright with celestiall splendor and majesty And him that sate on it Namely the Iudge him undoubtedly of whom Christ himselfe speaketh Mat. 25.31 When the Sonne of man shall come in his glory and all his Holy Angels with him The white throne of christ his glory Ioh. 5.12 Act 17.31 then shall he sit upon the Throne of his glory Wherefore the white Throne is the Throne of his glory or glorious Throne neither are we to imagine it to be made of gold or Ivorie but thus the Iudicatory Power of Christ is called For the Father hath given all Judgement to the Sonne that by him the whole world should be judged Here therefore Christ the Iudge appeared unto Iohn sitting on his Throne in the Spirit that none should question but that the world shall at last be judged Why the last judgement is so often exhibited XL Argument of Christs deitie For this Iudgement to come is so often foretold in Scripture and exhibited to the sight of Iohn in this Revelation that the Godly indeed should wait with joy for that day of their deliverance but mockers be raised up from their security Furthermore without all doubt this Iudge sitting on the Throne is Christ because the whole Scripture agrees hereunto Now a little after in ver 12. he is called GOD before whom the dead shall stand to bee judged Therefore undoubtedly also he that sate on the Throne Chap. 4.2 was Christ gloriously reigning in Heaven That which followeth serves to signifie his unspeakable majesty From whose face the Earth and the Heaven fled away The splendor and majesty of the Iudge is such Husterosis is when a thing is before put down which should come after or contrariwise Lib. 20 de C. D. c. 14. as neither Heaven nor Earth is able to behold or abide the same How then shall the wicked stand before him Augustine understands it of the future renovation of Heaven and Earth and here also he acknowledgeth an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Heaven and Earth fled not before but after the Iudgement to wit saith he the Iudgement being finished then shall this Heaven and Earth cease to bee when the new Heaven and Earth shall begin For this world shall passe away by a change of things not by an utter destruction the Heaven and Earth I say shall flee away that is this shape of Heaven and Earth shall passe away because they shall be changed from vanitie through fire that so they may be transformed into a much better and more beautifull state Of which innovation the Apostle Peter professedly writeth The Heaven shall passe way with a great noyse and the Elements melt with heat but we expect new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse And Paul saith 2. Pet. 3.12 1. Cor. 7.31 The figure or falshion of this world passeth away Of which AVGVSTINE The figure saith he of the world passeth not away in nature for we expect a new Heaven and a new Earth in which judgement and righteousnesse shall dwell Of which Iohn in the next Chapter I saw a new Heaven and a new Earth that is purged from all vanities Rev. 21. v. 1 Of which innovation not a totall destruction the words following must be understood And their place was found no more not as if it were no where but that it remained not such as it was before But whether Heaven and Earth shall so change their place as that the Earth should be moved out of the Centre of the universe the Heaven by its bending downe no longer inviron the Earth is not known either
take ought from the Scriptures but with the hazard of their Salvation If any man shall adde The contestation consists of two heads The first is that this Prophesie may not be adulterated by any Addition To adde What it is to adde to this Prophesie is not soberly and according to the Analogy of Faith to interpret the meaning of the Prophesie but to mixe other things besides what the Lord Iesus hath revealed by his Angell He addeth saith THOMAS which adjoyneth a lye for whatsoever is patched to the Scriptures of mens inventions that it might be accounted as divinely revealed is a lie Such are the Popes Traditions which seeing hee will make of like authority with the written word of God he addeth unto the Scriptures Therefore they are lies The other branch of the contestation is What it is to take away from this Prophesie that none may deprave this Prophesie by taking away from the words thereof He not onely takes away that derogates from the divine authority of the Booke which as Christ foresaw many would do but he also that any wayes changeth or maliciously perverteth or contradicteth any thing here written Of which offence such are not altogether free who obstinately deny that the manifest events of the Types touching the fall of the great Starre from Heaven into the Earth of the Beasts ascending out of the Sea and of the worshipping of his Image and Character of the Romane Babylon of the whore committing fornication with the kings of the earth the like are not yet manifestly fulfilled in the Papacy The summe of the contestation is that the integrity sincerity and sacred Authority of this Prophesie bee faithfully preserved in the Churches and that the contemners falsifiers and corrupters thereof be no way suffered under paine of Anathema or curse unto which as it followeth that man is liable that presumes to adde or take away ought therefrom for he saith Vnto him God shall adde the plagues This is the reason of the contestation the horrible curse of them that falsifie this Scripture by adding or detracting For if Falsifiers of Coine are liable unto the civill curse of the Law much more shall the Anathema of eternall damnation be inflicted upon the Corrupters of the Scriptures which are the word of God To them that adde thereto God will adde all the plagues of this Booke to wit the Seven last plagues and cast them into the Lake of fire and brimstone with the Dragon the Beast and the False-Prophet Chap. 19. 19. And if any man shall take away That the righteousnesse of Gods judgements may appeare he will punish the Corrupters of his word according to the quality of the offence To Impostors he will adde plagues To them that take away God will take away their part out of the Booke of life c. Their judgement shall bee much alike For as the former are threatned with plagues so the latter shall be deprived of all good His part Not what he hath but what he seemes to have He speaketh of the part or portion of eternall life which such shall have as are written in the Book of Life that blessednesse I say and Heavenly joy which the Inhabitants of the Holy Citie shall be partakers of And from the things which are written To wit which in the Epistles of this Prophesie especially Chap. 2. 3. are promised to them that overcome and from the things which in this Book are spoken touching the glorious state of the Saints in Heaven Chap. 7.9.20.21.22 Now they that shall be deprived of Heavenly blessings must of necessity lie under eternall plagues and punishment For betwixt these there is no medium This place is remarkeable against the Popish depravers of the Scriptures For two things are evidently proved First that the Holy Scripture is Authentique in it selfe and that it giveth testimony of its owne divine authority For what is truely said of this Prophesie is rightly by Expositers extended unto the whole Scripture Hence ANDREAS A fearfull curse saith he shall light on them who are not afraid to adulterate divine Scripture SECONDLY That the Holy Sriptures are so perfect in themselves as that the Romanists are to bee held for most damned falsifiers who deny that all Doctrines of Faith and Salvation are contained therein unlesse the traditions of Rome bee added Lib. 4. de ver 80. dei c. 10. Against this Bellarmine objecteth that only the integrity of this Book is established but not the perfection of the whole Scripture ANSWER Yea both this Booke and all the rest of Holy Scripture This appears because this Booke is the last and last written Therefore this threatning annexed is as the Seale of the whole Cannon or of all Bookes of divine Scripture For as God put too this Seal to the Bookes of Moses being the first Cononicall Bookes Deut. 4.2 12.32 Ye shall not adde unto the word which I command you neither shall ye diminish ought from it So to this last Booke he puts the same Seale that nothing might be added made equall or taken away from this or any other part of Canonicall Scripture Bellarmine objecteth to the contrary that it is not said which I have written but which I have commanded But frivolously for Exod. 24.12 God saith expresly Which I have written that thou mayest teach them And Hose 8.12 I have written to him the great things of this Law Adde to this the former reason that all Interpreters do acknowledge this Anathema to be pronounced generally against all falsisiers of Scripture Why the oracles of the Revelation are most taken out of the old Canon and that most justly For the evident argument hereof is that the greatest part of this Prophesie is as it were taken word for word out of the Old Canon so as the Holy Ghost seemes purposely in every of the Visions to allude unto certaine Prophesies of the Old and New Testament Now the reason hereof without Question was First indeed really to demonstrate that there was nothing wanting in the Old Testament unto perfection Secondly that by this apparent imitation hee might shew that in the writings of the Old Testament is contained the state and condition of the Church of the New Testament Lastly he sheweth that the Revelation is as it were a recapitulation of both the Testaments and containeth the summe and agreement of all the Holy Scriptures By the which againe it is plaine that this present contestation or protestation belongeth unto the whole Body of Sacred Writ 20. He which testifieth these things saith Ribera will have these words to bee Johns because of the like sayings in his Gospell Iohn 21.24 But the words following shew that they are spoken by the Lord Iesus for he addeth Behold I come quickly Notwithstanding there is no great matter in it Hee calleth himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Testifier because he testified that is revealed this Revelation unto John by his Angell Hence
at Euphrates 187. the four Angels at the four corners of the earth who they be 136. 137. The Four Acts of the second vision 84. The Fourty two moneths designe the time of Antichristian persecution 216. diverse opinions about them 217. 218. 219. 220. The Foure yeeres reigne of Antichrist refuted 231. Franciscus Petrarcha against the Romish Sea 235. 319. 320. The Full assurance of faith and perseverance proved against Popish Sophisters 46. 47. 71. 269. The Full sight of God and of Christ shall be at the last day 120. G. GAbriel its signification 98. Gagnaeus refuted 20. 133. Garments not defiled Metaphorically denote sincerity and purity of the body 58. The Gesture and habit of the Beast what it denotes 102. The Gesture and voice of mourners 465. Glory how ascribed to God 93. how given to him 480. Glorification of the witnesses 243. Glory and honour of the nations 571. The Godhead of Christ demonstrated and proved against Hereticks 3. 4. 5. 12. 15. 16. 26. 27. 31. 37. 40. 42. 43. 47. 50. 54. 62. 64. 65. 75. 78. 80. 88. 99. 100. 102. 103. 104. 133. 149. 369. 437. 492. 493. 542. 543. 568. 577. 581. 586. 587. 592. GOD. His names are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 9. His benignity the cause of forbearance 121. God and Satan do the same thing after a diverse manner and end 41. He detesteth pollutions 50. Will have Chast and holy worshippers ibid. He is holy and loveth holynesse he is true and loveth truth 64. How he reigneth and shall reigne 479. He never neglects the prayers of his servants 121. How he worketh in the hearts of men 444. He is not the authour of sin 446. 447. How he puts good and evill into the hearts of Kings ibid. and 448. His ordination is not that we should obtain life eternall by the Merits of works 250. God alone is to be worshipped 342 God hath a people in Babylon 459. God forgets not the blasphemies of the wicked 121. Godfrey of Bullen Generall of the Holy warr 190. 537. Gog and Magog who with the Papists 533. 534. Their fiction refuted ibid. They are the four Angels of Euphrates 536. Gogish warre how occasioned and when it began 537. Gold tried in the fire what it signifies 78. The Golden censer what it noteth 154. it is cast into the earth 155. The Golden girdle what it noteth 371. The Gospel preached is the sword wounding the beasts head 296. this sword accidentally takes away peace from the earth raiseth cruell persecutions 111. The Gospel is the word of the Crosse 32. Good works how great soever merit no reward because they are debts 59. They merit not life Eternall 545. Good men stand in need of often admonishings 33. Gratianus a Popish parasite 52. The Great Dragon described 260. How he differs from the Beast ibid. Why he devoured not the Man-child 264. The Great city is Rome 233. 234. The Great day of wrath is the last day 134. The Great number of sealed ones 142. the Great multitude represents the Church Triumphant 146. The Great Star falling from heaven whom it denoteth 170. Grecian Empire overthrown by the Turks 192. Green grasse trees what they signify 178 Gregorie II. bereaved the Emperor Leo of his revenewes 130. Gregorie VII an exquisite instrument of Satan 532. He was the first Antichrist ibid. He affirmed that married Priests were Nicolaitans ibid. He deposed the Emperor Henry IV. 532. 533. Gregorie the Great perceiving Antichrist to be at hand pointed as with the finger at his successor Boniface the III. 318. The Greek reading vindicated from the insultation of Gagnaeus and Ribera 12. H. HArpers how they overcame the beast 366. whither they be martyrs or professors 367. Harpes of God are by an He●●aisme put for Excellent harpes 368. Hailstones of a Talent waight 401. Happinesse of the Celestiall Citizens 135 577. To Have part in the first resurrection 526 Heads and hornes of the dragon whom they denote 260. 261. The Healing of the beasts wound 294. 296. The heaven rolled up is the Church apostating 130. Heaven departing is the closing of the scriptures in Poperie 130. Hereticks in several ages 112. 113. Hesperus and Lucifer that is the morning and the evening star is one 593. Hieroms observation of the titles of the Revelation 3. His opinion of the seats of the four and twenty Elders 89. He approues not the Iesuiticall fiction 431 Hierom refuted ibid. Hieracites heresie 334. refuted ibid. Hierusalem is not the Great Citie 236. The Holy Citie troden down by the Gentiles is the church 215. The Holy war was the occasion of the Gogish warre 537. Hoe his consequence against the Calvenists refuted 36. Homicide of the Papists 193. Hornes what they denote 100. Hornes of the Golden Altar 187. Hornes like the Lambs 307. The ten Hornes springing out of the seventh head 432. They denote Christian kingdoms 435. Hour of temptation 69. The profit and end of temptation 69. 70. How it stands with pietie and Charitie to stir up the saints to revenge 461. 462. Husse burnt at Constance 226. his prophesie of Luther ibid. Humane traditions a burden imposed by Satan 51. How much is to attributed vnto the antiquitie of traditions 524. The Hyacinth 565. its colour 189. Hypocrisie what it is 55. Hypocrites deceive not God but men ibid. Hypocrisie must be avoyded as a pest ibid. Hypocrites are mixt among the saints 71. are compared to lukewarme water 77. Many of the Clergie are Hypocrite● ibid. They imagine that they are just and holy ibid. are very quick-sighted in outward things 78. They put not on Christ by baptisme and the supper ibid. Hydra Lernea a strange Monster 260. I. IAsper a precious stone 87. 564. Idoles described 193. Idolatrie of the Eastern-nations 192. Of the Papists 193. who in Idolatry exceed the Egyptians 234. why Idolatry is compared to wine 350. Iehovah the sacred name of God distinguishing him from all false Gods 203. What it signifies 8. Iesuites affirme that Iohn did not evill in falling down before the Angel 484. 485. Iesuites bafling 420. They againe roll up the open book of the scripture 130. Iezabell a false prophetesse 48. Her doctrine 49. Ignatius his Epistle to the Philadelphians 62. Ilands denote peoples and nations 130 how they were moved out of their places ibid. Image of the beast 310. 311. hath life put into it by the dragon 312. Image of babylon 311. the beasts Image excels that of babylon 312. Images of Christ and the saintes are not to be set up in temple 23. Impatience and desire of revenge how it can be in the souls of the saints in heaven 120. Impotencie of all creatures 99. Imprinting of the Charactar on the right hand 312. 313. Impure spirits 394. Incompassing what it signifies 537. The Infirmities of the saints Gods clemencie passeth by 44. Incense what it is 155. The Inflicting of punishment on impostors belongs to God alone 50. The Individuall communion of the Saints with the Lamb 3●6
he bee deprived of understanding deny that these things are couched in the Text. And if credit be given unto their fiction Ribera in Apoc. c. 12. Num. 11. c. 13. Num. 10. there shall at Antichrists comming be no more then ten Kings in the whole world signified by the hornes of the Beast and of these three being slaine seven shal fight for Antichrist Therfore either these shal be Christian Kings or else there shall then be no Christian Kings under the Sun the falsitie whereof the Revelation doth shew Chap. 21.24 Now tel me what harshnesse or dishonour is there in it that as Paul confesseth he was sometime a blasphemer a persecutor and injurious but ignorantly and so obtained mercy the ten Kings have given their power unto the Beast against the Lamb but of ignorance and being overcome by the Lambe have repented God putting it into their hearts to hate the whore Tell me I say should this be to the dishonour of Kings which is to their great glory to have sinned indeed through ignorance but repented through the mercy of God Or is not rather the fiction of these Prophets very reproachfull scandalous and fatall who say that toward Antichrists rising there shal be no where any Emperor or Romane Empire that there shal be no King in any place save those seven that remaine of the ten fighting for Antichrist And seeing they every hour expect their Antichrist to arise as they say out of the tribe of Dan what do they but threaten an utter destruction both to the Emperor Romane Empire and all Christian Kings For according unto these mens doctrine as then there shal bee no Emperor no Empire so neither King of France Spain England Poland Hungary c. or if there be any they shall be Antichrists Life-gard and vassals Now tell me who they are that cast reproaches upon Christian Kings set their Crownes awry and menace them with eternall damnation Wherefore blessed shall ye be if ye hear and keep the Commandements of this Prophesie that ye may have right to the tree of life and may enter through the gates into the City But he that wil hurt let him hurt still and he that is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still Amen Even so come Lord Iesus and sanctifie us in trueth Thy word is trueth Amen PROVERB 27.6 Better are the wounds of a friend then the deceitfull kisses of an enemy The Authours PREFACE UPON THE REVELATION OF THE APOSTLE AND EVAGELIST IOHN HAPPILY BEGVN AND PROPOVNDED VNTO HIS AVDITORY IN THE VNIVERSITY Ann. 1608. IF any of you my Hearers admire wherefore after the Exposition of Pauls Epistle unto the Hebrews I should passe by so many excellent Bookes of the New Testament and take in hand the Interpretation of the last viz. the Revelation the Authour and Canonicall authority whereof hath long since variously bin disputed of and which being replenished with great secrets types and darke sentences is scarcely intelligible unto any The Objections against the Revelation and though it be entitled a Revelation yet seemeth not in the least to be a Booke revealed but rather shut up and sealed which seemeth also to bee the reason that it is placed at the end of the New Testament from the interpretation whereof because of its obscurity not a few of the ablest Divines have hitherto abstained and lastly seeing it hath long since bin held that it doth contain some things contrary to Apostolicall Faith and favour the heresie of the Chiliasts If I say any man wondreth at this my purpose such a one I would have with me to acknowledge that these very objections besides other causes which now are not requisite to be related with which this most Heavenly Book is injuriously charged offereth occasion unto me to interpret the same that ye might understand that the Revelation of John is so farre from the guilt of these accusations which do not a little weaken the Canon of our Faith that we rather may say of it what Jerome most truly said of the Prophesie of Isaias Whatsoever is in Holy Writ whatsoever can bee uttered by the tongue or received by the senses of mortall man is contained in this Booke which least it might seeme to be spoken by me without ground Prooem in Isa I thought good to praemise a few things in way of Preface in which I will handle somethings more briefly by other Interpreters more largely handled and somethings properly belonging to our purpose I shall more diligently explicate CHAPTER I. Of the Authour of the Revelation WHo was the Authour of this Booke Lib. 7. hist c. 25. Haer. 51. would never in our times have beene questioned unlesse Eusebius and Epiphanius had left in writing that some of old time did scruple the thing For Eusebius recordeth that in his time it was diversly on both parts disputed touching the Revelation Afterward he saith there were some who supposed from the Bookes called De Repromissionibus of one DIONYSIUS an Alexandrine Bishop and also from one Caius an old Writer that the Revelation was not written by John the Apostle but forged by the Hereticke Cerinthus who feined an earthly Kingdome to Christ in which the Saints should have their fill of corporall pleasures a thousand yeeres into which sense some whom they called Chiliasts men in other respects of note in the Church drew the twentieth Chapter of the Revelation But other Divines and worthy Fathers have alwayes demonstrated that there is no such thing in that Chapter and we also will shew it on the place But so farre is it from trueth The Revelation not written by Cerinthus that the blasphemous Heretick Cerinthus could be the Author of this Booke as nothing is lesse credible or more unlikely For Cerinthus blasphemously maintained that Christ was not before Mary But the Revelation throughout teacheth and proveth the Eternall Deity of Christ by such evident Arguments against Cerinthus Ebion Photinus and such like enemies of Christ as almost no Scripture affirmeth the same more clearly However therefore it is no marveile Lib. 4. adversus Mar. that the Marcionites as Tertulian recordeth as also the Alogian and Tatian Heretickes as Epiphanius Augustine and Philastrius testifie did reject the Revelation as being contrary to their heresie Yet the Grecians of old had no reason neither to this day hath any man a just or probable cause Iohn the Apostle author of the Revelation to call into question the Authour or Canonicall Authority of this most Sacred Booke That John the Apostle whose Gospell and three Canonicall Epistles are extant is the Author may be proved by solid and undoubted reasons First the Title it selfe sheweth that he is the Author 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Revelation of John the Divine But thou wilt say it is not said John the Apostle or Evangelist Lib. 3. hist cap. 13.
written for the understanding of all But the my steries of the Visions although he revealed them to his servants and Prophets yet hee kept them secret from all other men namely that indeed prophane men might alwayes set light by things so obscure but the godly even by the obscurity thereof be the more stirred up to the searching out of divine mysteries The obscurity ought not to keepe us from searthing And although we can scarcely and with much difficultie come unto the understanding of all the secrets of this Booke notwithstanding the difficultie ought not to affright or to keep us from searching but rather stir up a more diligent enquiry into the same Many things in the Booke are without any shadowes of darke Types as speaking plainely of the punishments of the ungodly of the blessednesse and reward of the Saints c. in which lies no obscurity In many Types also the signification is plaine and the Analogie with the things signified not obscure as the Analogie of the seven Candlestickes with the seven Churches of the Lamb with Christ of the woman with the Church of the Dragon with Satan of the Beast and False-Prophet with Antichrist of the Locusts with the devouring Monkes of Babylon and the Great Whore with Rome of the seven heads of the Beast with the seven hils of Rome In the other more obscure Visions we have three helps by whch in some measure wee may dive into the understanding of them viz. the Propheticall Scripture Historie and experience For first after we have compared the Types of the Revelation with the Visions and Phrases of the ancient Prophets Remedies of the darknes in speciall with Ezechiel Daniel and Zacharie we shall find a great likenesse in them and thence receive much light for example In Chap. 4.5 it is said there were seven Lamps of fire burning before the throne which plainly appeareth to be taken out of Zach. 4.10 where the seven Lampes are said to be the seven eyes of Iehovah running too and fro through the whole Earth By which undoubtedly is signified the ubiquitie of Gods power and providence Out of the same Chapter is taken that in Chap. 11.4 two witnesses are said to be two Olive trees and two Candlesticks standing before the face of the Lord of the Earth Examples of which kinde we shall observe many more in the course of our Interpretation If from Johns time we diligently run over the History of the Empire and Romane Church and precisely compare the principall events with the Types of the Revelation certainly we shall see much light to come unto these Visions The Romane and Ecclesiasticall Historie testifies that diverse storms of persecutions were raised against the Christians by Romane Tyrants Eusebius recordeth out of EGESIPPUS Lib. 3. hist cap. 32. that the Church did not long after the Apostles time remain an undefiled Virgine but by little and little through the ambition and contention of Priests declined from Apostolicall sincerity But after CONSTANTINES time In vita Malchi saith JEROM shee became greater indeed in wealth but lesse in vertues After-Histories also testifie that the Romane Bishops by pride and subtiltie namely under a pretence of the primacy left by the Apostle Peter as also of Christs Vicar-ship bequeathed unto them they through the connivency or neglect of the Emperours not onely usurped power over the City of Rome but also took into their owne hands the very spoile of the Empire and at last established this Sacred Empire of the West the direct or indirect power whereof should wholly be in the Popes Holinesse All which things do not obscurely teach us what is meant by the opening of the Seales The arrogance and subtilty of Romish Bishops by the stars falling from heaven to the earth by the Beast speaking great and blasphemous things what is intended by the Beast False-Prophet and Image of the Beast what lastly by the whorish woman sitting on the Beast and ruling over the Kings of the Earth in the great Citie upon seven Mountaines Lastly if we rightly consider the experience of the present times two nuts are not more alike then is the Beast and Purpled Whore to the Papacy then the Locusts unto the Popish Clergy then the impure Frogs proceeding out of the mouth of the Dragon Beast and False-Prophet unto the Popes Messengers being hooded like to Frogs viz the Iesuites cracking miracles and running too and fro by Sea and Land unto the Kings of the Earth Rev. 16 13 14 to gather them unto the Battell of that great Day of God Almighty These things I say will in some measure bee remedies against the darkenesse of the Booke Vnto which in the last place wee must adde diligent meditation and ardent prayer that the Spirit of God who revealed these mysteries to Iohn do enlighten the eyes of our mindes with heavenly knowledge to finde out the wisedome of this Booke For blessed is hee that readeth Rev. 1.3 22.7.14 and blessed are they that heare the words of this Prophesie and keepe them that is which diligently meditate and labour exactly to weigh these oracles in an equall ballance with the events past present and to come CHAPTFR IV. Touching Ancient and Moderne Interpreters of the Revelation and of the manner of Interpreting observed by them I Have spoken of the Authour and Canonicall Authority and obscurity of the Revelation and shewed that in these things is nothing to hinder us from the interpretation thereof The objection about the Interpreters is of no weight I confesse that not a few Divines of great account as Luther Melanchthon Bucer Martyr Calvin Beza and others have abstained from the Interpretation of the Revelation But this neither doth lessen the authority of the Booke neither doth it prejudice other Interpreters for who knowes whither the darkenesse of the Book or their other waighty labours or want of time did occasion the same certaine it is they no way questioned the authority of the Booke In the meane while in all Ages there have beene excellent Teachers of the Church who have laboured to illustrate the secrets of this Booke by their Commentaries The Ancientest that have written upon the Revelation are Iustine Martyr In vita Iohannu and Irenaeus Bishop of Lyons and Melito of Sardis as Ierome and Eusebius record But their Commentaries have not been preserved untill our times Eus lib. 5. hist. ca. 25. save onely that some few fragments of this nature touching the ten hornes of the Beast the two horned Beast of the image Character Number and Name of the Beast arising out of the Sea are found in IRENAEUS Lib. 5. Cap. 21.23.25 Among Augustins workes wee finde a few Homilies upon the Revelation which notwithstanding are ascribed to Ticonius by Bede who himselfe also hath commented some things upon the Apocalyps But Austine in that divine Commentary de Civitate Dei endeavours to search not a few mysteries of this Booke touching
fire and on the contrary the Churches Victory and Eternall Glory The particular Visions are finished with the two latter Acts The two Acts of the particular Visions because they onely represent Antichrists tragedie rage declining and destruction the which notwithstanding the former touching the seven Vials doth more briefly the later touching the whore riding on the Beast more largely and clearly therefore this also is to be distinguished into foure Acts yet answering to the two latter Acts of the universall Visions Now although the Parallell-Acts both former and latter are not alwayes divided by whole Chapters like as Tragedie-writers use to doe but sometimes are joyned together and as it were mingled in the same Chapters because they shadow out Histories or things by the same periods and walking as the saying is with equall steps yet every where if thou well observe the Method they have traces evident enough as wee have diligently shewed in every of the Visions where also wee have noted the Markes and Periods of every of them CHAPTER XI The manner of interpreting observed by PAREUS FVrthermore by the things hitherto spoken touching the Argument and Method the manner of interpreting observed by us will not be obscure To every vision wee have praefixed its proper dispensation or order with as much brevity and light as could be the Chapters we have illustrated with Arguments Parts and Analysis The Doctrines which in this Prophesie are many and excellent we have so laboured to expound and applie unto the Scope of divine Scriptures shewed by the Apostle Rom. 15.4 2. Tim. 3.16 being profitable for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and lastly for the patience comfort and hope of the Saints that this Booke may with no great labour profitablie be propounded unto the Churches by the Ministers of Gods word Now seeing in the beginning I said that the eternall Deity of Christ is thorowout in this Prophesie proved with such evident Arguments against Heretickes as scarcely any other Scripture doth it more clearely I thought it worth the labour to note above XL. Arguments of that nature in their severall places vindicating them from the depravings of Eniedinus the Transsilvanian Hereticke which he cals Explications that it might so much the more appeare that those Ancients who as Eusebius recordeth denyed the Canonicall Authority of this Book as not written by the Apostle John but the Hereticke Cerinthus Lib. 7. hist cap. 25. did either not looke into the Booke and so sinned through grosse ignorance or else were carried away with more then humane affection What Method I have taken in explicating Propheticall things hath already been said and the Praefaces of the Visions shall shew in which I have not onely laboured to declare the Argument Scope Coherence Order and Period of every one but in speciall clearly to shew the Harmonie and consent of the foregoing and following Types and of the darker and more clear each with other and with the Types and Phrases of the ancient Prophets that so I might illustrate the Revelation by the Revelation It is most safe to expound the Revelation by the Revelation which manner of interpreting cannot bee but most safe and certaine For seeing it is evident that the darker Types go before and the clearer follow after and are notwithstanding Analogicall or agreeing with each other undoubtedly the more darke must bee sought out by the clearer Now the more cleare have no extraordinary difficult application unto the things signified by them And therefore wee may thence with some labour draw the understanding of the darker which also I have laboured to doe In summe following Austines advice I have shewed these two things that the same things are so many wayes repeated in this Booke as it may seeme to speake of different things whereas we shall finde that the same things are diversly related And that a few yea not a few but many things are in the Booke Aug. lib. 20. de C. D. cap. 17. by the manifestation whereof the rest might with labour be found out which again I say not as if I thought that all the mysteries of the Revelation were by me unfolded Far be it I come short in many things Throughout where I sticke and where bounds seeme to be set Eph. 4.7 there I ingenuously professe a man must stand and goe no further For here is wisedome 2. Cor. 12.8 To them that earnestly call upon God the Spirit is given according to the measure of the gift of Christ. It befell even the Apostle Paul that he obtained not the thing hee petioned of God How much more may the same befall us and me the least of all especially in these things of which the Lord hath as yet reserved much in his owne power Wherefore to interpret the Revelation What it is to interpret the Revelation is not to untie all the knots of Aenigmaes to leave unsifted or be ignorant of nothing at all in the same or by precisely interpreting the meaning of the Image Character number of the Beasts name the Beast himselfe the woman on the Beast the eating of her flesh the seven the ten Kings that shall burne her Gog and Magog to make all gain-sayers to bee silent For who hath ever attained unto this by interpretation or commenting on any part of Holy Writ They therefore that require the same are wiser then Christ the Apostles and God himselfe And on the contrary such are wise against God who make a mocke of the Oracles they understand not because of their obscurity or because of the diversity of Interpreters Many types of future things remaine secret and are known to God onely untill they be fulfilled The whole fourth Act with its accomplishment is secret because the seventh Trumpet hath not yet sounded neither is the seventh Viall yet poured forth into the Ayre A great part also of the third Act is reserved unto posteritie which in time shall see the full gathering together of the Kings of the Earth into Harmageddon the devouring and burning of the whorish woman the desolation of Babylon and the event of the Goggish Warre c. The beginning we see and further shall see In the two former Acts and the better part of the third the accomplishment whereof hitherto Histories and dayly experience do so plainly shew that if we held our peace the very stones would cry out it is the part of a Faithfull Interpreter not to draw the Readers from the scope neither to send them from those things which are done at home before their eyes to seek for Chymeras in the Hyperborean Mountaines which thing almost all the Iesuiticall brethren at this day do in their Commentaries least happily Antichrist should bee found in the Mountaines of Rome for the discovery of whom the greater part of the Apocalyps was of old revealed and circumscribed with such apparent oracles that after the Historie and experience of so many Ages we may
saying of Christ Render not evill for evill Pag. 461. 82. How it stands with justice to render double Pag. 462. 83. Whether God in commanding to render the double according to Babylons workes doth command rapines theft wickednesse c. Pag. 463. In Chapter XIX 84. Whether Alcasar hath sufficiently demonstrated that properly the Church of Rome is the wife of the Lamb. Pag. 481. 85. Whether Iohn did well in proffering to worship the Angell and whether the Angell did well to prohibit him Pag. 484. 582. In Chapter XX. 86. Of the binding and loosing of Satan what when and how it was Pag. 502. 87. A disputation touching the thousand yeeres of Satans binding 506. whether they be definitely to be understood 507. where they take their beginning and ending 508. what was the condition of the godly in the thousand yeeres 511. 88. Who were the living and reigning with Christ 514 89. After what manner and how long they lived and reigned with Christ 516. 90. Who are the rest of the dead and how they lived not againe 517. 91. Of the first Resurrection how it is to be understood 518. 520. 92. Of the Chiliasts opinion the Authors thereof and its refutation 520. 521. 93. Of the first and second death 519 526. 527. 94. What Satan is said to do the thousand yeers being ended and when he was loosed 530. 95. A disputation with Bellarmine and Ribera about Gog and Magog 539. 96. Of the old and new Goggish war its occasion and beginning 536. 97. Of the perpetuall torments of the damned 540. In Chapter XXI 98. The description of the new Ierusalem whether it bee agreeable to the Church-Militant on earth or to the Romane onely 541. 99. Of the new Heaven and the new Earth 549. 100. Ludovicus his jest on Sophisters about the Lake of Fire 557. In Chapter XXII 101. A Disputation against Sophisters for the authority and perfection of the divine Scriptures 580 c. 102. Of the doctrine of Iustification by Faith 584. 585. A COMMENTARIE Vpon the REVELATION OF IOHN THE APOSTLE The argument parts and analysis of Chap. 1. After the title and Apostolical salutation to the seven Churches of Asia Iohn rehearseth the first vision namely the seven golden candlesticks and Christ his glorious walking in the middest of them and how hee was affected with the vision and received from Christ commandement for to write the same both concerning things present and to come The parts of the chapter are two the former containes the preface to v. 9. The latter the vision of Christ gloriously walking in the middest of the seven candlestickes from vers 9 unto the last THe preface containes the title and th●●postolical dedication of the booke The title shewet● first the argument of the booke that it is a ●●velation of things to come Christ the ●utho● of it as also the ministerie of the Angel vers 1. Secondly it notes the person of the author by a periphrasis or description vers 2. Thirdly it commendeth the profitablenes of the booke from the necessitie of it vers 3. The dedication containes the prosopographie or description of the persons who and to whom he writeth vers 4. Secondly the Apostles wish viz. grace from God and from the seven spirits as also from Iesus Christ whose threefold office he declareth v. 5. Thirdly the celebration of the prayses of Christ and giving of thanks for a threefold benefit received from him v. 5 6 His comming to Iudgement is promised by the words of Zacharie vers 7 and in the last place bringeth him in testifying his eternall Godhead and omnipotencie vers 8. The vision containes the preparation vision it self In the preparation Iohn sheweth the name how hee was affected the place of his banishment and the cause vers 9. Secondly the time and manner of the vision vers 10. Thirdly a command to write the vision and to send it to the seven Churches by name vers 11. Fourthly his Gesture vers 12. In the vision are three things first the form secōdly the effects thirdly the things following The form of the vision which hee saw is twofold first the seven Golden candlestickes Secondly the form of the Sonne of man in the middest of them whose habit and clothing hee describeth vers 13 His head Hair and eyes v. 14 His feet and voice vers 15 His right hand holding the seven starres his mouth armed with a two edged sword and his face shining like the sun vers 16. The effects are first Iohns Great amazement secondly his falling to the ground v. 17. The things following are first a twofold comforting of Iohn first by Gesture the laying on of the right hand vers 17. Secondly by speech bidding him not to fear and the reason is taken from the person adjuncts of the speaker viz. because hee is eternall God the Lord of life of death of hel vers 11 2 The command of writing the present vision following prophesies 3 The unfolding of the mysterie first of the seven starres that they are the seven pastors and secondly of the seven candlestikes to bee the seven Churches of Asia THE FIRST PART OF THE CHAPTER CONTAINING THE PREface title and dedication of the booke THe Revelation of Iesus Christ which God gave unto him to shew unto his servants things which must shortly come to passe and he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant Iohn 2 Who bare record of the word of God and of the testimony of Iesus Christ and of all things that he saw 3 Blessed is he that readeth Exod. 3.14 1 Cor. 15.21 Col. 1.18 and they that hear the words of this prophecy and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand 4 Iohn to the seven churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven spirits which are before his throne 5 And from Iesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the prince of the kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood 6 And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen 7 Behold he cometh with clouds and every eye shall see him and they also which pierced him and all kindreds of the earth shall waile because of him even so Amen 8 I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty A COMMENTARIE VPON THE REVELATION Chap. 1 vers 1. THe revelation this prophetical title doth expresse the argument of the booke called in Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concerning the meaning of which word there is extant in a colledge called wisdom colledge of which I have before spoken a manuscript in way of commentarie on this booke which Giveth us an
of Gods providence namely his vertue charity justice wisdom patience threatnings and wrath Which is a mysterie bringing along with it an inconvenience which he desireth to avoid for he makes question whither sound divinitie wil admit that grace and peace be asked from the seven vertues rather then from the seven created angels yea how grace and peace can be prayed for from menacings and wrath so he And from Jesus Christ In that he wisheth grace and peace from Christ in the the third and last place is neither against the former exposition nor any way derogateth from the dignity of Christ for as the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 doth not derogate from the order of the persons in the trinitie though he put Christ in the first place so here our Apostle for waighty causes sets downe the holy Ghost before Christ because he treateth of him not simply as being the son of God but also as he is the mediatour redeemer and revealer of this prophesie Notwithstanding great reason it is that he should pray for grace and peace from Christ Ephes 2.14 because it cometh by him Iohn 1.17 and he is our peace Who is the faithfull witnesse The following titles are so many reasons wherefore grace and peace is prayed for from Christ and they set forth as hath been shewed in the analysis both his threefold office with the benefit thereof as also declare his eternall Godhead The first title respects his propheticall office that faithfull witnesse which seemeth to be taken from Psal 89.38 witnesse because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of his father the testimonie that is the glad tydings of the redemption of man through his death and from heaven hath opened to us the true knowledge of God and way of salvation faithfull Because he not onely confirmed the heavenly truth by preaching by miracles meekly calling of sinners to repentance to the faith of the Gospel but also sealed the same by suffering on the crosse and by instituting the ministry he gave to the churches Apostles prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers who perpetually should be his witnesses Eph. 4.12 preach the Gospell to after ages for the perfecting of the saincts for the edifying of the body of Christ according to these scriptures Ioh. 17 6. I have manifested thy name to the men thou gavest me out of the world and 18 37. For this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnes unto the truth Io. 1.18 the son which is in the bosome of the father he hath revealed God unto us Who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession The father and holy Ghost are also said to be witnesses 1. Io. 5.7 Ioh. 5.37 there are three that bear record in heaven the father the word and the holy Ghost The father saith Christ himself hath borne witnes of me And of the holy Ghost he saith when the comforter is come c. He shall testifie of mee the Apostles are called witnesses Act. 1.18 And Antipas Rev 2.12 and two witnesses are mentioned called Martyrs for sheadding of their blood for the testimonie of Christ Revel 11.3 But Christ onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of prerogative is called that faithfull witnesse because he first brought with him the witnesse of the truth downe from heaven he first and he onely hath shead his blood for his owne testimonie whereas all other martyrs suffered not for their owne but for the testimonie of Jesus Christ Yea also the witnesse which the father and the holy Ghost gave of him was declared by himself and therefore Christ as by a speciall and proper right is called the faithfull witnes that is the true and constant revealer of the doctrine of our salvation whoever therefore hearkens not to him Deuteron 18.19 can not be saved but who so heareth him shall have life eternall This also confirmeth the authoritie of the revelation because it was revealed to John by Jesus Christ that faithfull witnesse who can notly nor deceive therefore this booke is trulie divine and we may safely trust and beleeve all things contained in it It serveth also to instruct us that if Christ onely be the true witnesse then those are not to be heard but avoyded as Liars which teach the Church such things as dissent from the testimonie of Christ It may also comfort us because Christ the faithfull witnesse will not forsake them who suffer for the cause of his truth but will at length reward them faithfully according to his promise The first begotten of the dead This title concernes Christ his priestly office who died for our sins and was raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 For the word dead shewes that he died and being the first begotten of the dead it teacheth us that he was raysed from the dead And the whole scripture testifies that the end and use of his death and resurrection was not a bare witnesse as Socinus blasphemeth but chiefly a propitiation to purge us from our sins and to justifie us before God Paul calleth him likewise the first begotten of the dead 1 Collo 1.18 1 Corinth 15.20 and sheweth that Christ is become the first fruits of them that sleep But how can Christ be the first fruits of the dead seeing the scriptures testifie that Elias and Elisha raysed up two persons from the dead before the time of Christs manifestation in the flesh Lazarus also with the widows son and Centurions servant were restored from death to life Answer First Christ is the first begotten or first fruites of the dead because he was the first that raysed up himself from the dead by his owne power whereas all before Christ were raysed not by their owne power but Christs alone Secondly Christ was raysed up to an immortall life not to dy any more but the other to an earthly life and became subject to death again He is said to be the first begotten or the first that did rise again Matt. 19.28 Act. 13.13 Rom. 1 4. because the resurrection is a kinde of new birth and so Christ calleth the last resurrection a regeneration And Paul applieth that in Psal 2. of the father eternally begetting the son to his resurrection from the dead and hence he is declared to be the eternall and omnipotent son of God This should greatly comfort us that though we are borne and brought forth in a corruptible condition yet when we rise again we shall be regenerated unto a state incorruptible even while we are in this life we are regenerated but it is spiritually onely and in part but when we shall by the spirit of God be restored to eternall life then we shall be regenerated both corporally and fully to wit when our mortall bodies shall be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ let us not fear therefore though we should suffer death for the testimony of Christ because he who is the first begotten of the dead
hands even so doth Christ lift up Iohn who was sore amazed first by laying his hand upon him and afterward speaking comfortably unto him Hee toucheth Iohn with the same right hand in which hee held the seven starres For by his divine power and love which never faileth hee upholdeth all the Churches with their teachers and every one of the faithfull Fear not I am the first and the last Hee biddeth him not to fear because feare disturbeth the minde unfits men for instruction and therefore the admonition at this time was very seasonable And that he might comfort Iohn the more and lift him up hee expoundeth in order unto him the whole vision First who he is Secondly what he would have him to do And thirdly unfolds the mystery of the starres candlesticks He sheweth him who hee is to the end he might know that he saw no fancie or spirit but Iesus Christ his redeemer He again calleth himself the first and the last that is God eternal as in vers 8 11 which is a seventh argument of Christs divinity Isay 41 40 44.6 48 12. as wee have already expounded For that which the prophet ascribeth to God alone Christ in this chapter three times assumeth unto himself But some heretikes object that Christ is called first as being the first of the Church under the new Testament But I answer that all the adjuncts disproove this glosse For Christ doth absolutely call himself the first and the last by which very words the prophets declare the eternity of Iehovah God Yea Christ saith that hee was not onely before the Church of the new Testament but also before Abraham Ioh. 8 58. 18. I am hee that liveth and was dead These words do clearly manifest that neither man nor Angel but Christ alone is represented here in this vision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the living or he that liveth Christ taketh unto himself not onely the glorious life of his humanity Ioh 5.26 but the essential also of his divinity of which hee speaketh in the Gospel as the father hath life in himself so hath he given to the son to have life in himself For chiefly he calleth himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him that liveth because even then whe he was dead he lived Therefore he saith not I did live and afterwarddy for then there would not have been any thing remarkeable in such an expression for no man can bee said to be dead who formerly hath not been alive but hee saith J living and was dead that is both together for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was is but once in the text is referred to both words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 living and dead In which great and admirable expression he doth openly declare his twofold nature affirming that he lived 1 Pet. 3 18. as he was God was dead as he was man at one time According to that of Peter Christ was mortifyed in the flesh but vivifyed in the spirit that is both dead in the flesh and alive in the spirit together And this is the true meaning of that place which is the same with that common tenet that Christ being dead in the flesh raysed up himself by the power of his divinity This is also confirmed by the following words Behold I am alive for evermore Hee saith not and I lived again but behold I am living or alive by the particle behold hee attributes to himself an admirable divine and everlasting life to distinguish it from that life which he received again after his suffering in the flesh Therefore he saith hee liveth for evermore that is both before his death in his death and after his death which I have expressed in these verses Vivus eram sed eram crudeli morte peremptus En vitam sine fine per omnia secula duco J was alive and did a sore death suffer Yet lo I live and so I shall for ever This is the eight argument 8 Argument of Chr. deity of the Godhead of Christ because he was dead and liveth for evermore Eniedinus the heretike objecteth that Christ is not God because he died and so ceased to be whereas God dieth not neither can he cease from being God But it is a childish objection For though God cannot die as hee is God yet Christ as is he God ●●nlfested in the flesh 1 Pet. 3 18. suffered death according unto the scriptures mortifial in the flesh Again God hath p●●●sed the Church with his owne blood Wherefore this onely doth follow that Christ is not God according to the flesh in which hee sunffered which indeed it true although it bee opposed by the Vbiquitisis who therefore have need to consider how they wil answer to what is here by the here●ike objected Further more all this that Christ doth attribute to himself is for the comfort of the Godly For Christ liveth yea is life it selfe that wee also might live through him according unto the prom●● Joh. 6 he that eateth me even he shill live by me and again Ioh. 16 28 I give lowy sheep eternall life and they s●●ll never preish And have the keyes of hell and of death That is I have power to cast the enemies into hell Keyes are a signe of power the which Christ Matth. 10.28 doth ascribe unto God fear not them which kil the body c. but rather fear him to wit God which is able to destroy both soule and body in hel This power Christ here assumeth by which he declares himself to be God and Lord of hell and death 9 Argument of Chr. deity This therefore in order is a ninth argument proving the Godhead of Christ Vers 19. Write the things which thou hast seene If this commandement be restrained to the first vision by a threefold division of the things which he had stene which were and which should come to passe then by it the arguments of the seven following epistles are signifyed but I rather refer it to the whole revelation for he is required to write some things already past which he had seene and somethings present the things which are and some things which shall be heerafter So that the matter of the revelation is distinguished in●● a threefold order by Christ himself some things he had seen already from the beginning of the Gospel under Nero and the following Emperors unto Domition some things he now saw but the greater part he was yet to see namely the things that were to come afterward To these three heads we must have regard all most in every one of the following visions The Latine version hath which must be in stead of which shall bee But the Gr. constantly readeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which shall come to passe Moreover this proveth again the divine authority of the revelation forasmuch as it is written by the commandement of Iesus Christ But why did he commande it to bee written questionlesse that the whole Church at
all times should continually read it for their comfort and instruction which also is the end and use of the whole scripture Rom 15 4. 2 Tim. 3.16 Vers 20. The mystery of the seven starres After that the Son of man had shewed who he was whom Iohn saw he comes to unfold the mystery of the starres and candlesticks viz. that the seven starres are the seven angels or ministers the seven candlesticks the seven churches of Asia to whom he was commanded to write vers 11. The mistery The vulgar hath it the sacrament of the starres that is the thing figured by them so again chap. 17.7 I will tell thee the sacrament of the woman but it is improperly used for the mysticallsfignification of the same Bishops So he caleth the starres because they ought to shine before others in purity of doctrine and integrity of life like unto starres shining in the firmament they are said to be angels because they are Gods messengers to the Churches and the Churches are compared to candlesticks because like as the candle or light is set up into the candlestike even so the Church ought to hold forth and preserve the shining light of true doctrine that all may behold it least being in darknesse they stumble and perish thorow their ignorance Hence we learn in the first place that the scripture best interpreteth it self for what was before more darkly spoken is now clearly unfolded So Christ opened the parables to his disciples Matth. 13 in like maner this vision which at first seemed obscure is now made plain by its own interpretation For albeit the scripture doth not make clear every thing that is darkely spoken not withstanding if we diligently observe it that of Austin will appeare most true that there is all most nothing abscure in scripture which is not in some other place plainly expounded Furthermore we are to take notice of these figurative and sacramental phrases The starres are Angels that is they signifie the Angels the candlestiks are the Churches Gen. 41 27. 1 Cor. 10 4. Cont. adim c. 12. that is they signifie the Churches according to that in Genesis the seven kine are seven years that is do signifie seven years And the rock was Christ for it signified Christ as Augustine expoundeth it For there is nothing more familiar in scripture then to name signes by the things which they signify which maner of speech is not darke but plaine in regard of the analogie betwixt the signe and the thing signified wherefore it was not obscure but familiar to the scripture that Christ called the bread which was broken at the institution of the supper his body which was crucifyed for us seeing it was a sacrament or holy signe of the same Hence Augustine opening the etymologie or signification of a sacrament applies it to the Lords supper saying that the Lord Iesus doubted not to say this is my body when he gave the signe onely thereof And this is so cleare a truth that even Aloasar a Iesuite confesseth it saying that in the phrase of scripture touching dark sentences and sacraments the word which is used is to be referred to the signification of it and that the bread and wine in the Eucharist which they call the species doth signify the body and blood of Christ because Christ saith this is my body c. Indeed he supposeth there are two sorts of signes some instituted onely for doctrin and signification as in parables and darke sentences the other such as really include and containe the things which they signifie as in baptisme and the supper in which saith he is truly and properly contained as the cleansing of the soule from sinne so the body and blood of Christ and he proveth it First because Christ instituted these signes to that end Secondly the Church so teacheth And lastly because it were an easy thing for any one to institute meere and naked signes wheras it is in the power of Christ alone to appoint such signes as are full of efficacy I answer first Alcasars arguments answered that in the institution either of baptisme or the Lords supper there is no mention made of any including of the things signified in the signes Secondly the primitive Church taught no such inclusion but the new popish Church in so teaching is departed from the institution and doctrin of the primitive times Lastly though it be true that the sacraments are not meere signes yet it followeth not that they are signes including the thing signified For there is in scripture another kinde of signes which as they are signes so they are seales confirming to the faithfull the grace of Christ signified by them For properly the sacraments are signes and seales of the promise of grace which no creature could institute or bring into the Church but God alone Another expositor denieth Hoe in the Revel chap. 1. that these are figurative speeches and why because saith he those candlesticks doe not signify but are really the Churches and the starres doe not denote but are in truth the angels But both is false first because then there should be no mystery in the candlesticks or starres Secondly if the candlesticks and starres were truly Churches and Angels then would not Christ have required Iohn to write his Epistles as being absent from them but he should have delivered his message unto them as there present with him in Patmos Thirdly because then the words the candlesticks are Churches the starres are Angels should be regular expressions But this he denies and truly For they are termes of disparity What then the metaphor saith he is in the subject which doth not import that the copulative IS should be taken for the word signifieth And though it were granted here yet would it not follow that the words of Christ at the institution of the supper were of the same significatiō because Christ did not expound to them a vision but institute asacrament Now howsoever both be true yet doth not this take away the metonymical expression for in typical Sacramental assertions the tipes signes are said to be the antitypes or things signified partly indeed by a metaphor because of the analogie or likenesse that is betwixt the signes the things themselves but chiefly by a metonymia Epist 23. ad Bonif. because of the sacramentall signification For as Augustine saith if sacraments had not some likenesse with the things they represent they should not at all be sacraments for in regard of that likenesse they have the name of the things themselves Therefore as in some sort the sacrament of the body of Christ is Christ the sacrament of the blood of Christ is Christs blood even so the sacrament of faith is faith Againe that is called the soule In Levit. lib. 3.4.5 Genes 41.26 1. Cor. 10.4 which signifies the soule for it is usuall that the thing signifying be called by the name of that which it doth signifie as it is written
however we need not alter the signification of the candlesticke forasmuch as it is not unusuall or contradictorie to divine justice that God should punish a whole congregation for the sinnes of a few yea for one particular person in the same as the Apostle sheweth 1 Cor. 5.6 11.30 And the reason hereof is because oftentimes the multitude followes the examples of their governors like priest like people as is the king such is the subject wherefore it is probable that the Church had lost her first love as well as her reachertand hence the threatning is directed against him as chiefe and against the congregation as being corrupted also To the second I answer by distinguishing the Church which is either particular or universal The universal is perpetual unshaken and built upon the rock But we beleeve otherwise of particular Churches which oftentimes the Lord for their security removeth by overthrowing whole cities countries as the Easterne Greek Churches of Asia and Africa doe plainly witnesse But although particular congregations are dissipated and the candlesticke removed either for publick or private sinnes so that where formerly the light of Gods word did shine there afterwards Paganisme or Antichristianisme doth reigne not withstanding the church it selfe is not alwaies removed for the abode of the Church is uncertaine Heb. 13.14 the Lord sometime causing the faithful to wander as strangers exiles from place to place not having a continued city in this world That which is spoken 1 Tim. 3.15 as it is most true of the universall Church so was it likewise true of these Ephesians yea of every particular congregation I say in right though not alwaies in fact for indeed every congregation ought to be a pillar and ground of truth though it be not so still in truth according to that of Mala. 2.7 The priests lips preserve knowledge that is they ought so to doe though they did it not therefore are reproved by the Prophet vers 8 But ye are departed out of the way c. so the Church is the pillar that is ought to be the pillar according to that in Tit. 1.6 Mat. 5.13 a Bishop is that is ought to be the husband of one wife Ye are the salt of the earth the light of the world viz. ye should be so c. Hence we first observe seeing the abode of the Church is uncertain we must not promise to our selves a continuance in one place in regard we are citizens of the Church For it is in the power of Christ to remove the candlesticks from one place to another and many times he doth so for the sinnes either of the teachers or of the whole congregation Now in this we must acknowledge our own faults as deserving it Psal 2● 1 yet ought we not to be altogether discouraged because the earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof For if the outward prosperity of the Church be disturbed and taken away yet our inward graces as faith and charity remaine for ever Let us therefore stedfastly persevere in our first faith and amend the evils whither in pastors or Church that so the candlesticke be not removed Secondly hence we learn that true repentance is the onely way and means to escape publick punishment and Church dissipation For Christ saith I will remove thee unlesse thou repent meaning if thou repent I will not remove thee Thirdly observe that in scripture the threatnings of punishment are still with a condition either expressed or understood viz. except men repent And therefore when the condition of repentance is declared and the punishment followes not there is no change at all in the decree of God Lastly hence we may learn how such as go astray are to be brotherly reproved and corrected for their evils and brought to true repentance the obstinate are to be terrified with threatnings and the repentant raised up with comfort the which Christ doth to this Church as knowing this to be a most effectuall means to bring them to amendment of life 6. But this thou hast that thou hatest The fift part of the narration containeth a further commendation of them for their hatred of the Nicolaitans and this he brings in after the reproofe and threatning as it were powring oyle into the wound and to draw them the sooner to repentance and to shew that they were not in a desperate condition Three things before he praysed in them here he addeth a fourth Thus we see none shall want praise with God for any thing that is prayse worthy now they are commended for their encouragement not as doing works of merit but as exercising the gifts and grace received of God in obedience unto him The deeds of the Nicolaitans In vers 15 their doctrine is mentioned Lib. 1 cap. 27. but not fully expressed what they taught Irenaeus writeth that they held it no sinne to commit fornication and eat things sacrificed to idols And most are of this opinion But in vers 14 it is said Act. 6 5. that this was the doctrine of Balaam and not of the Nicolaitans However it be it is certain they were a pernicious and most wicked sect both in life doctrine Lib. 3 hist cap. 2● Some will have Nicolas one of the seven deacons to be the author hereof Eusebius Epiphanius and Nicephorus do write of him that being accused as jealous of his wife who was very beautifull he forlooke her and left her as common to all But Clement Alexandrine as themselves testify doth commend this Nicolas for his piety and continency Heres 25. cap. 15. having daughters who remained virgins and a sonne which lived holily And therefore it is more probable that some other Nicolas was the author of this filthy sect and that these hereticks abused the name of this man as a cloake for their abominable wickednesse Of these men Augustine writeth largely in his booke of heresies A certaine writer hence gathereth Hoe in Apoc. seeing Christ calleth these men Nicolaitans after the name of the first author that he also may justly name such men Calvinists who have alvine for their author to the end his hearers may the more carefully avoid them Behold here a notable imitator of Christ But let him first prove that the doctrine which he falsly termeth Calvines hath its original from him or to be as this was of the Nicolaitans filthy impious and damnable Neither of which he shall ever be able to prove Wheras we might easily retort the very same fault upon himself For Christ calleth these sectaries Nicolaitans because they so named themselves the better to make way for their wicked errours like as in the Church of Corinth some said they were of Cephas some of Apollo and some of Paul very few being contented to be named after Christ For our parts we count it an evil to be named after Calvin and not rather Christians of Christ our Lord wheras this Clawback himself delighteth to be
and is not communicable to any creature no not unto the Angels Which further confirmeth the X. and XVIII argument before mentioned Secondly we are taught that all who professe the truth and make a shew of holines are not truely faithful and regenerate persons but many of them are hypocrites and deceivers as being farre otherwise then they are accounted of for hypocrisie is an outward shew of inward holinesse or a profession of faith with the mouth beeing in the mean time destitute thereof in the heart And hence we may conclude that a bare profession argues not true faith as the patrones of hypocrites affirme whereby they oftentimes delude themselves others Act. 8.13 Simon Magus is said to beleeve Therfore say they some who professe have true faith may fall away and perish But this place shewes us that many are inwardly dead who outwardly seem to be alive being with Ananias the hie Priest whyted walls Act 23.3 Matt. 23.27 Mat. 8.22 1 Tim. 5.6 with the Pharises painted sepulchres spiritually dead as Christ spake to the yong man let the dead burie the dead And Paul speaketh of some wanton widowes who are dead while they live yea all men considered in their natural condition are dead in trespasses and sinnes To be short many have faith without love which is dead a faith which the Devils also have Thus we se in scripture how they are said not onely to be dead who are deprived of naturall life but also not beeing regenerated to a spirituall or who are sincere in appearance onely and not in truth Let us therfore take notice that all are not godly who seem so to be neyther shall all they who say Lord Lord enter into the kingdome of God for the Church consisteth of a mixture of saintes and hypocrites and this difference is not onely in the laitie but chiefly in the Clergie as they call it that is many who in sheeps cloathing seem to be true Pastors teachers are in truth but mercenarie wolves and howsoever these may deceive men yet Christ knowes them And therfore let not the Bishops of Antichrist thinke to blinde the eyes of Christ with their titles mitres and royal robes The consideration of this informeth us in the first place of the divers condition of the Church in this world For many are called to be members of the Church whereof some are good others bad some saintes others hypocrites like as the net takes in al manner of fishes But howsoever the faintes elected are not knowen of men yet God Christ doe discerne them For the Lord knoweth who are his Therefore let every one try and examine himself whether he be dead or alive for hypocrites deceive not God but man their owne soules Wherfore let us shun hypocrisie even as a pest remembring what Ambrose admonisheth not to rest contented with a bare name in the mean while to be greevously guilty or with the hight of honour while we abound in sins or with a profession of Godlinesse while our actions are devilish For otherwise we should onely have a name to live when in deed we are but dead Lastly observe that the efficacie of the ministry doth not depend upon the goodnes of the minister For God doth sometime vivifie and governe his Church by dead officers as we have here an example which serves to confute the Donalists and Popish Sophisters who maintaine that there was not any Church of the elect untill the time of Luther in the Papacie but themselves except we wil acknowledge their Bishops for other there were none to have been approved of by the Lord. 2. Bee watchfull The second part of the narration is an exhortation admonishing the Angel in Sardis of divers things to the end he might purge himself from the crime of hypocrisie and withal he is threatned to be punished except he doe repent First he is commanded to shake of that hypocritical drowsines into which he was fallen Be watchful that is stirre thy self up for he is not onely required to be more faithfull and careful over the Church then formerly he had been but also called upon as it were to live againe for so faith Christ but thou art dead Now death in scripture is frequently compared to a sleep so that this place and that of the Apostle speaking unto men fallen into a deep sleep of sin is of the like interpretation Ephe. 14 A wake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Not as if wee could of our selves arise from the death of sin for this is a worke of Grace but because the Lord by his precept powerfully worketh in us that which he requireth of us and by the operation of his owne spirit rayseth us up beeing asleep in sin unto newnes of life And strengthen the things Or rather strengthen the rest that is such dying members of the Church as are committed unto thy charge who because of thy negligence decay both in faith and holinesse For it is no wonder that a Church should fal into a deadnesse and securitie while the officers therof are asleep Christ therfore comm●ndeth him to strengthen them that is to labour by a holie life and doctrine to bring them againe into the way of life That are ready to dy in Gre. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that shall dy that is which are near unto death like as in Luk. 7.2 it is said of the centurions servant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he should dy that is was ready to dy So these here were near unto death though not altogither dead and therfore the Pastor is exhorted carefully and speedily to put to his helping hand for their recoverie This care the Apostle recommendeth unto all the faithful Rom. 14.2 namely to receive them that are weake in the faith And therfore it is a speciall dutie of the ministers of God who are spirituall physitians to applie to Christs weaklings the holesome medicines of Gods word 1 Tim. 2.9 for otherwise God saith unto them by the prophet forasmuch as ye have not strengthened the diseased Ezec. 34.4 nor healed that which was sick nor bound up that which was broken nor sought that which was lost c. Behold I am against the shepheards and I will require my flock at their hand and cause them to cease from feeding my flock Montanus reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which thou art ready to lose that is destroy by thy negligence which is a more heavie expression For I have not found thy workes perfect These words containe a reason wherfore God requires him to be watchfull But it may seem that this reproofe is not equal just 1 Cor. 13.9 considering that no mans workes on earth are perfect before God if he should enter into Iudgment with us for we know but in part we prophesie in part and there is not a just man on earth that doth good Eccle. 7.20 and
the Church with Antichrist with the issues thereof as the fift and sixt notwithstanding in the conclusion of every one of them a description of the last judgement with the punishments of the wicked and reward of the Godlie are expressed eyther literally or figuratively as I have allready shewed in the preface The reason of which repetition is wondred at but cannot be declared by such interpreters who judge that the historie of the Church is described in these visions without any intermission whereas the observation of our method doth clearly manifest the same The second vision is contained in Chap. 4.5.6 7. And it consisteth first of a preparation unto the vision in which Iohn saw the majestie of God sitting on the throne and the great attendance given unto him chap. 4. And in his hand a booke sealed with seven seales chap. 5. At length opened by the Lambe The fower Acts of the second vision Secondly it containes the vision it self representing in fower distinct acts the historie of the Church from that time unto the end of theworld In the first Act is propounded the different state of the Church from the time of the Romane tyrants untill the rising of Antichrist in the first 600 yeares prefigured in the opening of the first foure seales Chap. 6. v. 8 The second Act is an opposition of the foregoing proposition for the comfort of the martyrs and especially those who suffered under the pale horse at the opening of the fift seale Chap. 6. v. 9.10.11 The third Act is an amplification of the calamities of the Church under the Easterne and Westerne Antichrist after the revolution of the first thousand years and thence forward revealed at the opening of the sixt seale Chap. 6. v. 12.13.14 And in the last place the fourth Act containes the final end of all the combats of the Church fearfull indeed and tragicall unto the wicked but happie and glorious unto the faithfull martyrs and Christs sealed ones Chap. 6. v. 15.16.17 Chap. 7. unto the end Now this is the true state or distribution of the second vision And so we come to handle the interpretation thereof THE ARGVMENT and parts of Chap. IV. THis chapter is a preparation to the second vision and containes a description of the divine majestie of him that sate on the throne the scope and drift thereof is to let the faithfull understand that however they are pressed with afflictions in this life yet they have a glorious and omnipotent judge in the heavens to revenge their cause The Chapter hath two parts In the first appeareth the glory and majestie of God sitting on the Throne v. 1.2.3 The second containeth a twofold description 1. Of the companie of the foure and twenty Elders And 2. Of the foure beasts with their thanksgiving from v. 4. unto the end of the Chapter The first part of the Chapter The Majestie of God sitting on the Throne 1 After this I looked and behold a door was opened in heaven the first voyce which I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me which said come up hither and I will shew thee things which must be hereafter 2 And immediately I was in the spirit and behold a throne was set in heaven and one sate on the throne 3 And he that sate was to look upon like a Iasper and a Sardine stone and there was a rainbow round about the throne in sight like unto an Emerald THE COMMENTARIE AFter these things I saw That is after I had seen the first vision for however Alcasar supposeth that the foregoing Chapters are as a prologue to the booke Yet Ribera and that groundedly doth acknowledge here a second vision because John saith After these things I saw that is after those things alreadie related I saw yet other visions And behold a door was opened in heaven As formerly I have shewed so here againe I would have it to be observed That we are not to search for mysteries in every particular of the visions but onely in those circumstances which doe concern the quality and scope of them Let others if they pleas by heaven understād the Church by the door opened the sence of the scriptures there interpreted by which we search and find out the mysteries of God But for my owne part I understand it simplie of the place where these things were seen of Iohn to wit not as formerly in Patmos but in heaven where as upon a larg and ample theatre the Acts of this vision were represented unto him And thus the following visions are differenced from the first as beeing of a higher nature He therefore saw a door opened in heaven that is he saw heaven opened within the heavens an open Pavilion or stage alluding to the custome of commoediants Act. 7.56 Steeven also the first Martyr saw the heavens opened towit corporally but John saw this in the spirit as it is in v. 2. however we may hence truely conclude that neither the perspicuity of the mind nor bodelie eyes of man can reach to heavenlie things except the Lord doe open heaven unto him And the first voyce The positive is here by an enallage or change of words put for the comparative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 first for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 former as Chap. 2.4 thou hast left thy first The voyce of Christ revealing the revelation that is thy former love And 1 Tim. 5.12 They have cast of their first that is their former faith he meaneth that great voyce as of a trumpet speaking unto him Chap. 1.10 For as there v. 1. it is said that Christ shewes unto his servants things that must shortelie come to passe So here this great voyce saith come up hither and I will shew thee c. So then both this and that is the voyce of Christ the revealer of the revelation Which must bee hereafter That is the hidden things of Gods secret counsell concerning the future condition of his Church in the world from this present time untill the end thereof Thus he brieflie openeth unto Iohn the argument of the following prophesie not for the satisfying eyther of his or our desire after the knowledge of novelties but to arme the Godlie with comfort against the approching troubles 2 And immediatelie I was in the spirit that is in a traunce as Chap. 1.10 he ascribes it unto the spirit least he might be thought to relate a dreame for he saw these things waking by which it appeareth that he was come to himself after the first vision and beeing again ravished he saw another vision although it is not manifest what distance of time there was betwixt them and ascended from Patmos by the commandement of Christ up into heaven not indeed by any locall motion but inward illumination the holy Ghost representing these things unto his understanding and revealing the mysteries thereof unto him which kinde of visions are called intellectual as we noted on Chap. 1.10
sung unto the Lamb 1. By both companies representing the Church triumphant who celebrate the benefit of their redemption glorification obtained by the blood of the Lamb. v. 8.9.10 2. By a third apparition or companie of Angels celebrating the worthinesse power and divine glorie of the Lambe v. 11.12 3 By a fourth apparition of all creatures rendring prayses and blessings unto God on the throne and unto the Lambe v. 13. And last of all the two first apparitions of the 24 Elders foure beasts closing up the thanksgiving by a divine adoration v. 14. The first part of the Chapter A description of the booke sealed 1 And I saw in the right hand of him that sate on the throne a booke written within and on the backside sealed with seven seales THE COMMENTARIE ANd or then I saw I will not here repeat all the diverse opinions of interpreters concerning this book who rather obscure then unfold the obscurity thereof but onely will cite some of the most probable The common opinion about the booke Most interpret it either of the booke of the old Testament or els the whole volume of Gods booke both old and new which is in the right hand of God because it is inspired by the holy Ghost and the contents thereof are in the hands of God alone This booke is written within that is obscurely in the old Testament without that is openly in the new or within as respecting the mystical sence without the litterall It is sealed with seven seales because the mysteries thereof are hid from humane reason 1 Cor. 2.14 It cannot be opened by any creature because the naturall man receiveth not the things which are of God The Lambe alone is worthy to open it because he onely hath fulfilled the scriptures and he onely doth reveal unto us outwarly by his word and inwardly by his spirit the hid things thereof These things in themselves are true and according to godlines but I judge they serve little to the purpose in hand because here he treats not about the obscurity or manifestation of legal types neyther are the mysteries thereof revealed in this booke but things of another nature and which concerne the condition of the Church under the Gospel Neither can it be said that the old and new Testament was as a sealed booke unto all creatures untill the time of Iohn seeing it would then follow that both the Prophets and Apostles were ignorant of the writings of Moses and the Prophets Besides all the bookes of the new Testament were then already written and so not shut but knowen unto all such as had their sences exercised in the scriptures of God even as the preaching of the Apostles opened a doore unto the faith of the Gospell unto every creature And therefore this interpretation seems to be repugnant to the holy scriptures and injurious to the Apostolicall Churches They seem to come neerer the marke Another opinion of the booke who understand it of the booke of Gods providence For the scriptures attribute three sorts of bookes to God 1. Of his providence 2. of life and 3. of universall judgement of which we have treated Chap. 3.5 But these also differ in opinion Some take it in a generall way for the booke of Gods decree concerning the governement of the world which interpretation is to large seeing not all Gods secret judgements but onely such which concerne the state of the Church are here intended Therefore I rather assent to them The booke is the Revelation it self who understand it litterally of the booke in which all these things were contained which Christ was pleased to reveale unto Iohn concerning the last times the which he afterward penned and left the same unto the Churches This booke I say is the revelation it self not as if he saw a materiall booke but a visionall booke so to speak wherin was written Gods secret decree touching the future event of the Church and her enemies Thus also Andreas Ribera expound it For first this is the same booke which Iohn after it was opened is commanded to eat up that is fully and clearly to take knowledge thereof And which was sweet in his mouth like hony that is he was much delighted with the knowledge of so high mysteries but by and by it became bitter in his belly as gall that is he was much greeved in foreseeing the great calamities of the Church as we shall see Chap. 10. for the booke there mentioned is the Revelation given unto Iohn Furthermore the contents of the whole Revelation is taken out of this booke For at the opening of the seventh seale seven Angels are said to come forth sounding with trumpets signifying thereby the diverse changes of the Church in the third vision At the sounding of the seventh trumpet the Dragon and two beasts are raised up against the Church in vision the fourth Presently here upon follow seven Angels powring forth the vials of the last plagues upon the earth in vision the fift Afterward one of these seven Angels pronounceth with a mighty voyce the judgement of the great whore and ruin of Babylon in vision the sixt At length the new Ierusalem with the marriage of the Lamb is represented unto John in the last vision whence we see that the whole matter of the Revelation was comprehended in this booke not included in a few Chapters viz. from 6. to 11. as Alcasar supposeth To be short the circumstances of this booke doe altogether agree with the former preface For as Christ is there said to receive the Revelation of God and by an Angel to deliver it unto Iohn so this booke was in the right hand of him that sate on the throne taken out of his hād by the Lamb opened delivered unto the Angel who gave it to Iohn commanding him to eat it Chap. 10. Forasmuch therefore as all things thus agree together there is no question but this booke here spoken of is the revelation it self delivered unto the Apostle These things observed the three following circumstances will bee the lesse obscure 1. The booke is held in the right hand of him that sits on the throne because God is the author of the revelation in Gr. it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at the right hand and is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the hand as appeares v. 7. where the Lambe takes the booke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of his right hand therefore it was In and not at his right hand as some will have it Now he is said to have it in his right hand to the end to give it unto Christ to open As men reach out with their right hands what they give unto others And I suppose we need not seek for any other mysterie in this expression 2. It is written within and without that is there was no place emptie in it For we are to understand this litterally This booke was not made as
Austine Jerome and Chrysostome had suckt in some of their dregs mingling with the pure Apostolicall doctrine many errours touching matrimonie single life grace freewill praying to and for the dead purgatorie about fasts difference of me●ts c. with which things as with black spots the white horse of Christ was much stained To be short in the following two hundred yeares till the time of Gregorie the first the heresies of the Pelagians Nestorians and Eutichinians succeeded the Arrians which had before overspread the whole Church By little and little also the rites of the heathens crept in a new worship was devised by the Bishops with many beastlie vanities and superstitions Then began hot disputations and contentions about holy orders and seats of Bishops about the primacie of the chaire of Rome about righteousnes of workes merits and humane satisfactions and the like by which the doctrine of faith and free grace was much oppressed and a way made for Antichrist who shortlie after came into the temple of God when Boniface the third obtained the primacie and dominion over all other Churches from Phocas the usurper Thus we have heard how at length the white horse became black Vpon which notwithstanding Christ sate with his ballance that is How Christ sate on hereticks with his ballanct Lib. 2. de bapt cont don cap. 6. as I also assent too the holy scripture for as the ballance is the triall of a just or unjust weight so the holie scripture is the rule of doctrine whether true or false As Augustine wel noteth Let us bring saith hee not deceitfull ballances wherein we may put what and how we will saying according to our owne pleasure this is waightie this is light But let us bring the divine ballance out of the holie Scripture as out of Gods treasurie And put into it that which is waightie nay let not us put in any thing our selves but onely acknowledge what is put in by the Lord. But thou wilt say how doth Christ sit on hereticks doe these beare him up or doe they not rather denie him and cast him off I answere both is true Now these though in truth they denie him by their blasphemies yet Christ is said to ride on them with his ballance in a twofold way First in profession and appearance for the worst and grossest hereticks professed Christ and accounted themselves his Church And would pretend to weigh their errours in the ballance of the scripture but by them abused and miserablie depraved For the truth is most of them drew their heresies out of adulterat and apocrypha bookes corrupting some places of holie writ for a cloake unto the same but rejecting such canonical bookes as refuted their heresies And thus we see how in this respect Christ rides on hereticks But secondlie he doth it also by his providence because even in the greatest confusion of heresies he was not wanting unto his Church Neyther have or doe heresies at any time come rashlie or unawares but by Gods wise ordering hand for the triall of the Church For there must be heresies saith Paul that those which be approved may be made manifest And therfore he hath caused such heresies as sprung up to bee continually examined confuted by the ballance of his word as histories abundantly testifie 6. And I heard a voyce in the midst We have heard what he saw at the opening of the third seale he addes that he heard a voyce in midst of the beasts saying the old version hath it As the voyce of foure beasts saying But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as is not in the Greek neyther is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saying in the plural number but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the singular The voyce came forth out of the midst of the beasts as chap. 9.13 I heard a voyce from the foure hornes of the altar It is not said whose voice it was But without doubt it was the Lambs standing in the midst of the throne and foure beasts Chap. 5.6 He cryeth the price of food but whither at a deare or cheap rate it is uncertaine for the words following may be taken both wayes In that it is said A measure of wheat viz. shal be sould for a penny and three measures of barly for a penny that is shal be put into the ballance We will first consider the words afterward the sence A measure the Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was a measure of dry things containing a halfe peck or as some wil have it so much food as would suffice a man for the day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Suidas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Choenix is a measure of a dayes provision hence came the proverb of Pythagoras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to sit on the measure Choenix intimating though a man had gotten so much as was sufficient for the day yet should he not therfore give himselfe to idlenes but still goe forward in his labour calling A Choenix according to Bude containes two sextaries or foure pound a sextarie containes 24 ounces or two pound by which we see that the old interpreter did erre in rendring Choenix two pound wheras it cōtaines foure For a penny Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so called from the number beeing worth ten pence So much as was given for a dayes wages as appeares by the parable of the labourers in the vineyard Of wheat a more daintie and dearer corne then barly for that was for the poorer sort of men beasts other uses I doubt not but he alludes to the famine in Samaria which was besieged untill an asses head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver 2 Kin. 6.25 the fourth part of a cab of doves dung for five pieces of silver but soon after a measure of fine flour was sold for a shekel and two measures of barlie for a shekel Notwithstanding I take it that here not a cheapnesse but a dearth rather of food is foretold seeing the measure of a dayes allowance could hardly be obtained by a dayes wages which must needs cause scarsity both to man and beast But wherefore doth he prophesie of a famine under the black horse the same shadowing out as we have shewed the corrupt state of the Church under haereticks If we take it according to the letter it seems not to cohere For what need was there to foretell a dearth which we know comes ordinarily to passe Wherefore the prophesie seemes mystically to be understood He proclaimes a mysticall famine not a famine of bread but of the word of God threatned here to be sent upon the despisers therof according to that in the prophet they shall wander from sea to sea from the North even to the East and run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord but should not finde it Amos 8.11.12 Therefore in these words viz. by scarsitie of wheat barly the Church is threatned with a spirituall famine that is the Gospel
endure but for a moment neyther shall Antichrist rage according to his full desire but he shal be be limited according to the decree and purpose of God who hath determined the number of martyrs which number beeing once accomplished not one drop of blood shall more be spilt by him And last of all their fellow servants and bretheren which should be killed shall also be gathered under the same Altar to pertake with them of the same blessednes Now Antichrists time is said to be short or for a little season after the maner of the scripture which speaking of the last times compare them as it were unto an houre in comparison eyther of eternitie or the age of the world alreadie past We are taught therefore in the first place that God doth alwayes heare the prayers of his children although touching their deliverance hee reserve the time and manner thereof unto himselfe as best knowing when and how to dispose of all things for their good Secondlie the blasphemies outragious cruelties of the wicked are never forgotten of God but vengeance certainlie is prepared for them however he forbeares them for a time Thirdly the goodnesse of God is the cause of this forbearance Rom. 2.4 As to lead men unto repentance so also that the full number of martyrs may be accomplished And for this cause no doubt the Lord suffered the Romanes Vandales Gothes and other tyrants by the space of six hundred years to shed much blood though no more then was appointed of the saintes for the confirmation of the Christian religion And no otherwise he decreed but from that time unto the end of the world many should suffer under Antichrist for the same causet that so the judgement of the whore might be the more intollerable Hence we may not thinke that either the Churches sufferings under Antichrist were unknown unto the Lord or happened against his will but rather came to passe by his most wise counsell in which we ought to rest never to be scandalised at his fury nor rage of any of his instruments but to rest in the worke of God if so be he have appointed eyther thee or mee to be among the number of the martyrs To be short here we see that there is a communion between the saints in heaven those on earth For we are brethren fellow servants neyther are they our lords Chap. 19.10 22.9 and patrones as Idolaters imagine And beeing fellow servants they no lesse refuse divine worship then did the Angel who forbade Iohn to worship him saying See thou doe it not for I am thy fellow servant Worship God But say they they pray for us therfore we may pray to them I answer were this true yet it would not follow The reason is because there is a great difference betwixt praying for others and to be prayed unto To pray one for an other is a dutie of charity and common unto all the faithfull But to be religiouslie invocated upon is a worship due to God alone according unto the commandement Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God Mat. 4.10 him onely shalt thou serve And the reason is because God alone is omniscient omnipotēt present in al places hearing understanding onely able to fulfil the desires of his people But now the heavely Angels glorified spirits are neyther omniscient to behold all our actions nor omnipotent as able to helpe us nor can they be present with us in all places Besides it is uncertaine The intercession of saintes is here not proved but condemned yea false that the saintes doe at al intercede for us neyther can any such thing be proved from this place For the soules of these martyrs pray not for their fellow servants but to have their owne blood avenged nay they knew not who they were for else they would not have desired a hastening of divine wrath neyther at the instant was their request granted but deferred to the time appointed of God To all which we may adde that from visions allegories no doctrines can or ought to be drawen repugnant to the word of God as this is concerning praying to the saintes 1 Tim. 26. 1 Ioh. 2.2 Rom. 8.34 for it is derogatory unto the honour of Christ who according to the scriptures is our onely advocate in heaven There is one mediatour betwixt God Man the Man Christ Jesus And we have an advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the Iust And he maketh request for us Now if the saintes were also our advocates then should not Christ be the onelie mediatour betwixt God Man In deed we doubt not but the soules of the saintes in a general way doe know the afflicted condition of the Church here and desire her deliverance But in speciall to know our affaires they doe not nor cannot They see say they in God as in a glasse or by a reflection all our affaires here but this is a mere fiction Isai 63.16 contrarie to the scriptures Abraham knowes us not Israel is ignorant of us But thou Jehovah art our God and Father But they further object They love us therefore they pray for us I answer It is true yet they love Christ more then us and therfore they will not intercede for us to derogate from Christ as if his intercession were insufficient or that he were asleep while he is called upon But say they the saints in praying for us derogate not frō Christ seeing the prayer of the saintes each for other on earth is no way derogatorie unto him I answer the reason is not alike for the glorified saints cannot intercede in Christs presence without great dishonour to him but the others beeing yet in the bodie are bound having a commandement to pray one for an other Iam. 5.16 which the saintes in heaven have not yea say they they have for Paul bids the Hebrewes to pray for him Heb. 12.28 I answer The Hebrewes of whom this duty of love is required were not in heaven but here in an earthly warfare Besides if this commandement did tie the saintes in heaven then also are they bound to pray each for other which is absurd and false To be short who doth not understand that those whom the Pope canonizeth for saintes are as they say spokesmen before God for others and howsoever they may not be worshipped as Gods yet as Advocates that is with a lesse kinde of worship Now who I say doth not see that all this is taken from Apuleius and the followers of Plato who fained that their daemons whom they called Gods were Lib. 8. de civit Dei cap. 22. Ibid. cap. 23. as it were messengers between the upper Gods and men carying up their petitions to them and bringing downe aide and succour from them to men So that they pretended not to worship them as Gods which subtilty of theirs Augustine thus refuteth Apuleius saith he denies them to be Gods But in
saying that they are so in the middle betwixt both as that they seem to be necessarie for man before God in this he doth not separate their worship from the religion of the high Gods And deriding this vanity he speaketh further it is to foolish to beleeve that such Gods as are made by men should more prevaile with the Gods whom God hath made Ibid. cap. 24. then men themselves whom God himselfe hath also created Let us therefore cast of Poperie as a heathenish worship derived from Apuleius and Plato The third Act of vision II. The opening of the sixt seale A great earthquake darkening the lights c. 12 And I beheld when he had opened the sixt seale and loe there vvas a great earthquake the Sunne became blacke as sackcloth of haire and the Moone became as blood 13 And the starres of heaven fell unto the earth even as a figtree casteth her untimely figges when shee is shaken of a mighty winde 14 And the heaven departed as a scrowle when he is rolled together and every mountaine and Iland were mooved out of their places THE COMMENTARIE ANd I beheld Horrible wonders appeare at the opening of this sixt seale as earthquakes shaking of the heavens convulsion of the starres subversion of mountaines and Islands the explication whereof is difficult Arethas understands it of the darknesse over all the earth of the earthquake and rending of rocks at Christs suffering Matt. 27.51 Ambrose by a trope applies this horrible concussion to the destruction of Ierusalem But what use was there to reveale that unto Iohn by obscure types which was already past and fresh in memorie and by historie formerlie made known unto all Lyra understands it figuratively of the Diocletian persecution more cruel then the former But the most cruelst of all was the persecution yet to come namely under Antichrist Andreas therfore more probablie refers it unto the time before the comming of Antichrist wherein the miseries and persecutions here spoken of should come to passe But most interpreters understand it of the verie last persecution under Antichrist of whose mind I also am notwithstanding they erre from the scope of the history in their application For they following the common opinion that som one particular Antichrist shal oppresse the Church about the last foure yeeres of the world referre these earthquakes and darknings of the sun c. unto the foresaid time Neverthelesse herein they agree not For Ribera and others interpret it properly of the signes going before Christs last comming spoken of Matt. 24. Luk. 21. But most applie it to the horrible confusions and calamities which by Antichrist shal be brought upon the whole earth But for my own part I understand this third Act of the vision to shadow out the manie and sore trials wherewith for a thousand yeeres and more as histories testifie the Church of Christ hath been excercised under Antichrist Now this Act consisteth of two parts The third Act of the second vision hath two parts The first treats of the greater more horrible confusion of the Christian world under Antichrist contained in the 12.13.14 following verses which are to be separated from the last three verses of the Chapt the reason whereof I will shew by and by The other part of the Act is more comfortable as beeing opposed to the former troubles in which is propounded unto the godlie for their great consolation the sealing of the elect in their foreheads in the first eight verses of the following Chapter Now unlesse this be observed howbeit manie things I confesse in a general way may be truely learnedly piously treated of touching this earthquake darkening of the Sun other prodigious things as miseries to befall the world yet in deed these Generals tend but to the darkening of the matter And therfore for the right understanding of the sixt seale we must of necessity have recourse to the histories of the east and westerne kingdoms both from the time that Popery was first established in the West and Mahumetisme in the East as also diligently consider the state and experience of the present times touching all which a word or two in Generall About the yeere of our Lord six hundred after that the Church had obtained some rest was freed frō the persecution of open enemies she immediately began to be rent asunder by divisions corrupted with diverse heresies yea at length Pagan worship under the cloake of Christianitie and humane traditions so prevailed as that shee became pale and sick even unto the death For then arose the hot contention between the Bishops of Rome Bizantium about the monarchical primatie over all other Bishops and Churches Hereupon the Emperour Mauritius much favouring Iovinian his metropolitan made way for him to obtaine the primacie under a pretence that where the principall seat of the Empire was there ought also to be the chiefe chaire of the Church Now on the other hand Gregorie Bishop of Rome invying this honour of universalitie and power in his corrival Lib. 6. Epist 10. Lib. 4. Epist 34.36.37.39 affirmed that this title was wicked perverse proud prophane foolish and frivolous neyther ought there to be any such scandal raised among the Bishops at last he thus concludeth I saith he doe confidentlie affirm that whosoever either calleth himself or desireth to be called the universall priest seeing herein out of the pride of his heart he lifts himself up above his fellow brethren is the fore runner of Antichrist Thus we see that Gregorie makes the title of universall to be the true badge of Antichrist And indeed he so much prevailed with the Emperour as at that time the pride of Jovinian his corrival was repressed But Mauritius a while after beeing wickedlie murdered by Phocas and Gregorie dying about the yeere 604. Pope Sabinian his successour thirsting after the foresaid tyrannie burnt the writings of Gregorie and made void his decrees however he attained not what he aymed at beeing prevēted the yeere after by an infamous death After him succeeded Boniface the third who by Phocas the usurper was proclaimed universal Bishop Prince of Priests notwithstanding the clergie most of the Italian Bishops opposed the same Thus he declared himself unto the whole world to be that Antichrist and the first as Platina and other writers affirme that established his tyrannie by these insolent expressions as thus we will and command we appoint and charge we will and require c. From that time the Christian world began to be shaken with a horrible motion For now Christ the Sun of righteousnes was obscured The Moon of the Church turned into blood The starres fall from heaven Bishops become secular princes heaven or the opened booke of holy scriptures rolled up The mountaines kings princes stand in jeopardy of their power to be short the Islands are remooved out of there place by beeing brought under the yoke of Romish tyrannie Then saith
becomming earthly princes imitating the pompe of courtiers and wholie giving themselves to worldlie affaires as to wars hauking huntings all other vanities pleasures in princes courts yea far exceeding them in pride pompe and luxurie This fall of the stars is amplifyed by the similitude of a strong wind blowing untimelie figs from the tree By these figs are meant carnal bishops and by the mightie wind the Papal authority unto which all of them eyther for fear of excommunication or for promotion sake readilie submitted 14. And the heaven departed as a scroll The sift wonder is taken out of Isai 34.4 Heaven Hebr. rakiagh is that outspread firmament which God created on the second day and adorned with lights on the fourth day This heaven the lights failing and falling downe departed But after what manner as a scroll rolled together In old time they bound not up their bookes as we doe now but rolled them up as upon a rolling instrument The heaven rolled up is the Church falling away from Christ so beeing shut they could not be read But what heaven is here meant to be thus rolled up Interpreters understand hereby the Church spread over all the face of the earth which to Iohn did seem to depart like a scrol not as ceasing to bee but as ceasing to bee seen The which indeed is true of the Church of the Elect. For however Antichrist shall cover his kingdome with the title of the Church take those things that are proper unto her causing the word Sacraments though horribly depraved to be administred by his clergie neverthelesse they shall not be Christs Church but a synagogue of Satan The true Church of Christ shall depart beeing hid not seen to the world to whom belonged all the martyrs and professors witnessing against Antichrist But thou wilt say these were not hid It is true indeed they were seen as they were men could not be hid as they were martyrs but hid as a Church or the members thereof for they were condemned accounted by Antichrist not as Christs faithful ones but as wicked hereticks This heaven or out spread firmament The heaven departing is the closing of scriptures in popery may also be rightly understood of the opened booke of holy scriptures which by Antichrist his instrumēts was shut or rolled up yea cast under foot using in the mean time with great reverēce the Fathers Scolasticks Sentenciaries Canonists Legends c. Moreover since this booke of God began againe to be opened how have the Iesuits laboured to rolle it up questioning the authority thereof not accounting the same to be divine but as it is confirmed by the judgment of the Church Andrad defens concil Staplet contr Witak that is of the Pope For thus they expresly write That in it there is so much of the deity as the Popes Church attributes unto it neyther ought God to bee beleeved but because of the Church And all the mountaines were moved This is the sixt wonder which Andreas doth rightly understand of those who excell others in wordlie power For in Rev. 17.10 by mountains kings are understood in which sence I judge it is here also taken neither doth it any way crosse this exposition that kings are expresly nominated in the following verse seeing that place concernes the following Act is to be understood of their punishment But how have kings been moved by Antichrist The histories of the Popes declare this diverse wayes First by their ecclesiastical authoritie fraud threatnings constraining Emperours and kings not onely to maintain by fire and sword their ordinances and decrees but even to cast themselves downe kisse the feet of their holinesse The Popes tyrannie against Emperours and kings And secondlie civily for Antichrist spared neither King nor Keisar but whoever would not doe all things according to his pleasure those he oppressed deposed and thrust out of their places Gregorie II. having excommunicated Leo the Emperour deprived him of his revenues Pope Zacharie deposed Childerick king of France Leo III deprived the Graecian Emperours of the Western Empire Alexander III. first proudlie trampled with his feet upon Frederick I. before he would receive him into favour Gregorie VII displaced Henrie IV. Innocent III. thrust out Otho IV. Innocent IV. took the Empire from Frederick II. Clement VI. excommunicated Ludowick IV. Iulius II. deprived the great grandfather of Henry IV king of France of his kingdome of Navarre Sixtus V. sought to depose Charles IX king of France Elizabeth queene of England c. To be short Antichrist powerfully moved the mountaines against Emperours kings Christian princes through his Sophisters councils usurping to himself authority over whole councils boasting that by him kings doe reigne that it is in his power to cast them downe when he pleaseth lastly that no councils are authentick without his approbation This is a true plain interpretation And the Ilands were moved out of their places This is the seventh wonder Ilands are invironed with waters The waters signifie peoples Chap. 17.15 and therefore by the Ilands here are meant nations or the subjects of princes these also are moved for all are necessitated upon pain of salvation to subject themselves unto the Romish Bishop neither can any buy nor sel nor make any bargaine but according to his pleasure as appeares by the extravagant of Boniface VIII We define we say we pronounce we appoint that it is of necessitie unto salvation for every humane creature to beleeve that he is subject unto the chiefe priest of Rome Thus the Ilands peoples communaltie beeing deprived of their Christian libertie which they enjoyed under the Apostles were brought under Antichrists yoke under which they serve and groan even unto this day The fourth Act of the second vision concerning the final punishment of the wicked 15 And the Kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and the chiefe captaines the mighty men every bond-man and every free-man hid themselves in the dens and in the rockes of the mountaines 16 And said to the mountaines and rocks Fall on us and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe 17 For the great day of his wrath is come who shall be able to stand THE COMMENTARIE 15 ANd the kings of the earth Many with Lyra referre these things unto the times of Diocletian Maximianus whose cruelty against the Christians Eusebius treateth of Histor lib. 8. 9. because in those dayes men of all conditions estates both great and small not beeing able to endure the extremitie of tyrants sought to hide themselves in caves mountaines and woodes But they erre from the scope in my opinion offer violence to the text for undoubtedly by kings c. are not meant the vulgar but men in place and authority Now in those times there were no Christian
high majestie Saying Amen The like thanksgiving of the heavenly inhabitants we see Chap. 4.10.11 Chap. 5.14 Cha. 19.1 In saying Amen they joyfully ascent to the hymne of this innumerable multitude as if they should say worthilie indeed yee doe celebrate God and the Lambe the author of your salvation glorie For hee is worthy as Chap. 4.11 They adde also more glorious prayses as blessing glorie c. In which as we before noted they doe not so much pray and wish that God may have the same as by approbatiō shew forth that which is dew unto him Blessing that is celebration is dew unto God from all creatures Glorie Or a thankfull publishing of the powerfull works of God Wisdom For hee is the author and fountain of all wisdom And thanksgiving For the exceeding great benefits of their creation redemption and glorification Honour Reverence with subjection Power Above all the power of Satan Antichrist all adversaries Might by which he sustaineth all things overcomes al things is overcome by none By repeating Amen they confirm and desire that these his prayses may remaine for ever and ever This is a most sweet harmonie of the Saintes in heaven allwayes praysing the Lord now wee who for the present remaine here on earth are hereby stirred up to the like affections Moreover we are taught after what manner the Saintes in heaven pray before God and the Lamb namely by perpetual praysing of them but we hear them not supplicating to God neither interceeding before Christ The Saints in heaven pray not for the Church on earth eyther for the whole Church on earth or any particular member thereof for this honour is dew to Christ alone And therfore to affirme that eyther they pray for us or that wee ought to pray unto them is an hypocritical invention contrarie to the Scripture and true religion greatly derogating from the glorie of God and the Lambe making the glorifyed Saintes to be tutelar idols And one of the Elders answered saying to mee Now one of the Elders by way of conference shewes Iohn who this multitude of thanksgivers are as did the Angel to Zacharie Chap. 1. v. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 answered for asked by a metalepsis of the consequent for the antecedent usual to the Hebrewes who frequently For answer use ask for hear speake c. because ordinarilie questions are answered they that speak are heard c. One Lyra laugheth at such who make this Elder to be Pope Silvester Who this Elder was indeed wel he might for Iohn could not learn any thing of him but he himself is as ridiculous in making Peter the Apostle to be this One. Now where hath he this but from his owne foolish invention Others therefore say more probablie that it was Isay the Prophet who speakes in the words of this Elder Chap. 1.18 Chap. 19.10 but whosoever he were it seemes he sate neere unto Iohn was perhaps the same who bade him Chap. 5.5 not to weep Hee asketh who they are whence they came not as if he knew it not but hence to take occasion for to instruct him therein as if he should say knowest thou not who these are clothed in white I will shew thee these are c. Thus he stirs up Iohn diligently to observe and mind this multitude as beeing matter full of comfort both for him and us For if we make white our garments in the blood of the Lamb we may then be certainly perswaded that after the troublesome warfare of this present life we shall be partakers of the like victorie happinesse with them in heaven Now he describeth the multitude by two notes The first is taken from their former afflicted condition which came out of great tribulation this is a paraphrase of the martyrs induring with patience most cruel persecution and all kinde of torments for the sake of Christ as also of all other faithfull professours who through the manifold troubles of this wretched life have attained the port of eternall happines For howsoever some mens afflictions are greater then others yet of necessity all that will live godly in this world must through manifold tribulations enter into the kingdome of God Came out that is obtained a glorious victory by the power of God howbeit to the world they seemed as lost which is partly to teach us that we should not dream of delights and pleasures in this world but prepare our selves for the crosse of Christ And partlie to comfort us least we should faint under the same for howsoever our tribulations are great yet we shall come out and be conquerours And have washed their robes It is strange that Erasmus should rather read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enlarged then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have washed seeing al our most approved copies so have it the analogie of this place and that in Rev. 1.5 1 Ioh. 1.17 doe necessarily lead unto it for a reason is here given how they came to have their garments white viz. by washing them in the blood of the Lambe And this is the second signe or note of the godlie taken from their faith constancy Their white robes set forth their righteousnes and purity see Chap. 6.11 This they have not by their owne blood that is by the merit of martyrdom or sufferings but by the blood of the Lambe that is by the alone merit of Christ For this whitenes comes by faith by which the godlie apply the merits of Christs blood unto themselves as Rom 3.25 God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnes for the remission of sins that are past Whosoever therefore seeks to wash their robes in their owne merits satisfactions popish masses purgatorie or indulgences they appertaine not to this multitude for they cast of the blood of the Lambe He saith in the preterperfect tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have washed and not in the present tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they wash to signifie that if by faith wee are not washed in this life there shall not be afterward any more a washing or purging from sin And made them white All other blood makes red and staineth How we are made white by the blood of the Lambe but the blood of Christ purgeth us from all sin 1 Ioh. 1.7 makes white as snow Isai 1.18 therefore this is a washing and whiting not of nature but of grace not of art but of the spirit 15. Therefore are they before the Throne Here the Elder declares unto Iohn the happines both of the martyrs and all other true beleevers The particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore notes the cause of this felicity that is how it flowes not from the whitenesse of their robes but because they are washed in the blood of Christ so that nothing hence can be gathered for to establish the merits of Saints Now he describeth this coelestiall
into the sea of this world causeth the same tumultuously to rage against Christ Or into the sea that is among peoples nations princes kings inforcing them to shed much innocent blood and dissipate many Churches This interpretation I confesse in it self is pious and true but doth not as I judge agree with the purpose of this vision my reason is because the devil from the beginning hath been a murderer seeking to devour the Church in which respect there was no use that this thing should be represented unto Iohn in obscure types I therefore doe again with the Catholick glosse compare the sounding of the second trumpet with the opening of the second seal The interpretation of the Catholick Glosse and understand it of the cruel persecutions of Romane tyrants and the remnant of the Church which was preserved from utter destruction For as at the opening of the second seal went forth a red horse that is the Apostolical and following Church appeared red with the blood of the martyrs so there by the founding of the second trumpet is shewed unto Iohn 1. Whence this bloody condition of the Church arose 11. How great evils she should suffer thereby 111. Wherein she ought to be comforted For the first a great mountain burning with fire should be cast into the sea The Scripture familiarly by mountaines notes kingdomes kings and tyrants because of their highnes that is their power and pride as Zach. 4.7 the Prophet thus speaketh concerning the Persian kingdom Who art thou O great mountain before Zerubabel Let us therfore understand this great mountain to be some powerfull kingdom having other kingdoms in subjection as at that time the Romanes had He saw this mountain burning with fire that is their Emperours in wrath cruelly raging against Christian religion This mountain was cast into the sea Now what is the meaning hereof The sea is a gathering of many waters The waters are peoples Chap. 17. by the sea therefore I understand all nations in subjection to the Romane Empire and among which the Christian Churches were here and there dispersed This mountain was cast into the sea that is violently nished upon the world not indeed of unbeleevers but of true belevers that is the Christian Church when as the Romane Emperours as Domitian Trajan Severus Diocletian Maximianus and others imitaring the tyranny of Nero persecuted the saintes even untill Constantines time What followed hereupon The third part of the sea became blood that is as we heard before at the opening of the second seale the Church was made red with the blood of martyrs so here this mountaine with a fierie rage oppresseth many thousands of saintes 9 The third part of the creatures died These are the slaughters Martyrdoms of infinite Christians put to death by the Romane tyrants for the confession of the name of Christ And there is an allegorical analogie betweene the sea and creatures in it the Church and faithfull living in the same And the third part of the ships were destroyed by ships we understand the Churches with their pilots or teachers for by ships Churches are signified many wherof were then lost and destroyed with the Apostles Bishops their worthy teachers these I say were crushed through the weight of this great mountaine not indeed eternally but corporallie onely Now touching this we are to consult with the Ecclesiastical histories of the Churches persecutions of which we have spoken somewhat on Chap. 6. which wil serve for an excellent commentarie on this place Certainely the ship or Church at Rome was in a special manner made red with blood for all her bishops or teachers as it is recorded unto Melchiades suffered Martyrdome under those tyrants Thus therefore this trumpet allegorically explaineth the efficient cause of the second horses rednesse and further amplifies the grievous outragiousnesse thereof But what reason is there Why onely one third of the sea was made blood that the whole sea was not turned into blood and that all creatures ships died perished not but onely a third part I have shewed that this manner of speech is taken out of Ezech. 5.2 Now there the Prophet is commanded not onely to destroy one third part of his hair but the three thirds thereof thereby signifying a totall destruction But here the mountaine shall only make red one third part of the sea and kill the third part of creatures cause the third part of ships to perish which undoubtedly was for the comfort of Iohn and the faithful for however this mountaine were great and rushing with a mighty violence labours to fill all places with fire and blood yet should he be able to hurt but one third part of the Christian Church For two thirds shal bee preserved in safety And the truth hereof is confirmed by histories The fulfilling of this type for both in Rome and all other kingdomes the greater part of Christians were safely kept in the midst of the most dangerous cruel persecutions yea the blood of the martyrs was as it were the seed of the Church for the more Christians were put to death by tyrants the more their number increased in so much that many times even the executioners themselves beholding the confession courage constancie of martyrs became Christians and obtained the same crown of martyrdom with them Moreover it is for the Churches comfort that this burning mountain is cast into the sea for by water the fire is extinguished However therefore tyrants doe much rage for a time yet at length they shall perish the victory shall remain on the Churches side for by faith we overcome the world 1 Ioh. 5.5 The Catholick Glosse interprets this mountain not unfitly of the Romane Empire great indeed yet thrown into the sea which is much greater The sea swallowed up this great mountain and so consumeth and deitroyes the same By the sea he understandeth Christs kingdom of far greater power then the Romane signifying that the Romane tyranny should be swallowed up by Christs kingdome for however Christ seems to bee overcome in his afflicted members yet in truth he conquereth all his tyrannical adverlaries for the gates of hell shall not prevaile against the Church Matt. 16.18 Thus sad and joyfull things are here mixed together by which we see that the iteration of this vision touching the bloody condition of the Church is not in vain Moreover I understand the sounding of this trumpet to be from Domitians time under whom Iohn was banished untill Constantine who repressed the tyranny of his Copartners in the Empire and restored peace unto the Church about the yeere of our Lord 312. The sounding of the third trumpet 10 And the third Angel sounded there fell a great Star from heaven burning as it were a lampe and it fell upon the third part of the rivers and upon the fountaine of waters 11 And the name of the Starre is called Wormewood and the third part of the
Constantius but overcome by banishment at length he yeelded to Valens and Vrsacius Arians to the end he might by this apostasie regaine the Romish chaire His successour Felix II. was a professed Arian Yea all the Bishops of the East except Athanasius and Paulinus as the said Ierom witnesseth against the errours of John were infected with the Arian pest Besides how the following Romane Bishops have behaved themselves may be seen by the histories of Platina Balaeus and others who have recorded their lives and Acts. By the Fountaines I understand the holy scriptures namely the living fountaines of Israel Psal 68.27 By the waters the doctrines and comforts contained in them Now how far this falling starre infected the rivers fountains waters here followes 11. And the name of the starre is Wormwood He describeth the apostasie of this siarre by the effects it is called Wormwood not by a proper name but from the events For by pestilent institutions he did make bitter the third part of the waters that is of the doctrines and comforts of the scriptures turning the same into a deadly wormwood not indeed naturally for howsoever in this respect wormwood bee a bitter herbe yet it is medicinal causeth digestion but theologically it beeing a scripture phrase signifies a vile depravation of justice and equity as Amos 5.7 Yee who turn justice to Wormwood Ier. 9.15 23.15 And sometimes Gods grievous plagues and judgements I will feed them even this people with wormwood The sence then seemes to be thus that these Apostates should make the waters of the holy scriptures so bitter that whosoever drinketh thereof should hazard their eternall salvation Hee alludes undoubtedly to the bitter waters of Marah which the Israelites could not drinke Exod. 15.25 To this bitternes appertaine the horrible confusions of the Eastern and Western Churches by the Arians the contentions of Bishops the oppositions of Councils each to other condemning rejecting and persecuting one the other to the great scandall of the heathens disturbance and destruction of Christian Churches The which Emperours sometimes occasioned otherwhile connived at and sometimes wanted power to suppresse the pride of Bishops beeing lifted up with ambition and envie one against the other they having before put to much power into their hands Of which read the Ecclesiasticall histories of Socrates Sozomenus Theodoretus Evagrius Nicephorus even from the time of Sylvester untill Leo Gregorie For so long I judge that the sound of this trumpet continued Howbeit wee are to take notice that the Church was not destitute of comfort in these evill times For not all the rivers nor all the waters were made bitter neyther were all men killed with Wormwood but a third part onely For Christ even in the midst of all this bitternes and ruin of Bishops did still preserve a Church unto himself And indeed histories aboundantly testifie that there were many faithfull and sound professours of the faith of Christ who resisted the pride and arrogancie of the Romish Bishops as for example the Councill of Carthage of which Augustine was president openly reproved and suppressed the affected tyranny of three Popes viz. Sozimus Boniface Caelestinus over the Affrican Churches The sound of the fourth trumpet 12. And the fourth Angel sounded and the third part of the Sunne was smitten and the third part of the Moone and the third part of the stars so as the third part of them was darkened and the day shone not for a third part of it and the night likewise 13. And I beheld and heard an Angell flying thorow the middest of heaven saying with a loud voyce Woe woe woe to the inhabiters of the earth by reason of the other voyces of the trumpets of the three Angels which are yet to sound THE COMMENTARIE ANd the fourth Angel sounded This Angel sounding the third part of the Sun and Moon and stars was darkned so as the day shone not for a third part of it and the night likewise The former wonders happened here below in the earth sea and waters but these things following are above in the heaven coelestiall signes Riberas Andreas opinion and stars Andreas Ribera and some others understand this trumpet to denote the wonders foretold in Ioel. 2. and Matth. 24. There shall bee signes in the Sun Moon and Starres c. the which should happen alittle before the day of judgement But as yet we are not come to the trumpet praefiguring the end of the world as we shall see by that which followeth Neyther is it probable that these things should be represented unto Iohn in obscure types seeing he well knew they should come to passe as beeing foretold by the Prophets Christ the Apostles Neither doth the praediction of Christ agree with what is here said touching the defect of the third part of the lights Indeed there may bee some allusion in this trumpet to the last signes But without doubt other events are noted by the same Lyra understands the fourth Angel of Eutyches Lyraes opinion who confounding the two natures of Christ said that the divinity was first changed into the humanity the humanity again into the divinity By which pestilent heresie he darkened the third part of the Sun that is of the divinity the third part of the Moon that is of the Church the third part of the stars that is of Bishops of whō many were infected with this heresy a third part of the day Bullingers interpretation Francis Lamberts opinion of the night that is the scriptures of the old new testament Bullinger interprets this allegorie after the same manner yet applies it not to the heresie of Eutyches but of Pelagius Franciscus Lambertus expounds it in a generall way Christ the Sunne shall be smitten when the light of his truth shall be hid then also the Moon the Church and stars the teachers shall faile but he shewes not when and how this was accomplished For my part howbeit the apparitions of this trumpet doe much agree with the events of the sixt seale for as here so there the light of the Sunne Moone and Starres are said to be darkened yet I judge there is a manifest difference For here onely the third part of lights is darkened but there a total defect is spoken of besides the Analogie of the seales and trumpets is to be kept unto what possibly we can Whether the fourth trumpet doth agree with the sixt seale Now there the total Apostasie from the faith by the darkening of true doctrine under Antichrist is denoted but here the beginning and growth thereof onely certain therfore it is that the total obscuration of the Sunne shal be at the sounding of the fift trumpet following So that I doe here again follow the Ecclesiasticall Glosse that the wonders of this fourth trumpet agree with that which happened at the opening of the fourth seale As therefore we saw there a pale horse with
Lord said unto my Ladie sit thou at my right-hand c. And unto other images thus S. Peter S. Paul S. Nicolas S. Magdalene have mercie on us save us c. Is not this in workes to deny God and Christ the onely Saviour albeit in the words of the Creed they doe professe him They teach that the remission of sins righteousnesse and eternal life is to be sought for in the merits of humane workes as penance satisfactions Iubilees indulgences masses exorcismes processions pilgrimages purgatorie c. Is not this whatsoever they professe a denying of the blood and merit of Iesus Christ The Pope boasteth to be the Vicar of Christ the Head and Monarch of the Church on earth But Christ neyther appointed nor gave any such office unto the Church Read 1 Cor. 12.8 and Ephes 4.11 where the distinct orders and office which Christ gave unto the bodie are all reckoned up Now if any man takes upon him to bee a Kings Vicar without his appointment is not such a one the kings enemie Ioh. 19.12 as they said in the Gospell whosoever maketh himself a king speaketh against Caesar The Pope therefore arrogating to himself the title of Christs Vicar doth thereby plainely prove that he is Antichrist Christs adversarie The Pope will be adored as God In Donat. Constant dist 96. taking divine honour unto himself Steuchus saith Constantine adored the Pope as God Bloudus saith all the Princes of the earth adore and worship the Pope as the chiefe God Mantuan thus writeth concerning the pope Great Caesar with victorious kings Who golden crownes doe weare They doe adore his footsteps Who the double sword doth beare The Fathers of the Lateran Council gave this blasphemous applause to the Pope Thou art all things and above all things To thee is given all power in heaven and in earth And another Poet thus Oraculo vocis mundi moderaris habenas Et merito in terris diceris esse Deus By thy unerring word thou rulest over all And fitt it is a god on earth men should thee call The titles of some bookes lately dedicated unto the Pope are thus PAVLO V. VICE DEO To Paul the fift in place of God The letters of which title in Latine doe pecisely expresse the number of the BEASTS name 666. doth he not therefore deny God and shew himself to be the very Antichrist seeing he thus presumptuously takes a deity to himselfe Touching mariage meats fasting c. He binds where God unlooseth looseth where God binds Now is not this in pride to lift up himself both against and above the Lord He will not that the scriptures should bee beleeved no neither God himselfe otherwise then he approves off Enchi de script de authorit scriptu lib. 1. cap. 10. sect 3. The scripture is not authentick saith Eckius but by the authoritie of the Church And Stapleton neyther doe we beleeve God but for the Church How therefore can he himself eyther beleeve in or call on the name of God He hath made himself to bee the GREATEST high-priest of the Church whereas Christ is called the GREAT High-priest thereof Heb. 4. 12. By how much therefore greatest is more then great by so much the Pope hath lift himself up above Christ To be short he not onely weakens but labours wholy to take away all faith out of the harts of the Godly not onely in making the scriptures which is the rule of faith to depend on his will but also in denying and comdemning all certainty and confidence of grace mercie and salvation and on the contrarie he will have the conscience to be in perpetuall trouble fear and doubtings I forbear to speake more these things are sufficient to shew how in the Papacie the Sun was darkened by the smoake of hell And the aire by reason of the smoake of the pit The Sun being darkned the aire of necessitie must be so likewise What is meant by the darkening of the aire For the aire darke in it self is enlightned by the Sun Lyra well understands by the aire the Church because the Church receives her light from Christ as doth the aire from the Sun Now the Church vanished out of the sight of men when she lay hid and buried as it were under the smoke of this pit beeing changed into the chaire and kingdom of Antichrist At first the state of the Church was oeconomicall wherein Christ as the onely father of his houshold taking a far journy even to heaven appointed many servants over his familie the Church and howsoever he gave unto them diversitie of talents or gifts yet equall power in the dispensation thereof But Antichrist having possessed the chaire of VNIVERSAL pestilence altered this oeconomicall state into a Monarchie and was acknowledged in stead of Christ to be the priest and head of the Church But thou wilt say was Christ now without a Church had he quite forsaken and lost his spouse These indeed are the objections of the Romish Parasites but they are idle and frivolous For in the midst of the confusions of Antichrist Christ as we heard before preserved unto himself out of everie tribe and nation tongue 144000 sealed ones So that there was a Church even in the bowels of Popery although it were not in the least the Papall Hierarchie which caried the title thereof We may also interpret the aire to be the holy Scriptures or the ministry of the Church for as the aire instrumentally brings the light of the Sun unto us so by the holy Scriptures and the opening of them the light of the glorious Gospell of Christ doth brightly shine in our harts But now this aire was darkened viz. by a fatal eversion of the word and the whole ecclesiastical order But I rather approve the former sence For touching the ecclesiasticall order how it began the historie of the locusts will shew 3. And there came out of the smoake Locusts We have heard three effects of this Apostaticall Star viz. the opening of the bottomlesse pit the smoake of the pit the darkening of the sun and aire Now the fourth followes a monstrous brood of Locusts came out of the smoake of the pit Locusts are a small kinde of vermine having weak wings The description and nature of Locusts lifting up themselves by flight so little from the earth that they seem rather to leap then to fly In Africa Syria and the Indies they are bigger of bodie and stronger of wings they are verie hurtfull to the herbs fruites and trees upon which they feed and by touching infect them in sommer time they leap make a creaking with their wings Among the ten plagues of Egypt the Locusts were the eight beeing brought by an East-winde over the whole land Exod. 10.13 Ioel. 1.6 In Ioel also the Lord threatneth the Israelites with Locusts having teeth like Lions alluding allegorically unto the Babylonians Here also the whole description argues The Locusts
events of the Church For it was written within and without as we heard Chap. 1.7 and Ezech. 2.10 This little booke Christ both opened and held open teaching us that as Iohn so all the teachers of the word must ask of Christ and receive out of his hand the doctrine of salvation which they are to propound unto the Church but not from the hand of Satan or Antichrist Now he exhibiteth a booke open because the holy scriptures doe open and manifestly set forth the mysteries of our salvation Thus we see the decrees of the Romish Antichrist the traditions of Popes and Councils the humane Philosophie and subtilties of Sophisters are to be quite banished out of the Church It is expressely added Of the Angel that stood upon the earth and sea that we might confidently rest on the power of Christ and acknowledge him alone to be the revealer of the heavenly truth and so desire nothing as necessarie to salvation but what we take out of his hand 9. Take it and eat it up This is the other commandement Bookes of paper or parchment are not to be eaten properly as not beeing fit food for man but they are said to be eaten up metaphorically when they are so carefully read and throughly taken notice of that we are able promptly to rehearse and discourse of the contents thereof So a man is said to have devoured Virgil Cicero who is fullie acquainted with them and hath them as it were by heart So Cicero called M. Cato a devourer of bookes because he was an insatiable reader Thus as the Prophet in Ezech. 3. so John here is commanded to eat up the booke he received of Christ that is well to understand and as it were hide the same in the bowels of his heart that so he might deliver no other doctrine unto the Church but what hee had received from Christ Now whether this booke were eaten up trulie or in a vision onely makes little to the purpose the latter is most probable For all these things were don by a vision Here the ministers of the word are taught earnestly to devoure or eat up the doctrine of salvation divinely written received from Christ that is diligently to read understand search meditate as it were to turne it even into their verie moisture blood For such onely can faithfully instruct the Church in the knowledge of the truth who after this manner meditate in the law of the Lord day night On the contrary their sluggishnesse is condemned who though they love to be called Bishops Archbishops Patriarchs of the Church yet in the mean while are little or nothing acquainted with the scriptures of God And it shall make thy belly bitter He preadmonisheth Iohn of a double effect of the booke sweet in the mouth bitter in the belly Sweet things are delightfull to the palate bitter things provoke to vomit Hereby signifying that one effect thereof should be sweet the other troublesome the nature whereof is expounded in the following verse He fore shewes it should be sweet to stir him up the more earnestly to eat up the booke he tels him also that it should be bitter that he might not afterward bee offended thereat but know that this bitternesse should bee recompensed with much sweetnesse Then I tooke the booke He shewes his readinesse in eating the book for neither the difficulty of the command nor the bitternesse of the book dishartens him shewing us that we are readily to submitt unto the command of God not to be dismayed at any hardships or difficulties whatsoever Now he ate the booke not really but in vision onely as I said before signifying that he most readily accepted the worke imposed upon him of which it followeth And it was sweet in my mouth Here the foresaid effects follow This booke being eaten was sweet in the mouth and bitter in the belly the first signifies the sweetnesse of the word as Psal 119.103 How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then hony to my mouth Ierem. 15.16 Thy words were found I did eat them thy word was unto mee the joy rejoycing of myne heart This is the proper effect of the word it brings joy to the heart comfort to the conscience yea by how much faithfull teachers doe feel this sweetnesse by so much the more they preach the Gospell chearfully But the effect thereof is bitter by accident because the preaching of the word occasioneth most painefull grypings of the belly as the hatred of the world persecutions banishments martyrdomes This effect Christ foretold unto his disciples They shall put you out of their synagogues Ioh. 16.2 whosoever killeth you will thinke that he doth God service But what use was there to reveale this in a type unto John seeing it was long before plainely foretold in the written word It was altogether needfull considering that this bitternesse doth not properly denote the calamities already past under the four trumpets but to come in the end of the fift sixt under the kingdome of Antichrist the which we shall heare in the following Chapter namely the combats of the third Act of this Vision He foretold them therefore unto Iohn that he might not bee offended for he had already experience hereof beeing sent into exile by Domitian notwithstanding Christ doth not properly intend this here but praefigures in his person the future calamities of the witnesses of the truth 11. And hee said unto me To wit the former voyce from heaven Thou must againe prophesie This commandement is taken diversly Lyra thou must write downe more prophesies to wit those which follow in this booke But to write more things is not againe to prophesie c. Thomas Rupertus and some others understand it historically of Iohns beeing restored unto his Church as if he had said Thou must after the death of Domitian returne from Patmos the place of thy exile unto Ephesus and preach againe the Gospell or as if it were a promise of writing his Gospell after the Revelation The which Ribera refuteth This saith he I approve not of for to put prophesying in stead of preaching the Gospell is new which reason is not solid he adds another that seeing John was gifted with the fulnesse of the holy Ghost therefore he needed not to eat up the booke eyther for to preach or to write the Gospell wherefore he saith the sense is thus that although Iohn hitherto had prophesied many things concerning the last times notwithstanding there remained as yet many things of the same nature which he was to prophesie of against the gentiles c. The which is one with the opinion of Lyra which Alcasar also with his subtilties doth at last come unto But hee needed not to eat up the booke in this respect seeing before he had received a commandement to write the whole Revelation allthough I grant that Lyras opinion touching the promise of Iohns restitution is
4. 3. From the efficacie and authority of their office v. 5. 6. II. Their warre with the beast where 1. we have the description of the beast his hostile invasion and victorie ver 7. 2. The martyrdome of the prophets and place of reproach v. 7. 8. 9. 3. The joyes of the wicked for the slaughter of the prophets with the cause of this their great rejoycing vers 10. III. The avengement of the prophets where 1. we have their restoring to life vers 11. 2. The astonishment feare of the wicked ibid. 3. Their glorious ascending up into heaven v. 12. 4. The shaking and ruin of Antichrists kingdome IV. An acclamatory conclusion of the end of the Churches calamities of judgement at hand v. 14. The latter part the seventh trumpet sounding declares the change of the Churches warfare in three particulars 1. An heavenly triumph because the kingdomes of the world were become Gods and Christs ver 15. 2. A triumphant song of the first companie viz. of the four and twenty Elders whose reverend cariage gratulatorie hymne is recited in which 1. they give thankes to Christ for freeing his Church and kingdom from the tyrannie of the adversaries v. 17. 2. They declare the vain fretting wrath of the wicked hereat v. 18. 3. They proclaime the resurrection of the dead with the last judgement ibid. 4. They denounce rewards unto the godly and punishment unto the wicked ibid. The excecution of judgement on the godly ungodly To the godly heaven is opened that they might see Iesus Christ the Ark upon the wicked are sent lightnings thunders eternal haile The first part of the Chapter Of the reformation of the Church by the two witnesses under the Westerne Antichrist 1. And there was given me a reed like unto a rod and the Angel stood saying Rife and measure the Temple of God the Altar them that worship therein 2. But the Court which is without the Temple leave out and measure it not for it is given unto the Gentiles the holy City shall they tread under foot fourtie and two moneths 3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses they shall prophesie a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes clothed in sakcloth 4. These are the two Olive trees and the two candlestickes standing before the God of the earth 5. And if any man will hurt them fire proceedeth out of their mouth and devoureth their enemies if any man will hurt them he must in this manner be killed 6. These have power to shut heaven that it raine not in the dayes of their prophecie and have power over waters to turne them to blood and to smite the earth with all plagues as often as they will 7. And when they shall have finished their testimony the beast that ascendeth out of the bottomlesse pit shal make warre against them shall overcome them and kill them 8. And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city which spiritually is called Sodome and Egypt where also our Lord was crucified 9. And they of the people and kindreds and tongues nations shall see their dead bodies three dayes and an halfe shall not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves 10. And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoyce over them and make merry shall send gifts one to another because these two Prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth 11. And after three dayes and an halfe the Spirit of life from God entred into them they stood upon their feete great feare fell upon them which saw them THE COMMENTARIE ANd there was given mee a reed This is a generall prophesie touching the restoring of the Church beeing declyned under Antichrist Before Iohn was commanded againe to prophesie But now to measure the temple of God with a measuring reed that is to prophesie of the measuring of the temple of God which should be afterwards in the times of Antichrist The measuring of the temple is the reformation of the Church The measuring of the temple signifies the building repairing thereof as appeares if this prophesie bee compared with that in Ezech. 40.41 c. unto which this place doth allude The Temple of God signifies the Church as almost all interpreters both ancient moderne understand it and indeed the words here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 temple of God are so taken 1 Cor. 3.16 2 Cor. 6.16 2 Thess 2.4 They who apply this to the temple of Jerusalem are refuted by the time it self for when these things were spoken unto John that temple with the city beeing utterly destroyed was never any more to be restored Lyra Lyras frivolous interpretation doting as his manner is applies it to the festivitie of the dedication of temples instituted by Pope Felix about the yeere 525. at which time the Bishop holding in his hand a sprinckling reed goes about the outward walles of the temple as if he were to measure the same and within on the floore from one corner thereof unto another he thwartwise writes downe the letters of the Greek alphabet and so measures the space within The words therefore Rise and measure he will have to be meant of Pope Felix speaking to every Bishop about the dedication of temples the court leave out or cast forth because masse may not be celebrated except the place be consecrated But I passe by these fopperies For Ribera and Alcasar themselves acknowledge that the Temple here signifies the Church of God Now let us see what instrument hee is to use what to doe with it wherefore and when First hee shewes the instrument A reed like unto a rod was given mee to wit by the Angel who before commanded him to eat up the booke and againe prophesie that is by Christ Ribera wel observeth that it was not a writing pen but a measuring reed because it is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like to a rod that is a great measuring staffe with which Architects use to mete plats of ground and buildings a measure of six cubites and a handbreth Ezech. 40.5 The Rod wherewith the Church is measured What is meant by the measuring rod of the Church is nothing else but the word of God the most perfect rule of faith and Church discipline Rupertus acknowledgeth it to be the authoritie of the Evangelical scripture So that this reed is indeed the same little booke which Christ gave unto John to eat it up the which is here againe delivered to him under the type of a reed or rule in regard of the measuring worke here enjoyned Thus also my Anonymus above 260 yeeres agoe The rod saith he is the sense of the scripture because as a rod of diverse colours it chastiseth sinners Rise and measure the Temple of God First he must measure the Temple Altar Worshippers therein Secondly leave or cast forth the inward court The reading of both is somewhat
different yet the sense is al one After 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rod some bookes read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saying rise as if the reed it self had said it The old version seems to read after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for he renders it And it was said to mee to wit by the Angel We here and so our translation follow the reading of Montanus who after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Angel stood or stood by saying c. He is commanded therefore to measure the temple c. beeing a plaine allusion as before I shewed unto the prophesie of Ezech. Chap. 40. where the Angel is commanded to measure the new temple with a reed The prophesie of Ezech. touching the measuring of the temple is spirituall in which vision God promised the restauration of the temple destroyed by the Babylonians not indeed materially but spiritually under the Gospel For the outward temple built by Zerubbabel after their returne doth not at all answer to the dimensions of that vision neither shall any one be like unto it and therefore that measuring was a prophesie of the future reformation of the spirituall temple by Christ By the like metaphor the restoring of Ierusalem is promised in Zach. 1.16 My house shall be built in it saith the Lord of hostes a line shall be stretched forth upon Ierusalem So here by the like reason in that Iohn is bid to measure the temple is signified that the same should be so wasted rent and overthrowen as that of necessitie it must be measured that is reformed built againe This worke Iohn is commanded to set himself upon that is by this type to foretell what should come to passe viz. that after Antichrist had taken possession wasted oppressed the temple of God then Christ by giving the measuring reed unto his two witnesses would againe measure repaire wholy renew the same Thus we se that this commandment of measuring the Temple is a propheticall promise of the reformation of the Church wasted and ruinated by the Westerne Antichrist Hence the Papists fiction is refuted that the visible Church can never degenerate The visible Church could erre seeing it had need of measuring erre fal from her integrity But the thing it self shewes the vanity hereof The old Temple according to Ribera was a type of the Church Now we know that might be was laid wast destroyed yea the old Church it self very often degenerated The new Church also shal be possessed troden under foot by Antichrist so need a new measuring or reparation Wherefore it cannot be denied but that the Church may be destroyed degenerate from the faith of Christ unto Antichrist Furthermore it is manifest that the Church dissipated by Antichrist neither can be nor shal be measured by any other instrument then by the reed of the word contained in the holy Scriptures as being indeed the onely true infallible rule Psal 45 7. according to that of the Psalmist The scepter or rod of thy kingdome is a scepter of righteousnes Let us therfore wholy cast of all other adulterate false rules as humane traditions decrees of councils Popes unto which the foolish builders giving way have destroyed the Temple of God from whose corruptions it shal be restored as from death to life by the reed of Gods word Measure the Altar also For the understanding of this we must have recourse to the structure of the old Temple for the spirit of God is pleased in this prophesie to shadow out the state and worship of the new Church by the type and service of the Old not as if such types were to remaine under the Gospell but because the things signified by them are fitlie applied unto the new Church We have the description of the tabernacle in the latter part of Exodus of Solomons temple in some Chapters of 1 King from Chap. 4. unto 8. The Apostle also Hebr. 9. rehearseth the parts of the tabernacle To be short we have a worthy portraiture of the Temple in Ezech. Chap. 40.41.42 divided into foure parts I. There was an outmost court in which the people were conversant II. A more inward or middle court for the keeping of the Leviticall instruments making ready of the sacrifices III. The most inward or court of the Priests in which was the great brazen Altar for burnt-offerings IV. The Temple it self in the entrie wherof stood the golden Altar of perfumes with the golden candlestick table within behinde the vaile was the sanctuary in which was the Ark of the covenant This Temple was a type of the Church we have shewed wherfore he was commanded to measure the same He must also measure the Altar to wit the golden Altar from the foure corners whereof hee heard a voyce Cha. 9.13 This was a type of Christ But how Is he commanded to measure Christ yea verely For Christ under a pretence of his name was thrust out of his possession by Antichrist who suppressed the faith turned Christian libertie into miserable servitude The Altar therefore of Christ shal be measured when as the faith of Christ shal be freed from the perfidiousnes of Antichrist Christian liberty from his tyranny The Altar indeed by a synecdoche may be taken for the whole worship of God But we shal see by by why it is rather to be understood of the golden perfumatory then of the brazen Altar of burnt-offering The building of the old temple Thus also my Anonymus the Altar that is Christ And them that worship therein He meaneth the residue of sincere worshippers in the midst of Antichristian defilements These he is commanded to measure that is as Ribera wel expounds it to number and sever as chosen members of the true Church and not to be delivered unto Antichrist he therefore acknowledgeth that God will reserve some true worshippers of Christ in the midst of Babylon that is the Papacie So then these worshippers are the same who in Cha. 7. are said to be 144000 sealed in the foreheads out of every tribe and nation tongue Which serves for to comfort the godlie to refute that daylie irksome song of the Papists viz. if the Papacie were not the Church then Christ before Luther had neither body nor members Although true it is this measuring of the Temple and Altar leads us to a farther thing promising moreover a purging of doctrine discipline as we have seen the same accomplished in our times Therein No man did worship in the Temple properly so called except the high-priest alone all other worshippers stood in the court turning their faces onely towards the sanctuary Yet here the faithfull are said to worship in the verie temple of the sanctuarie because they are the true members of the temple yea the temple of God it self 1 Cor. 3.16 2 Cor. 6.6.16 as the Apostle saith Know yee
false that no other cause can be given of the translation of Henoch and Elias without this fable For they were taken up alive that they might be examples to the world how much the Lord accounts of godlinesse and that there is another life prepared for the faithfull in heaven Now to these two he vouchsaved this grace before others because he was better pleased with them then with others That Henoch and Elias should yet live a mortal life be subject to death is a verie fable For how can they prove this fiction And what mercie would there translation into heaven be if there they are reserved unto a more cruel death Wheras the Scripture teacheth that to them who are eyther in paradise Luk. 16.26 or in the place of torment there is no going forth or returning Passing by therefore this fable let us now goe foreward In Austins notes or the Revelation Whether the two witnesses be the two testaments attributed to Triconius the two witnesses are said to be the old and new Testament which Bede and Brightman follow and some others of ours as if the sence should be thus notwithstanding Antichrists treading down the scripture yet God would give it power to prophesie that is reprove his tyranny instruct the faithfull secretly mourning under the crosse in the way of life eternal For the Scriptures are Gods witnesses in the world against the wicked as Christ saith search the scriptures for they testifie of me Io. 5.39 Now thus far indeed it is true But I see not how the following attributes except it be by a harsh allegorie can be applied unto the scriptures viz. in that the witnesses are said to be clothed in sackcloth killed by the beast their carkeises thrown in the streets restored to life and ascend into heaven There are some who thinke that in the last times there shall come two most powerfull teachers who being indued with the power and spirit of Elias shal fulfill all these things literally both by prophesying and fighting against Antichrist But they doe acknowledge that this their opinion is uncertaine And therefore in as much as I finde nothing certainely concluded touching this matter by others and seeing the Lord for the present doth not suggest any thing unto mee I wil follow the opinion of Bullinger and some others of our best interpreters who understand the two witnesses indefinitely to be diverse reformers of religion in Antichrists times The Papists indeed imagine The two witnesses are indefinitely to be understood Lib. 3. de P. R. c. 6. that they are two strictly and no more But it is not credible that Antichrist sending forth infinite Locusts out of the smoke of hell into the Church Christ should raise up onely two witnesses besides it is impossible as we even now proved that the things spoken of v. 9.10 should be effected by two persons alone As for Bellarmins objections we shall have occasion to examin them hereafter We therefore by these two witnesses doe indefinitely understand a succession of certaine maintainers of Evangelical truthes against Antichrist Yet they are said to be two definitely both because they are but few in respect of the Locusts of whom the whole Christian world are full as also because in all matters of judgement two suffice to confirme a testimony that so we might neither be deceived by the applause of the multitude of Locusts nor offended at the fewnes of sincere teachers wherewith Antichrist upbraides us Besides in the last place as of old the Lord was pleased to use two witnesses as instruments in his hand for special deliverances of the Church Thus he sent two viz. Moses and Aaron unto Pharaoh for the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt Josuah and Caleb to search the promised land Zerubbabel Jehoshuah to bring back the people from Babylō unto which two there is here a plaine allusion in vers 4. As these two latter I say sufficed to deliver the people of God out of the first Babylonish and corporall captivity so two that is few prophesying witnesses shall suffice to deliver the Church from the second Babylonish spiritual captivity And thus much concerning the two witnesses Now what doe they They shall prophesie to wit againe according to the commandement Thou must againe prophesie We are not by prophesie strickly to understand a praediction of things to come but in a larger sense for the preaching of Prophetical Apostolical doctrines which were darkned yea troden down by Antichrist but again renewed by their prophesying that is by faithfull preaching unto the Church for Christ will give this unto them that is so arme them with an heroick spirit and qualifications as that they shal be able strongly to oppose and shake Antichrists kingdom which seemed to be so established throughout the Christian world as if it had been an invincible fortresse But when how long Two thousand two hundred sixtie dayes This againe is hard to be understood but we must looke back to what hath been treated of touching the fourty two moneths for it is cleare enough that by those moneths these dayes one and the same time is designed The Papists opinion touching these dayes refuted For fourty two equall moneths precisely consist of 1260 dayes but herein is the difference that the Papists restraine these moneths and these dayes astronomically unto three yeeres an half which is the time their supposed Antichrist shall reigne and these witnesses prophesie but this cannot be both because the fable of Antichrists standing so short a time hath been before refuted as also because it is contradictorie that the time of Antichrist and of the two witnesses should be of one continuance yet Antichrist should slay the witnesses after they had prophesied 1260 dayes rejoyce thereat with his followers Others interpret these dayes as the moneths also prophetically of so many yeeres taking the beginning eyther from Christs passion Another opinion not probable or from the time of Constantine or from the beginning of the Ottoman Empire whose opinions we have shewed to be very improbable because according to them the yeeres of treading downe the Church the prophese of the two witnesses should be expired now long agoe but this is not likely To be short others understand the XIII moneths the 1260 dayes The third and best opinion indefinitely for the time of the Churches oppression and of the prophesie of the witnesses defined indeed in Gods eternall comsell but hid unto us for the present that we should not curiously search ●●to that which God hath reserved to himselfe or by knowing the term to say with the wicked servant Luk. 12.45 My Lord delayeth his comming c. And this is the reason why the end of the world is hitherto kept secret from men The time therefore of reading down and of the witnesses shal be the same for all the while Antichrist shall tread the Church
with the Dragon doe altogether belong to Antichrists time But I thinke I can move here a far more difficult question A more difficult question about the woman that is whither this woman flying into the wildernes be not the same whom Iohn saw in the wildernes sitting on the scarlet coloured Beast or another of all which questions I wil speak a few things As for the first The Monkish fable touching Maries assumption is not hence proved This Vision makes nothing for the establishing of the Monkish dreames and pictures of the virgine Maries corporall assumption into heaven and placing her on the Throne of the Trinitie her beeing queen of heaven and so clothed as the woman here appeared to Iohn These are mere apocriphal fictions and contradictorie to Christian relegion Yea themselves also confesse that this type doth not in many things agree with their fables This woman is a type of the Churches birth under the New Testament alluding to the history of Christ beeing borne of the virgin Mary for the historie of Christs comming in the flesh doth partly literally partly allegorically very wel represent the future condition of the Church This woman brought forth a man childe A historical comparing of this type with Marie and Christ Mat. 2.13 so in the fulnes of time God sent his son made of a woman Gal. 4.4 The Dragon layes wait for the womans child so Herod the tyrant sought to kill Christ as soon as he was born The Woman with Eagles wings flyes into the wildernes so Mary being admonished of God fled with the child into the deserts of Aegypt The Woman was there sustained and kept 1260 dayes so Mary remained in Aegypt neer four yeeres untill the death of Herod The Dragon cast forth a flood of waters after the Woman to devour her So Herod after Maries flight murdered all the infants of Bethlehem of two yeeres old and upward that among them he might slay the womans child To be shortt the childe of the woman was caught up into heaven unto the throne of God and made the feeder ruler of all nations so Christ having finished the worke of our redemption ascended into heaven is set down on the throne of the Father having all power in heaven and in earth These things are now represented unto John not as historical seeing he was no way ignorant of them neither as things to come to passe afterward seeing they were already don but as types of future things mystically setting forth the future condition of the Church in this life For as the virgine Marie once brought forth Christ corporally so the Church continually as it were in travaile brings him forth in his members spiritually Se Gal. 4.19 Herod persecuted Mary with her child so that old Dragon by tyrants other enemies shal persecute the Church with her members The allegory of the Church Christs birth of the virgine Mary flying from the tyrant withdrew herself out of the sight of the adversaries yet she still had a beeing and was preserved and nourished in the deserts of Aegypt untill her return so the Church shunning Antichrist withdrew herself out of the eyes of the world yet had she a continuance still and was nourished and preserved in the wildernes of the world untill the measuring of the temple Christ the son of the woman being taken up into heaven was set on the throne of God so the faithfull at length shal be taken up into heaven and reign with Christ So that this type doth excellently represent the historie both of the birth of Christ and of the Church The woman represents Mary The child taken up into heaven Christ The Dragon persecuting the woman Herod the tyrant the taking up of the child unto Throne of God Christs ascention into heaven his sitting at the right hand of his Father Notwithstanding in a mystical sense which onely is intended in this prophetical Vision the woman is the Church the child of the woman her seed are the faithfull of all ages the Dragon is the Devill and all other persecuting tyrants of the Church Why the Church is represented under the type of a woman Furthermore it is not unusuall in scripture to compare both the true and false Church unto a woman as in Isai 54.1 it is said unto the true Church rejoyce O barren thou which didst not bear for more are the children of the desolate then of the married wife and Mica 7.8 the true Church saith to the false rejoyce not against me O mine enemie because I fall for I shall arise c. Hence generally the Church is called the spouse of Christ a chast and undefiled virgin so Chap. 19.7 she is called the wife and spouse of the Lambe The reason she is so called is both her spiritual marriage with Christ her bridegrome as also the weaknes of that sex for the Church being like unto a weak woman hath no humane strength to subsist of herself On the contrarie the Church of malignant men is compared to an adulterous woman Ierem. 3.1 to a whore and most impure harlot Ezech. 16. Reve. 17.18 Thus we se what this woman is I hope by this time Riberas first question is fully answered Now I come to his second question In what state the Church is here represented he rightly denies that the Church is represented in the first state or as it was before the comming of Christ although some doe thinke that there is an allusion unto Eve our first mother betwixt whose seed and the serpents God put enmity in the beginning but this is without al ground Neither was Iohn to be informed of the state of the ancient synagogue but of the condition of the new Church Now the other two things which he affirmeth are not true One that the state of the Church at Christs comming is not here spoken of for we have shewed the contrarie because the woman in travaile of Christ corporally was a type of the Church beeing in travaile with Christ spiritually The other that he refers the event of this type unto the last times of his feined Antichrist who shal never come As if the woman were not already long agoe fled into the wildernes persecuted by the Dragon in her flight as shall appeare more evidently by that which followes Lastly unto the third question viz. whither this woman flying into the wildernesse be the same that sate on the Beast Chap. 17. I say that she is and is not the which I thus manifest It is plaine that the woman represents the Church Now the Church by a diverse signification is taken eyther for the Church of the first begotten Heb. 12.22 which universally comprehends all the elect before and under the law Lib. 4. Epist 38. as also under the Gospel as Gregory affirmeth and this is the Catholick Church mentioned in the Creed or for the Church of the called which in the New
her power and principallity This admiration encreasing by little and little and turned into superstition by giving unto the Pope right of Vniversall jurisdiction with divine honour they made him to be the Antichrist And so much is signified by the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wondred after the Beast that is men being bewitched with the admiration of his power they worshipped him as god and subjected themselves by willing reverence under his feet adoring all his decrees and commandements as divine oracles for thus the Scripture usually speaks of divine worship Walke after the Lord your God Deut. 13.4 1 Sam. 7.2 for Worship God All the house of Israel rested after the Lord for persevered in his true worship So also of the false They committed fornication after strange gods for they worshipped idols Walk not after strange gods for Iudg. 1.17 Ier. 8.6.9 serve not the idols of the heathens with many the like places in Ieremie so that not a civill or forced but a religious and willing subjection is here signified Whence first we see that neither the old Romane Empire nor the Mahumetane kingdom is properly this Beast for they required and forced men to a civill obedience onely And hence Alcasars Glosse is frivolous and fabulous that persecution being renewed the nations of their own accord subjected themselves unto the Beast for no nation but by force of armes subjected its selfe unto the Romanes Secondly it appears that the throne which the Dragon gave to the Beast is not onely a secular Kingdome but also a sacred Monarchie and grounded on religion Thirdly it is cleare that this Beast is no other then the person whom the Apostle speaks of 2 Thess 2.4 Who opposeth and exalteth himselfe above all that is called God or that is worshipped that is the Romane Antichrist after whom the world hath wondred these thousand years ascribing unto him these verses of triumph By oracles of thine own voyce the world thou govern'st all And worthily a god on earth men think and do thee call And lately dedicated to PAVLO V. VICE DEO To Paul the fift being in Gods stead which letters in Latine doe expresly containe the number of the Beast 666. THE INVINCIBLE MONARCH OF THE CHRISTIAN COMMON-WEALTH AND MOST ZEALOUS PRESERVER OF THE PAPAL OMNIPOTENCIE And againe Thou art all in all and above all and to thee is given all power in heaven and in earth who saith My peace I give unto you my peace I leave with you And lastly who usurps all things unto himselfe which belong to God and to Christ he takes away the sins of the world rules from sea to sea is the Lion of the tribe of Judah the root of David the Saviour and light of the world c. Thus much touching the admiration But now who are these admirers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole earth in which we may observe two things first that this admiration is Catholike and universall Secondly that these CATHOLIKE ADMIRERS are said to be the earth that is all both great and smal bond and free given to earthly worship pomp wealth dignity and pleasure as it follows in ver 16. And therefore we must take heed not to be taken up with admiration of these admirers or follow them but rather mourn in regard of their stupidity and destruction 4 And they worshipped the Dragon this declares the former for whereas before he said they wondred after the Beast he now shews it to be the worshipping of the Dragon and attributing titles of divine majestie and power unto the Beast Religious admiration as the Scripture witnesseth is onely proper to God and Christ Deut 6.13 Mar. 4.10 Psal 97.7 Phil. 2.10 Psal 72.9 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve All the Angels of God adore him In the name of Jesus every knee shall bow before him the inhabitants of the desart shall fall down But these admirers adore the Dragon and the Beast and therefore attribute divine worship unto them And that we may not imagine it to be a civill worship the words and exclamations of these wondrers are added Who is like to the beast Who is able to make warre with him as making the Beast equall with God For by the first they extoll his majesty and by the latter the divine power of the Beast In imitation of the Scripture saying To whom will ye liken God What likenesse will ye make to him Who is like to me saith God As therefore the Saints and worshippers of God cry out Isa 40.18 Psal 113.7 Who is like the Lord our God O Lord who is like thee so the admirers of the Beast cry out Who is as the Beast Who is like him And as the Saints cry out to God Lord who shall resist thee Who shall withstand thy will so these idolaters cry out Who can fight with him So that by these expressions they liken the Beast to God and Christ yea if thou well observe it they make him greater for these exclamations are absolute negatives Who is like thee Who is able to fight with him as if they should say no man no not God nor Christ whereby they openly professe the Beast to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adversary to God Christ lifting himself above al that is called God This is one of the clearest argumēts proving the Beast to be Antichrist But how are they said to worship the Dragon Not by profession but in works For they religiously worship Saints and Angels in heaven who are not God They worship images of wood stone and brasse but all religious worship attributed to the creature is an honouring not of God but of the devill whatsoever the intention and profession of the worshippers be according to that of the Apostle That which the Gentiles sacrifice 1. Cor. 10.20 they sacrifice to devils and not to God And yet we know that the Gentiles as the Indians and Brasilians to this day did intentionally sacrito God As therefore they that worship Christ worship God so they that worship Antichrist worship the devil of whom he received his seat and power 5. And to him was givē a mouth speaking great things Thus much of the figure power worship of the Beast Now follows the declaration usurpatiō of that power received from the Dragon The which will be the lesse obscure because in part we have heard formerly the like in chap. 11. The declaration of the power is in this verse The usurpation in the two following This great powr is two fold 1. to blaspheme 2. Thes 2.9 2. to do Now this is said to be givē to the Beast But by whō by the Dragon the devil v. 2. for the cōming of Antichrist is after the efficacy of satan His mouth in figure is like a Lyons v. 2. but speaks like a man who is a blasphemer for metonymically the mouth is put for boldnes in evil speaking as a hard mouth is
an ill speaking mouth Great things blasphemies is put for great blasphemies which are rehearsed v. 6. Here observe that the little horn also Dan. 7. v. 8.20 hath a mouth speaking great things whence it is conjectured that by it Antichrist is shadowed out specially seeing the three following things are also attributed to him as blasphemies against the highest warre with the saints and the time of his rage to be XLII moneths vers 25. Historically indeed that horne seemes to be Antiochus the scourge of the Iewes but Mystically it figured Antichrist For as Antiochus afflicted the Iewish Church so doth Antichrist the Christian Thus we see that the old this new prophesie excellentlie agree both in phrases deeds and illustrate one the other And power was given him to do The first part of his power we have heard now follows the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 power of doing The OLD VERSION TO DO OR MAKE some copies adde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 warre which seems to be taken from v. 7. The sense is all one yet it is better to take it absolutely of making but is not making here put for sacrificing I wonder our Sophisters have not observed this that so they might make the beast a sacrificer or masse-priest But TO DO here is put for to rage and destroy according to his pleasure This is given him by the Dragon God permitting the same yet holding the bridle in the midst of the beasts rage And that we might not imagine the beasts fury to be absolute a term is prefixed unto him for the comfort of the godly Fourty two moneths his rage shall continue long but not alwaies What is meant by these moneths I have shewed on Chap 11. ver 2. The Gentiles shall tread down the holy city XLII moneths The time is the same because the History both there and here is all one so that the treading down of the city by the Gentiles is this very rage of the Beast here being to endure XLII moneths and it will clearly appeare by the sixt Vision treating of the destruction of the Whore and Beast that these moneths took their beginning at the Beasts ascention out of the bottomlesse pit and are now for the most part expired 6 And he opened his mouth in blasphemie The usurpation of his power followeth both by his mouth in this verse as also in action in the following He opened his mouth in blasphemie that is he began to blaspheme in a horrible manner These are the great things which were given to the Beast to vomit out with open mouth that is publikely and in the very height of pride and malapertnesse Now what are these but those great priviledges the Romish Beast boasteth of as that he is in Gods stead yea a god and Christs Vicar on earth Peters successour having alone the Keyes of Heaven that he is the invincible Monarch of the Christian world the Prince of Bishops the head and spouse of the Church the King of Kings the Lord of heaven earth and hell the alone interpreter of the holy Scriptures chiefe Judge of all religion having all laws and mysteries lockt up in his breast the chiefe decider of the Catholike faith judgeing all men but to be judged of none to whom none may say though he lead thousands of soules with him into hell My Lord the Pope why dost thou so to whom is given all power in heaven and in earth who opens and no man shuts shuts no man opens who loosing no man bindes and binding no man looseth forgiving iniquities taking away the sins of the world with many other blasphemies which proceed out of his lascivious mouth But distinctly or in particular the bent of his blasphemies are against God his name his tabernacle and them that dwell in heaven Now to shew again how he blasphemeth God and his name It is by doing that which the Apostle foretold of Antichrist and which we see the Pope of Rome to do even at this day viz. he opposeth and exalteth himselfe against all that is called God or that is worshipped so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God shewing himself that he is God for he arrogates to himself the name and honour of God suffereth his Clawbacks to cry out Who is like unto the Beast Who is able to make war with him he challengeth to himselfe all the rights and works of God that he can create God make some thing of nothing make the word of God that he cannot erre that his decrees are of like certainty and authority with the divine Scriptures that it is of necessity to salvation to be subject unto him that it belongs to him to give the kingdoms of the world to set up depose Kings as he lifteth c. All which things if the Pope doth what is left for God Is not this blasphemie against God his name The tabernacle of God is the Church in which God dwelleth this he also blasphemeth for he falsly affirmes himself to be the Head Bridegrom and Lord therof tyrannically oppresseth and infects her by the poison of wicked doctrine seduceth and as much as in him lies thrusteth her into eternall destruction by his lying signes and horrible idolatry Andreas understands this Tabernacle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be the flesh of Christ in which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dwelt with us Ioh. 1.14 This tabernacle of God he also blasphemeth divers waies for what blasphemie is more horrid against the Son of God then that the Pope should boast daily by his Locusts to create Christ of a piece of bread in the Masse to sacrifice and to destroy him What blasphemie more odious against the office of Christ then that the Pope boasting himselfe to be the greatest high Priest proudly should exalt himselfe as above Christ the great high Priest he denies that the alone sacrifice of Christ is sufficient for the expiation of the sins of the Church unlesse it be again and againe iterated by his Masse-priests he denieth that the merits of Christ alone suffice to take away sins the punishment thereof unlesse through his indulgences he adde a supply from the treasure of the Church which is the merits of the Saints Other things I passe by And them which dwel in heaven I see not why we may not understand these heavenly inhabitants properly of the Angels blessed souls triumphing with the Lamb in heaven for against these the Pope also poures forth his blasphemies more waies then one for will they nill they for his own gain sake he obtrudes false honour upon them makes them gods and builds temples altars and images unto them and by this worship exerciseth a most filthy trade and the most of them he forceth to succeed in the places of Heathenish idols and doth weary them as if they were houshold and tutelar gods with diverse troublesome and sordid services setting one over Hogs another Horses another Asses one over
omission of the article is of no waight his argument also proves nothing because a great and difinite number is put for an indefinite as Beda hath rightly observed At last he affirmeth that they are 144000. virgines to be converted to Christ both of the Iewes and Gentiles under Antichrist But he is deceived I. Touching the time of Antichrist which is now and hath been these many yeares and is not as he supposeth yet to come namely in the last foure yeares of the world II. Also in the Epithite of Virgines the which as afterward I will shew is not corporally but spiritually to be understood Alcasar makes these sealed Alcasars opinion to be the faithful of the Primitive Church under the Romane Emperours But he erreth for these as conquerours stood with the Lamb even while Antichrist reigned First therefore we are to hold that these 144000. sealed are the same spoken of Chap. 7. because this part of the Chapter doth altogether answer to the seventh Chapter in which as we said is conteined an antithesis of the third Act of the second Vision Secondly that this multitude of sealed ones are no other then the remnant of the womans seed with whom after her flight into the wildernes the Dragon made war Cha. 12.17 as appeareth by the description there added and repeated in the 12. verse of this Chapter Thridly that they are no other then those Saints to whom it was given to make warre with the Beast Chap. 13.7 Lastly that they are the faithful whether teachers or hearers of the godly I say who from Antichrists rising until the reformation withstood the tyranny of Popes and retained the purity of the Gospel to wit al the martyrs and professours touching whom see the Bookes of Martyrs and the Catalogue of the witnesses of the truth They are said to be sealed in the name of his Father To wit of the Lambes The Kings Bible reads it in the name of the Lamb and of his Father What is this but to shew that they constantly professed the doctrine of the Father and faith of the Lamb against Antichrist by an allusion unto the Character of the Beast For as the Beast imprints a Character in the right hand or forehead of his worshippers Chap. 13.16 which is an obligation to Antichrist So the Lamb imprints a Character in the foreheads of his worshippers The name of the father and of the Lamb which is a profession of the true Christian religion and open deniall and separating from Antichrists idolatry and abominations And I heard a voice from heaven We have heard who the multitude of the sealed are Their titles should now be spoken of in the next place but the joyfull shout of the inhabitants in heaven is put in between because of the preservation of so many sealed ones from the idolatry and tyranny of Antichrist and then their excellent commendations are afterward rehearsed The connexion and sence seemes to be obscure unto interpreters But I doe expound this part of the third Vision by that part of the second Vision in Chap. 7. touching the 144000. that were sealed seeing all things excellently accord There John saw the 144000. sealed in their foreheads here the same multitude standing with the Lamb. There he heareth an innumerable multitude clothed in white robes singing to God and the Lamb before the throne Here he heareth a voice as it were of many waters a voyce I say of harpers finging a new song There enquiring who they were arayed in white robes it is answered These are they which came out of great tribulation c. Here not enquiring he heareth from the company of the heavenly inhabitants These are they who are not polluted with women c. The Scripture interprets it selfe All things being thus alike containe the same history Thus we see that the whole Scripture especially the Revelation interprets it selfe But I will more clearely touch every particular There are three parts of the comparison First there John saw 12000. servants of the living God sealed in their foreheads by an Angell The comparing of the sealed here with these in Chap. 7. out of every of the tribes of Israel making together 144000. Here he seeth the same multitude of the sealed ones standing with the Lambe on Mount Sion The name of the Lamb and the name of his Father being written on their foreheads Thus he expoundeth what was that Seale of the living God In both places the multitude of the sealed signifies the combate of faithfull Martyrs and Professours whom the Lamb had reserved with himselfe these thousand yeeres on Mount Sion that is in the Church groaning under Antichrist even from the time of the Womans flight into the wildernesse until the new measuring of the Temple that is from the rising of Antichrist unto the reformation of the Church and doctrine accomplished in the age of our predecessours The second member of the comparison here followeth There John saw a great and innumerable multitude before the throne clothed in white robes in the sight of the Lamb and of all the Angels the foure and twenty Elders and of the foure Beasts and singing with a great voice salvation to God and the Lamb c. The which multitude we shewed to be the triumphant Church succeeding the Apostolicall times who having finished their warfare did now rest in heaven continually praysing God and the Lamb Here he heareth a voice from heaven as of many waters This is the voice of that innumerable multitude out of all nations and kindreds and tongues mentioned Chap. 7.9 for many waters as the Angell interprets it Chap. 17.15 are many peoples multitudes nations and tongues This voice by and by he calleth a new song In the beginning indeed he heard as it were a confused sound of a multitude but by little and little he more narrowly observed what and whose voice it was Even as the singing of Musicians afarre off seemes to be confused but by approaching nearer and nearer the gravity of their accord and sweetnesse of their harmony is more distinctly perceived Presently therefore he also heard as it were the sound of a great thunder which some apply to the terriblenesse thereof But this little agrees with the following Epithite and is repugnant to the scope of the harmony I therefore expound it of the vehemency of the voice viz. that now these singers did not lightly strike or passe thorow the eares of John but they thundred it out with all their might which undoubtedly denotes the vehement joy of the Saints in heaven At last he heard the voice of harpers He saith not as it were of harpers as before as it were of many waters as it were of thunder c. intimating that now he did plainely heare and perceive the harmonious accord of harpers playing on their harpes as being most delightfull artificious and sweet such as is the musick of most skilfull harpers In Chap. 5.8 The foure Beasts and foure and twenty
this Prophesie it is to be hoped that as these kings have begun already to make the whore naked so they shal also in due time most certainly perfect the same And shall eat her flesh Not in love as some have thought but in hatred By eating her flesh Now this cannot also be understood according to the letter for the kings which shal do this work are no Canibals or men-eaters of Brasilia Therfore most expound the flesh of the whore not corporally but mistically of the whores kitching fat revenues anuities vacancies commendums tithes and holy rents hitherto brought to Rome from all parts of Christendom with which the whore being fatted grew to such fleshinesse and great strength This flesh the kings shall eat by denying these revenues to the whore appropriating the same to their own provinces kingdoms churches schools hospitals and almes-houses So Bullin Illyr Chyt Artop Napier and others This sense agrees with the uncovering of the whore or certainly it notes the last degree of the same However it be this phrase of Scripture doth also in other places signifie great hatred persecution wounding and killing Iob 19.22 Psal 27 2 being taken from Beasts tearing the flesh of their prey as in Iob Why are yee not satisfied with my flesh When the wicked came upon me to eat my flesh they stumbled and fell on which place Augustine thus They eat our flesh saith he that persecute us Shall burn her with fire Rome I say that whorish seat and nest they shal take By burning destroy and burne This prophefie is so open and cleare touching the overthrow of Popish Rome as the Iesuites dare no more deny the same And therefore we here see that Papall Rome shall be made desolate not by the Turkes but by Christian KINGS the definite or certaine time thereof we know not yet by what goes before it may be gathered without obscurity that the time is near for some Kings have already begun to hate and forsake the whore making her naked and eating her flesh some of the Ten yet remain with her into whose hearts what the LORD will put for them to do himself knoweth Perhaps more shall forsake the whore And though some Kings of the Earth may remain to make war still against Christ Neverthelesse these also will not spare her flesh no more then others as the present times do witnesse for do they not equally gape after the holy Revenues Neither will they any more fight gratis for the Whore but sell their protection of her for filthy lucre emptying her Purse as much as they can Here by the way to gratifie the Reader I thinke good to set downe a prophesie taken out of an Ancient Munuscript found in the House of Salezianus and lately sent to mee which every one may credit so far as it likes him Certainly so much of it as concerns the destruction of Rome doth not aberre from the present Prophesie of his Booke Now the words are these There shall arise a King out of the Nation of the most Illustrious Lilie having a long Fore-head high Brows great Eyes and an Eagles Nose He shall gather a great Army and destroy all the Tyrants of his kingdome and slay all that flye and hide themselves in Mountaines and Caves from his face For righteousnesse shall be joyned unto him as the Bridegroome to the Bride with them he shall wage warre even unto the fourtieth yeere bringing into subjection the Ilanders Spaniards and Italians Rome and Florence he shall destroy and burne with fire so as Salt may bee sowed on that Land The greatest Clergy-men who have invaded Peters Seat he shall put to death and in the same yeere obtaine a double Crowne At last going over Sea with a great army he shall enter Greece and be named King of the Greekes The Turkes and Barbarians hee shall subdue making an Edict that every one shall die the death that worshippeth not the Crucified one And none shall be found able to resist him because an holy arme from the Lord shall allwayes be with him And he shall possesse the Dominion of the Earth These things being done he shall be called the rest of holy Christians c. Thus far the Prophesie Now to return to the Kings Whether these kings be ten in succession Brightman understands by the hornes Ten Kings not reigning all at one time in so many kingdoms but so many Emperours succeeding each other in the Romane Empire and thinks that Charles V. was the first of those who taking Rome by force Anno 1527. did not a little shake it Foure followed none of which received their Crown from the Whore after the manner of their Ancestours or came to Rome to kisse his Holinesse feet yea all of them according to their clemency and prudencie gave freedom to publish the Gospell in the Romane Empire and by their example invited neighbouring Kings to the like clemency God is to be intreated that he will further put into their hearts to do what his pleasure is As for the succession the Angell made the same most plain in the seven heads but of the seven hornes not so for these Kings shall receive power together in one houre with the Beast and shall have one minde togither first in defending afterward in opposing the Whore Therefore they shall be together some space of time onely excepted Neverthelesse Riberas fiction which before I touched hath no place of Ten Kings Riberas fiction is inconsistent who suppressing the Romane Emperour shall reigne thorowout the whole world towards Antichrists comming and destroy Rome before Antichrist begin to reigne For first in this he agrees not with himself in Apocal. 17. Sect. 18 19. When saith he Antichrist is risen They indeed shall have the names of kings but in truth Antichrist shall reigne and they shall obey him Here he will have that the Ten kings shall obey Antichrist And afterward The devill saith he and Antichrist his chiefest limb assisted with the helpe and power of these kings will be able to doe all the things which are foretold by God Now it cannot be questioned but that the things he speakes of are the same which the Angell foretold ver 16. viz. of consuming the whores flesh and her burning by the kings How therefore should Rome be burnt by the Ten kings before Antichrists comming if the Devill and Antichrist shall do this very thing by the helpe and power of the Ten kings and how doth the fable confist that three of them shall be wholly extinguished by him if all ten shall give their faithfull assistance unto him Secondly it is an assertion altogether unprobable that these ten shall then rule the whole universe nay rather it is refuted by evident reason For when Antichrist whom they expect doth come certainly there shall be some Christian Kings to burne the whore There shall also be some kings of the Earth who shall lament her and gathering themselves into
will I give the Morning-Star for if the Morning-Star be Christ the sense is To him that overcommeth I will give my selfe or communicate my selfe with all my benefits unto him viz. joy and glory in part in this life but perfectly in the life to come 17. And the Spirit and the Bride say Come These kinde of abrupt sentences full of affection serve to stir up like affections desires and wishes in us Here the Lord Iesus commends unto us the studie of this Prophesie by the example of the Spirit and of the Bride They say Come that is from this Prophesie they long for my comming and that I fulfill the same Therefore ye also that heare the Prophesie ought to have the like desire And the Spirit and the Bride By the Spirit and Bride may be meant the spirituall Bride sanctified by the Spirit of God By the Bride I understand the Church especially the Triumphant She desires me to come that is to fulfill the Prophesie and to return to judgement that she might at length be glorified through a finall redemption like as the Soules of the Martyrs under the Altar did desire the full deliverance of the Church from all the miseries of this life Or we may understand the Spirit properly of the Holy Ghost Metalepsis is a figure whereby a word is put from his proper signification who above spake to the Churches in the Epistles of Christ in which it is often repeated Hee that hath eares let him heare what the SPIRIT saith unto the Churches In this sense the Spirit is said to wish the comming of Christ by a Metalepsis because it is the Spirit that makes the Bride to desire Christs comming in which sense also it is said Rom. 8.26 that the Spirit maketh intercession for us that is stirreth us up to make our requests and to cry Abba Father Come Namely to the full glorification of thy Bride This is the reason of the wish for the coming of the Lord shall be the full redemption of the Church the which seeing wee all doe expect wee must also wish for the comming of the Lord for as the Apostle intimates it is a note of Gods children to love his comming 2. Tim. 4.8 And let him that heareth This is the consequent of the former as if he should say If the Spirit and the Bride long for my comming then also let him that heareth the words of the Prophesie say COME that is ardently desire my comming for his redemption Thus hee would have us continually to pray Let thy Kingdome come by which we daily desire that the Lord Iesus by his comming would wholly destroy the Kingdome of Satan and perfectly set up his owne in us in eternall glory And let him that is athirst come He teacheth us what we ought to doe untill we obtaine our desire by a most large promise comforting us against the temptation of delay Let him saith he that is athirst that is that desireth full redemption and glory through my comming Come To wit unto me or unto the studie and meditation of this Prophesie It is an Answer unto the Churches wish as if he should say ye desire that I should come to your deliverance Yee therefore come unto me through Faith What it is to come unto Christ Mat. 11.28 Obedience and true Sanctitie being alwayes as it were girded with the same For to come to Christ is to receive his doctrine trust obey serve and wholly to give ones selfe unto him This is meant in the Gospell where hee saith Come unto mee all yee that are heavy laden AND VVHOSOEVER VVIL According to the promise Chap. 21.6 To him that is athirst I will give of the Fountaine of the water of life freely So here to them that come unto him he promiseth the living water of the pure Chrystalline River of the Heavenly Ierusalem This water is Christ himselfe the Fountaine of Life Or the Holy Ghost filling the Saints with Heavenly consolation This water is drawne or obtained by Faith and Prayer Therefore he saith Let him take That is by prayer beg and by faith obtaine the same It is not thrust into the hands of unwilling slothfull and drowsie persons therefore hee saith Whosoever will Hee saith not that it is in the power of free will but requires the will to receive it The will is ours but the will of receiving is not in us it is the gift of grace 1. Cor. 4.7 For what hast thou that thou hast not received Therefore the will and desire of grace is required to be in us that wee might bee quickned with the water of life Freely The Fountaine of grace which is open to all that desire the same is not to bee bought with the price of any thing but is freely bestowed by the merit and efficacie of the Lord Iesus Away therefore with the merits of Hypocrites 18. For I testifie These also are the words of the Lord Iesus not Iohns as appeares from ver 20. Before he said Blessed are they that keepe the words of this Prophesie Now he threatens a terrible curse unto all such as presume any wayes to adulterate this Prophesie For he foresaw that some would despise question and falsifie the same by their Additions Hee was not ignorant also that Antichrist with his false Prophets Falsifiers of Holy Writ would take liberty to falsifie the Faith yea usurpe to themselves absolute power over the very Scriptures of God Therefore he thought it necessary to defend the Authority of the Revelation and the whole Booke of Canonicall Scripture by this threatning as it were with a Seale that it might bee preserved entire unto the end for the Churches unto whose profit it was dedicated For I testifie The causall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For seemes an over-plus to Ribera by a Graecisme but as we shewed in the Analysis it is a seventh Argument commending the worthinesse of this Prophesie taken from the inviolable authority thereof Andreas for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I also testifie for so it is in the Text simplie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I testifie And so the Kings Copie hath it But all other Copies have it I also testifie neither is it without ground for the Lord Iesus assenteth to his Angell whom he had sent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to testifie these things to his servants as if he should say My Angell hath testified unto you and I also testifie with him For properly Summarturesai signifies to affirme a thing by a religious testimony or to urge it with serious contestation and so oblidge the Hearers upon pain of vengeance to obey the same But let us briefly consider to whom Christ doth testifie what it is and after what manner Vnto every man that heareth the words This Protestation belongs unto all that heare and read the same not one excepted And therefore neither Pope nor Councell have any right to adde or
John Husse and Jerome of Prage the two witnesses of the Gospel to be burnt and displacing the three Antipopes Gregory Benedict and Iohn it substituted Martin V. and so the deadly wound of the Beast was at length as it were healed by a divine Aesculapius or Chirurgion one onely Pope being againe set on the Romish Chaire Notwithstanding the ulcer burst forth in divers places first in Spaine and France for Benedict XIII dying Anno 1424. the Cardinals by his commandement and authority of King Alphonsus created Aegidius Munyos a Canonist named Pope Clement VIII Afterward in Bohemia where in the Hussian warres it is wonderfull to consider how much Christian blood was shed for the wound of the Beast untill at last Pope Martin regaining the favour of Alphonsus Aegidius was forced at the commandement of the King to lay down his Popedom And to the Bohemians the Councill of Basil permitted marriage to their Priests to have the Liturgie in the vulgar tongue the use of the Cup in the Eucharist and some other things which they called Compactata on this condition that they should acknowledge the Romane beast to be head of the Church Now I suppose there is no man but sees that these things do very wel suite with this prophesie touching the deadly wound and healing of the Beast Notwithstanding I leave it to the judgement of the Reader for whose sake I here briefly set down a rype of the Antipopes during the wound of that scisme ANTIPOPES During the schismaticall vvound of the Romane Beasts At Avinion   At Rome Clement VII dieth Anno 1392.   Vrban VI. dieth 1390. Benedict XIII deposed at Pise 1410. and at Constance 1417.   Boniface 9. dieth 1404.   Innocent VII dieth 1407 Gregory XII deposed at Pise 1410. and at Constance 1415. Alexander V. dieth 1411 Clement VIII giving place to Martine at Constance 1421.   Iohn XXII deposed at Constance 1415. Martine V. created Pope at Constance 1417. But if so be we are to understand the wound and the healing thereof in the latter sence Alphonsus his opinion touching the deadly wound of the Beast then I should altogether embrace the opinion of Alphonsus Mantuanus a learned Italian Interpreter One of the Beasts heads saith he as it were wounded to death seemes to me to denote that age of impiety in which the Gospell began to be preached and the Popish kingdom opposed through the ministery of the Gospell and the abomination thereof so manifested as it is even known to the ignorant themselves that the Pope who hath on his heads written names of blasphemy is the Beast and a most wretched man who presumes to be esteemed a god For then the Beast was seen to have received a deadly wound when those impious doctrines by which hitherto the Popes kingdome hath remained in its strength were reproved as meere lyes and Diabolicall deceits by the free preaching of the Gospell of Christ. Thus far he By the mortall wound of the Beast therefore he understands the separation of the Professours of the Gospell from Popery whence first a deadly disease befell the Papists in Germany and soon after in the neighbouring Kingdoms of France Poland Hungary and England Like as the ach of a wound ordinarily is irksome to the parts adjoyning This wound could not be inflicted on this powerfull Beast but by God himself who at last taking compassion on Germanie confounded the deceits of Rome by raysing up Anno 1516. Luther Melancthon and other excellent Divines as the instruments and organes of his grace and favour The sword wounding the Beast was the preaching of the Gospell by which in a short space the props of Popery were so sore shaken throughout Germany as it was not far from an utter ruine Notwithstanding our sins so deserving we see this wound now healed the Papacie again prevailing and reassuming her strength and vigour But by what medicines or potions This is cleared by Histories And as Alphonsus well writeth this deadly stroke began to be healed When the Kings and Princes of the earth began through fire and sword to force men unto the Popes obedience To this end was raised the Smalcaldick war against the Protestants The wars of the Spaniard in the Low-countries and the Massacres in France that the mortall stroke of the Beast might be healed But the false prophet ver 11. seems to have made the true medicine The Beasts Chyrurgians by his Chyrurgians Campegius Caietane Polus Faber Prierates Eckius Latomus Staphylus and the like Physicians who excelling in art fraud and sophistrie have held up the tottering state of the Papacy Notwithstanding the Councill of Trent acted the part of chiefe Physicians as applying with great skill wonderfull potions for to heal this wound To these we may adde the Popish Academies and especially that of the Sorbonnists at Paris The last are the jugling Iesuites by whose industrie boldnesse and craft the Head of the Beast is daily more and more restored to its former health And I could wish that the unhappy contentions of the Professours of the Gospell were not as oyle and wine powred into this wound for I verily believe that our own dissentions have more strengthened the Beast then all his own force and policy whatsoever Thus much concerning the wound and the healing thereof And all the whole earth wondred after the Beast First I desire the reader to take notice of the anticipation even now laid down For we are not to think that the world admired not the Beast till he was wounded and healed again for the Beast never was without his followers and people wondring at his throne and great power and therefore by way of a parenthesis the stroke and cure was spoken of before which came to passe afterward Now the authority of the Beast and the besotted stupidity of men to worship him doth immediately cohere with his seat and great power for although this be not so plaine in the verse yet is it clear by the following For wherefore is the Beast so much wondred at was it because he was healed certainly it is a matter of no great admiration that a wound should be cured by a Chyrurgian and therefore this cure could not be the cause of so great an admiration as the Glosse imagineth in applying it to the feined death and resurrection of Antichrist the which thing even the chiefest of the Iesuites are ashamed of The true cause of the worlds wondring is the seat and great power given to the Beast by the Dragon as we shall see in the following verse for as the Philosopher saith admiration begets Philosophie so here the worlds admiring the Beast Aristot lib. 1. Metap c. 2. begets Antichristianisme At first men admiring the Keyes and pretended seat of Peter together with the majestie of ancient Rome did easily attribute to the Romane bishop primacie of honour and agreed that every Church should bring their cases to the Church of Rome because of