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

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of God For Iohn describing the state of glory after this life saith I saw no Temple therein for the Lord God Almighty Re. 21 22 23 24 25 26 2● and the Lambe are the Temple of it and this City hath no need of the Sunne neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God did light it and the Lambe is the light of it Happy are they that enter into this city where God is the Temple where God is the Sun where God is the Moone where God is all the light thereof and all the glory and defence therof It is a glorious thing in this life to be Kings and Princes and to sit vpon the throne of maiesty but when they shall inherite the kingdome of heauen they shall lay downe all earthly pompe and magnificence receiuing so great glory in that glorious city that the glory which they had as kings and Princes shall vanish away as the light of a candle at the shining of the Sunne The glory of the least of Gods Saints is so excellent that Salomon in all his glory was neuer arayed nor aduanced like one of these The end of all this is to teach vs that we ought to be euen rauished with an earnest and longing desire to dwel in this heauenly tabernacle and to labor to haue our hearts purged from an euill conscience knowing that no vncleane thing shall enter into it ●●uel 21.27 neither whatsoeuer worketh abominations and lies Euery one will seeme desirous to dwell in the Lords Tabernacle and to come to heauen but they are loath to leaue their sinnes But let vs not deceiue our selues neither let vs sooth and flatter our selues in our euils if we follow our vngodly wayes with greedinesse and will not forsake our wickednesse we shall haue the doore of Gods kingdome shut against vs. 18 The standard of the Campe of Ephraim shall be toward the West according to their armies and the Captaine ouer the sonnes of Ephraim shall be Elishama the sonne of Ammihud 19 And the hoste and the number of them were forty thousand and fiue hundreth 20 And by him shall be the tribe of Manasseh and the Captaine ouer the sonnes of Manasseh shall be Gamliel the sonne of Pedahzur 21 And his hoste and the number of them were two and thirty thousand and two hundreth 22 And the tribe of Beniamin and the Captaine ouer the sonnes of Beniamin shall be Abidan the sonne of Gideoni 23 And his hoste and the number of them were fiue and thirty thousand and foure hundreth 24 All the number of the Campe of Ephraim were an hundred and eight thousand and one hundreth according to their Armies and they shall goe in the third place We haue heard before how the Tabernacle of the Congregation was placed in the midst of the hoste and compassed about both in front and flanke standing strong in battelled in their aray ready to receiue a shocke if any enemies should offer to enter vpon them In these words is laid before vs the third company of this mighty Army the principall whereof was Ephraim and his Partizans are Manasseh and Beniamin appointed to march vnder his Ensigne and to be after a sort ranged vnder his colours It is not vnknowne to any that are meanely conuersant in the holy Scriptures that Ioseph and Beniamin were the onely children of Rahel the true and beloued wife of Iacob and that both Manasseh and Ephraim were the children of Ioseph and that the elder was Manasseh the yonger Ephraim who notwithstanding hath the first place of honour and preheminence assigned vnto him and Manasseh the first borne is compelled to be his vnderling What could Ephraim claime aboue his brother or what had Manasseh done to be put behinde It pleaseth God oftentimes to make the first last and the last first to thrust downe the elder into the place of the yonger and to aduance the yonger into the seate of the elder This appeareth in many places of the Booke of Genesis and is so ordinary and common as it need not to be set downe To insist onely vpon the present example we reade that when Ioseph brought his two children before his sicke father Gene. 48.14.18.20 Iacob stretched out his right hand and laide it on Ephraims head and his left hand vpon Manassehs head directing his hands of purpose neither could be drawne to remooue them but blessed them that day and said In thee Israel shal blesse and say God make thee as Ephraim and as Manasseh and he set Ephraim before Manasseh Thus Gods iudgement is oftentimes contrary to mans and he preferreth that which man despiseth A notable example whereof we haue in Samuel when hee was sent to anoynt Dauid King and had the eldest sonne of Ishai before him he said 1 Sam. 16.6 Surely the Lords anoynted is before him but the Lord said vnto Samuel Looke not on his countenance nor on the height of his stature because I haue refused him for God seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord beholdeth the heart Samuel was an holy Prophet of God yet he faileth in binding Gods grace to the ordinary course of nature Doctrine 5 We learne from hence God bestoweth his gifts and graces freely to whom hee pleaseth that God bestoweth his gifts freely both when he will and where he will and to whom he will He giueth as a bountifull and gracious father the graces of election adoption iustification sanctification and all other his benefites of his free loue and fauour He lifteth vp whom he will he passeth by he forsaketh he putteth and pulleth downe whom he pleaseth Some gifts are temporall and some eternall some earthly and other heauenly and of both sorts it may be truely said Who separateth thee 1 Cor. 4.7 and what hast thou that thou hast not receiued if thou hast receiued it why reioycest thou as though thou hadst not receiued it This is set downe in the song of Hannah The Lord maketh poore 1 Sam. 2.7.8 and maketh rich he bringeth low and exalteth he raiseth vp the poore out of the dust lifteth vp the begger from the dunghil to set them among Princes and to make them inherit the seat of glory This appeareth most plainly and euidently in the gifts of God Our whole saluation is of Gods free grace belonging to a better life and accompanying saluation The free grace of god in Christ is the fountaine from whence saluatiō floweth yea it is the beginning continuance ending of our saluation The truth hereof may be made plain by the particular rehearsall of the seuerall parts thereof if we consider our election redemption calling faith iustification regeneration loue good workes remission of sinnes and perseuerance in good things vnto the end No man can be saued and obtaine eternall life except he be predestinated and elected thereunto before the foundation of the world for the kingdome of
themselues deuout but is indeed the language of the diuels God respecteth not such foolish deuotions he requireth of all persons the knowledge of his word as we shall shew afterward and he will bee worshipped according to the knowledge thereof The Apostle reproueth the Iewes for their zeale a vertue that ought to be in al the faithfull forasmuch as God will spew all that are lukewarme out of his mouth neuerthelesse he accepteth it not in them because it was not according to knowledge Rom. 10 2 We must know what God alloweth if we would haue him allow approue of vs. If we regard not to know him we may well assure our selues that in the day of account he will not know vs but turne away his face from vs. The second reproofe The second reproofe meeteth with all such as do things doubtfully and waueringly not knowing whether they do well or ill these do attempt things either against their conscience or without the comfort of a good conscience and therefore albeit it be good in it owne nature which they do and good in regard of the will of God yet to them it is not so because they are not assured by the word whether it be lawfull or vnlawfull and therefore it is turned into sinne This is that which we heard before out of the Apostle Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14 23. All such neede not another to condemne them they condemne themselues in that which they doe The vnfaithfull and vnregenerate man sinneth in euery thing he doth euen in his best actions We must please god before any of our works can please him The Apostle saith Vnto the pure all things are pure but vnto thē that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minde and conscience is defiled Tit. 1 15. And S. Iames in his Epistle chap. 1 7 8. Hee that wauereth is like a waue of the sea driuen with winde and tossed for let not that man thinke that he shall receiue any thing of the Lord a double-minded man is vnstable in all his waies Wherefore it standeth vs vpon ●eral rules ●irect our ●ons to consider the three generall rules set downe by S. Paul in the Epistle to the Romanes chap. 14 to direct vs in all our actions First he is happy that condemneth not himselfe in the vse of those things which hee knoweth to be lawful This concerneth those that are strong ●n 14 22. This is a golden rule and a great honour happinesse of Christian men that their owne consciences doe not accuse them to allow and admit of that which they iudge not to be good and lawfull They know by due triall and examination that the same which they do agreeth with the word of God so that they are assured to build vpō the rock Though all men should accuse them and condemne them yet their conscience grounded vpon the word of God would acquit discharge thē which cannot but giue an inward peace and sweet contentment to their soules This the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 1 12. Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience c. To the same purpose Iob speaketh chap. 27 6. My righteousnesse I hold fast and will not let it go my heart shall not reproch me so long as I liue Likewise Iohn in his first Epistle saith I four heart condemne vs ●oh 3 20 21. God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things beloued if our heart condemne vs not then haue we confidence toward God This comfort of a good conscience they cannot but want which doubt whether that which they do please God or not they are farre from this happinesse which the Apostle pronounceth vpon such as know well and are throughly assured what they do the rest are like drunken men that stagger reele too and fro cannot keepe themselues vpright vpon their feet Secondly no man must do any thing with a doubtfull conscience for such a one woundeth his owne conscience offendeth God The Apostle saith He that doubteth is condemned if he eate ●m 14 23. because he eateth not of faith He that is not perswaded that it pleaseth GOD which he doth cannot direct it to his glory Euery worke that commeth short of his end is sinne and therefore Abraham is commended that he staggered not at the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strong in faith giuing glory to God Rom. 4 20. This rule belongeth to those that are weake who wauer vp and downe in their opinions like a ship that tottereth hither and thither in a tempest Woe vnto such they need no other witnes or iudge against themselues but themselues They do many good things that doe displease GOD which would please him if they were wel and rightly done If then thou wouldst haue any fruite and comfort in those things which thou doest informe thy conscience aright be perswaded throughly of that which thou doest and build thy faith vpon the sure and infallible rocke of God Thirdly whatsoeuer proceedeth not from faith is a sinne committed against God and condemneth him that doth it forasmuch as without faith it is vnpossible to please God Hebr. 11 6. Outward shewes and appearances though they be neuer so pompous and glorious are not respected of him he enquireth whether those things we do proceed from true obedience whether we beleeue by the word that they are required of God and so please him This last rule engendereth two other first whatsoeuer proceedeth from pure naturals is vnpure and whatsoeuer commeth from the force of our free will is sin in the sight of God Such as the fountaine is such are the streames as the root is so are the branches like mother like daughters like cause like effects Doth a spring send foorth out of the same place sweet water and bitter Can the figgetree beare Oliue berries Iam. 3 12. Math 7 18. eyther a vine figges A good tree cannot bring forth euill fruite neither can a corrupt tree bring foorth good fruite Secondly all the vertues and actions of the infidels and vnbeleeuers albeit in regard of themselues and the substance of the workes and as they are the gifts of God they be not euill but good yet in the iudgment of God they are sins The whole life of vnbeleeuers and vnregenerate men is nothing else but a whole practise of sin in a continued course without stay or interruption from the beginning to the ending August in Psal 31. et epist 105 but they are like those that run a great pace out of the way They may do many things beautifull in shew but they are more in shew then in substance in appearance then in deed and truth All their vertues are shaddowes and therefore called by one of the fathers splendida peccata beautifull sinnes August de ciuit dei They lay an euill foundation haue a wrong beginning they do them without faith and they also
their sicknes trust in the Phisition as Asa did 1 Chro. 16 11 12. 1 Sam. 2.5 not in the liuing God who killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp againe hee maketh the wound and bindeth it vp he smiteth and his hands make whole he shall deliuer thee in sixe troubles and in the seuenth the euill shall not touch thee In time of warre and day of battell we trust in our strength armor men munition and defenced places and make them our God Nah. 3.8 ● whereas the Prophet teacheth that this is a cursed confidence and shall not leaue a blessing behind it Lastly we learne from hence not to reuenge Vse 4 our own causes quarels For if we be taught in this practise of Moses to go vnto God in all our wrongs who will iudge his people then we are not to render like for like or to requite euill for euill or to repay wrong for wrong taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke railing for railing but contrariwise blesse knowing that we are thereunto called that we should bee heires of blessing This vse is concluded Prou. 20.22 Say not thou I will recompence euill but waite vpon the Lord and he shall saue thee This is the direction of the Apostle Ro. 12.17.19 Recompence to no man euill for euill dearely beloued auenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine Psal 94.1 ● I will repay saith the Lord. Where we see God claymeth and challenge vengeance to himselfe and taketh it from vs so that such as seeke reuenge sit downe in the seat of God and as much as lyeth in thē wrest the scepter out of his hands taking vpon them the person of the accuser witnesse iudge and executioner contrary to all true forme of lawfull iudgement And albeit it bee hard and harsh for flesh and blood to put vp iniuries yet if we wil be the children of God we must haue more in vs then flesh and blood For they that are after the flesh Rom. 3.5 ● fauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit so then they that are in the flesh cannot please GOD. Wherefore when Zachariah the Priest a faithfull and fruitefull witnesse of God was vniustly and cruelly stoned to death he raged not he reuiled not he reuenged not but said The Lord see and require it When the Lord of life ●● 24.22 Christ Iesus was accused condemned and crucified the iust for the vniust he prayed for his enemies Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe ● 23 34. leauing vs an example that we should follow his steps When blessed Stephen who was full of the holy Ghost and saw the glory of God and Iesus standing at the right of God was cast out of the city and stoned with stones hee kneeled downe and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sinne to their charge ● 55.58 When the Archangel mentioned by the Apostle Iude saw that the diuell went about to corrupt the pure worship of God hee would not vse railing and reprochfull speaches ● ver 9. but desireth the Lord to rebuke him and repay him for his malice Seeing therefore this duty hath beene practised by Priest and people by men and Angels by the head and the members of his body let vs follow those things that concerne peace let vs be of a patient and meeke spirit which is much set by of God and let vs commit our causes to him that is the God of vengeance It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Verse 9 10. Then Moses tooke that rod c. Hitherto Moses Aaron haue behaued themselues vprightly in respect of God meekely in respect of themselues and patiently in regard of the people Now we shal see how they offend by transgressing the commandement of God by distrusting his word by raging against the whole assembly God chargeth them to speake to the rocke they spake vnto the people Againe as if it were vnlikely or vnpossible that the rock should yeeld water they smote it twise through impaciency vnbeeleefe Thus they that had beene the instruments of God in so many miracles that had seene him face to face as a man seeth his friend that had stood so often in the gap where the hand of God had made the breach that had diuided the red sea Moses I say and Aaron the Ministers of God the witnesses of his workes the pillars of the truth now begin to faile to faint and to fall down to shew vs and themselues the weakenesse that is in flesh and blood From hence we learne that many are the failings and fals of the children of God ●trine ● are the 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Howsoeuer the faithfull be borne againe and endued with the spirit of sanctification howsoeuer they desire to please God and endeuor to serue him with all the powers of soule and body yet they often stumble in their race thorough the burthen that presseth down and the sinne that cleaueth so fast vnto them This truth is confessed and confirmed by many testimonies Salomon in his worthy prayer at the dedication of the Temple acknowledgeth it 1 king 8.46 So Iob. 15.14 15. Likewise Prou. 20.9 And the Prophet Psal 14 2 3. All which testimonies doe plentifully teach this truth that howsoeuer through the grace of God giuen vnto them the faithful fight a good fight hauing faith and a good conscience yet all are sinners and no flesh is cleane and cleere from sin which Moses and Aaron here fal into The reasons of this doctrine are First because Reason 1 the Scripture hath concluded all vnder sinne Gal 3 2● Rom. 3.19 That euery mouth might bee stopped and all the world be subiect to the iudgment of God Al matter of glorying in our selues is taken from vs we are found guilty before God wee haue no excuse no defence no cloake for our selues to couer our sins there is no difference Wee haue all sinned and are depriued of the glory of God and euerlasting life so that all both Iewes and Gentiles are proued to be vnder sinne Secondly we see that death the wages of Reason 2 sinne hath raigned and doth raigne ouer all without difference yea it taketh hold euen on children that sinned not actually like the transgression of Adam If then old and yong taste of death all the posterity of Adam are corrupted in him when he wittingly and willingly wilfully sinned against God We flow from an vncleane fountaine we grow out of a bitter root we are as branches of the wilde vine Thus the Apostle reasoneth Death raigned frō Adam to Moses Rom. 5.14 euen ouer them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam which was the figure of him that was to come So then sinne and death goe together as mother and daughter
wisedome are oft-tentimes enemies vnto faith fol. 539 14 Things vnpossible in the eyes of men are possible with God fol. 540 15 It is the duty of masters to reprooue their seruants fol. 541 16 Inferiors must shew subiection and vse speeches of reuerence toward their superiors Ibid. 17 Young men are ordinarily rash in iudging and censuring of others fol. 542 18 Enuy is to bee shunned and auoided of all Gods people fol. 543 19 The godly do heartily desire the good growth of the whole Church fol. 544 20 God giueth good things by meanes fol. 546 21 The iudgements of God do often fall vpon men sodainly before they be aware fol. 546 CHAP. XII 1 GOds children oftentimes find great discomfort at their hands of whom they expect the greatest comfort fol. 553 2 Contentions and strife are often in the Church betweene the members of the same body fol. 554 3 Ambition and desire of preheminence are the greatest plagues to the Church fol. 555 4 Proud and ambitious men doe shew themselues most enuious and outragious against the most excellent most painfull seruants of God fol. 557 5 God vnderstandeth all the waies of men how secret soeuer they seeme to be fol. 558 6 Euery man in his owne cause should be meek and gentle ready to put vp wrongs and iniuries fol. 560 7 God neuer bringeth iudgement vpon any but hee searcheth and findeth sufficient cause fol. 562 8 God reuealeth himselfe to one more then to another and giueth greater graces to some then he doth to others fol. 563 9 The Church or faithfull people of God are rightly and truly the house of God Ibid. 10 It is required of all the Ministers of God that they be found faithfull and conscionable in their places fol. 564 11 The wrath of God is iustly kindled and stirred vp against all offenders fol. 567 12 God heareth not their praiers that lie in their sinnes and are not reconciled vnto him fol. 568 13 Wee ought to be humbled for the sinnes we haue committed albeit we feele no punishment vpon vs. fol. 569 14 Albeit Gods children put vp wrongs and pray not against them yet God will not put them vp 15 Such as haue the cheefe hand in sinne are principally subiect vnto punishment fol. 572 16 God doth mingle his chastisements with much mercy and doth not deale with vs according to our sinnes fol. 573 17 None can be free from iudgement hauing sinned fol. 574 CHAP. XIII 1 IT is our duty to vse meanes to further Gods prouidence fol. 577 2 The faithfull must deale wisely in all their enterprises fol. 579 3 Wicked men speake fairest when they mean foulest fol. 580 4 The greatest part are for the most part the worst fol. 581 5 God hath euer had some witnesses of his truth in all ages fol. 584 6 The euill of others though they be many may not be followed of vs. fol. 585 7 It is our duty to exhort and stir vp one another to good things fol. 586 8 Hypocrisie though long couered is at length vncased fol. 588 CHAP. XIIII 1 VVEe are naturally ready to hearken to seducers and deceiuers fol. 591 2 Wicked men adde sinne vnto sinne and proceede from euill to worse fol. 592 3 The faithfull are greeued for the sinnes of others fol. 594 4 GOD is a shield to his but taketh no care nor charge of his enemies fol. 595 5 Such as are Gods seruants shall be euilly intreated fol. 596 6 Among all iudgements sent for sinne the plague and pestilence is one fol. 597 7 Threatnings of Gods iudgment conditional fol. 600 8 The means to cal back iudgments is prayer fol. 602 9 It is a good plea to mooue the Lord to mercy to put him in minde c. fol. 605 10 God is of much patience long-suffering fol. 606 11 The blessings which we enioy c. fol. 608 12 Sin generally entertained bringeth with it a generall destruction fol. 610 13 The Word deliuered not regarded c. fol. 612 14 Sin and the punishment of sin c. fol. 613 15 God visiteth the sins of the fathers on the children fol. 615 16 The chiefest offēders shal be chiefly punisht fol. 618 17 Sin is pleasant in the beginning c. fol. 619 18 Wicked men hauing giuen themselues to sinne doe wilfully run on therein p. 622 CHAP. XV. 1 Of the meat and drinke offering fol. 625 2 The Church is as one body c. fol. 627 3 Whatsoeuer we haue we haue it from God fol. 630 4 Ignorance of Gods word is agreeuous sinne fol. 631 5 There is a difference betweene sin and sin fol. 635 6 Sin is come to the hight c. fol. 636 7 Euery sin is so much the greater c. fol. 638 8 God punisheth for sins of vngodlines c. fol. 640 9 The Sabbath day must be kept holy fol. 643 10 All must haue knowledge in the Scripture fol. 647 Chapter 16. 1 Whatsoeuer euil men do c. fol. 649 2 The Ministers by their office c. fol. 651 3 The greater our meanes are to preuent sin fol. 652 4 To despise and resist the Ministery c. fol. 653 5 Obstinate sinners reuile their reprouers fol. 655 6 Gods children ought to be angry at sinne fol. 656 7 God respecte●h not the workes of euill men fol. 657 8 The Ministers must continue in teaching fol. 658 9 Such as haue society with wicked persons fol. 660 10 God neuer striketh c. fol. 661 11 Conspirators shal come to destruction fol. 663 12 When man sinneth and is punished c fol. 667 13 The workes of Gods iustice c. fol. 668 14 Wicked men will not be warned c. fol. 669 15 Great is the necessity of the Ministery fol. 671 16 The force of prayer is very great fol. 673 17 Christ the mediator between God and mā fol. 675 CHAP. xvii 1 God is very desirous to haue sinners c fol. 678 2 God can worke miracles aboue nature fol. 679 3 Obedience is required of all Gods seruants fol. 683 4 God is better then his word c. ibid 5 God is able to giue life c. fol. 684 6 Gods miracles are wrought openly fol. 688 7 God is to be acknowledged to be iust fol. 691 Chapter xviii 1 Those sins are greatest c. fol. 693 2 A good Minister is a special gift of God fol. 695 3 The The Ministers ought to haue a care fol. 699 4 Ministers must be liberally maintained fol. 701 5 Ministers of meane gifts must be heard fol. 706 6 A sin to reape the profit of any place and not to discharge the duty fol. 709 CHAP. XIX 1 ALL penitent persons shall bee receiued into Gods fauour fol. 713 2 The water of separation the vses thereof fol. 716 CHAP. XX. 1 ALL flesh is subiect to death fol. 726 2 It is a necessary duty to bury the dead fol. 728 3 In all wants we are ready to murmure c. fol. 730
4 In all wrongs and iniuries offered vnto vs wee must flie to God and seeke helpe of him fol. 732 5 Many are the falles of Gods children fol. 734. 6 We liue by Gods appointment c. fol. 737 7 God chastiseth his owne children c. fol. 739 8 We must vse all lawfull meanes to further Gods prouidence fol. 743 9 The Church destitute of helpe is often driuen to craue succour of the enemies thereof fol. 747 10 The consideration of our communion one with another must draw vs to duties of loue c. fol. 749 11 Among all mankinde is a certaine brotherhood and common kindred fol. 750 12 The miseries of the Church of God should moue others to pitty them c. fol. 753 13 Many are the afflictions laid vpon the Church by the enemies thereof fol. 756 14 The consideration of Gods loue to his children must moue vs to shew mercy toward them fol. 757 15 God loueth fauoureth his owne people fol. 759 16 Gods people must abstaine from wrongs fol. 761 17 The enemies of the Church are mercilesse fol. 763 18 Gods threatnings are alwaies accomplished fol. 766 19 The Church must bee left in good estate after our departure out of this life fol. 768 20 The Leuiticall Priesthood passed from one to another fol. 771 21 The cheefe of the Church being taken away the rest are to be greeued fol. 772 CHAP. xxi 1 ENemies are oftentimes suffered to preuaile ouer the Church fol. 776 2 Affliction is of excellent vse c. fol. 779 3 It is lawfull to vow to God c. fol. 780 4 God heareth and granteth the praiers of his children fol. 784 5 Though the Church lie long vnder the Crosse yet God leaueth it not for euer fol. 786 6 Our weaknesse is such that we are ready to fall againe in the same sinnes which we haue renounced fol. 792 7 Naturally wee soone waxe weary and wanton of Gods gifts and contemne his blessings fol. 794 8 All punishments and visitations are inflicted vppon vs by the hand of God fol. 796 9 God hath all creatures c. fol. 799 10 Wicked men are often driuen c. fol. 801 11 We must witnesse our true repentance c. fol. 804 12 It is our duty to pray one for another c. fol. 806 13 God is mercifull to greeuous sinners c. fol. 809 14 The brazen serpent was a figure c. fol. 812 15 The faithfull are forrainers c. fol. 822 16 All wars are ordered by God fol. 824 17 Thanksgiuing to God c. fol. 827 18 All superiors must giue good example c. fol. 830 19 The persecuters and enemies c. fol. 835 20 The people of God must abstaine c. fol. 838 21 The wicked hate the godly without cause fol. 841 22 God oftentimes punisheth one wicked man by the hand of another as wicked as he fol. 843 23 Gods children are oftentimes brought c. fol. 845 24 Poetry is ancient and commendable fol. 847 25 It is our duty to remember publish c. fol. 850 26 Great is the misery of warre fol. 852 27 Idolaters lie open to iudgement fol. 856 28 The enemies of the church c. fol. 858 29 Experience of Gods fauour c. fol. 861 38 Enemies of the church not to be feared fol. 863 CHAP. xxii 1 Euil men feare where no feare is fol. 874 2 Enemies of the Church differing among themselues ioyn against the Church fol. 879 3 Wicked men in troubles resort to Witches fol. 882 4 Wicked men rest vpon vaine things fol. 885 5 Gain gifts and rewards are dangerous fol. 886 6 God somtimes reuealeth his wil to euil men fol. 888 7 Promotions ofttimes draw from God fol. 893 8 Reprouing of sin by an ironical taunting c fol. 895 9 The rage of the wicked against the church fol. 897 10 God deliuereth those that are his c. fol. 902 11 God worketh aboue nature fol. 905 12 We haue no vse of the senses c. fol. 908 13 Euil men are oftentimes reprooued c. fol. 911 14 Idolaters and Infidels were wont c. 15 Wicked mē thogh reproued continue in sin fol. 916 CHAP. xxiii 1 Al religion pretendeth order and zeale fol. 921 2 Euil men are often constrained c. fol. 923 3 The church of God is an holy people c. fol. 925 4 The church abounds with many children fol. 927 5 The wicked haue oftentimes good mntions fol. 930 6 The reasonable soule of man is immortal fol. 933 7 The hope of the wicked is vaine fol. 937 8 Enemies leaue no meanes vnattempted c. fol. 930 9 The wicked in their euill successes c. fol. 942 10 All reuerence is due to the word c. fol. 946 11 The Lord is vnchangeable in al his waies fol. 952 12 To all the members of the Church c. fol. 954 13 It is a priuiledge of the Church c. fol. 658 14 It is a priuiledge belonging to the Church to haue the pure vse of the Word fol. 962 15 No attempts shal ouerthrow the Church fol. 964 16 The church shal haue victory c. fol. 967 17 It belongeth to the Ministers c. fol. 971 18 Many professe piety in the tongue c. fol. 974 19 The wicked are wise in their kinde fol. 978 Chap. xxiiii 1 The things of God are vnknowne till he reueale them to the sonnes of men fol. 984 2 Diuers things God reueald in old time c. fol. 986 3 The church is more excellent then c. fol. 988 4 The Church hath the vpper hand of enemies far stronger then they fol. 991 5 God wil be merciful to those that shew mercy fol. 993 6 Things vnlawfully attempted haue ill ends fol. 998 7 Worldly businesse should not withdraw vs from Christian duties fol. 1000 8 It is a greeuous sin to giue euill counsell fol. 1003 9 The Church sometimes hath rest glory fol. 1009 10 The church shal haue victory fol. 1012 11 Christ Iesus is the day-star arising c. fol. 1015 12 Wars are of great antiquity fol. 1017 13 God punisheth in the same kind and measure as men prouoke him fol. 1019 14 The iudgments of God fall sodainly fol. 1022 15 Such as are in greatest authority c. fol. 1025 16 Such as gape after euill gaine are oftentimes deceiued of their expectation fol. 1027 17 The deuices of euill men intended against the Church do come to nothing fol. 1030 CHAP. xxv 1 It is the practise of all false teachers c. fol. 1036 2 Tentations from pleasures are dangerous fol. 1040 3 The malice of the enemies of the Church is vnsatiable fol. 1044 4 Such as are impure in religion c. 5 It is dangerous to the Church to haue fellowship with the wicked fol. 10●9 6 Fornicatiō calleth down great plagues c. fol. 10●2 7 Superiors and men of high places he open to greeuous iudgements as well as others fol.
Church were many wicked liuers of whom the Apostle saith e 1 Cor 10 5. 1 Cor. 10. With many of them God was not pleased but they were destroyed in the Wildernesse Yea such as were the chiefe among them and excelled in godlinesse aboue the rest as the Cedar doth the low shrub had their failings and infirmities as wee see in Aaron in Miriam and in Moses himselfe as we shall see afterward in this booke Wherefore they are deceiued that seeke for a Church in this life without spot or wrinkle Such in former times were the Donatists and such in our dayes are the Anabaptists whoe shall looke vntill their eyes fall out before they shall finde any company or society wholly separated from al contagion of hypocrites Epicures Libertines and such like loose liuers Christ compareth the Church vnto a draw net cast into the Sea which gathereth fish of all sorts both good and bad Againe heere is comfort for the sincere Ministers of the Gospell to whom the dispensation of the Word and sacraments is committed that they ought not to forsake their calling when they behold the greatest part of their charges and Congregations to take no profite and to receiue no instruction by their ministery but to continue and waite with patience vntil f 2 Tim. 2 26. God wil giue them repentance that they may come out of the snare of the diuell of whom they are holden captiue to do his will Fourthly we learne the vnchangeable loue of God toward his people It is euident by Vse 4 this booke more then by the former how diuersly they prouoked him to wrath by their sinnes as their lust murmuring impatience vnthankfulnesse idolatry and fornication they tempted him in the wildernesse whereby they deserued not onely to be depriued of the Land of Canaan but to bee excluded out of the Kingdome of heauen Notwit●sta●●ing God continued their mercifull Lord still so that his election is immutable g Iohn 13 1. and whom hee loueth he loueth him to the end What then shall we sinne that grace may abound God forbid nay how shall wee that are dead to sinne yet liue therein As his graces guifts are without repentance so they must leade vs to repentance and cause vs to expresse backe againe vnfained loue vnto him who loued vs first Vse 5 Fiftly we haue set before vs many fearefull examples of Gods heauy indignation against sinne and sinners Hee punisheth the murmurings of the people fretting fuming against God in their extremities he taketh vengeance on their idolatry and committing fornication he chastiseth their sedition emulation breach of the Sabboth contempt of authority luste tempting of God and such like wickednesse that thereby wee might learne the feare of God and be admonished to auoide the same sinnes which will bring vpon vs the same or gteater iudgements euen temporall and eternall punishments For God is the same God to them and to vs he will shew himselfe iust and righteous in all his wayes a Psal 5 4. that hee is not a God that loueth wickednesse and that euill shall not dwell with him Hence it is that Paul alluding to these famous and remarkable examples of his iustice saith b 1 Cor. 10 11 These things came vnto them for examples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the worlde are come Let him therefore that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall If his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that trust in him Lastly as wee haue fearefull examples and Vse 6 threatnings of the Lawe manifested in this booke so on the other side wee haue comfortable promises of the Gospell touching our saluation and redemption by Christ Iesus who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification For hee is truely and plainely preached in this booke a type of whom wee haue in the brasen Serpent c Num. 21 9. Iohn 3 14 and 12 32. lifted vp in the wildernesse and healing those that were bitten of the fiery Serpents which Christ expoundeth Ioh. 3 to be meant of his death and lifting vp vpon the Crosse That euery one which beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Likewise the Rocke which Moses did strike yeelding vnto them abundance of water as out of a plentifull Fountaine the Apostle expoundeth of Christ for he saith d Num. 20 10 and 21 16. 1 Cor. 10 4. They did all drinke the same spirituall drinke for they dranke of the spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ The like we might say of Manna of the ashes of the red Cow of the Nazarites besides the sacrifices and ceremonies burnt offerings meat offerings and purifications which were figures painting and pointing out the sacrifice ●nd sufferings of Christ Iesus But because we haue spoken somewhat of them before and more remaineth to be spoken heereafter we will passe them ouer at this time without farther consideration This serueth to confute those which hold that all things were carnall to the Fathers that they had no knowledge of the Messiah but onely a carnall imagination of earthly things These are disciples brought vp in the damnable schoole of Seruetus an arch-enemy to the faith who contradict the Apostles in many places and make the Iewes as Swine fatted in a Stie groueling vpon the earth and neuer lifting vp their heads to a better life The Apostle Peter reasoning against such as taught the necessity of circumcision saith e Act. 15 10 11 Why doe yee tempt God to lay a yoke on the Disciples neckes which neyther our Fathers nor we are able to beare but we beleeue through the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ to be saued euen as they doe Thus wee see Christ was onely the way to Gods Kingdome and that by faith in him the Fathers looked for saluation as well as we Our Sauiour testifieth f Iohn 8 56. that Abraham reioyced to see his day and saw it and was glad So the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes saith g Heb. 13 8. Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same also is for euer As therefore the Couenant of GOD touching life and saluation is for substance one and the same so there is one faith one hope and way to attaine to the Kingdome of heauen for the Fathers in the time of the Law and for vs in the time of the Gospell Thus much of the generall vses of this booke The last point which wee propounded in the beginning to be handled h The diuision of this booke into his parts is the diuision of this booke that we may orderly proceede in the seuerall parts of it Some do diuide it into two parts according to the Chronology or computation of time obserued heerein for in the first nineteene chapters he handleth those things which happened in the wildernesse from the second yeare of their departure out of Egypt to the fortieth yeare
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
Law they are called Priests Exod. 19.24 Thou shalt come vp thou and Aaron with thee but let not the Priests and the people breake through to come vp vnto the Lord lest he breake forth vpon them At this time Aaron and his sonnes were not consecrated to the office of the Priesthood neither was the tribe of Leui chosen to come neere to the Lord and therefore these Priests could be no other but the first borne that were sanctified vnto the Lord which is the point that now we deale withall Reason 1 This will farther appeare vnto vs if we consider what their dignitie was and wherein it consisted who excelled from the beginning in three things First he was Lord ouer his brethren according to that of Isaac when hee blessed Iacob the yonger in stead of the elder and thereby preferred him to the dignitie of the first borne Gen. 27.29 Be Lord ouer thy brethren and let thy mothers children bow downe vnto thee The like wee see in the booke of the Chronicles Chap. 21.3 touching the sonnes of Iehoshaphat Their father gaue them great gifts of siluer and of gold and of precious things with fenced cities in Iudah but the kingdome gaue hee to Iehoram because he was the first borne Secondly he had a double portion Deut. 21.17 that is two parts of all that the father had whereas the rest were contented with a single portion And this was so firmely established and decreed that no man vpon priuate affection ought to be disinherited and the reason is rendred for he is the beginning of his strength and therefore the right of the first borne is his Thirdly he was holy vnto God and was the Priest of the family vnder his father whom for the most part he vsed as an assistant vnto him in the managing of all the affaires thereof All this appeareth plainely in the dissolutenesse that fell out among the sonnes of Iacob which was sufficient to haue wrought the dissolution and desolation of that family when Reuben sinned against his father and defiled his bed by horrible incest he was disinherited and his excellency was diuided among his brethren Iudah gate the scepter Leui had the Priesthood and Ioseph obtained the double portion 2 Chronicles Chapter 5. verses 1 2. Againe as nothing is more naturall then Reason 2 that the father instruct and direct his children and set them forward in the wayes of godlinesse and well doing so nothing is more seemely among brethren then that the elder should help the yonger the stronger assist the weaker and the richer helpe the poorer Now none could be fitter to assist the father in the Kingly and Priestly office while he liued and to second him in them both when hee dyed then the first borne who is said to be the beginning of his strength the excellency of dignity and of power Genesis Chapter 49. verse 3. Seeing then it is iust and right and profitable it ought to be confessed and acknowledged of vs. Lastly heereunto in processe of time was Reason 3 added another reason and a new necessitie of lifting vp their heads when GOD destroyed all the first borne in the land of Egypt so that there was no house wherein there was not one dead Now Exod. 12.29 inasmuch as the first borne of Israel escaped out of this common calamitie as it were a brand taken out of the fire God saith vnto Moses Sanctifie vnto me all the first borne whatsoeuer openeth the wombe among the children of Israel c. it is mine Exodus Chapter 13. verse 1. From hence we may conclude that all the first borne were consecrated vnto GOD and were to bee employed in his seruice This is indeed a type and figure and hath Vse 1 not place among vs howbeit it is written for our admonition vpon whom the endes of the world are come and offereth many good and profitable instructions for our edification This teacheth who are chiefly bound to serue the Lord. The greater our giftes are the fitter we are for God and none is to disdaine to employ themselues and all that is in them to his seruice To this purpose commeth the saying of the wise man Prouerbes Chapter 3. verse 9. Honour the LORD with thy substance and with the first fruites of all thine increase Such as haue receiued the greatest measure of grace are bound to yeeld vnto him the greatest honour and to bring forth the greatest obedience as the fielde that hath most cost bestowed vpon it giueth the greatest encrease Such as haue receiued fiue talents should gaine with them other fiue If he haue made vs as the first borne preferred vs before many other and doubled his Spirit vpon vs as it were a double portion let not vs content our selues in any wise to giue him a simple and single gift or recompence of all his labours bestowed vpon vs. The first reproofe This reprooueth those that scorne the Ministery as base and reiect the calling it selfe as needelesse and superfluous in their eyes that account it too contemptible to employ the best and chiefest of their children in it In former times the first borne were teachers of the families and Ministers of the Church vntill God set apart the tribe of Leui to serue at the altar in the temple The best things that we haue are not too good for God euen to giue them vnto him all the dayes of their life For whom are the best fittest but for him that is best He challenged the eldest to serue him the rest he permitted to the father to be employed as he saw good First God will be serued as it is great reason he should be and afterward he giueth vs leaue to serue our selues Iesse serued the king with his eldest sonne in the warres 1 Sam. 17.13 and kept his yongest at home and bestowed him about his owne businesse If any thinke his first borne to be too good to minister before the Lord he honoureth them aboue the Lord. Doth any thinke himselfe too good or too great a man to be sent as an embassadour from the Prince to forraine estates or rather doe not men sue for such high places and think themselues happy when they attaine vnto them How commeth it then to passe that men of countenance are ashamed to see their children to be the embassadours of the king of kings and to be employed in the greatest seruice to make peace betweene God and man and to saue soules from death and destruction If a man be blessed with many children if any bee more toward in wisdome in learning in iudgment in stayednesse and in giftes he were fittest for the Lord. But the Ministery of the word in our dayes through the abundance of sinne and of iniquity getting the vpper hand is grown into disgrace and contempt because men cannot abide to be reproued whereas to them that are sanctified and shal be saued it is the power of God 1 Cor. 1.24 and the wisedome
him the forme of a seruant and was made in the likenesse of man When the disciples began to contend for place of superiority so that a strife arose among them which of them should be accounted the greatest he propoundeth vnto them his manner of liuing and conuersation and thereby disswadeth them from ambition Luke 22.27 Whether is greater he that sitteth at meat or he that serueth is not he that sitteth at meate but I am among you as he that serueth The whole life of Christ euen from the first moment of his conception vnto the last period of his assumption and ascension from the earth doe preach vnto vs as with a liuely voyce his wonderfull humiliation that he made himselfe as a worme of the earth who was equall in glory with his Father If this example of him that is the authour and finisher of our faith wil not moue vs to true humility nothing in the world will moue vs. Lastly pride is the preparation of vs vnto a fall and the ready way that leadeth to destruction The proude man that climbeth aloft worketh his owne ouerthrow and confusion and the higher we ascend the greater is our downe-fall Salomon in the booke of his Prouerbes beateth much vpon this point as Chap. 11.2 When pride commeth then commeth shame but with the lowly is wisedome and Chap. 16.18 Pride goeth before destruction and an hauty spirit before a fall chap. 18.12 Before destruction the heart of man is hauty and before honour is humility This may be farther confirmed vnto vs by three famous and memorable examples recorded in the Scriptures to wit Nebuchadnezzar Haman and Herod The first whiles he was boasting of great Babylon which he had built for the chamber of the Empire by the might of his power Dan. 4.30 and for the honour of his maiesty was driuen from the company of men and had his habitation with the beasts of the fielde and did eate grasse as oxen The second to wit proud Haman swolne with the conceit of his owne greatnesse while he thought to be clad in royall apparel which the king vsed to weare to bee mounted on horsebacke that the king rideth vpon and to haue the crowne royall that he weareth to be set vpon his head was driuen to play the lacky on foot and to dance attendance as a Page Ester 6.10 and 7.9.10 and not long after fell from the highest toppe and tower of honour to the lowest degree of shame and reproch The third and last example is of Herode who being puffed vp with the Syren songs of Sycophants and Flatterers thought himselfe worthy to take vpon him the honour of God Act. 12 2● but immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him because he gaue not God the glory and he was eaten vp of wormes Behold heere how the greatest sort of men are wonderfully deceiued in their owne imaginations deeming pride as a stirrup to mount vp into the saddle of honour whereas it is a steppe to bring them-downe and a meanes to make them fall into shame and confusion ●e sixt re●oofe Lastly it reproueth such as enuy at the better and higher callings of others These are euen ready to die consume away when they see others placed in greater places and adorned with greater gifts then themselues This is a common sicknesse and sinne and the cause of many euils that swarme in Church common-wealth When Ioshua heard the Elders in the hoste to prophesie he enuyed them for Moses sake ●mb 11.28 ● 3.26 The like we see in Iohns disciples when they heard of Christs glory and fame encreasing more more they feared it would turne to the diminishing of the credite and estimation of their master The remedies to preuent this mischiefe before it come or to pull it vp when it hath taken hold of vs are many First let vs acquaint our hearts to reioyce at the good that doth befall them and to be glad when any thing befalleth them for the comfort of their soules or bodies as when one member is had in honour all the rest are cheered and refreshed by it Cor. 12.26 Secondly we are to consider that all places of preferment come from God as the Prophet teacheth Promotion commeth neither from the East nor from the West ●l 76.6 7. nor from the South but God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Thirdly we must al of vs make this account of our gifts that they are bestowed for the common good and not onely for the priuate benefit of such as possesse them so that the eye cannot say to the hand Cor. 12.21 nor the head that is highest to the foot that is lowest I haue no need of thee without the destruction of the whole body Fourthly the fewer our gifts and the lower our places and the smaller our callings are the lesser lighter account we are to make wheras such as haue the greatest charges haue the greatest account to make according to the rule of Christ ●e 12.48 Vnto whomsoeuer much is giuen of him shall be much required and to whom men haue committed much of him they will aske the more The higher therefore a man is exalted the more is he bound to God and to them ouer whom he is set and to those among whom he liueth so that there is no gift no honour no calling without his burden and account For as the starres haue light but for mans vse so we haue gifts but for others benefit Lastly this consideration if there were no other is sufficient to correct all pride and ambition in vs to wit to examine our owne ability and we shall finde that there cannot be so small a charge committed vnto vs but the same is able to make our shoulders shrinke and crack yea to bow and breake if we doe our duties as we ought to doe For our infirmities are so great and our strength so little that whosoeuer sifteth himselfe throughly and tryeth his owne giftes without hypocrisie and flattery shall find that he is able to do as good almost as nothing at all If we thinke vpon these things it will be as a bridle to restrain vs from soaring and climbing so high and a forcible means to breed in vs contentation in our places whatsoeuer they be whether high or low whether great or little Thirdly it is a comfortable thing to a mans Vse 3 conscience in life and death in prosperity and aduersity to remember that we haue thus serued God fulfilled the callings with a good conscience that he hath laid vpon vs. The faithfull seruant that hath giuen to his fellow seruants their portion of meat in due season shall be most happy and be made ruler ouer all his goods He that occupied his masters talents and gained by them heard this comfortable voyce Matth. 24.47 and 25.23 Well done good and faithfull seruants thou hast beene faithfull ouer a few things I will
and infirmities of the Ministers should not bring the holy ordinances of God into contempt Lastly this law seemeth to be restrained to such Leuites as bare the burden of the Tabernacle the Sanctuary all the instruments of it For God will haue no man to liue without a calling he aloweth idlenesse in no estate and condition What then did the Leuites What the Leuites did after 50. yeares of age They trained vp younger men they instructed them and were no doubt as the Ouerseers of the schooles of the Prophets in them were the younger sort brought vp and called the children of the Prophets Besides they preached to the people and taught the Law of the Lord which is no idle worke but a matter of great labour exceeding paines so that albeit they bare not material burdens which required strength of body yet they bare weightier burdens then those they had the charge of mens soules lying heauy vpon them which is able to presse downe the feete and to weary the shoulders of the strongest man Last of all no doubt they were present president at the oblations that were brought they offered sacrifices and burned incense vnto God in the Tabernacle so many of them as were of the number of the Priests as appeareth by the age of Aaron who ministred in the place of Gods seruice after the age of fifty It is noted of Zachary the Priest that he was an old man Luc. 1 7. he was well striken in yeares which cannot be supposed or imagined but he was aboue 50. yeares of age yet he ceassed not to execute the Priests office before God in the order of his course and burned incense in the Temple Nay the circumstances of the text in that place do rather guide vs and as it were leade vs by the hand to thinke that he was more then threescore peraduenture fourscore and it may be aboue otherwise there had beene no great barre and impediment on his behalfe but he might haue a childe wheras he obiecteth against the Angel not onely the age of his wife but also his owne age Whereby shall I know this Luc. 1 18. for I am an old man and my wife well striken in yeares So then all the Leuites being come to the age of fifty trained vp young men vnder them they were as tutors vnto them taught the people knowledge sitting in the chaire of Moses and the Priests offered sacrifice to God first in the Tabernacle and after in the Temple their time of vacation therefore was granted from such labours and seruice as required the strength of the body which Moses himselfe seemeth to point vnto afterward in this booke From the age of fifty yeares they shall cease waiting vpon the seruice thereof Num. 8 25 26 and shall serue no more but shall minister with their brethren in the Tabernacle of the Congregation to keepe the charge and shall do no seruice c. Verses 2 3. Take the summe of the sonnes of Kohath c from thirty yeares old and aboue c. See heere a different manner obserued in numbring of this Tribe from the former Before they were numbred at a moneth olde because then they were fit to be presented to God but yet not fit to execute the office of the Ministery or manage any businesse of charge and importance Now none are numbred vnder thirty because before they were not capable of this office Such as were to serue in the warres among the other Tribes were numbred at 20. yeares old but such as were to appeare before the Lord to doe the warfare of his seruice Numb 8 25. as the Scripture speaketh must be 30. yeares of age so that he requireth greater maturity in the gifts of the body and minde greater wisedome vnderstanding in such as minister in the Tabernacle then in such as pitch vp their Tents and go out with an army There is wonderfull skil required in leading an host of men against the enemy but to be a Captaine ouer the Lords people and to conduct them into the field against the spirituall enemies of our soules where the danger is greater is a matter of deeper knowledge pollicy experience and iudgement We learne from hence how the Doctrine 1 Ministers of the word ought to be qualified The Minis● of the wo●● must be man of grauity 〈◊〉 moderan●● their affe●●ons they must be men of grauity wisedome sobriety and moderation of all their affections For if this were required of those that serued in the Tabernacle and the Temple in the time of the old Testament that onely they of 30. yeares old and aboue euen vntill fifty should enter into that calling who then were in the prime and flower of their age and had the greatest gifts much more is it necessarily required of the Ministers of the Gospel that they be men of sobriety constancy staiednesse wisedome iudgement and diligence Such as were to builde the Tabernacle and to frame all the instruments of it and appurtenances vnto it were filled with the Spirit of God in wisedome and in vnderstanding Exod. 31 3. and in knowledge and in all manner of workmanship All such as had any hand in the erecting thereof were fitted to it for God did put wisedome in the hearts of all that were wise-hearted verse 6. that so they might make all that he had commanded them The building vp of Gods Church is a greater worke and therefore the workmen appointed to the edification of it must not haue lesser gifts or baser qualities Hence it is that the sons of Eli are noted to bee wicked men greeuous sinners that knew not the Lord 1 Sam 2 1●● because they bare themselues without sobriety temperance and discretion they were ful of lightnesse wantonnesse excesse and couetousnesse The sinnes of Ieroboam are set out that he made not choise of the Tribe of Leui 1 Kings 12 ● but took the scum of the people and the basest of them men of euill note Christ willeth his Disciples to be wise as serpents Math. 10. 1 Tim. ●● Titus 1 ● The Apostle Paul describing what the Ministers ought to be teacheth that they must be vnreproueable and blamelesse they must be wise iust patient temperate discreete not selfe willed not soone angry not giuen to fighting and brawling So that the Ministers set apart for the worke of the Ministery must not onely be apt to teach and able to diuide the word of truth aright but there is farther required of them that they be qualified with wisedome with knowledge with gifts of gouernment discretion in their calling and conuersation As this is plainely proued vnto vs by these consents so it may be strengthened by these Reason 1 few yet forcible reasons First because they haue oftentimes giuen vnto them in the scripture the name of Elders Many titles are giuen vnto them and euery one of them carrieth some instruction and admonition with it vnto
and laid in a manger he was persecuted of Herod he was tempted of the diuell slandered of the Pharisies condemned of Pilate and crucified by the Iewes He that is the first begotten of the dead the Prince of the Kings of the earth he that is Alpha and Omega the first and the last he that hath the seuen starres in his hand and the keyes of hell and death was despised and reiected of men Esay 53 7. and brought as a Lambe to the slaughter and as asheep before her shearers is dumbe so he opened not his mouth We cannot compare in highnesse and greatnesse with him whose eyes are like fire and his feet like brasse who is the beginning of the creatures of God yet none hath sunke downe so low into sorrow as he hath done neither bin baptized with the baptisme that he was baptized withall Math. 20. Let vs not therefore thinke it strange that we are made low but reioyce that wee are made like vnto Christ himselfe while the wicked are so pampered with delights and fatted as Oxen vnto the slaughter that pride compasseth them about as a chaine and violence couereth them as a garment Psal 73.6 Luke chapter 16 25. Lastly let vs vse all good meanes that God Vse 3 hath appointed to beginne in vs this sweet grace of contentation There is no heauenly gift but God hath appointed some waies to breed it and beget it in vs. The first meanes is to resigne vp our selues wholly to the will and pleasure of God and to submit our willes to his will that as wee pray Gods will may be done we may be carefull indeed to do it and that for diuers causes First as hee is infinite in wisedome so hee knoweth much better then wee our selues what is best for our selues especially for the saluation of our soules We see how children take no care nor thought for things of this world how they shall liue what they shall eate and what they shall put on We are content when we are sicke to accept vpon the Physitions word of any receit yea oftentimes bitter pilles and potions which our stomacke loatheth because we know he loueth vs and that his skill exceedeth ours We are desirous of riches or of honours to be great in the world he in his great wisedome denyeth them because hee knoweth they are hurtfull to vs not healthfull for vs but as it were windy meate which would not nourish our soules but puffe them vp with pride and make them poore in grace so that we should be as vnfit to enter into the streight gate and narrow way as the Camell to go through the eie of a needle This reason is vsed by our Sauiour Math. 6 verse 32. After all these things doe the Gentiles seeke for your heauenly Father knoweth that ye haue need of all these things Where he laboureth to work contentation in vs by this consideration because God our heauenly Father knoweth better then our selues whereof we stand in need Againe he is Almighty and therefore fully able to supply our wants as he can giue riches without contentment so he can giue contentment without riches for it is he that can satiate the weary soule ●●n 31 25. and replenish euery sorrowfull soule so that we haue no cause to doubt of his sufficiency who hath said he is God all-sufficient He filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth the rich empty away Moreouer he is as mercifull as he is powerfull and infinite in loue toward vs who hath so dearely loued vs that he hath not spared his owne Sonne but giuen him to suffer death for vs that so he might bring vs to life and saluation and if he haue giuen vs his Sonne how should he not with him giue vs all things else ● 8 32. There is no sonne but resteth in the care and prouision his father maketh for him and by this we may proue whether we be sons or not Another meanes is to liue an holy godly life seruing him in sincerity of hart and vprightnesse of life Godlinesse is a iewell of such value that it will enrich vs and fill our houses with treasures because it is profitable vnto all things ●m 4 8 ●6 6. and hath the promises of this life and of the life to come The Prophet saith He will withhold no good thing from them that walke vprightly Psalme 84 11. It is a good conscience that maketh a continuall feast Prou. 15 verse 15. God is rich in promising and gracious in performing he oftentimes performeth more then he promised neuerlesse He saith If we seeke first of all the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse all outward and earthly things shall be ministred vnto vs Math. 6 33. He maketh a mercifull promise howbeit he addeth a condition which on our part must be performed If we be not behind in this duty we may safely yea securely cast our selues vpon his promise and prouidence hauing sure interest in them and a good title vnto them But such as liue in their sinnes and minde not the matters of his kingdome can neuer haue this contentation because they can neuer with comfort and assurance of his helpe flye vnto him as a child to his father but rather runne away from him as the malefactour from the Iudge or the traitor from his Prince who beareth the sword to take vengeance on him for his euill deeds and deserts Thirdly it is our duty to bee thankfull for things present let vs cast our eyes vnto them and looke stedfastly vpon them and neuer turne our selues from him that is the giuer of them and consider that we haue not deserued the thousand part of that which is bestowed vpon vs. Be it that we want many things yet hath God dealt graciously with vs and sent a gracious raine into our harts the good things that he withholdeth he doth not of malice and enuy Gen. 3. as the diuell perswaded our first parents but in loue and mercy toward vs as we noted before If hee should take from vs all his blessings which are innumerable bring vpon vs all his iudgements for our sins we could not complaine against him forasmuch as they haue iustly deserued it Besides how many blessings do we enioy that others haue not who are no worse then we are and peraduenture better And from how many calamities are we freed which haue fallen vpon others who were not greater sinners then we are and peraduenture lesser It is a signe of vnthankfulnesse to lessen the gifts we haue receiued and to value them as matters of no worth in comparison of such blessings as our selues doe want or as others haue obtained If this point be well obserued it will condemne many of vs who are guilty of greeuous sinne against God this way 34. And Moses and Aaron and chechiefe of the Congregation numbered the sonnes of the Kohathites after their families and after the house of their fathers 35 From thirtie
is vncleane by a dead body touch any holy thing he maketh it to be vnclean vnto him It defileth also the land and places wherein sinners are conuersant Leuit. 18.24 25. God loatheth the houses and habitations of such soule persons albeit they be decked with ornaments of gold and siluer Sinne depriueth a man of all those graces that did adorne him in the sight of God and men and causeth God to turne away his fauour and louing countenance from vs Deu. 23 14. In his fauour is life and at his right hand are pleasures for euermore if he turne away his face and fauour from vs and deny his louing kindnesse vnto vs nothing shall doe vs any good Vse 1 We are now to handle and heare the vses that arise from hence First we may conclude that such are blessed as keepe diligent watch and ward ouer themselues lest they fall asleep in carnall pleasures in the cares of this world and securely wallow in sinne and so be spoyled of the precious robe and rayment of the soule which is giuen vs in Christ Iesus This admonition is often giuen in holy Scripture especially in the new Testament because as the world groweth neerer to his end so sinfull men will grow lesse wary and watchfull in mind to good things and therefore we must looke the better to our selues This vse is concluded Reuel 16.15 Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments lest he walke naked and men see his filthinesse If we had spirituall eyes to see and discerne the vglinesse of sinne and could behold it in it owne nature we would account them happy that escape it On the other side their condition is cursed and wretched that giue themselues ouer to the lusts of all kinde of sinne Mans wretched condition in regard of sinne they are polluted and abominable in the sight of God If we should see a man wallowing in the mire or tumbling himselfe in his owne dung that nothing appeared vpon him but filthinesse how would we loath him and shunne him how squeymish would we be to come neere him how fast would we flie from him Or if we should see a man turning to his owne vomit how would our stomacks abhorre and rise against him we would account such as dogges and swine and no better But thus the case standeth with all vnregenerate persons whose whole life is a continuall practise of sinne they wallow in the most stinking and filthy mire that may bee found and turne to their owne vomit and eat vp worse then their owne excrements No spots and blemishes are like to the spots and blemishes of sinne that doe leaue a staine and guiltinesse in the soule This doth the Apostle Peter ayme at in his second Epistle chap. 2. ver 22. It is happened vnto them according to the true prouerbe the dogge is turned to his owne vomit againe and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire True it is sinne carryeth with it a beautifull shew howbeit it casteth a false light it carryeth with it a false glosse like the harlot that painteth her face that she may seem faire It is like the forbidden fruit whereof our first parents did taste the tree seemed good for food Gen. 3.6 and pleasant to the eyes and to be desired to make one wise but when they had once eaten they saw the filthinesse of their owne nakednesse and hidde themselues from the presence of the Lord. It is like the harlot mentioned in the Prouerbes she caught a yong man voyde of vnderstanding she kissed him and with an impudent face said vnto him Come Pro. 7.18 let vs take our fill of loue vntill the morning let vs solace our selues with loues With much faire speech she caused him to yeeld and with flattering of her lippes she forced him til a dart strike through his liuer as a birde hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life And in another place the wise man saith Pro. 5.3 4 5. The lippes of a strange woman droppe as an hony combe and her mouth is smoother then oyle but her end is bitter as wormewood sharpe as a two edged sword her feete goe downe to death her steppes take hold of hell Heere we haue a most true and liuely description of the nature of sinne looke vpon this picture of an harlot that Salomon hath drawne before our eyes behold the shape and image of it and wee shall quickely and easily know what sin is It fawneth vpon vs and flattereth vs it speaketh faire vnto vs but in the end it wil destroy vs. It is like vnto Ioab and is ready to serue vs as he serued Amasa 2 Sam. ●0 ● He said vnto him art thou in health my brother he tooke him with the right hand to kisse him but withall he smote him with his sword and shed out his bowels to the ground Or it dealeth with vs as Iael dealt with Sisera Iud. 4.18 5.26 26. She cryed vnto him Turne in my lord turne in to me feare not He asked a little water to drinke and she gaue him milke and brought him butter in a lordly dish but withall shee put her hand to the naile and her right hand to the workmans hammer and with the hammer she smote him and then cut off his head when she had pearsed and stricken through his temples Thus doth sinne come to vs masked and couered it offereth vs many sweete delights many carnall pleasures many goodly profits and commodities so that we wil turne in vnto it and commit it without feare but the issues thereof are the issues of death it taketh an hammer and knocketh vs on the head In the booke of Iob Zophar speaking of the state and portion of the wicked compareth sinne to sweet meates which oftentimes haue sowre sawce Let vs heare it in his own words Iob 20.12 13 14 15 16. Though wickednesse be sweet in his mouth though he hide it vnder his tongue though he spare it and forsake it not but keepe it still within his mouth yet his meate in his bowels is turned it is the gall of Aspes within him he hath swallowed downe riches and he shall vomit them vp againe God shall cast them out of his belly he shall sucke the poison of Aspes the vipers tongue shall slay him Sinne is as an hooke that is cunningly baited euery way to catch vs and entrap vs but the wages of it in the end is death It dealeth with vs as the diuell dealt with Christ ●●h 4.9 he shewed him all the kingdomes of the world and the glory of them but then hee must fall downe and worship him Woe vnto them therefore that haue their eyes closed and shut vp that they cannot see the deformitie of sinne in his naturall colours but looke vpon it in a deceitfull glasse It fareth worse with such then if they had many foule diseases about them that can onely annoy the body but are
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
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
Lord plagued him and his house with great plagues vntill hee had restored her If a bare purpose to commit adultery and that ignorantly called for iudgment vpon an heathen king how much more shall the liuing in this sinne bring moe stripes vpon vs that liue in the light of the Gospel haue the truth plainely reuealed vnto vs forasmuch as he that knoweth his masters will doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes The third crying sinne is the oppression of such persons as are destitute of helpe which is ioyned with cruelty as for example such as are widdowes fatherlesse strangers poore innocents whose cry God hath promised to heare and to helpe them This we heard before out of the booke of Exodus If you afflict them in any wise and they cry at all vnto me Exo. 22 ●● Deut. 154. I will surely heare their cry and my wrath shall waxe hot and I will kill you with the sword and your wiues shall be widdowes and your children fatherlesse The Prophet Habakkuk prophesieth against such and painteth out their sinne in liuely colours chap. 2 9 11 12. Woe to him that coueteth an euill couetousnesse to his house that he may set his nest on high that he may be deliuered from the power of euill c. The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beame out of the timber shal answer it One shall say Woe to him that buildeth a Towne with blood another shall make answer and stablisheth a City by iniquity These oppressers do sucke out as it were the blood and life of the needy that haue none to whom to cry out for redresse but in the eares of the Lord. They dare not buckle and encounter with the mighty for as when the pot of earth and of yron meet together the earthen vessell is dashed in peeces so when the mighty and the needy striue the poore man striueth against the streame and bringeth much misery vpon himselfe Their helpe is onely in God the Father of all consolation If men stop their eares against them and will not rescue them out of the snare of the fowler and the net of the hunter let them abide vnder the shadow of the Almighty and shroud themselues vnder his wings who wil couer them with his feathers and heare them in their afflictions The last crying sinne is the poore labourers wages that are wrongfully and vniustly deteined this also cryeth aloud and neuer ceaseth vntill God hearken to the cry of it Many thinke it goods well gained that can be gotten from the poore but they shall finde it fret as a canker and consume as a moth the residue of their substance Hereunto commeth that law of the Lord Deut. 24 14 15. Thou shalt not oppresse an hired seruant that is poore needy c. thou shalt giue him his hire neither shall the Sunne goe downe vpon it for he is poore and setteth his heart vpon it lest he cry against thee vnto the Lord and it be sinne vnto thee Where wee see that this consideration of committing sinne against God ought to enter into vs to restraine vs from doing wrong against any especially the poore and needy brother or the stranger that is in the Land And to this purpose speaketh the Apostle Iames chap. 5 4. Behold the hire of the labourers which haue reaped downe your fields which is of you kept back by fraud cryeth the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of Saboth ●ld ●cry● Whereby it appeareth that there is a double kinde of crying one of iniquity and wickednes the other of the oppressed and afflicted If one of these ceasse yet the other shall neuer ceasse crying It falleth out oftentimes through the power and might of the greater sort that the poore dare not mutter or murmure if they begin to cry out and complaine their mouthes are soone stopped because their angry lookes make them afraid of their displeasure their seuere threatnings are too heauy a burden for them to beare but the other shall neuer giue ouer crying the sinne of the oppressors shall cry against them for vengeance as we see whē Abel could not cry yet his blood cried and was heard Sinne hath a voice more shrill then the sound of a Trumpet for that be it neuer so loud vanisheth in the aire cannot pierce the Clouds whereas the noise that issueth and proceedeth from sin out-reacheth the Clouds entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts What then Must we imagine that sinne is a bodily thing ●he cry ●e it that hath a mouth to speake a voice to cry No this cry is nothing else but the vnchangeable order of Gods iustice punishing sinne euen as at the instance and importunity of the innocent party a iust Iudge cannot but releeue the oppressed and punish the guilty and so doe iustice according to the office committed vnto him As if it were said blood will haue vengeance vncleannesse will haue vengeance oppression will haue vengeance fraud and deceit will haue vengeance God cannot but punish all these crying sins because he is a iust Iudge otherwise he were vnrighteous It is the nature of all sin to prouoke God to enter into iudgement with the sinner but especially these horrible and abhominable crimes mentioned before And as it is the nature of sinne to cry out to GOD for vengeance so it is the nature of God to punish sinne and to take vengeance of it Therefore they greatly deceiue both themselues and others that make him like to one of the gods of the Gentiles not to be offended at all or very little displeased with sinne and not to regard what men doe As if iustice were not essentiall vnto him or as if he could deny himselfe or as if he could ceasse to be God for as soone he may do these as the other But if it can in any sort agree to him ●ent Pa● in Gen. 4. that he can bee not willing to punish sinne then he can also not hate sinne forasmuch as to hate is nothing else but to be willing to punish reiect And if it be incident to him not to hate sinne then also it will follow that hee can loue and like sinne If he can loue sinne he can deny himselfe and destroy himselfe he can like of the workes of the diuell which is vnpossible to do and horrible blasphemy to affirme Lastly seeing whatsoeuer is of the nature of sinne is against God it directeth vs what Vse 5 we are to do when we haue any way sinned and desire to haue peace of conscience we must not goe to Saints or Angels whom wee haue not offended who are not able to be reuenged of vs but it is our duty to call for mercy at his hands against whom onely wee haue sinned and to seeke to be reconciled to him whose lawes we haue transgressed and who is able to cast body and soule
many of the cheefest among the Iewes withheld the tithes and offerings from them to whom they were due by the expresse gift of God Verse 11. so that the house of God was forsaken he was mercifull vnto him againe and spared him and made him to bee magnified of all the people according to the saying of the Lord 1 Sam. 2 30. Them that honour me I will honour and they that despise mee shall be lightly esteemed Consider with me farther another example to wit touching Ebed-melech The fourth example when as the Prophet Ieremy by false suggestions and accusations was thrust into the dungeon where was no water but mire so that he sunke down and stucke fast in it and must of necessity perish in short time if he were not speedily deliuered this stranger spake to the King for him and was content to take vpon him the enuy of many that he might expose himselfe vnto My Lord the King these men haue done euill in all that they haue done to Ieremiah the Prophet whom they haue cast into the dungeon and hee is like to dye for hunger in the place where he is for there is no more bread in the City Ier. 38 9. So he drew him vp with cords and tooke him vp out of the dungeon What then He that remembred Ieremy in prison hath his owne life giuen him for a prey and he that lifted vp the Prophet out of the dungeon is assured also of his owne deliuerance God doth greatly accept of the compassion he shewed and rewarded it to the full so that Ieremy is sent vnto him with this ioyfull message in those miserable daies when Ierusalem was taken by the enemies the Princes were slaine with the sword Zedekiah the King had his eyes put out his sonnes were slaine before his face the Kings house was burned with fire the walles of the City were broken downe and the remnant of the people were carried away into captiuity in the middest of all these tumults publike calamities I say rhe Prophet receiueth a commandement from God to goe vnto this godly Ethiopian being one of the Eunuches that was in the Kings house and to say vnto him Thus saith the Lord of hosts the God of Israel Behold I will bring my words vpon this Citty for euill and not for good and they shall bee accomplished in that day before thee but I will deliuer thee in that day saith the LORD and thou shalt not be giuen into the hand of the men of whom thou art afraid for I will surely deliuer thee and thou shalt not fall by the sword but thy life shall be for a prey vnto thee because thou hast put thy trust in mee saith the Lord Ier. 39 16 17 18. He had done good to Ieremy God doth good vnto him and accounteth it as done vnto himselfe ●ift ex●e The last example shall be out of the New Testament mentioned by the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercy vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when hee was at Rome he sought mee out very diligently found me the Lord grant vnto him that hee may finde mercy of the Lord in that day Where hee prayeth that he might reape as he had sowed and gather as he had scattered and receiue as he had bestowed to wit mercy for mercy goodnesse for goodnesse and kindnesse for kindnesse and no doubt God heard his praier according to his promise and recompenced him that had refreshed the Apostle This is that which the Lord promiseth in the Prophet Malachi chap. 3 10. If they would robbe him and spoile him no more but bring all his tithes into his house he passeth his word toward thē that they should see plenty vpon their labors and a remouing of those meanes that caused famine and misery to fall vpon them and to come among them as before he threatned denounced that as they spoiled God so God spoiled them and as they caused famine to be in his house by keeping backe his portion so he caused scarsenesse of bread and cleannesse of teeth in their houses causing extreme want to bee in the middest of them in withholding and keeping backe his blessings and in sending vpon them his greeuous plagues Now hee telleth them that if they murmure not at the maintenance of his Ministers but pay them truely and sustaine them conscionably hee will satisfie them with good things and remoue from them euill things He would open the windowes of heauen vnto them and poure out a blessing without measure And thus we see how we may finde comfort vnto our selues and strengthen our faith by such examples as the Scripture affoordeth vnto vs. Beside the Ramme of attonement whereby an attonement shall bee made for him In these words we are to consider the last but yet the chiefe and principall meanes of sanctification which also is a satisfaction to God and a putting and purging away of the sinne of defrauding our neighbour And heerein indeed standeth the onely way of expiation blotting out iniquity howbeit set downe in the ceremony For neither can confession of our sinnes to God nor making restitution of our euill gotten goods to man put away our sin we may confesse all the day long we may bestow all our goods to feede the poore and giue our bodies to bee burned and yet our sinnes shall lye heauy vpon vs and presse vs downe to the gates of hell it is onely the blood of Christ as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled that can do it Neither is it enough for vs to say Christ hath washed vs from our sinnes he hath paid a sufficient price for them and therefore it skilleth not whether they bee acknowledged to God or recompenced to men For we haue seene that GOD requireth besides the Ramme of attonement that such as haue wronged their brethren must both confesse and restore or else they can haue no benefit of reconciliatiō to God by the death of Christ We are therefore in this place to marke how our sinnes are purged which is expressed vnder a type figure True it is the blood of Buls and other beasts is not able to take away sinne Heb. 9 12 and 10 4. neither is it possible that the offering vp of guifts and sacrifices could make holy concerning the conscience him that did the seruice Verse 9. and sanctifie the commers thereunto Hebrewes 10 verse 1. For sinne is an offence done to God a breach of the Law and a wounding of the conscience But what is the blood of Bullocks able to do touching the curing of these mischiefes and maladies Will I eate saith the Lord the flesh of Buls or drinke the blood of Goats Psal 50 13. Doubtlesse such things of small account and reckning haue no force or efficacy to appease the wrath of God which is infinite Besides the iustice of GOD required that man himselfe
The naturall man knoweth not the things of the spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned So we may say the naturall man cannot tel how or what to pray but the spirituall man that iudgeth al things knoweth both how what to pray Flesh blood reuealed not the knowledge of Christ to Peter Math. ●● ● but the Father which is in heauen so flesh and blood cannot reueale to vs what we should aske in prayer but the Spirit helpeth our infirmities Where wee see hee opposeth the Spirite vnto our selues in that which we cannot do we shall haue the Spirit to bee our teacher and to instruct vs how to perfourme it Secondly it is falsely supposed that when wee haue a praier composed to our hands and we reade that praier that then we need not the helpe of the Spirit For need we not the helpe of the Spirit to make vs lift vp our hearts to God to giue vs a feeling of our wants to keepe vs frō earthly cogitations wandring thoghts to stirre vp faith in vs with assurance to receiue whatsoeuer we desire and many things of like sort the which if they be wanting whether our praier be conceiued or prescribed read in the booke or made without the booke it is of no vertue or value neither doth God accept thereof Secondly this is a great comfort to such as Vse 2 as are weake and yet withall willing to come to the throne of grace to such I say as haue not the gift to conceiue and inuent praier thēselues Let them from this ground heare a word of consolation Let no man discourage such from prayer neither let such discourage themselues For shall they neuer pray or should they neuer fall downe before the Almighty O yes let them come they ought to come if the mercy of God cannot allure thē let their owne infirmity constraine them If they cannot conceiue a praier themselues shall this excuse them for the intermitting of this duty Let them come to God and vse the praiers of other men As he that could not come vnto Christ by reason of his impotency did not reason thus within himselfe Alas I am not able to goe to him of my selfe I will therefore neuer seeke helpe or labour to be cured Nay he rather reasoned thus as it appeareth by the meanes he vsed I am not able to goe to Christ of my selfe ● 19. I will therefore be borne of others rather then not seeke helpe at all so should we reason I cannot pray of my selfe I will therefore helpe mine infirmity by vsing the benefit of other mens praiers which is no more then to vse the feete of others when we haue not the vse of our owne And as it was all one to him that was taken with a palsie and broug●t in a bed to Christ by the hands and helpe of others to be borne to Christ and to be able of himselfe to come to Christ because hee was cured and made able to walke Luke 5 24.25 So should it be to vs if we come vnto Christ whether we come and beg the graces which we want in our owne words or whether we beg them in the words of others it skilleth not greatly neither is it much materiall so that wee doe obtaine It is not the excellency or eloquence of words or variety of matter that God respecteth ● 13 14. we must come euermore in the Name of Christ and for his sake we shall be heard If the man sicke of the palsie had beene able to walke to Christ and not stood in need to be brought vnto him what other gracious answer could he haue looked for then that which he receiued ●5 Arise and walke So if all persons that liue in the bosome of the Church were well able to put vp their owne supplications in their owne words and had the greatest graces of knowledge and inuention what fruite could we reape and receiue of such our prayers but to be regarded and to haue that comfortable answer which Cornelius had and heard Acts 10 4 31. Thy praiers are heard and had in remembrance in the sight of God As then Dauid did admit Mephibosheth to his table though he were lame of his feete so doth God receiue vs though our seruice wee performe vnto him be weake and many waies defectiue as he did those that came to the Passeouer 2 Chron. 30. Lastly we must learne that albeit God allow Vse 3 vs to pray vnto him by the help of others yet we must striue to goe further and labour in all things to grow to perfection Hebr. 6 1. There is no man that hath any infirmity but doth gladly seeke the meanes to remedy redresse the same the lepers to be cleansed the blinde to recouer their sight the lame to walke the deafe to heare not to be able to pray to God and to lay open our wants to him is a great want and a greater blemish and defect in the soule then to be blinde or deafe or lame is to the body O that all had eyes to see this hearts to bewaile it It is allowed to weake Christians to vse set formes as to him that hath weake eyes to vse spectacles But we must not euermore stand at one stay nor be alwaies as children that must bee taught to goe and be stayed vp with the hand of another It is a great weaknesse to be alwayes weake and to continue in our weaknesse all the daies of our life It is our duty to grow in knowledge in iudgment in vnderstanding in faith and such like gifts If any aske Obiect how shall we be able to attaine to this gift and how shall we be furnished to pray according to the present occasion our owne present necessities I answer Answer wee must obserue these few particulars First we must take notice of our particular sinnes that they may be acknowledged Secondly we must labor to feele our particular wants tha● we may haue them supplied Thirdly wee must call to remembrance the speciall benefits that GOD bestoweth vpon vs that hi● Name may be praised Againe that we should not please our selues too much in our owne ignorance sundry cautions conditions are to be marked in vsing set formes of prayer Cautions to be marked in vsing set ●ormes of prayer as first of all we mus● labour for the graces and affections shewed in the said prayers by the makers composers and pen-men of them that we may pray with the same spirit by which they did endite them For to pray aright and to make it auailable it is not enough to be present at prayer or to heare a prayer read but we must ioyne attention with our presence and with our attention humility and with humility faith and with faith lifting vp of our hearts to him that sitteth in heauen to whom we pray For many a one that cometh to the place of praier and into the company of them that pray
doth yet nothing lesse then pray Many a Minister that getteth vp into the Pulpit doth nothing lesse then preach Many people that come with eares to heare do nothing lesse thē heare and to eate the Supper of the Lord that do nothing lesse then partake of his holy table Wherefore wee must be present in minde at holy things as well as in body or else our presence is no better then an absence Secondly we must yeeld to this principle that it is both safer and better to conceiue a prayer then to reade a prayer because it keepeth our mindes constant and freeth vs from wandring thoughts that carry vs oftentimes from the matter which we should altogether minde For we are ready to goe astray and to set our hearts vpon other things whereas by this meanes they are kept close and stedfast to the requests which we make Againe a man may reade a praier that neuer vnderstandeth it or conceiueth the meaning of it and therefore it is more profitable to poure out our petitions our selues then to haue our petitions drawne by the hand of another No man can haue such a feeling of our owne wants as our own necessities will make vs able to expresse neither can conceiue such ioy and gladnesse for blessings receiued as the experience in our selues of Gods benefits will affoord vnto vs. Thirdly no man must condemne such as do conceiue themselues formes of praiers call them conceited praiers or fantasticall praiers These are enuious persons who enuy in others the graces of God cannot abide that any should go before themselues or beyond themselues These are wise in their own eyes and indeed themselues wholly conceited and fantasticall which they falsely charge vpon others being vtterly ignorant both of Gods workes and their owne wants For had they knowne or regarded the gifts and power of the Spirit which helpeth and assisteth his seruants that their tongue is as the pen of a ready writer and findeth sufficient matter to vtter to their Maker or had they knowne themselues throughly what new wants they haue what new sinnes they commit what new assaults they vndergoe what new blessings they enioy which are as so many occasions or rather prouocations to open their mouthes anew to God to sing a new song vnto him they would not blot this ordinance of God with such an odious cauill So then whereas all such should be greeued that cannot frame their petitions according to their present wants nor poure out their supplications according to their particular assaults neither make confession to God according to their particular offences they are rather grieued that any others can performe these duties better then themselues And whereas they should striue with might and maine to be like vnto them and to follow their example they would haue all other men ignorant like themselues and please themselues in that ignorance On this wise ye shal blesse the children of Israel Note in these words the persons that must performe this duty and they are the Priests note also what they are to doe to blesse the people that is to pray to almighty God for them that his blessings may come downe vpon them From hence we see that it is the duty of the Ministers to pray for the people Doctrine It is the Ministers duty to pray for the people So did Melchisedec for Abraham and he was the Priest of the most high God Gen. 14.18 19. So did Moses often for the people when Gods heauy iudgements were vpon them or hanging ouer their heads Exod. 32 33 Psal 106 23. he stood oftentimes in the gappe when the hand of God had made the breach to turne away his wrath lest he should destroy them So did Aaron as appeareth afterward in this booke when the plague was begun among the people he put on incense made an attonement for them he stood betweene the dead the liuing and the plague was staied Numb 16 Rom. 1 2 ●● 47 48. Paul in euery Epistle practiseth this duty and the Apostles committed the charge of prouiding for the poore Acts 6 ● and distributing to the poore to the Deacons that they might giue themselues continually to prayer and to the ministery of the word The Prophets also neuer failed in this duty as we reade almost in euery place of their Prophesies Dan. 5 22 they stood vpon their watch-tower hauing the people continually in remembrance in their holy praiers Christ Iesus himselfe the great Shepheard of the sheepe is a perfect patterne of performing this he prayed for Ierusalem oftentimes Luke 19. and for the whole flocke of God committed vnto him whō he would not suffer to perish but bring them to euerlasting life Iohn 17 20. Thus then we see wee haue the examples of Melchisedec of Moses of Aaron of the Priests of the Prophets of the Apostles and of Christ Iesus the Lord of life as liuely examples to go before vs and as a cloud of witnesses to conduct vs in this duty to proue vnto vs the truth of this point This must the rather be practised first because it is an infallible token of our loue toward Reason 1 them and of an earnest desire that we haue of their good Psal 118 26. And how can we better expresse euen the bowels of our affection and our longing after their prosperous estate from the heart roote then by our daily praying for them Rom. 1 10. Secondly the faithfull Ministers of God haue beene much greeued when they were forbidden and not permitted to performe this duty We see this euidently in Ieremy Ier. ●4 ●● when the Lord had said vnto him Pray not for this people for their good he said Ah Lord God the Prophets say vnto thom yee shall not see the sword neither shall ye haue famine but I will giue you assured peace in this place where we see he layeth the fault vpon the false Prophets and goeth about to excuse or at least to lessen the sinne of the people who were blindly led by those blinde guides that thereby he might make a way to moue the Lord to heare him for that poore seduced people Thirdly the flocke of God is committed vnto them it is no small charge that lyeth on their hands the price of Christs precious blood is committed vnto them and therfore by all meanes they are charged to procure their good especially considering that the blood of such as perish through their negligence shall be required at their hands 1 Pet. 5 2. Ezek. 3.18 Fourthly it is a sinne against God as well as against his people to omit or refuse this duty And therefore when all the people saide to Samuel Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord thy God that we die not he answered As for me God forbid that I should sinne against the lord in ceasing to pray for you 1 Sam. 12 23. If then it be a sinne to omit it it must needs be a duty
let them make it their meditation whereby they may represse such hot and hasty head-strong passions The Prophet saith Psal 119 9. Wherewithall shall a young man cleanse his way By taking heed thereto according to thy word And Moses saide vnto him Enuiest thou for my sake In these words Moses openeth and discouereth the particular sinne wherewith Ioshua was infected ●octrine 〈◊〉 Gods peo●●e must be●●re of enuy We learne heereby in this reproofe that all Gods people must beware of enuy Iam. 4 5. It is an affection compounded of sorrow and malice For such persons are malicious alwaies repining and grudging at the gifts of God bestowed vpon others and as it were looke asquint at them as Gen. 26 12 13 14 27 and 30 1 and 31 1. Mark 9 38. Iohn 3 26 27. First because it is a fruite of the flesh Gal. Reason 1 5 21. as carnall greefe and carnall hatred are of which it is compounded for it maketh mē repine and greeue at the blessings and prosperity of others and that which is worst of all to hate the persons that haue those gifts and in the end the good things themselues that are in the persons for the persons sake This appeareth in the Pharisies Math. 27 18. when they saw that Christ was in more account among the people and did exceed them in all his doctrine and miracles they repined and grudged at him It greeued them that any should be equall vnto them much more goe beyond them Secondly God bestoweth his gifts where he will and to whom he will in what measure he will Math. 20 15. Thirdly it procureth the wrath of God and is neuer left without punishment as appeareth in the next chapter where Miriam the sister of Moses is striken with the leprosie 〈◊〉 12 10. because she enuied the gifts of Moses God shewing therby how greatly he detesteth this sinne Fourthly whatsoeuer is bestowed vpon any member is bestowed vpon the whole body 1 Cor. 12. Whatsoeuer is giuen to any part is giuen for the benefit of the whole Church why then should we enuy any seeing we haue our part and portion in it Fiftly it is a diuellish vice it is worse then fleshly and yet if it were no more it were sufficient to make vs to detest it howbeit it sauoureth not onely of the flesh but of the diuell and it transformeth vs into the image of Satan who enuied the happinesse of our first parents in the garden Gen. 3 5. So Caine was of that euill one 1 Ioh. 3 12. and enuied his brother because God accepted him and his sacrifice Gen. 4.5 Sixtly it crosseth and controlleth the wisedome of God in the distribution of his gifts graces as if God had done thē wrong and bin too good to others we can challenge nothing as due to our selues but whatsoeuer we haue we haue it freely howbeit the enuious like not his administration but dislike that others should enioy that which they want Lastly it is against the rule of charity which reioyceth at the good of others 1 Cor. ●3 and is ready to bestow and communicate good things where is want of them So then where enuy is there charity is not and where charity is there enuy is not This teacheth vs that all are subiect to this Vse 1 euill euen they that are godly and in a great measure sanctified are apt to enuy at others excelling in the graces of God And doubtles this is one cause oftentimes of contentions among the faithfull 1 Corin. 1 12. much more therfore the vnreformed and vnsanctified are ready to enuy them that goe before them Let vs not haue the faith of GOD in respect of persons Iam. 2 1. let vs beware of hauing men in admiration for sinister respects The best things are subiect to be abused through our corruption Secondly it serueth to reprooue many Vse 2 malicious persons some enuy others temporall blessings others that are worse enuy them the grace of God If they haue more knowledg then themselues they cannot abide them but speake all manner of euill against them These men are possessed nay poisened with malice ambition pride arrogancy and dissimulation they are vtterly destitute of charity or desire of reconciliation to their brethren Hence it is that Salomon opposeth enuy and the feare of God Prou. 27 4. as things that cannot possibly stand together Prou. 23 17. and in another place a sound heart and enuy Pro. 14 30. If such see another haue more wealth and riches then themselues they so vex torment themselues that the things which they haue do them no good Enuy is a very torment to the enuious who enuying at others do plague and punish themselues For as enuy hurteth not him at all that is enuied Egidij Hunnij comment in Iohan cap. 12. so the enuious man carrieth about within his owne bosome an inward and home-bred tormenter that neuer suffereth him to be quiet Such a monster is spite enuy that if he see or heare or think another to haue more or as much to goe beyond him or be equall vnto him it is a quotidian nay a continual feuer without any intermission it paineth him day and night Psalm 112 9 10. Thirdly let vs vse all holy and sanctified meanes to prevent it or to purge it away if it Vse 3 haue seized vpon vs. Let vs labour for christian charity How we may auoid enuy that so we may rid our hearts of the corrupt weeds of fretting and malice against our brethren and decke our selues with lowlinesse of mind that we may banish pride and selfe loue Phil. 2 3. Store of charity and humility tempered together will make a notable defence preseruatiue against this malady Secondly be wel contented with Gods holy administration of temporall blessings spiritual eternal that we do not any way charge him with folly who is wisedome it selfe or with partiality who respecteth no mans person Thirdly to cast our eyes vpon the troubles sorrowes miseries and calamities of our brethren which they sustaine and suffer as well as vpon the gifts blessings comforts prosperity which they enioy that so the consideration of the one may stay vphold vs from grudging at the sight of the other But this is our fault we looke vpon their good but will not behold their euill which if we did wee should finde cause many times rather to pitty them then to enuy them Fourthly to marke that the gifts of others are for our benefit as the good of one member of the body serueth for the vse of another and therefore wee are enemies to our owne good and welfare when wee repine at that which others haue Fiftly to pray to God for the obtaining of his gifts where we see them wanting and for encrease of them where they are obtained and for the continuance of them where they are encreased Lastly it is our duty to loue the graces of God wheresoeuer wee see
though one be surbordinate to the other yet both of them as good friends ioyne hand in hand and neyther of them ouerthroweth the other The Sunne doth not in vaine rise and set euery day thogh God as the first cause created the light The fields are not in vaine ploughed and sowed by men and watered with the early and latter raine from heauen although GOD bringeth foorth corne out of the earth and giueth bread to strengthen mans heart Psalm 104 verses 14 15. Our bodies are not in vaine refreshed with food albeit God be the life and the length of our daies Acts 17 28. And thouching our soules it is not in vaine to beleeue in Christ to repent from dead works to heare the preaching of the Gospel and to yeeld obedience thereunto although our saluation and eternal life be the free gift of God Rom. 6 23. Secondly whosoeuer is predestinated to the ende Z●nch de ●tribut 〈…〉 cap. 2. they are also predestinated to the meanes without which the end cannot possibly be attained Such as are appointed to eternall life are also appointed to the meanes by which life euerlasting may bee got and obtained For almighty GOD hath from euerlasting decreed both the ends and the meanes not the end without the meanes nor the means without the end but both of them and none must make any diuorce betweene these God himselfe hath prescribed vnto vs the meanes to bring vs to the ends all that shall be saued wil carefully vse them No man well aduised will reason thus If it be determined by Gods prouidence that I shall recouer my health there is no need that I vse either food or physicke and if it be otherwise determined I shall vse in vaine the helpe either of the one or of the other forasmuch as Hezekiah receiued such promise of deliuery and recouery yet he must take a lumpe of figges and lay it for a plaister vpon the boyle that he may recouer Esay 38 21. No man in his right mind will argue thus If God haue ordained that I shall come to my iournies end I need not goe ouer the bridge I may leape into the water I am sure I shall be safe and not be drowned Or if it be determined that theeues shall not rob me nor haue any power ouer me I may thrust my selfe into all companies I may trauaile into dangerous places at all houres of the night and though I stand there of purpose they shall not be able to lay hands vpon me nor to spoile me of my goods If this kinde of reasoning be extreme folly how is it that we see not the vanity of the other Lastly as God appointeth good meanes to Vse 5 bring vs to the end of our faith so it is required of vs to beware of euill meanes and euill waies which leade to hell and tend to destruction There are many in the world that perswade themselues they may follow their euill waies with greedinesse and delight and yet that they shall escape death and damnation well enough that albeit they sowe to the flesh yet they shall not reape corruption Thus hee tempted and seduced Eue in the garden that she might eate freely of the forbidden fruite and yet she should neuer die the death but be as God knowing good and euill Gen. 3 4 5 But we must know that God hath linked together as with a brazen chaine that cannot be broken the pleasures of sinne and the punishments of sinne Rom. 6 23 and 8 2. The Apostle ioyneth sinne and death together coupleth them together as the cause the effect for the wages of sinne is death Thus we see the diuels cunning to beguile teaching that we need not to do good things and yet wee shall come well enough soone enough easie enough to heauen and that we may follow euill things and yet we shall escape hell and destruction See more of this afterward chapter 20. 17. And Moses sent them to spie out the Land of Canaan and saide vnto them Goe you vp this way Southward and goe vp into the Mountaine 18. And see the Land what it is and the people that dwelleth therein whether they be strong or weake few or many 19. And what the Land is that they dwell in c. Albeit the Lord had promised to Abraham and his posterity to giue them the land of Canaan for a possession yet hee will haue them beare themselues wisely and warily prudently and circumspectly in the search and viewing of it to enquire into the people their Cities their Land their multitude their strength and so to get a perfect knowledge of them and for this cause doeth Moses so carefully instruct them The doctrine Doctrine The faithfull must deale wisely in all their enterprises Wisedome is a gift required of the faithfull in all their enterprizes to doe nothing headily rashly rawly and ignorantly We must deale not onely lawfully iustly honestly and godlily but wisely prudently politikely Rebecca hearing of the purpose and intent of Esau waiting opportunity to kill his brother and being desirous to preserue them both but especially Iacob conueyed him away Gen. 27 verse 43. The like appeareth in Abigael 1 Sam. 25 18. she preuented Dauid and the mischiefe hanging ouer her owne head and is therefore commended by Dauid himselfe So 2 Sam. 20 16 17 18. And 2 King 4 verse 23. we haue a notable example in the Shunamite she wisely dissembleth the cause of her iourney lest she should greeue the heart of her husband onely she desireth leaue and liberty of him to goe ●o the Prophet So Acts 23 verses 6 7. Paul knowing the great iarre and diuision in iudgement among those of the assembly which consisted of two sorts or sects partly Saduces which denied the resurrection and partly Pharisees which acknowledged it he taketh aduantage of the present opportunity to seuer them and to deliuer himselfe Prouerbs chap. 13 verse 16. Rom. chapter 16 verse 19. For first wisedome is more worth much Reason 1 better then all weapons of warre Prou. 21 verse 22. A prudent man is to be preferred before the valiant and indeed he can do more Hee can by counsell take a City wherein the valiant are and by his stratagems throw downe the bulwarkes and Castles thereof Eccl. chapter 7 verse 12 and cha ver 9 13 14 15 16. Secondly if Gods seruants should not Reason 2 deale wisely they should lie open to euery enemy to be hurt and destroyed to be ouertaken and circumuented in an excessiue hand The times wherein we liue are dangerous the persons with whom we deale are pernicious the sleights of Satan that dealeth against vs are mischieuous his instruments are growne cunning and crafty Prou. 1 verses 11 12. If then wee should not deale as well wisely as lawfully wee should not bee able to withstand them If we should not order our affaires discreetely and with good aduise forecasting the issues and preuenting their attempts we should
of teeth Math. 25 30. horrour without release weeping but the teares shall neuer be wiped away fire but it shall neuer be quenched this is their cup to drinke this is their portion to inherite But the godly vpon earth haue the gifts of GOD mingled with wants faith with infidelity assurance with doubting hope with despaire loue with hatred perfection with imperfection sanctification with the reliques of sinne as likewise they haue greefe tempered with ioy and ioy with greefe Indeed sometimes they want the sense and feeling of ioy and comfort but neu●r all hope and expectation of them Vse 3 Thirdly we ought much more to mourne for our owne sinnes otherwise it were grosse hypocrisie to mourne for others more then for our selues or so much for others as for our selues It is sufficient that we mourne for other men whose sins we cannot amend but more is required to be performed toward our selues wee must both mourne for them and amend them If we can weepe for them and doe not amend them our teares are counterfeit teares Let vs therfore oftentimes examine our selues how we are affected toward our selues and toward others and touching our greefe conceiued for our sinnes and for the sinnes of other men Let vs marke where we bestow our greatest sorrow and thereby take notice how it standeth with vs and so learned to reforme our practise if we finde it any way to bee amisse The women that followed Christ our Sauiour to the Crosse wept for him and thought they had iust cause so to doe but neuer imagined that they had more cause to weepe for themselues and therefore he correcteth that practise Luke 23 28. Daughters of Ierusalem weepe not for mee but for your selues and for your children c. We shall all of vs finde cause in our owne selues to mourne and humble our selues for our selues Lastly we ought to haue a care of the saluation Vse 4 of others and to desire their repentance otherwise our mourning is idle and nothing worth He that is entred into the way of saluation himselfe will both hunger and thirst after the saluation of other And heereby we may try whether our mourning for others be sanctified or not For as there is a carnall ioy so there is a carnall sorrow and as there is a naturall ioy such as natural men haue so there is a naturall sorrow arising from naturall causes If we haue the spirituall godly sorrow it will worke in vs a great care and desire of the saluation of our brethren 〈◊〉 oecol●m●●omment 〈…〉 cap. As godly sorrow causeth in vs repentance neuer to bee repented off 2 Cor. 7 10. so godly sorrow conceiued for the sins of others will bring foorth an earnest longing in vs to bring them to repentance 8. If the Lord delight in vs then he will bring vs into this Land and giue it vs a Land which floweth with milke and hony 9. Onely rebell not ye against the Lord neither feare ye the people of the Land for they are bread for vs their defence is departed from them and the Lord is with vs feare them not Of the interpretation of these words wee haue spoken in the former verses They containe an effectuall exhortation able to stoppe the mouthes of the seditious spies and to perswade the people to proceed building themselues vpon the blessed experience of the loue of God toward them and of his power sufficient to saue them and ready to stand for thē and touching their enemies they should bee assured they could not preuaile because God is not among them he had laid them open to iudgement The Doctrine Doctrine God is a shield to his but taketh no care nor charge of his enemies God is a shield and defence for all that are his but as for his enemies he taketh no care nor charge of them he leaueth them to themselues Prou. 30 5. Exod. 15 2 and 29 45 46. Iudg. 2 14. Psal 3 3 and 18 2. The reasons God is the Captaine of his Reason 1 host to fight his owne battels against all the enemies of the Church 2 Chro. 13 12. Iosh 5 14. Secondly sinne maketh naked and bare of Reason 2 Gods protection and defence Exod. 32 25. when the people had committed idolatry Moses saw that they were naked for Aaron had made thē naked vnto their shame among their enemies Thirdly the enemies of God haue forsaken Reason 3 him and therefore hee will not be with them because they will not be with him it is a iust thing that hee should forsake them that haue forsaken him and that he should not be on their side who are not on his They that will not be his people he will not be their God Hos 3 3 1 9. From hence it may be obiected Obiect Is not God saide to be euery where Esay 66 1. Answer Answer He is touching his essence but not in his effectuall working by his Spirit to saue and deliuer Thus he is onely with the godly Hence it is that in the end of this chap. verse 42. the Lord said to the rebellious Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you that ye bee not smitten before your enemies He was not among these to fight for them and to saue them to defend and deliuer them by his power great might otherwise by his essence and according to his nature he was euen among them as he is also euery where Thus we see how God is said to be neere and how to be farre off How God is said to bee neere how farre off For while he offereth grace by the ministery of his word and causeth it to bee preached vnto vs he is neere vnto vs Esay 55 6. Call vpon him while he is neere to wit while his arme is stretched out to receiue vs and his mercy is offered to saue vs. Thus God may be saide to be in one place and in one person more then in another yea in one place and person not in another and he is said sometimes to come and sometimes to go away notwithstanding he be euery where essentially and there be no mutation of place or shadow of change with him When he beginneth to worke by his holy Spirit How God may be saide to come to a people faith repentance and sanctification in the hearts of his children he may be said to come vnto them as Iohn 15 22. Reuel 3 20. And when he preached by Noah to the old world Christ is said by his diuine Spirit to come among that people 1 Pet. 3 19. He went and preached vnto the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient c. So likewise his absence or departure is the remouing of the effects of his presence to wit his grace and fauour Vse 1 From hence arise●● comfort to all the godly they are safe and 〈◊〉 vnder the wings of God he is a buckler round about he is their castle and their fortresse whereupon
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
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
Eunuch could reade the Scriptures as wel as they he needed not to haue come to Ierusalem to learne to spell his words and name his letters and yet when he was asked of the meaning and interpretation and whether hee vnderstood the words of the Prophet hee answered How can I except I haue a guide Actes 8.31 But these will be their owne guides and therefore let them take heede lest they misse the way that leadeth to the kingdome of heauen They will be their owne Pilots to guide the ship let them therefore take heede lest they suffer shipwracke and bee drowned Reading is good but it is not good enough like a medicine that hath strength in it but is not strong enough to cure the disease The men of Berea could reade and did reade and search the Scriptures daily at home yet they came diligently to heare Paul preach vnto them Actes chapter 17. verse 11. Woe also to all prophane Atheists who despise all meanes of saluation hauing no regard at all to God or his word at home or abroad publikely or priuately Doe these beleeue the doctrine that now wee haue in hand Do they thinke that a good Minister is a precious gift of God when by their continuall practise they make it manifest that they regard neither Minister nor yet Ministery neither the glad tydings of saluation nor those that bring the same The world is stored and replenished with such open contemners of the Gospel which are enemies to their own peace to their owne liues to their own soules to their owne saluation Vse 3 Thirdly from hence ariseth much instruction to the Minister himselfe Let vs examine our selues whether we be the true Ministers of God or not that we may assure our owne hearts we are as a gift of God giuen vnto the Church This hath many branches First we must labour for a competency and sufficiency of gifts that so we may approoue our selues to be the Ministers of Christ planted by him But such as are rash and headdy in entring vpon this calling before they are qualified I do not meane by men but by God are presumptuous persons and are not a gift giuen to the churches where they haue set themselues because they are no way fitted thereunto Secondly we must be diligent in our calling in the vse of our gifts which we haue receiued that wee suffer them not to rest to rust in vs lest therby they decay and be lost If we vse them conscionably we keepe them surely if we vse thē not we lose them The gifts graces of God do not weare by vse but doe exceedingly encrease for we haue a promise that we shall haue abundance Mat. 13 12. Thirdly we ought to labour aboue all things to seeke the good of the people vnto whom we are giuen not our owne good or to get goods as if we were sent for our owne profits The end that we must aime at is the edification instruction and saluation of others not our owne priuate gaine or promotion nor the vaine applause of the world to magnifie our selues as the manner of many is The popish Church neuer regard this they ordaine their Priests to say Masse to minister the Sacrament of the Altar but send them not foorth to preach the Gospel They haue many sacrificers but few preachers But the ends that we must propound vnto our selues are the glory of God the good of the Church and the discharge of a good conscience that so wee may say with the Apostle Brethren my hearts desire is that Israel may be saued Rom. 10 1. If we do these things blessed are we we shall be such Pastors as God liketh and approueth such as haue our calling from him and our gifts from him we shall teach for him and reproue for him Vse 4 Lastly it is the duty of the people whatsoeuer they be to magnifie the worke of the Ministers and by all meanes to promote it for thereby we further the glory of God and enlarge the kingdome of Christ Iesus This also hath many particular branches First we are bound to pray to God and to commend vnto him the Ministery as his owne ordinance For if the Ministers be a speciall gift of God to whō should we goe or of whom should we aske this gift but of him that is the giuer of euery good gift and of euery perfect gift We must pray to God to send them where they are wāting Mat. 9 37. We must pray for the continuance of them where they are granted and for the blessing of God vpon their labours that God would accept the worke of their hands Deu. 33 11. We must be thankfull to him for bestowing this gift vpon vs which he hath denied to many places and people Secondly we must repent of those sins which may hinder either the obtaining or the continuing of it For as the Prophet truly teacheth that our sins withhold good things from vs so it is certaine that God oftentimes denieth this blessing for the wickednes being once grāted remoueth it for the vnthankfulnes of the people because they are not earnest with God to haue it and keepe it neither walke worthy of it when they haue obtained it Esay 62 7. Giue him no rest till he establish and till he make Ierusalem a praise in the earth Thirdly we should haue this gift of God in precious account to make a reuerent vse of it in being subiect vnto it gouerned by it and reformed according to the same because therin we are subiect to Christ as the Apostle willeth vs to obey them that haue the ouersight of vs Heb. 13 17. and submit our selues vnto them which watch for our soules and must giue an account for vs. Let euery one examine himselfe whether he make this vse of the word if we do then we receiue the Minister as a gift of God if we doe not thē we do not only reiect the Minister but God himselfe that gaue him and sent him to vs for he hath said He that despiseth you despiseth me Luke 10 16. Fourthly lament the estate of the church which is destitute or depriued of this gift as Psal 74 9. We see not our signes there is not one Prophet more nor any with vs that knoweth how long We must acknowledge therefore that great is the misery of that people which want the ordinary preaching of the word Alas they see no vision how then can they but decay Pro. 29 18. They haue no Shepheard what then shall the silly sheepe doe but wander vp and downe they know not whither They haue blinde guides to leade them how then can they escape falling into the ditch All knowledge and obedience will soone decay if the word be not preached as the grasse withereth without raine the body pineth without food and the lampe goeth out without oyle Fiftly it directeth such as are Patrons of benefices whō they should present namely such as they may commend
then it skilleth not whether men study or not or seeke to attaine to knowledge and to better their knowledge because they may doe more good with lesse gifts I answer Answer this ought to make no man negligent or carelesse but rather to double his care and diligence For what greater encouragement can we haue to performe the duties of our calling then to heare this voice full of comfort Well done thou good and faithfull seruant thou hast bene faithfull ouer a few things I will make thee ruler ouer many things enter into the ioy of thy Lord Mat 25 21. So then no man ought to grow carelesse because God will blesse small gifts for that were to continue in sin that grace might abound Rom. 6 1. Lastly from hence some will obiect that then it skilleth not whom the Officers and Ouerseers of the Church do chuse and ordaine how ignorant and vnsufficient soeuer they be I answer they are to follow the ordinary rule to appoint such as are apt to teach 1 Tim. 3 2. Again God supplieth the wants of such as he chuseth as appeareth in the Disciples which men cannot Lastly there is difference betweene such as haue meane gifts and such as haue none the one sort are Gods Ministers the other are mens not Gods Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see it is a speciall gift of God not a fruite of learning for a Minister to conuert soules to GOD by preaching of the word for this grace and fauour is often denied to many famous seruants of God Esay 6 10 and 53 1 and 49 4. Christ himselfe conuerted not all to whom hee preached he often complaineth of their infidelity and hardnesse of heart they would not be gathered whom he would haue gathered and gained to the faith Mat. 23 37. Neuerthelesse we shall be rewarded not according as we haue conuerted which lyeth not in our power but according as wee haue laboured which lyeth in our power If learning could do any thing of it selfe then the best learned should doe most good But as the most learned do not most labour so they doe not see the greatest fruite of their labour We must therefore all of vs whatsoeuer our gifts are depend wholly vpon God for his blessing forasmuch as Paul planteth Apollos watereth but God giueth the increase 1 Cor. 3 6 7. nay he beginneth and maketh an end of his owne worke it is he that giueth vs grace to will and to do of his good pleasure Vse 2 Secondly euery one ought to make it the speciall end of our Ministery the edification of the Church therby to bring many children vnto Christ This doubtles is the reason why so many great Doctors and deepe Diuines are very drones aad altogether vnprofitable in their places albeit peraduenture profitable enough to their owne purses they looke altogether to the rewards of learning as they call them to popular fame as though they that had greatest rewards had alwayes greatest learning or they that had greatest learning had alwaies greatest conscience wheras they shold looke to the benefit of the people These hunt after the praise and glory of the world desire to be called great Rabbines and therefore oftentimes God casteth dung in their faces that they may learne to bee ashamed so that wee may say vnto them as Christ doth Iohn 5 44. How can ye beleeue which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour from God onely Whereas we ought to bee like our Lord and Master to be able in some measure to say with him I seeke not mine owne glory there is one that seeketh and iudgeth Ioh. 8 50. Such a one as can truely speake thus so far as humane frailty will suffer him shall haue his defects supplied and God will accompany the labour of his Ministery with the power of his Spirit One such meane learned man that hath zeale with knowledge and knowledge with conscience conscience with diligence maketh the ends of his Ministery the good ●f the people the glory of God is worth an hundred of those proud Pharisies that loue the vppermost seates and to be saluted in the market Mat. 23 6. The Apostle sheweth in himselfe requireth of others another spirit He made himselfe a seruant vnto all that hee might win the more 1. cor 9 19. Neuer came there greater detriment in former daies or present times to the Church An vnconscionable learne● man is a plague to the Church then by vnconscionable vnfaithfull learned men Who vsurped greater tyrrany in the church then they Who hath starued moe soules and sent them headlong in throngs to hell then they Who haue fallen into the sin of Non-residency and idlenesse in their residency more then they Who haue bin greater hindrances to the free passage of the Gospel then they Who haue more disturbed the peace of the Church and bin the causes of atheisme popery carnall liberty and open prophanenes then they by reason of their reputed knowledge who stand so much vpon their sw●lling titles and places of superiority and yet want conscience of their dutie lowlinesse of mind loue to God and compassion to his people What shall all their profound learning auaile them when they want an humble heart to season and sanctifie their learning withall Obiection What then will some say doe you goe about to condemne learning so great an ornament in all I doe not goe about to disgrace learning Answ or to contemne any learned men or to barre the rewards of learning much lesse to bring in ignorance the mother of barbarisme Learning is a precious iewell it is a great blessing of God it is a notable ornament ioyned with true godlinesse wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer they meete and are coupled together there followeth an exceeding blessing For as an vnfaithfull learned man is a great plague to the Church so I hold this as a certaine rule No greater good cometh to the church then by conscionable learned men there neuer came greater good to the Church then by a conscionable learned man I wish as Moses said to Ioshua that all the Lords people were Prophets and that he would powre out his spirit vpon them all Numb 11.29 I greeue at no mans learning I enuy no mans preferment I desire that all had the tongue of the learned to speake the language of Canaan Esay 50 4. yea the tongues and gifts of Angels 1 Cor. 13 1. whose names they beare Reuel 1.20 and 2.1 but withall I adde that as a sword is a good thing and of necessary vse to defend offend yet being put into the hand of a tyrant or a mad man it doth mu●h hurt because it is abused so learning is a great blessing of God and maketh vs differ not only from the bruite beasts but from other men also it is profitable to proue and improoue reforme instruct but being powred into a giddy spirit and an vnconscionable man as
of it wast thou taken because thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne Where the reason is thus framed Thou art made and taken out of the dust therfore thou shalt returne to the dust Secondly we must all die the death because Reason 2 all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God for the Scripture concludeth al both Iewes and Gentiles vnder sin True it is man was created to immortality and if he had euer loued God and neuer sinned he should euer haue liued without seeing death But whē sinne entred death followed in the world as the wages doth the worke according to the threatning of God Gen. 2 17. In the day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt die the death For as they that are adiudged and condemned to dye ●sost hom ●●en 3. are accounted as dead men albeit they be kept aliue in prison so our first Parents although they did not immediately die yet immediately were subiect to death by desart of sinne So the Apostle Rom. 5 12. By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all men haue sinned Where he proueth the cause by the effect that sinne was before Moses and the Law giuen by him because death was in the world which seizeth vpon young and old infants sucklings whereby euery one is conuinced of sinne 〈◊〉 3 19. euery mouth is stopped and all the world subiect to the righteous iudgement of God Seeing therefore wee are all made out of the dust and carry about with vs this body of sin we haue here no continuing City but are placed in the world for a season as men set vpon a Stage to play our parts then must be gone to giue roome to others according to the saying of Salomon One generation passeth and another generation succeedeth Vse 1 The vses follow First the rich the mighty the learned and men of high degree must acknowledge that there shall be no difference betweene them and the poore the lowly and vnlearned in the graue vnto which all must descend True it is there is a difference and distinction betweene rich and poore high and low great small in their life time in friends in honours in houses in lands in liuings in food in apparell in duties in dignities such like externall priuiledges and prerogatiues which shall haue an end yet all these shall ceasse and all degrees must equally meete together in the graue so that albeit an vnequall life haue gone before yet an equall death shal follow after ●rat oda li. 1. This is it which Iob pointeth vnto chap. 17 which we named before where he sheweth that all worldly prosperity and hope shall faile They shall goe downe into the bottome of the pit surely it shall lie together in the dust And the Prophet Psal 49 9 10 11. sheweth that neither wit nor wisedome neither might nor mony neither fauour nor policy can preuent or put away death that all without difference respect of persons must yeeld to Nature and that all meanes which they can deuise for the continuance of their names shall come to nought For hee seeth wise men die and also that the ignorant and foolish perish and leaue their riches for others Secondly let men of excellent and eminent Vse 2 places liue iustly and deale vprightly in their callings wherein they are set As they are placed aboue others so they are seene marked before others and notwithstanding all their honour and estimation their riches and retinue they must die and depart hence when it shall be said to them ●● 16 2. Come giue an account of thy stewardship for thou maiest be no longer steward The remembrance of death must therefore admonish them of their duties that they dreame not of immortality and they promise not to themselues continuance heere and perpetuity This Dauid toucheth and teacheth Ps 82 2 3 6 7. How long will ye deale vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Doe right to the poore and fatherlesse doe iustice to the poore and needy deliuer the poore and needy saue them from the hand of the wicked I haue saide yee are Gods and ye all are children of the most High but ye shal die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others So then when we are tempted to euill we must remember death and the estate that followeth death Therefore the Apostle chargeth them that are rich in this world 1 Tim. 6 17 18. that they bee not high-minded neither trust in vncertain riches but in the liuing GOD because we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine that we can carry nothing out Thirdly this consideration of the common Vse 3 condition of al flesh must stirre vp our affections from resting relying vpon men whose breath is in their nostrils to depend vpon the eternall God which continueth and liueth for euer Let vs beware of all vaine confidence We are ready to rest vpon creatures and stay our selues vpon an arme of flesh as vpon a broken Reed whereby we deceiue our selues of our hope and rob God of his honour This we learne Psal 146 3 4 5. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the sonnes of man for there is no helpe in him his breath departeth and he returneth to the earth then his thoughts perish Blessed is hee that hath the God of Iacob for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord his God Man is vaine and all his pompe is lighter then vanity If then we make him our stay and staffe we beate the ayre wee labour in the fire we build vpon a weak foundation and rest vpon the vncertaine life of mortall and miserable man Psal 144. who vanisheth as a shadow passeth as a dreame flieth as an Eagle speedeth as a Poste consumeth as a garment and goeth away as a thought that cannot be recalled His life is as a span soone measured as a vapour soone gone as a tale soone told as an hand-bredth soone measured as a winde soone ouerblowne and as the weauers Shuttle quickly sliding Lastly it is our duty to prepare for it before Vse 4 it cometh that we may bee found ready and haue oyle in our lamps whē the Bridegroome cometh For death spareth none it respecteth no person no age no Sexe no State or condition no power can withstand it no wisedome can preuent it no bribe can corrupt it no cunning can ouercome it And albeit we often recouer of some diseases yet in the ende we are taken away The whole life of a Christian should be a continuall meditation of death to teach vs as it were to die daily and to number our daies that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome not to set our whole loue and liking on the world which wee must shortly leaue Will a man bestow cost and charges on an house and tenement in which hee shall not long dwell
come yet his death was as forcible frō the beginning of the world is now also as auaileable and effectuall and shal be euer hereafter to the end of the world as when he hung vpon the Crosse in the dayes of his Passion and when the blood really streamed and issued out of his body The Israelites in the time of the Law were the children of God heires of eternall life and had the promises of saluation as well as we vnder the Gospel God did not seed them and fat them as swine in a stye but vnder certaine figures and types hee gaue them a taste of heauenly things The offering of bruite beasts in sacrifice was a signe that they were made partakers of the redemption wrought by the blood of Christ which was shed to wash away our sinnes Vnder the promise of giuing thē the earthly Canaan so often remēbred he gaue thē a taste representation of the heauenly inheritance The aboundance of temporall blessings was a pledge and earnest penny to them of the life eternall they hauing the same faith Ephe. 4.4 5. 1 Cor. 10. ● 4. the same Father the same spiritual meat the same spirituall drinke the same Lord the same hope the same heauen the same Christ that wee haue Albeit Gal. 4.1.2 3.4 they were as little children vnder tutors and gouernours and were taught in rude manner by shadowes and ceremonies which are as certaine pictures and looking glasses to behold the outward manner of his dispensation whereas wee are come to mans estate in comparison of them and behold Iesus Christ openly in the face we know his death resurrection ascension and opening the kingdome of heauen to vs. Therefore our Sauiour saith Ioh. 8.56 Your father Abrahā reioyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Heb. 11 13 14 15 16. So the Apostle to the Hebrewes sayth That the Fathers dyed in faith and receiued not the things promised but saw them afarre off beleeued them receiued them thankefully confessed that they were Pilgrims and strangers on the earth so that they iudged the promises made to them to bee spirituall and expected more then temporall blessings This is one point which we are to learne and imprint in our mindes touching the Iewes who had an image of the serpents lifted vp to teach them the doctrine of Christ hanging on the crosse If then the vnbeleeuing Iewes in these dayes blaspheme Christ crucified account the blood of the new Testament an vnholy thing and vnpossible to giue saluation let thē know that their fathers receiued life and recouered health by a brazen serpent an image without life and motion the meaning signification heereof were not hard but easie to gather sauing that the Apostle teacheth that their mindes are obstinate and that a veile is laid ouer their hearts in reading the old Testament so that they vnderstand nothing c. 1 Corin. 3 14. Thus doth God send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies that all they might be damned which beleeued not the truth but had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse 2 Thess 2 11 12. Thus then we see that the Couenant which GOD made with man to be gracious and fauourable vnto them is one in substance and matter seeing there is but one God 1 Tim. 2 5. one Mediatour betweene God and man one faith one meane of reconciliation and one way of saluation to all that are saued and haue bin saued from the beginning Christ Iesus was appointed ouer all things to be the head of the Church by whom all the body is coupled and knit together Eph. 1 22 4 16. He is the way the truth and the life no man cometh to the Father but by him Iohn 1 18 and 14 6. All therefore he being onely the way as well vnder the Law as vnder the Gospel who were to be saued had respect to the only Mediatour Christ by whom alone they were reconciled to God and saued by faith The differences betweene the Iewes and vs were onely in certaine circumstances in promising of corporall benefits in giuing them outward signes and oblations in propounding things more obscurely and darkely in restraining his gifts and in limiting them to the Iewish Nation whereas otherwise the old and new couenant agree together not only in the Author of them which is God and in the Mediatour of them which is Christ but in the promises of grace touching remission of sinnes and euerlasting life to bee freely giuen for Christs fake and in the condition in respect of man that we should walke before him vprightly beleeue the Gospel vnfainedly Vse 2 Secondly we obserue from this similitude the naturall estate and condition of all mankinde what it is wee are all naturally stung with the poison of the olde serpent and the wound is mortall All the Israelites that were bitten by the fiery serpents whether deeply or but a ●ittle whether more or lesse whether once or often dyed the death if they vsed not the remedy ordained of God albeit the wound were slender and shalow So such as looke not on Christ hanging on the Crosse are sure to fall into damnation The guilt of sin is as the poyson of a serpent this we haue drawne frō our first parents by whose offence we are culpable of iudgement We are all stung with it vnto death The wound is so deep deadly that we are guilty of the transgression of Adam being in his loynes We haue the spawne and seed of all sinne in vs we are corrupt in soule and body we are prone to fall into the most dangerous and desperate sins The Israelites felt the anguish of the paine and the danger of death otherwise they would neuer haue looked vp to the brazen serpent If the sicke man finde not the want of his health feele not the greefe of his sicknesse feare not the losse of his life he wil neuer seeke to the Physition for ease and recouery And indeed what should it haue auailed these distressed Iewes to haue any recourse to the brazen ferpent vnlesse they had perceiued themselues to be stung euen to death and no other way or remedy to procure their deliuerance So it behooueth all of vs to haue a liuely and sencible feeling of our spirituall wounds We must know that sinne is as a poyson to the soule and the Law giueth strength to sinne We must be greeued for our sins which draw vpon vs the losse of Gods fauour more then for the lacke and losse of bodily health Let vs not therefore make a mock of sin We see no man will dally or delight in poyson no poyson is so dangerous to the body as sin is to the soule Let vs beware of the wiles and subtilties of the old serpent lest as he beguiled Eue through his craftinesse so hee corrupt our mindes from the simplicity that is in Christ 2 Cor. 11● carry vs headlong to destruction and damnation of soule and
meanes which are deceitfull but the vngodly being of the world relye on worldly meanes and put their confidence in an arme of flesh This difference Dauid acknowledgeth and setteth downe Psal 20 7 8. Some trust in Chariots and some in Horses but we will remember the Name of God our Lord They are brought downe and fallen but we are risen stand vpright Where the Prophet declareth the diuers practises of the men of this world the children of God which are not of this world and sheweth the yssue of them both The godly shall stand vpright and abide vnmoueable as a Rocke but the other shall fall to the ground and vanish as a shadow The godly grow strong and their defence is sure albeit many oppose themselues against them and intend mischiefe to ouerthrow them yet still they rest in God and remaine vndaunted and therefore shall preuaile in the end whereas worldlings that put not their trust in God but in the things which they behold with a fleshly eye which are temporall deceiue thēselues and all their hope shall perish Secondly let vs marke the certainty of the Vse 2 destruction of carnall men concluded with God For if their confidence be weake and all their hope and expectation vaine wherin they trust then let them not thinke to escape whē they promise vnto themselues peace and security Iob 8 14. suddenly the day of vengeance cometh and shall light vpon them and all their trust shall be as the Spiders web which albeit to day it be builded aloft yet to morrow it is swept away For they leane on a broken staffe of wood which not onely cannot helpe but the shiuers runne into their hand and wound it 2 Kings 18 21. Ier. 17 5 and 49 16. Vse 3 Lastly let vs learne this duty not to depend on vaine things as riches friends honours and policies but on God which is vnchangeable vnmoueable and let vs resigne vp ourselues into his hands This the Prophet vrgeth and exhorteth vnto in many places Psal 62 8 9 10 118 8 9 and 146 3 4. True it is we are not to refuse good meanes offered and affoorded of God vnto vs but are bound to vse them as blessings and instruments by which he will helpe vs for then we trust not in the creature but in the Creator himselfe in whom onely we must confesse is the power to helpe It is a great cause why God oftentimes blesseth not good meanes when wee trust in them rob God of his glory and doe not waite for a blessing at his hands This causeth the Lord to crosse vs to curse his own benefits because we seeke not him but sacrifice to our owne Nets Hab. 1 15 16 burne Incense to our owne yarne we put our confidence in the outward meanes sometimes in Princes sometimes in pollicies sometimes in men sometimes in Mountaines forsaking God and therefore when we hope for helpe by them God bloweth vpon them and turneth them to our hurt and destruction Asa King of Iudah Being diseased in his feet sought not the Lord in his disease but trusted in the Physitions 2 Chron. 16 12 therefore they could do him no good The rich man in the Gospel that said to his soule Luke 12 19 20 21. Soul thou hast much goods laid vp for many years liue at ease eate drinke and take thy pastime receiued this answer O foole this nigh● will they fetch away thy soule from thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided So is he that gathereth riches to himselfe and is not rich in God Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to call vpon God to giue a blessing vpon his owne helps and meanes giuen vnto vs otherwise though wee haue all helps in our owne hands to defend our selues Nah. 3 8 9 10 and offend the enemy fenced by the Sea fortified by Ships blessed by Princes backed with friends stored with munitions ayded with confederates and armed with multitudes of men yet must our comfort affiance and confidence bee in the Lord alone Hereunto commeth that which the Prophet Esay saith chap. 31 3. The Egiptians are men and not God and their horses flesh and not spirit and when the Lord shall stretch out his hand the helper shall fall and he that is holpen shall fall and they shall altogether faile Verse 7. And the Elders of Moab and of Midian departed hauing the reward of the soothsaying in their hand In these words note the pollicy of the wicked they lay a baite before him to catch him and carry not their hands empty which was a great tryall and tentation to a man of his humour and one of the diuels hungry Chaplaines For albeit Wizards and Coniurers and such as are counted cunning men and women offer to helpe others to money and to enrich them with treasures yet liue most commonly basely and beggerly themselues Take a view of Witches and Coniurers that sell their soules to the diuell and receiue his marke as the badge of their profession and behold how wretchedly and miserably they liue aboue all others in a poore and simple estate glorying to be able to stand others in stead but not enabled to helpe themselues Wherefore these leaguers knowing the disposition of Balaam carry their reward and his wages with them to make him to assent to them and to grant their petition This teacheth Doctr●● Gaine 〈◊〉 are a d●rou● te● That gaine and rewards are a great tentation to attempt euill actions Man I say is of himselfe prone to wickednesse but when gaine is offered and gifts are giuen they are a powerfull meanes to deceiue and corrupt the cōscience The diuel being by long experience priuy to our corruption and knowing how effectuall bribes and rewards are to draw men to sinne laid his bayte before Christ and offered all the Kingdomes of the world and the glory of them if he would fall downe and worship him Mat. 4 8 9. So when he entred into Iudas and filled him full of all iniquity he preuailed this way with him to sell his Master for money to betray him into the hands of sinners saying What will ye giue mee Math. ● and I will deliuer him vnto you This preuailed in Lot he forsook Abraham dwelt in Sodome Gen. 1● was carried away with earthly commodities and smarted for it This the Apostle noteth to haue bene the cause that Demas fell from the truth Because he embraced this present world forgetting that the amity of the world is the enmity of God insomuch that whosoeuer will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemy of God 2 Tim. 4 10. Iam. 4 4. This also our Sauiour declareth by the Parable of the rich man Luke 14 16. who sent out his messengers and bad his guests who refused to come pretending sundry excuses one said I haue bought fiue yoake of Oxen and I go to proue them I pray thee haue me excused another saide I
Name If he deliuer his will to his enemies he will shew himselfe to his friends If he vouchsafe to instruct such as be strangers doubtlesse he will open himselfe and reueale his secrets to those that be Citizens of his kingdome If the seruant bee taught by him who doth not know what his master doth he will not passe ouer his owne sonnes who shall be heyres of his inheritance that he hath prepared for them that desire the knowledge of his wayes For he will fulfill the desires of them that feare him hee also will heare their cry and will saue them Psalm 145 19. Thus did Dauid assure his sonne Salomon standing by him when he was going the way of all flesh If thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer 1 Chron. 28 2. 2 Chron. 15 2 3. So when the noble Eunuch repayred to Ierusalem and gaue himselfe to reade the Scriptures that his knowledge might be encreased the word of God dwell plentifully in him the Lord sent Philip vnto him Acts 8.35 who ioyned himselfe to his Chariot and expounded vnto him the way of God more perfectly Likewise when Cornelius the captaine Acts ● a deuout mā and one that feared God had prayed to God for further knowledge that God who had begun his good worke in him would bring him to perfection he is directed to send for Peter who should tell him what he ought to do verifying the saying of Christ Math 13 12 and 25 29. Vnto euery man that hath it shall be giuē and he shall haue abundance but whosoeuer hath not from him shall bee taken away euen that hee hath Would we then know why we are ignorant in the wayes of God weake in faith bare and barren in the gifts of God We do not beleeue the promises of God offering himselfe to those that seeke him and opening to those that knocke at his gate neyther hunger and thirst after his graces nor know the want of them in our selues or others Fourthly let vs follow the example of God Vse and do good to those that are euill He maketh the Sunne to rise vpon the euill and the good hee sendeth raine on the iust and vniust so should wee do good to all although especially to the houshold of faith Math. 5 45. Gal. 6 10. Let not theyr vnworthinesse hinder our goodnesse but labour that our light may so shine before them that we may gaine them to the faith heape coales of fire vpon their head Let vs admonish and exhort them with all patience and long-suffering that they may come out of the snare of the diuell of whom they are holden Let vs preach the Gospel in season and out of season and 1 Cor. 9.22 take all occasions to win those that are without that by all meanes we may saue some What though they be not turned and conuerted to God by the preaching of the Gospel we seeme to bestow our labor in vaine Many are enlightened of God that are not saued they attaine to knowledge that neuer grow to faith We are the sweet sauor of God as well in them that perish as in them that are saued to the one we are the sauour of life to life and to the other the sauour of death to death 2. Cor. 2 15 16. And this must serue and suffice to comfort vs and strengthen vs to beare out the heate of the day the weight of the burden that lyeth vpon our shoulders to consider that howsoeuer our persons be entertained our doctrine receiued Esay 4● and our strength bee wasted and consumed in vaine yet our iudgement is with the Lord and our worke with our God who will reward vs according to our labour Lastly Vs● seeing GOD maketh knowne his will and word to wicked and prophane men who are sundry wayes enlightened with many gifts of the Spirit let vs not rest in seeking after common gifts but labor to be partakers of such as are proper to the elect and doe alwayes accompany saluation and eternall life This is it that the Apostle exhorteth vnto 1. Cor. 14 where mentioning diuers gifts of the Spirit as the gift of knowledge the working of myracles the word of wisedome the power of healing the discerning of spirits the diuersity of toongs the interpretation of tongues all wh●ch are common to al sorts of men both good bad he addeth as the vse that now we teach perswade But desire you the best gifts and I will shew you a more excellent way 1 Cor. 14 30 31. Let vs not therefore content our selues with such knowledge and illumination as the reprobate and vngodly haue but let vs couet such as are peculiar and proper to the elect that we may be the Temples of the holy Ghost that the Spirit of God may dwell in vs not for a time but for euer and dispose our hearts as the owner of the house and gouerne it wholly after his owne will Let vs labour to feele a certaine knowledge of our reconcilation to God in Christ 〈◊〉 3. 〈…〉 5. 〈◊〉 25. 〈◊〉 6. the gifts of regeneration a dying vnto sin arising vp to newnesse of life the grace of hearty praier comfort in distresse and such like which the elect of God finde in some measure wroght in them These are infallible notes of election these are the best gifts that the Apostle vrgeth these are such fruites of the Spirit as wee must delight in and follow after If these be in vs do abound we shall haue that peace of conscience through them that passeth all vnderstanding if these bee not in vs whatsoeuer knowledge we haue beside though we haue tasted of the heauenly gift beene enlightened by the Spirit beene partakers of the holy Ghost tasted of the good word of God and receiued the Gospel with ioy wee shall finde no more sound comfort in them then Balaam did in this place by the reuelation which he had receiued from God 15 Balak yet sent againe moe Princes and more honorable then they 16 Who came to Balaam and said vnto him Thus saith Balak the sonne of Zippor Be not thou staide I pray thee from comming to mee 17 For I will promote thee vnto great honour and will do whatsoeuer thou sayest vnto me Come therfore I pray thee curse for me this people 18 And Balaam answered and saide vnto the seruants of Balak If Balak would giue mee his house full of siluer and gold I cannot goe beyond the word of the Lord my God to do lesse or more 19 And now I pray you tarry ye heere also this night that I may wit what the Lord will say vnto me more 20 And God came vnto Balaam by night and saide vnto him Forasmuch as men are come to call thee rise vp and goe with them but onely what thing I say vnto thee that shalt thou do 21 So Balaam rose vp early
do the sparkes flye out are scattered abroad to the shame and confusion of their owne faces This is it which the Prophet noteth in the people of Israel whom God of his mercy had chosen to be his Church aboue other Nations When the wrath of God came euen vpon them and slew the strongest of them and smote downe the chosen men of Israel then they returned to him and sought him early then they remembred that God was their strength and the most high God their redeemer but they flattered him with their lips and dissembled with him with their tongue for their heart was not vpright with him neither were they faithfull in his couenat Psal 78 31 34 35 36. Where we see that howsoeuer hypocrisy were in their secret soules and deepe dissimulation in their secret parts yet a counterfet repentance is in their mouthes their owne harts had taught their tongues to lye against God Secondly they would be like the children Reason 2 of God in their afflictions whom they regard not to follow in their conuersations They hate them with a deadly hatred and cannot abide them in their life so long as themselues liue in peace and sleepe in security but when the hand of God is heauy vpon them thē they would follow their example and would giue a world that they were like vnto them That they might die the death of the righteous Numb 23 10. yet is their confession no true confession because it proceedeth not from a feeling of the filthinesse of sinne but ariseth from a feare of punishment and therefore it is without conuersion to God without hope of mercy without prayer for pardon without hatred of sinne and without purpose to amend The vses of this doctrine are these First Vse 1 this ouerthroweth the doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth that confession is a part of true repentance which is a turning of the heart and a right reformation of the life For they make three parts of repentance cont●ition of the heatt confession of the tongue satisfaction of the worke But these are not to be holden of vs as essentiall parts of a right repentance inasmuch as they may agree to the Reprobate and vnregenerate and are all of them found in Iudas that betrayed his Master Math. 27 34. For when he saw that Christ was condemned he sorrowed was striken with greefe for the treachery hee had committed againe he confessed his sinne before the high Priests in betraying innocent blood Lastly he made satisfaction and restitution of the mony which he had receiued Besides if wee marke their owne doctrine Catech. Rom. pag. 437. Tho. Aquin lib. 4. dist 2. quaest 1. art 1. who teach that contrition is an act of a mans free will proceeding from it not an act of the Holy-Ghost and that satisfaction may bee performed by another one satisfying for another as well as for himselfe Ioh. Chapeauil summ Catech. Rom. we may truely and soundly conclude from their false and vnsound doctrine that the reprobate may haue sorow of heart yea make confession and satisfaction and consequently their confession is no true member of repentance This therefore cannot be the true Religion which faileth and faultereth in the chiefe points and foundations thereof The like wee might say of the faith of the Romane Church which a reprobate may attaine For they define it to be a gift of God and a certaine light of the minde whereby a man giueth a sure and a certain assent to those things that are reuealed in the Word of God Rhe. Testam vpon 2 Cor. 13. And therefore our English Rhemists write that we may know and feele whether we haue faith but cannot know whether we be in the state of grace So Bellarmine in his first booke of Iustification auoucheth that whereas wee are taught in the Creed to beleeue the forgiuenesse of sinnes Bellar. de Iustif lib. 1. ca. 9. Sensus illius articuli non est credo aut confido mihi remissa esse peccata sed credo confi●cor in Ecclesia Catholica esse donum remission●s peccatorum c. Iam. 2.19 Heb. 6.5 Luke 8 13. The meaning of that Article is not I beleeue or trust that my sins are forgiuen but I beleeue and confesse that the gift of forgiuing sins is found in the Catholike Church which is receiued by Baptisme and other Sacraments All this is but an historicall and generall faith which the diuell himselfe hath who beleeueth and trembleth as the Apostle teacheth and therefore also the reprobates whose mindes are so far enlightened to know the truth This is to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they know nothing how the Church beleeueth If then the reprobate may be made partakers of the faith and repentance of the Church of Rome Acts 20 20.21 which are the two chiefe parts of Religion it confuteth those Polititians wise in their owne eyes who neither shame nor feare to maintaine that the Romish Religion differeth not in substance from the doctrine of the reformed Churches and consequently that they may be vnited reconciled If they can make a fellowship betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnes a communion betweene light and darknesse concord betweene Christ and Belial then they may make an harmony and hotch-potch betweene these two so contrary the one to the other But they shall assoone bring the North and South pole together and cause heauen earth to ioyne in one as these two the one grounded vpon the infallible rock of the Scriptures onely the other builded vpon the traditions of their fathers Vse 2 Secondly we must learne that they are further from the Kingdome of heauen that deny their sinne that hide it that excuse and iustifie it the reprobate shall rise vp in iudgment and condemne this generation It is one steppe toward the Kingdome of Heauen to tremble at the iudgements of God to feare to commit sin to sorrow and weep for it when a man hath committed it to humble himself and acknowledge his particular sinnes before mens and to pray to God in his distresses yet the reprobate may goe thus farre in his profession and afterward fall away This we see in Ahab when Eliah had reproued him for his bloody oppression and Idolatry and had denounced the wrath of God to fall vpon him and his posterity 1 Kings 2● 29. He rent his cloathes put on sackcloath vpon him fasted and went softly in token of mourning Thus he humbled himselfe for some sinnes which hee had committed yet not for all his sinnes neither did he aske pardon for them So the Israelites murmuring against God desiring flesh for their lusts in the wildernesse had their prayers granted Numb 11 If then the vngodly may goe thus farre in Religion then they are heereby condemned that iustifie themselues in their iniquities and cannot bee brought to a free confession of them but hide them as Adam Gen. 3 2● or excuse
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
testimonies of the fauour of GOD blessing them both with spirituall blessings in heauenly things and with temporall blessings in earthly things In regard of benefits belonging to the life to come and accompanying saluation hee sheweth diuers priuiledges bestowed vpon them concerning their iustification sanctification regeneration and comfortable vse of the Word vouchsafed vnto them Touching their iustification hee saith Hee seeth none iniquity in Iacob and hee beholdeth not transgression in Israel Whereby hee meaneth not that they were freed from sinne for if wee say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and there is no truth in vs 1. Iohn 1 8. but that he imputeth it not he layeth it not to their charge but he couereth it and freely forgiueth it Hee doth not charge them with it but discharge them from it Hee seeth their sinnes well enough with the eyes of his knowledge but because they are couered in Christ 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 31. he will not looke vpon them with the eyes of his iudgment he beholdeth them as wel able to discerne them but not with a purpose to reuenge them Touching their sanctification he saith The Lord his God is with him not onely with his presence but with his grace and Spirit of sanctification For if wee speake of the presence of his essence and being hee is with all persons and filleth all places This Salomon in his worthy and excellent prayer 1. King 8 27. confesseth to GOD saying Is it true indeed that GGD will dwell on the earth Behold the heauens and the heauen of heauens are not able to contain thee how much more vnable is this house that I haue built Heereunto accordeth the saying of the Prophet Ieremy Ier. 23.24 Can any hide himselfe in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Losd Doe not I fill heauen and earth saith the Lord How then is this made a speciall priuiledge and prerogatiue bestowed on the people of GOD to haue GOD with them which is the common condition of all places and persons I answere that in respect of his Natute and being he is no more in heauen then on earth with the godly then with the vngodly in the Church then out of the Church but in respect of his effects and the presence of his grace fauour and protection For as the soule of man is wholly in the whole body and sitteth therein as a Queene ruling in euery member and part of the body in respect of the essence thereof and is no more in the head then in the hand nor in the hand more then in the heele but it is saide to bee especially in the head and in the hart because there it exerciseth most worthy and weighty effects so God is present euery where in the world euen in the wicked and reprobate in respect of naturall gifts of preseruation knowledge and such like But he is present in the godly in more speciall manner by more speciall graces of regeneration and sanctification of faith and repentance ruling them by his Spirit pardoning their iniquities and remembring their sins no more so that howsoeuer he may leaue them for a season to see their owne infirmity and the necessity of his mercy yet he neuer totally and finally departeth from them but returneth in compassion toward them and followeth them with his louing kindnes vntill he haue brought them to eternall life In these respects he is said Numb 14 42. 2 Chro. 5 7. to be farre from the wicked and not to come neare their habitation Touching the next priuiledge which is his word he saith The ioyfull shout of a King is among them that is he ruleth them by the Scepter of his Word which soundeth shrill among them as the blast of a trumpet whereby is wrought in them both faith and sanctification Touching temporall blessings he painteth and pointeth out the long experience which his people haue had of his mercy in sauing them and of his power in ouerthrowing their enemies This he sheweth by a particular example of his wonderfull deliuerance from the tyranny of the Egyptians who could not holde them in that slauery and bondage but were constrained by great wonders and grieuous plagues to let them go And as he deliuered them from the hard and heauy yoke of their oppressors so he armeth them with strength as with a shield against all their enemies and fenceth them with his mighty hand as the Vnicorne is with his borne so that al the diuelish deuices that diuelish men can practise can no more preuaile against them then poyson against the Vnicorne For we reade partly in the holy Scriptures and partly in other authors that haue searched out the nature of foure-footed beasts both of the strength of the Vnicorne and of the nature of his horne to expell poyson This is it which the Lord himselfe speaketh in the book of Iob Iob. 39 12 13 14 15 Psal 22 22 and 92.11 Esay 34 7. Will the Vnicorne serue thee or will he tarry by thy cribbe Canst thou binde the Vnicorne with his band to labour in the furrow or will he plough the valleyes after thee So the Prophet Dauid describing his enemies resembleth them for their cruelty to the Lyon for their strength to the Vnicorne Aelian lib. 16. hist animal cap. 20. Likewise all men agree about the Vnicornes horne Writers doe confesse and experience doth confirme that it hath force to expell poyson therefore his horne being put into the water purgeth it and driueth out the poyson that he may drinke without harme if any venomous beast happen to drink therein before him So the Israelites are compared to the Vnicorne in this place partly in respect of their owne strength who whilst they were obedient to God and serued him with a faithfull heart could not be ouercome of their enemies but stood victorious and inuincible against all dangers and partly because no hurtfull or noysome arts vsed against them should be able to worke their confusion Now to the latter point which respecteth the person of Balaam he acknowledgeth that notwithstanding his sorcery and diuellish diuination he was destitute of all power ability to hurt them by his enchantments therfore saith There is no sorcery against Iacob nor southsaying against Israel that is the people of God which were his posterity Some vnderstanding these words as if the people were praised and commended because they were not giuen to sorcery and such like superstitions as GOD condemneth in the Law and had forbidden to be among his chosen people Deu. 18 10. but the meaning of Balaams words rather seemeth to be this that the elect people of GOD were so protected from aboue that no sorcery or southsaying could haue any force against them to doe them hurt This mercy of GOD was so great so maruailous so miraculous in the eyes of the very infidels their enemies that from hence forward Balaam resolueth to leaue his Magicke and extoll the workes of GOD toward
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
the sacrifices that both of thē did offer Doctrine The wicked are wise in their kind to bring their wicked purposes to passe Hereby we learne That the children of this world are wise in their generation omitting no manner of means to bring their purposes to passe Wee may obserue by continuall experience the nature of vngodly men they are subtle and cunning in their kinde they watch their wayes and times to fit them to work out their wicked deuices and inuentions Balak knew well enough hee was not able to meete the Israelites in the open field and to put his cause to the triall of a battell and therefore dealeth otherwise This is it which Stephen in his Apology noteth Acts 7 19. There arose another King which knew not Ioseph the same dealt subtilly with our kindred and euilly entreated our fathers and made them to cast out their young children that they should not remaine aliue Thus did Laban deale toward Iacob Gen. 31 1 2 41 changing his minde reuoking his bargaines altering his wages murmuring at his prosperity and changing his countenance toward him This is noted also in the Parable recorded Luk. 16 8 where it is saide that the Master praised and commended his vniust Steward because he had done wisely For the children of this world are in their generation wiser thē the children of light This we see by many examples 2 Sam. 16 23. Ahithophels counsel was esteemed like as one had asked counsell at the Oracle of God so were all his counsels both with Dauid and with Absolon The like we see in Herod when he heard of the birth of Christ as of a new borne King by the wise men he pretendeth piety but vseth pollicy to destroy the Babe our Sauiour he calleth the wisemen secretly and priuily he willeth them to returne what successe they had and pretended a good end that he might worship him Math. 2 7 8. whereas his meaning was to kill him The same we might obserue in the Scribes and Pharisies after the ascension of Christ they spared no meanes to hinder the course of the Gospel Acts 3 and 4 and 5 but vsed sometimes faire meanes somtimes threatnings somtimes commandements to stop the mouths of the Apostles All which Testimonies teach vs that which the Prophet Ieremy saith ch 4.22 of the people in his time agreeable to the truth of this doctrine They are wise to do euil but to do well they haue no knowledge Reason 1 The Reasons follow First they serue a cunning master the author of al confusion the contriuer of all mischiefe the worker of all wickednesse that olde subtill serpent who worketh in all the children of disobedience Eph. 2 2. They serue him as their master they obey him as their father they follow him as their captaine they honour him as their lord they worship him as their god For do yee not know saith the Apostle Paul that to whomsoeuer ye giue your selues as seruants to obey his seruants ye are to whom ye obey whether it bee of sin vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse Rom. 6 16. And as Peter testifieth They promise vnto others liberty and are themselues the seruants of corruption for of whomsoeuer a man is ouercome euen vnto the same he is in bondage 2 Pet. 2 19. Secondly God giueth euen to wicked men Reason 2 wisedome and vnderstanding Psal 145 9. to magnifie his mercy who is good to all and to aggrauate their sinne who are made thereby without excuse Rom. 1 20 21. For he maketh his Sunne to shine vpon the euill and the good hee sendeth raine on the iust and vniust Now the greater his goodnes is toward them the heauier shall his iudgement and their punishment be To whom much is committed of him much shall be required and to whomsoeuer men doe giue much the more of him will they aske Luke 12 48. What is it that thou hast not receiued And if thou hast receiued it why dost thou not glorifie him of whom thou hast receiued it Thus we see God giueth wisedome and sundry other gifts to the vngodly both to shew himselfe to be in his mercies vnspeakable and to leaue them in their sinnes inexcusable Thirdly the enemies of God haue knowledge Reason 3 vnderstanding experience foresight forecast they are as wise as Serpents as subtle as Foxes as crafty as Crocodiles to the ende God may vse them as his rods in correcting his Church and in trying the faith of his people So he proued the patience of the Israelites by Pharaoh the Egyptians Exod. 1 10 15 22. and by the cunning and crafty fetches which they practised for their ouerthrow and destruction So he tried Dauid by wise Achitophel through whose subtilty suggestion Dauid was driuen out of Ierusalem and to shift from place to place for the safegard of life So he tried Ioseph and Mary by the dissimulation of Herod by whō they were constrained to depart out of Iudea and to flye into the Land of Egypt The vses to bee made of this Doctrine are Vse 1 many First this should on the other side teach vs to deale wisely and warily with them lest we be snared and circumuented by them We are set as vpon an hill we are placed as vpon a stage if we professe Christ Iesus a small spot will be seene in our garment It behoueth vs therefore to be wise as Serpents and innocent as Doues Math. 10 1● according to the counsell of our Sauiour to the end we may stop the mouthes of gainsayers and cut off occasions from them that seeke occasions that when they speake euill of vs as of euill doers they may be ashamed which slander our good conuersation It behooueth vs therefore hauing to doe with such aduersaries as are their craftesmasters in their occupation and haue learned cunning in their profession to deale not onely lawfully but wisely Their wisedome is ioyned with wickednes our wisedome must bee seasoned and tempered with godlinesse Their policy is iniquity with vs policy and innocencie must accompany together and kisse one another Their wisedome is a circumuenting by laying of snares our wisedom must be to be circumspect in auoyding of snares If wee haue this warinesse mingled with true sincerity hauing our spirits without guile and all our actions without dissimulation it is both lawfull and expedient to set wisedome against wisedome and policie against policy and care against care and vnderstanding against vnderstāding that so through their subtilty and our simplicity we be not taken in their traps which they haue laid for vs. The men are mischieuous the times are dangerous the snares and slights are pernicious if we should not deale wisely and warily we should lye open as a prey to the enemies and should notwithstand iminent harmes and hurts ready to fall vpon vs. Thus the seruants of God haue borne themselues in a lawfull course with a wise hand Rebecca vnderstanding the hatred and hearing
Epistle chapt 2. verse 4 of the sinnes of the Angelles of the olde world of the Sodomites and setteth down the wages thereof what it was the Angels were cast downe the olde world was drowned the Cities of Sodome and Gomorrha were burned See the miserable ends of Pharaoh of Ahitophel of Saul of Iudas of Herod and such others all the which are written for our instruction to teach vs that all euil works shall haue an end answerable to their euill The Reasons are plaine to assure the truth Reason 1 hereof For first it standeth with Gods iustice to recompence euill with euill True it is he is able by his infinite power to bring good out of euill and to turne the euill actions of men to serue his owne glory to further the good of his children as we see in the history of Ioseph who by the false treachery of his brethren was solde into Egypt to whom he said When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good that he might bring to passe as it is this day and saue much people aliue Gen. 50 20. So Iob being bereaued of his children 〈◊〉 1 21. and robbed of his Cattell confesseth that the Lord had giuen the Lord had taken away Likewise the Apostles speaking of the crucifying of Christ the Lord of glory declare that Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel 〈◊〉 4 27 28. had done no more then the counsell of God had determined before to be done Neuerthelesse it standeth with the rule of his iustice to crosse the attempts and endeuours of euill men and to set himselfe against them that set themselues against him So long therfore as God is so iust the vngodly must not looke for any good successe of euill enterprizes His blessing is vpon the lawfull labours of his children because he is mercifull his curse waiteth vpon the vnlawfull works of his enemies because he is iust It is his nature to bee iust hee cannot deny himselfe Reason 2 Secondly the Lord will make their wickednesse knowne and plucke off the vizard from their faces howsoeuer they thinke to proceed and promise to themselues an happy end This the Apostle teacheth 2 Tim. 3 8 9 where he sheweth that as Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses so do these also resist the truth men of corrupt mindes reprobate concerning the faith but they shall preuaile no longer for their madnesse shall be euident to all men as theirs also was Seeing therefore God is a iust God and will vncase the hypocrisie of euill men we are right well assured that euil inuentions shal come to nought and haue God to crosse them Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see from hence that sinne endeth not as it beginneth Euill men are sure to be destroyed and that God will call them to an account for those things which they haue done if not in this life yet assuredly in the life to come They dreame of God sitting ydle in heauen and seeing all things and regarding nothing but in the end they shall know that which now they will not know and feele that whereof now they haue no feeling And see heere how Satan bewitcheth the mindes of these men and blindeth their eyes that they cannot see sinne to bee sinne nor cast their eyes to behold the wages of sinne reserued for the committers of it Let all wicked men therefore looke for the heauy curse of God They blesse themselues but the curse of God is vpon them Deut. 32 41 and ready to ouertake them Woe therefore shall be vnto them though all the world should blesse them They can haue no assurance of any good successe nor looke for any blessing vpon the works of their hands Secondly be not offended when wicked Vse 2 men florish and prosper but consider their end and what the end of their hope is and we shal not be deceiued with their outward glory and present pompe of the world wherin they liue It is a great tentation to the faithfull to behold the prosperity of the wicked The Prophet Dauid declareth how his faith had long wrastled and struggled with this assault insomuch that his foote had well nigh slipped Ps 73 2. and his steps were almost gone when he saw how the vngodly florished and on the other side that he was daily punished and chastened euery morning This was it that troubled Iob Wherefore do the wicked liue and waxe olde and grow in wealth Iob 21.7 So the Prophet Ieremy maruaileth at the prosperity of the wicked O Lord if I dispute with thee thou art righteous yet let me talk with thee of thy iudgments Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper Why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse Ier. 12 1. So the Prophet Habbakkuk complaineth vnto God Hab 1.3 considering the great felicity of the wicked and the miserable oppression of the godly which oftentimes endure all kinde of cruelty and affliction and can see no end thereof But we must enter into the Sanctuary of God then we shal see the end which God in his iust iudgement hath appointed to wicked men when wee thought he had no care of their doings and that they were in the greatest safety and security we shall see he is holy in all his wayes true in all his words This is a great terror vnto wicked men to know that he will lay vpon them a fearefull end and on the other side it is a great comfort vnto the godly to consider that howsoeuer God beare a long time yet in the end his hand shall take hold on iudgment then hee shall execute vengeance on his enemies and reward them that hate him Lastly seeing all euill shall haue an euill Vse 3 end let vs haue no fellowship with euill men or euill actions vnlesse we will partake with them in the punishment It is our duty to forsake their company and to leaue our league with them lest we be taken in the net and be snared in their wayes This is the exhortation giuen to vs from heauen Come out of her my people that ye be not partaker of her sinnes Reuel 18 4 5. and that ye receiue not of her plagues Many haue sustained much danger endured much affliction by accompanying and conuersing with euill men Lot was neuer more greeued nor lesse secured then when he was euen in the very midst of Sodome He made choise to dwell there therby to enrich himselfe but he quickly repented him of his choise Gen. 14 12. He was taken prisoner by forreigne enemies and was in greatest danger by violence at his owne home Gen. 19.9 Yea so long as he liued in that place he seemed to liue in a little hell as the Apostle testifieth 2 Pet 2 7 8 that God deliuered iust Lot being vexed with the vncleanly conuersation of the wicked for he being righteous and dwelling amongst them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous soule from
seeing GOD hath threatned to turne them to our curse and confusion so that wherein soeuer hath beene our wickednesse therein also shall be our woe our malice shall turne to our owne mischiefe our vncleannesse shall fall out to be our owne vndoing This the wiseman teacheth that because of the whoorish woman a man is brought to a morsell of bread and such an one will hunt for the precious life of a man Pro. 6 26. So such as delight to follow drunkennes it turneth to their destructiō for the very creatures grone trauel as it were in paine to be deliuered from this bondage of corruption in which they are after a sort holden for a time and do cry out vnto God for vengeance against them according to the saying of Salomon Prou. 23 29 30. To whom is woe to whom is sorrow to whom is strife to whō is murmuring to whom are wounds without cause and to whom is the rednesse of the eyes Euen to them that tarry long at the wine to them that goe and seeke mixt wine Wherefore let vs vse the creatures of God aright that they may be seruiceable and comfortable vnto vs and that they may helpe to further and encrease our blessednesse which they will do if they bee well vsed This our Sauiour teacheth his Disciples Math. chap. 13 16. Blessed are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare Euery gift and creature of God that thou abusest shall further thy condemnation and bring vppon thy head his iust iudgement Euery instrument of thy body and power of thy soule that thou hast abused to sinne shall encrease thy woe and torment as appeareth in the example of the rich man Verse 22. And he looked on the Kenites and said Strong is thy dwelling place and put thy nest in the rocke neuerthelesse the Kenite shall be spoiled c. In these words going before we heard of Balaams prophesie against the Amalekites Heere Moses setteth downe his prophecy against the Kenites which is the sixt in number and the third among those that are denounced against the vnbeleeuers and idolatrous nations Concerning the Kenites wee haue spoken sufficiently before which were the posterity of Iethro the father in law of Moses and these dwelled among the Amalekites before they departed from them as appeareth 1. Sam. 15 16 so that they obtained mercy and were not destroyed because they shewed mercy vnto the children of Israel when they came vp from Egypt The scope of this prophecie is to declare that howsoeuer these Kenites thought they dwelled safely and had their seat as it were a nest made in a strong rocke that might be assaulted but not subdued besieged but not ouercome yet when they promised to themselues the surest peace and greatest security destruction should come suddainly like a whirlewinde and carry them away Doctrine The iudgments of God many times come suddenly From hence we learne that the iudgments of GOD vpon secure and sinfull persons doe many times come suddainly Howsoeuer the Lord bee a God of patience and beareth with the vessels of wrath appointed to destruction yet when men think themselues free and farre from all danger iudgement lighteth on them encreased by the speedinesse of the execution This wee see in sundry examples of Gods proceedings against the vngodly The Egyptians that pursued after the Israelites to the midst of the sea were suddenly drowned the waters couered them their chariots failed them the Lord fought against them Exod. 14 26. Whiles Balteshazzar made his feasts dranke wine in all excesse and praised his gods of gold and siluer at the same houre appeared fingers of a mans hand writing on the plaster of the wall foretelling his finall confusion which immediatly after followed Dan. 5 5 30. When Pharaoh refused to let the people go as God commanded and Moses required of him had bin scourged by many plagues he his Princes his people and whole land yet they hardened their hearts and walked stubburnly against him suddainly at midnight the Lord smote all the first borne in the land of Egypt from the first borne of Pharaoh that sate on his throne vnto the first borne of the captiue that was in prison all the first borne of beasts Exod. 12 29. Thus Christ describeth his second comming that it shall be suddaine speedy and at vnawares Math. 24 37. So in Lots time They were giuen to lust of the flesh to pride of life to fulnesse of bread to abundance of idlenesse to contempt of the poore Ezek. 16 49 these were the chiefe and capitall sinnes of the Sodomites others followed and accompanied them and behold suddainly the Lord rained downe fire and brimstone from heauen which was their portion and consumed them Gen. 19 24. Such shall the comming of Christ to iudgment be when men say peace peace safety safety and thinke not of any danger suddaine destruction shall come vpon them as a thiefe in the night c. 1. Thess 5 2 3. Reason 1 The reasons for further confirmation of this truth do follow For first God is the mighty Iehouah that knoweth all the wayes and workes of his enemies which labour in the fire and conspire in vaine against God his people Howsoeuer the vngodly think him to be weake and to want strength or to bee farre from them not to see their dealings yet by wofull experience they shall finde the power of his hand This is the reason vrged by Moses in his song declaring that they sanke as a stone and were consumed as stubble hee giueth this reason The Lord is a man of warre his Name is Iehouah Exod. 15 3. The world hath had many worthies men of warre excelling in might glorious in victories but the Lord passeth them all whose Name is eternall and almighty able to execute all his iudgments at his owne pleasure His power is not limited stinted there is no power on earth but that which is receiued of him who bringeth all his purposes to passe and his counsels take effect Secondly the vngodly are of a dead heart Reason 2 and despise the warning giuen vnto them of God they haue no desire or affection to any thing but the pleasures and profits of this life This is the reason why the flood was brought vpon the old world and wherefore destruction shal come vpon this old world at the comming of Christ because albeit they were warned by the preaching of Noah yet they were drowned in the delights of the flesh and neuer turned to the Lord till the flood came Mat. 24. Deadnesse of heart contempt of the word are feareful sinnes in the former age in these times wherein we liue Such men make but a mocke in their hearts of all that God promiseth or threatneth saying to themselues where is the promise of his comming 2 Pet. 3 and thereupon oppresse their brethren rage against God and his people vse outragious leud dealings follow euery
the rest of the multitude were spared and the plague ceased which was begun in the hoast as appeareth in the words following Now albeit these were most liuely arguments of the wrath and indignation of God yet the Israelites continued with an high hand and a proud heart to prouoke the most High to his face so that one not of the least lowest but of the principall and cheefest among them brought an whorish woman into the hoast to despite God his people and religion This man thought it not sufficient to goe out of his Tent to those strange women but broght one of thē openly without shame into the Campe before his brethren Verse 14. before Moses and the other Magistrates yea to fill vp the measure of his abhominations to the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation therby blaspheming God reproching his Religion enticing his brethren insulting ouer Moses and the whole assembly that cryed vnto God for mercy to stay his iudgement and to spare his people Loe such was the impudency of this Zimri that notwithstanding the tumults and hurly-burlyes in the hoast yet he is not moued to repentance eyther with the punishment inflicted vpon the malefactors or by the plague of God raging among his brethren or by the teares and supplications of the godly entreating for pardon lying prostrate at the doore of the Tabernacle but in the middest of all these iudgements neyther fearing GOD nor reuerencing man he seeketh to satisfie his filthy lust in the sight of the Sunne and in the open view of all his brethren euen of the whole hoast Verse 1. Now whilst Israel abode in Sittim Before we come to speake of the sinne of the people it shall not be amisse to consider the occasion whereby they fell into sinne Wee haue heard how Balaam being hyred to curse Israel could not for God stayed and restrained him who was greedy of the wages of iniquity Wherefore he counselled Balak to bring the people to destruction by procuring them to fall into some sinne Thus he layde a stumbling blocke before the children of Israel and thereby did draw them to spirituall and carnall fornication For whatsoeuer the Israelites heere committed they did through the counsell and procurement of Balaam From hence we learne that it is a particular note of false Teachers Doctrine It is a note of false teachers to lay stumbling blockes before men and false doctrines to set stumbling blockes before men to draw them to vncleannesse and wickednes eyther against the first or second Table or both I say false Teachers which are the instruments of Satan who he hath thrust into the church haue this speciall care to bring the seruants of God into wickednesse to draw them to idolatry and to destroy theyr faith To this purpose Moses teacheth Deut. 13 1. that false Prophets shall set before them this end to entice the children of God to serue false gods but true Idols This the Prophet Ezekiel noteth chapter 13.19 that they made Gods word to serue their bellies and taught carnall liberty sowing pillowes vnder euery arme hole polluting the Name of God for an handfull of Barley and for a peece of bread slaying the soules of them that should not dye giuing life to the soules that shold not liue crying peace where God proclaimeth open warre lying to the people that heare theyr lies The Scribes and Pharisies corrupted the law by false interpretations and expositions Math. 5 22. as appeareth in the Doctrine of Christ reducing the Law to the true meaning of the Law-giuer So the Apostle declareth that those rauening wolues which should creepe into the Church of God purpose to make hauocke of the people of God I know this that after my departing shall greeuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Acts 20 29. The Apostle Paul prophesying of the comming of Antichrist calleth the doctrine of Antichrist The mystery of Iniquity 2 Thess 2 7. It is the common practise of the Iesuites and Seminary Priests scattered heere and there in the Land to bring the people to Idolatry The Reasons of this truth are manifest Reason 1 First from the counsell of God for albeit no wickednes be in the most High yet it is his wisedome and power to draw good out of euill as he did light out of darknes that so they which are his may be tryed that their faith may be proued their loue to God and the trueth manifested and his children alwayes exercised that they may be made the more carefull and watchful and so finde by experience how they can stand out vnto the end of theyr dayes in all holy obedience This reason is laide open in the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy verse 3. where the doctrine hath his confirmation If there arise among you a Prophet or a dreamer of dreams and giue thee a signe or wonder thou shalt not hearken to the words of the Prophet for the Lord your God proueth you to know whether ye loue the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soule And the Apostle teaching that God hath appointed that heresies shall be in the Church annexeth this reason that the faith of Gods children seated in the heart may be made manifest There must be euen heresies among you that they which are approued among you might be knowne 1 Cor. chap. 11. Another Reason is in the malice of those Reason 2 wicked men themselues For this is the nature of the diuell and the property of diuellish men and the cruelty of them both they carry a continuall hatred to the truth and the professors of it they seeke to make a spirituall slaughter and hauocke of the flock of Christ Therefore the Apostle exhorting the Elders of Ephesus prophesyeth that greeuous wolues should rage against the sheepe of Christ yea of their owne selues should men arise speaking peruerse things to draw disciples after them Act. 20 30. All wolues do account and finde by experience the blood of Lambes to be sweeter thē the blood of all other beasts and therefore they are sheep-byters rather then hog-byters or dog-byters The prophane and heathen are in the power and possession of Satan already he hath made sure of them his cheefest labour and endeuour is to circumuent and subuert the seruants of God So his instruments do hate the faithful as the wolfe doth the sheep the lambes are milde peaceable and simple the wolfe bloudy beastly and cruell therefore no maruaile if they seeke to suppresse the truth and to ouerthrow the seruants of God which are the professors and maintainers of the truth 2 Tim. 3 8. Now let vs apply this doctrine to our seuerall Vse 1 vses First we may assure our owne harts of this that so long as this world continueth the Church shall neuer bee without vncleane beasts to assault it eyther heretiques or false seducers or hyrelings that regard the fleece more then the sheepe the dignity more then
regard neither God nor men neyther heauen nor hell neyther saluation nor damnation This is indeede a dangerous estate and a feareful condition Vse 2 Secondly seeing euill men waxe worse worse we may conclude that their iudgment sleepeth not but is encreased as their sinne encreaseth yea it is not farre off but lyeth at the doores Euery sinne is in it owne nature a sin to death and a remouing from God the wages of it is death and prouoketh to an vtter consumption of vs Rom. 6 23 how then can we answere so many thousands if one bee so grieuous For if the Lord marke what is done amisse who shall be able to stand Thus the Apostle setteth downe their condition that were setled in wickednesse That their condemnation long since resteth not their destruction stūbreth not 2. Pet. 2 3. So then we may assure our selues that the iudgments of God follow at their heeles when men are come to the top and heighth of their sinnes Thus it was with the old world when their wayes were wholly corrupted then was the earth vniuersally drowned When the Sodomites became exceeding sinners against the Lord and their sinnes cryed to heauen the Lord rayned downe fire brimstone vpon them When Israel abounded in all sinne that there was no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land but that by swearing and lying by killing and stealing they brake out and blood touched blood the Lord denounceth by his Prophet That the land shall mourne and euery one that dwelleth therein shall he cut-off Hos 4 1 2. When the Amorites had filled vp the measure of their sins Gen. 15 14. they should be rooted out of the Land and the people of God come in their stead Where the Lord declareth that howsoeuer this people were exceeding sinners in the dayes of Abraham and deserued to be rooted out at the very first yet did he withhold his hand and waited for their repentance a long time vntill they were past recouery Do we then see any waxe worse and worse and encrease in sinne as they grow in age We may conclude that so soone as they are become ripe nay rotten in their sinnes the appointed time of God draweth on to destroy them For euen as men when their Corne is waxen ripe and the fields are white vnto the haruest doe thrust in their sickles Mark 4 29. and cut it downe so will the Lord deale with all the vngodly for when their sinnes are at the highest then his iudgements are at the neerest according as the Apostle Iohn sheweth that an Angell came out of the Temple crying with a loud voyce vnto him that sate on the Cloud Thrust in thy sickle and reape for the time is come to reape for the haruest of the earth is ripe Reuel 14 15. This is it which was declared in a vision vnto Amos where the Lord shewed vnto him a Basket of Summer fruite and saide Amos what seest thou who answered A Basket of Summer fruite Then the Lord saide vnto him The ende is come vpon my people of Israel I will passe by them no more Amos 8 1 2. Declaring thereby the ripenes of their sinnes and the readinesse of Gods iudgements to giue them their reward Wherefore whatsoeuer sinnes vngodly men commit the old are not forgotten and onely the new remembred but all both old and new do come together adde vnto the heape that the measure beeing full pressed downe shaken together and running ouer certaine destruction may fall vpon them Let vs not make a mocke of sinne or thinke that God hath forgotten it when wee haue forgotten it The iniquities that men commit one day are forgotten with them the next and such as are practised in their youth are past their knowledge before they come to age but we cannot hide them from the Almighty Who writeth bitter things against vs and maketh vs to possesse the iniquities of our youth Iob 14 26. Psal 25.7 Euery sin shall helpe somewhat to encrease the weight and make our account the greater in the day of account for as euery Corne of wheat helpeth to fill vp the bushell and to enlarge the heape so doth euery sinne that we commit helpe to bring our wickednesse to the full And as men keepe their bookes of reckonings and accounts which they wil bring forth when they are to reckon so the Lord to the end we may know that he seeth and remembreth our offences is saide after the manner of men to keepe a Register of the deeds of men and to write them vp in the same and euery sin serueth to fill vp the accounts Reuel 20 12. He noteth so many oathes as euery day come from our vncleane mouthes our drunkennesse at this time and that place and in that company our whoredomes vncleannesse and wantonnesse our contempt of his word our neglect of this sermon and that sermon on this Sabboth and on such a Sabboth so that wee shall finde when the day of reckoning commeth sins vpon sins and heaps vpon heapes vntill the measure runneth ouer and when wee must goe the way of all flesh they will stand before vs as an huge Sea whereof we can sound no bottome to swallow vs vp For if we must giue an account for euery idle word at the day of iudgment Mat. 12 36 how much more for our blasphemies and vncleane deeds which are without number Which should make vs cry out with the Prophet O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe neither is it in man to walke to direct his steppes Lord correct me but with iudgment not in thine anger lest thou bring me to nothing Ier. 10 23 24. To conclude howsoeuer God spare long because hee is patient yet if wee grow worse and worse and abuse his patience and run into all ryot and excesse of sinne he will fill vp the viole of his iudgment and powre out his wrath vpon vs to the vtmost This serueth to answere the curiosity and to stop the mouthes of many men who seeing wicked men proceede in sinne and prosper in their wayes are offended and are ready to say Doeth not the Lord see this Or is there no righteousnesse in the Almighty Why doth the way of the wicked prosper and why are they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse Ier. 12 1. God suffereth wicked men a long time because their sinnes are not yet full the measure is not filled vp but waite a while and they shall not goe vnpunished Vse 3 Lastly seeing men giuing themselues ouer to sinne come at the last to bee frozen in the dregges of it it is our duty to resist the beginnings to preuent the breach and to stop the first course of it It is as a serpent that must be trod on in the egge it is as a birth that would be smothered in the conception Let vs take heed that sinne grow not into a custome and get an habit This is it which
10 31 32 that saw a certaine man robbed of his money spoyled of his rayment and wounded of his body yet departed from him and passed by on the other side leauing him halfe dead But when we are so farre from releeuing them in theyr wants and comforting them in theyr distresses and helping them with our counsell that we seduce them our selues or boulster them vp in their sinnes or draw them into wickednesse we shall draw vpon our selues the heauy iudgements of God in the day of his visitation For if they shall not escape that are ledde out of the way and follow the direction of false and lying seducers of greater iudgment and sorer punishment shall they bee worthy that lay snares to catch others and draw them vnto destruction In the Prophesies of Ieremy we see Pashur the sonne of Immer the Priest threatned Ier. 20 6. that because he had preached lies hee and all that belonged vnto him should dye in captiuity And in another place the Lord denounceth his iudgements to come vpon the Prophets which haue sweet toongs Ier. 23.31 seducing the people with pleasing lies Herevnto wee may referre all ignorant Ministers which are vtterly disabled for the performance of their duty in teaching the people they haue the place but want the gifts 1 Tim. 3 2 they haue the calling but want the ability 2 Tim. 2.2 they fill vp the roomes of workmen but are not able to do the worke These commit an heynous sin not onely destroying their owne foules but bringing the people to destruction For through their ignorance and insufficiency they cast away their owne soules the soules of other men The wise man teacheth Prou. 29 18 that where there is no vision there the people decay Wherefore to conclude let all faithfull Ministers of God with care conscience be stirred vp to deliuer that Embassage which they haue receiued from God not as men pleasers but as the seruants of Christ And let all the people know that it becommeth them with al patience and reuerence to receiue the word of exhortation which God hath sanctified as the meanes to worke in thē faith and obedience It shall excuse no man in the day of the Lord to say I would haue hearkened to the truth but I was deceyued I would haue walked in the right way but alasse I was seduced These are olde Adams figge-leaues which will not serue to couer our shame and to hide our nakednesse wee must seeke after the truth and learne to discerne of it from errour If we be content to liue in ignorance and voluntarily submit our selues to be led or rather misled by blinde guides that can neyther informe themselues nor vs in the wayes of the Lord if we wilfully shut our eyes because we will not see our ignorance is without excuse and for want of knowledge wee shall certainly bee destroyed Let vs all walke in the right way and make streight steps vnto our feete Heb. 12 13 that God may be glorified our soules saued we entirely preserued in the truth through Iesus Christ to whom bee praise and glory in the Church for euer Amen CHAP. XXVI 1 AND it came to passe after the plague that the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saying 2 Take the summe of the Congregation of the Children of Israel from twenty yeares old and vpward throughout their fathers house all that are able to go to warre in Israel 3 And Moses and Eleazar the Priest spake vnto them c. 5 Reuben the eldest sonne of Israel c. 9 This is that Dathan and Abiram which were famous in the Congregation c. 10 And the earth opened her mouth c. HAuing sufficiently seene the weake estate and condition of this people who as much as lay in them rushed forward to their owne destruction and were vnworthy of the mercy of God that they might learne in the matter of their saluation to ascribe al to God Deut. 8 17. Let vs consider the power of his grace 1 Cor. 12 6 seene and made perfect in their weaknesse to the end of this booke wherein we are to marke a description partly of the holy and Ecclesiasticall Lawes giuen to the 31. chapt and partly sundry Ciuill and politicall Lawes belonging to their inheritance in the Land of promise Before both these we haue in this and the chapter following a new numbring of the people by the commandement of God wherein we must marke two things one touching the numbring of them the other touching the order to be deuised in the diuiding of the inheritance Touching the numbring of the people we must remember that this is now the third numbring since the Israelites by the mighty hand of God departed out of Egypt The first was the same yeare they were brought foorth when the summe was taken of them and a generall payment exacted of rich and poore for the prouision and preparation of holy things requisite for the Tabernacle Exod. 30 14 15 16. The second was in the beginning of the second yeare when the holy things were made and an order set downe among the people in their iournies Numb 1 and 2. The third is that which is in this place And notwithstanding the two former this was not without speciall causes The causes of this new nūbring of the people for there had beene a great change and alteration among the people since the second nūbring of them which was 38. yeares before they that were then numbred beeing dead in the plagues and punishments that fell vpon them Againe the diuision of the Land could not but by these breaches among them be very vniust and vnequall vnlesse this summe had beene taken whereas the Land ought to bee indifferently diuided and parted to ende all controuersies to cut off all occasions of enuie and emulation and to preserue loue and vnity among brethren Thirdly in regard of military discipline that they might march in good array and keep order the better among them for they were now in a manner come to hand blowes with their enemies and were ready to encounter with them Fourthly that the hand of God toward this people might be better seene and knowne to wit both his power and goodnesse in that though many thousands of them were wasted consumed in the Wildernesse yet the number of them was not diminished but rather encreased likewise his iustice and truth in that though he chastened the rebellious and refractary against him yet hee kept the promise hee had made to their fathers touching the multiplying of their seed as the starres of heauen Theod. quaest 46 forasmuch as he is able of stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham Mat. 3 9. And to call those things that are not as though they were Rom. 4 17 18. Lastly to shew that as he knoweth perfectly and exactly the number of all that entred into the earthly Canaan so he knoweth the
iniquity hath gotten the vpper hand Exod. 33 32 33. Deut. 7 2 3 4. 2 King 8 18. Reason 1 The grounds are because sin is a cunning Orator able to moue much so is euery sinner though otherwise neuer so simple a cunning Rhetoritian speaking in the enticing words of mans wisedome or rather of the diuels eloquence and therefore they seldome plead but they perswade they sildom come but they ouercome They compasse sea and land they spare no time or place or meanes to win whomsoeuer they can to themselues Prou. 7 21. Secondly our nature is prone to decline vnto euil for as sin is strong twisted as a cartrope to draw others so we are of our selues weake and feeble ready to yeeld and to giue ouer vpon euery occasion euen of our selues through our inbred corruption thogh none do entice or intrap vs much more then when we are proued and prouoked We see it by the Israelites that suffered the Heathen to liue among them they soon learned their waies and serued their idols which were a snare to them Psal 106 35 36. Vse 1 This reproueth all such as enter into league with such persons they euen offer their hands and feet to be bound as it were in chaines and they become afterward as prisoners and vassals to them The chaines of sin are small and subtle in the beginning they are not easie to be espied while they are more easie to be passed ouer or to be broken and so much lesse easie they are to bee discerned because they promise pleasure or profit liberty or life howbeit afterward hauing taken hold they do so claspe and inclose the poore prisoner that he can hardly free himselfe This is the ruine and downfall of many If wee make much of the sinner we cannot long hate the sin and therefore the Apostle ioyneth them both together and chargeth vs to auoyd both the one the other Eph. 5 7 11. Be ye not partakers with thē and afterward he addeth Haue no fellowshippe with the vnfruitfull works of darknesse but rather reproue them If then we be continualy in company with euill doers the continuall custome of seeing and hearing euil dimmeth our fight and stoppeth our eares and hardeneth our hearts and taketh away out feeling that wee can neither see the vglines of sin nor heare the cry of it nor feele the foulnes of it yea it stoppeth our mouths that we cannot nor dare not for feare of offence reproue any of theyr euill wayes but first we winke at them and afterward we ioyne with them Secondly we see hereby the error vaine Vse 2 perswasion of many men that for pleasure or profit or such like carnal respects yoke themselues with prophane persons who glorie and boast that they can easily and quickly breake off society with them whensoeuer they list leaue their company at their owne pleasure or leysure But these men are much deceiued know neither the deceitfulnesse of sinne nor cunning of a sinner nor the iudgment of God For marke when we list we shall finde by experience few examples of such as haue returned from carnall and corrupt company And heereby it appeareth to be true because when as such as delighted to stand in the way of sinners once went seriously about it to shake off their fellowes and to leaue their folly they haue bene discouraged with the difficultie of the worke and found it as hard as for a prisoner to shake off his fetters that are made fast about him When Peter lay in prison he could not with all his might free himselfe from his irons it was the hand of the Angel that deliuered him from those chaines Acts 12 7 so all the power and strength that we haue is not great enough to set vs at liberty from the snares of sinne it must be a superiour and supernaturall worke that we may confesse and say This is the finger of God The strong man keepeth vs vnder lock and key Till a stronger then he commeth and taketh from him all his Armor wherein he trusted and diuideth the spoyles Luk. chapter 11 verse 22. Nay the more strength a man thinketh he hath to withstand any sin or to resist the sinner the sooner he is ouertaken with the one the other For this perswasion ariseth from presumption in himselfe of his owne giftes and this breedeth in him security and so in the end thorough a proud opinion he hath of his great strength hee groweth so retchlesse and carelesse that he feareth not to commit any sinne whatsoeuer This wee might expresse and enlarge by the example of Peter Math. 26. The Scripture setteth him downe as a glasse before vs that so often as we looke vpon him we should take notice of our owne frailty and weaknesse And doubtlesse this is the cause why God oftentimes in his iust iudgement forsaketh men and leaueth them vnto themselues because they make flesh their arme and presume vpon their own strength Hence it is that they are oft●n ouertaken with those sinnes which otherwise if they had feared with a godly iealousie their owne hearts he would haue kept them from the pit of them So then it is a vaine thing for men to vse the company of those that are prophane and wicked vnder an euill-grounded conceit and foolish imagination of their own ability to stand fast seeing it is so hard a thing to forsake and shake off their society Vse 3 Lastly it admonisheth euery one that there is required great warinesse and watchfulnesse of him to forsake the company and abandon the society of those that are wicked men For the hardnesse of this duty should stirre vs vp to be so much more carefull and fearful of our selues Therefore we ought to labour after a sound faith that we may beleeue this to bee true for this is the foundation of the whole building Faith is that which wil beget feare and feare will beget diligence and circumspection to auoyde that which is euill Thus it was with Noah hee did beleeue that GOD would destroy the world or else he had himselfe beene destroyed with the vnbeleeuing world therefore also he feared knowing that hee who had threatned would performe And what did this feare work in him was it idle No it caused him To prepare the Arke to saue himselfe and to enter into it going from the rest of the world and separating himselfe and his family from them Heb. 11 7. So then these three go together faith feare and diligence Faith breedeth feare and feare bringeth carefulnesse If we haue faith to beleeue the danger of euill company and how hard it is to separate from them and to touch nothing of theirs as we heard chap. 16 26 where Moses saith Depart I pray you from the Tents of these wicked men and touch nothing of theirs lest ye bee consumed in all their sinnes this will make vs beginne to be fearefull to feare our owne estate lest we be suddenly surprized and
others euen in priuate houses and families The Law of God and man allow not nay they condemne the common practice of brawling fighting quarrelling or challenging one of another into the field for priuate and personall wrongs whereby the seedes of murther and shedding of blood are sowne which soone grow vp to ripenesse and perfection and yeelde a dolefull haruest of sorrow and repentance when it is too late if they bee not weeded out of the heart betimes Whosoeuer shall thinke it a disgrace to refuse such challenges let them also thinke it a disgrace to walke in the wayes of God and to obey the good Edicts of Princes and the wholesome lawes of the Commonwealth It is the greatest grace that can be to yeeld obedience to God and contrariwise it is no credite to sinne against him to saue and salue vp a supposed honour and reputation among men It is the duty therefore of all that liue in priuate societies when they haue hard or wrong measure offered vnto them to go to their fathers or masters for they are Magistrates in the house and are within their owne doores as Kings to rule and Officers to gouerne and no man ought to reuenge his owne cause and quarrel he is as a Marshal to right euery mans cause that is vnder his roofe and to maintaine their credite and reputation The causes of these duels are euill Zedegin loc commun pag. 457. sometimes pride vain-glory sometimes couetousnesse and greedinesse of gaine and the cause of all these causes the diuell himselfe who was a murtherer from the beginning The effects thereof are no better for they cause deadly feudes breed hatred neuer to be appeased nourish contention and confusion hinder prayer and holy exercises of Religion shed mans blood made in the Image of God and bring downe the vengeance of God vpon our owne heads For how often doe such quarrels beginne with brawling and end in blood which once being spilled cannot be gathered vp Let all such therefore as eyther challenge or accept of challenges consider this point that hee which killeth maketh himselfe guilty of execrable murther before God and the blood so shed cryeth as it were with a loud voyce against him to heauen and neuer ceaseth till it hath called downe vengeance and touching him that is killed let him know that he is no better then one of the martyrs of the diuell For as God hath his Martyrs that dye in his cause What we are to thinke of Duellists so the diuell also hath his martyrs that dye in his cause and such as shed their blood are the diuels executioners and no better We can hold no other opinion either of the one or of the other neyther of him that killeth nor of him that is killed whatsoeuer they thinke of themselues and therefore let them looke to it that are so prodigall of their liues or of the liues of others 3 Our father dyed in the wildernesse and he was not in the company of them that gathered themselues together against the Lord in the company of Korah but dyed in his owne sinne and had no sonnes 4 Why should the name of our father be done away from among his family because hee hath c. 5 And Moses brought their cause before the Lord. The plea of the daughters o● Zelophehad In these words the daughters of Zelophehad plead their own cause to haue their part in the diuision of the land not to be shut out from their inheritance The plea is good and well grounded and they vse sundry reasons of no small importance First because their father dyed in the wildernesse in his iourney toward the land of Canaan and therefore the same inheritance that was due vnto him being aliue should not be denyed to his issue being dead For seeing hee died in the way before any of the Israelites could take possession of the land of promise hee could leaue to his daughters nothing but the promise of GOD and a liuely faith appprehending the same which no doubt was truly grafted in them or else they would neuer haue beene so earnest in this matter but haue let it alone till the conquest of the land and the displanting of the Canaanites They plead that he was not partaker with Korah in his conspiracy but dyed in his owne sinne that is as all other men do and must do that are sinners forasmuch as the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6 27. Now vnder this conspiracy of Korah heere expressed we must vnderstand all other mutinies of the same nature that he ioyned not with any in their rebellions neyther was partaker with any seditious persons whereby hee should deserue to be excluded from his possession of the land If any aske Obiect why this conspiracy of Korah is named and singled out aboue any of the rest of the murmurings which were many and of many I answere first because this was late and yet fresh in remembrance Secondly Answer it was more eminent then any of the rest and as it were swallowed vp the memory of all the former Thirdly because it seemeth hee died at the same time that Korahs treachery brake out and therefore hee might more easily bee thought to bee destroyed with them But though he dyed at the same time yet he died not of the same crime as likewise it fell out that Methushelah died immediatly before the flood it might be after it began to raine vpon the face of the earth but was not swept away with the flood And heere it is not to be forgotten that some of the Hebrewes as also we noted before chap. 15 21 are of opinion that this Zelophehad was the man that gathered stickes vpon the Sabbath day others thinke Vatabl a●●●● in hunc locum that he was one of them that died by the biting stinging of the fiery serpents chap. 21 6. But the purpose of his daughters was to bring to their remembrance that their father had committed no act whereby his issue should bee denyed or debarred of their inheritance because he died a naturall death and went the way of all flesh and when he had serued his time was gathered to his fathers An other reason is because he left behind him no sons or heires males of his body lawfully begotten whereby it might and would come to passe that the name of a family in Israel should perish if no portion of the inheritance were assigned to his daughters In al this plea we may perceiue in them a notable example of honouring parents in that they are careful that the Name of their father should not be buried in perpetuall forgetfulnes but bee honourably remembred preserued which all ought to follow Likewise an example of faith beleeuing the promise of God for except they had assured their hearts that God would performe his promise and make good the wordes of his owne mouth spoken to Abraham Isaac and Iacob they would neuer haue made such
Adam which also is our sin Now there are four things that doe continually and distinctly cleaue to sinne Foure things cleaue to sin the fault the guilt the blot and the punishment The fault is the offence committed against God in the action which is the root of all the rest The guilt is an obligation to punishment for the fault and offence which we haue committed The blot or spot thereof is as it were a marke or print set and branded in the soule of him that sinned when he groweth to an hight in wickednes like the marke that was set vpon Cain when he had killed his brother For the multiplying of offensiue actions is the continuall encrease of the blot or blemish of the soule til in the end the light of nature be vtterly extinguished and men come to a reprobate sense and grow to be past feeling through the blindnesse of their mindes and the hardnesse of their hearts Euen as the dropsie man the more he drinketh the more hee dryeth so the more a man sinneth the more he is giuen to sinne As the couetous person alwayes desireth to get more so the sinner alwayes desireth to sinne more and to worke al vncleannes with greedines The punishment it selfe is the wages and iust recompence of all the former which is the first second death The first death is a separation of the soule and body the second a separation of the whole man from God for as the soule is the life of the body so is God the life of the soule Know therefore and acknowledge from hence that it is an irkesome and bitter thing to prouoke him by our sin which driueth away his comfortable presence from vs. Vse 2 Secondly this teacheth that none can escape death by strēgth or policy by friends or fraud or by any occasion in asmuch as all are sinners euen from their mothers wombe vnto the day of their death Psal 58 3. 51 5. Gen. 8 21. Iob 4 17. 15 14. 25 4. It is a fearefull and cruell tyrant an outragious and wasting enemy that maketh spoyle and hauocke wheresoeuer hee commeth sparing neyther young nor old rich nor poore Prince nor people good nor bad Psal 89 48. It standeth vs therefore in hand to account of euery day as our last day and to know that euery moment may cut off the threed of our life so that wee are suddenly gone are no more we must prepare for it continually our whole life should be a meditation of it Againe we must pull out of our hearts this false conceit and imagination whereby euery man naturally blesseth and notably deceiueth himselfe and thinketh though he haue one foot in a maner in the graue yet hee shall not die this yeere but he may liue one yeare longer as the rich man was in a pleasant dreame did forecast for many yeares Luke 12 19. And yet alas we know not what shal be to morrow Iam. 4 14 no nor what one day may bring forth Pr. 27 1 Vse 3 Lastly let euery one labor to take away the power and strength of his own death And to this end we must deale with it as the Philistims dealt with Sampson they neuer gaue ouer till they had learned where his strength lay Iudg. 16 5 6 and then they quickly weakned him and preuailed ouer him who before had preuailed ouer them So ought we to doe we must know wherin the strength of death consisteth that is in sin onely Take this away by repentance from dead works faith in Christ and you shaue off the seuen locks of it that is you shall weaken it that it shall neuer bee able to hurt you So many sinnes as liue and reigne in vs so many stings hath death which serue to wound our soules to eternall death If then we would die the death of the righteous let vs endeauour to the vtmost of our strength to liue the life of the righteous Then we shal lay a good foundation that shall neuer be shaken and build our house vpon the rocke wee shal begin our eternal life in this mortall life and haue our conuersation in heauen while we walke vpon the earth Phil. 3 20. Let vs beware of putting off the time from day to day whatsoeuer we would do at the last gaspe grone when we are dying let vs doe the same euery day while wee are liuing The most wicked when he seeth he is presently to leaue the world will seeme desirous to pray though he neuer prayed in his health and to require others to pray for him and haply those whom before he contemned and derided their prayers also then likewise hee will promise and protest amendment of life make solemne vowes couenants with God Let vs therefore do this daily which these men doe at their last day that when death commeth wee may be found ready and prepared with oyle in our lampes like the wise virgins Math. 25. To conclude he that would liue when he is dead must dye when he is aliue and there is no way for vs to come to life but first to enter by the gate of death 6 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 7 The daughters of Zelophehad speake right thou shalt surely giue them a possession of an inheritance among their fathers brethren c. 8 And thou shalt speake vnto the children of Israel saying If a man die and haue no sonne c. 9 And if hee haue no daughter then yee shall giue his inheritance vnto his brethren 10 And if he haue no brethren then ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his fathers brethren 11 And if his father haue no brethren ye shall giue his inheritance vnto his kinsman c. The deciding of the former question being referred by Moses vnto GOD followeth in these words wherein he returneth his answer consisting of two parts the one special the othe general the one respecting the time present the other the time to come The speciall belongeth to the cause of these fiue sisters God approueth theyr suite requireth that an inheritance should be giuen to them all so much as theyr father should haue inherited if he had liued longer The accomplishment of this designement is afterward related Iosh 17 3 4 c. where hee performeth this Commandement of the Lord. The generall ariseth vpon the former particular case and this belongeth to all the children of Israel wherein God determineth in what order they shall inherite Now these are the degrees First the neerest heyres are the heyres males The law for i●heritances a mans owne sonnes Secondly if hee haue no heyres males his daughters shall be his heyres Thirdly for default of such yssue the inheritance shall go to his owne brethren for after his children his brother is next in nature and blood vnto him therefore if his owne children faile his brother must be his heyre Fourthly if he haue no brother then his fathers
it self who notwithstanding are saued in the day of the Lord. This appeareth in Lots wife Gen. 19 she looked backe contrary to the commandement of the Angel and was turned into a pillar of salt Her offence might seeme little at the first and the punishment to be ouergreat howbeit we must not measure sinne by the outward acte but by the commandement and will of God which is the onely rule of righteousnes This her disobedience seemeth to proceed from infidelity vnthankfulnesse curiosity and the immoderate loue of the world of the substance which they had left behind and therefore she is punished and made as a mirror and monument of Gods iustice which Iosephus testifieth to continue to his time Ioseph antiq Iud. lib. 1. ca. 1● yet we doubt not but her soule was saued and she receyued to mercy The like we might say of Iobs childred they were all sodainly slaine by the fall of the house wherin they were assembled yet they gaue good testimony of their godlynesse in their life for as no euil is recorded of them in the Scripture so it appeareth they were wel taught and trained vp in the feare of God by their carefull father euen in the daies of theyr youth God heard their father when he praied for them when bee sent for them they came dutifully and obediently vnto him if they had despised that God whom their father worshipped he would not haue said It may be my sonnes haue blasphemed God and it had beene a vaine thing for him to speake to them of sanctification Moreouer if their bankettings feastings had bene like our Wakes and reuels which they commonly call Yeauals or drunken feasts of such as call themselues good fellowes he ought to haue forbidden their meetings and not to haue prayed to God to pardon their sins which they might commit in their meetings and thereby suffer them to liue in the continual practise of sin forasmuch as that were to mocke and dally with God not desiring pardon for sinne past but to craue free liberty to sin for the time to come And if the father had doubted of their saluatiō no doubt hee would haue bewailed their destruction Lastly it is to bee noted that they feasted in their owne houses they did not run to Ordinaries or haunt Ale-houses or frequent Tauernes neither did they feast euery day like the rich glutton whose daily dinners were daily feasts for hee did nothing else but feast euery day neither did they keepe companie with ruffians swearers drunkards swaggerers and such like but they inuited one another to witnesse their good will and to continue mutuall loue among themselues The like wee might say of Vzzah that stayed vp the Arke and was stricken with sodaine death because he laid his hand vpon the Arke 2 Sam. 6 7. So was it with Vriah the faithfull seruant of Dauid yet he was slain by the sword of the Ammonites 2 Sam. 11 17. Iosiah that good king serued the Lord from his youth yet dyed hee a violent death and was slaine by Pharao Nechoh at Megiddo and al the people of the land mourned for him 2 Kings 23 29. Reason 1 Thus doth God deale with his owne children oftentimes they are chastised in this world lest they should be condemned with the wicked in the world to come 1 Cor. 11 32. Secondly those whom God loueth hee loueth vnto the end Ioh. 13 inasmuch as all his giftes are without repentance Rom. 11. therefore temporall chastisements cannot alter his loue or make frustrate the gifts that once he hath bestowed vpon his children Thirdly euen his owne people sinne against him for in manie things we sinne all Iames 3 ver 1. and therfore when they sinne against him he chastiseth thē with death as with a rod howbeit his mercie he neuer taketh from them Thus did Iosiah offend he would not heare the word of the Lord which was brought vnto him therefore he was smitten by the hand of God Vse 1 This teacheth that it is a false rule and a deceitfull measure to iudge of the saluation of men by temporall things whereas commonly all things fall out alike to the godly vngodly Eccl. 9 12. Many there are that wil take vpon them to iudge and censure men to bee out of the fauour of God because sometimes they dye sodainly and sometimes strangely and contrarywise if they dye in their beddes quietly and calmely they conclude that they must necessarily bee the children of God for that cause onely But if we haue no better testimony to discerne a childe of God then this note we may soone be deceiued for this may often happen more by the nature of the disease then through any grace in the soul of the diseased The constant course of a mans life is the best witnesse what is in man A man may dye rauing and haply blaspheming and yet be the seruant of God by the violence and rage of some sicknesse disturbing the head and the braine For as Paul sayeth It was not hee but sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 7 15 so I may say it is not they that raue and blaspheme it is the force of their sicknesse to which they do not consent and againe a man may go away like a Lambe and yet dye out of Gods fauour and go to hell as Iob chap. 21. verses 13 14. Vse 2 Secondly this reprooueth the Popish sort that commonly condemne Zuinglius a sound defender of the true and Apostolike faith Zuinglius defended because he died in the field as a good Patriot against the enemies of his country Hee did no more then euery true Minister and faythfull man ought to be ready to do Hee was slaine with the sword of wickedmen but that death was an honourable death Hee exhorted the people to constancy in the faith as the Priest is commanded in the Law to do Deut. 20 23 It is no reproach to dye in a good cause and a iust quarrell If he had dyed as Sanders an arch enemy to the Queene and State dyed in Ireland in the rebellion which himselfe had procured who died distracted and in a frenzy to behold the hand of God gone out against him and all his plots and proiects crossed O what outcries would these men then haue made he died as a Traitor against his lawfull Prince in the Popes quarrel and was in the field against his owne Soueraigne whereas Zuinglius dyed with his owne Cittizens in a good cause and was lamented of all good men Lastly we must take heed we doe not iudge Vse 3 rashly and rigorously of the Churches sorrowes and afflictions albeit they seem oftentimes both strong and strange when God feedeth them with the bread of teares giueth them teares to drinke in great measure Psal 80 5. The dead bodies of his seruants haue the enemies giuen to be meate to the fowls of the heauen and the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth their
Wee should make diligent search of the temporall estate of our brethren but much more how they stand toward God how they do increase in the best things that we may reioyce in their standing and mourne in their decaying and thereby bee prouoked either to giue God praise glory for their continuance and perseuerance or to pray to him to open theyr eyes to see their weaknesse their standing stil or going back or leauing their first loue that so they may repent and do their first workes Reuel 2 5. Lastly it is our duty euen to aduenture our Vse 4 persons and estate for our brethren if by any means we may releeue the distressed This we see in Abraham toward Lot Gen. 14 Moses refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter but visited his brethren and when he saw an Egyptian offer one of them wrong Hee defended him and auenged him that was oppressed Acts 7 24. So it was with Obadiah that liued in Ahabs Court when Iezabel raised hot persecution against the prophets of God he took them and hid them and fed them in a Caue not fearing the fiercenesse of their enemies 1 Kin. 18. The like we see in Ester a notable nursing mother of the Church she went boldly to the King with this resolution If I perish I perish Ester 4. verse 16 to haue the liues of her people giuen at her request chapt 7. verse 3. Many in our dayes thinke they haue gone far in Christianity and take themselues to be notable and zealous Christians if they wish wel vnto the state of the Church or be not open enemies vnto it But it is not enough to wish the good of it except by all meanes we labor to procure it and learne to cast down all that wee haue and bee content to licke the dust of the Churches feete Many will needes be accounted to bee the friends of the Church who wil hazard neither goods nor frends nor honor neither the fauor of great men nor the credit of the world much lesse either limbe or life wheras the Apostle teacheth that this is true loue To giue our liues for the brethren 1 Iohn chapt 3. verse 16. 20 And Moses saide vnto them If ye will do this thing if yee will goe armed before the Lord to warre 21 And will go all of you armed c. vntil he haue driuen out his enemies c. 22 And the land be subdued c. 23 But if ye will not do so behold yee haue sinned against the Lord and be sure your sin will find you out 24 Build you Cities c. 25 And the children of Gad c. 26 Our little ones our wiues c. 27 But thy seruants c. Heere we haue the conclusion of the whole controuersie betweene these tribes and Moses and vnder what conditions hee assenteth vnto them that there might be no mistaking one of another The summe whereof is this If they would go vp armed before their bretheren and go forward with them vntill their enemies were cast out then they should return backe againe and be guiltlesse before the Lord and this land should be their lawfull possession if not they should be guilty of sinne before the Lord and should not bee able to escape the vengeance of God These conditions propounded by Moses are approued by the Tribes who promise that they wil leaue their wiues and children and families behinde thē and passe ouer armed for warre before the Lord to battell From hence I might handle sundry instructions that arise in Moses we see his patience in hearing and determining and therefore it is the duty of Magistrates willingly patiently to hear the people Again these two Tribes and halfe might not be discharged till they had finished the Lords worke and therefore in all good duties perseuerance is necessary and we must continue to the end as wee haue shewed chapt 7. Lastly Moses threatneth that if they sinned against the Lord they might be well assured their sin would find them out that is the punishment of sinne shall certainly fall vpon you therefore sinne and the punishment of sinne are vnseparable companions as we see in Kingdomes Cities Families Doctrine The onely cause of punnishment is sinne and particular persons that haue offended against him And hereby we may obserue that the only cause of iudgement and punishment is sin God is neuer displeased with any people or person but for their sinnes Esay 43 24. 63 10. Hos 4 1 2. This is farther confirmed in the examples of his iudgments that fell vpon men and Angelles kingdomes and States houses and persons they haue bin destroyed subuerted for sin 1 Cor. 10.8 9 10. Reason 1 The grounds hereof follow First sinne is the transgression of the law 1 Ioh. 3 4. and 5 17. so defined by the Apostle he gaue a law to al which he would haue to be kept now then when this is broken and transgressed it cannot be but he should be offended and execute punishment against those that break it Secondly God is holy yea most holy and therefore cannot but punish sin which is directly opposite to the holines of his nature The more iust and righteous a Iudge is the more he is greeued at the enormities of malefactors that he hath to deale withall so in this case God being most holy and righteous nothing can be so offensiue and displeasing vnto him as the sinnes of men which are committed against him Thirdly sin is the destruction and condemnation of the creature and bringeth the ruine of soule and body The Apostle teacheth that the wages of sin is death Rom. 6 23 it is the cause of naturall death of spirituall death of eternall death If God doe thus hate sinne that it draweth Vse 1 from him all plagues vpon vs then it giueth wicked men to vnderstand what they are in the sight of God nothing but such as displease greeue and prouoke him by their sinnes and therefore he hateth them as his enemies and setteth his face against them as the Iudge setteth himselfe against euill doers and a Prince setteth himselfe against rebels that do resist against him There cannot be a greater miserie then for a man to commit sinne because it is that which is so highly displeasing to God the procurer of his displeasure and indignation against the committers of it and therefore this pointeth and painteth out the most fearefull estate of all wicked sinners that liue yet are dead in their sinnes seeing God is such an enemy vnto them and they vnto him Some thinke the onely miserable condition to bee to liue in pouerty and neede and want of all things in reproch and contempt in famine dearth of all things in hunger and nakednesse in sickenesse and diseases howbeit these are greatly deceiued who are themselues so much the more miserable that they know not what misery is neyther wherein it consisteth Our sinnes are the true sores and
grieuous sinnes to men to meddle with them that haue no power or precept giuen vnto them to performe them There is nothing so much commanded of GOD as to doe these things yet nothing more sinnefull then these when they are done without a commandement and a commission If a man of a priuate trade and occupation shall presume to preach the word of God hauing no calling thereunto it is most vngodly let his gifts bee what they may bee let him bee able to speake with the tongue of men and Angels and let him diuide the word of truth rightly and interpret the same soundly yet it is Anabaptistical and a great sinne and impiety So likewise we may say for priuate Baptisme to be performed by a woman vnder a pretence of necessity as if there were any necessity in sinning or to make the people of God goe out of their calling and yet so wretched and wicked is our age that this sinne is not onely committed but also defended Epiph. cont heres One well obserueth that it cannot bee lawfull for women to baptize and he confirmeth it by this because it was not giuen to the mother of Christ that shee who was blessed aboue all other women should do it If then it were lawful for any then certainly much more for her to touch these holy things what wicked women then what bloody Zipporahs are those of our time that dare vndertake this holy thing without any calling It is euill in those midwiues that vsurpe this office but worse in those that commend and defend this sinne Let all therefore both men and women examine themselues in those things if they haue broken the bankes that God hath set them haue yet carried it away and no plague from God hath ouertaken them that haue vndertaken such workes impertinent vnto them then let them know that they are to acknowledge the great mercy of GOD toward them that he did not strike thē dead in the very act as he did Vzzah that touched the Arke 1 Sam 6 7 otherwise a good man because hee did a good act without any calling thereunto Neyther let any dreame that God doth approue of them because hee doth not presently punish them Eccles 8 but consider they haue to doe with a God of patience and albeit they goe away prosper for a time yet in the end hee will finde them out and punish them Likewise in this kinde they offend who take vpon them to reproue whom and where and when they please without due obseruation of fit circumstances It is indeed a duty commanded that some should reproue and some bee reproued for sinne Leuit. 19 14. Prou. 9 8 yet euery man is not to reproue all at all times and in all places onely it lyeth vpon them that haue a calling to reproue and therefore it is a sinne in others So when priuate men take vpon them to reforme publike abuses as to pull downe images and to abolish the monuments of Idolatry they sinne in this case against God and the Magistrate against the Magistrate in taking his calling out of his hand that belongeth to him against God in that they doe it without his direction True it is the word teacheth that their altars should bee destroyed their images must be broken downe their idols burned but it is a word to the Magistrate he sinneth if hee doe it not because hee performeth not Gods commandement the priuat person sinneth if he do it because he doth it without any commandement nay against the commandement The brasen serpent must be stamped in pieces if once the people offer incense vnto it and commit idolatry with it howbeit it must be done by Hezekiah 2 Kings 18 4. If a priuat man buy an house find therein sundry images many monuments of idolatry he may abolish thē if any of his family haue gotten such he may take them away and deface them as Iacob did cleanse his house Gen. 35 2 because he is a Master Magistrate in his own family but to do it in publike where he is no Magistrate he may not without sinne as the Magistrat himself may not omit it without sinne Secondly euery one ought to labour to Vse 2 know his owne calling and to be assured how farre it stretcheth and will beare him out This should perswade euery one of vs that in euery good thing which wee doe wee should be sure that sinne cleaue not vnto vs and that we attempt nothing before we haue our commission sealed and sent vnto vs. When we goe about any thing it is not enough to weigh how good it is but to looke what warrant we haue to do it It is not the goodnesse of the thing that will free vs from sinne but the warrant that wee haue to doe it We must haue a generall warrant that the worke is good and a particular also that it is good for vs and in vs. But some will say how shall a man know Obiect that he hath a commandement in particular to do this or that Answer I answere if any man be such a one as hee to whom the commandement is giuen or if the commandement bee giuen to him in generall then hee may gather that the commandement doth belong vnto him in particular so that in doing the same he shall not onely doe a good worke but the worke shall be good in him So then euery man must reason thus with himselfe God hath commanded me to doe it and therefore out of conscience to his commandement I will do it forasmuch as to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken then the fat of rammes 1 Sam. 15 22. And if Saul himselfe had obeyed it had beene better for him then to haue offered vp his sacrifice though it had been of the chiefest of the things which should haue beene destroyed It is a policy of Satan and it were good that none were ignorant of it and that all would take notice of it that if he cannot make men abide and abound in euill but that they will needes bee doing of good then hee will labour to make them doe good vnlawfully and vnseasonably by bringing them to doe some good whereunto they haue no calling Thus hee maketh againe to himselfe euen by the workes themselues of godlinesse and therefore it should be the care and wisdome of euery man to look to Gods word and to his owne warrant in doing of any thing and not suffer our selues to be deluded by him If the disciples of Christ had duly obserued this they would neuer haue desired to bring fire from heauen consume the Samaritans that would not receiue him as Elias had done to destroy the captaines that scoffed at him 2 Kings 1 10. Luke 9 54 but they would haue considered that they were not indued with the same spirit neyther fitted with that calling nor armed with that power Peter would not haue drawne the sword to strike the the high
1214 Iudgement corrupted p. 218. Iudgements are instructions to others 526. none can be free from them that sin p. 474 b. Iubile why instituted p. 1259. Iubile Popish p. 1262 b Iustification by faith p. 815 b. 817 b. K Kingdom of God first seeke 61. it is required of all 226 b 258. it is the root of obedience Ibid. Kings and Princes our duty to them 664 why we are to pray for them p. 666. Knowledge all must haue 647. little is in the Romish Church ibid. Knowledge of God twofold 23 a it must be sought 27 a wherein it consisteth p. 27 b. L Land diuiding why the high Priests helpe was vsed therein p. 1232 a Law how giuen to the iust p. 182 a Law how we may go vnto 1123 how it may bee vsed lawfully ibid. Lawfull to lay vp 101. sometimes to reprooue by name 1084. rules to be obserued in it p. 1085 b. Lawfull things not to be done vnlawfully p. 1249. Learning a great gift 707 a. without conscience a great plague 707 b with it it doth great good ibid. Lent p. 1151 b. Lepers not suffered in the host p. 256 b Leprosie of three sorts p. 757 Lesse the thing is the greater the sin p. 638. Leuites what their office was 144 b why numbered from a month old p. 166. Leuiticall Priesthood passed from one to another p. 771. Liberall dyet prouided for Gods children p. 531 b. Liberality commended 95 Obiections hindering it 96. how we are encouraged vnto it 393 Time of death not fittest for a p. 449 a. Life of diuers sorts 49 a it is maintained by God 747 without meanes ibid. Lords things are in 3 respects p. 145 b. Loue 750 it must be to all the creatures 758 b such reproued are without it p. 759. Loue of brethren 629 b how to try whether in vs what fruites it hath p. 182 a. Loue of God to his must moue vs to mercy p. 757 b. M Machabees no Scriptute p. 1116 Magistracy a great burthen p. 534. Magistrates must doe iustice 58 b. 60 a. punnish breaches of the first Table ibid. they are needfull for the people p. 63 b 534 a. Magistrates must further the preaching of the Word 202 their office 366 428 429 430. to them we must seeke in wrongs 1211 They must be vpright 958 b. 1122 draw others by their example 432 how qualified 1122 b feared for doing euill 1059 b zealous in the cause of God p. 1072. Magistrates haue their calling immediately from God 1134 papists are enemies to them ibid. Master a Magistrate in his owne house p. 1242. Magistrates duty p. 1256. Maintenance of the Ministery p. 446 193 b. Malice of enemies vnsatiable p. 1044. Manichees p. 7 b. Manna what p. 531. Manslaughter done of ignorance a sin p. 1248 a Mariage in May 1144 of cosin germans p. 1263 Mariage not to be enforced p. 1257 b. Mariage in their owne Tribe neither forbid nor is obserued p. 1258 b. Masse 1138. discommodity thereof p. 1220. Masters must reproue their seruants p. 541. Matters of God vnknowne till he reueale thē p. 984 Matrimony p. 387. Meanes to keepe vs from sin p. 577 743. Meanes extraordinary not to be looked after p. 744 Meekenesse p. 367 560 b. Merit p. 451. Ministers must be proved 474 b. how practised among papists 475. they are Gods Trumpets 503 what is done to them is done to God p. 328. Ministers must deliuer Gods word 970. teach orderly 13 a. 168 b. workes of their calling 49 b Idle are reproued 48 b. 189 345 770. are worldly 49. swallow many liuings 50 a motiues to their duty 126 b. they must looke to themselues p. 51 b. Ministers must be diligent in preaching 192 haue a care of all the flocke 199 b. 699. what Titles they haue 213 b. men of grauity 216 b. they must teach with reuerence 231. come prepared 232. not reproue sinne in iest ibid. must be vnderstood 233 a. 700. continue in teaching page 236 237. not broach new doctrine ibid. Ministers must be vnblameable 467 b. they are Gods seruants 73. when not regarded GOD dealeth with men 612. they are in special fauor with God 651. such as are of meanes must bee regarded 706. 708 b. Gods gift p. 695. Ministery must be planted among all people it is of absolute necessity 120. 671. not base 160 a. it is a charge 188 b. an high calling 206 b. how it may be desired 208 a. the contempt of it ibid it is blessed of God 434. when despised God is despised 653 b. their danger that want it 672. how to promote it p. 697. Ministery shall neuer decay 804 the end is edification p. 707 a. Ministers must be prouided of all things necessary for them p. 1237. Miracles what 688 b. transubstantiation no miracle 960 b. God onely can worke them 679 b. 906 b. they are wrought openly 688. Miseries of the Church must moue pity page 753 755 Miseries of our Brethren wee must haue a fellow-feeling p. 1203. Monkish vowes p. 420. Morning sacrifice p. 1136 1137. Moses whether free from doubting p. 538 b. Moses his wife who 549. what his sinne was p. 725 Motiues for Ministers to be diligent in their calling p. 1239 b. Multiplication of the Israelites p. 39. Multitude no note of the Church 177 b. See Vniuersality wicked boast therof 582. commonly they are worst 581 b. they cannot make euill to be good p. 583 b. Multitude lye open to iudgement 1118 b. They must be reproued 119. Murmuring 243 b. 730 b. 523 b. how to preuent it 524 b. remedies against it p. 732. Murther an heinous sin in the sight of God p. 1244 N Names of the faithfull knowne to God p. 20. Nature content with little p. 98 b. Nature God worketh aboue p. 905 b. Naturall estate p. 887 b 874. Naturall reason enemy to faith p. 539. Naturally we hearken to seducers 591. wee waxe weary of Gods gifts p. 794. Naturally all men are prone to reuenge p. 1240 b. Nazarites the sorts of them 415. meaning thereof p. 1164. Necessity dispenseth with holy duties 486 a. we are not of our selues to make it p. 487. a. Neglect of Gods worship p. 489 b. 490. New man p. 1145. New Moone See Feast Non-residency 190 191 345. how coloured p. 200 711. Note of the Church not outward glory p. 1051 b. Nouations p. 793 b. Booke of Numbers authorized out of the New testament p. 2. Numbring of the people 1103. how vnlawfull p. 29 O Oath when vnlawful 370. whose oath may be refused 372. what it is 374 b. the authour of it 375. the parts ibid. the forme and ends ib. 376 b. the properties p. 377 a. Obedience required of all 29 a 683 b. grounded vpon knowledge 33 b. rules directing it 36. it must be yeelded to all 109 b. the popish not to be vowed p. 155. Obedience to the Word required 247 b. it agreeth to our profession p. 148. Obedience to God p. 254 a. Obiections against laying
wholesome wine into an vnwholesome vessell it loseth his taste and becommeth not onely vnprofitable but hurtfull and bringeth much mischiefe and sometimes the vtter ruine not onely of the person that possesseth it but of the whole Church that is pestered with it yet not of it owne nature but by his corruption that doth abuse it Vse 3 Thirdly from hence ariseth comfort to men of meane gifts of small knowledge if they be painfull and conscionable True it is they must not be Ieroboams Priests that were neyther Leuites nor learned but taken from the basest of the people as vnsauory salt good for nothing howbeit if with their meane gifts they vse not meane diligence and so discharge a good conscience God accepteth and approueth of them yea he blesseth their labours worketh his great worke of regeneration by them sealeth vp thereby his fauour to their owne consciences We see this in Apollos mētioned in the Acts he was not altogether destitute of knowledge thogh he had but little knowing only the baptisme of Iohn ch 18 25. that is the doctrine of Iohn preaching repentance which he sealed vp by baptisme but his want of knowledge he did recompence with painfulnesse in his preaching for he was feruent in the Spirit and taught diligently the things of the Lord so that albeit he came far behind others in gifts of vnderstanding yet did he paralell or equall them and peraduenture goe before thē in feruency and faithfulnesse and in the effect of his Ministery for he was zealous of Gods glory eloquent in speech diligent in his place mighty in the Scriptures and confounded the Iewes that beleeued not in Christ But woe vnto them that haue neither knowledge nor zeale nor diligence nor conscience It is noted of the Angel that is of the Minister of the Church of Philadelphia Reuel 3 8. that hee had but a little strength a small measure of graces and gifts yet hee maintained the truth resolutely and brought much good to the Church of GOD by vsing them carefully for he did not onely keepe the word and confesse the Lord in time of trouble and persecution but conuerted many enemies that they came and worshipped before his feet Verse 19. Reu. 3 8 9 though he had little strength yet he had many children whom he conuerted to the faith For as the Apostle teacheth out of the Prophet that the desolate hath many moe children then she which hath an husband Esay 54 1. And as it often falleth out that a weak man begetteth many moe children then hee that is of greater strength so such as haue but weake gifts do notwithstanding bring many to God Let not therfore any be discouraged through the weaknesse of their gifts from doing their duty remembring the saying of Christ Mat. 13 12. Whosoeuer hath to him shall be giuen and he shall haue more abundance Vse 4 Fourthly this serueth to humble and abase such as haue the greatest gifts and are high Doctors of the Church that they should not stand ouermuch vpon the glory of their learning but craue with all humility the blessing of God and cast downe themselues and all their gifts at his footstoole of whom they receiued them that withal they may receiue cōfort in their Ministery from him Their labors are oftentimes lesse blessed because they stand so much vpon their schoole-learning termes tongues titles degrees and such like priuiledges that they oftentimes forget the principall part of their calling to do good to Gods people to know nothing among them but Christ him crucified 1 Cor. 2 2. Many there are that come farre behinde them in knowledge that go farre before them in conscience which are beneath them in learning but aboue them in labour and finde a greater blessing vpon their diligence For it oftentimes falleth out that such as are great Linguists and profound Clearks beare themselues so proud vpon their reputation that they neuer desire a blessing from God nor craue of him to sanctifie their gifts and therefore they oftentimes beate the aire neuer pierce the conscience of the hearers neither win any soules to God They speake in the entising words of mans wisedome vtter strange tongues to gaine admiration astonishment in the hearers but regard not the demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2 4. wheras others which preach in weaknesse and in feare in much trembling that the faith of the Church should not stand in the wisedome of men but in the power of God are made instruments of bringing a plentiful haruest to God Lastly let the people content themselues Vse 5 with such as God hath set ouer them though they be not most excellent in gifts and count it a blessing from God not refusing or disdaining to heare them and to depend vpon them as the Pastors that watch ouer their soules Heb. 13 1● They are oftentimes edified in their most holy faith profite in knowledge in repentance and in obedience vnder such a one more then vnder another For these doe much good in their places and turne many to righteousnesse The diet of Daniel and of his fellowes was no better then Water and Pulse yet with that they prospered better then they which had their portion from the Kings Table because they were dieted at Gods alowance and therefore it was ioyned with his blessing so are many fed with plaine yet with pure doctrine taken out of the holy fountains of the Scriptures whose soules do thriue prosper far better in knowledge in faith and in obedience then theirs that are fed after a more stately and costly manner with flowers of eloquence and ostentation of humane learning which puffeth vp but edifieth not The people that haue a painfull and conscionable Minister which bendeth all his gifts to edification that hee may profite with them and vseth them not to gaine glory to himselfe but to God are in far better case then such as haue a great Doctour a cunning linguist an excellent Artist a deepe Philosopher a subtill disputer an eloquent Oratour an acute Logitian or a profound schooleman wel seene in histories and well redde in Fathers and is withall without conscience and leaueth his flocke or if he bee among them hideth his gifts and burieth his talent or if he vse his gifts now and then bendeth them to vanity not to piety to ostentation not to edification or as many doe vse them against the truth not for the truth to destroy not to build to roote out not to plant Woe vnto that people that haue such a guide such a one can do no good vnto them whatsoeuer hee doth to himselfe 25 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 26 Thus speake vnto the Leuites and say vnto them when ye take of the children of Israel the tithes which I haue giuen you c. 27 And this your heaue offering c. 28 Thus you also shall offer c. 29 Out of all your gifts you shall
offer c. 30 Therefore thou shalt say c. 31 And yee shall eate it in euery place yee and your housholds for it is your reward for your seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 32 And ye shall beare no sinne c. Moses speaking both of the Priests and Leuites speaketh first of their office and then of their maintenance for whatsoeuer they haue they enioy it for their seruice verse 21. it is giuen vnto them as their reward for their seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation ver 31. Now the Leuites are charged to deale truely with the Priests as they would haue the people to deale truely with them ● Leuites ● deale ●ly with Priests ●e people ● with the ●ces They were to pay tithes out of their tithes to the Priests by reason of their honor and labour who did as it were beare the burden and heat of the day and least couetousnesse and greedinesse of gaine should make them base minded and hard hearted he telleth them that they themselues should be no lesse guilty of theft if they deale fraudulently and iniuriously with the Priests then the people if they deale falsely toward them So then as the people must set out their tithes before they presumed to vse the rest so must the Leuites the tithes of tithes before they vse the rest of the tithes We might obserue from hence the common rule of equity Whatsoeuer we would that other men should doe vnto vs we should doe the same vnto them Matt. 7.12 We are ready and forward to require good dealing of others toward our selues but slacke and backward to returne the same to others Beware therefore of hurting and hindring any man in his body in his soule in his substance in his good name by cruelty by oppression by fraude by lying by slandering this the darkish light of naturall reason may teach vs because we would not haue others to defraud to defame vs to oppresse vs or to purloyne from vs and therfore we ought not to deale so with others nay we ought to be ready to doe good for euill and in all our dealings one with another to proceed by the rule of loue remembring how we desire others should deale with vs. Doctrine A sinne to reape the profits of any place and not to discharge the duty But the point which I will insist vpon is this that it is a sinne for any especially the Minister to take the profits and commodities of any place and not to performe the duties that belong thereunto Esay 56.10 11. Ezek. 34.2 3. 1 Cor. 9.13 14. 2 Thess 3.7 8. 1 Tim. 5.17 The reasons first because profits are giuen Reason 1 for duties performed and therefore hee is a theefe before God and stealeth the benefit whosoeuer neglecteth the duty It is a sinne therefore because it is iniustice If a man shold make a bargaine and take money vpon it and yet afterward not performe his bargaine like to that son that promised his father to worke in his vineyard but went not Matth. 21.30 euery man would condemne him of wrongfull dealing so is it vniust and iniurious for a Minister to take the profit that shall arise out of any place and then not to performe that which is required as belonging of right vnto it as it is to take a fee and to doe nothing for it Secondly this is an occasion of the perishing Reason 2 of many people both of himselfe and of others committed to his charge 1 Tim. 4.16 A faithfull Minister by doing his duty doth saue both himselfe and them that heare him the vnfaithfull destroyeth both himselfe and his hearers Therefore it must needs bee wrongfull If it were so that he did destroy himselfe onely it were no small euill to be a selfe-murtherer but when with himselfe he shall ruine many others it must needs be more impious Lastly because in not performing his duty Reason 3 he doth defraud the people and depriue them of that great good which the Lord hath bestowed vpon them and committed vnto him to deliuer and dispense vnto them Hee hath trusted them with a great charge and willed them to keepe the same to their vse 1 Tim. 6.20 2 Tim. 1.14 If he that concealeth and keepeth backe temporal things from his brother doe offend the Law Exod. 22. then great is his sin that keepeth backe spirituall things from those to whom they ought to be deliuered and so much greater as the difference is betweene spirituall and temporall This serueth to condemne the Popish teachers Vse 1 that liue vpon the spoile of the Church and make merchandise of mens soules Wee might taxe these and arrest them as guilty of an horrible crime from the highest to the lowest from the head to the foote from the Pope the mightiest to the Priest the meanest they are all idle bellies and conspire together to destroy the people and happy is he accounted that hath his hand deepest in this sinne For though many of them haue goodly reuenewes and haue filled themselues with the fat of the earth yet they liue at pleasure and are no whit seruiceable to the Church of whom I may speake with the Apostle Rom. 16.18 They that are such serue not our Lord Iesus Christ but their owne belly and by good words and faire speeches deceiue the hearts of the simple The Cardinals doe scorne this office as too base and simple for them and chuse rather to reigne like Princes then to rule as Pastors and make more reckoning of their purple then they doe of their people and therefore turne ouer the toile and labour of teaching to the Parish Priests whereas themselues not long agoe were no whit better The Priests considering that they haue no calling to preach but to say Masse and to reade their portuisse doe passe it ouer as a thing impertinent vnto them The Monkes which of ancient time labored with their hands liue at ease and pleasure in their Cloysters and Couens but doe no good to others The Abbots fat themselues like boares in their styes and are no way seruiceable to the Church but make their bellies their god and their kitchen their heauen and their table their ioy and the Pope which sitteth at the sterne and gouerneth the ship taketh no care of any thing but letteth all alone so that it is no maruell if all the rest follow his example Vse 2 Secondly to let these passe and to come vnto our selues it reprooueth all such as are content to reape the profits of their places and swallow great preferments downe their wide throates and yet take no paines at all in teaching This certainely is a palpable sinne howsoeuer many euen those that are Non residents already or would bee open their mouthes and set on worke their pennes to mainetaine and defend the same This we all confesse to bee vnlawfull in other callings where notwithstanding the danger is not so great how then should it be allowed