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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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be thine it is the Lords and he giueth it vnto the Priest for a recompence of his labours in the Tabernacle and his seruice of the Lord and his teaching of the people God is the Lord of the soile he challengeth it at his own and he disposeth it at his owne pleasure Thus much touching the Law the applying of it followeth where God ordaineth it as a Law that all such things as are purloyned and conueyghed away from the right owners and possessours should in case they or any of them faile be bestowed vpon the Priest which is amplified by an equall comparison of the like all other things offered should be his also and might not be altered to any other vse as if he had said As I haue giuen them the offerings of the people so I haue giuen to them this also that they shal haue right as wel to the one as to the other by my gift Verse 5. When a man or woman shall commit any sinne o. After we haue seene the order of the words let vs make a collection of doctrine And first obserue that Moses speaketh in this place not of any sinne committed against piety and godlinesse but against the equity and iustice that ought to bee among men not of the immediate worship of God prescribed in the first table but of wrongs done to our brethren forbidden in the second table as appeareth by sundry circumstances both because he speaketh of making him recompence which no man can giue to God it being vnpossible to make satisfaction to him for the least offence and because the trespasse shall be recompensed to the Priest yet notwithstanding he calleth it a trespasse against God Heereby we learne that all sinne Doctrine All sinne 〈◊〉 committed against God himselfe euen the breach of the second table is committed against God Whatsoeuer iniuries and offences are done against our brethren are sinnes and offences committed against God This appeareth euidently in other places of the Law as Leuit. 6.2 3 4. If any man sinne and commit a trespasse against the Lord and deny to his neighbour that which is taken him to keepe c. Where he teacheth that to deny the thing committed to our keeping to breake the trust reposed in vs to robbe our neighbor violently to take his goods from him to deny that which we haue found and our neighbour hath lost are all of them sinnes against God though trespasses against men The charge also that Nathan layeth vpon Dauid together with his answere make this trueth most plaine 2 Sam. 12.9.13 The Prophet reproouing him saith Wherefore hast thou despised the commandement of the Lord to doe euill in his sight thou hast killed Vriah the Hittite with the sword and hast taken his wife to be thy wife and hast slaine him with the sword of the children of Ammon To this heauy message from God deliuered by his seruant the Prophet doth Dauid submit himselfe and in the humility of his soule consesseth I haue sinned against the Lord. This is that which Ioseph witnesseth when he was entised to commit folly with his wanton mistresse but yeelded not vnto the tentation he saith vnto her Gen. 39.9 How can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God He doth not say against my master and so render euill for good vnto him as he might truely haue said but he speaketh with a feeling conscience that he should sinne against God in offending against his master To all these we may also adde the testimony of the Lord himself vttered vnto Caine that had conceiued malice and murther in his heart against his brother a sinne against the second Table the summe whereof is Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Gen. 4.6 7. Why art thou wroth and why is thy countenance cast downe if thou doe well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well sinne lyeth at the doore c. It is a notable exhortation that Moses giueth in the behalfe of the poore that were among them Deut. 1.5.6 Beware that there bee not a thought in thy wicked heart saying The seuenth yeere the yeere of release is at hand and thine eye be euill against thy poore brother and thou giuest him nought and he cry vnto the Lord against thee and it be sinne vnto thee Whereby we see that not onely such as take away other mens goods wrongfully doe commit sinne against God but they that detaine their owne goods couetously and doe not bestow them vpon the releefe of the poore so that a man may sinne in his owne as well as in other mens in ouermuch sparing as well as in wronging others To the same purpose he speaketh in another place against the oppressing of an hired seruant that is poore and needy whether he were of their brethren or of the strangers in the land Deut. 24.15 At his day thou shalt giue him his hire neither shall the Sunne go downe vpon it for he is poore and setteth his heart vpon it lest he cry against thee vnto the Lord and it be sinne vnto thee All these places prooue vnto vs that all sinne is committed against God and respecteth him either immediately when we sinne against the first Table or mediately when we sinne against the second Table This will better appeare by such reasons as Reason 1 are grounded out of the Scriptures and serue to confirme this trueth and to establish our consciences in it First sinne is nothing else but the breach of the Law of God 1 Ioh. 5.17 and the party that is offended properly directly is God himselfe For except there had beene a law giuen of God forbidding or commanding there could be no offence against any creature If God had not said Thou shalt not steale theft had not beene a sinne and lust could not be accounted as a sinne except the Law had said 〈◊〉 7.7 Thou shalt not lust as Paul confesseth he had not knowne sinne but by the law And in another place hee testifieth that where there is no law there is no transgression forasmuch as by the law commeth the knowledge of sin 〈◊〉 4.15 If God had not said Thou shalt not commit adultery Dauid had neuer offended Vriah in taking his wife If he had neuer said Thou shalt not kill it had beene no offence to take away life Absolon had neuer transgressed in dishonouring his father Caine in murthering his brother Ziba in slaundering his master if God had neuer published a law against these things Hence it is that the Apostle Iohn saith Whosoeuer committeth sinne 〈◊〉 3.7 transgresseth also the law for sinne is the transgression of the Law This is a full and perfect definition of sinne so that as the definition and the thing defined are both one so are sinne and the breach of the Law For as euery sinne is the transgression of the Law so euery transgression of the law is sinne and nothing else but sinne as euery man is a
them might haue hope And the Prophet Dauid in sundry places setteth downe this effect which himselfe from time to time had found and felt in his troubles as Psal 19.8 The statutes of the Lord are right reioycing the heart the commandement of the Lord is pure enlightning the eyes and the 119. Psalme Psalm 119 24 is a plentiful store-house to furnish vs abundantly with matter of comfort Thy testimonies are my delight and my Counsellers and againe My soule melteth for heauinesse strengthen thou mee Verse 28 according to thy word This is the true way sanctified vnto vs to driue away heauinesse this means the children of God haue vsed haue found by experience and good proofe the force and effect of it It hath beene very auaileable vnto them and filled their bones with marrow and fatnesse To this end he saith afterward Verse 92. Vnlesse thy law had beene my delight I should then haue perished in mine affliction Thus doe the faithfull reioyce in his Testimonies as much as in all riches forasmuch as his statutes do reioyce the heart make wise the simple enlighten the eies and conuert the soule then which it is vnpossible to finde greater matter of comfort Two meanes of comfort To conclude we haue seene that there are two meanes to obtaine comfort the one is from the worke of God in our hearts by his holy Spirit which leaueth vs not desolate and destitute The other is the vse of the word which is sweeter then the hony and the hony-combe and more to be desired then much riches Let vs haue an heape of sorrowes cast vpon vs through enduring of the Crosse and let vs sinke neuer so deepe into afflictions the word of God is able to raise vs vp againe to cheere vp our hearts Verse 7. Then they shall confesse their sinne which they haue done Wee shewed before that Moses setteth downe three waies how this damage offered to men is to be blotted out The course which they ought to take to purge it away is first of all to make confession of their sinne to God forasmuch as where the confession of man goeth before there the forgiuenesse of God followeth after We cannot lye hid from him nor conceale our offences and therefore it is best to acknowledge them before him Doctrine Whosoeuer looketh for forgiuenesse must confesse his sinnes to God From hence we learne that whosoeuer looketh for forgiuenesse must confesse his sins to God This is the practise and property of a true penitent to lay foorth his sinnes to God both originall and actuall and to discouer them in his sight This we see in sundry examples remembred in the old new Testament When Dauid was reprooued of Nathan the Prophet who set his sins in order before him he answered 2 Sam. 12. I haue sinned against the Lord. The Publican going vp into the Temple to pray and standing afarre off would not lift vp so much as his eyes vnto heauen but smote vpon his brest Luke 18 13. saying God be mercifull to me a sinner The prodigall sonne hauing wasted his substance with riotous liuing when he came to himselfe he went to his father and saide vnto him Luke 15 21. Father I haue sinned against heauen and in thy sight and am no more worthy to bee called thy sonne The like confession we reade in Daniel chap. 9 5 6 7. when he perceiued by the word of the Lord that the seuenty yeares were accomplished in the desolations of Ierusalem he praied vnto the Lord his God and made his confession Wee haue sinned and committed iniquity and haue done wickedly and haue rebelled euen by departing from thy precepts and from thy iudgements c. The like we might shew out of Ezra 9 5 6. and Nehem. 9. and many other places which teach that it is a duty required of vs to make humble confession of our sinnes vnto God Reason 1 The reasons are weighty and effectuall to enforce this duty First we shewed in the former doctrine that all sin is committed against God Howsoeuer we may hurt men and damnifie them in their bodies and goods yet the cheefest dishonor is done against God whose law is broken and transgressed as Psal 51 4. Against thee euen thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight If then the iniury done to man be an iniquity cōmitted against God we are bound to confesse our sinne vnto him But all the wrongs offered to our brethren are sinnes against God and therefore confession ought to be made vnto him Secondly we haue shewed also before that Reason 2 it is in Gods power onely to forgiue sins and free vs from the punishment due vnto sinne He onely can giue pardon for sinne Cypri Ser. 5. de Lapsis that carried our sinnes on his body The Scribes and Pharisies had greeuously corrupted the purity of doctrine by the leauen of their owne traditions yet they held soundly and sincerely this principle that God onely forgiueth sinnes They falsely interpreted the law of God and peruerted the true meaning of it by their gloses yet they reteined this truth that none can forgiue sinnes but God onely Mark 2.7 If then God alone can forgiue sins then we must confesse them vnto him But hee alone can forgiue sinnes and therefore we must confesse them vnto him Thirdly without confession of our sinnes Reason 3 there is no forgiuenesse nor hope of pardon for God cannot in iustice forgiue vs except in humility we confesse vnto him seeing without it wee haue no promise made vnto vs to finde fauour at his hands If we be not ashamed to vncase and vncouer our sinnes he will not be ashamed of vs but shew mercy toward vs as Prou. 28 verse 13. Hee that couereth his sinnes shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercy And the Apostle Iohn affirmeth the same If we confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse 1 Iohn 1 verse 9. The like remedy Paul deliuereth to the Corinthians who for their vnreuerent vnworthy partaking of the Lords Supper were some of them weake some sicke and some dead If we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged of the Lord. 1 Corin. 11 31. And the Prophet Dauid declareth the same by his owne experience Psal 32 verse 5. I acknowledged my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquity haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the iniquity of my sinne If then there be no forgiuenesse of sinnes without confession it followeth that it is our duty to confesse them before him Fourthly where there is no true confession Reason 4 of sinne there is no sound repentance for sin For the inward sight of sinne and humbling of our selues for it will open our mouthes cause vs to lay them open As then the confessing of them with
betweene sinne and sinne both in nature and in the punishment due vnto them some are greater some lesser some worther of greater punishment and some of lesser yet the least sin committed in thought and motion deserueth euerlasting death and separation from the gracious presence of God if he deale with vs according to the rigour of his iustice and looke vpon vs without the satisfaction of Christ The writers and teachers of the Popish Religion publish to the world that wee hold the sottish Paradox of the Stoikes that all sinnes are equall The Papists slander vs 〈◊〉 make all si● equall the contrary whereof is manifest in the harmony of the confessions of our Churches And why do they slander vs with this dotish doctrine or vpon what foundation doe they ground this accusation forsooth because we hold that all are mortall But this is a weake consequent and will not proue the point for which they alledge it All men are mortall euen Princes as it is said in the Psalme 82.6 shall we hence conclude that the people are equall to Princes because they are alike subiect to mortality In the breach of the seuenth commandement there are sundry sortes of vncleannesse and incontinency forbidden as fornication when men defile themselues with filthy harlots and concubines adultery betweene them that are married incest committed with such as are neere in consanguinity or affinity the sinne of the Sodomites Who leauing the naturall vse of the woman burne in lust one toward another man with man working filthinesse Rom. 1.27 reuenged with fire and brimstone from heauen Gen. 19. Among all these seuerall kindes there are degrees of sinne one is greater then other adultery worse then fornication incest then adultery and Sodometry then them all and all these by the confession of the Papists themselues are mortall and yet by their owne confession also one is more heinous and horrible then the other If then their conclusion bee good against vs that we hold all sinnes to bee equal because we teach that they are mortall how should it not stand as strong and firme against themselues that they also hold all these sinnes to be equall fornication as bad as incest and adultery as heinous as Sodometry because they teach that they are all of them mortall The like absurdity wee might easily inferre against them in the rest of the commandements and that out of the Roman Catechisme But to vnderstand this point the better let vs consider that our Churches teach no other doctrine then the Scriptures teach that as all sinnes proceede out of the same fountaine of corruption and infidelity so all of them make vs guilty of eternall death and damnation vnlesse we obtaine pardon by faith in the Mediatour Christ Iesus Luke 12.47.48 All sinnes whether committed of ignorance or knowledge deserue stripes either many or few and these stripes are no other then eternall punishments as appeareth by the wordes of the Apostle 2 Thes 1.8 so that they which know not God neither beleeue the Gospel shall be punished in hel because according to the opinion of the Papists themselues when the Lord shall come in flaming fire to iudge the quicke and the dead Purgatory shal vtterly ceasse and be no more the prison dores shall be broken the fire shall be quenched the place shall be emptyed and the poore soules shall be discharged then shall be a gaile deliuery they shall be quit by Proclamation To vnderstand this the better we must know that sinnes may bee said to bee mortall or veniall three wayes ●s may ●d to bee ●ll or ve●●hree ●s First in regard of the euent Secondly in regard of the cause Thirdly in regard of the nature of the sinnes themselues They are veniall in regard of the successe or euent which doe obtaine pardon and when forgiuenesse followeth them though they be in themselues most greeuous as 1 Ioh. 5.16 where the Apostle calleth those onely sinnes vnto death whose reward certainely is eternall death and those not to death which may bee forgiuen howsoeuer in their own nature they merit damnation Thus we may say that Dauids adultery and murther were veniall sinnes because howsoeuer in the nature of them they were deadly yet were they veniall in regard of the euent because Nathan said vnto him The Lord hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not dye 2 Sam. 12.13 ●ss ordin in ●r 11. No sinne is veniall so long as we follow it and no sinne is mortall when once we forsake it Pro. 28.13 All sinnes are made veniall by repentance no sin is veniall without repentance Secondly sinnes may bee said to bee veniall in regard of the cause from whence they proceed whereupon they sooner obtaine pardon because they are not done of malice and a setled purpose but of ignorance and infirmity as Paul sheweth this to bee the cause why his sinne was veniall vnto him and why he obtained mercy and forgiuenesse because he did it ignorantly through vnbeleefe 1 Tim. 1.13 And in the fifteenth Chapter of this booke it is said the Priest shall make attonement when a priuate person or the whole Congregation hath committed any thing through errour or ignorance and it shall be forgiuen them for it is ignorance Numb 14.25 These sinnes springing from this fountaine are damnable in themselues from hence it came that Paul was a persecuter and a blasphemer but the Father of all mercies and compassions gaue him pardon because hee sinned of ignorance and infirmity So then his sinnes were veniall in regard of the euent and of the cause But sinne considered in the nature of the thing it selfe is not veniall but deserueth temporall and eternall punishment Now the Papists themselues teach ● Popish 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 sinne that sinne is truely and properly called veniall when it is so in it owne nature and deserueth onely a temporall punishment either in this life or in the life to come so that if God would examine it and enter into iudgement with it according to his most rigourous and seuere iustice hee could not punish it with eternall death for as much as in it owne nature it deserueth pardon or at least some slight or temporall punishment And of these the controuersie is betweene the Church of Rome and vs and not of those that are veniall by the euent or by the cause But the Scripture teacheth vs that all sinne is the transgression of the Law 1 Ioh. 3.4 This is a true and perfect definition of sinne for euery transgression of the Law is sinne and euery sinne is a transgression of the Law From whence wee reason thus Euery transgression of the law is worthy of death Euery sinne is a transgression of the Law Therefore euery sinne is worthy of death The first part is plainely proued by many places Gal. 3.13.10 Deut. 27.26 Matth. 5.22 whereby it is manifest that the Prophet the Apostle and Christ himselfe speake generally without limitation that whosoeuer committeth any
ignorance onely purpose and intend the committing of it a plague came vpon him all his kingdome Gen. 20 3 17. This vncleannesse as appeareth in the booke of Iudges chap. 18 and 19 had almost consumed the whole Tribe of Beniamin a few of them only reserued VVe see this in the sonnes of Eli as in a glasse they were wicked men knew not the Lord they caused the people to abhorre the offering of the Lord and lay with the women that assembled at the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 1 Sam. 2 22. therefore God at the length found them out in their sinnes when they descended into the battell and perished Looke vpon the example of Dauid and behold what a fire it kindled in his house it brought vpon his head through the iust iudgement of God who punisheth sinne with sinne the sword of the enemy the rauishing of his wiues the deflouring of his daughter the death of his childe the murther of Ammon the treason of Absolon the reuolting of his Counsellers and Captaines sundry other conspiracies insurrections and calamities that fell vpon him This is that which the Prophet Nathan told him from the mouth of the Lord Because thou hast despised mee and taken the wife of Vriah the Hittite to be thy wife behold I will raise vp euill against thee out of thine owne house wil take thy wiues before thine eyes and giue them vnto thy neighbour and he shall lie with thy wiues in the sight of this Sunne for thou diddest it secretly but I will do this thing before all Israel and before the Sunne 1 Sam. chap. 12 verse 11. Reason 1 The Reasons are now a little to be stood vpon to make the Doctrine sinke deeper into our hearts and to gaine our affections to subscribe vnto it First all vncleannesse bringeth with it a certaine curse wheresoeuer it goeth and by whomsoeuer it be committed This is it which Iob affirmeth chap. 31. verse 12. It is a wickednesse and iniquity to b●e condemned yea this is a fire that shall deuoure to destruction and which shall roo●e out all mine encrease what portion should I haue of God from aboue and what inheritance of the Almighty if I should suffer my eyes to wander after strange women Secondly it is greater then other sinnes of Reason 2 the second Table that are sharply and seuerely punished The wise man teacheth that it is a more greeuous sinne then theft It is a peruerting of all right and an ouerturning of all equity among men If a man rob another of his goods he shall be punished A theefe shall be rebuked at euery mans hand he shall be exclaimed vpon and men wil spit in his face and yet adultery is more then a simple robbery for thereby other men are robbed not of theyr goods and substance but of their honour and honesty yea they rob not onely those that are borne but those also that yet are vnfashioned in their mothers wombe Men do not despise saith Salomon a theefe when he stealeth to satisfie his soule because he is hungry but if hee be found he shall restore seuen fold or he shall giue all the substance of his house but hee that committeth adultery with a woman hee is destitute of vnderstanding he that doth it destroyeth his owne soule Prou. 6 30. Reason 3 Thirdly this sinne neuer goeth alone but is accompanied with a traine of many other sinnes as ydlenesse drunkennesse prophanenesse of heart and sencelesnesse of spirit This the Prophet Hosea expresseth chapter 4 verse 11. Whoredome and wine and new wine take away their heart whereby he meaneth that the vnlawfull pleasures blinde the vnderstanding draw away the will from all goodnesse and make the affections so brutish that they mind nothing and delight in nothing but in beastly sensuality This the Prophet Ezekiel declareth touching the vncleannes of the Sodomites Behold this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodome pride fulnesse of bread and abundance of ydlenesse was 〈◊〉 her and in her daughters neither did she strengthen the hands of the poore and needy Ezek. 16 49. The vses of this Doctrine are to bee considered Vse 1 First wee learne that God will neuer suffer this sinne to lye hid though it bee committed neuer so closely and secretly We see it euidently in the sinne of Dauid he was in time found out and the hand of God arrested him They are greatly deceiued that thinke to hide this sinne and go away in the darke and not be espied For howsoeuer men eyther do not at all punish this sinne or punish it slightly as if they did not see it or not regard it yet God will be a swift Iudge against whoremongers and adulterers This was notably set foorth by the ceremony of the bitter waters Numb 5 12. discouering the guilty wife which no man on earth was able to accuse True it is this ceremony is ended and these shadowes of the law are ceassed yet the eye of the Lord is as quicke and his sight as sharpe as euer it was he taketh vpon him the knowing disclosing and punishing of this sinne It is vnpossible to hide it from him who will reueale the things that are hidden in darknesse Nothing more prouoketh to sinne then hope of impurity and the opinion of secresie and carrying the matter away closely If a man were perswaded that the sinnes which hee committeth should be engrauen in his forehead or written in great Letters that he which runneth migh● reade them it would bee a meanes to make him abstaine if not for conscience yet at least for shame of the world from the doing of them But we are assured by the word of the eternall God that our secret sinnes are open and manifest to him with whom wee haue to do and he will bring them to the light what figge-leaues soeuer we patch together to couer them from his knowledge This should moue vs to beware of committing secret sins seeing he vnderstandeth all things Hee made the eye and shall he not see He made the heart shall not he finde out the iniquities of our hearts Psal 94 9. Take we heed therefore of whoredome and of all vncleannesse and learne to possesse our vessels in holinesse and honor not in the lust of concupiscence as the Gentiles did that know not God Secondly this doctrine reproueth the light Vse 2 account and estimation of this sinne For if it procure and cause great iudgements and destroyeth a mans soule they are deceyued that make whoredome a tricke of youth a veniall offence a naturall sinne a matter of small importance and a sport to laugh at We see in this chapter that there fell in one day foure and twenty thousand for their fornication committed with the Midianites 1 Cor. 10 8 hee destroyed so many of his owne people in one day and made them examples to vs vppon whom the ends of the world are now come and yet shall wee make it a tricke of
Christ the reproch redounds in part to the head Fourthly it behoueth vs from hence to Vse 4 learne to auoyde all allurements and enticements that may draw vs into this sinne For to auoyd sinne is to auoyd the occasions of sinne Whosoeuer doth nourish the occasions cannot be long free from sinne And whosoeuer maketh no conscience to follow the prouocations of lust and the meanes that may bring it vpon vs will shortly make no conscience of whoredome it selfe Therefore our Sauior correcting the false glozes of the Scribes and Pharisies and expounding the true meaning of the seuenth Commandement saith If thy right eie cause thee to offend plucke it out and cast it from thee for better it is for thee that one of thy members perish then that thy whole body should be cast into hell Math. chap. 5 29. Whereby our Sauiour meaneth that the Law of God not onely forbiddeth the sinne expressed but restraineth all occasions and allurements though they were as deare vnto vs as our right eye or as necessary vnto vs as our hand A notable example hereeof wee haue in Ioseph when he was tempted by his wanton mistresse to commit folly hee was so farre from consenting to adultery that he absented him selfe from her company Gen. 39 10. Many are the allurements that leade the way vnto this sinne wanton apparrell filthy communication vncleane songs wanton lookes beastly drunkennesse vnlawfull embracings excessiue dyet hurtfull idlenesse and too familiar company with those that may entice vs and tempt vs to lust The following after these the delighting in them is the path that guideth vs to the practise of all vncleannesse and therefore we must abhorre them if we would hate whoredome it selfe Such then as say they cannot abide whoredome and they doe detest it from their harts and yet do not shun these allurements do not consider their owne weaknes but offer themselues leade themselues into tentation yea as much as in them lyeth they make God a lyar and there is no truth in them Lastly let vs according to our duty with Vse 5 all speede forsake this filthy kinde of life and renounce our former vncleannes so the hearty repētance may follow after wher this sin hath bin cōmitted before For there remaines mercy to such if they repent and turne with all their hearts and with all their soules The Lord is full of compassion and mercy slowe to anger and of great kindnesse If the wicked man forsake his waies and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations if he returne vnto the Lord and craue mercy at his hands hee will not alway chide neither keepe his anger for euer Esay 55 7. He will not deale with vs after our sinnes neither reward vs according to our iniquities Psal 103 10. Dauid through the lust of his eye fell into this sinne and committed folly in Israel but when he confessed his fault and forsooke his sinne he was receiued to mercy For when Dauid saide vnto Nathan I haue sinned against the Lord Nathan saide vnto Dauid The Lord also hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die 2. Sam. 12 verse 13. The Lord seeketh no more but that the sinner turn vnto him When once we are reconciled vnto him he hath no more controuersie against vs. This we see in Rahab the harlot she led a filthy and vncleane life among her people but when she heard of the great workes that the Lord had done for the children of Israel in deliuering them out of Egypt in drying vp the red sea in feeding thē from heauen and in preseruing them from all their enemies she ioyned in heart with the Church forsooke her euill life and in token of her true repentance Heb. 11 31. Iam. 2.25 she receiued the messengers sent vnto her with the danger of her life and sent them out another way This the Apostle speaketh of the Saints at Corinth for hauing denounced a fearful iudgment against fornicators adulterers wanton persons that they shall not inherit the kingdome of God he addeth 1 Cor. 6 11. Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Seeing therefore God is ready to forgiue our sins why should not we be ready to forsake our sinnes This vncleannesse maketh vs guilty of temporall and eternal punishments yet God offereth to discharge vs of both and to receiue vs vnto his fauour if we will turne from our sinnes to him bring forth fruite worthy amendment of life Let vs therefore confesse with Dauid that wee haue sinned let vs call for mercy at the hands of God saying Haue mercy vpon me O Lord according to thy louing kindnes acording to the multitude of thy compassions put away mine iniquities wash me throughly from mine iniquity and clense me from my sinne Psalme 51 the first second verses Verse 4. And the Lord said vnto Moses Take all the heads of this people and hang them vp to the Lord before this Sunne In the words before the punishment that fell vpon the people of Israel was set downe in generall now hee setteth downe vpon whom it fell in particular to wit both Princes people for the wrath of God was so kindled against them that they were cut off as rotten members all through the counsell of Balaam For when he saw that God opened not his mouth to curse the Israelites but rather when he was resolued to vtter curses hee was inforced to pronounce blessings hee gaue diuellish counsell as his last shift to the Moabites that their beautifull women should allure the Iewes into their cōpany and by their company vnto adultery by adultery vnto idolatry wherby they shold prouoke Gods indignation and so bring vpon themselues vtter confusion Now we must obserue in this place that God in punishing these sinnes beginneth first with the heads of the people Doctrine Superiors lye open to iudgmen●s as well as others From hence we learne that Superiors and men of high places lye open to greeuous iudgements as wel as others All sorts of men high and low rich and poore noble and vnnoble shall taste of the punishments of God for sinne This the Prophet pointeth vnto when he faith God powreth contempt vpon Princes and causeth them to erre in desert places out of the way Psal 107 40. In the first chapter of Esay verses 10 23 24 this truth receiueth plentifull confirmation Heare the word of God O Princes of Sodome hearken vnto the Law of our God O people of Gomorrha thy Princes are rebellious and companions of theeues euery one loueth gifts and followeth after rewards they iudge not the fatherlesse neither doth the widdowes cause come before them therefore saith the Lord God of hostes the mighty one of Israel Ah I will ease me of mine aduersaries auenge me of mine enemies And in the Chapter following the same Prophet saith The high lookes
Tribe of Simeon pitch and the Captaine ouer the sonnes of Simeon shall be Shelumiel the sonne of Zuri shaddai 13. And his hoast and the number of them were nine and fifty thousand and three hundreth 14. And the Tribe of Gad and the Captain ouer the sonnes of Gad shall be Eliasaph the son of Deuel 15. And his hoast and the number of them were sixe and forty thousand sixe hundreth and fifty 16. All the number of the Campe of Reuben were an hundreth and one and fifty thousand and foure hundred and fifty according to their armies and they shall set foorth in the second place In these words wee haue a description of the second standard as appeareth in the shutting vp of this diuision where it is said They shall set foorth in the second place In this standard the principall is Reuben his assistants ioyned with him are Simeon and Gad. In which combination wee see the particular number of each of them declared their Captaines are specified and then the totall summe is reckoned vp We shewed before that Reuben was the eldest sonne of Iacob to whom as to the first borne the birth-right did of right belong yet we see in the former words that Iudah was set before him thus doth God shew himselfe a iust Iudge in punishing sin and declareth how odious and abhominable it is in his sight But see how God dealeth in mercy with him that is with his posterity He deserued vtterly to bee raced out of the number of Gods people and to be forgotten for euer by reason of his horrible incest and no doubt the rest of the Tribes were ready to hate him to reproch him and preferre themselues before him But behold the goodnesse of God that though he will punish sinne yet he doth it in mercy not with seuerity gently not rigorously for correction not seeking the ruine and destruction of those that belong Doctrine 3 vnto him From this example of Gods dealing toward Reuben Gods iudgements are alwayes tempered and seasoned with mercy toward those that are his wee learne that Gods iudgements are tempered and mingled with great mercy and mildnesse toward those that are his Reuben committed horrible incest and thereby deserued not onely to bee thrust into the lowest place but to be cast out of the account of Iacobs posterity and to be honoured neither of God nor man neither aliue not dead yet though Iudah haue the first place Reuben hath the second so then albeit hee was punished iustly he was punished gently Thus God dealeth euermore he correcteth both moderately and mercifully and as the Physitian allayeth the bitternesse of the potion with some sweetnesse so God asswageth the greatnesse of his punishment with some mildnesse and fauour that hee mingleth with it This doth the Prophet declare Psal 89 30 31 32 33 34. If his children forsake my Law and walke not in my iudgements If they breake my statutes and keepe not my Commandements then will I visite their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with strokes yet my louing kindnesse will I not take from h●m neither will I falsifie my truth c. God will chastise his for their sinnes but in the middest of his punishments he remembreth his mercy toward his and will not vtterly forsake them though he afflict them for a time So the Prophet Esay testifieth the like chap. 54 7 8. For a little while haue I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee for a moment in mine anger I hid my face from thee for a little season but with euerlasting mercy haue I had compassion on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer He correcteth his owne people because they are sinfull he correcteth them gently because he is mercifull This will yet better appeare vnto vs if we take a view of the examples of Gods dealing toward his seruants in their afflictions When Miriam rose vp against Moses she was striken with leprosie Numb 12 10 14. and shut out of the hoast seauen daies and afterward was receiued againe When Dauid had sinned in numbring the people 2 Sam. 24 13 16. the Lorde threatned three dayes pestilence in the Land the Angell stretched out his hand vpon Ierusalem to destroy it notwithstanding when Dauid repented of his sinne the Lord also repented of the euill and saide to the Angell that destroyed the people It is sufficient hold now thine hand When Zachariah the Priest would not beleeue the message that was sent him from God and deliuered by the Angell that hee should haue a sonne in his olde age then which what greater dishonour could be done to God what greater disgrace to his messenger It was saide vnto him Behold thou shalt be dumbe and not be able to speake Luke 1 20. vntill the day that these things be done If Miriam had beene striken with leaprosie as many yeares as she was daies or Dauid with the pestilence or Zachary with dumbnesse they could not haue complained against God but must haue acknowledged their sinnes had deserued more so that such is the dealing of our GOD toward his children that he euermore mitigateth the bitternesse of the cup of his wrath with the greatnesse of his mercy so that his iustice and goodnesse goe together This will farther appeare vnto vs by setting Reason 1 before vs sundry reasons which will put this doctrine out of all doubt For first of all he punisheth his people as it were vnwillingly as enforced and compelled vnto it by our disobedience Hee had rather spare vs and not correct vs if it were for our good but he seeth it to be for our benefit and to further our saluation who before we be afflicted doe goe astray and wander out of the right way This is the reason vrged by the Prophet Ieremy Lam. 3 32 33 Lam. 3 32 33. Though he send affliction yet will he not forsake for euer but haue compassion according to the multitude of his mercies for he doth not punish willingly nor afflict the Children of God If then he take no delight nor pleasure in it but doth it of necessity for our profite and amendment it followeth that he dealeth gently and not cruelly mildely and not rigorously with vs. Secondly he is as a louing Father that spareth Reason 2 his sonne that serueth him Hee dealeth not as a tyrant or a tormenter that setteth vpon the Racke and sheweth exquisite punishments vpon such as offend but he correcteth his Church as a father doth his childrē which come out of his bowels and therefore it must be done with great compassion This reason is often rendred to enforce this point of doctrine as Deut. 8 5. Know therefore in thine heart that as a man nourtereth his sonne so the Lord thy God nourtereth thee declaring thereby that his afflictions are signes of his fatherly loue toward vs. Likewise 2 Sam. 7 14. I will be his father and he shall bee my sonne if he sinne I
should be as frontlets betweene their eyes and write them vpon the postes of their houses and gates of their Cities all these were as helpes for memory against forgetfulnesse as if he had said vnto them Haue them alwayes in remembrance Of all persons old men seeme to haue the weakest memories which decay with their age and these doe most of all complaine of them howbeit the heathen man telleth vs that there is no man so old Cicero lib. de Senect that hath forgotten where he laid vp his treasure All men remember the things they most regard such as they loue they will not forget forasmuch as Where the treasure is there will the heart be also Mat. 6.21 If then we remember not the things of God the chiefe cause is because we doe not much esteeme of them Set an high price vpon them value them aboue thy siluer and thy gold esteeme them beyond all pearles and precious stones and thou shalt finde thy memory much bettered and encreased The fourth is to plant in vs true godlinesse and reforme our liues as it were to rid our ground of all bryars bushes before we sow any thing in it The gate of Gods house is the gate of righteousnesse because none but the iust and righteous ought to enter into it Psa 118.19 20. This is the cause that Iacob when hee went to Bethel to worship God first cleansed his house of the filthines of idolatry and commanded his houshold to be cleane Gen. 35. ● and change their garments thereby vnderstanding the purity of the heart and the changing of their mindes by the renuing of them according to true godlinesse Thus doth the Lord command the Israelites to wash their cloathes and sanctifie themselues before they came to heare the law at his mouth Exo. 19.14 To this purpose Dauid saith Psal 26.6 I will wash mine hands in innocency so will I compasse thine Altar O Lord. If we come into Gods presence without sanctification we offer a sacrifice full of blemishes which his soule abhorreth He reiecteth our prayers as abominable and our hearing of his word is turned into sinne Lastly we are bound to lay vp in the heart that which we heare for God especially requireth the heart If that be wanting he misseth it by and by he espyeth it so soon as we come as he did him that came to the marriage feast without his wedding garment Mat. 22.11 There is no man hath any treasure that leaueth or layeth it commonly and carelesly but he locketh it vp that no man should take it from him the word is a pearle and a pearle of such price that when he hath found it that knoweth the worth of it Matth. 13. he selleth all that he hath to buy it the heart is as it were the coffer where we ought to keepe it If we hold it in our hands or haue it in our heads or suffer it to dwell in our mouthes onely and cannot afford to giue it roome and lodging in our hearts it is in danger euery foote to be taken from vs and we surprised of it Esay 29.13 Such persons honour him with their lips but their harts are far from him Matt. 15. The blessed Virgin is commended that she kept those sayings in her heart So did Isaac go out into the fields to meditate Luk. 2.10 Gen. 24.63 at euentide he chose a solitary place and fit season to call to minde such things as he had heard Wherefore let vs also lay vp in our soules and ponder in our hearts such good things as wee haue learned and let vs hide them as in the casket of a good conscience that in all times of need we may bring foorth these precious treasures to helpe vs. We know not into what troubles and perplexities we may come how we may be tempted assaulted into what dangers of spiritual enemies we may fall how bitter will those dayes be vnto vs if wee haue no word of God dweling in vs to comfort vs raise vs vp againe It wil then be too late to go and buy oile in our lamps when we should vse it Let vs store our selues with plenty of heauenly meditations that we may neuer be too seeke and arme our selues with such sufficient furniture that wheresoeuer the enemy seeke to foile vs and to make a breach into our soules we may be able to resist him and to stand fast in the power of God against all the wyles of the diuell 21. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 22. Take also the summe of the sonnes of Gershon throughout the houses of their fathers by their families 23. From thirty yeares old and vpward vntill fifty yeare old shalt thou number them all that enter in to performe the seruice to doe the worke in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 24. This is the seruice of the families of the Gershonites to serue and for burdens 25. And they shall beare the Curtaines of the Tabernacle and the Tabernacle of the Congregation his couering and the couering of the badgers skinnes that is aboue vpon it and the hanging for the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 26. And the hangings of the Court and the hanging for the doore of the gate of the Court which is by the Tabernacle by the Altar round about and their cords and all the instruments of their seruice all that is made for them so shall they serue 27. At the appointment of Aaron and his sonnes shall be all the seruice of the sonnes of the Gersbonites in all their burdens and in all their seruice and ye shall appoint vnto them in charge all their burdens 28. This is the seruice of the families of the sonnes of Gershon in the Tabernacle of the Congregation and their charge shall be vnder the hand of Ithamar the sonne of Aaron the Priest Hitherto Moses hath spoken of the Kohathites and he hath done it more largely then he doth handle the other families for the causes noted before In the next place he proceedeth to the Gershonites Touching these first God commandeth them also to be numbred and t●●ir age is appointed and limited as in the fo●mer from thirty yeares old and vpward vntill fifty Secondly their proper and peculiar charge is expressed what burdens they are to beare to wit the Curtaines and the couerings the cordes the veiles and all the instruments appertaining to their seruice Thirdly all these things before mentioned must be done at the commandement of Aaron and his sonnes Ver. 22 23. Take also the summe of the sons of Gershon c. Obserue with me in this diuision that Moses repeateth sundry points that are set downe in the former chapter as will euidently appeare vnto vs if wee make tryall and comparison in euery one of the three families as for example touching the Kohathites that which hee speaketh of them in this chapter verse 5 7 9. compare it with the 31. verse of the third chapter
sound out Achan who had stollen the Babylonish garment and wedge of gold he had hidden it priuily and conueyed it closely into his tent howbeit he could not hide himselfe but the eye of God easily espyed him so that the hoste of God could not prosper so long as he remained in it Iosh 7.4 but receiued an ouerthrow at the siege of Ai. Wherefore what shal it profit vs to be absolued by the voices and sentences of all men or to be winked at as if we were cleare innocent when our conscience accuseth vs before God or he be displeased with vs and angry against vs We must enter into our selues and consider how the case standeth betweene God vs and not thinke it enough to know how the case standeth betweene man and vs. What though we can bribe them and stoppe their mouthes and make them hold their peaces and cause them to be content to take a little at our hands when we haue done them much wrong rather then they will goe to law with vs because they are weak and we mighty they are poore and we rich they are empty and we full we shall not be able to bribe the Lord who is stronger then we are and taketh the cause of the oppressed into his hand When we haue offered iniury vnto them it is not enough to confesse our fault vnto them and to humble our selues before them and to seeke to make amends vnto them all this we may doe and then goe to hell yet there are many that doe not come thus farre So then we must remember whom we offend that is God and thereupon to account all sinne heinous and capital forasmuch as it is against the highest Maiesty of infinite power and authority The greater the person is that is offended the greater the sinne is If a man speake euill of the Iudge or Iustice he shall be imprisoned howbeit it is not so heinous as to raile at the Prince because his person is greater and higher But what are all Princes but mortall men whose breath is in their nostrils whose bodies must goe into the graue and turne into dust out of which they were taken in comparison of the immortall God who is a person of infinite and incomprehensible Maiesty If he giue vs once the sight of our sinnes and touch our hearts with a feeling of them though they were as hard as steele as sencelesse as the dead and seared as with an hote yron he can make them aliue quicke and tender enough that we shall goe roaring all the day long and finde comfort in nothing if his hand be heauy vpon vs he will turne our moisture into the drouth of Summer and make all our bones that are broken to clatter so that our life shal abhorre bread and our soule dainty meate and our flesh shall be consumed away that it cannot be seene It is not therefore for vs to dally with him as with a childe or to play with his iustice as the fly doth with the candle til she be consumed but rather let vs remember the exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 12.28 Let vs haue grace whereby we may serue God acceptably with reuerence godly feare because our God is a consuming fire If his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that trust in him As then we are to mark what we doe so we are to marke against whom wee doe it lest wee taste of destruction at the last and then would giue all the world if we were owners of it to be eased and released of our horrible plagues as it fared and fell out with the rich man in the Gospel Luk. 16. Let vs not thinke to escape from him by denying our sinnes as the reprobate shall doe at the last day who being accused of sin committed against God Matth. 25.44 shall answere When saw we thee a stranger or naked or hungry or thirsty or in prison but Christ Iesus will reply against them and take away all excuse from them and so stop the mouth of iniquity Verely verely I say vnto you inasmuch as ye did it not to one of these little ones ye did it not to me And heereby we may try our selues whether we haue truely repented of sinne or not if this note that abounded in Dauid be found in vs. For his conscience doth not so much accuse him for any fact and offence committed against Vriah as against the Lord himselfe and from hence came the liuely feeling of his sinne So if our conscience accuse vs much more for offending of Gods infinite Maiesty then for the iniury which we haue done vnto man if we stay not beneath vpon the earth but lift vp our hearts vnto God and consider that we haue to doe with him we haue attained to a good measure of true repentance But so long as we regard nothing but men we shall neuer behold the true face of sinne nor see it as it is in his owne likenesse To conclude let vs learne that of all enemies God is the most fearefull and terrible if he set himselfe against vs. Secondly seeing God is the person that is Vse 2 hurt and offended we learne that vengeance belongeth vnto him onely When iniury is done vnto any we must esteeme the wrong as done not onely vnto men but to God and therefore is to be left vnto him whose commandement is transgressed For except the Law of God had beene violated the creature should haue had no cause to complaine of any iniury It is the law that maketh it a sinne and an iniury as we shewed before out of the Apostle Rom. 7. No man therefore is to reuenge his owne cause but must commit vengeance vnto God and to that person that sustaineth Gods person on earth to wit the Magistrate who beareth not the sword in vaine whose iudgement is the iudgement of God whose reuenge is the reuenge of God This doth the Apostle set downe as a rule to guide vs Rom. 12.19 Dearely beloued auenge not your selues but rather giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord. A lesson often vrged alwayes confessed and yeelded vnto but smally regarded and seldome practised For as if there were no God in heauen no Gods on earth that beare his name and title men runne together like wilde beasts or as horses that rush into the battell and reuenge their owne quarrels as if sinne were wholly committed against themselues and not at all against God as if they were specially interessed in it and God had litle to doe with the matter as if the wrong touched them and no way concerned him From hence it commeth to passe that whiles they goe about greedily to reuenge wrong done vnto them iudgement falleth vpon their owne heads and God executeth vengeance vpon them for their reuenge and so while they goe about to hurt others the greatest hurt falleth vpon themselues and while they shew themselues
iudgement he will execute vengeance on his enemies and will reward them that hate him If a king heare of another coming against him with an huge and mighty host and consider that he is not able to encounter with him hand to hand while he is yet afarre off he sendeth embassage desiring conditions of peace Luke 14 32. This wisedome ought to be in vs. Let no man thinke to preuaile get the vpper hand by standing out against him He that continueth an enemy vnto him is an enemy to himselfe nay to his owne soule It is sinne that maketh this separation betweene God and vs Esay 59 2. We rise vp against him we rebell against the Lord 2 Chron. 13 6 and then the Lord riseth vp against vs. We cannot prosper so long as wee prouoke him with an high hand Let vs therefore repent vs of our euill waies How we may haue peace with God and turne vnto him assuring our selues that then he will turne vnto vs. Let vs humble our selues vnder his mighty hand and he will lift vs vp Let vs confesse our sinnes vnto him and we shall finde mercy for he is iust and mercifull to forgiue vs our sins There is no peace to be obtained but vnder these three conditions repentance humility and confession these as a trumpet sound the retreate of his iudgements they are as peace-makers betweene God and vs and are as a strong threefold cord which is not easily broken whereby his hands are after a sort bound from pouring wrath and vengeance vpon vs. Let thine enemies be scattered and them that hate thee flie before thee Marke in these words the title that he giueth to those that were ready to hinder their approch vnto Canaan hee saith not Let our enemies and them that hate vs be scattered but let thine enemies and them that hate thee c. Neuerthelesse if he had so praied the praier had beene lawfull but his words are more powerfull and effectuall whereby we see that the Churches enemies he calleth Gods enemies and sheweth that they hated not onely the godly but God himselfe So then the doctrine Doctrin● is this that the enemies of the Church in generall The e●e●● of the ch●●● are the e●●mies of 〈◊〉 or of any his faithfull seruants in particular are indeed and in truth the enemies of God himselfe Howsoeuer they may in the blindnes of their harts perswade themselues that notwithstanding their hatred to Gods deare children they may be the good friends of God yet they do but deceiue themselues for they are accounted his vtter enemies and such as inwardly hate him as Exod. 15 verses 6 7. speaking of the drowning of Pharaoh and his host in the redde sea Moses singeth that the Lord ouerthrew them that rose vp against him he saith not they rose vp against Israel And Deborah speaking of the destruction of Sisera Iudg. 5 verse 31 saith So let all thine enemies O Lord perish Thus the Prophet alluding to the common prayer of Moses in this place beginneth the 68. Psalme in this manner Let God arise let his enemies bee scattered let them also that hate him flie before him The like we see Psalm 83 2 3. Deut 32 It is plaine therefore that the enemies of the godly are Gods enemies though if they were asked the question they would vtterly deny it thinke themselues vniustly charged with it For first God is entred into a league and couenant with them to haue the same friends and the same enemies as if he should say Reason as Iehoshaphat said to the Kings of Israel 1 King ● 2 King 3 I am as thou art my people as thy people and my horses as thy horses This appeareth in the Couenant which God made with Abraham Gen. 12 3. I will blesse them that blesse thee and curse them that curse thee and his he verifieth in all that imbrace the faith of Abraham Secondly wherefore are the vngodly persecuters enemies to Gods children or what hath the righteous done and why do they set themselues against them is it not for the Lords sake is it not for his truth and religion True it is they may haue and indeed haue other colours and pretences but religion is the cause of all the true feare of God as Psal 44 22 38 20. Rom. 8 36. as it is noted of Caine that he was of that euill one and slew his brother because his owne workes were euill his brothers good 1 Iohn 3 12. Woe therfore vnto them that set themselues against Gods people for they fight against Vse 1 God and he will fight against them for those that are his If they cannot preuaile against him for what is an arm of flesh to the Almighty then certainely not against the Church So long as God standeth the Church shall stand vpright the gates of hell cannot preuail against it Mat. 16. Zach. 2 Deut. ●● Psal 17 Hence it is that the Prophet saith He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eie We may therefore conclude as a principle not to be gainsaid the sure and certaine destruction of all the enemies of the Church in asmuch as he will thrust through the loynes of them that set themselues against his sanctuary They may for a time prosper preuaile but in the end they shall be confounded and come to ruine Let them in time consider in what case they stand They thinke they haue to deale only with men ouer whom they may insult at their pleasure through their might and greatnesse but they shall find they haue to doe with God who is able to vphold his seruants O that they could consider this Vse 2 Secondly we may truely inferre the woful estate of those that defend not the cause of God and his children that do not stand with them but stand still as newters and looke on as idle beholders and suffer them to be borne down and trampled vnder the feet of proud men as myre in the street such as shrinke backe from them for feare of danger that may befall thēselues For such as forsake the faithfull in their iust defence do in the height of their sin and in the pride of their hearts forsake the Lord himselfe and renounce him This made Dauid say 〈◊〉 50.51 Remēber Lord the reproch of thy seruants how I doe beare in my bosom the reproch of all the mighty people wherewith thine enemies haue reproched O Lord wherewith they haue reproched the footesteps of thine Annointed As he bare the reproches of his enemies which were Gods enemies in his bosome so he prayeth that God would recompence their sin into their bo●ome Therfore it is that Deborah saith Curse ye Meroz curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof 〈◊〉 23. because they came not out to the help of the Lord to the help of the Lord against the mighty They did not ioyne with the enemies of God yet they are cursed because they sate
1 4 and pity vs as a father pities his children Ps 103 13 14. Hee will stir vp the hearts of others to whom hee hath giuen this worlds good to doe vs good who hath the hearts of all in his owne hand Such therefore ought then especially to giue themselues to prayer vnto God they must also beare themselues thankfully to men that haue bene raised vp to shew compassion toward them but aboue all to God himselfe from whom euery good gift commeth Iam. 1 17. The dutie of such as are taken with the pestilence The duties of such as are taken with the pestilence are also to be considered They must consider that their sins haue deserued that iudgement that God thereby calleth them to repentance stir●eth them to praier exerciseth their faith driueth thē from security weaneth them from the loue of the world and bringeth them to a loue and desire of heauen Such must renounce all confidence in the flesh and commit themselues wholy to God not doubting of his mercy they must set their houses in order to auoid contention they must giue testimony of their faith in their sicknesse and stir vp those that are about them and come to visit them to the feare of God Especially let them take heede they doe not accuse God of dealing hardly and rigorouslie with them because he striketh thē while he letteth others to escape but let them stoope downe to his correction submit themselues to his heauenly pleasure with all reuerence Lastly The dutie of all men in time of the plague it is the duty of all men to make solemne profession of their humiliation repentance humbling themselues before God by fasting and praier against whom they haue sinned Exod. 15 26. 1 Kin. 8 38. Al brauery and excesse ought then to be laid aside all riotousnesse and luxuriousnesse should be banished far from vs Esa 22 12 13 14. The Prophet Amos reproueth the rich crieth out earnestly against their senslesnesse liuing in all kind of pleasures and delights nothing at al regarding the affliction of Ioseph chap. 6. So was it with the rich Glutton in the gospel though he saw Lazarus lye at his gate in great misery yet he was clad in purple fared deliciously euery day Lu. 16 19. such is the pride and delicacy of our times y● albeit God sweep away many with his fearful visitation and the cry of the poore at such times bee verie great that it might euen moue the stones to relent and that it soundeth with a shrill voyce in the eares of men and ascendeth vp to God yet the greatest sort are nothing moued the Lord of hosts calleth to weeping and to mourning to girding with sackecloth and behold ioy and gladnes slaying Oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die No man almost will diminish any thing of his brauery in apparell of his daintinesse in fare of his costlinesse in furniture and of his excesse in all things Let all such as feare God think vpon the euill day prepare themselues against the time of affliction stoop vnder the mighty hand of God I will disinherite them and will make of thee a greater Nation and mightier then they A most fearefull threatning It is a sore punishment when the father is constrained to disinherite his sonne Gen. 49 3 4 but much sorer when he must disinherite all of them God threatneth in this place to disinherite thousands of Israel and to make of Moses a mighty Nation And as Iohn Baptist said to the Pharisies and Sadduces that came to his baptisme Math 3 ● that God was able of those stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham so doth the Lord say to Moses that he would destroy that whole people for whom he had praied before chap. 10 36. Returne O Lord to the many thousands of Israel but of him hee would raise vp a great and a mighty Nation This threatning we must vnderstand conditionally except his anger be appeased at the prayer and intercession of Moses The threatnings of God are twofold some are peremptory and absolute neuer to be reuoked as it is said of the lawes of the Medes Persians that they could not be changed as Gen. 2 17. If Adā had praied al the daies of his life that he might not die but returne to his former condition the sentence of God had not bin reuersed The like we see concerning Moses Numb 20 12. God threatneth that he should neuer enter into the Land of promise Moses vnderstanding the threatening conditionally Deut. 3 26. besought the Lord that he might goe ouer Iordan into that Land but the Lord was wroth with him and would not heare him but saide vnto him Let it suffice thee speake no more vnto me of this matter The same we might say of Dauid he receiued a threatning against his sin that the childe conceiued in adultery should die 2 Sam. 12 14 neuerthelesse he besought God for the childe with fasting weeping and praier v. 16. he said Who can tell whether God will be gracious to me that the childe may liue Notwithstanding according as the Prophet had denounced the childe died So then we see that some of Gods iudgements denounced against the sonnes of men are absolute and irreuocable and must take effect other of them are limited with a condition and vpon humiliation and repentance are changed altered and so it is with the promises of God some of them are absolute and some are with condition Such as concerne saluation and are necessary to eternall life are promised absolutely in respect of God Doctrine The threatenings of Gods iudgements are conditionall such as are temporall and belong to this present life are promised conditionally We learne from hence that the threatnings and denunciations of Gods iudgments are for the most part conditionall not absolute toward his people and to be vnderstood with this exception except they repent and amend This condition is sometimes expressed and sometimes vnderstood It is set downe expresly Ier. 18 7 8. Sometimes it is suppressed and vnderstood inclusively Gen. 6 3. The reasons First because after threatning Reason 1 if repentance follow it causeth forgiuenes of sin and taketh away the cause of punishment Sinne is the cause of Gods iudgements if the cause be remoued the effect will ceasse Ezek. 33 14 15. Whē I say to the wicked thou shalt surely die if he turne from his sin and do that which is lawfull c. he shall surely liue he shall not die Secondly God is a gracious God of great Reason 2 long-suffering and of much patience and vnspeakable kindnesse ready though much moued to receiue to mercy as soone as we return to him Ier. 3 12. He promiseth mercy to them that repent his anger shall not fall vpon them that returne because he is mercifull and will not keepe his wrath for euer Thirdly
he had beene said Thy seruant went no whither 2 Ki. 5 25. Or if they slāder and belye their masters or any way falsely accuse them as Ziba did Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 16 3. Or if they run away from their masters and will not tarry in their houses like the seruants of Shemei that fled from him 1 King 2 39. Or if they picke and steale from them as Onesimus did from Philemon or any way deale fraudulently falsly with their masters goods which he hath committed to their trust as the vniust steward did with his Lord Lu. 16 5 6 7. Let these look for no better dealing in times to come at the hands of their owne seruants but be well assured that it is iust with God to send them the like false and disobedient seruants as themselues haue beene to their masters Thus then we see how all inferiors shold be encouraged to honour their superiours because God will cause them to be honoured and on the other side be terrified from despising and dishonouring them lest another day he cause them also to be dishonoured Your children shall wander in the wildernesse forty yeares and beare your whoredomes c By whoredome we must vnderstand the punishment of the idolatry and infidelity of their fathers falling from God and ceasing to trust in him For as idolatry so infidelity is spirituall whoredome They were as a wife that had forsaken her husband and broken the couenant of her God So then obserue that according to the number of the daies in which the fathers had searched the Land euē forty daies the children must beare their iniquities and wander too and fro forward and backward forty yeares before they should enter into the Land The doctrine from hence is this Doctrine The iudgements and punishments of God God visiteth the sinnes of the father vpon the childrē deserued and procured by the fathers sinnes and rebellions do oftentimes fal vpon their children and posterity they do not end and ceasse in themselues but descend to their stocke issue that liue after them Exod. 20 5. and 34 7 8. The reasons First because the children of Reason 1 men and their posterity though they be oftentimes infants and haue not vnderstanding to conceiue of sinne yet the same iudgements that belonged to the fathers sinnes shall light vpon them because God would therby shew his anger sore displeasure against their sins in that when it pleaseth him hee will punish those for their sinnes which as yet had committed no sinne at all Rom. 5 14 Gen. 7 4 and 19 25. Secondly touching those that are of ripe Reason 2 years they are of two sorts either wicked so like to their parents and then it is iust with God to bring his iudgements vpon them because he would shew himselfe displeased with their sins or else they are godly not tainted and defiled with them yet neuerthelesse there is other corruption enough in thē which may lustly worthily call for temporal iudgment Obiect But some haply will obiect that this may seeme to bee quite contrary to other Scriptures as Ezek. 18 4 ●0 where it is said The soule that sinneth shall die the death and againe The sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father neither shall the father beare the iniquity of the son the righteousnes of the righteous shall be vpon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall be vpon him I answer Answer we must marke the occasion of these words The children of Israel tooke vp a taunting prouerb against God and in their afflictions said The fathers haue eaten sowre grapes the childrens teeth are set on edge v 2. that is the fathers haue sinned and the children are punished These were quick-sighted to looke vp but they could not looke downe-ward vpon themselues they could see farther off but were blinde neerer home These were ranke hypocrites who had rather accuse God then themselues and as Adam cast the fault from himselfe vpon his wife Gen. 3 12 so do they from themselues vpon their fathers They neuer thinke of their owne eating of the sowre grapes they thought themselues free frō any sin that should procure such iudgements but God taketh the sons in the sins of the fathers and then punisheth them for their owne sins taking occasion from their fathers sins Euery mans sin shall be vpon his owne head so that though a wicked father be condemned yet his sonne not treading in his steps shall be saued And though God punisheth temporally for the sin of the father yet he doth not condemn any eternally for the same For as the godlinesse of the father shall nothing helpe the son to eternall life so his wickednes shall not hinder his saluation except he be wicked himselfe and walke in the steps of his wicked father Obiect But it wil peraduenture be said that Dauid sinned in the numbring of the people yet the people were punished many thousands were plagued for his offence 2 Sa. 24 15 17 and he escaped scot-free Loe I haue sinned and I haue done wickedly but these sheepe what haue they done Let thine hand I pray thee be against me and against my fathers house I answer Answer this is a certaine infallible rule that there is no vnrighteousnesse with God who is the Iudge of all the world Deut. 32 4. Lament 3 33 And touching the people though they were free from this sin of Dauid yet they had many other greeuous sins for which God might iustly punish them and God either for some secret or else some open sin had a quarrell against them as is plaine by these words 2 Sam. 24 1. The anger of the Lord was againe kindled against Israel and therefore he moued Dauid against them to say Go number Iudah and Israel It is not said that he moued Dauid against himselfe but against them So then their owne sin was the cause of the kings sin and the kings sin brought this punishment vpon them The cause he cause the cause the thing caused and therefore their sin was the cause of the cause of their punishment It may be they abused the peace plenty giuen vnto them after the three yeares of famine after the foure great battels which they had fought against the Philistims for it is hard to vse Gods blessings wel our corrupt nature being ready to turne good into euill and blessings into curses Deut. 32 6 15. Therefore the people are especially plagued because their sin was the first cause of al which sin he punished with the sin of Dauid God punisheth one with anoth● and both of thē with that greeuous pestilence And touching Dauid we cannot say he altogether escaped vnpunished for God by one and the same plague and iudgement striketh many waies and many persons his sword hath many edges and cutteth euery way he vseth no rod that hath not many sharpe twigs nor no whip that hath not many cordes
9. Acts 2 23. Luke 19 8. The reasons First because repentance onely Reason 1 made generally confusedly for knowne sins is neuer true repentance but a common hypocriticall repentance of one resolued and setled to continue in sin not yet touched with a true feeling thereof True it is for secret and vnknowne sins which we in weaknesse ignorance commit the Lord accepteth a general confession as we see in the practise of the Prophet Dauid saying Who can vnderstand his faults Cleanse me from secret sins Psalm 19 12. Thus did the rest no doubt of the godly deal such an acknowledgment of their vnknown sins which they tooke not to be sins did they make in a general manner which were hidden not onely from other men but euen from thēselues This we may say of their polygamy or their marrying of many wiues and other their dail infirmities Secondly we must make a particular account to God at the houre of death when we Reason 2 must pleade guilty or not guilty at his bar A generall reckoning and account will not then be taken neither will the Lord set before vs grosse summes but the account shall be made of specials which may cause the stoutest and strongest men to tremble and quake for very feare of that day All the sinnes of thy former life shal be represented before thee like ● squadron of enemies ready set in battell aray to assault thee to giue in euidence against thee This is taught and witnessed vnto vs by the Apostle Iohn describing the manner of iudgement to which we shall be summoned Reuel 20 12. I saw the bookes opened and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their works It standeth vs vpon in regard of these bookes to make vp our bookes and to looke to our reckonings forasmuch as we must gaue an account of our stewardship Luk. 16 2. Let vs now make vse of this doctrine First Vse 1 we learne from hence that it is not enough to say we are sinners and so to cry God mercy for a pa●g or a brunt and so away or to desire God to forgiue vs our sinnes but we must vncase our selues and vncouer our particular trespasses if we would haue God to couer thē with the precious garment of Christ If a sicke man come to the Physition and onely tell him he is sicke and neuer shew him his particular greefe and disease that troubleth him in what part he is pained and in what sort he is taken he can neuer look to be cured and restored to health If we come vnto God the Father of spirits and Physition of soules and onely say We haue sinned we cannot assure our selues of pardon We declared before that we must cōfesse our vnknowne sinnes generally but our knowne sinnes we must confesse particularly without any excuse or defence without any hiding or diminishing of thē as the same Prophet doth after he had sinned in numbring of the people I haue sinned greatly because I haue done this thing ●hro 21 8. c. Wherfore ●t standeth vs vpon with great greefe heauinesse of heart to confesse our speciall sinnes to giue sentence against our selues and to pray with earnestnes of spirit as for life and death for the pardon of our offences which we haue committed at such and such times in such places with such persons and in such manner otherwise our repentance is only in shew and for fashion sake which is neuer acceptable to God being done in hypocrisie and without a conscionable feeling of sinne in the soule Vse 2 Secondly this particular confession ouerthroweth and ouerturneth sundry corruptions and abuses in the case of repentance It condemneth all impenitent persons such as liue continue in one estate neuer sorrow for any sinne neither at any time turne from it neither haue any feeling or ●●eefe for sinne neither know what it meaneth This is a dangerous estate and a most perilous iudgement For as a sick man is then most dangerously sick when he hath no feeling of his sicknesse and is ready to say he is well and hath small sense or none at all of any paine or perill so sinfull man is then in greatest misery by reason of his sinnes when hee thinketh himselfe to bee no sinner Such one is farre off from mourning sorrowing for sinne from turning from them and returning to God seeing be taketh himselfe to be in good ●ase and to stand in need of no repentance Such were the Pharisies in the dayes of Christ whom he reproueth Mat. 9 12 13. Besides it cōdemneth ceremonial repentance which carrieth an outward shew of dying to sinne but is separated from the inward truth of a sound heart Thus Saul repented 1 Sam. 15.74 and 26 21 and 24 17 18. And Ahab rent his clothes but not his heart hee fasted from food but not from sinne 1 Kin. 21.27.29 Thus the hypocrites repent mentioned in the Prophets when a man afflicteth his soule for a day Esay 58 5. Mic. 6 7. and boweth-downe his head as a bulrush yet looseth not the bondes of wickednesse and therefore immediately afterward he imbraceth his former sinnes and returneth to his old wayes as Phazaoh did who being annoied with the frogs smitten with the haile terrified with the thunders troubled with the grassehoppers pestered with the flyes disquieted with the darkenesse this was the euen● and issue of all as soone as he had rest giuen vnto him he hardned his heart and hearkened not vnto the Lord. This is the common sicknes of the common repentance that men ordinarily practise in these daies whereby they deceiue themselues and their owne soules dealing in hypocrisie dissembling with the Lord catching at the shadow instead of the body resting in shewes instead of the substance Lastly it condemneth all such as haue hardened their hearts in sinne and are growne therby to be past feeling such as cannot discerne betweene good and euill nor tremble at Gods iudgements but draw sin ●o themselues as it were with cart-ropes and worke all vncleannesse euen with greedinesse These haue their conscience seared with an hot Iron and it accuseth them not for any sin but bringeth them into a reprobate minde so that they are so farre from confessing their proper and particular sinnes that they haue no sense or remorse of any sin but are full of all wickednesse and vnrighteousnesse Lastly it behooueth vs to search out our waies to see what we haue left vndone and Vse 3 what lyeth most vpon our consciences and especially bewaile the same otherwise there is in vs no sound conuersion This the Prophet testifieth Lam. 3 40 41. Some are specially inclined to lust vncleannesse some to couetousnes some to surfeiting drunkennes some to enuy reuenge some to swearing blaspheming some to pleasures delights of the outward man now where we are weakest Satan will be strongest where our defence is
then our iustification standeth not in our good workes but in that God pardoneth our euill workes For we haue all bene as an vncleane thing And all our righteousnesse is as filthy clouts Esay ch 64. ver 6. Vse 1 Now let vs make vse of this doctrine First this ministreth great comfort to the faithfull that are in Christ The glory and happines of our soules and bodies in this life in the life to come consisteth herein The forgiuenesse of sinnes comprehendeth vnder it as it were in a short summe all the mercies of God This is it which the Prophet Esay teacheth chap 40 1. So Dauid declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnes without workes saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sins are couered blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not his sin Psal 32 1 2 7. This mercy of God will bee sweete vnto vs and cheere vp our hearts with vnspeakeable comfort and giue vs ioy in the holy Ghost if we consider these circumstances that wee dayly offend God after our new birth that all sin is odious in it selfe and maketh vs vile and abhominable in the sight of God keeping all good things from vs and pulling downe all euill vpon vs and that the wages thereof is death beeing able to presse vs downe to the very bottome of the gulfe of hell Ier. 5 25. Esay 59 1 2 3. If a man had all the skill of wise Salomon to speake as he did of the nature of beasts of birds and creeping things knew the vertues of all trees and plants 1 Kings 4.33 from the Cedar that is in Libanus vnto the Hysop that springeth out of the wall and were ignorant of this blessed priuiledge and had not the comfortable assurance of it in his conscience it could not auaile or profit him one whit It might peraduenture delight the outward man for a season but wanting the sweet feeling of Gods fauour in washing away his sins the other can be but vanity and vexation of spirit If a man were able to measure the heauens to tell the order height distances influences and number of the starres and yet be ignorant at home and doe not know what is done as it were within his owne house and within the doores and clossets of his owne heart what should it profit him thus to gaze vp into heauen when the burthen of sinne is ready to thrust him downe to hell If a man were so excellent and expert as out of the knowledge of herbes and Simples to remedie all the diseases of the body yet if he be not able to salue the sores of his soule know not how the sicknesses and infirmities therof shall be cured this can be little comfort to him for then he may haue a sound body but an infected soule an healthy body but a sickly soule full of the botches and blemishes of sin which of all diseases is most dangerous and deadly If a man had the knowledge of all lawes and statutes and were able to decide any controuersie and end any suite between man man yet is not assured how himselfe shal be acquitted when the Iudge of all the world shall come and holde his Assises and how things shall stand with him it can bring no peace vnto him seeing God hath a controuersie against him so long as his sinnes are vnpardoned Hos 4 1. What shal it profit a man to bee passing well seene in musicke by voice or instrument to be skilful in reports and descant and bee alwaies troubled with a iarring conscience Last of all what shall it auaile if a man vnderstood all Arts and Mysteries if hee could worke miracles and speake with the tongues of men and Angels if he knew al sciences and secrets of nature yet were ignorant of the forgiuenesse of his sinnes and of the grace of Christ Philip. 3 7. 1 Cor. 2 2. whom onely if we know the matter is not great if we know nothing else whom if we know not it is worth nothing if we know all things in the world beside Vse 2 Secondly wofull is their estate that are not of the Church that are not in Christ that are without true faith and feeling of this heauenly doctrine Wretched and miserable is the condition of many thousands in the world which want this assurance it is such a burthen as ●tayeth vs from the heauens and waigheth vs ●owne to hell Pouerty is a great burthen the ●word famine pestilence imprisonment sicknesse oppression and such crosses are indeede ●eauy burthens but the burthen of sinne sur●ounteth them all Therefore the Prophet ●aith Psal 38 4. Mine iniquities are gone ouer mine head and as waighty burthens they are too heauy Hence it is that the Apostle exhorteth vs Heb. 12 1 to cast off euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on that so we may run with patience the race that is set before vs. So heauy it was on the Angels that kept not their first estate That it cast them downe to hell and they are reserued in chains vnto the iudgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2 4. So heauy it was vpon the shoulders of Dathan and Abiram that the earth was not able to hold them but receyued them to destruction Yea it is so intollerable a burden as it bringeth terrors and horrors that cannot be expressed and leadeth to the gulfe of desperation when God chargeth the conscience with sinne so that though a man had al riches and honors all pleasures and delights al kingdomes and glory of the world what ioy or comfort can he feel in these things so long as he is not at peace with his God Contrarywise he that is eased of this waight lightened of this burthen though hee haue all the troubles crosses and afflictions of Iob be laid in fetters with Ioseph be banished his country with Moses be cast to the Lions with Daniel he put in the stockes with Ieremy be fed with bread of affliction with Micaiah and haue no more comfort and compassion shewed vnto him then the poore begger in the Gospel to haue the dogges licke his sores Luke 16 21. though his estate be vile contemptible and miserable to the world yet so long as he hath a discharge of his debt a pardon of his sin a cancelling of the bill of enditement drawne against him written in his heart and feeles that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding sealing him vp to the day of redemption this man before God is most happy and blessed for euer But if sin be imputed vnto vs and God enter into iudgement with vs Who shall bee able to stand before him or be righteous in his sight Psal 130 3. 143 2. This feeling of sinne and wound of conscience which the stroke of Gods hand hath made will weary the strongest and lustiest man that liueth when hee shall open the eye to see
and the heart to feele the horror thereof together with the heauinesse of his wrath indignation for the same This made Cain to speake desperately My punishment is greater then I can beare Gen. 4 13. This made Iudas to do desperately when he wrought his owne destruction and hanged himselfe Mat. 27.5 This made Dauid to say If thou Lord streightly markest iniquities who is he that shal be able to endure thy iudgement They then are grossely deceyued and most vnhappy who thinke happinesse to consist in committing of sinnes with all greedinesse These are in the number of those fooles howsoeuer worldly wise that make a mocke of sinne Prou. 14 9 12 13. There is a way that seemeth right to a man but the issues thereof are the wayes of death euen in laughing the heart is sorrowfull and the end of that mirth is heauines The world hath alwayes bene full of such fooles but if they depart hence without the feeling of Gods fauor in the forgiuenesse of their offences it had beene good for them that they had bene bruite beasts or that they had neuer bene borne as it is sayd of Iudas Math. 26 24. No vncleane thing shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Such as haue not their sins pardoned haue no part in Christ Out of Christ there is no saluation nor vnto such any imputation of his righteousnes Sinne shutteth vp the way that leadeth vnto life it separateth vs from God and his Kingdome it maketh vs the children of the diuell God displeased with vs for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Thirdly we see some are happy in this life Vse 3 and attaine to the certainty of their saluation The saluation of the Church standeth in the remission of their sinnes Luke 1 ●7 We doe not then begin to be happy when at the end of our dayes we enter into the kingdom of heauen but while we are vpon the earth we lay the foundation of our happines and set the first stones of it or else we neuer attaine vnto it We are all in this life builders 1 Cor. 3 9. We haue a great and waighty work to set vp it requireth a long time and great labour to bring it to passe and perfection Euery day of our life shold adde somwhat to the building this day should make it in greater forwardnesse then the former Let vs diligently consider these things and seriously examine our selues what wee haue done for the furthering of our saluation whether wee haue alreadie made an happy entrance into it So soone as we begin and the first stone is laid the doore of the kingdome of heauen is opened vnto vs. The further we proceed the neerer wee come to the marke This our Sauiour preached to his hearers Iohn 5 24. Verily verily I say vnto you he that heareth my word beleeueth him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnatiō but hath passed from death to life When Zacheus was conuerted to the faith and testified the sincerity of his repentance by actuall restitution he saide This day is saluation come vnto this house forasmuch as he is also become the sonne of Abraham Luke 19 9. So the Apostle speaketh Rom. 13 11 Considering the season it is now time that we should arise from sleepe for now is our saluation nerer then when we beleeued it And in that holy Praier of Christ recorded by the Euangelist Iohn hee saith This is eternall life to know thee to be the only very God whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Iohn 17 3. This is the great mercy of God to giue vs here a taste of the glory to come We haue heere as it were the first fruits of eternal life and by hope possesse that which we shall really inherit so wee may truly say with the Apostle 2 Tim. 1 12 I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day Heereby we see that it is not a doctrine of pride and presumption as the Church of Rome teacheth to beleeue the remission of our owne sinnes For generally to beleeue that God forgiueth sinne or that some men haue their sinnes forgiuen is no priuiledge of the Church but the common faith of the diuels Iam. 2 19. All the Articles contain the confession of a speciall faith and a particular application to our selues As I must beleeue God the Father to be my Creator the Son my Redeemer the holy Ghost to be my Sanctifier so I am boūd to beleeue the remission of mine owne sinnes the resurrection of mine owne body and that life euerlasting shall be giuen to me Thus the Apostle speaketh Gal. 2 20 I liue by the faith of the Son of God who loued me and gaue himselfe for me This special faith must be the faith of vs all Vse 4 Lastly from hence we are put in minde of sundry good duties necessary to bee practised of vs. First seeing euery true member of the Church hath the forgiuenes of his sins giuen assured vnto him it is our duty to acknowledge our selues to bee greeuous sinners to haue godly sorrow for them which may cause repentance not to be repented of and to seek pardon by dayly prayer for the forgiuenes of them at the hands of God ●●g 8 46. Hee resisteth the proud and giueth grace to the humble He filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth the rich empty away He is ready to forgiue and to haue compassion on his children he is slow to anger and of great kindnes Hee doth not deale with vs after our sinnes nor reward vs according to our iniquities Hence it is that the Apostles haue taught and the godly haue acknowledged themselues greeuous sinners yea euen the most regenerate as Dauid Daniel Paul and others Seeing therefore we haue a promise of forgiuenes as it were a priuiledge aboue others of the world it behooueth vs to haue in vs an humble acknowledgement of our sinfull estate ioyned with godly sorrow and earnest prayer for the forgiuenes of them Secondly it is required of vs to haue a reuerent care and feare not to offend him any more as heeretofore wee haue prouoked him yea a most earnest studie and desire to please him better thē we haue done This the Prophet teacheth Psal 103 3 4. If thou O Lord streightly markest iniquities O Lord who shall stand But mercy is with thee that thou maist be feared This was the instruction that Christ gaue vnto the diseased man whom he had healed when hee found him in the Temple hee saide vnto him Behold thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Ioh. 5 14. Thus the Apostle Paul describeth true repentance by the fruites and effects of it 2 Cor. 7 11. Behold this thing that ye haue bene godly sorry what great care it hath wrought in you yea what clearing of your selues yea
what indignation yea what feare yea how great desire yea what a zeale yea what reuenge Where this care is not to please God and feare to fall againe and offend him there was neuer true repentance nor any feeling of the forgiuenes of former sinnes This were exceeding vnthankfulnes for mercy receyued and a turning of the grace of God into wantonnes to commit sinne anew that grace may abound Thirdly it is our duty to returne all praise and thankfulnes to God for this so infinit and vnspeakable mercy which appeareth in nothing more thē in the forgiuenes of our manifold sins It belongeth to God onely to forgiue sinnes therfore to him onely belongeth the glory of forgiuenes as being onely worthy to receiue all praise This Daniel confesseth in his praier O Lord righteousnes belongeth vnto thee but vnto vs open shame as appeareth this day So the prophet Dauid prouoking all to praise the Lord alledgeth this as the cheefe reason to mooue them Which forgiueth all thine iniquities healeth all thine infirmities Psal 103 3. This also we see in the practise and example of the Apostle who mentioning his sinnes and magnifying the exceeding and abundant mercy of God in the pardon of them hee breaketh out into a thankesgiuing to the eternall God Vnto the King euerlasting immortall inuisible vnto God onely wise be honor and glory for euer euer Amen 1 Tim. 1 17. Rom. 7 25. If we haue tasted of this mercy let vs bee mindfull of this duty and if wee haue had experience of this forgiuenes let vs be carefull to expresse vnto him our thankfulnesse Fourthly wee must shew backe againe our loue toward our heauenly Father according to the measure of his loue toward vs. The greater sins he hath pardoned the greater loue should bee returned This is it which the Prophet professeth to haue wrought exceeding loue in his heart towards the Lord when he considered how gracious and mercifull he had bene vnto him Psal 116 1. I loue the Lord because he hath heard my voice and my prayer The practise of this duty is remembred and commended in the sinfull woman Luke 7 47. Many sinnes are forgiuen her for she loued much to whom a little is forgiuen he doth loue a little Let this example be continually before our eies Let vs examine our selues how neere we come vnto her in the practise of this duty Let vs behold our selues in her as in a glasse If wee haue had a blessed experience of Gods louing kindnesse toward vs in blotting out and burying our sinnes out of his remembrance let vs be answerable in loue to him againe who hath loued vs first Where little loue appeareth to God there is little knowledge of forgiuenes of sinnes Where no loue is there is no feeling of the comfort of this doctrine If we haue found God exceeding kinde and gracious vnto vs it will work an exceeding measure of loue where God hath assured and sealed vp that grace by his holy Spirit Lastly the receiuing of this mercy from God must worke in vs mercy toward our brethren that as we haue obtayned forgiuenesse of sinnes at his hands so wee should be ready to forgiue one another And so bee mercifull to others as our heauenly Father is mercifull to vs Luke 6 36. This our Sauiour teacheth in the parable of the King that would take an account of his seruants to wit that he requireth mercy where he hath shewed mercy and that iudgement shall be without mercy to him that sheweth no mercy Hence it is that the Apostle giueth this in charge Eph. 4 32. Colos 3 13. This we are also directed vnto in that forme of prayer which Christ did teach his Disciples and hath left vnto his Church warranting vs to aske forgiuenes as we feele our selues ready to forgiue This we are to apply vnto our selues and learne euerie day to be like to our heauenly Father Matth. 5 45. Who maketh his Sunne to arise on the euill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust If then we desire to be partakers of the goodnes of God in forgiuing the infinit debt whereby we are deeply indebted vnto GOD and would finde him mercifull vnto vs as euery one will seeme to be desirous of it let vs shew our selues ready to forgiue from our hearts the iniuries and offences done vnto vs. Among all testimonies that we may gather to our selues of Gods goodnesse and mercie towards vs none is more excellent more cōfortable more certaine then this if we finde it in vs that is the pardoning and passing ouer the wrongs offered vs and a readines to forgiue euen our enemies that most enuy and hate vs and that frankely and freely as we our selues haue receyued forgiuenesse at the hands of God The Lord his God is with him These words containe the second priuiledge peculiar and proper to the Church which God hath bestowed vpon it to wit the presence of his Spirit True it is in regard of his essence and deity hee is euery where the heauen is his throne and the earth is his footstoole Psalme 139 7 8. So that we cannot hide our selues from his presence If we ascend into heauen he is there If we lye downe in the graue he is there if we take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the sea thither shall his hand leade vs and his right hand hold vs if wee say yet the darknes shal hide vs the night shall be light about him But in this place this prophesie poynteth vs vnto vs another presence to wit of his grace protection defence and deliuerance the presence of his Spirit sanctifying his children purging them from dead workes to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe Doctrin● It is a pri●●ledge of 〈◊〉 Church haue Go● presence his grace working in them regeneration and finishing all good things in them to bring them to euerlasting life We learne from hence That it is a great priuiledge of the Church to haue God present with it and president ouer it He is not farre off from those that are his howsoeuer in time of affliction and in the houre of tentation he seemeth so to them hee is neere vnto them he is euer with them he holdeth a gracious hand ouer them This is it which the Lord so often promiseth in his word truly performeth to the great comfort of all his children This is it which the Lord speaketh to Iacob going from his fathers house to Padan Aram Gen. 28 15. This also the Prophet Dauid acknowledgeth Psal 34 15 18. And lest any should restraine that exhortation and take it peculiarly to belong to him alone the Apostle extendeth it farther and applyeth it to all the people of God speaking to them as well as vnto Ioshua chapt 1 9. I will not faile thee nor forsake thee so that we may boldly say The Lord is mine helper I will not fear what man can do vnto
house like the house of Ieroboam c and also of Iezabel spake the Lord saying The dogs shall eate Iezabel by the wals of Izreel Who are then the greatest enemies to their children but vngodly parents And who bring vpon them a greater woe and ruine then they that should build them vp and leaue a blessing behinde thē When Moses describeth the nature of God that hee is abundant in mercy toward the righteous he addeth Holding not the wicked innocent but visiting the sinnes of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation Exod. 34 8. This must moue parents and gouernours to make conscience of their carriage and conuersation and to bewayle their sinnes that haue endangered their off-spring For God may and doth in Iustice visite with sundry and diuers iudgments those families and societies where wicked Parents and prophane gouernors are All they be cruell tyger-like parents that be vngodly parents for they are the murtherers and butchers of their children ouerthrow of their posterity in time howsoeuer they be spared for a season What vnmercifull vnnaturall parents were Cain Cham Canaan Ieroboam Iezabel Ahab such like that caused euery one of their house that could water a wall to be destroyed and vtterly to haue their race and remembrance rooted out It is therefore a diuellish and wicked Prouerbe Happy are those children whose father goeth to the diuell A diuellish Prouerbe Nay rather cursed are those children whose fathers fall into hell for there is a great presumption that they will follow them without the great mercy and speciall grace of God yea it is a blessed thing to spring from a godly stocke to rise from faithfull parents For often did the Lord spare Israel for Abrahams Isaacks and Iacobs sake When the posterity of Dauid became wicked hee continued them in their kingdome deliuered them from their enemies did not destroy them for Dauids sake When the Lord was angry with Salomon because he had turned his heart from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared vnto him twice and charged him not to follow strange gods he threatned to rent the kingdome from him to giue it to his seruant Notwithstanding in thy dayes I will not do it sayth the Lord because of Dauid thy father 1. King 11 12. This appeareth more plainly afterward in Abiiam the sonne of Rehoboam who walked in all the sinnes of his father which he had done before him yet for Dauids sake did the Lord his God giue him a light in Hierusalem and set vp his sonne after him and established Hierusalem because Dauid did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and turned from nothing that he commanded him all the dayes of his life saue onely in the matters of Vriah the Hittite 1. King 15.4 5. 2. Chron. 21 7. This is it which the Lord promiseth in the second commandement of the Law That he will shew mercy to thousands of them that loue him and keepe his commandements Exod. 20.6 Seeing then wicked and wretched parents are most deadly enemies vnto their children who beare the curses of God vpon them for many generations for the impiety of their fathers this serueth as a great terror to those parents that goe about by fraud and oppression by wrongfull and iniurious dealing to enrich themselues to set vp their names and make their posterity to bee great vpon the earth after them For this is the ready way to bring the curse of God vpon them and to pull downe their houses Where the curse of God entreth it maketh hauocke and wasteth all before it God is an auenger of al such things 1. Thes 4 6. Surely if men were not altogether faithlesse but had faith to beleeue the word of God that all wicked courses and vile practices would ouerthrow their houses and not build them vp that they could not fill them with euil things but they will pul down the plagues of God vpon them and all theirs it would make them feare to offend by fraud and vniust dealing which cryeth for vengeance vnto heauen and the cry thereof entreth into the eares of the Lord of hoasts Iames 5 4 All men by nature haue a loue vnto their children and a desire to leaue them great men in the world but many are greatly deceiued in the meanes and wander farre and wide out of the way For if we wold leaue them a sure inheritance and settle them in an estate to continue wee must take heed that wee doe not enrich our selues with the spoyles of others nor fill our houses with the riches of iniquity lest we fill them also with the vengeance of God which is the reward of iniquity Let vs eate our own bread which wee haue gotten by lawfull meanes There is more comfort in a little truly gotten then in great riches and reuenewes that carry with them Gods marks and curses being wrongfully obtayned and vniustly retayned Lastly it is required of vs to repent beleeue Vse 3 the Gospell that so wee may procure a blessing vpon our selues and our children This duty the Apostle Peter preacheth vnto the Iewes that were pricked in their hearts Amend your liues be baptized euery one of you for the remission of sinnes for the promise is made vnto you and to your children c. Acts 2 38 39. When God promised to Abraham to make a couenant with him and to multiply his seed exceedingly hee requireth this condition at his hands Walke before me and be thou vpright Gen. 17 1. VVee must walke in the midst of our houses with pure and perfect heart and guide them with a watchfull eye wee must looke to their wayes and to our gouernment This would be a great helpe to the Ministery and a singular furtherance to his labours The neglect of this care bringeth vtter ruine to father and childe This appeareth in the example of Eli who through his indulgence and negligence ouerthrew himselfe and his posterity This is the cause of so many cursed youths so many riotous men women which procure the ruines of so many excellent houses their tender age was not sanctified neither they seasoned by their parents with the fear of God So then godly parents must haue a care to bring vp their children families in godlines righteousnes It may be a meanes by the blessing of God to saue thy sonne from death and to deliuer his soule from destruction The Lord himselfe speaketh of Abraham That hee knew him that he would teach his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lord to doe righteousnesse and iudgement Gen. 18 19. The Apostle chargeth parents to bring vp their children in the nurture and information of the Lord Eph. 6 4. No parents must presume that because they haue obtayned to bee faithfull therefore theyr children must of necessity bee so also Faith is the gift of GOD and not of Nature It is not
to ouersee their manners to redresse their disorders and to teach and instruct them in the wayes of godlinesse To these Salomon speaketh Pro. 27 23 24. Bee diligent to know the state of thy flocks and looke well to thy heards For riches are not for euer and doth the Crowne endure to euery generation When the Sheepheard is gone frō the Lambes the wolfe watcheth to take his prey The husbandman sowed good seed in his field but while he slept his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheate Mat. 13 25. The diuell watcheth all occasions and maketh his vse of all aduantages to deceiue and seduce and therefore we must take heed we giue him no occasions Moses was absent from the people but forty dayes and what a change found he among them at his returne how deepely had they plunged themselues into idolatry and how had they corrupted the worshippe of God and were departed from him Such is the corruption of nature and prophanenes of the heart to euill continually Gen. 6 5 that they which are vnder vs are ready to fall into euill euen while wee are with them and haue them in a manner before our eyes much more when we are absent from them as Moses speaketh of the people Behold while I am yet aliue with you this day yee haue beene rebellious against the Lord and how much more after my death Deuteronomy chapter thirty one verse 27 Let vs take heed of long and vnnecessary absence from our priuate charges as wel as they ought that haue publike charges lest while by our absence wee prouide for their bodies we do not destroy their soules for want of our presence I will conclude this point with the words of Salomon Prou. 27 8. As a bird that wandreth from her nest so is a man that wandreth from his place Verse 10. And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them vp together with Korah when that company dyed what time the fire deuoured c In the description of the Tribe of Reuben he fingleth out Dathan and Abiram as arch-conspirators against Moses the lawfull Magistrate set ouer the people they opposed themselues against authority and therefore perish As they withstood Aaron wee haue spoken before Numb chapter sixteene now consider theyr facte as they rebelliously stroue against Moses and in him against the Lord. Doctrine It is a fearfull sinne to withstand gouernment and authority We learne heereby that it is a fearefull and greeuous sinne to set our selues against lawful gouernment and authority which God hath set ouer vs. This is a most wicked and vngodly worke and the Scripture condemneth it in euery place Hos 8 3 4. Roman 13 1. 2. Pet. 2 10. Iude verse 8. The continuall practise of all the godly throughout the olde and new Testament tend to the contrary to commend to vs obedience for conscience sake and to reproue and condemne all resistance opposition as a worke of the flesh for they euermore submitted thēselues to those that were Magistrates Christ Iesus the Lord of all was not bound to Caesar in any sort whether wee consider him as God or as man Not as he was God Caesar was subiect vnto him and owed to him homage and obedience for as Dauid in spirit called him Lord Mat. 22 43 so might Cesar also and all Princes and Potentates in the world Not as he was man because he was of the blood royall of the seed of Dauid and the right heyre to the kingdome whereas Cesar had no other right but what he got by the sword and therefore he ought to haue receyued not to haue payde tribute yet because he would giue good example to others not offence to any Math. 17 27 he gaue to the receyuers for himselfe and for Peter a Stater which is thought to amount to halfe an ounce of siluer in value two shillings six pence after fiue shillings the ounce And as he taught them by his practise so likewise hee did by words to giue vnto Cesar the things which are Cesars Mat. 22 21. So did Paul for the tryall of the truth and the iustice of his cause appeale vnto Cesar from the high Priests who were carried with rage and enuy against him Acts 25 11. Psalm 18 43 44. Reason 1 The grounds heereof are euident First because publike authority is Gods ordinance euery soule ought to be subiect vnto it because it is of God Rom. 13 1 2. and whosoeuer resisteth it resisteth God himselfe The people of Israel were reiected of God for resisting the manner of gouernment that God had appointed when he set Iudges ouer them and they would needs haue a king to iudge them like all the Nations 1 Sam. 8 5 much more then shall they bee reiected of God that resist gouernment it selfe and be accounted foule fearefull sinners before him Reason 2 Secondly because the opposition against gouernment and the denying and withstanding of it must needs bring all confusion that may be so that nothing can be in peace and quietnesse It is saide and often repeated in the booke of Iudges that euery man did what he list because they had no gouernment Iudg. 18 1 and 17 6 and 21 25. God is the God of order not of confusion and therefore he alloweth of Magistrates because he would haue order among men Take away a Generall out of the field and expose the whole army to rout what followeth but the destruction and carnage of the whole host Take away the Pilot out of the Ship it is the ready way to perish the Ship so if you take away the Magistrate which is as the Chieftaine of the army and as the Master of the Shippe we shall liue a life more sauage and vnreasonable then the vnreasonable beasts leade the great ones would deuoure the lesse the rich the poore the strong ones them that are weake nothing would appeare but a miserable face of hauocke and confusion Before we proceed to the vses Obiect it is necessary to remoue an obiection For to resist gouernment may not be so fearefull a sinne forasmuch as sometimes it is said to be of God as the Scripture speaking of the apostacy of the ten Tribes from the house of Dauid saith that the Lord would giue them to Ieroboam and rent the kingdome from the house of Dauid 1 Ki. 13 31 and chap. 12 15 this was done from the Lord and verse 24 the other Tribes are commanded not to go vp to fight against Ieroboam and his followers for this saith the Lord is from me How then can the rebellion of the ten Tribes be a fearefull sinne seeing it was from the Lord. Answer Answer To cleere this point we must vnderstand that Gods appointment of Ieroboam to bee King and the renting off the house of Salomon doth not iustifie the acte of this people that it was not sin in them for this came to passe by the decree of God yet the people are not iustified in giuing him
reason why the elect after their calling do not fall from grace is not in the nature of faith or the constancie of grace it selfe but it proceedeth wholly from the mercifull promise of God made to the faithfull to their faith which he cannot frustrate and therefore we cannot be deceiued because he that hath made the promise cannot lie We know and are not ignorant what Christ saith to Peter Math. 16 18. Thou art Peter and vpon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it Lastly these giftes of God though they cannot totally and finally be lost in regard of Gods promise yet the enemies of our Faith and obedience may greatly assault them and greeuously weaken them and pittifully diminish them and thereby make a deepe wound and impression in our soules so that thereby we may lye langui●hing gaping and gasping for life and draw as it were to the point of death The Prophet felt few or no effects of the Spirit working in him when he said There is no hope for me in my God So then albeit it be sure certaine that the sauing gifts of GOD are without repentance and that a true iustifying faith peculiar to the elect cannot totally and finally be lost yet when we haue receiued them if we waxe proud and wanton if we grow secure and giue our selues to commit iniquity these graces of God may so decay in vs as that in our owne iudgement and feeling and in the opinion of others it may seeme that they are quite lost and the Spirite of God to be departed from vs. Take the Galathians for an example who were truely called by the Gospell and receiued Christ Iesus to saluation as appeareth in that they receiued the Apostle as an Angel of light Gal. 4.19 9 11 14. yet by false teachers they so fel away and so dangerously as that Christ was without fashion in them the Apostle did trauell in paine with them as a woman in child-birth vntill Christ were anew fashioned in them Dauid by giuing libertie to the flesh and committing of sinne not watching ouer his owne wayes was brought into that horror and anguish of spirit as that he intreateth God to create a new heart in h m Psal 51 10 1 not to take his holy Spirit from him the work of grace seemed wholly perished and the graces of the Spirit touching his owne feeling were quenched When a man by the force of a violent tentation as it were a sore tempest beating him downe hath prophaned the giftes of God and checked grieued his Spirit quenching with sin as it were with cold water the heauenly graces kindled in his heart wherewith he was sealed to the day of redemption it will cost him deare draw from him manie sighes and sobs driue him into great horrour and greeuous agonies and cause him to shed many teares before he shall recouer himselfe againe yea he would giue the whole worlde to see the louing countenance of God toward him to heare God speake peace to his conscience to feele with comfort the ioy of his saluation The sinne of relapse is a fearefull sin as the relapse into a sharp disease is dangerous to the life God did whip and torment the conscience of Dauid that he roared as a Lion for the disquietnesse of his heart Psalme 6 6. and caused his bed to swim and watered his couch with teares The like wee see in Peter after his falling and denying of his master Math. 26 75. He went out wept bitterly before he could finde the fauour of God renewed again toward him Thus then we see that albeit vpon this ground that our names and our numbers are known to God we learn that our saluation is sure and our state vnchangeable yet we must not grow secure but vse all means wherby his graces in vs may not be in vaine but be cherished as a fire is with Fuell put vnto it that they go not out and die in vs. Fourthly seeing God vouchsafeth in mercie Vse 4 to number vs let vs labor to learne the Art of numbring measuring our daies and times that so we may be wise harted It is a great skil a diuine to number aright as we ought If a man could vnderstand al languages speake with the tongue of men Angels and were not able to vtter the language of Canaan it should little auaile him Wee must all prepare our selues if we would haue the name and reputation of good Linguists and Artists to learne the heauenly Arts and the true liberall Sciences Many there are that are accounted deepe Schollers great Linguists profound Philosophers good Grammarians excellent Mathematitians sharpe Logitians cunning Polititians fine Rhetoritians sweet Musitians rare in all witty conceits yet while they waxe old in humane learning and spend all their time therein to delight themselues and to please others they are vtterly ignorant oftentimes of the right vse of those artes catching after the shadow of them they leaue the substance and studying the circumstances they omit the marrow and pith of them There is a diuine Grammar a diuine Arithmetick a diuine Geometry a diuine Astronomy diuine Musicke there are Christian Ethicks Oeconomicks Christian Politikes and Physicks which are to be knowne of vs and studied by vs without which the other cannot profit He is the best Grammarian that hath learned to speake the truth from his heart It is the greatest incongruity that can bee when the heart and the tongue betweene which two there ought to be a concord do not agree together If wee doe not for an aduantage lye one to another we haue gotten the right arte of Grammar which teacheth to speake truly They are the best Musitians that haue learned to sing the praises of God Ephes 5 19. Speaking to themselues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody to the Lord in their harts giuing thankes alwayes for all thinges vnto God the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ He is the best Astronomer that hath his conuersation in heauen and treadeth vnder foote earthly thinges that setteth his affections on things that are aboue and not on things that are beneath He is the most expert Arithmetitian that vseth daily to number not only his yeares and moneths but his dayes and the short times of his life that he is to liue vpon the earth He is the most skilfull Geometritian that measureth his dayes with a right line and considereth that while the chaine is in his hand some part of his life is consumed and cut shorter Whosoeuer amendeth his life and euery day groweth better and better is cunning in the Ethicks Whosoeuer traineth vppe his family in the feare of God is a good Oeconomicke Whosoeuer is wise vnto saluation and prudent in giuing and taking godly counsell is a good Polititian and if he know aright his owne state how hee
heere as afterward in this Booke ch 20. where he obeyeth with doubting but he executeth the charge laide vpon him with readinesse and willingnesse This obedience of Moses and Aaron is set downe first generally then particularly Generally in these words particularly in the verses following Heere a question may be demanded Obiection whether it were lawfull for them to number the people Wee reade in the holy Historie 2 Samuel 24 that Dauid was sharply reprooued and seuerely punished because hee did number them yet Moses numbereth them in this place and is approoued and iustified● Some thinke Answer that Dauid is reproued not simply for numbring the people but because he would haue all numbred and not onely from 20 yeare old and aboue But this was not the true cause of Dauids offence and of Gods iudgement in as much as it is very euident out of the words of the Text and circumstances of the place that such only were numbred as were strong men and able to draw out their swords 2 Sam. 24.9 Others make this the reason because the Lord promised to multiply the seede of Abraham as the starres of Heauen which are innumerable and as the sand on the Sea Shore which cannot bee tolde Oleast in Exod. and therefore he was angry sore displeased whē they were numbred as if it were a calling of his promise into question But if this reason were good and to bee granted it would follow that they could neuer be numbred without sin Neither was this the cause of Gods anger as others imagine Sim●●r in Exod because after his numbring of them hee caused not the tribute to be paid that God had appointed Exod. 30.12 for Moses did not alway enioyne any such polle-mony to be paid whensoeuer he nūbred their persons and besides the punnishment should be inflicted vpon Dauid not for numbring the people but for want of paiment The true causes why Moses is commended Differences between Moses and Dauid in numbering the people Dauid condemned for their numbring of Israel are these First Moses was inioyned vnto it had the expresse commandement of God to direct and warrant him but Dauid was not commāded of God he was stirred vp of Sathan who tempted him to this euill in setting before his eies 1 Chron. 21 1 his glory and excellency his power victories Aug. quaest 134 in Exod. This is one difference Secondly it was lawfull to number the people when anie publique collection or contribution was to bee made of tribute or subsidy for vnlesse an exact account were taken some should be omitted others ouerburthened and iniustice committed This maketh it lawful for Princes to number their people muster them by hundreds or thousands albeit they haue no special warrant or particular commissiō from God Thus did Dauid in another place and at another time number them without sin 2 Sam. 18 1. Againe when any Army is to be gathered forces to be leuied it is necessarie the people should be assembled and mustered that fit choise may bee made of such as are to goe to battell as Dauid did number them without sinne 2 Sam. 18 1. when hee sent an armie against Absolon but in this place hee did not intend any of these ends either that Tribute should be gathered or that souldiers should be mustered and therefore the warrant of his worke was not answerable to the calling of Moses Thirdly as they were stirred vp by diuers causes so they respected diuers ends Dauid propounded to himselfe an euill end hee did it to set forth his owne glorie to reioyce in himselfe to put his whole affiance and confidence in the multitude of his men and therefore his pride and presumption his haughtinesse and ambition his rashnesse and vnthankefulnesse were punished of GOD. Thus we see how one and the same thing is praised in one and reprooued in another because howsoeuer the deede were one yet the cause was not one from whence it proceeded neither were the ends one whereunto it was referred Verses 17.18.19 Moses Aaron tooke these men c And as the Lord commaunded Moses so he numbred them Heere we haue an example of the obedience of Moses Aaron who lingred not the time to discharge the dutie that God had laide vpon them This example offereth vnto vs this instruction that it Doctrine 3 is required of all Gods seruants t is our dutie to obey Gods co●mandements to performe obedience to Gods commandements Whensoeuer God speaketh vnto vs wee must heare and obey his voyce Noah receiued a Commandement from God to builde the Arke Genes 6 ver 13. Whereby hee and his houshold might be saued many hindrances might haue stayed him and sundry inconueniences might haue stopped him and infinite dangers might haue terrified him from that enterprize the greatnesse of the Arke the labour of the building the continuance of the worke the tants of the wicked and an hundred such like troubles stood in his way all which he did ouerstride as the Apostle witnesseth Heb. 11 7. By Faith Noah beeing warned of GOD of the things which were as yet not seene mooued with reuerence prepared the Arke to the sauing of his Houshold through the which Arke hee condemned the world and was made heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith In like manner Gen. 12 4. Heb 11 8. Abraham receiued an expresse commandement to go out of his Country and from his Kindred and Fathers house and he also by Faith when hee was called obeyed to go into a place which he should afterwarde receiue for inheritance and he went out not knowing whither hee went So when God charged him to circumcise himselfe his sonne and all his houshold hee did not delay the time Gen. 17 23. 22 1 2 3. Heb. 11 17. 18 19. but did it the same day and when hee commanded him to take his sonne his onely son euen Isaac whom he loued the sonne of promise through whom all Nations should bee blessed By Faith hee offered vp Isaac when hee was tryed for he considered that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence he receiued him also after a sort When God called Samuel and determined to reueale vnto him the destruction of Elies house and the calamitie that hanged ouer all Israel hee saide vnto him to testifie the willingnesse of his heart to obey Speake Lord 1 Sam. 3 9 10 for thy Seruant heareth This the Prophet Dauid witnesseth Psal 27 8. When thou sayedst Seeke ye my face mine heart answered thee O Lord I will seeke thy face Luke 5 4 5. When Christ commanded Peter to launch out into the deepe and to let out their Nets to make a draught Simon answered and saide vnto him Master we haue trauailed sore all night and haue taken nothing neuerthelesse at thy word I wil let down the net The examples are infinite and endlesse that might bee
a thousand fold because he selleth it to Christ the best rewarder All men are content heere to sell to him that will giue most Christ is the best chapman the best buyer he giueth eternall saluation to vs. To draw vs from our sinnes that do vs the greatest hurt and bring infinite danger vpon soule and body he offereth to recompence vs an hundred fold more for withdrawing our hearts from our sinnes then the world can reward vs for the vsing of them Art thou not stedfast in religion but as a reede shaken with the winde sometimes carried one way and sometimes inclined another way Sell this thy doubting and wauering vnto Christ be no longer vnstable vnsetled and he will giue thee constancy to continue vnto the end Psal 68 28. and will strengthen that which he hath wrought in thee Art thou puffed vp with pride in apparell Sell this corruption and he will garnish thee with better garments he will cloathe thee with his innocency and righteousnesse that the filthinesse of thy nakednesse shall not appeare Art thou poore and needy Christ saith vnto thee The Foxes haue holes Math. 8 20. and the birds of the aire haue nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Wilt thou prouide for thy children thy houshold Dauid saith I was young and now am olde yet I haue not seene the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging bread Psal 37 25. Now in this selling of our sinnes and parting from them we must obserue these particulars First that it must not be for a short time or for a season but for euer We must not sell our sinnes for a season onely but renounce all right title interest and propriety in them we must depart from them with a full purpose and resolution neuer to take them vp againe neuer to practise them any more To sell any thing is to alienate the property of it from our selues Blessed are all such sellers In this point therefore we must not be lenders as they that chalenge the right of being owners but quite and cleane put from our selues all title to our former sinnes Many indeede lay them downe for a time as hypocrites doe wiping their mouthes with the harlot and returning to their vomite with the dogge Prou. 30 20. 2 Pet. 2 22. or to their wallowing in the mire with the swine Thus it fareth with such as come to the word and Sacraments of God with prophane and vnreformed hearts They seeme godly while they are in the Church but their righteousnesse is but as the morning dew they hang downe their heads as a bulrush for a time afterward they are as bad or worse then they were before This is nothing in the sight of GOD except we vtterly forsake our sinnes True it is the faithfull and godly man may fall into some sinnes which they haue forsaken Gen. 20 2. as Abraham did in denying his wife but they must do it as strangers to it not as owners of it for it is none of theirs they haue giuen ouer the vse of it and the right vnto it It is the man that is vnregenerate he may lay lawfull claime vnto it as for vs it is no more ours then the house that we haue solde and so alienated it from vs. Secondly there is another kinde of sale that is faulty and deceitfull which is when we are content to sell some of our sinnes but we will not sell all of them Some there are so couetous that they wil part from nothing they will sell nothing Though they be neuer so well offered they are so in loue with their owne faults and folly that they will keepe them still albeit to their infinite hindrance losse euen the losse of their soules Others are content to lend their sinnes but they will not leaue them they are willing to abstaine from them for a time but they will not renounce them for euer These are like the Israelites who albeit they were brought with a strong hand out of Egypt Numb 11 5. yet they had a minde to returne thither againe they thought vpon the fish which they did eate there and remembred the Cucumbers and the Melons the Leekes the Onions and the Garlicke these they lusted after with all their soule Or as Lots wife being deliuered out of Sodome as a firebrand out of the burning or as two legs or a piece of an eare out of the mouth of the Lyon Amos 3 12 and 4 11 euen a little remnant out of the common destruction of the City Gen. 19. Luke 17. she looked backe againe toward Sodome and hadde her minde there vpon such things as she had left behind which sheweth she had not sold all but as he that lendeth his goods looketh for them againe so would she faine returne to those things that yet shee retained in her heart If the case be better with vs and that our righteousnesse exceed these yet let vs not flatter our selues and deceiue our owne soules forasmuch as wee must goe farther and step many degrees beyond them For albeit we can be content to sell and to sell for euer yet there is more required of vs so that we may say with Christ One thing is wanting we must sell all and must keep back nothing We must not sell as Ananias Sapphira did they kept backe part of the price so many make sale but they are deceitfull Merchants they will not passe all but leaue out somewhat in the bargaine So do many deale doubly with God they desire to forgoe their sinnes but they will keepe somewhat But he cannot bee mocked or cousened of vs. We must renounce our sweet sinnes our profitable sins with all the appurtenances and dependances vnto them We must abstaine from all appearance of euill We must pull vp these weeds by the rootes that they grow not in the gardens of our heart againe God will haue all that is ours left or else hee accounteth nothing truely left Herod was cōtent to heare Iohn to feare him to reuerence him to do many things that he required Mat. 14 4. and to reforme many euils that he reproued and himselfe had practised but when he told him he must not marry his brothers wife he stopped his eares and would not heare he was determined to keep that one sin The hypocrites in Micah are ready to come before the Lord and to bow themselues before the most high Mic. 6 6 7 ● to offer Riuers of oyle and the fruite of their body for the sin of their soule neuerthelesse the Prophet telleth them that God liketh not of this bargaine inasmuch as he requireth of them to do iustly to loue mercy and to walke humbly with their God We are like vnto the young man mentioned in the Gospell whom Christ is saide to haue loued Mar 10 22 When he was bidden to sell all that he had he was sad at that saying and went away
family which was the Church of God not onely Isaac the sonne of promise in whose seede the nations of the earth should bee blessed but Ismael that was borne after the flesh that mocked his brother persecuted him that was borne after the spirit and in the end was cast out of the Church Gen. 21.9 10. Gen. 21.9.10 Gal. 4.30 Gal. 3.30 And as it was with the father so was it with the son for we see this in the children of Isaac who stroue and struggled within the wombe of their mother Gen. 25.22 and when the time of her deliuerance came she brought foorth not only Iacob Gen. 32.24 who afterward was sirnamed Israel obtaining a farre more honourable name then all the Affricani or Germanici or Asiatici among the Romanes whose praise was wholly from the earth and a blast of the mouthes of mortall man whereas he wrastled with God in Peniel and preuailed but also prophane Esau Heb. 12 16. so branded as it were in the forehead by a marke of yron by the Spirit of God who sold his birth-right for a messe of pottage For the children being not yet borne neither hauing done any good or euil that the purpose of God according to the election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said vnto her Iacob haue I loued but Esau haue I hated Rom. 9.11.13 Rom. 9.11.13 Samuel was a man that feared God exceedingly and gouerned the people vprightly so that he appealed to the people and to the consciences of all men to witnesse his innocency and integrity what wrong he had done them whose oxe he had taken and whose asse he had taken or at whose hand he had receiued any bribe to blinde his eyes 1 Sam. 12.3 1 Sam. 12.3 Yet when hee was old and made his sonnes iudges ouer Israel they walked not in his wayes but turned aside after lucre they tooke bribes and peruerted iudgement 1 Sam. 8.3 1 Sam. 8.3 Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart yet he had not onely Salomon that was beloued of God 2. Sam. 13.14 and 15.16 1 Kin. 1.5 but also incestuous Amnon ambicious Absolon and trecherous Adonijah the first defiled his owne sister and wrought folly in Israel the other two rebelled against their father and sought to take away the kingdome from him The like we might say of Eli who sate vpon a seat by a post of the Temple and by his residence on his charge and daily attendance to giue answeres to the people that came vnto him gaue testimony of his godlinesse yet his sonnes were the sonnes of Belial and knew not the Lord 1 Sam. 2.12 1 Sam. 2.12 To conclude for the examples that might be brought to this purpose are infinite who was more Godly then Iosiah who remembred his creator in the dayes of his youth and reformed religion betimes in his kingdome yet his children followed not the wayes of their father but did euill in the sight of the Lord according to all that their wicked forefathers had done 2 King 23.32 37. 2 King 23. Iere. 22.18 Iere. 22.18 To all these testimonies of Scripture if we adde also the testimony of common experience of all ages and times and places and persons we may gather that all the children of the faithfull haue not beene alwayes continued vnder the covenant of God nor followed the steppes of their faithfull parents to be like vnto them Now because this is a point diligently to Reason 1 be marked of vs let vs consider the reasons whereby it may be better confirmed vnto vs. First to shew the election of God which is the highest steppe of our saluation to stand vpon the free wil and purpose of God and not vpon ordinary succession or naturall generation or any causes in our owne selues to the end that all both parents and children should confesse that such as haue receiued this power and prerogatiue to beleeue in the Name of Christ Iesus are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1.13 Ioh. 1.13 This reason is noted concerning Iacob Rom. 9.11 that the purpose of God might stand according to election not of any workes but by him that calleth this was it that made difference betweene him and his brother Secondly that the best seruants of God Reason 2 may acknowledge that they can by no means conuey to their posterity the graces of God the gifts of sanctification repentance from dead workes which themselues haue receiued from God by supernaturall meanes and not by naturall they begetting naturally children of wrath as well as other men euen sinfull children tainted and defiled with originall corruption Adam begate Seth in his owne image that is in his naturall inclination to euil Gen. 5.3 Gen. 5.3 Hence it is that Dauid acknowledgeth he was shapen in iniquity and that in sinne his mother did conceiue him Psal 51. Psal 51. So then as the corne that is purged from the chaffe and made cleane bringeth vp corne againe together with the chaffe and as the father that is circumcised begetteth children that are vncircumcised so such parents as are sanctified themselues cannot leaue to their issue any sanctifying graces which must come onely from aboue from the Father of lights Reason 3 Thirdly God hath a purpose to shew his iustice in the destruction of the stubborne and disobedient as he doth his mercy in the saluation of those that are godly and obedient This is the reason rendred by the Spirit of God that albeit the sonnes of Eli were reproued by their father yet they hearkened not vnto his voyce because the Lord would slay them 1 Sam. 2.25 ● Sam. 2.25 God is determined to glorifie himselfe and his great Name in their destruction as they resolued and setled themselues their whole liues to dishonour him to their confusion Reason 4 Lastly the children euen of faithfull and godly parents doe oftentimes want the good meanes of a godly education and therefore no maruell if their hearts not being ploughed vp doe bring forth cockle and darnell in stead of good corne For the children of God doe themselues through humane frailty and infirmity sometimes faile in the performance of this duty They cocker them and are too choice and nice ouer them they dare not offend them or speake a word against them which ouerweening and suffering of them to haue their will too much God punisheth in their children whereof we haue a worthy example in Dauid toward Adonijah who exalted himselfe against his father saying I will be king and he prepared him chariots and horsemen and fifty men to runne before him The occasion of this presumption and rebellion is noted to be thus King 1.6 His father had not displeased him at any time in saying Why hast thou done so He failed toward him more then Eli did toward his sons for he said
brother or neighbour but we must hold no friendship with such as are enemies to God and are at warre and defiance with him Iehoshaphat is reprooued for a lesse matter 2 Chro. 19.2 If any man aske Obiect whether the children must shunne their father the seruants their master the wife her husband c. I answere Answer we must haue no such familiaritie as is free for vs to refuse and deny neither voluntary society which we may auoide Vnnecessary fellowship is forbidden and is offensiue such as is for pleasure and delight As for children seruants subiects wiues and such as are bound by band of duty and obliged in the family or common-wealth they are not by this doctrine discharged from their duties but must be subiect euen to such as are excommunicated prouided that they take heed so farre as lyeth in them that by their conuersation with them they do not consent to their sinne like of it delight in it defende it commend it but rather according to their place and calling mourne that they are compelled to be with such and therefore must exhort and admonish them to returne to the Church as it were to the fold of Christ This then serueth to reprooue all such as delight make choice to be in company with excommunicate persons such as receiue them to their houses such as ordinarily eat and drinke with them knowing them to stand in that fearefull case These partake with them in their sinnes and keepe them from repentance as much as in them lyeth While we are familiarly conuersant with the wicked it will be hard not to be stained with their sinnes For how can a man walke among thornes and not wound himselfe Vse 5 Lastly we are warned hereby to leade our liues circumspectly and soberly that we bee not cast out Let vs hold faith and a good conscience as the Apostle saith 1 Tim. 1.19 20. Which while some hauing put away concerning faith haue made shipwracke of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I haue deliuered vnto Satan that they may learne not to blaspheme This vse hath diuers particular branches First we should desire euermore to liue in the Church It was the prayer of Dauid Psal 27.4 One thing haue I desired of the Lord that wil I seeke after that I may dwel in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple It is recorded to the great commendation of Anna that she departed not from the Temple Luke 2.37 but serued God with fastings and prayer night and day We must therefore liue orderly not as fooles but as wise redeeming the time because the daies are euill that we may continue as children of the light and members of the Church If once we become prophane and as dogs and swine we must be kept from holy things and barred from the word and Sacraments It is the duty of the Church to keepe the holy ordinances of God from all contempt Some that liue in the Church are open blasphemers of the name of Christ others are heretiks and corrupt the faith many giue scandall and offence to others by their loosenesse of life all these are to be barred and excluded from the word Sacraments For a man liuing in the middes of the Church may be worse in the practises of his life then an open enemy of which the Apostle Paul speaketh Tit. 1.16 They professe that they know God but in workes they deny him being abominable and disobedient and vnto euery good worke reprobate This care of keeping his ordinances from open prophanation Christ himselfe shewed in reforming the abuses of the Temple when in great zeale of spirit that had eaten him vp he whipped the buyers and sellers out of the temple Mat. 21.12 13. because they had made his Fathers house which was the house of prayer an house of merchandise and a denne of theeues Secondly we must doe nothing and speake nothing that may giue occasion to the world to reuile the religion of God or slander our holy profession This is Pauls charge to seruants that they so carry themselues toward their masters that the Name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken off 1 Tim. 6.1 The faults of men are wont to be cast vpon the doctrine which they professe and to be whipped vpon the back of the author from whence it came Such as mens life is that they leade such is the doctrine and religion iudged to be which they beleeue Wherefore we must take heede lest the Name of God be blasphemed through vs Esay 52. Dauid is said by his sins to cause the enemies to blaspheme 2 Samu. 12.14 Thirdly it is our duty to pray that the word of God may be glorified 2 Thes 3.1 It is that which we are taught to aske in the Lords prayer Matth. 6.9 that his Name may be hallowed Now Gods word is his Name forasmuch as thereby he is knowne vnto vs Psal 138.2 It was Dauids prayer Psal 119.39 Turne away my reproch which I feare for thy iudgements are good As if he should say keepe me from doing that which may bring rebuke or reproch to thy word Fourthly it is the duty of all faithfull Pastours and Ministers to keepe the people from prophaning the holy thing Ier. 15 19. they are as the Angels of God set with a glistering sword to keepe the way to the tree of life It is the duty of the shepheard to seuer the infected sheepe from the sound The dispensation of the Sacraments is committed to the Ministers to deliuer them to such as are worthy to withhold them from such as are vnworthy lest we giue them a sword into their hand to kill themselues because obstinate sinners that come vnworthily impenitently to the Supper of the Lord doe eate and drinke their owne damnation Iohn the Baptist would not admit vnto his baptisme any but such as confessed their sinnes and was perswaded they had truly repēted Mat. 3. But is it not enough for them to say they repent No for euery hypocrite may thus repent A man may confesse in words that which he denyeth in his deeds and therefore he must haue the vndoubted testimonies of true repentance weeping humiliation prayer amendment of life such like Besides by this account euery one that commeth to the Lords Table repenteth and no man commeth vnworthily or without repentance forasmuch as euery one will say he repenteth no man will confesse he is impenitent Neuerthelesse we cannot account him to be a true penitent that hath giuen no signe of repentance Fiftly this sentence is to be denounced with meeknesse and moderation with all patience and long suffering yea with much griefe and sorrow It must not be done ordinarily and commonly The cutting off of a member is no vsuall thing the Phisitian tryeth all wayes and meanes before he attempt that desperate cure and oftentimes he findeth it fitter not to
hath dealt bountifully with thee for thou hast deliuered my soule from death mine eyes from teares and my feet from falling We must vow vnto him a faithfull seruing of him and performe our vow before him in the trueth of our hearts saying Ver. 9. I will walke before the Lord in the land of the liuing We must returne the praise and glory vnto him to whom alone it is due vttering this voyce of thankesgiuing in a sweet meditation of his goodnesse What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits toward me Ver. 12 23 I will take vp the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. Wherefore albeit we haue many perils without vs and within vs yet we rest in the armes of Christ and abide vnder the shelter and shadow of the Almighty so that we haue this comfort his left hand is vnder our head Cant. 8.3 and with his right hand he doth embrace vs. If it were not for this protection and vpholding of vs we could not endure heere in the world Secondly it warneth all those that are cleansed to keepe themselues in such sort that they be not polluted Deut. 23.9 This shall bring great comfort to the conscience and great peace that passeth all vnderstanding The burnt child dreadeth the fire he that hath once beene in danger of drowning will hardly be brought or drawne to the bankes side an horse that hath once bene plunged in some deepe quag-mire will with much adoe passe that way againe He that once hath found and felt the grieuousnesse of sinne and the terrours of conscience and the wrath of God and the flashings of hell fire will feare to fall and offend againe If we did duely consider how dearely it did cost Christ our Sauiour to redeeme a soule from damnation and that the weight of sinne did make him sweat drops of blood and to cry out vpon the Crosse Psal 22.1 Matth. 27.46 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me when we haue bene once cleansed it will make vs carefull to keepe our selues cleane when we haue washed our feet it will worke a care in vs that we doe not defile them It is such an heauy burden that whosoeuer hath once felt the weight and smart of it dareth not stand vnder it againe Thirdly this circumspect walking before him warneth vs to forsake the company of the wicked and society with them as 2 Cor. 6.16 Come out from among them and be yee separate saith the Lord and touch not the vncleane thing and I will receiue you Our doctrine teacheth vs that sinne defileth and polluteth a man so as there is no filth or dung vpon the earth defileth the body as sinne defileth the whole man before God and therefore wee should loath the fellowship of euill men and wicked persons If a man should offer himselfe into our company that had wallowed and tumbled in some foule and filthy channell wee would shunne him and bee ashamed of him wee would not abide him but thrust him from vs. For we know we could not bee neere him a little while but he would make some of his filth to cleaue vnto vs. Thus it is with badde men As themselues are loathsome and filthy so they will leaue part of their filthines behind them among whomsoeuer they conuerse like vnto some beasts that leaue such a rancke sauour after them wheresoeuer they become that it may easily be knowne thereby as by an infallible token that they haue beene there If we cannot draw these men from iniquity let vs withdraw our selues from their company There is not a more deceitfull baite to catch vs then to come within their reach Many haue beene stricken downe with this stroke that haue stood as valiant and inuincible men against many other dangers Let vs be wary by their harmes and learne wisedome by their folly and to beare our selues vpright by their fals ●on But it may be demaunded whether all keeping company with them be vnlawfull 〈…〉 or not I answere all company with them is not absolutely forbidden but to be familiar with them is forbidden to delight in them to be of one heart and of one mind with them to be yoked vnto them so to delight to be among them that we like better of them then of any other and neuer thinke our selues well vntill we be with them If any farther aske the question ●on in what cases it is lawfull to be among them 〈…〉 I answer briefly first when we seeke to reclaime them when we haue this end to conferre with them to instruct and admonish them as the Apostle speaketh of an heretike that he must be once or twice admonished then being obstinate he must be auoyded Tit. 3.10 That which he speaketh particularly of an heretike may be spoken generally of euery wicked person that is incurable Secondly when we are bound by the band of a necessary calling to be in their presence and company For God hath set vs in our seuerall standings out of which we may not depart We shewed in the former doctrine that if a man were excommunicated by the Church yet such as belong vnto him in the family or in the Common-wealth ought to be subiect and obedient vnto him The wife must yeeld to the husband due beneuolence the child must honour the father and a seruant his master so farre forth as they doe not encourage him in his sinnes nor ioyne with him in a liking of them Lastly it teacheth vs to auoide all occasions and inducements to sinnes yea all appearances of euill Hence it is that Iude saith ver 23. Hate euen that garment which is spotted by the flesh not onely the sinnes themselues but the occasions of them And heereby wee may try our selues whether we make conscience of sinne or not Euery commandement that forbiddeth any sinne forbiddeth all the allurements that may draw vs into the same This is one of the generall rules that helpe vs to vnderstand the law to come to the true meaning thereof Lastly seeing sinne soileth and defileth we learne to put this duty in practise to craue of God to wash vs and cleanse vs from the defilements of sinne Let vs follow the example of the leper Matth. 8.2 who fell downe at the feet of our Sauiour and besought him that he might be clensed Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me cleane so ought we to come into the presence of Christ and worship him and craue of him to cleanse vs from the filthinesse of our sinne It so staineth and polluteth that none can wash away the blots and spots that sticke so fast vnto vs but he This we see in Dauid Psal 51.2 3. Wash me from mine iniquitie and cleanse me from my sin for I know mine iniquitie and my sinne is euer before me True it is God sometimes willeth vs to wash our selues as he commanded the Israelites to wash their garments when they
separated frō it that were neuer of it or in it And touching the elect they can neuer fall from the grace of election the foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. ● ● hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his so that it is vnchangeable Besides such are also engrafted into Christ and cannot be separated from his communion according the saying of Christ Iohn 6 ver 37. All that the Father giueth mee shall come to me and him that commeth to me I will in no wise cast out And the Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn ● ● saieth They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would no doubt haue continued with vs but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of vs. If then the reprobate were neuer of this communion and the elect can neuer fall from this communion it may seeme that none can be said to be truely excommunicated that is to be separated from that spirituall communion which wee haue with Christ and with all the Saints by faith ● hope and loue I answer that which is affirmed of the elect and reprobate is most true neuerthelesse that which is concluded from thence is most false as the learned haue well obserued For first of all touching the reprobate that being hypocrites were once in the Church though they were neuer of the Church neither truely partakers of this spirituall communion of the Saints yet then they are saide to bee separated from it when they are manifested declared to haue beene alwaies strangers vnto it and separated from it as when Dauid praieth in the Psalms that they might be blotted out of the booke of life Psal 69 28. as if he had said declare it shew it plainely that they were neuer written in the booke of eternall election Secondly touching the elect the question is more difficult and yet the knot is not so intricate or intangled but it may be loosed For albeit they cannot be cut off from the grace of election because his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. neither can be wholly and altogether excluded from that communion which they haue by faith with Christ and by loue with the Church both by reason of the stablenesse of Gods promises and by reason of the efficacy force of Christs praier heard of the Father 〈◊〉 ●7 21 ● Luke 22 32. Yet in some sort in some respect they separate themselues as much as lyeth in them when they fall into greeuous sinnes as Dauid when he committed adultery and Peter when he denyed his Master The guifts of the holy Ghost are as a flame of fire kindled in vs such sinnes are as water powred vpon them to quench it and except GOD did grant his Spirit to dwell in them and preserue it as fire hidden vnder the ashes they would lose it wholly be quite and cleane excluded from this spirituall communion Notwithstanding our saluation is sure for his promise sake who hath promised to put his feare in our hearts that we should not depart from him and for Christs praier who praied for Peter all the elect that their faith should not faile Hence it is that he keepeth a remnant of grace in them and cherisheth the fire of his Spirit that it should not goe out so that the flame is slaked and the heat is diminished But in his good time he kindleth the fire and stirreth vp the heat somtimes by his word and sometimes by his corrections and therefore the Apostle willeth Timothy to stirre vp as coales 〈◊〉 1 6. the gift of God that was in him Dauid hauing experience hereof praieth vnto him to create a new heart in him and not to take away his Spirit from him Ps 51 10 11. Thus we see how the faithful are not wholly but yet in some part separated frō the communion of Christ because they are depriued of the sweet comforts that they felt before of the large measure of grace which they finde greatly diminished by the committing of sinne and continuing in it This is the spirituall communion The externall communion standeth in a common partaking together in the word in praiers in the receiuing of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another as Luke speaketh of the Church of Christ after his ascension Acts 2 42. They continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and in praiers Excommunication separateth from all these But some will say Obiect doth excommunication take away all commercing and conuersing one with another May not one in any sort liue with such Or doth it dissolue all bands of nature and pollicy I answer Answer no. There are some bands so firmely and closely knit tied together that nothing can loose them and abrogate them Some duties are naturall some domesticall and some ciuill which no excommunication can diminish or dissolue or dispense withall The Apostle giueth this as a generall precept If thine enemy hunger Rom. 12 20. giue him meate and if he thirst giue him drinke If an excommunicate person be in want and in any distresse we must helpe him and minister vnto him such things as are necessary for his preseruation wee must not cast away all care of him and all loue vnto him forasmuch as God hath made vs keepers one of another Againe it is lawfull to buy of him to sell vnto him and to bargaine with him albeit we should not conuerse and commerce with him as with a friend Moreouer if we owe personall duties to such a one as is in the family with vs we cānot shake them off vnder any colour or pretence of excommunication The wife must performe due beneuolence to the husband the children must obey their parents the seruants must count their masters worthy of all honour and contrariwise prouided alwayes that they do not ceasse to pray for thē to admonish them and to hate their sins and that they looke to themselues that they do not defend them in their wicked courses and ioyne with them in opinion for then we make our selues partakers of their sins Lastly let vs set before vs the ends of excommunication which also haue bin considered in part already One end of it is the good of the person excommunicated that if it bee possible he may be won Tit. 2 11. Rom 1 6. Christ deliuereth the doctrine of saluation the Gospel is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth For wheras Christ Iesus saith of himself Math. 10 34. that he came to send fire and sword into the world and that hee is appointed for the fall of many in Israel Lu. 12 46 2 34. that the Gospel is the sauor of death vnto death 2 Corinth 2 15. Yet this is not the proper end of Christ or the Gospel but as it were beside their purpose
as a Sergeant and iudge him as guilty in the sight of God Besides as there is a twofold trespasse Vrs●n 〈◊〉 part 4. so there is a threefold kinde of remitting or forgiuing to wit remission of reuenge remission of punishment and remission of iudgement Remission of reuenge belongeth to all persons both publike and priuate and restraineth the hands of Magistrates and subiects for neither superiours nor inferiours ought to do any thing in malice and grudge or to satisfie their owne lusts If a Iudge in proceeding against malefactors pursue his owne quarrell rather then execute iustice he sinneth and offendeth albeit the party be guilty and deserue death for vengeance belongeth to the Lord and we are not to requite like for like Remission of punishment belongeth to priuate persons that beare not the sword but as all cannot inflict so all cannot remit punishment For the Magistrate though not sometimes and in some cases and in some persons he may remit which are not needfull heere to remember yet not alwayes nor all offenders Rom. 13.4 nor in all offences because God will haue the sentence of the law proceed and the execution of iustice haue his course This extendeth not to Magistrates for then euill doers should not be punished nor euil deedes rooted out of the city of God Remission of iudgement is when we conceiue a good and charitable opinion of those that haue offended vs. But thus we are not bound alwayes to forgiue neither to remit the censure which euill men iustly deserue for their euill deedes For the Prophet Esay pronounceth a woe against all such as call euill good Esay 5.12 and good euill sweet sowre and sowre sweet It is lawfull for vs to retaine our iudgement and opinion of wicked men so long as they be impenitent Of this Christ speaketh Luk. 17.3 If he repent forgiue him that is that hard censure of him and count him as a brother But of this we haue spoken at large elsewhere 〈…〉 and therefore this shall suffice for the answere to this obiection The vses that arise from hence are many and Vse 1 of speciall note First of all is all sinne euen the trespasse against men committed against God doth it offend him and violate his law yes doubtlesse not onely man is iniuried but God himselfe is offended as hath beene sufficiently prooued and therfore it should teach vs what a grieuous and feareful thing sinne is in what account it ought to be with vs and how euery one should learn to aggrauate and augment with God his owne sinne for his farther humiliation This was it that greeued and vexed Dauid and as it were pierced his very bowels in the matter of Vriah namely that his sinne was against God who knoweth sinne perfectly and beholdeth it in his naturall colours so that neither it nor wee can deceiue him Wherefore this lesson must duly be considered of vs and enter deepely into our hearts Who it is that we offend This was it that mooued Dauid to know sinne and to mourne for it Psal 51.4 Against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight that thou mightest be iustified when thou speakest and be cleare when thou iudgest Where note that he is not content to say once against thee but he doubleth it against thee against thee and addeth with great force and vehemency against thee onely ●ion But did he not sinne against man or is not murther a breach of the sixth commandement and adultery of the seuenth I answere 〈◊〉 1. yes these sinnes are condemned in the second Table He had slaine Vriah with a sword 〈◊〉 sinne ●eat it he had committed adultery with his wife he had beene the chiefe cause and principall meanes of the slaughter and destruction of others and so brought blood-guiltines vpon himselfe he hardned the Ammonites in their sinnes who opened their mouth to slander the word and to blaspheme the holy Name of God he sinned against the child that was mis-begotten which also dyed through that vnfaithful act he sinned against his own house in that he kindled a fire throughout his family brought stickes with his own hands to raise vp the flame that was not easily to bee quenched 〈◊〉 13.14 〈◊〉 16.22 for one of his sonnes taketh vp the sword and killeth another the brother committeth abominable incest with his owne sister of the halfe blood and another of his own sonnes taketh his wiues and lyeth with them not in the darke of the night or in a secret corner of the house but he spread a tent openly and in the sight of the sunne Lastly he sinned against the whole Church and people of God who by meanes of his sinne were offended and troubled with tumults and seditions so that the whole land was in an vprore and insurrection from one end to the other All which points shew that his sinne went farre against men it touched Vriah it touched Bathshebah it touched the child it touched the Ammonites it touched his family it touched the whole Church yet these bloody and crying and heinous sinnes so farre as they concerned men like himselfe he seeth to be as nothing albeit they were notorious in comparison of God against whom they were especially committed he had rather haue all men set against him then to haue God his enemy and to come out in battell aray against him and therefore he cryeth out in great anguish and bitternesse of spirit O against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight As if he should say Although the whole world should absolue me and no man could accuse me of sinne yet this troubleth my conscience this stingeth and striketh me to the heart that I must haue thee to be my iudge I am free from the iudgment seat of men as being my selfe supreme and vnder the iurisdiction of no other but ●lasse what can this comfort me so long as I haue thee to giue sentence vpon me He that is thus ouerburdened and ouerwhelmed with a feeling of the greatnesse of Gods iudgement as Dauid was needeth no other accuser forasmuch as God standeth and serueth in stead of a thousand If the whole world should accuse a man and conspire together to charge him with any crime yet if God acquit him his owne conscience will minister peace vnto him and comfort against all slanders and imputations laid against him For if God be on his side Rom. 8.31 who shall be against him but if God be against him and lay greeuous things vnto him woe woe vnto him who shall speake for him though he had the praise and applause though he had the gaine and glory of all the world If he condemne who shall iustify if he say guilty who dare plead not guilty He found out Adam Gen. 3 9. when none accused him when there was no man vpon the face of the earth to accuse him and said Adam Where art thou He
all holinesse and righteousnesse Hence it is that God tollerated many things among his people which he neuer allowed simply as appeareth in the case of diuorcement 〈◊〉 4 1. and many other of like nature So hee suffered the next of kinne to pursue him to death that had slaine his kinsman if he were taken out of the City of his refuge but God neuerthelesse did neuer approue of this to set vpon the person that had done him no harme neither aloweth any to follow the rage of his choler and to execute the malice of his heart so that this law hath no place among vs. For we must marke this as a certaine rule that ciuil gouernment cannot change any thing in the ten Commandements or set downe any thing to the preiudice of them Many things were permitted vnto the Iewes because of the hardnesse of their hearts Math. 19 8. but from the beginning it was not so They then that would put away their wiues for euery cause might as well alledge the law of giuing them a bill of diuorcement as others produce the auenger of blood to iustifie the prosecution of priuate reuenge forasmuch as the one is a breach of the seauenth Commandement the other is a breach of the sixth Commandement And thus much in answer of the obiections Thirdly we are put in mind of this duty Vse 3 that seeing all sin is committed against God we should be afraid to sinne against him and ought aboue all things to take heed of his wrath and indignation We are rather to chuse any course or take any way then runne into his displeasure Thus it was with Ioseph of whom we spake before he was content rather to be slandered vniustly and accused falsely of his leud and lasciuious mistrisse yea to be imprisoned and punished by his ouer-credulous master then he would make a breach in his owne soule sin against God Let a man once perish his conscience the wracke is not easily made vp again It is like a water-course which is not easily stopped It is better to fall into the hands of men then of God for he can make our innocency knowne and the vprightnesse of our cause to appeare that it shall break out as the light and shine as the Sunne at noone daies as we shall shew more euidently in the end of this chapter True it is the greatest sort of men make it a common matter because it is common they account it a small and light matter to sin against God When they heare that by cōmitting euill they sin in Gods sight and prouoke him to anger they regard not much those threatnings they make a mock of sin and feare not the euent of it not considering they play with a serpent that will in the end sting thē vnto death when it hath wrapped them fast as it were in fetters that they can by no meanes escape We must account no sin to be in it owne nature little as a mote but esteeme of it as a great beame albeit there be difference betweene them and some be greater then other This cogitation once taking place in vs How we may vnderstand the greeuousnesse of sin Eph. 5 3. will make vs feare and tremble at the naming of it The Apostle speaking of fornication and vncleannesse and such like euils saith Let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints For the Scripture laieth hold on our straying thoughts and wandring motions of the minde though we neuer giue assent vnto them but labour to remoue and repell them so soone as they arise in vs and abhorre them and our selues for them These first motions and lusts are a breach of the Law Rom. 7. and deserue condemnation how much more therfore the transgressions of our whole life that are much more abhominable Besides we are taught not onely to looke into the glasse of the law to see the heinousnesse of our transgressions but also to consider the punishments due vnto them in this life and the life to come for thereby we are subiect to all woes and miseries and death it selfe as we may see by the examples of our first parents of the old world of Sodome of Pharaoh and his hoste of the Iewes that were carried captiue and many of Gods owne people that by infirmity haue fallen and felt sore chastisements from his hands as appeareth in Moses and Aaron in Dauid in Hezekiah in Iosiah in Salomon and sundry others Lastly we may behold the grieuousnesse of sin in the example of Christ our Sauiour who albeit he were without sinne and none iniquitie was found in his mouth yet bare he in his body our sinnes and felt that burden which would haue crushed vs in peeces and broken all our bones in sunder forasmuch as he apprehended the wrath of God in his soule which caused him to sweat water and blood and to cry out vpon the crosse My God Mat. 27.46 my God why hast thou forsaken me Such then as neuer feare to offend God haue no feeling of Gods iustice no feeling of Christs suffering no feeling of the vilenesse of sin no feeling of their owne punishments that hang ouer their heads shall without repentance seaze vpon them to their finall damnation Let vs awake cut of our deepe sleepe and take care of our saluation let vs take heede we grow not senselesse and hard-hearted Let vs learne to know our selues better and consider what we haue done Let vs feare to offend God and stand in awe of his iudgements so that if we sinne against him we may be well assured to be punished for it But some will say Obiect God is gracious and mercifull he will not plague vs and strike vs though we sin he is not hard as many would make him doth not the Scripture tell vs that he is mercifull and shall we not beleeue the Scripture to be true Let them say what they will I will beleeue the Scripture Answer I answere in saying thus thou doest nothing but deceiue thy selfe and dally with the word of God and indeed doest not beleeue it to be true For if thou diddest acknowledge God to be the author of it thou wouldest submit thy selfe to euery part of it thou wouldest not embrace what thou likest and refuse what liketh thee not Thou mayest as well say in plaine English that part of the word of God is false and there is no trueth in it and I will sinne without controllement of it nay while thou reasonest in that prophane manner thou sayest in thine heart Tush God is not God but an idoll that sitteth still that hath eyes and seeth nothing that hath hands and doeth nothing that hath eares and heareth nothing True it is men are ashamed to vtter these reprochfull wordes and to belch out of their filthy mouthes such horrible blasphemies but if we will rippe vp to the quick their former presumptions we shall find their case and condition to be little better
into hell fire For seeing we offend him to whō should we repaire and come for pardon but vnto him that is offended It is he that can giue vs pardon both of sinne and punishment The practise heereof we see in the Prophet Dauid who because he had sinned against God against God onely he flieth vnto him for the forgiuenesse of his sinnes Psal 51 4. Haue mercy vpon me O God according to thy louing kindnesse Verse 1. according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions Verse 2. Verse 4. wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sinne c against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight Let vs not continue in sinne but labour earnestly and speedily to come out of it as he that is fallen into a pit desireth nothing more then to get out and putteth to all his strength to be deliuered If we get not a generall pardon for all our sinnes woe vnto vs we are in a most wretched and miserable condition One sinne left vnpardoned is able to cast vs out of Gods kingdome and to giue vs our portion among the vnbeleeuers We see this in the fall of the Angels who left the state and habitation wherein they were set they sinned and were cast out from the presence of God and are reserued to destruction It is a good signe and a true note of repentance to thirst after mercy This is the penitents song he neuer pleadeth merit but euermore praieth for mercy and prizeth it aboue all other things First we must see our sinnes against God and the sentence of death pronounced against vs and then confesse the same to be iust and equall against our selues As then our sinnes cry to God for vengeance as we shewed before so let them cause vs to cry vnto God for deliuerance from them and the forgiuenes of them Though we haue sinned against him yet let vs not despaire of mercy for that were willingly and wittingly and willfully to cast our selues into the Lyons denne with whom is no pitty or compassion as if he that were like to bee drowned should refuse to bee helped out of the waters Let vs not say that God hath forsaken vs cast vs out of his sight let vs not thinke we are out of the hope of his fauour When we seeke not God he will seeke vs out and he seeketh out no man but he findeth him And heerein appeareth the infinitenesse of his loue the bottome wherof no man can sound whereof many can speake to their endlesse cōfort and to his endlesse glory and praise Such as sought not the meanes to bring them home to God God hath brought the meanes home to them and directed them to vse thē to their consolation and saluation Not that we should abuse or neglect the meanes but to kindle our loue and zeale vnto them so much the more For if he haue bin found of them that sought him not much more will he offer himselfe in kindnesse and mercy to those that with pure hearts and vpright consciences seeke vnto him and craue a blessing of him as somtimes he hath rewarded temporally those that haue humbled themselues hypocritically and vnsoundly to declare how greatly he regardeth true repentance indeed From hence is reproued the doctrine and practise of the Church of Rome that teach that the Pastours of the Church haue full and absolute power to forgiue sinnes as Christ had as though whosoeuer doubteth of their right and iurisdiction might as well doubt whether Christ haue authority to remit sinnes This is the pride and presumption of the man of sinne to challenge this preheminence who setteth himselfe downe in the seat of God and boasteth himselfe as God For this is one of the regalities and prerogatiues of God which he will giue or impart in whole or in part to none other It is an honour that belongeth peculiarly vnto him This the Scribes and Pharisies confessed in the Gospel Math. 9 3. Mar. 2 7. Who can forgiue sinnes but God onely Christ therefore is the onely author of reconciliation the Ministers are onely the Lords messengers and ambassadors to declare his will out of his word 2 Cor. 5 18. All things are of God who hath reconciled vs vnto himselfe by Iesus Christ and hath giuen to vs the ministery of reconciliation If the Bishop of Rome had this authority The Bishop of Rome cannot forgiue sins then wee ought to craue mercy at his hands and say vnto him Haue mercy vpon me O Lord God the Pope which is intollerable blasphemy impiety against God Obiection But it may be said If he do not sometimes forgiue sinnes then it shall seeme to be false which Christ saith Whatsoeuer ye binde on earth shall bee bound in heauen and whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted c. I answer Answer this power giuen to the Apostles and their successors is a commission in the Name of Christ to declare and pronounce remission of sins to them that are truely penitent They haue no power actually to remit sinnes they are onely as dispensers and stewards they are not made competent Iudges but onely as the Lords messengers to publish the will of God out of his word They are as Ministers not enabled to reconcile men vnto God but to pray and beseech them to be reconciled through Christ 2 Cor. 5 20. Christ then is the reconciler they are the Ministers of reconciliation Their commission stretcheth no farther but to declare the Princes pleasure If then God onely forgiue sinnes surely no man can doe it doubtlesse the man of sinne cannot forgiue sinne he cannot forgiue himselfe much lesse another He is a sicke man himselfe and needeth the Physition if haply any physicke will do him any any good which is much to be doubted He cannot be an absolute Physition to others that needeth the Physition himselfe he cannot saue others that cannot saue himselfe neither reconcile others to God who hath himselfe neede to be reconciled by another Christ Iesus himselfe could neuer haue reconciled vs to his Father if he had needed his Mother or any Saint or Angell to reconcile him to God We must all high and low rich and poore goe together to the Physition that he may heale all of vs. It is Christs shedding of his blood that remitteth sinnes it is he that hath made satisfaction to God so that it belongeth to God only to forgiue sinnes properly It is Christ that calleth all vnto him that are weary and heauy laden Mat. 11 ● and promiseth to refresh them The Lord saith in the Prophet I am the Lord thy God Esay 43 ● 25. the holy one of Israel thy Sauiour and afterward I euen I am the Lord and besides me there is no Sauiour and yet againe more plainely I euen I am hee that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Neither doth Christ reprehend
when wee can complaine of them speake euill of them deface and euery way disgrace them as carnall men do their vtter enemies it is a true signe that our hearts are touched by the Spirit of God as our Sauiour Christ teacheth Iohn 16 verse 8. When the Comforter is come he will reproue the world of sinne and of righteousnesse and of iudgement Wee haue no greater enemies then our sinnes which are many in number strong in power deceitfull in snaring and dangerous in subduing of vs. They are in number as the sand on the sea shore that cannot be reckoned and moe then the haires of our head or then the houres that we haue liued They are as strong as an army of men set in battell aray who by their power and puissance haue strooke downe the chosen men of Israel They deceiue with their pleasures as the bird is taken in the snare and as the subtill harlot that flattereth with her mouth They bring danger both to soule and body and leaue vs not till wee perish for euer and be cast into the pitte of hel from whence there is no redemption Seeing then their nature is such that they carry vs headlong with violence into perdition we should also maligne them and hate them as death nay as him that hath the power of death that is the diuell Hebr. 2 verse 14. If we finde them too cunning and crafty for vs and our selues too weake to deale against them being armed with all the forces of Satan and of the world let vs goe to him that beeing stronger then that strong man is able to take away all his weapons Luke 11 verse 22. and binde him in chaines euen the Lyon of the Tribe of Iuda Reuel 5 verse 5. that is able to stop the mouth of that roaring Lyon which seeketh whom he may deuoure 1 Pet. 5 8. He knoweth wherof we are made he remembreth that we are but dust And as he is of power to helpe vs and subdue our corruptions so he is of infinite mercy to pardon vs our sinnes He knoweth what is in vs better then we our selues know our selues forasmuch as he is greater then our hearts and knoweth all things If then we confesse our sinnes truely and vnfainedly as he is faithfull and iust 1 Iohn chap 1 verse 9. so he will forgiue vs he hath made the promise and the word is gone out of his mouth which he cannot call backe againe he hath vttered his voice and he cannot deny it no more then he can deny himselfe If he should reteine our sinnes we being penitent he should forfeit and falsifie his truth which cannot agree to the diuine nature and therefore as one rightly speaketh he should be a greater leeser then we This is euidently to be seene in the Psalmes of repentance penned by the Prophet Dauid as Psalme 32. At the first he sought by all the meanes that he could to hide his sinnes hee sendeth for Vriah and vseth sundry shifts to conuey him vnto his house and thereby to couer his sinne When that pollicy would not serue he sendeth secretly to Ioab to put him in place of danger and thē to retire from him that hee might fall by the sword of the Ammonites But whiles he seeketh all meanes to couer it God the searcher of hearts doth discouer it and sendeth his Prophet vnto him to reproue him Heereby euen by the Ministery of the word his heart is touched and he is made to see the greeuousnesse of his sin against whom he had sinned then he is not ashamed to acknowledge it and to leaue a memoriall of it in the Church for the good of others Thus he found wonderfull comfort by his confession and could finde none without it I acknowledged my sinne and thou forgauest mine iniquity Psal 32 5. The consideration of the multitude of our sinnes is able to bring vs to despaire but the confession of our sinnes is able to raise vp to hope againe and to stay vs vp with the mercies of GOD which are as flagons of wine to refresh vs. When Dauid had thus confessed that he had sinned God sent him a comfortable message that cheered his heart and quieted his conscience The Prophet that before threatned thundered out the Law now applieth precious balme and powreth wine and oyle into his wounds saying vnto him in the Name of God Thy sinne is pardoned They that are escaped by the mercy of God as it were from a dangerous shipwracke out of their sinnes would not come into the same case and condition againe for to gaine a kingdome nay all the kingdomes of the world When the sinfull woman confessed her sinnes by shedding abundance of teares and wiping the feete of Christ with the haires of her head hee answered concerning her as the Lord of life and comfort Many sinnes are forgiuen her for shee loued much Luke 7 verse 47. Thus he spake graciously and comfortably to the penitent theefe on the Crosse accusing himselfe reprouing his fellow iustifying Christ confessing his faith and asking forgiuenesse This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luke 23 43. The more often we goe vnto God and confesse our sinnes before him the better it is for vs the more mercifully he will deale with vs the greater grace he will bestow vpon vs the farther he will remoue his iudgements from vs and the neerer he will approch vnto vs. Vse 3 Lastly let vs all labour after a right confession Many haue confessed their sinnes and yet found little comfort as Pharaoh Saul Iudas the Israelites and many others If we hope to speed better then these men then we must confesse better then they did If wee sinne with them and confesse as they did we shall reape no better fruite then they did We are apt to fauour and flatter our selues wee are possessed with selfe-loue Wee cannot looke vpon other mens vertues nor our owne vices we are blinde in seeing our owne faults wheras wee are sharpe sighted and quicke eyed to espie a little mote in other mens faces Wee should rather consider our owne wants to be humbled for them then the graces we haue to be puffed vp by them No man seeth the spots that be in his owne face so he discerneth not the sinnes that are in his owne soule He that would know his deformities taketh a glasse Iames 1 23. which sheweth vnto him what he is and how he is so if we would vnderstand our secret open sinnes we must behold our faces in the law of God for by the law commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3 20. Wee must therefore examine our selues touching this duty of confession and obserue diligently the true properties of it Not euery one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Not euery one that saith I am a sinner I am vncleane is a true conuert and a right penitent Nothing is more common thē to heare men say I confesse my selfe a
sinner all men are sinners there is no man that sinneth not God be mercifull vnto vs this is the ordinary confession of euery man These are no better then words of course it is rotten at the roote it is blasted in the eare it is green in the leaues but beareth no fruite it is beautifull without but soule and filthy within it is formall in shew but fading in substance Wherfore that we may not deceiue our selues as a great part of the world do The properties of right confession we are to vnderstand the properties of true confession that wee may comfort our selues in them if we finde them in vs or else labour to attaine vnto them if we feele the want of them and seeke to increase in the knowledge of them if we haue already receiued them First of all wee must confesse to God our speciall and particular sinnes as the patient that would bee cured not onely telleth the Physition that he is sicke but acknowledgeth in what part and in what manner how long he hath beene sicke When men complaine to Magistrates of the wrongs that haue beene done them they will expresse in what particulars and in what sort they haue beene damnified Shall we not much rather seeke to the Physition of our soules and acknowledge to him how sorely we are sicke especially considering hee knoweth our diseases better then our selues If there were no other motiue to stir vs vp to this duty of confession this were sufficient because we cannot hide them from him We may conceale them from the knowledge of men but with all our craft and cunning with all our deuises and pollicies with all our fetches and falsehood we cannot conceale them from God whose eies pierce into the bowels of the earth and into the depth of hell This is that which the wise man deliuereth Hell destruction are before the Lord how much more the hearts of the sons of men Pro. 15 11. So that there is nothing so deepe nothing so secret which can be hidden frō the sight of God Hence it is that Dauid confessed oftentimes that he had sinned addeth in what kindes in blood-guiltinesse Psal 51 14. 1 Chr. 21 8. and in numbring of the people so Paul confessed that he was a blasphemer a persecutor and an oppressor the chiefest of all sinners 1 Tim. 1 15. We see then to whom we must goe to confesse and in what manner we are to performe it which serueth to reproue those that when their sinnes are discouered and come to sight that they can no longer hide them doe submit themselues vnto men and stoope downe to them but neuer humble themselues before God whom they haue offended nor acknowledge how shamefully they haue broken his lawes We haue many false teares shed to blinde and bleare the eyes of men but they neuer seeke vnfainedly to reconcile themselues vnto him that is able to saue and to destroy Iames 4 12. Math. 10 28. and neuer stand in feare of him that can destroy body and soule in hell fire Let vs take heed of this hypocrisie which is a most vaine and fruitelesse kinde of humiliation of which we shall speake more afterward Secondly we must set out our sins in their right colours The second property as beggers that vncouer their sores to men that they may behold them and shew mercy We must be so farre from making our sinnes lighter and lesser then they are that we should enlarge them to the full and labour to make them appeare vile heinous as they are A notable practise of this we haue in Dauid Psal 51 5. he ascendeth vp from his present sinnes to his original corruption Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sinne did my mother conceiue me The like wee see in Ezra chap. 9 verse 6. when the people had transgressed by making affinity with strangers taking of their daughters for themselues and for their sonnes he fell vpon his knees spred out his hands vnto the Lord his God and said O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift vp my face to thee my God for our iniquities are increased ouer our head and our trespasse is growne vp vnto the heauens We must confesse when and where and how we haue sinned We must confesse how much we haue dishonoured God and scandalized the Church and how long we haue liued and continued in our sinnes Wee must confesse that if he should condemne vs he should do vs no wrong but we must cleere him and the course of his iustice when he proceedeth against vs. Wee heard how Paul confessed his sin in the time of his ignorance that he had persecuted the Church of God extremely and made hauocke of it horribly Gal. 1 13. and therefore was not onely the least of all Saints but the greatest of all sinners Neither doth he in vttering this speech Pernar de vita sol●tar make a lye or speak for modesty sake but as he thought in his heart esteeming no mans sinne like his owne nor vnderstanding another mans as he doth his owne nor feeling another mans as his owne Thus do the seruants of God deale with themselues with their sinnes and thereby shew that they were out of loue with themselues and their sinnes This reproueth those that content themselues with a word and away they cannot abide to stand long in their confession as if they were afraid to humble themselues too farre whereas we cannot make our selues too vile nor hate our sinnes too much Many confesse thē as if they meant presently to returne vnto thē like to the harlot that wipeth her mouth and saith I haue not committed iniquity Pro. 30 20. wheras we should hate thē with a perfect hatred as our vtter enemies that seek our destructiō Thirdly The third property our confession must proceed from the heart it must be sound at the roote otherwise the fruite will be blasted rotten corrupt and vnsauory as Prou. 4 23. Keepe thine heart with all diligence for thereout commeth life and chap. 23 26. My sonne giue me thine heart and let thine eies delight in my waies Thus it was with Dauid Ps 6.7 6. whose soule was troubled very sore I fainted in my mourning I cause my bed euery night to swim and water my couch with my teares and the more he was afflicted the more vnfainedly he came to God Such was the confession of the Publican when he smote his brest and said Lord be merciful to me a sinner When he laid his hand vpon his brest if it had bin possible he would haue touched and taken his hart to haue offred it vp to God If we bring vnto God onely an outward confession fetched no farther then from the mouth it returneth empty to vs againe and neuer obtaineth any blessing This lip-labour God hateth as a lame offering and a maimed sacrifice The hart is as salt that seasoneth euery part of the worship of God
for the recouery of his nephew Lot out of the hands of tyrants so no doubt they gathered together many seruants of their owne and out of their fathers house by whose helpe they slew the men of that place and spoiled the city See also to this purpose 1 Sam. 15.9 21 24 and 2.27 28 c. Num. 25.4 Ioab offended as the kings instrument in numbring of the people yet Dauid had the chiefe hand and therfore he is punished with the diminution of his people the punishment is proportioned according to the sinne he sinned in numbring of them the number of them therefore is exceedingly lessened for there dyed of the people from Dan euen to Beersheba seuenty-thousand men 2 Sam. 24.15 So in the killing of Vriah Dauid contriued the plot Ioab offered the meanes the Ammonites put it in execution 2 Sam. 11.15 16 17. Howbeit Dauid is charged directly and expresly to haue slaine him by the sword of the enemies and is most seuerely punished 2 Sam. 12.9 10 11 12. What then may some say Obiect Are the instruments of other mens euils without sin are they without fault and to be holden excused because they are not the first and principall doers No they are not without blame For whosoeuer practiseth any euill whether he be principall or accessary is guilty in the sight of God and therefore such as are ministers of other mens euills are oftentimes punished whether they be reasonable or vnreasonable creatures Gen. 3.14 Leuit. 20.15 Exod. 21.28 29 32. Iosh 6.17 Esay 30 22. As God is iust so he punisheth the instruments of iniustice And as he pronounceth a woe against those that pronounce wicked decrees so he hath destroyed those that haue executed them as 2 King 1.9 the captaines and their fifty were destroyed with fire from heauen and yet these were but messengers and ministers of the King Notwithstanding though the instruments doe offend and not escape the chiefe punishment is euer reserued for the chiefe offender Reason 1 For first of all such as are chiefe in gouernment ought to stay their inferiours from euil as the head gouerneth the members Eli is charged with the wickednesse of his sonnes in that they made themselues vile but he restrained them not 1 Sam. 3.13 Such gouernours make themselues the taile and not the head wheras they should order those of their house as the soule ruleth the body Secondly God will require the blood of Reason 2 those that perish at the hands of the gouernours for that which Ezekiel speaketh of the watchman chap. 3.17.18 holdeth proportion in euery ruler the Magistrate is the watchman of the common-wealth the Minister is the watchman of the Church the housholder is the watchman of the family all set as it were in their watch-tower and al must giue an account for such as are vnder them Thirdly the sinne of those that haue the Reason 3 chiefest hand in it is greater then of others as then it is greater so it deserueth the greater punishment forasmuch as the sinne and punishment shall be sutable and proportionable one to the other It belongeth to all especially to such as are Vse 1 superiours to consider this they thinke themselues absolute and that they ought of right to command what they list to their inferiours But as they are superiour in place so they shall also be superiour in punishment if they command any thing against God and his word Euery one therefore must looke to his charge committed vnto him as a field to till and bee good examples to those that are vnder them Pro. 27.23 Psal 78.71.72 Superiority is both an honour and a burden as it aduanceth to dignity so it inferreth and requireth a duty The honour is great but the burden charge is farre greater Vse 2 Secondly it is the duty of all housholders to be carefull to order their families aright and to compell them to serue the Lord The authority that Princes haue in the common-wealth 2 Chro. 14.4 the same haue housholders touching the ordering of their housholds Gen. 25.2 they must reforme abuses purge their houses of them that be vntractable and incorrigible Psal 101.2 In the fourth commandement the master of the house is charged to looke to his family to his seruants and children See see I say heereby the misery of our times and people they suffer those that are vnder them to goe whither they will and to do what they list they neuer do so much as call them to an account where they haue beene or what they haue done whether they haue serued GOD or the Diuell So they haue their owne worke done vpon the other daies they giue thē liberty to all other works vpon the Lords day Lastly there commeth a great blessing vpon Vse 3 their heads that are the chiefe and principall in any good worke that draw on and encourage others in the waies of godlinesse for they shall haue a chiefe and principal reward Happy and blessed therefore are they that gouerne their charges as becometh them Gen. 18 18. Abraham shall be a great and mighty Nation and all the Nations of the earth shall be blessed in him and the reason is added because the Lord knew him that he would command his children and his houshold after him that they might keepe the way of the Lord to doe iustice and iudgement This is a notable commendation of him he was chiefe and one that went before the rest in good things therefore he should chiefly be rewarded O that the like might be said of vs This should stirre vs vp not onely to do good but to be cheefe in doing good to go before others to leade them the way that so we may haue the greater and better reward in that great day Miriam was shut vp from the Campe seuen daies Heere we may behold the mitigation of the punishment inflicted vpon Miriam If we weigh and consider her deserts so hainous was her sinne in equalling herselfe vnto Moses and despising his calling that she deserued to be shut out seuenty times seuen daies but God dealeth not with her according to her deseruings but changeth the perpetuall punishment into a temporal chastisement which should continue not seuen yeares or seuen moneths but seuen daies onely When Vzziah vsurped the Priests office and would needs burne incense vpon the Altar of incense he was striken with leprosie and he remained a leper vnto the day of his death 2 Chron. 26 21. The sinne of Miriam was not much lesse yet God dealt mercifully with her at the entreaty of Moses so that she was cut off from the host onely seuen daies that deserued to be striken all the daies of her life Doctrine All Gods chastisements are with mercy Obserue from hence that GOD doth mingle his chastisements with much mercy and doth not deale with vs according to our sinnes Lament 3 32. Luke 1 v. 20. 2 Sam. 24 verse 13. Psalm 125 3. Marke the reasons heereof First hee
need not feare for the time to come but that wee shall also receiue more at his hands who giueth liberally one blessing after another Iam. 1.5 Forasmuch as he is God for the time to come as well as for the time past and all his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. Thirdly this should mooue vs earnestly to Vse 3 labour for the first grace and neuer to giue rest to our selues vntill we feele an addition and encrease of the second and third grace in our hearts and to multiply them one after another that they may dwell in vs plentifully and make vs fruitfull in all holy conuersation If we haue the first grace in our hearts and be carefull to vse the same well it is as seed sown in good ground it will bring forth a wonderfull encrease and a notable haruest in the end Paul would haue Timothy to stirre vp the gift that was in him 1 Tim. 1.6 If wee bee once in Christ he will purge vs more and more that we shall bring forth more fruit Ioh. 15.8 Lastly obserue that this is a priuiledge belonging Vse 4 onely to the faithfull that they shall haue the mercy and fauour of God continued vnto them The blessings that God bestoweth vpon the wicked doe serue to make them without excuse and are as seales of condemnation they are not assurances vnto them that they shall haue moe bestowed vpon them he hath made no such promise vnto them neither can they gather any hope to haue any farther encrease of the same or any addition of new blessings Albeit it be so with the godly that former blessings of God are pledges of more yet it is not so with the vngodly 2 Sam. 7 17. Iudg. 10 12 13. Eccle. 8.12 13. Esay 65.20 He tooke away his mercy from Saul but hee would neuer doe it from Dauid he deliuered the vnthankefull and rebellious Israelites out of the hands of their enemies but he threateneth that he will deliuer them no more The euill seruant hath his talent taken from him and neuer restored vnto him againe and therupon Christ deliuereth the manner of Gods dealing as well toward the faithful as the vnfaithfull Matth. 25.29 Vnto euery one that hath shall be giuen and he shall haue aboundance but from him that hath not shall be taken away euen that which he hath For they doe abuse his mercies and neuer make any good vse of them how then should they bee continued vnto them nay how should they not be depriued of them They become much more sinfull and grow worse and worse by his blessings God requireth the more of them but they performe the lesse duty vnto him It is therefore a vaine hope and a meere presumption for such to thinke to haue his goodnesse continued rather they may conclude that God will take them away suddenly and bestow them no longer vpon them except they turne from their euill wayes 20 And the Lord said I haue pardoned according to thy word 21 But as truely as I liue all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. 23 Because all these men which haue seene my glory and my miracles which I did in Egypt in the wildernesse and haue tempted me now these ten times and haue not hearkened vnto my voyce 23 Surely they shall not see the Land c. 24 But my seruant Caleb c. We haue in these words the effect of the prayer of Moses and the answer that God giueth vnto him The summe whereof is this that the fathers should die in the wildernesse because though they had seene his glory and miracles in Egypt and in the wildernesse yet they tempted him ten times that is not once nor twice but oftentimes a certaine number put for an vncertaine as Gen. 31.41 Iob. 19.3 Dan. 7.10 and therefore they should be all destroied excepting Caleb the seruant of God If any aske the question why Ioshua is not expressed ●ction and wherefore his name is concealed I answer ●er because the Lord pronounced the former sentence concerning the people that were in their tents but Ioshua that attended vpon Moses was present with Moses and Aaron before the dore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation therefore the iudgement denounced against the people that abode in their tents no way touched him Caleb was with the people so that it behoued him who had spoken the truth of the land to be excepted Ioshua was not and therefore there was no need to haue him exempted from them who was not among them For being with Moses and Aaron he is accounted in their number Secondly they are commanded to returne backe againe into the wildernesse by the way of the red sea verse 25 when they were now come to the borders of Canaan which they could not heare without great greefe and anguish of minde Before they wept without cause verse 1. Now they haue cause to weepe for this heauy iudgement Thirdly their children shold beare the burdē of their fathers sin wander in the wildernes forty yeres howbeit in the end they should enter into the land Fourthly the Spies themselues that had searched the land which were the authors of all this mutiny and had brought vp an euill report of the land were smitten with a fearefull plague dyed suddenly by the hand of God Heere we may obserue in these words that God heareth the prayer of Moses and pardoneth the people according to his prayer so that the Lord heareth the prayers of the faithfull according to his promise Secondly Gods iudgements are tempered with mercy Thirdly such as haue receiued the greatest mercies and become vnthankfull and disobedient Matth. 11.20.21 22 23 24. Luke 12.47 are the greatest sinners and shal receiue the greatest iudgement Fourthly in excepting Caleb and Ioshua from the common destruction it appeareth that God is a iust righteous God who as he doth not account the wicked innocent so he will not account the innocent to be wicked The Popish teachers alledge this example to prooue that God pardoneth sinne Popish doct●ine touching the pardon of sin and the retaining of the punishment and yet punisheth the sinner that the same punishment so inflicted is a satisfaction to God for their sinne and that the eternall punishment due to this people was pardoned at y● request of Moses If this were true then all this people were beleeuers and had true faith in the Messiah which is a bold assertion without all shew of reason and likelihood of trueth It may probably and charitably be thought that some of them were beleeuers and repented to them these were chastisements The like may be said of Moses and Aaron and of Dauid of which they were shut out of the land of promise and he was punished by the death of his child and in other his children and house not thereby to satisfie God by bearing part of the temporall punishment belonging to their sin but that Moses
and Aaron might learne together with all the people to put their trust in Gods promises made vnto them and to waite on him with patience The end therefore was not Gods satisfaction but their owne reformation and the peoples instruction And Dauid had many punishments that the mouths of the heathen might thereby be stopped who were likely to blaspheme God because of his sinne The truth is before forgiuenesse such iudgements are punishments of sinne but after forgiuenesse obtained August de pecc●t merit remis lib 2. cap. 34. Origen in Gen. hom 16. they are the fights and exercises of the iust This is the difference betweene the afflictions of the faithfull and of the vnfaithful that which is to the iust the exercise of vertue is to the vniust the punishment of sinne That which is laid vpon vs after forgiuenesse in Christ is onely in respect of the time to come to weaken and weare away the power of sinne and in death vtterly to destroy it If any obiect that death is the wages of sinne and that yet it continueth after forgiuenesse I answer it is so indeed original●y and naturally but to the faithfull it hath lost his sting the poison of it is taken away and turned into a medicine and is made the way to life and saluation Bern. in Cant. Serm. 26. That which was the gate of hell is made an entry to the kingdome of heauen Thus we see that the Popish satisfaction is weakely grounded and the gainefull fire of purgatory standing vpon the rotten and ruinous pillar of satifaction is vtterly quenched that though the Iesuites and their instruments labor to blow the bellows to kindle it againe yet they are not able to put any sparke of heat into it When the sinne is forgiuen the punishment is also remitted For this is a certain doctrine that when God pardoneth sinne he also remitteth the punishment For first the fault the punishment are relatiues which stand together and fall together admit of the one you yeeld the other take away the one you ouerthrow the other Againe when God doth not remit the fault he doth retaine the punishment who can deny this therfore on the contrary when he forgiueth the fault he doth not retaine the punishment The fault is a greater matter then the punishment if then God forgiue the fault which is the greater it may not seeme strange that he should forgiue that which is lesser and onely depending vpon the fault Besides when once a debt is discharged it were extreme wrong and iniustice to require the payment thereof againe but sinnes are debts Matth. 6.12 The obligation standing against vs is cancelled and the creditour is fully satisfied how then should we feare any arrest or imprisonment who shall sue vs or who can lay any thing to our charge In a ciuill court he were a very corrupt iudge who hauing acquitted cleared a man that stood as guilty from al offence would notwithstanding giue sentence that he shold be executed for this were as much as to pardon the theft and to hang the theefe They that are iustified by faith are at peace with God Rom. 5.1 and there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Rom. 8.1 When God forgiueth the sinnes and transgressions of the penitent he remembreth them no more Ier. 31.34 hee blotteth them out of his sight he setteth them as farre from vs as the East is from the West Psal 103 he scattereth them as a cloud and casteth them into the bottom of the Sea The meaning of the words Mic. 7.19 But touching the pardon mentioned in this place the answer of God is to be referred to the prayer of Moses is proportioned out according to his request He desired that God would not vtterly root out that whole people as one man according as he had threatned his prayer is granted and God declareth that hee had pardoned them not absolutely but according to his word he requested they might not vtterly be destroyed he receiueth answer they shall not vtterly be destroyed And concerning satisfaction to God for our sinnes by our selues it is more then we are able to make it cost more to redeeme a soule and to pay a price sufficient for it For to satisfie is to yeeld a sufficient recompence to God for the transgressions that we haue committed against him This Christ our redeemer is onely able to doe and his satifaction is all sufficient Obiect But they tel vs that mans satisfaction is not a supplying of any want in Christs satisfaction Answer but an applycation of it to vs. A most foolish and witlesse conceit For when a man hath a medicine fully sufficient and auaileable for the curing and healing of a wound what needeth another medicine for the healing the same wound which he must apply and lay to the former medicine to make it good is not this applycation needlesse And if a surety vndertaking for vs hath discharged our debts it is very ridiculous to suppose that we must pay the debt againe that so our sureties payment may stand in effect We reade of the satisfaction that Christ hath made and we beleeue it but of a satisfaction applying his satisfaction we reade not and therfore we beleeue not which is no better then a cloake to couer their shame and soundeth harsh to the eare of reason it selfe But to passe ouer these things let vs consider the sentence pronounced against these men that all of them should die in the wildernes as they had all broken out into open wickednesse The doctrine Doctrin● sinne generally entertained bringeth a generall destruction Where 〈◊〉 is genera● entertain● it bringe● a genera● destructi● Gen. 6.5 〈◊〉 7.17 and 20 and 15 24 25. De● 9.4 Iosh 〈◊〉 21. Hos 4. 3. Ze. 1 1● when it is once come to the height in the maner and measure it causeth destruction to come vpon such persons The reasons follow This is agreeable to the course of Gods iustice that his iudgements may be answerable to the sinne A generall sinne deserueth a general plague Secondly as sinnes are resembled to sicknesses so punishments are to medicines which must be fitted to the diseases and not to a part thereof Reas 1 Now if vniuersall and spreading sins should not haue vniuersall spreading iudgments brought vpon them the plaster should be lesse then the wound the remedy much weaker then the disease The vses remaine First seeing God giueth sentence to bring Vse 1 desolation vpon this people for their common sinnes we haue great cause to feare that the day of our desolation and iudgement cannot be farre off For seeing it hath beene already prooued that we are growne a cold and carelesse people a lukewarme Church neither hote nor cold seeing wee are growne to the height of wickednesse Deut. 19 and haue added sinne to sinne as it were drunkennesse vnto thirst what can be expected in the next
mastery they wil hardly leaue their hold We shall finde it little better then to wash a Tile or brick and go about in a manner an vnpossible worke they are become a Cart-ropes which are not easily vntwisted Esay 5 18. Or as a threefold cable which is not quickly broken Eccles. 4 12. Cōsider the truth of this in these three things Drunkennesse whoredome and swearing what meanes soeuer are vsed to take these away they are vnprofitable the drunkard will follow it still Pro. 23 35. Such as comit whoredome sildome returne againe and take holde of the paths of life Prou. 2 19. when a man hath once accustomed himselfe to swearing he cannot but sweare at euery word he neuer feareth an oath Custome taketh away feare of sinning where no fear is to offend men are bold to sin when men are growne bold and past shame they haue no sense of sinne You shall heare them sweare ordinarily and horribly and yet they know not of it or at least neuer consider it Rom 2 4. Eph. 4 19. Vse 5 Lastly it behooueth vs to vse all the meanes we can to keepe vs from sinne as wee would do to keepe vs from the pestilence least wee grow secure and senslesse and think our selues in good case when we are neerest to destruction and farthest off from saluation ●nes sanc● or God 〈◊〉 vs 〈◊〉 The meanes which God sanctifieth as so many preseruatiues to worke in vs a conscience of sinne and to stay vs from falling into the same are many First the ministery of the word I range this in the first place both because of the power of it and because it giueth force vnto the rest God commandeth his Ministers to cry alowd and spare not to preach the doctrine of repentance and to tell the people their sinnes Pro. 1 20 21. and 9 2 33. Ephes 4 11 12. Thus hee sent Ionah to the Niniuites Ionah 3 4. Nathan to Dauid 2 Sam 12 1. and the prophets continually to the Israelites 2 Chronic. 36 14 15 Acts 2 37 38. Secondly the benefites and blessings of God which are many and great daily continuall vpon soule and body hee saueth and preserueth vs in him we liue and mooue who reneweth his mercies to vs euerie morning Psal 68 18 Lam 3 23. be daileth loadeth vs with benefits wonderfully Moses telleth the people that the Lord bestowed so many benefits vpon them that they should loue the Lord with all their hearts and with al their soule Deut. 10 12. That they should cleane vnto him and knit their hearts vnto him Iosh 23 8. and 24 14. 1 Kings 14.7 8. Paul beseecheth the Romanes by the mercies of God to offer vp their bodies as an holy sacrifice vnto God Rom. 12 1. God hath made vs to abound with this argument and hath often spoken vnto vs. Thirdly he hath bestowed vpon vs his own Sonne the greatest blessing in heauē or earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of vs Rom. 8 32 He spared not his owne Son but deliuered him vp for vs all Ioh. 3 16. He gaue his owne his onely Sonne for vs his enemies euen vnto the death that wee should be reconciled vnto him If the consideration of this and the earnest meditation in it will not mooue vs to repent of sin nothing in the world will put life into our hard hearts Fourthly the corrections and chastisements which are laide vpon vs Psal 89 31 32. Iob 33 16. The Lord openeth the eares of men euen by their corrections which he hath sealed so that we should humble our selues when we feel them Heb. 12 6 11. It is our duty therfore to mourn for sin betimes which wil bring with it comfort in the latter end Luk. 6 21. Blessed are yee that weepe for ye shall laugh This vse did Dauid make of them Psal 119 71. To this wee may ioyne the chastisements of God sent vpon others though we feele them not ourselues for if we see them or heare of them they should be as so many warning peeces to our selues to call vs to repentance Esay 26 9. Fiftly priuate admonitions and exhortations yea reproofes and threatnings of iudgement when the former will not serue Leu. 19 17. Prou. 9 8. Rebuke a wise man and hee will loue thee Math. 18 15. Iames 5 20. Thus he may be wonne by his brother Psal 141 5. Let vs not therefore refuse this meanes but make good vse of it Lastly the inward motions and inspirations of the holy Spirit which he stirreth vp in our hearts as it is saide of Dauid that God caused his owne heart to smite him 2 Sam. 24 10. and Psal 16 7. We haue all of vs at one time or other some good motions and desires put into our mindes let vs make much of them and entertaine them into our soules lest hee withdraw his Spirit from vs and giue vs ouer vnto our selues 40. And they rose vp early in the morning and gate them vp into the top of the Mountaine saying Loe we be heere and will goe vp vnto the place which the Lord hath promised for wee haue sinned 41. And Moses said Wherefore now doe you transgresse the commandement of the Lord but it shall not prosper 42. Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you c. Heere we haue the behauiour of this crooked and peruerse people hearing from the mouth of Moses the minde of God that they must go backe againe by the way of the red sea and shall wander vp and downe fourty yeares in the wildernesse for the false report which the spies had brought vp of the Land and for their own beleeuing of that report Now they will not obey but will needs goe forward though God had commanded them to retire and returne See heere the peruersenesse of our nature as if we had made a generall conspiracy neuer to obey him but to oppose against him whatsoeuer he say so we euermore striue against that we are forbidden They refused before to goe into the Land now they will needs in a Brauado proceede when they are forbidden When they should go forward thē they will go backward and make them a Captaine to conduct them into Egypt When they should go backward then they will goe forward though they perish for it This is our corrupt nature that which God willeth vs to do we will not do and that which he willeth vs not to do that we will do whereby we see that the lustes of the flesh are enmity against God Againe obserue that when God is not with a people they cannot prosper his presence is the cause of victory 2 Chron. 20 27. If he be gone from vs and goe not foorth with our armies we fall by the sword of the enemy wee cannot stand before them we go out one way and flie before them seuen waies Deut. 28 25. Moreouer we see in the example of this disobedience that God oftentimes punisheth one
iudgements vpon our families We see this with our eyes wee need not say we haue heard and our fathers haue told vs for wee haue seene and haue knowne the hand of GOD heauy vpon their wiues their children their seruants and yet they take no more notice of them then if they were in another world Sometimes God doth punish men with lesse iudgements when they haue deserued greater he doth but as it were touch them with the little finger when they haue deserued to bee striken with his whole hand and smiteth them with the backe of the sword that deserue to bee cut in peeces with the edge Take example in the sinne of drunkennesse and wonder at it How many drunkards hath God cast downe in a ditch from a bridge from an horse where peraduenture they haue broken arme or legge or face whē God could as easily haue suffered thē to haue broken their neckes so to haue ended their sinfull daies wretchedly as they liued prophanely yet which of them hath beene bettered or admonished by it or who hath taken instruction from it to feare the Lord or to repent of the same sinne Many there are that are companions in sin and brethren in euill they ioyne together in the practise thereof God giueth warning sometimes by the death of one of these companions which dieth desperately in his sins yet will not the rest take warning but proceed in their wickednesse as if there were no GOD to take vengeance of their presumptuous sinnes Lastly it belongeth to euery one to take Vse 3 notice of the corruptions of his owne heart that he is very forgetful of Gods iudgements very vnwilling to be admonished of them but is ready to passe them ouer and to put thē from him as matters that no way concerne him This is a voluntary and wilful ignorance Let vs therefore learne to make good vse of them and to lay them vp in our hearts as wee would do a treasure in our coffers The consideration of these well digested may doe vs more good then all the gold and siluer in the world As Dauid said I will neuer forget thy precepts Psal 119 61. so let vs say I wil neuer forget thy iudgements And as he remembred his mercies of old so let vs remēber his iudgments of old And whereas the greatest fort make a mocke both of their owne sinnes and of Gods punishments let vs say with the Prophet My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraid of thy iudgements Psal 119 120. He giueth warning of his iudgements before hee smiteth and he smiteth one to teach another that so we should not fall into his iudgments but might learne to preuent them by a timely care of auoiding sinne We are yet safe from his reuenging hand let vs not be secure nor abuse his patience Security is one of the last sinnes that shall be in the world For before the fearefull day of the Lord there shall be a generall security when all are ready to fall asleepe Let vs bee warned by other mens harmes lest we feele them vpon our selues Esay 28 15. Christ our Sauiour speaking of the last times saith When the Sonne of man cometh shall he finde faith on the earth Luk. 18 8 and therefore he compareth them to the daies of Noah and of Lot when they did eate drink build and plant marry and giue in marriage euen vntill his iudgements fell in the midst of them so shall the comming of the Sonne of man be Math. 24 37 The more common this sinne shall bee the more watchful we ought to be that so against this vniuersall slumber we may prepare a generall remedy 46 And Moses said vnto Aaron Take a censer and put fire therein from off the Altar and put on incense and goe quickly to the Congregation and make an attonement for them for there is wrath gone out from the Lord the plague is begun 47 And Aaron tooke as Moses commanded and ranne into the middest of the Congregation and behold the plague was begun among the people and he put on incense and made an attonement for the people 48 And hee stood betweene the dead and the liuing and the plague was staied 49 And they that died in the plague were fourteene thousand c. 50. And Aaron went againe c. We heard before the sinne or rather the many sinnes of these men now Moses setteth downe the punishment that fell vpon thē Albeit God at the intercession of Moses did not consume them in a moment yet he sent a fearefull plague and a deuouring pestilence among them that smote downe fourteene thousand and fiue hundred beside them that died about the matter of Korah And this plague had passed a great deale farther had not Moses and Aaron by their feruent praiers preuailed mightily with God to stay his hand so that we may say as it is in the Psalme He saide hee would destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the breach to turne away his wrath lest he should destroy them Psal 106 23. This is a borrowed speech from warrefare and the besieging of a City where the walles are battered with engines that make a breach in thē ●hat it is to ●nd in the ●each so that nothing remaineth but for the enemy to giue the assault and to make an entrance put all to the sword meaning thereby that the wrath of God is as the violent shaking of the walles of a City there can no strength hold out against him Now Moses and Aaron did as it were oppose thēselues against Gods wrath and the peoples danger by earnest and hearty praier made on their behalfe that God would spare his people not destroy them with the pestilence For as in times of greatest danger and distresse the most valiant Captaines and Souldiers offer themselues to manifest perilles when a breach is made in the wall for the enemy to enter with all his forces that thereby they may driue backe such as are pressing forward to giue the assault so did Moses and Aaron stand betweene the liuing and the dead interposed body for body and life for life ●octrine We learne heereby that the necessity dignity 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of Ministery and worthinesse of the Ministery is exceeding great in respect of the good of the people 1 Tim 3 1. Eph. 4 11 12 13. Acts 8 29 and 9 11 and 10 20 and 16 9 10 14.15 29.30 Math. 16 19. Reason 1 This is farther confirmed by the titles wherby they are called and adorned They are appointed to be Shepheards by the great Shepheard of the sheepe 1 Pet. 5. Eph. 4 11 12 to be Ouerseers of the Church of Christ Acts 20 28 to bee as fathers ouer their children Exod. 20 12. 1 Cor 3 to be as nurses ouer the infants and to be as stewards ouer the house to giue to euery one his portion Secondly they haue charge ouer mens Reason
punishment lying euen at the doore Because ye sanctified not my Name before the children of Israel yee shall not bring this congregation into the land which I haue giuen them Hee doth not onely accuse and conuince them of sinne but amplifieth it by the effect that thereby hee was robbed of his glory and so excludeth them out of the land of promise We learne from hence that God chastiseth his owne children sinning against him ●trine chasti ●is owne ●on When his children forsake his lawes and walke not in his iudgements although he take not his louing kindnesse from them neither falsifie his trueth yet he will visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquities with strokes This we see throughly strengthened thoroughout the whole booke of the Iudges as chap. 4.1.2 When the people of Israel proceeded to doe euill in the sight of the Lord hee sold them into the hand of Iabin king of Canaan c. So when Ionah disobeyed the voyce of the Lord calling him to preach to Nineueh that great Citie and to cry against it for their wickednesse hee was cast into the Sea as an vnprofitable burthen of the ship ● 2 3 15 and swallowed of a Whale so that albeit he fled from the presence of the Lord yet his hand followed after him and ouertooke him When Dauid had trespassed in the matter of Vriah by adultery and murther though he were a man after Gods owne heart yet the Lord raised euill against him out of his house ●m 12.9 the sword of the enemy was shaken against him and his own wiues were defiled in the sight of the Sun ●b 12.10 When Miriam the sister of Moses withstood him in the pride of her heart through ambition and vaineglory albeit he accused her not but in meekenesse of spirit put vp the wrong being lowly in his owne eyes yet shee was striken with leprosie by the hand of God and shut for a season out of the hoast The like we might say of Salomon Asa Iehoshaphat Iosiah Hezekiah and many others all which seale vp this trueth to our hearts that GOD spareth not his owne people when they sinne against him Reason 1 The Reasons of this iust dealing of God are first to cleare his iudgement and iustice that we should know him to bee no respecter of persons but to hate sinne whensoeuer wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer he findeth it He is not a God that loueth wickednesse neither shall euill dwell with him for he hateth all them that worke iniquity This the Prophet Dauid acknowledgeth 51.4 Against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight that thou maiest be iust when thou speakest and pure when thou iudgest If then we breake his statutes and keepe not his commandements when he searcheth with lights and findeth out our sinnes we must giue glory to God and make confession vnto him wee must pronounce righteousnesse to belong vnto him and vnto our selues open shame yea if he should destroy vs we must acknowledge him to be holy in all his waies and iust in all his workes who giueth vs to eate the fruite of our owne labours As then he is iust and righteous so he must punish sinne in whomsoeuer he taketh it and as he denounceth sore iudgements and greeuous plagues of great continuance and long durance so he executeth thē to manifest the truth of his owne word and maketh good his owne threatnings gone out of his owne mouth Againe God chastiseth his owne children Reason 2 lest they sinning with the men of this world whose portion is in this life should be condemned with the world For as in punishing of vs he respecteth his own iustice so he doth it in respect of our owne good and the great profite which thereby is brought vnto vs. If we should alwaies enioy health wealth liberty peace plenty and other good blessings of God according to our hearts desire we would waxe fat and spurne with the heele Deut. 32.15 forsaking God that made vs refusing the strong God of our saluation ioyning hand in hand with wicked men reserued to destruction Wherefore affliction is as the messenger of God to call vs backe from sinne to weane vs from the world to kindle in vs a desire of the world to come This the Apostle aimeth at 1 Cor. 11 31 32. If we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged but when we are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord because we should not bee condemned with the world The vses of this Doctrine are many First Vse 1 consider with me the cause why they keep the word and turne vnto him with all their harts why they run not on in euill as the horse rusheth into the battell as the vngodly do the reason is God calleth them backe by his hand his afflictions are remembrances vnto them and his corrections are their instructions This the Prophet Dauid found true in his owne comfortable experience Psal 119 67 71. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes The Children of Israel liuing vnder the Iudges and sinning against God making a couenant with the inhabitants of the land Iudg. 2. and 4. Deu. 4.29.30 taking their daughters to be their wiues giuing their daughters to their sonnes seruing their idols forgetting the true God and doing worse then their fathers the Lord sold them into the hand of their enemies whom they serued then they lift vp their voyces and wept then they called and cryed vnto the Lord in their afflictions and he deliuered them out of their distresse The same we see in Manasseh who for his euils that he commited like the abominations of the heathen was carryed away captiue put in fetters 2 Chro. 33.2 11 12 13. and bound in chaines and when he was in tribulation hee prayed to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his father and prayed vnto him and God was intreated of him and heard his praier and brought him againe to Ierusalem into his kingdome Then Manasseh knew that the Lord was God But of this we shall speake more in the chapter following Vse 2 Secondly confesse from hence that great is the wrath and anger of God for sinne seeing he punisheth it so sharpely and seuerely in his children whom he hath engrauen as a Signet in the palme of his hand and whom he tendreth as the apple of his eye Marke how hee hath many times schooled his owne seruants offending When Miriam murmured against Moses and made other to murmure shee was striken by the hand of God with leprosie and albeit Moses made supplication for her yet the Lord answered Numb 12.10 13 14. If her father had spit in her face should she not haue beene ashamed seuen dayes Let her be shut out of the hoast seuen dayes and after she shall be
receiued Thus he dealt with Dauid whom hee greatly fauoured and aduanced to the kingdome when he fell into grieuous sins 2 Sam. 12.9 10. Thou hast killed Vriah the Hittite with the sword and hast taken his wife to bee thy wife and hast slaine him with the sword of the children of Ammon Now therefore the sword shal neuer depart from thine house and I will raise vp euill against thee out of thine owne house So soone as Salomon set vp idolatry and wrought wickednesse in the sight of the Lord he stirred vp aduersaries vnto Salomon 1 King 11. ● 14. and afterward rent the greatest part of the kingdome out of the hands of his sonne This serueth to conuince all such prophane persons as presume of Gods patience and abuse his mercy to all loosenesse and licenciousnesse saying God is mercifull and yet continue in their sinnes But we must know that as he is mercifull so hee is iust as his mercy is toward the penitent so his iustice is toward the obstinate who spareth not his owne people that forget his Law and therefore will deale more fiercely against strangers Vse 3 Thirdly measure not the fauour and loue of God toward our selues or others by outward blessings or outward crosses by prosperity or aduersity which come alike to the godly and vngodly Nay oftentimes the wicked flourish when the faithfull are in great misery as Psal 73.3 4 5. So Salomon teacheth Eccle. 9.2 Therefore Christ our Sauiour correcteth the wrong iudgement of the disciples supposing that such as Pilate slew were the greatest sinners of all the rest that dwelt in Ierusalem because they suffered those things Luke 13.1 2 3. If then we would find sound comfort in our hearts and feele vnfained testimonies of Gods fauour towards vs wee must not seeke for them in outward blessings or in want of outward blessings both which are common to the godly and vngodly but in ioy in the holy Ghost in remission of sinnes in repentance from dead workes in the spirit of adoption in faith in Christ in peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding As for other things place not thy heauen and happinesse in them if blessings come receiue them thankefully if crosses learne to beare them patiently Fourthly wee are hereby put in minde to Vse 4 search our owne wayes to suruey our owne hearts and to prooue by the touchstone of the word our owne thoughts words and workes that we haue conceiued spoken and done what we haue iustly deserued if God in iustice should proceede against vs examining seriously our owne life mourning bitterly for our sinnes past and turning vnfainedly vnto God with all our hearts This duty is vrged by Ieremy the Prophet Lam. 3.39 40 41 42. This is the marke that God shooteth at this is the end that he respecteth euen by his afflictions to bring vs home to himselfe not to destroy and confound vs for euer Heb 12.5 10. Let vs not dispise the chastenings of the Lord nor faint when we are rebuked We haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs for a few daies and we gaue them reuerence should wee not much rather be in subiection to the Father of spirits who chastneth those whom he loueth and scourgeth euery sonne whom hee receiueth Fiftly let vs labour to strengthen our faith Vse 5 by the word and Sacraments and by such ordinary meanes as hee hath appointed for that purpose Hereunto the Apostle exhorteth 1. Cor. 11.30 To examine our selues and so to eate of that bread and drinke of that cup declaring that the iudgements of God were broken in among the Corinthians insomuch that many were weake and sicke among them and many slept Wherefore whensoeuer wee find the hand of God sore and heauy vpon vs it is our duty to seeke strength of faith by the vse of the word and Sacraments whereby wee shall learne to find out the true cause of those iudgements and submit our selues vnder his hand that striketh vs as a father For the Scriptures serue to direct vs the Sacraments serue to comfort vs Psal 116. ● Without which the Prophet had perished in his afflictions Lastly seeing God chastiseth his when Vse 6 they offend then most assuredly the wicked that are not his shall not escape his reuenging hand If he correct the flocke of his own pasture the children of his owne houshold the citizens of his owne kingdome and the members of his owne body fed at his owne table in this life and made heires of heauen in the life to come really possessing that inheritance with what plagues punishments torments will he visit the rebellion of aliants and strangers If the Lord deale sharply toward these to whom he is a mercifull Father and gracious Sauiour and whom he often preuenteth with his liberall blessings Surely his reuenging wrath full of rage Psal 21.8 2 King 21. shall find out all his enemies whom he wipe will away as a man wipeth a dish turneth it vpside down This is that which Salomon teacheth in the Prouerbs Behold ● 11.31 the righteous shall bee recompenced in the earth how much more the wicked and the sinner There remaineth a day of iudgement when they shall be punished as they deserue either in this life or in the life to come With this the Apostle Peter sweetly accordeth 1 Pet. 4.17 18. The time is come that iudgement must begin at the house of God if it first begin at vs what shall the end be of them which obey not the Gospel of God And if the righteous scarcely bee saued where shal the wicked and the sinner appeare Where we see that God will scourge whip his owne children for their frailties and infirmities appearing in them But he correcteth the godly in mercy the vngodly in anger the godly as a louing father the vngodly as a iust Iudge the godly to amend them the vngodly to condemne them the godly albeeit humbled and cast downe with one hand are comforted and raised vp with another whereas the punishments that fall vpon the heads of the vngodly are but the beginnings of sorrow and as the flashings of hell fire Now the earth is not properly the place of vengeance and iudgement For we must vnderstand that God hath appointed three places earth heauen hell for three seuerall purposes ●ree places 〈◊〉 need for ree seuerall ●poses the earth to be a place of working the heauen a place of rewarding hell a place of punishing earth as a shop of labour heauen as a pallace of glory hell as a prison of torment Notwithstanding rather then sinners should escape and sinne goe vnpunished the Lord wil call a priuy or petty Sessions euen in this life and make the earth his gaile or house of correction If then God will visit their transgressions with such heauy strokes Alas what shall become of al prophane persons vnrepentant offenders obstinate sinners such as contemne God and his word euery
Peter They fall by frailty with Dauid but they rise not by repentance with Dauid They sinne with Salomon but they repent not with him 〈◊〉 ●7 They sinne with the Iewes but they are not pricked in heart with the Iewes saying What shall we doe They persecute the Saints of God with the laylor Acts 16.29 but they tremble not at their sin nor seeke to the seruants of God saying Sirs what must we doe to be saued They break out with their tongues and iustifie themselues as Iob but they set not a watch before the dore of their lips Iob 42 6. they doe not abhorre themselues neither repent in dust and ashes with Iob saying Psal 39.1 I will t●ke heede to my wayes that I sinne not with my tongue I will keepe my mouth bridled They flye from the presence of God with Ionah but they remember not to pray with him for pardon ●on 1.3 and ● 1.8 acknowledging that such as waite vpon lying vanities forsake their owne mercy Let vs therfore all learne to profit by the fauorable dealing of God toward offenders neither abusing his louing kindnesse nor continuing in sinne nor presuming of his mercy assuring our selues that if the persons receiuing pardon be such as are penitent then assuredly to the impenitent there is no forgiuenesse This the Apostle setteth downe Rom. 2.4 5. The acceptable time of repentance for all of vs is the time present what time we haue to come is vncertain Late repentance is oftentimes constrained and sildome true repentance The longer a diseased man continueth in his sickenesse the harder is his recouery Let vs not delay and deferre our repentance This is the blessed time and the acceptable season To day therefore if we will heare his voyce let vs not harden our hearts in sinne Heb. 3.7 8. Fourthly let vs not spare to seeke the saluation Vse 4 and thirst after the conuersion euen of the greatst sinners Let vs not account their estate and condition forlorne and desperate Neither iudge any before the time 1 Cor. 4.5 vntill the Lord come who will ligh●en things that are hid in darkenesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God The husbandman waiteth for the fruite of the earth Iames 5 7 and hath long patience for it vntill hee receiue the former and latter raine Now we are Gods labourers and husbandmen 1 Cor. 3 9.6.7 ye are Gods husbandry and Gods building Paul planteth and Apollo watereth but God giueth the increase So then neither is hee that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giueth the increase Wee are vnto God the sweet sauour of Christ in them that are saued 2 Cor. 2 15.16 and in them which perish to the one we are the sauour of death to death and to the other the sauour of life vnto life This must be our comfort in the midst of all discomforts iniurious dealing and hard measure offered vnto vs to know that euery man shall receiue his wages according to his labour And the Prophet prophesying of the kingdome of Christ that he should spread out his hands all day vnto a rebellious people maketh this his stay and staffe of rest Esay 49 4. I haue laboured in vaine I haue spent my strength in vaine and for nothing but my iudgement is with the Lord and my worke with my God Let vs therefore goe Iustile forward in building vp the house of God preach in season and out of season and commit the fruit of the work and successe of all our labours to the Lord whose word is neuer deliuered nor heard in vaine as the Apostle vrgeth it 2 Ti. 2.24 25 26. Vse 5 Lastly seeing God is mercifull to miserable Sinners as a good shepheard taking them out of the iawes of the Lyon bringing them vnto the sheepefolde and feeding them in greene pastures let vs seeke to be like our heauenly Father in shewing mercy and forgiuenesse toward such as greeuously offend against vs. Euery mans experience telleth and teacheth him the mercy of God to be exceeding great we feele it toward our selues wee see it daily toward others we reade that blasphemy it selfe findeth place for pardon Mat. 12.31 Wee find this to be the nature of God The Lord the Lord Exod. 34.6 7 gracious and mercifull slow to anger and aboundant in goodnesse reseruing mercy for thousands forgiuing iniquity trangression and sinne If we will be the children of God we must resemble our heauenly Father we must expresse the liuely lineaments of his face wee must bee transformed into his likenesse and beare his image in all holinesse and righteousnesse This the Apostle teacheth Col. 3.12 13. To this purpose Christ propoundeth the parable Matthew chapter 18. verses 32 33 35. teaching vs that wee must forgiue small things that receiue the pardon of greater we must remit a sew pence because God forgiueth vs many talents an huge summe an infinit debt But if we will not forgiue nor forget the trespasses done to vs we are stamped in the image of the diuel who was malicious and a murtherer from the beginning we make a law against our selues inasmuch as we shall find the Lord so toward vs as wee deale toward our brethren For there shall bee iudgement mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy Iam. 2.13 Mat. 7.2 and with what measure wee mete it shall bee measured to vs againe Verse 9. Moses made a Serpent of brasse and set it vpon apole and when a serpent had bitten a man then he looked to the serpent of brasse and liued We saw before how the prayer of Moses was heard and the remedy prouided of God to heale the people We saw in God the greatnesse of his compassion wee saw in the people the fruit of their confession we saw in Moses the grace of meeknesse and gentlenesse suffering all things and enduring all things Heere there is offered to our considerations the obedience of Moses the setting vp of the serpent and the recouery of the people Moses doth not heere consult with flesh and blood neither doth he vse carnall wisedome to bee his counseller which in matters of faith is an enemie to God He doth not reason whether it were likely that a piece of brasse should remedy this biting or whether a dead thing shold giue life but so soon as he receiueth the commandement of God hee prepareth himselfe maketh ready a brazen serpent pitcheth it vpon an high pole the people looke vpon it and are recouered This cure was not by Phisicke or Chirurgery or by inherent vertue in the brasse as in a medicine but by casting vp the eye vpon the serpent and beleeuing the ordinance of God who had appointed the serpent for that purpose We are all of vs from hence to learne and consider That the brazen serpent standing on the pole was a type and figure of Christ crucified Doctrine The
blindnes as hee did Elymas with crookednes deformity as the woman in the Gospel with foolishnes as hee did Achitophel with want of reason vnderstanding as he did Nebucadnezzar to teach vs to take heed to our selues and our senses lest we abuse them to our destruction Lastly seeing God can blinde the eyes and Vse 3 bind vp the senses when it pleaseth him let vs go forward walk boldly in the duties of our calling let vs not feare any enemies seeing the Lord hath so many wayes to helpe his chosen people to succour them to saue them harmlesse Let vs commit commend our selues to his prouidence who albeit hee suffer vs to fall into many dangers yet hee can smite his enemies with many suddain iudgments He can visit them oftentimes in sundry manners Euery thing serueth to his wll therfore if we serue God let vs be assured he wil make it serue to our benefit They shal not stir a foot or moue any member or lift vp an hand but at his beck and appointment Ieroboam stretched out his hand from the Altar to lay holde on the Prophet but immediatly it dried vp 1. King 1● and he could not pull it in again vnto him Ananias Sapphira his wife were among the Apostles and seemed to be in perfect health far from death yet suddainly they fell down were caried out Olde Eli whose sons walked not in the steps of their father sate vpon a seat by the way side waiting for the successe of the battel fought against the Philistims A man would haue thought he sate safely and surely at his owne pleasure and no doubt he iudged no lesse himselfe of himselfe but when hee heard that the Arke was taken suddainly hee fell from his seate backward 2 Sam. 4. ● and his neck was broken When Vzziah King of Iudah presumed to burne incense vpon the Altar of incense lift vp his heart to his owne destruction while he waxed wroth against the Priests of the Lord had the incense in his hand to burne it 2. Chro●● 19. suddainly the leprosie arose in his forehead he was compelled to depant out of the Temple We are able to do nothing of our selues as of our selues seeing that in him we liue moue Act. 17 2● and haue our being Let vs in all our sufferings comfort our selues heerein that the Lord holdeth the wicked in his owne hand turneth their wisdome into foolishnes Absalom rebelled against his father and was assisted by Achitophel Dauids companion and chiefe counseller for the counsell which hee counselled in those dayes was like as one had asked counsell at the oracle of God Dauid prayed vnto God to turne his counsell into foolishnes 2 Sam. 1● God heard his prayer and confounded the deep wisdome of this great Polititian so that he set his house in order hanged himselfe 1 Cor. 3● 20 Hee catcheth the wise in their owne craftinesse for the wisdome of this world is foolishnes with God the Lord knoweth that the thoughts of the wise be vain If any therefore seeme to be wise in this world let him bee a foole that hee may be wise All humane wisdome in the vnregenerate is oftentimes turned into extreme folly Iezabel enemy against the Church hated Eliah vnto the death but sending him this word by a messenger The Gods do so to me and more also if I make not thy life like one of theirs whom thou hast slaine by to morrow this time 1 Kings 19 2.3 hereby he had fit occasion and opportunity to flye away and to shift for himselfe receiuing warning and learning wisedome by his enemy Herod a subtle Fox and withall a bloody Lyon and wise in his generation might haue sent one of his Courtiers with the wise men for his greater assurance yet hee sendeth them alone and appointeth not one to goe with them Mat. 2 8. Thus the Lord striketh his enemies with the spirit of giddinesse and turneth all their deuices into sottishnesse he circumuenteth the wise in their owne pollicies and the counsell of the wicked is made foolish They meete with darknesse in the day time and grope at noone day as in the night but he saueth the poore from the sword from their mouth and from the hand of the violent man so that the poore hath his hope but iniquity shall stoppe her mouth Iob 5 12 13 14 15. Indeed they seeke wayes imagine meanes to destroy the godly but they cannot finde them out they are endued with wisedome iudgement counsell they are very subtle and deceitfull but that which happened to the eyes of the Sodomites falleth vpon their mindes They are smitten with blindnesse and madnesse are smitten with astonying of heart c. Deut. 28 28 29. Verse 34. Then Balaam saide to the Angel of the Lord I haue sinned Heere is offered to our considerations the corrupt conscience of an euill man So soone as the Lord charged him with his sinne by and by his heart smote him and he confessed his offence Heere was no true sanctificatiō of the conscience which indeed did checke and condemne him for his disobedience and couetousnesse but did not bridle suppresse the inclination of his heart vnto euill neyther could testifie that his transgression was pardoned We learne in this example ●●●ine 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 ●●●trai●●●●on●●●●innes that euill men are oftentimes compelled to confesse their owne sinnes God wanteth not many wayes and sundry meanes to draw from men a confession of their owne iniquities This wee see in Pharaoh when the hand of God was heauy vpon him and his plagues pressed sore against him he called for Moses and Aaron and said vnto them I haue now sinned the Lord is righteous but I my people are wicked Exod. 9 27. Albeit he could not beleeue to obtaine remission yet he confessed his sinnes to his condemnation The like we see in Saul who persecuted Dauid and sinned against his owne conscience yet when he saw that Dauid had saued his life when some willed and cryed to kill him he saide Thou art more righteous then I for thou hast rendred mee good and I haue rendred thee euill I haue sinned come againe my sonne Dauid for I will do thee no more harme because my soule was precious in thine eies c. 1 Sa. 24 18. and 26 21. So then howsoeuer the vngodly delight in sin and regard not to prouoke God to wrath yet theyr owne mouthes are made witnesses against thēselues and they publish theyr owne shame as with the blast of a Trumpet The Reasons are these First the wrath of Reason 1 God is gone out against them and their owne consciences summon them vnto iudgement to answer for their sins before the high Iudge of heauen and earth so that the more they seeke to couer and smother them in the ashes of their owne corruptions that the flame of them breake not out the more
them as Saul or deny them as Achan or defend them as Cain Therfore if we would finde pardon at the hands of God wee must confesse vnto him as Dauid did weepe for them as Peter did If we vncouer them he will couer them if we condemne our selues hee will iustifie vs. Therefore the Wiseman saith He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper Prou. 28 but hee that confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercy Lastly wee see heereby that sinne endeth Vse not as it beginneth Albeit the foole maketh a mocke of sinne yet when the soule is tormented and the conscience oppressed with desperation and can finde no ease then a man ceaseth not to vtter his secret filthinesse to the shaming of himselfe and to the astonishment of the hearers Let vs not looke for Pharaoh or Saul or Iudas to come out of hell to warne vs. These things are written for our learning wee haue Moses and the Prophets let vs hearken to them When as terrours take hold vpon the soule wee cannot couer sinne any longer Prou. 1 Howsoeuer therefore sinne to the carnall man be sweete vnto the taste and Satan baiteth his hooke with profite on the one side and with pleasure on the other yet afterward it shall prooue more bitter then gall and worme-wood it shall wound the conscience as with a deadly dart and pierce the soule through with many sorrowes For albeit it beginne in sport it shall end in horror and despaire This wee see in the example of Cain Gen. 4 ● My punishment is greater then I can beare So Iudas when hee saw Christ condemned felt an hell in his conscience The money was pleasant and the gaine was sweete vnto him but it was as a two edged sword that woundeth incurably and as the teeth of a Lyon that biteth mortally It seemed vnreasonable to Gehazi that Naaman the Syrian should depa●t with so great a benefite by so little a consideration 2 King 5 23 27. And therefore followeth after him for a bribe and reward but with the reward he gained the leprosie that did cleaue vnto him and to his seede This is the deepe subtilty of satan before sin be committed he hideth the deformity of it from the eyes of men he maketh as if it were no sinne or a little and veniall sinne or a little punishment due vnto it or that there shall be time enough hereafter to repent of it hee be commeth a preacher of Gods mercy and pardon he telleth the sinner that God is gracious and mercifull Thus he couereth the greatnesse of sinne and hideth the greeuousnesse of the punishment and concealeth the wrath of God that is drawne vpon vs. But when hee hath once preuailed and ensnared the poore soule that hath swallowed the bait he openeth the eies which before he had darkned he rouzeth vp the conscience which before he had seduced he striketh the heart which before he had hardned hee vncouereth the fire of Gods indignation and iealousie which before hee had smothered Then he maketh sinne appeare as vile and vgly as he can then he layeth it open in his colours then he will make a small sinne appeare the greatest then he setteth forth the iustice of God due to the least sinne and all to bring the person that hath sinned to desperation Wherefore let vs flye from sinne as from the byting of a Serpent that we be not stung therewith to eternall death Knowing that the wages of sin is death Rom 6 23. 36 And when Balak heard that Balaam came hee went out to meete him vnto a Citie of Moab which is in the border of Arnon euen in the vtmost coast 37 Then Balak saide vnto Balaam Did not I send for thee to call thee Wherefore camest thou not vnto mee Am not I able indeede to promote thee vnto honour 38 And Balaam made answer vnto Balak Loe I am come vnto thee and can I now say any thing at all The word that God putteth in my mouth that shall I speake 39 So Balaam went with Balak they came vnto the City of Huzoth 40 Then Balak offered Bull●kes and Sheepe and sent therof to Balaam and to the Princes that were with him 41 And on the morrow Balak tooke Balaam and brought him vppe into the high places of Baal that thence hee might see the vtmost part of the people In these words beeing the shutting vp of this Chapter is contained the last branch of Balaams going to curse the people We heard before of the wrath of God against this Wizard who would not be stopped from his desired iourney and therefore the Lord opened the mouth of the dumbe beast to reproue her master and afterward the Angel of God further to discouer the hollownesse and hypocrisie of his heart Heere we are to consider the meeting and comming together of the King and the false Prophet together with the entertainment he findeth at Balaks hands Herein we are to obserue two things First their talke and communication secondly the actions of them both In the first part contayning the speech that passed betweene them we are to marke that the King to honour him the more so soone as hee is aduertised of his approach neere to the borders of his kingdome he goeth out to meete him For no doubt he sent the Princes and messengers of the Moabites backe to go before to giue some notice and bring ioyfull tidings of his comming to their Lord. Therefore the King hearing the message and conceyuing no doubt in his minde the vtter ouerthrow of the Israelites stayed not vntill he came within his dominion but met him in the bounds and limites thereof and brought him home with him to go about his businesse When they are met note in their talke first the question moued by Balak then the answer of Balaam In the question we see that albeit he had basely deiected himselfe and crept lowly into the fauour of the false Prophet honoring him to his own dishonor going out to bring him in and after a sort casting his crowne and dignity vnder his feete yet on the other side hee gloryeth in his owne power and boasteth of his high dignity as if he had all the riches and honor in his owne hand Balaam doth not denie the fauour of the king placing him with his Princes rewarding him with his presents honouring him with his owne presence and sending for him from far but maketh a short answer vnto him truely albeit vnwillingly that albeit he were come at the kings desire and brought by his deserts yet it was not in his owne power what to do he could go no farther then the Rules and Principles of his Art would suffer him hee had called vp the God of the Hebrewes to forsake them and he must of necessity speake that which God should put into his mouth As if hee should say I cannot speake what I would but shall bee constrained to speak that onely which he willeth mee After the
must auoide all light gestures that may bring our Ministery into contempt Many vse in their teaching casting abroad of their armes knocking of the Pulpit lifting themselues vp and immediately sinking downe hemming in the throate rolling of the eyes rubbing of the browes nodding of the head stamping with the feete turning euery way with the body snuffing with their nose fidling with the fingers tuning with the voyce as if they were acting their part vpon the stage or as if they were Fencers playing their Prizes These and such like abuses wee must labour to reforme by vsing aduised deliberation in our selues obseruing what is comely or vncomely what is decent or defectiue in others The world is full of carpers and scoffers Many will sooner marke what behauiour is amisse in vs then what doctrine we deliuer or what is amisse in their owne liues When Iacob sell sicke of his sicknesse whereof he dyed hee gathered his sonnes together to giue them instruction before his death and not beeing able through weaknesse to stand on his feete he raised vp himselfe in his bed and leaned on his staffe that he might shew reuerence vnto the word that he pronounced Gen. 47 31 and 49 33. The like we see in Dauid hee stood vpon his feet to giue honour to the word 2 Chron. 2. To conclude this point as we haue occasions offered vnto vs to speake of God of his iudgments or mercies of sinne against God of the calamities of others we must alwayes remember to speake of the person of God with reuerence of the iudgements of God with feare of the promises of God and comforts of his word with cheerefulnesse of sinne against God with hatred and detestation of other mens miseries with feeling and compassion Thus we shall become most profitable Teachers and thus we shall bee as wise Scribes taught vnto the kingdome of heauen which bring foorth out of their treasure things both new and old Math. 13 52. Lastly we learne from hence not to forsake Vse 5 the exercises of religion for the wickednesse or vnworthinesse of the Ministers Who was it that prophesied in the Name of God in this place was it not Balaam a leud liuer a cursed Idolater a diuellish Sorcerer And yet Balak is commanded to rise vp out of his throne to hearken vnto him with al attention It standeth vs vpon more to regard the matter then the speaker and to marke what is deliuered then the person that doth deliuer it The Pharisies in the dayes of Christ were leud liuers and many of them of other Tribes then of Leui 〈◊〉 3 2 3. yet so long as they sate in Moses chayre the Disciples are commanded to heare them and to obserue whatsoeuer they commanded We must discerne and distinguish the life of the Ministers from their Doctrine As we are not to receiue their doctrine for their good life so we are not to reiect it for their euil life Therfore the Apostle saith Some preach Christ through enuy and strife and some also of good will What then Yet Christ is preached all manner waies whether it be vnder a pretence or sincerely I therein reioyce yea and will reioyce Phil. 1 15 18. Although he were sorry that the Gospel was preached by such men yet he was glad it was preached This serueth to reproue those that will not heare scandalous Ministers nor receiue the Sacraments at the hands of ignorant Ministers Who haue itching eares and after their owne lusts get them an heape of Teachers 2. Tim. 4 3. Who are euer learning and are neuer able to come to the acknowledging of the truth 2. Tim. 3 7. Euill Ministers of corrupt life may deliuer the good things of God So long as they preach the word of God truely and administer the sacraments sincerely according to the ordinance of Christ the wickednesse of their persons cleaueth to themselues If a Prince should send vs a message or offer vs some present by the hands of some messenger that were an euill man would we reiect them for the fault of the person or accept them as the fauour of the Prince So should it be with vs when Gods word is preached and his sacraments administred we must hearken what it is that is preached consider what it is that is deliuered If it be of God we cannot refuse it lest wee be found contemners of his ordinances The people of Israel abhorred the sacrifices of God 1 Sam. 3 11. for the prophane life of the Priests but iudgement is denounced against them for their contempt Verse 19. God is not as man that hee should lye neither as the sonne of man that he should repent c. Hitherto we haue spoken of the entrance of this second Prophesie now we come to the Prophesie it selfe Hitherto in the nature of God is described and expressed vnto vs that he is constant in his mercifull promises toward his Church with whom is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning This is one of the names and essentiall properties of God whereby he is knowne to be God who is vnchangeably good vnchangeably holy vnchangeably iust and mercifull and is found firme and faithfull in all his promises Against this it may be obiected Obiect that he is oftentimes saide in the Scriptures to haue repented as Gen. 6 6 7. 1 Sam. 15 11. Ionah 3 9. How then can God be saide to be immutable vnchangeable I answer Answer the Scripture speaketh of God two wayes sometimes properly and then he is saide to be vnchangeable no variablenesse to be in him and that he cannot repent as 1 Sam. 15. The strength of Israel will not lie nor repent for he is not a man that hee should repent Sometimes vnproperly and figuratiuely for our capacity and because of our weaknesse not otherwise beeing able to conceiue of the high things of God Hence it is that we reade of the eyes eares hands armes the heart of God and such like Not that these parts and members are in God who is a Spirit inuisible and infinite But because wee cannot vnderstand how one should see without eyes or heare without eares or shew strength without armes these parts are giuen to God to teach vs that he seeth all things he heareth all th●ngs hee worketh all things in Heauen and earth as pleaseth him Thus is God set sometime before vs as it were turned and transfigured into our nature and as one said Hee hath not these things by nature but by effect Bern. in serm 4 super Cant. The change is not in GOD but in his worke Repentance in him is no perturbation or griefe he knoweth all things and is ignorant of nothing When he is said to repent that he made man the meaning is he determined to destroy him whom before hee had created When hee is saide to repent of making Saul King the meaning is he determined to take the kingdome from him to whom before he had assigned it and whom he caused
Citties to be stored and great concourse of people to be assembled it shold moue vs to render thankes to God to pay our vowes in the presence of all his people and to craue the continuance of his goodnesse vpon vs. This is it which the Prophet acknowledgeth Psal 116 12 13 saying What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefites towardes me I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord So the Prophet setting downe the behauiour of the people what it shall be being deliuered from captiuity sheweth that they shall say in that day O Lord I will praise thee though thou wast angry with me thy wrath is turned away and thou comfortest me Behold God is my strength and song he also is become my saluation Esay 12 1 2. Let this be our practise when we haue tasted of his mercy and haue receiued any deliuerance from him out of our afflictions Secondly we ought from hence to consider the peace and rest that God hath reserued for vs in the life to come For they are but a shadow of that comfort which wee shall feele in the kingdome of heauen This is that which the Apostle concludeth from the rest in the land of Canaan that there remaineth a rest for the people of God to wit in the kingdom of heauen Heb. 4 9. For euen as the punishments and plagues that befall the vngodly which the Lord raineth downe vpon their heads are as the messengers of death and the fore-runners of destruction and giue vnto them a tast of the paines and torments of hell so the blessings bestowed vpon the godly are as the first fruites of all their comfort Rom 8 23. The first fruites which the Israelites vnder the law offered to God gaue hope and assurance vnto them to enioy the rest of the increase so the faithfull hauing a feeling of the gifts giuen vnto them and receiuing them as assured pledges and tokens of the fauour and loue of God towardes them in this life do gather hope to haue the heauenly inheritance in time to come For if God be so gracious and mercifull vnto vs in these dayes of our pilgrimage doubtlesse hee reserueth greater mercies for vs in the life to come when we shal possesse euerlasting ioyes which no man shall take from vs which neyther the eie hath seen nor the eare hath heard nor the heart can conceiue when we shall really inherit that which now by hope we wait for with much patience 1. Cor. 2 9. V. 18. A Star shal come out of Iacob a Scepter shall rise out of Israel and shall smite the coasts of Moab and shall destroy all them that are behinde And Edom shall be possessed Seir shall be a possessiō to their enemies for Israel shal do valiantly We haue heard before that the purpose of Balak and Balaam was onely to curse the people of God Heere we may see vpon whom the curse lighteth and falleth Wherein see how differing the wayes and thoughts of God are from the purposes and pretences of men The King of Moab intended a curse against Israel and a blessing vpon himselfe in both which he is disappointed For as Balaam before pronounced a blessing vpon Israel so in this place hee denounceth a curse to come vpon Moab When the King perceiued the continuance of Balaams blessings to follow Israel Numb 23 25. he bad him in choller and indignation neyther blesse nor curse he would haue taken it for a blessing if Balaam would haue held his peace said nothing But he cannot finde this nothing at his hands for hee proceedeth now to deliuer sundry curses against the Moabites as before he had deliuered sundry blessings to come vpon the Israelites And hereby is notably verified the saying of the Prophet Psal 109 17 18. As hee loued cursing so shall it come to him and as he loued not blessing so shall it be farre from him as he cloathed himselfe with cursing like a raiment so shall it come into his bowels like water and like oyle into his bones We haue heard already how these things were performed when God raysed vp Dauid out of the loynes of Iacob who smote the Tabernacles of Moab and made the Curtaines of Edome to tremble But these things howsoeuer temporally fulfilled in Dauid and Salomon haue spiritually and for euer their accomplishment and consummation in Christ Iesus he is a King for euer and hath an euerlastaing kingdome albeit not of this world Therefore the Apostle saith This man after he had offered one sacrifice for sinne sitteth for euer at the right hand of God and from henceforth tarrieth till his enemies be made his footstoole Hebr. 10 22 23. Hee is the true star that shineth to euerlasting life heere spoken of and the Scepter of his kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnesse Hee shall be Ruler in the midst of his enemies Psalm 110 2 and 45 6. Hence it is that the Prophet Malichi calleth him the Sunne of righteousnesse the brightest of all the stars that shine in the Firmament and from which all the rest borrow and receiue their light when he saith Vnto you that feare my Name shall the Sunne of righteousnesse arise and health shall be vnder his wings c. Mal. 4 2. Thus Christ speaketh of himselfe in many places Iohn 8 12. I am the light of the world hee that followeth mee shall not walke in darknes but haue that light of life Thus Iohn witnesseth chap. 1 5 9. This was that true light which lighteth euery man that commeth into the world So Zachary calleth him The Day-spring from on high that hath visited vs Luke 1 78. And the Apostle Peter The Day-starre that ariseth in our hearts 2 Pet. 1 19. Likewise in the last chapter of the Reuelation verse 16. he saith Reuel 2 28. I am the roote and generation of Dauid and the bright morning Starre Now as he is the Starre of Iacob to giue them light so he is the King of Iacob to rule them through whom they shall do valiantly and bee enabled to ouercome their enemies Heereby we learne that the Church through Christ Doctrine The 〈◊〉 shall t●●● ouer al● the ●nemies or their peace hath victory ouer spirituall enemies The elect in Christ shall subdue and triumph ouer all the enemies of theyr peace and saluation both wicked mē and reprobate angels yea shall in Christ haue power ouer all the world This promise was made from the beginning vnto mankinde and vttered by the mouth of God Gen. 3 15. That the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head which belongeth both to Christ and vnto his members For the souereigne power of Christ is not giuen to the creature but the ftuite and benefite thereof is giuen to the elect and that two wayes first he maketh all his members partakers of part of his glory in heauen whereas the whole world besides lying in wickednesse is condemned in
body when Nature hath any euill and vnprofitable humours that oppresse the stomack it is forced to cast them out for the preseruation of the health of other parts so should it be with vs when we perceiue the family greatly endangered by obstinate and obdurate persons Leuit. 18 25. it should vomite them out as raw and vndigested humours by timely eiection left the whole head waxe heauy and the whole body sickly and so the vital parts languish Lastly seeing it is dangerous for vs to haue Vse 4 fellowship with the wicked let vs auoid their company and flye their society as from an infectious and contagious disease This is that vse which the Scripture maketh in sundry places The Prophet Ieremy teacheth this ch 51 9. We would haue cured Babel but shee could not be healed forsake her and let vs goe euery one into his Countrey for her iudgement is come vp vnto heauen and is lifted vp to the Clouds Hereunto accordeth the exhortation of the Apostle when he had shewed that there is no concord and agreement betweene Christ and Belial he addeth Wherefore come out from among them and separate your selues saith the Lord and touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you and I will be a Father vnto you and ye shall be my so●nes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty 2 Cor. 6 17. We must all know that sinne is of an infectious nature no disease so infectious no sicknesse so dangerous In the time of plague and pestilence the Physitians giue these rules and receits as directions to be followed of such as would be free from danger First that men flye with al speed secondly that they flye farre enough lastly 1. Cit● longe ●arde that they returne slowly When the ayre is once infected dangerously no remedy can be deuised to secure vs. These rules are to be applyed of vs as carefully in regard of the welfare of the soule as we are willing to practise them in regard of the health of the body The plague that breaketh out into a sore and runneth full of corruption is no more contagious and venemous then the wicked are neyther doth it more annoy the ayre then the wicked infect those places wherein they are and those persons with whom they liue This the Prophet Dauid did see and confesse which caused him at sundry times to complaine Away from me yee wicked for I will keepe the Commandements of my God Psal 119 115. For we must consider how hard it is to auoyd sinne when occasion is at hand and opportunity tempteth to sinne It is easier for the bird to passe by the net then to breake the net so it is easier for a man to auoyde tentations then to ouercome tentations It is a great deale easier to auoyde their company then to stand vpright in their company Peter thought himselfe a strong man and auouched with great boldnes that he would rather dye then deny his Master Mat. 26 35 but yet warming himselfe at Caiphas fire and thrusting himselfe into euil company was ouercome by a silly damosell to doe that which hee neuer thought euen to renounce and forsweare his Lord and Master He had made a notable confession of his faith hee had acknowledged Christ to be the Sonne of the liuing God Mat. 16 16 and that he had the words of eternall life Iohn 6 68 yet the company of euill persons foyled him Are we better then he or are we stronger then he or haue wee a greater priuiledge from falling then he This serueth to checke the folly and rashnesse of those that haunt wicked company and drunken ale-houses and yet say we are in no danger we will looke to our wayes that we offend not we can leaue such places whē we list This is to check the word to giue Gods Spirit the lye who in euery place warneth vs of our weaknesse This presumption is the certaine fore-runner of a fall The first step that bringeth vs downe is to be puffed vp in the opinion of our owne strength as Salomon saith Prou. 16 18. Pride goeth before destruction and an high minde before the fall Likewise the Apostle putteth vs in remembrance heereof where remembring the manifold downefals of the people of Israel consumed by the pestilence stung by the serpents and destroyed by the Angel he maketh this vse Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10 12. It is a part of the armour wherewith the seruants of God are armed made able to stand in time of tentation to feare themselues and to acknowledge their owne weaknesse for thereby they are made more wary and circumspect to looke to their wayes that they offend not So it is the beginning of our ruine the first degree by which we fall to thrust our selues into places of danger and yet thinke we haue a sure footing For what calling haue we to goe into such places Or what warrant can we haue to be protected of God while wee wander out of our calling So long as wee walke in the wayes that God hath set vs in we haue a promise of his protection and wee haue comfort in the doing of our duties but when we passe the boundes and limits of our particular vocations we haue God no longer to be our defender but we lye open as a prey to the enemy to wound vs to death and to worke our confusion Wherefore the wrath of the Lord was kindled against Israel We haue seene before the sin of the people now let vs heare also the punishment Their sinne was pleasant in the beginning but it was bitter in the ending verifying the saying of the wise man Prou. 16 25. There is a way that seemeth right vnto a man but the yssues thereof are the wayes of death Hence it is that Moses sheweth in this place how the wrath of the Lord was kindled against Israel so soone as they fell into fornication So then furnicators and adulterers are heere remembred to be great sinners and very hurtfull and noysome vnto the people of God From hence we learne that adulterers and vncleane persons Doctrine Fornication calleth do● great plagu● iudgmen● draw vpon themselues and others fearefull iudgements of God I say no sinne is more strong and auayleable to call downe the plagues and punishments of almighty God vpon a people and company or vpon particular persons then fornication and vncleannesse This was the chiefe sin among others that brought the flood vpon the whol earth and destroyed all mankinde Gen. 6 1. What was it that caused the Lord to raine downe fire and brimstone vpon Sodome and Gomorrh● Gen. 19 25. and to ouerthrow the Cities of the Plaine and the inhabitants therof and all that grew vpon the earth but their filthy and vnnaturall lust which was growne so outragious that the sauour thereof ascended vp to heauen and the cry of their sinnes pierced the eares of God When Abimelech did in
brethren But they proceed by little and little from step to step and from one degree to another till they feare nothing and are ashamed of nothing Therefore in the example of one man heere set before our eies Moses declares to what impudency shamelesnesse they were come that they brought their harlots into the hoast to despite God to anger Moses to corrupt the people to pollute the worship that was set vp by the commandement of the Lord. For this man who is afterward named as if he had beene absolute in power as he was indeed resolute in will dissolute in his whole life brought his whorish woman in the sight of God in the sight of Moses in the sight of the congregation and in the sight of the Tabernacle to shew that he had filled vp the measure of his sinne Doctrine Euill men proceed by degrees from worse to worse The doctrine arising from hence is this that euill men doe not vsually make any stay in euill but proceede from degree to degree to worse worse The nature of sinne is to draw all such as delight in it and follow after it from one euill to another vntill in the end they become most corrupt and abhominable This is it which the Prophet Ieremy noteth in the people of his time when he sayth Were they ashamed when they committed abhomination Nay they were not ashamed no neither could they haue any shame therefore they shall fall among the slaine when I shall visit them they shall bee cast downe saith the Lord Ier. 6 15. The like we see in the 18. chap. following ver 11 12. Speake to the men of Iudah and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem saying Thus saith the Lord Behold I prepare a plague for you and purpose a thing against you returne you therefore euery one from his euill way and make your wayes your workes good But they said desperatly Surely we will walk after our own imaginations doe euery man after the stubburnes of his wicked hart The truth of this hath bin euidēt in al ages of the Church When the Lord was determined to bring an vniuersall flood vpon the face of the earth for the sinnes of man and had giuen them a time of repentance while his patience endured Gen. 6.12 They ceased not from sin neither repented of their wickednesse saying what haue I done Math. 24 38. But euery one turned to their race as the horse rusheth into the battell For in the time that was limited thē their sin increased our Sauior shewing how they were giuen ouer vnto all loosenesse vntill the flood came and swept them all away This the Prophet Dauid noteth if hee were the penner of that Psalme where hee obserueth the degrees and stayres by which men ascend to the heighth and top of sinne first they beginne to walke in the counsell of the wicked then they proceed to stand in the way of sinners lastly they come to sit downe in the seat of the scornefull Psal 1.1 And this we may further obserue in the faylings of the faithfull and in their fallings into sinne No man becommeth extreamely euil at a sudden nor desperately setled and obstinatly resolued to continue in sin in a moment but as he that will climbe vp to the top of an high tower doth ascend step by step and by little litle so he that maketh no conscience of any sinne but walketh in all prophanenesse with greedinesse commeth to that height by degrees one sinne drawing on another the lesser making way for the greater and the greater obtayning passage for the greatest of all Wee see it in Euah when she fell from God first Gen 3 6. she listned vnto Satan secondly shee made a light resistance to his tentation thirdly shee beganne to doubt waueringly of that which God had deliuered absolutely fourthly shee grew in concupiscence the eye liking the heart lusting and both of them desiring the forbidden fruite lastly she fell to flat apostacy infidelity and rebellion This likewise is set before vs in the example of Peter who getting into the high-Priests hall and thrusting himselfe into euill company hath left vs a strong proofe of his owne weakenesse and of his declining from euill to worse First hee answereth faintly and fearefully that he knew not the man Math. 26 70. A dangerous beginning When hee was further vrged and pressed to answere and that he saw his bare and cold denyall would not be accepted hee thought to goe one step farther hee denyed with an oath that he neuer knew him Yea when they were importunate vpon him and would not suffer him to be in rest he began to curse himselfe and thereby to cast himselfe into the depth of sin into the gates of hel and into the hands of Satan The Reasons follow First sin groweth Reason 1 in the heart as the childe doth in the wombe For as the infant hath his increasings and augmentations from a small beginning vntill hee come to the birth proceeding from one degree and age vnto another as Iob setteth foorth our first creation Thou hast powred me out as milke and turned mee into cruds like cheese thou hast clothed me with skinne and flesh and ioyned me with bones and sinnewes Iob 10 10 11 so is it with a sinner his beginnings are small but the further hee runneth the longer he continueth and the deeper hee plungeth himselfe in sinne the more corrupt and abhominable he becommeth As a spring that ariseth out of the earth is first little and shallow but the further it groweth the more ground it floweth and the more streames come into it the greater the riuer is or as a fire which at the first is a little sparke being nourished becommeth in short time a great flame so is it with sin it is little in growth weake in strength slender in appearance at the beginning but being cherrished and fostered in the soule of the sinner it multiplyeth exceedingly and bringeth foorth many children of the same nature whereof we may truely say Like mother like daughter This is that comparison which the Apostle Iames vseth to expresse the fruitfull nature of all the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse Euery man is tempted when hee is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and when sinne is finished it bringeth foorth death Iam. 1 15. VVhere the Apostle sheweth that first a man is tempted to euill then concupiscence conueyeth it after it is in trauaile and bringeth foorth and lastly it doth finish it as a perfect birth This comparison is also vsed by the Prophet Dauid Behold he shall trauaile with wickednesse for he hath conceiued mischiefe but he shall bring forth a lie Psal 7 14. Reason 2 Secondly the wrath of God falleth vpon such as make no conscience to fall into lesser sinnes hee giueth them ouer to a reprobate sence to a slumbring spirit and to hardnesse of heart that
they fall to be past feeling and cannot repent The Apostle declareth in the Epistle to the Romanes That such as regarded not to know God hee gaue them vp to their hearts lust vnto all vncleannesse and punished one sinne with another Rom 1.28 For the sinne that followeth is a punishment which went before God forsaketh them with his grace that forsake him by their sinnes and when once God leaueth them the diuell findeth them Whensoeuer God departeth out of any person the vncleane spirit taketh possession for the house is empty swept and garnished and made ready to entertaine him Math. 12 44. This is it which the Prophet declareth concerning the secret iudgment of God vpon sinners that make shipwracke of faith and of a good conscience My people would not heare my voyce and Israel would none of me so I gaue them vp vnto the hardnesse of their heart and they haue walked in their owne counsels Psal 81 11 12. Where hee sheweth that seeing they would not be reclaimed and reformed hee laide the bridle in their owne neckes and suffered them to run their full swinge into all wickednesse In like manner the Apostle describing the sins of the Iewes that hated the Gospel stoned the Prophets persecuted the Saints and crucified the Lord of life sheweth that they had filled vp the measure of their sinnes and that the wrath of God was come on them to the vttermost 1. Thess 2 19. Reason 3 Thirdly sinne is fitly resembled to the fretting of a canker and to the vncleannesse of a leprosie both which goe forward and make no stay vntill the whole body be infected and euery member endangered This is the similitude which the Apostle vseth Their word shal fret as a canker 2. Tim. 2.17 of which sort is Hymeneus and Philetus For as one serpent engendreth another so doth one sinne conceiue and bring forth another It is like vnto the beast that is said to grow so long as it liueth So then lay these things together both that God forsaketh such as make no conscience of sinne and that sinne is likened to the conceiuing of the wombe to the eating of a canker and to the filthinesse of a leprosie wee may conclude that sin being entertained knoweth not stay but rolleth as a stone vntill it come to the Vse 1 bottome Now let vs handle the vses First consider from hence how dangerous it is to giue entertainment vnto sinne at the beginning which groweth to more perfection euery day we cannot stop this streame when we will it goeth beyond the strength of our nature God leaueth vs further to our selues when we begin to leaue his wayes We see this in the example of Cain he was reproued of God checked for his hatred against his brother admonished to repent but he harkened not to the voyce of the Lord but hardened his heart and shed innocent blood euen the blood of his brother Gen. 4 8. This appeareth in Iudas hee entertained couetousnesse in his heart from couetousnesse hee fell to plot with the Pharisies from plotting he proceeded to practising and in the end hee brake out into treason against his Lord and Master and ceased not till hee brake his owne necke Math. 26 15. The like we may say of Saul and trace out his falling from God step by step and the more he continued 1. Sam. 16 14. the more did the Spirit of GOD forsake him so that his hidden corruption brake out into open rebellion against God open persecution against Dauid and open desperation against himself and his owne soule Thus it falleth out with such as sinne against their conscience Some grow to be very diuels incarnate that do euery day giue strength vnto their corruption and adde drunkennesse vnto thirst who being past feeling giue themselues to wantonnesse to worke all vncleannes with greedinesse Some are like bruite beasts that are led onely by sensuality carnall and naturall men which haue nothing in them of the Spirit of God Iude 10. Continuance in sinne bringeth hardnesse of heart Such are in greatest danger and see it not they are in the midst of the fire and feele it not they taste deeply of the iudgment of God and regard it not Lay before them the grieuousnesse of sinne beseech them with bitter teares exhort them by the tender mercies of God denounce all the plagues punishments and iudgments of hell offer vnto them the sweet promises of the Gospel entreate them by the death of Christ and the dearest blood that he shed for them all these they tread vnder their feet and neglect them as things of no price sinne hath bewitched their hearts Sathan hath blinded their eyes and God hath giuen them vp into a reprobate sence For as among all the blessings that God bestoweth vpon the sonnes of men in this world a soft and tender heart is one of the greatest which is soone checked controuled soone made to bleed and raised to repentance and amendement of life Ezek. 11 19 so there can be no greater curse and malediction laide vpon any man then to haue a stony and stiff-necked a rebellious and yron heart which heapeth and hoardeth vp euery day vengeance against it selfe What an heauy punishment was this vpon Pharaoh when his heart was hardened Moses and Aaron came vnto him they laide before him the word of God they wrought miracles in the land of Egypt they called vpon him to let the people go he was visited with lice he was feared with thunders he was plagued with frogges he was tryed with darknesse he was punished with the death of the first borne yet could not all these enter into his heart nor pierce his conscience that was seared with an hot yron so that he proceeded in euill vntill he and his whole hoste were drowned in the red sea Heereunto accordeth that which the Prophet Ieremy sayth Can the blacke Moore change his skinne or the leopard his spots Then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe euill Ier. 13 23. Seeing therefore such as beginne to sinne can haue do stay of themselues we must needs confesse it to be very dangerous and hurtfull to our soules For all such as breake out into this sinne are like to those that runne downe a steepe hill that when they are going haue no power to make any stay or stop vntill they come vnto the lower end Thus it is with those that haue giuen the onset vpon sinne they do as it wer open the flood gates of impiety which are not againe easily shut vp but the violence of the streame beareth all things before it For howsoeuer sinne at the first be entertained of men with some dislike and not without some strugling and striuing against it yet in processe of time and by continuance in sinne they grow shamelesse euen to haue an whores forehead that they cannot nor wil not be ashamed though the Sunne the heauen the earth and men beare witnesse against them they
he is not tyed to any guide or Gouernor We are put in minde heereof by Moses Deut. 29 29. The secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things reuealed belong vnto vs and to our children for euer that wee may do all the words of the law God is not tyed to his reuealed wil the Law-giuer is aboue his law For the law must be vnderstood with this restraint and limitation except God command the contrary who is free and not bound to ordinary rules He commanded Moses in the building of the Tabernacle to make the Cherubims and other similitudes as also afterward when the people were stung with fiery serpents to set vp a brazen serpent which without his commandement had bin a breach of the second Commandement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the similitude of any thing in the heauen aboue or in earth beneath or in the waters vnder the earth Exod. 20 4. He commanded Ioshua to compasse the City of Iericho seuen dayes with the men of warre and the Arke of God seuen dayes together and therfore also on the Sabbath day Iosh 6 15 which without the Commandement of God had bin a breach of the fourth Commandement Remember thou keepe holy the Sabbath day So God proued Abraham and charged him to offer his son which he could not haue done without horrible murther Gen. 22 1. except God had commanded it being a breach of the sixt Commandement Thou shalt not kil In like manner God willed his people to aske iewels of siluer and iewels of gold of theyr neighbors the Egyptians Exod. 12 35 wherby they spoyled them but neuer made restitution vnto them which without a peculiar direction from God had not stood with the eyght Commandement Thou shalt not steale Thus thē we see for the encrease of our knowledge how the Law of God is to be vnderstood to wit with this caueat and prouiso Vnlesse it please God to command the contrary who alwayes worketh according to his owne will For as such as haue to do in the Statutes of earthly Princes do teach to restraine them and vnderstand them thus sauing the Kings prerogatiue so are we to do in the interpretation of the law of God alwayes to vse this exception of Gods prerogatiue For if Princes claime a prerogatiue aboue theyr lawes much more are we to giue vnto the eternall God a prerogatiue and priuiledge aboue the lawes giuen to the sonnes of men Secondly we learne from hence that all examples Vse 2 set downe in Scripture are not set downe for our imitation albeit reuealed for our instruction Our Sauiour in the Gospel reproueth his Disciples who would haue called downe fire from heauen vpon the Samaritans to consume them pretending to follow the example of Elias saying vnto them Yee know not of what spirit ye are Lu. 9 59. The examples of the godly set downe in Scripture are of foure sorts The first generall and common standing in the law of nature taught in the ten Commandements commanding vs to worship God to honour our parents to doe wrong to no man Hence it is that we are cōmanded to follow the faith of Abraham 1 Cor. 11 1. the chastity of Ioseph the zeale of Dauid the patience of Iob the repentance of Peter the attention of Lydia the restitution of Zacheus and such like these are set before vs both for our instruction and for our imitation Secondly the godly haue many infirmities and imperfections whereby it commeth to passe that some of theyr actions are sinful and vngodly which are set downe for vs not to follow but to auoyde Such are the incredulity of Moses the adultery of Dauid the idolatry of Salomon the drunkennesse of Noah the incest of Lot the ambition of the Apostles These are not written that we should alledge the fals of the Saints to warrant and iustifie our sinnes but to teach vs that no mā is free from sinne in this life seeing the elect and regenerate do offend that we should not being suddainly ouertaken with sin despaire of Gods mercy that we should be watchfull and looke to our footing seeing these men sinned beeing adorned with such great gifts so highly in Gods fauour that shined as Starres in the Firmament and were eminent aboue other men as the Cedars aboue other Trees Thirdly some things were well done of the Fathers that cannot bee followed of vs without offence to God as those that were ceremoniall and endured only vntill the comming of Christ and the restoring of all things by him as the cutting of the foreskinne the offering of sacrifices the killing of the Passeouer which cannot be brought into vse and practise againe Acts chap. 15 ver 1 5 without iniury to Christ and the abolishing of his death Lastly some examples were singular and proper vnto those to whom they were giuen so as neyther others in those dayes nor we in our times may any way follow them without the same inspiration of the Spirit and of this number is the zeale of Phinehas mentioned in this place and such extraordinary examples as we named before Thus we see both that all examples of the faithfull are not to be practised and likewise what are to be followed and what are not to be followed Heereby we learne to meete with all prophane men who resolue to continue in their sinnes defend themselues with the slips and faylings of the faithfull These men sinne with the godly but they repent not with them they fall asleepe with them but they arise not with them out of sleepe Heereby also the Church of Rome is conuinced who alledge the making of the Cherubims of the brazen serpent and such like to iustifie their imagery and idolatry by the example of Moses which we haue shewed to be speciall not generall commanded to him not warranted to all Lastly hereby they are condemned that would bring in any of the ceremonies of the law which are long since buried together with the Synagogue cannot stand with the simplicity of the Gospel and with the sufficiency of the death of Christ Lastly as no man must bee rash in pretending extraordinary callings so we must take heed we bee not rash in censuring the doings of other men Do we know or can we vnderstand the motions and inspirations of other men What man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him 1 Cor. 2 11. We may not therefore examine theyr callings by our owne nor measure extraordinary actions by ordinary rules especially in the times of the decay of religion of the ruines of the Church of the planting of the Gospel when God doth many times giue some of his people speciall motions guide them with an extraordinary direction of his Spirit but euery man must looke to the warrant of his owne worke No man must presume aboue his calling but euery man must be wise according to sobriety and consider what
This ouercommeth all tentations and all offences whatsoeuer in the world without it it is not possible to be kept preserued in the way of truth What held Nicodemus among the Pharisies but onely the feare of men he could not resolue to follow Christ Ioh. 3 1 12 42 43 And the reproches of the Pharisees cast out against him whē he defended the cause of Christ put him to silence made him giue ouer vntil at length he shake off all impediments and betake himselfe to follow him A good example for vs to follow If we faint for reproches our strength is litle our faith is weake The words of enemies cannot hurt vs except wee through weakenesse and faintnesse hurt our selues For if we neglect and reiect them they returne vpon him that cast them Doctrine God punisheth the sins of parents with the sins of their children Behold ye are risen vp in your fathers stead an increase of sinfull men c. Moses putteth these two tribes the halfe in minde of the former prouocations of their fathers which had caused many iudgments to breake in vpon them these were risen vp in their stead walking in their steps so that it fell out according to the Prouerbe like father like sonnes Wee learne hereby by this sharp charge that it is an vsual thing with God to punish the sinnes of the parents with the sins of their children The parents sin the children are oftentimes giuen ouer to follow them to commit the same sins or such like notorious sinnes whereby he taketh vengeance of their sins Gen. 21 9 10 9 24 27 1 King 11 11 Hos 4 13. This is euident in the Kings of Israel of whom we may truly say that the fathers sinned the children rose vp an encrease of sinful men they were a wicked seed and augmented the fierce anger of the Lord vntill hee remoued Israel vtterly out of his sight So he threatneth oftentimes to visit the sins of the fathers vpon the children to the third 4. generatiō of them that hate him Ex. 20 Reason 1 And God doth deale thus for sundry causes First God respecteth the good of such parents as belong vnto him for hee doth it to hūble them to bring them vpon their knees to repent for their sins which happily they had forgotten long agoe It is a far greater griefe to Christian parents to see them lye vnder this spirituall iudgment then afflictiō whatsoeuer Secondly such parents as are wicked belōg not vnto him are heereby hardned grieued and vexed He doth it in part to pardon them because when euill parents see their children commit any sins against the 1 table which are committed immediatly against God as to delight in swearing and blaspheming in contempt of the word neglect of his worship and in prophaning of the Sabbath they are not touched or troubled at it because they think it no iudgment their sons to haue committed no sins at al so it cōmeth to passe that they are the more hardned againe if they see their children commit any sinne against the second Table as murther theft or the like whereby they vndergoe the punishment of the Magistrate they are greeued and vexed for it not because they haue sinned against God prouoked him to anger but because their childrē posterity are brought to shame and reproch before the world This serueth first of all to teach vs that the Vse 1 wayes of God are iust equall against those that are ready to accuse him of iniustice God is a most iust and righteous God he dealeth with euery one according to his desarts God punisheth sinne with si●●e And he oftentimes punisheth sinne with sinne For he doth not onely punish sin with the sword of the enemy with sicknesses diseases with famine and mortality and such like which all doe acknowledge and confesse to be punishments but he punisheth former sins with later sins Thus he punished the Idolatrous Gentiles when they knew God and glorified him not as God but worshipped serued the creature in stead of the Creator by giuing them vp to theyr owne vile affections and to a reprobate sense to work vncleannes euen with greedinesse Rom. 1. And in these last times of the world because men will not loue and embrace the truth Hee sendeth among them strong delusions that they should beleeue lyes 2 Thess 2 Obiect 12. But how doth God punish sinne with sin may some say Doth he tempt vnto euill or doth he infuse any euill into them Doth hee allure and prouoke men to sin I answer Answer with the Apostle God tempteth no man to sin Iam. 1 13 but hee punisheth this way secretly by withdrawing his grace and giuing them ouer to bee entangled in their owne corruptions Thus God punished Pharaoh by hardnesse of heart not by making that to bee hard which was soft and plyable before but by denying the oyle of his grace whereby it should haue beene mollified Thus also he tempted Dauid to number the people because his wrath was kindled against Israel for their sins 2 Sam. 2● 1 This is the most grieuous punishment that can bee inflicted in this life howsoeuer many men neuer regard it for other punishments through the blessing of God and a sanctified vse of them are vsual meanes to bring vs to true repentance but when we are smitten with this adding of sinne to sinne and are striken with this plague sore we doe more and more flie from him Other punishments are as sharp eye-salues to make vs see our owne misery that we may be mooued to sue and seeke for his mercy but this iudgement doth vs no good at all nay it blindeth our minds it hardneth our hearts it scareth our consciences it encreaseth our sinnes and doubleth our condemnation Thus doth God shew himselfe a iust Iudge Vse 2 Secondly it directeth parents what they ought to do in the sinnes of their Children which may be reduced to these foure heads First they must search to find out the cause of it secondly they must be humbled and sorrow for it thirdly they must labour to reclaime them and lastly they must abstaine from sinning themselues lest by their example they corrupt and infect them The first duty of parents Touching the first it belongeth vnto all parents in the sinnes of their children which they commit to search enquire diligently whether this punishment faln vppon their children bee not the punishment of some particular sinne of their owne formerly committed and doubtlesse in searching they shal not lose their labour but oftentimes find that some fearfull sin of theirs before committed is the cause of those notorious sinnes that they see and behold in their children For example we see some Ministers and men of other callings haue their children fall to idolatry and superstition and are gone after Antichrist and fled into Babylon the mother of whoredomes this is no
to iudge the quick and dead 1 Peter 44 5. It is noted concerning Christ by the Euangelist that before hee entred vpon the worke of his high calling to preach the Gospel and shewed himselfe a Redeemer to Israel hee increased in wisdome and stature and grew in fauour with God and man Luke 2 52 but when once hee left his priuate life in the priuate houfe of Ioseph where hee was brought vp and set vpon the office whereunto he was appointed albeit hee continued in the fauour of God as his onely begotten Sonne in whom he is well pleased Matthew 3 17 yet he grew out of fauour with men who were not contented with him Paul before his conuersion was in great estimation with the Pharisees and obtayned letters of them to put in prison all them that called vpon the Name of Christ but when hee beganne to preach faith in Christ which before hee persecuted and sought to destroy hee lost theyr fauour and friendship as appeareth in that they plotted his death and sought his life to take it away more vehemently and violently then hee had practised against the disciples Let vs not therefore thinke it strange that we meete with many enemies cunning subtill cruell and malicious but seeke to be at peace with God and reconciled vnto him and then if God be with vs who shall be against vs Rom. 8 31. Vse 5 Fiftly the enemies of Israel albeit they were ouerthrowne and defeated yet were not all discomfited and consumed at once but by little and little sometimes one and then afterward another as they did not arise and appeare all together so it is euermore with his Church to the end of the world We shall neuer be without some enemies God will euer try the faith and patience of his children When Dauid sate at home and went not to warre against his enemies he was surprized by a subtill enemy whom he neuer suspected and fell into two grieuous sinnes adultery and murther 2 Sam. 11 1 4 1 Chron. 20 1. The water by standing still gathereth filth mud and corruption The iron by lying still gathereth r●st The Church free from enemies oftentimes groweth secure and the godly are ready to say in their prosperity they shall neuer be remoued Psal 30 6. Let all the wicked therefore know that their peace and prosperity cannot giue them assurance though they endure long of the fauour and loue of God but hee will bring downe his iudgements vpon them when they haue filled vp the measure of their sins And albeit for a time they escape yet they are appointed to wrath and destruction forasmuch as the Lord is iealous and the Lord auengeth hee will take vengeance on his aduersaries and he reserueth wrath for his enemies Nah. 1 2. Yea thus it shall be with the spirituall enemies of our soules and of our saluation albeit they haue receiued their deathes wound and are crushed in the head that they can neuer fully recouer their strēgth but shall finally be subdued yet they are alwayes hissing and stinging they are trying tempting the members of Christ So long as we are Christs wee must looke for the diuell and his Angels to set themselues against vs. They will take no denyall or repulse but being beaten and vanquished will gather their forces and vnite their power together to build vp the kingdome of darknes When he tempted Christ in the wildernesse and receiued a notable foyle and glorious ouerthrow in all those seuerall combats and had ended his tentations that he had prepared hee departed from him but a little season Luke 4 13. As he dealt with the head in the wildernesse so he dealeth with the members in this world wee must neuer looke to bee wholly ridde of this importunate enemy Whensoeuer he leaueth vs it is not as a confession that hee is vtterly conuicted and confounded for it fareth with him as with one that wrastled Plutarch in vit who how soeuer hee spedde would alwayes perswade the standers by that he gaue him the fall and foile that buckled and clasped with him and so it is when we wrastle with these principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesses in high places they will neuer yeeld the victory but rather gather their broken and disbanded companies leuy new forces prouide and procure stronger weapons and make better prouision and preparation against vs. If then he depart from vs and breake vp his siege it is not to free vs from danger and to take a truce with vs but to muster a fresh army and to take vs at an aduantage if hee see vs to grow secure and therefore let vs neuer promise rest vnto our selues from his assaults so long as we continue heere and carry about vs this earthly Tabernacle but alwayes stand vpon our gard and in our watch-tower to be ready for his comming and returning that so resisting him being strong in faith he may flye from vs Iam. 4 7. 1 Pet. 5 8 9. Yea let this serue as a great comfort and consolation to those that haue experience of his manifold assaults and inuasions that they neuer distrust or despaire though their troubles be many though their tentations be great continuall seeing this was the lot and portion of Iesus Christ the Sonne of GOD Who shall treade downe Satan vnder their feete shortly Rom. 16 20. Lastly the people of Israel after the enduring Vse 6 of all their troubles and afflictions after the experience of many sorrowes and miseries that came vpon them had rest giuen vnto them and victory ouer all their enemies round about them so that they were safely brought into the land of promise where they inherited and possessed cities that they builded not Deut. 6 10 11 houses full of all maner goods which they filled not welles which they digged not vineyards and oliues which they planted not and saw all the good things performed which the Lord had promised vnto them This serueth to comfort the children of God though for a time they sustaine many iniuries beare many disgraces receiue many losses feele many pinches instraightments yea many fierce and fiery tryals it is but while they wander in the wildernesse they are not yet come into Canaan the place of rest howbeit the blessednes of the issue and end of all will fully recompence the hardnesse of the way and make amends and satisfaction for all their sorrowes being fully assured that the afflictions of this present world are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs hereafter for then God shall wipe away all teares from our eyes Rom. 8 19. Reuel 7 16 17. Thus God giueth comfort to his seruants after they haue beene humbled in this vale of misery They shall hunger no more they shall thirst no more they shall want no more Then this corruptible shall put on incorruption this mortall shall put on immortality and death shall be swallowed vp in victory 1 Cor. 15 53 54. This made
that flourish 123 b. why those of the heathens prospered p. 124 a. Communion of two sorts 292 with Christ and one with another 307. b. 508 b. it teacheth loue 749 b. especially that in the spirit p. 750. Company of wicked auoid 163 b. 591 b. 999 1100 the branches of it 163 280 b. in what cases lawfull and in what not p. 281 a. 661 a. Companions with euill men are punished p. 660. Confession of sinnes 805 it is necessary 312 the want of it dangerous 316 the properties p. 317 b Conscience p. 411 a. Contemners of the Gospel p. 32. Contentation required 94 245 530 630 b. 1029 b. how many waies men do faile in it p. 99 100 183 a. Contentions in the Church p. 554. Continency See single life Continuance in sinne dangerous p. 917 b. Corruption of nature 161 the fruites of it p. 162 a. Couetousnesse 103 242 887 it deceiueth many 1027 b. it bringeth nothing home 1028 the euils of it 1114 b. it is idolatry 103 it may bee in the poore ibid. the branches of it 104 b motiues to auoide it p. 1227 b. Couenant betweene God and man p. 499 a. Counsell euil giue not 1003 b. good counsell follow whosoeuer giue it p. 1006. Creatures suffer with men 667 they must bee vsed with thanksgiuing 738 the smallest sent of God are mighty 799 they are weary of wicked men p. 875. Crying sinnes 308 what the cry of sinne is p. 309 a. Curiosity p. 522 a. Cush is not alwaies Ethiopia p. 550. D Dauids sinne how great it was p. 299 a. Death common to all 726 it maketh all equall 727 we must prepare for it ibid. it is the effect of sinne p. 1125. Death cutteth not off good workes 450 a. beeing sudden it is feareful 548 b. how we bring it vppon our selues ibid. the day of it vnknowne 548 and wherefore ibid. Decency what p. 59 b. Defrauding p. 840. b Delay dangerous p. 38 b. Departure out of the Church reproued p. 287. Despaire of no mans saluation p. 52● a 907 b. Deuices of euill men come to nothing p. 1030. Deuils cannot worke miracles 680 how great their knowledge is 988 b. their subtilty to seduce men p. 1037. Difference betweene sin and sin 635. not all equall ibid. between the Priests and Leuites p. 695. Dignity of the ministery p. 447. Discomfort often from such as should comfort pa. p. 553 b Discontentment p. 241 b Diseases of the soule worse then of the body p. 279. Disgrace it is not to godly children to descend of vngodly parents p. 1109. Disgrare it is not to refuse a challenge p. 1242. Doubting p. 170 b. 171 a. Diuinity of the Diuines of Doway p. 1242 b Drunkards defence p. 851 b. Drunkennes 252 b. how it may be knowne 537 b the signes and effects of it p. 538 a. Duels vnlawfull 304 1123 b. causes and effects thereof ibid. Duties of children to parents 1167. of parents toward their children 1168 b. of wiues to theyr husbands 1170. of husbands to their wiues ib. E Earthly things 1002. they are often giuen to the godly p. 453 b. Earthly pilgrim is a Citizen of heauen p. 1215 b. Eate as in Gods presence 631 it must be religious p. 537. Election of God p. 578 b. Election of the Ministers how p. 470. Encouragements in well doing p. 393 b. Enemies of the Church are cruell 763 are Gods enemies 516 b the diuell worketh in them 763 they often preuaile ouer the Church 776 b they are not consumed at once 858 b they leaue no meanes vnattempted to plot the Churches ouerthrow p. 940. Enemies differing ioyne against the Church p. 879 Enuy to be auoyded 543. remedies to keep vs from it ibid. p. 185. Enuy not wicked men p. 547 b. Epha what it is p. 359 b. Equiuocation p. 376 a. Eternall life a rest p. 1141 a. Euill is twofold p. 665 a. Euill actions haue ill successe p. 998. Euill company p. 589. Euill men account the Church as a prison 231 They prolong the time with God 249 b. They feare where no feare is 874 they are Cowards 875 they proceed from euill to worse p. 1061 Euill men rest vpon vaine things 885 they are often constrained to confesse their sins 911. and to giue testimony to the truth p. 923. Euil parents bring a curse on their houses 1081 b good parents a blessing p. 1083. Euill reports p. 776 b. Euill workes shall be rewarded p. 450 b. Examination before the Supper 480 wherein it standeth ibid. Examples what not to be followed 1169 b. of euill do corrupt page 529. they are not to be followed p. 585 Exhort one another p. 86 b. Excommunicate who are to be 264. 290 b. 291 a What duties are to be performed to them 293 265. not to be familiar with such Ibid. Their fearfull estate p. 266. Excommunicate are to be barred from the Worde and Sacraments 275 266 267. they are as Heathen and Publicans ibidem they are to be held infamous ibidem they are deliuered vnto satan 268 they are to be shut out of all christian churches ibidem Princes Lawes against them 269 we must shun their companie 271 275 the children of such may be baptized 291 492. the family may conuerse with them 275. who are to be excommunicated page 290 b. pag p. 291 a. Excommunication 258. it ought to haue place in euery Church 277. the ends of it 293 b. what is obiected against it 258. it is to be vsed vnder a Christian Magistrate 262. what it is Ibid. 290 it is to be executed vpon a member of the Church 263 291 how the Papists abuse it 364. 271 the end of it is the recouery of them p. 266. Excommunication blotteth men out of the number of Gods people 266 the sentence is ratified in heauen ibid. it is to bee denounced with sorrow 276. sundry abuses of it 271 it is not to be executed rashly 272 but when there is iust cause Ibid. it is not of the essence of the Church 273 277. it cannot depriue of temporall possession Ibid. it cannot be executed against such as are not of the Church p. 274. Executioners of iustice 640. why commonly infamous Ibid. Experience of mercy assureth more p. 608 861. F Face of God what p. 422 b Failings of Gods seruants many 538 b. why recorded in Scriptures p. 585 b. True Faith of an applying nature p. 1232 b. Faith is not in mans power 88. a none must sweare by it 373. a how it is knowne to be true 489. required of all Communicants 501. being weake it is auaileable p. 816 b. Faith of the Greeke Church touching Purgatorie p. 714 b. Faithfull that shew mercy receiue mercie 336. they haue often earthly blessings 453 b. they are greeued when kept from Gods seruice 482. they desire others to be equall to themselues 544 b. they must not greeue at it 545. a. they are the wicked mans benefactors 557 b. they are the house of God 563 b. their life is