Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n ability_n able_a appear_v 19 3 4.7672 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 22 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

day And if the voice of Christ in the daies of his humility were so fearefull and auailable in the hearts of his persecuters what a dreadfull thunderbolt will hee cast downe against all his enemies and vpon all the reprobate being in glory and sitting at the right hand of his Father when he shall vtter this finall and fearefull sentence Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his angels Math. chapter 25 verse 41. Againe wee are all put in minde that his death is meritorious and the full price of our redemption Thirdly we see that he is Lord of life and death for he raised himselfe by his eternall Spirit and as he had power to lay it downe so he had power to take it vp as appeared euidently at his resurrection Let vs serue him that is able to redeeme from death such as beleeue in him and rest vpon him for their saluation He that restored himselfe to life is able to giue vs life and he that brake the sorrowes of death is able to destroy him that hath the power of death Lastly let vs also endure the crosse willingly following his steps and shewing our selues to be like vnto him remembring that the losse of life for his sake is indeed not a losse of life but a finding of it or a changing of it a temporall life with an eternall Fourthly the heiffer heere mentioned was brought out of the hoast as also other sacrifices were Leuit 4 12 21. this signified Christs suffering out of the gates of the City as Heb. 13 11 12. Iohn 19 16 17 20. This circumstance is not without profite for first it sheweth and signifieth the abolishing of the types and figures of the Law the truth standing in place of the ceremonies and the body instead of the shadowes and therefore such as still serue at the Altar cannot bee partakers of our Altar that is of Christ Hebr. 13 10. Wee haue an Altar whereof they haue no right to eate which serue the Tabernacle The false Apostles taught that the ceremonies were to be mingled with the Gospel but these two cannot stand togegether because the seruice performed in the tabernacle was but a shadow of better things to come Col. 2 verse 17. But the body is Christ Wherefore to obserue them was to deny Iesus Christ and to keep them still in force was as much as to ouerthrow his sacrifice once offered vpon the Crosse They are therfore much deceiued that goe about to bring into vse againe Altars of wood or of stone in the churches of Christians For the Apostle speaketh not of Altars as of many but of the Altar as of one There is but one Altar in all the Church not infinite Altars and by that one Altar hee vnderstandeth the offering vpon the Altar which is no other then Christ himselfe So then wee may as well bring in the Leuiticall sacrifices as the Leuiticall Altars into the Church of Christ forasmuch as these depend one vpon another the sacrifice hauing relation to the Altar and the Altar to the sacrifice Math. 23 verses 19 20. whereas now we haue no more need either of the one or of the other For we haue an Altar and an offering which by offering of himselfe once vp a full and sufficient price for our redemption hath perfected all that are sanctified Againe as Christ was led out of the gates by the Iewes as though he were vnworthy of the society of men and afterward was crucified betweene two theeues as if he were the greatest malefactour of all hauing before preferred a wretched murtherer before him so let it not seeme strange vnto vs if the world cannot abide vs and if wee bee often made a gazing stocke to men and Angels and accounted as the off-scouring of the world and the filth of the earth 1 Corinth 4 verse 9. But howsoeuer the world do iudge of vs let vs appeale from their corrupt iudgement to the righteous iudgement of God saying with Iob Behold my Witnesse is in heauen and my Record is on high Iob 16 verse 19. Hee accepteth of vs as of his children and will admit vs as heires of his kingdome with his Sonne Lastly Christ was turned out of the City to teach vs what wee must account of our selues in this life that we haue heere no place to rest and repose our selues our hope is concerning things that are not seene Hebr. 13 verses 13 14. Let vs goe foorth vnto him without the Campe bearing his reproach for wee haue heere no continuing City but we seeke one to come As then we must bee content to beare part of the Crosse of Christ and to bee reproched as he was reproched for if we wil not beare part of his crosse wee shall not weare part of his Crowne so also wee must account our selues as Pilgrims and strangers in this world that we may enioy his kingdome in the world to come We must bee content to leaue father and mother lands and liues for his sake knowing that we shall finde all againe with a good aduantage Such as refuse to goe out of the Campe of this world to Christ and begin to nestle themselues as if they had heere a sure certaine habitation what other thing remaineth for them but vtterly to perish in the Camp of this world together with the wicked Our hope is in heauē our ankre is fixed fast aboue not in this world but in the next wee seeke not a kingdome vpon the earth for then wee should deceiue our selues God hath not called vs heere to reigne but to suffer Thus it was with all the fathers Gen. chapter 47 ver 9. Hebrewes chapter 11 verses 13 14. The Heathen people accounted this life as it were an Inne to lodge at for a short season Cicero de s●● not an house to dwell in and continue for euer yet those poore soules knew not whither they went but we know whither we goe and the way we know Iohn 14 4. We looke for a City which hath foundations whose builder maker is God Heb. 11 10. Vse 4 Lastly this purging and purifying water sprinkling the vncleane mentioned in this place is a figure of the blood of Christ fit and sufficient as a well of springing water to purge vs from all our sinnes Leuit. 1 13. Zach. 13 1. In that day there shall bee a fountaine opened vnto the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem and for separation from vncleannesse so the words are in the originall in which the Prophet alludeth to these waters of separation in this place Christ is this fountaine flowing of it selfe open and ready vnto euery one that will drinke of it for the cleansing of sinnes And we heard before out of the Apostle that the blood of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purgeth our consciences from dead works to serue the liuing God Now the blood of Christ purgeth our consciences two
that seeing God hath created vs and giuen vs our being to serue him albeit we be redu●ed by others it shall not profit vs o● deliuer v● from iudgement Ignorance shall excuse no man it is the fountaine of all sinne it is the cause of all punishments Hos 4 1. Mar. 12 24. it is not enough for vs to say we are no seducers and deceiuers of others because if we be seduced and deceiued by others wee are partakers of their sinne and shal bea●e our iust condemnation Secondly seeing the poore seduced people Vse 2 shall not escape no more the the chiefe Ring-leaders and heads of the conspiracy against God it is our duty to search narrowly and view diligently that which is brought and taught vnto vs we must beware of seducers and Captaines that leade to lewdnesse of life or corruption of doctrine It behoueth vs to shew such loue to God and his truth as to withstand such as goe about to infect vs to shame them to bewray them to reprooue them to conuince them and to take heed that we be not drawne away with them eyther by their flattery or by their authority Hence cōmeth the exhortation of Christ Beware of false Prophets which come to you in Sheepes cloathing but inwardly they are rauening wolues yee shall know them by their fruites Math. chap. 7. verse 15. By these the LORD our GOD tryeth vs whether we loue him with al our harts with all our soules He chargeth his people to seeke carefully to search earnestly Deut. 13 14. and to enquire diligently if there bee any such wickednesse There is no loue to God where his truth is not professed followed and maintayned The Apostle Iohn chargeth those to whom he wrote Not to beleeue euery spirit but to try the spirits whether they be of God or not for many false Prophets are gone into the world 1 Iohn 4 1. But where is this ability to bee found And where shall we meete with those that are able to discerne of spirits Looke vppon the greatest part of our congregations and behold they are not able to make any tryall of truth from errour They are fit to entertaine any doctrine They know no difference betweene the mists of Popery and the light of the Gospel They embrace this Religion because it is established by authority defended by the Law professed by the Prince countenanced by the Magistrate embraced by the multitude freed from trouble controlled by none But aske them a reason of the hope that is in them and call them to an account of the faith which they hold Aske them what they beleeue and how they thinke to be saued they are taken speechlesse and not able to giue any reasonable answer And how can it bee otherwise in many places where such as should bee eyes to others are blinde themselues a naked ministery hath made a naked people an ignorant ministery hath made an ignorant people a simple Teacher hath made a sottish hearer For as Moses saw that the people were naked Because Aaron had made them naked Exod. 32 25 vnto their shame among their enemies so wee see the people without knowledge and vnderstanding because the Watchmen are blinde the Embassadors are dumbe the Shepheards are simple the Teachers are not able to instruct themselues The meanes to bring vs to this spirituall iudgment to try the spirits Rules to be obserued to enable vs to try the spirits are to obserue these few rules and directions following First we must haue the word of God to dwell plentifully in vs we must reade and search the Scriptures as Christ commanded Iohn 5 39 and the men of Berea practised Acts 17. They examined the Doctrine of the Apostles by the touchstone of the Prophets and are commended for it by the Spirit of God We must not take euery thing that is deliuered but search and try the things that are deliuered Secondly we must continue constant in the things which wee haue learned thence Thus the Apostle exhorteth Timothy who had beene brought vp in the Scriptures of a childe To perseuere in the things which hee had learned and was perswaded of knowing of whom he had learned them 2 Tim. 3 14. Thirdly we are to auoyd those places and persons where abhominations are set vp and maintained lest ioyning and partaking with them in their sinnes wee be also companions with them in punishments Thus doth the Apostle teach vs to giue a farewell to those places I heard a voice from heauen say Goe out of her my people that yee be not partakers of her sins and that ye receiue not of her plagues Reuel 18 verse 4. Fourthly we are to magnifie the Ministery of the word where it is planted and established we are diligently to attend vnto it and to heare it with all patience and reuerence to encrease in vs both knowledge and obedience to worke in vs faith a sound beleefe to bring vs to a true sight of our sinnes and to an vnfeigned repentance from dead works If these rules be carefully and wisely obserued we shall bee made able to try all things that we heare to refuse the euill and to hold fast that which is good Lastly we may from hence conclude the Vse 3 wofull condition of all seducers that seduce and deceiue the simple people they are sure to perish and to be destroyed It is a greeuous sinne not to embrace the truth of God but to erre from the wayes of saluation but it is more greeuous to draw away others and to plunge them into the pit of destruction They are accursed in the law which make the blinde to go out of the way and all the people were to say Amen Deut. 27 18. If we see a poore blinde man wandring hither and thither for want of a guide and groping to finde his way if wee lay stones or stumbling blocks before his feere to supplant him and cause him to fall downe all men are ready to condemne it of rigor and cruelty The very heathen which neyther know the Law nor vnderstand the Gospel could say Cicer. li. 1. offic that whosoeuer sheweth not the way to a trauailer and wayfaring man when he seeth him out of the right way is without all pitty and compassion as if one should refuse to suffer his neighbour to light his Candle that is gone out at his Candle that burneth But if a man should leade his brother beeing in a strange and vnknowne Countrey quite and cleane out of the way direct him of purpose into places of danger and thereby as it were blow out his Candle that burneth bright all men would haue accounted him a monster and vnworthy to liue vpon the earth If our brother want our helpe or counsell we are bound to do all good vnto him and it is a note of cruelty to shutte our mouthes or hands when they should bee opened as wee see in the examples of the Priest and Leuite Luk.
that in order followeth after the other Moses declareth the performāce of Gods promise touching the multiplying of their seede together with the myraculous gouernment of that people wandering vp and down and iourneying heere and there without any setled estate more then 38. yeares in the Wildernesse When Moses was to bee gathered vnto his Fathers Deut. 32 49 50. and to go the way of all flesh GOD commanded him to go vp vnto the Mount Nebo which is in the land of Moab and from thence to behold as it were in a moment the Land of Canaan and the seuerall parts of it In like maner if wee from this place as from an high Mountaine and as it were looking from the vpper ground shall take a view of the parts proportion of this booke we shall throughly vnderstand what is the purpose and purport of it and what are the ends for which it was committed and commended vnto vs. Wherefore for our better and more orderly proceeding heerein let vs generally obserue and consider these particular points First we will speake of the Author of this booke secondly of the inscription or Title thereof thirdly of the ends and vses and last of all of the seuerall parts and diuision of it The Author for that is the first branch is double either principall or instrumentall The cheefe author of this booke is God For who is the inditer of the Scripture but he or from what spirit can it proceede but from his The Prophets alwayes begin their preaching and prophesying with this note b Esay 1 10. Hab. 1 1. 2 1. Thus sayeth the Lord Heare ye the word of the Lord the vision of Isaiah the burthen which Habakkuk did see Thus the Apostles shew their calling frō God c Rom. 1. ver 1 Galat. 1 1. Reuel 1 1. Paul a Seruant of Iesus Christ called to bee an Apostle not of men neyther by man but by Iesus Christ The Reuelation of Iesus Christ shewed to his seruant Iohn Thus Zachary in his song teacheth that d Luke 1 70. God spake by the mouth of his holy Prophets which were since the world began To this accordeth the saying of Peter e 2 Pet. 1 20.21 No prophesie of the Scripture is of priuat motion for it came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were mooued by the holy Ghost And the Apostle affirmeth f 2 Tim. 3 16. That the vvhole Scripture is giuen by inspiration of God Al which serue to teach vs that the words of all the holy Prophets are to bee receiued and embraced as the words of God but the doctrine handled in this booke is a part of the word of one of the most ancient most holy most excellent and most diuine Prophets and therefore consequently the doings heere registred and the doctrines heere deliuered are to be holden as a portion of the vndoubted word of God So then as Christ spake to his Disciples g Math. 10 20 It is not you that speake but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you so may we truly say it is not Moses that speaketh heere but the Spirit of God that spake in him and wrote by him in which respect it may iustly be affirmed He that heareth him heareth God and he that despiseth him that is the writer dispiseth God that is the inditer And as the Author of this Booke appeareth to be the Lord himself by an argument drawn from the generall to the speciall so the authority of it will euidently appeare and easily bee demonstrated out of sundry particular places and circumstances out of the booke it selfe Such is the full consent and sweete agreement betweene the old and new Testament that one of them serueth to confirme ratifie and establish the other Hence it is that Christ Iesus himselfe and his Apostles writing by his spirit do alledge sundry examples produce sundry testimonies proue sundry doctrines and disproue sundry errors as by an authenticke witnesse taken from this book of Moses which now we haue vndertaken to expound Moses the man of God reciteth and reckoneth vp in sundry places h Numb 20 21. 25. compared with 1. Cor. 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 c. of this Booke on the one side the great mercies of God to his people that he gaue them and they did eate Manna that is bread from heauen and dranke water out of the rocke and on the other side their wretched vnthankfulnesse toward him they lusted after flesh they murmured against him they committed fornication and perished manie thousands of them The truth of these thinges is confirmed by the Apostle Paul 1. Cor. 10. testifying that they did all eate the same spir●tuall meat and all dranke the same spiritual drinke drinking of the rocke that followed them and thereupon alluding vnto the history he saith i Num. 21 6 8 compa●d with 1 Corin. 10. Iohn 3 Let not vs commit fornication as some of them committed fornication and fell in one day three and twenty thousand Againe we reade heere how ●od brought among them in the wildernesse fiery Serpents k Numb 12 6 7 compared with Hebr. 3 2 5. that destroyed them but vpon their repentance and humiliation hee was reconciled commanded Moses to make the resemblance and representation of those fierie Serpents and set it vpon a pole that so many as were bitten m ght looke vpon it and liue The truth of these appeareth both by the testimony of Paul 1 Cor. 10 9. Neither let vs tempt Christ as some of them tempted him and were destroyed by Serpents by the words of Christ himselfe Iohn 3 14 15. As Moses lift vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the Son of man be life vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life Moses in the 12 chap. saith l Num. 11 29. compard with Iames 4 5. If there be a Prophet of the Lord among you I will be knowne to him by Dreame or vision my seruant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all his house Heereunto the Apostle to the Hebrues alludeth Consider Christ Iesus the high Priest of our profession who was faithfull to him that hath appointed him euen as Moses was in all his house Moreouer in the former chap. when Ioshua saw the two Elders in the hoste to prophesie m Iunius in paralel hee feared that Moses his reputation and authority would be diminished therefore ran to him in haste that hee should forbid them but Moses saide vnto him Enuiest thou for my sake Heereunto the Apostle Iames alludeth Think ye that the Scripture saith in vain Doth that spirite which dwelleth in vs lust vnto enuy Lastly to omit sundry Testimonies that might be produced n Numb 24 14. and 31 16. compard with 2 Peter 2 15. Iude 12. Reu. 2 14. and are remembred by others we haue at large laide
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
bee receiued To conclude let our obedience be surely grounded vpon the infallible rocke of the scriptures let it be performed heartily not hypocritically let it be discharged cheerefully not grudgingly let it bee done entirely not to halfes let it be constant not intermitted and interrupted lastly let it be present not put off from day to day then shal we be sure to be accepted and that God will crowne our obedience in this life with a full and finall recompence in the life to come 20. So were the sons of Reuben Reuben Israels eldest son by their generations by their families by the houses of their fathers according to the number of their names man by man euery male from twenty yeares and aboue as many as went foorth to warre 21. The number of them I say of the Tribe of Reuben was sixe and forty thousand and fiue hundreth 22 Of the sonnes of Simeon Simeon by their generations their families and by the houses of their fathers according to the number of their names man by man euery male from twenty yeares and aboue as many as went foorth to warre 23 The summe of them I say of the Tribe of Simeon was nine and fifty thousand and three hundreth 24. Of the sons of Gad Gad. by their generations and so forward vnto the ende of the Chapter In the words before we haue seene the obedience of Moses set downe in generall that hee did all as the Lord had commanded him Heere we are to consider the same more particularly what was the summe of euery Tribe wherein somewhat is set downe common to them all that they are numbred first by their generations secondly by their families thirdly by the houses of their fathers fourthly according to the number of their names fiftly man by man sixtly euery male seuenthly frō twēty yeare and aboue eightly as many as went foorth to warre These things are noted of euery Tribe particularly somewhat is sette downe that is proper to each Tribe to wit to what summe it accrued to wit 1. Of the Tribe of Reuben were numbred 46500. 2. Of the Tribe of Simeon were numbred 59300. 3. Of the Tribe of Gad were numbred 45650. 4. Of the Tribe of Iudah were numbred 74600. 5. Of the Tribe of Issachar were numbred 54400. 6. Of the Tribe of Zebulun were numbred 57400. 7. Of the Tribe of Ephraim were numbred 40500. 8. Of the Tribe of Manasseh were numbred 32200. 9. Of the Tribe of Beniamin were numbred 35400. 10. Of the Tribe of Dan were numbred 62700. 11. Of the Tribe of Asher were numbred 41500. 12. Of the Tribe of Naphtali were numbred 53400. The totall summe 603550. Here is a particular view and suruey taken of this people together with the generall summe of the whole From hence diuers Questions arise that are to bee answered before we do handle the doctrine proper to this Question 1 place First it may be demanded how this people could multiply to so great a number in so short a time For from the birth of Isaac to the muster heere taken are not much aboue 400 yeares and they went into Egypt with a few soules how then could one family the Tribe of Leui also excluded and the vnwarlike company of women and children of olde and sickly persons not comprehended how I say could one family grow to so great a multitude The Atheists account this incredible and vnpossible Answer and therfore make a mock at it as they do at many other partes of holy scriptures which they wrest to their owne destruction Neither is this to be beleeued by the authority of the Church rather then thorough the testimony of the Scripture and the holy Spirit speaking in it Cocleus lib. 2. de author Eccles et Script as some of the Papists speake of many like places Heerein appeareth indeed the wonderfull blessing of God in increasing seuenty persons to such a multitude in the space of two hundred sixteene yeares for so long was it and no longer from the coming downe of Iacob into Egypt with his family vnto this numbring of them by Moses in this place whereby God did make good his promise vnto Iacob Gen. 46.3 I will make of thee a great Nation For as his iustice appeared and the seuerity of his hand that of all this great multitude which came out of Egypt onely two of them to wit Caleb and Ioshua entred into the Land of Canaan all the residue because of their murmuring idolatry and disobedience perished in the wildernesse some were slaine with the sword some were swallowed vp of the earth some were consumed with the pestilence some were stung with the serpents some dyed a natural death Numb 14. so that neither their eyes saw nor their feete trod vpon the Land of promise as the Lord threatned them so the wonderfull mercy exceeding blessing of God was seene shewed in this wonderfull multiplication vntill they came to so huge a multitude August de ciuit dei lib. 18. cap. 7. Mornae de ver rel Christ c. 26. Neither need we to hold as many doe that this was miraculous and contrary to the course of nature or that euery one brought foorth two or three at euery birth We see by experience in numbring that a small number by addition and multiplication and doubling therof in a small time ariseth to a great and an innumerable company Some in our time yet liuing auouch that they haue knowne in their owne daies one woman who saw of her posterity that came out of her owne wombe an hundred and sixty persons and yet a principall part of them had no issue at all some of them leading a single life others beeing preuented by death The heathen report in their Histories that the Egyptian women bring foorth many at one burthen but to leaue them it is most probable that all the Hebrew women were very fruitefull Willet Hexapl. in Exod. cap. 1. p. 9. cap. 12. Simler in Exod. and none of them barren and that they began betimes to beare children and continued long the LORD thereby making a way for the execution of his decree and the accomplishment of his promise notwithstanding theyr cruell bondage heauy yoke intollerable labor wherewith they were oppressed and oppugned Now to giue a taste of this increase how it might be effected by ordinarie meanes albeit by an extraordinary blessing that God might verifie the worde spoken vnto Abraham consider with me that seauentie persons in thirty yeares supposing they begate euerie one but one onely in a yeare as manie might do moe will bring forth two thousand one hundred persons If we cut off the odde hundred and admit that the third part only of the former number was apt for generation to wit sixe hundred which make three hundred couples and so many marriages these considered as the former in thirty yeare more will beget and multiply nine thousand and yet we are come
But wee haue a better and stronger motiue to mooue vs to suffer then the forcible weapon of necessity euen the vnchangeable purpose of God whose gracious will it is that through manifold tribulations wee should enter into the kingdome of heauen Lastly wee must haue an eye cast vpward to the rich recompence of reward that shall be giuen vnto vs. For the greater our tryals are the greater shall our reward be It is said by the Apostle that Moses chose rather to suffer aduersity with the people of God then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season because he had respect to the recompence of the reward Hebrewes 11 The afflictions of this present life are all temporall and transitory they haue an end in a short space but the glory prepared and reserued for the Saints in the next life 2 Cor. 4 17. shall know no end for our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory while wee looke not on the things which are seene but on the things which are not seene for the things which are seene are temporall but the things which are not seene are eternall Our afflictions shall not continue long vpon vs they shall speedily haue an end which ought to deuoure the bitternesse thereof and swallow vp the tediousnesse that creepeth vpon vs. Thus much of the meanes or motiues to worke patience in vs. Now it remaineth that we examine our selues whether it be in vs or not The signes of patience For if we be without patience we shall neuer bee able to hold out our profession vnto the end It is as salt that must season euery duty If then this bee not found in vs we are but as time-seruers that continue for a season or as the morning dew which vanisheth at the rising of the Sunne or as the grasse vpon the house-top which flourisheth for a while and afterward withereth away Let vs therefore consider the signes and tokens whereby we may try our selues and prooue whether it be in vs or not One signe is an heart resolued to abide whatsoeuer is laide vpon vs whether it bee for sinne or for tryall For we must vnderstand that some afflictions are laide vpon vs for our sinnes and some for our tryall Examples of both we haue in the Scriptures to informe vs in these points Touching sinne the Prophet saith Lament 3 verse 39. Wherefore is the liuing man sorrowfull Man suffereth for his sinne When Christ had cured the man that had lyen eight and thirty yeares at the poole of Bethesda he found him afterward in the Temple and saide vnto him Behold thou art made whole sinne no more Iohn 5.14 lest a worse thing come vnto thee He had suffered a great iudgment yet the Lord threatneth him with a greater he had beene diseased many yeares yet he was to feare a worse euill Touching triall we may looke vpon Iob all whose sufferings were for triall of his faith obedience and sincerity The like speaketh Christ to the Disciples seeing a man which was blinde from his birth and asking him Maister who did sinne this man or his parents that he was borne blinde For he answered them Neyther hath this man sinned nor his parents Iohn 9 1 2 3. but that the workes of God should be shewed on him Now then whether our afflictions be to chastise vs or to prooue vs the faithfull man is perswaded and resolued to beare them If his sinnes be remitted and the guilt of them remoued he careth not though the crosse abide and continue still He that standeth thus affected hath laide vp a good signe to be knowne for his patience The pardon of our sin must more reioyce vs then the feeling of the crosse can dismay vs. Secondly when we suffer and suffer much yet we must not cease to loue the Lord that striketh vs. Though the punishment be bitter we must not hate the hand that giueth the stroke but imbrace it heartily and loue it still This affection was in Iob when he had sustained the losse of his cattell of his seruants of his sonnes and of all his substance he hated not GOD nor murmured against him but acknowledged in the midst of al Naked came I out of my mothers wombe Iob 1 21. and naked shall I returne thither the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken away blessed bee the Name of the LORD Where wee see hee blesseth God not onely for his giuing but for his taking away not onely for his blessings but for his chastisements A notable example for vs to follow and a certaine signe to make triall of our patience It is the ordinary manner of wicked men when they haue receiued guifts and are filled with good things to giue God thankes and to say God be thanked but if their riches honours peace and guifts be taken away all is done their thankes are ceassed their mouthes are stopped and their tongues are tyed It is a notable saying of the Prophet Psalme 130 3 4. If thou O LORD straightly markest iniquities O LORD who shall stand but mercy is with thee that thou maiest bee feared If our loue of GOD bee prooued when his iustice is shewed and our feare when his mercy is extended toward vs we may assure our owne hearts wee haue the spirit of patience within vs. It is truely saide hee loueth the partie well that can loue him when hee hath done him iniury True it is GOD can doe vs no wrong nor deale vniustly with vs but if hee lay heauy punnishments vppon vs and we doe patiently abide them and loue God still heartily and vnfainedly it is a great comfort that we are his For who can loue God when hee is wounded by his hand but he that is vndoubtedly in his fauour and friendship Wherefore as God chastiseth those that belong to him because he loueth them so it is their duety to loue him because he chastiseth them Thirdly another signe of patience is humility and humbling our selues vnder his blowes and strokes laid vpon vs. If once we beginne to reason and dispute of the causes for which we suffer and say why should the Lord thus deale with vs or to vaunt of our sufferings in the spirit of vanity and say who is like vnto me or what man hath endured such things it is plaine and euident we are farre from true humility and consequently from true patience Iob is made a mirror of patience to all posterities to the ende of the world which did euidently appeare to be in him by the liuely fruits thereof And albeit he suffered much more then others yet in the middes of all his sufferings and losses he did not sinne Iob 1.22 and 2.10 nor charge God foolishly who being mooued to confesse his hypocrisie and being iudged an extraordinary wicked man by his extraordinary afflictions he answered Thou speakest like a foolish woman what shall we
to all Churches therefore hee reprooued them because they neglected an ordinary duty Secondly he commandeth them that themselues should take him away saying Put him out from among you but it had beene vnreasonable to require a myracle at their handes which he knew they were not able to worke Thirdly if he had intended such a miraculous action as they performed against hypocrites and enemies of the truth what neede had there beene of a solemne assembly and consent of the Church But in putting of him out the Congregation had an interest ver 4. When ye are gathered together c my spirit with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ ●r 5 4. Fourthly this appeareth also by the ende for which he was to be deliuered to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus ●r 5 5. that is that he may repent of his wickednesse in this life and so be saued in the life to come This also is noted to be the end wherefore he deliuered Hymeneus and Alexander to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme that is that they might renounce their heresies and imbrace the true faith and so repent of their former impiety and iniquity Therefore hee would not haue him smitten with sudden death and taken out of this life and so the time and gift of repentance to be cut off from him Fiftly what it is to deliuer to Satan and to take away the Apostle expresseth in other places keepe not company with them with such eate not purge out the old leauen that they may blush and be ashamed so amend their euill waies Sixtly if this had beene meant of such extraordinary punishments the Apostle might haue done this by his Apostolicall authority and needed not to haue troubled the whole Church with it Seuenthly that which the Apostle heere commanded the Church no doubt practised but they did not take him away out of this world by any myracle neyther deliuered him to bee possessed and punished bodily by the diuell but rather proceeded against him with the censures of the Church as appeareth in the second Epistle where he willeth them to comfort him being afflicted ●or 2 6 7. to receiue him being penitent and to cure him beeing wounded Lastly if he had willed them to kill him he had willed them to rush into the Magistrates seate which he would neuer doe for this is proper to the Magistrate alone that beareth the sword Seeing therefore we haue the commandement of Christ and the practise of the Apostle to warrant the sentence of excommunication there shall alwayes bee place for it in the Church euen where the Christian Magistrate is setled established Paul would haue them assemble together in the Name of Christ ●or 5 12. that is by his will commandement and afterward hee sheweth that the Churches office is to iudge them that are within albeit the Magistrate haue a sword put into his hand by the ordinance of GOD. What then There is a twofold sword materiall and spirituall he taketh vp the materiall sword and striketh with it The Church handleth the spirituall sword which is the word of God so that the Magistrate taketh away the wicked one way the Church another way The Magistrate killeth and taketh away life if the cause require the Church medleth not with corporall punishment and shedding of blood The Magistrate proceedeth directly according to the Lawes against offenders albeit they repent because he respecteth the execution of iustice and the reuenge of the dishonour done to God The Church proceedeth not in that order but obserueth the degrees appointed by Christ Math. 18 15. If thy brother shall trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene him and thee alone c and if the offenders repent they are ready to forgiue thē For this is the marke whereat excommunication aymeth and the end whereto it tendeth that the sinners being ashamed may be brought to repētance that such as liue in the church might not be corrupted forasmuch as a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe Lastly it may be said that we should rather Obiection 3 labour how and which way to bring more into the Church then to exclude any out of the Church Men are ready to goe fa●● enough out of it but they returne slowe enough to it We are to endeuour to call men to the Sacraments which are encouragements to godlinesse rather then to keepe them frō them for their wickednesse It is a signe we lacke charity toward them when wee hide from them that which should do them good I answer Answer it is our duty to do both of them to wit both to encourage them to godlines and yet to keepe them from them so long as they lye in open wickednes not repented of not the first without the latter nor the latter without the first lest wee bee compelled to giue that which is holy to dogges Did the Lord himselfe want charity toward Adam whē he sent him forth from the Garden of Eden Gen. 3 22. lest he put foorth his hand and take also of the Tree of life and eate liue for euer The Sacraments of God cannot profite or helpe wicked men The Supper of the Lord is onely auaileable and comfortable vnto them which come worthily to wit with true repentance with sound faith and with vnfained charity touching others it turneth to greater iudgement and condemnation This doth the Apostle teach 1 Corin. 11 27. Whosoeuer shall eate this bread and drinke this cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Is it not a worke of charity to stay his course that is running into dāger and like to hurt himselfe to hinder our brother from such an action as that he eateth iudgement to himselfe and maketh himselfe guilty of horrible sinne This were a strange kinde of charity to suffer a man to thrust himselfe through with his sword or to cast himselfe downe headlong from a steepe Rocke when we may hinder him from so doing The Apostle Iude giueth vs other direction in his Epistle that we should haue compassion of some making a difference and others saue with feare Iude 22 23. pulling them out of the fire Wherefore there is no wrong done to impenitent persons if they be excommunicated and consequently barred from the Supper but rather a great benefit is bestowed vpon them and their saluation furthered by this means Neither let any say Obiect that the Church vsurpeth vpon the Magistrate and taketh from him his office For if this were a good reason Answer it was neuer lawfull neither euer shall bee for the Church to excommunicate any offenders because it belongeth to the Magistrate as his duty to punish offences whether he be a Christian or no Christian How then is it that wee take away this authority from the Church in the time of a
would be thought no strange thing to any but a ground whereunto all persons yeeld against which none dareth oppose himselfe howbeit if we come to their workes and examine their waies into which they are entred we shall see it is farre remooued from their hearts and innermost parts We are not therefore to flatter our selues in our sins as though no eye saw vs or no eare heard vs as the maner of the prophane and vngodly is who say who seeth me I am compassed about with darknesse of the night the walles of the house hide me no body can behold me what need I then to feare There is not one of an hundreth that maketh any bones at sinne so he may cary it away cleerely and closely smoothly and secretly from the sight and knowledge of the world They stand more vpon their credite then vpon their conscience and regard more the shame of men then the feare of God But what shall it profit a man to hide his sinnes from men when they lie open to the eyes of God Nay albeit we thinke our selues neuer so sure and secret yet we doe but deceiue our selues forasmuch as our owne conscience as a thousand witnesses will not be bribed to hold his peace but will reply against vs within our owne bosome and say vnto vs I see thee I wil not keepe thy counsell I will accuse thee I wil bring in euidence against thee I will indite thee and condemne thee So long then as we haue a conscience what are we the better though we haue no body priuy to our sinnes for if our owne heart condemne vs God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Ioh. 3.20 The cōscience is as a watchman set ouer vs to marke all our thoughts ●●cond E. that pryeth narrowly into vs that nothing at all can escape him It is as a Scriuener that alwayes holdeth a pen of yron in his hand to write vp all that passeth from vs who doth so firmely ingraue it that nothing shall be able to blot it out It is a faithfull remembrancer to register and record all our actions nothing can escape him that was done or thought or spoken a thousand yeeres agoe This serueth to reprooue all such as thinke to delude God and to hide their dealings from him as the adulterer supposeth to goe in the darke the theefe and murtherer in solitary places but the Lord in his word preuenteth such peeuish and foolish conceits Psal 10.11.13.14 He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten he hideth his face he will neuer see it wherefore doth the wicked contemne God he hath said in his heart thou wilt not require it But thou hast seene it for thou beholdest mischiefe and spite to require it with thine hand the poore committeth himselfe vnto thee thou art the helper of the fatherlesse Thus we see God is not in all his thoughts So in the 94 Psalme 〈◊〉 78. which we cited before bringing in the vngodly to speake thus The Lord shall not see neither shal the God of Iacob regard it he reproueth them in this manner Vnderstand ye brutish among the people and ye fooles when wil ye be wise They then are deceiued that thinke to escape Gods sight and knowledge Salomon complaining of such as speake euill of Princes and those that are in authority Eccle. 10.20 declareth that rather then it shall be kept secret the fowles of the ayre shall discouer it Eccle. 10.20 and that which hath wings shall tell the matter that is it shall certainely come to light and be set in the sight of the Sunne that all men may see it Much more then will God himselfe finde infinite meanes to lay open the thoughts of our hearts so that nothing shall escape him If Elisha by the Spirit of God was able to disclose the secret counsels of the king of Syria that he plotted and contriued in his secret chamber 2 King 6.12 Shall not God then lay open our secret sinnes that we commit or can we hide them from his sight His eyes are in euery corner of the earth He seeth not as man seeth nor looketh vpon the countenance but God beholdeth the heart euen he that formeth the spirit within him Secondly let no man sin with hope of concealement Vse 2 neither thinke to escape when hee hath sinned He saw the sacriledge of Achan though he committed it secretly none of the people could accuse him or detect him God commanded euery family to appeare before him apart and if hee had not taken him and singled him out neither Ioshua nor the Elders of the people could haue knowne him by all their wisedome and gifts of discerning Iosh 7 1. It was God that found him out that tooke the accursed thing it was not in the power and policy of man to bewray the theft He discouered the hypocrisie of Ananias and Sapphira their counterfeit liberality toward the distressed members of the Church They were taken to be most earnest beleeuers most forward professours and most zealous Christians such as gaue example of a good life vnto others seemed to shine as goodly lights in the firmament neuerthelesse the Spirit of God that searcheth all things did make manifest the hollownesse of their hearts and therefore Peter inspired with knowledge from aboue saith vnto them How is it Act. 5.3.9 that yee haue agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord or why hath Satan filled your hearts to lie to the holy Ghost He saw into the treachery of Iudas when none of the disciples could espie it For when they sate at the Passeouer and Iesus reuealed vnto them that he should be betrayed by one of them that dipped his hand in the platter with him they were very sorrowfull and knew not whom to suspect but one said Master is it I and another said Is it I Mat. 26 22. Mar. 14.19 All these were detected of hypocrisie and all these were punished by the hand of God most seuerely Achan was stoned with stones and burned with fire Iosh 7.25 Ananias and Sapphira were both of them stricken with sudden death and had no time of repentance giuen vnto them for they fell downe straightway at Peters feet Act. 5.5 10.11 yeelded vp the ghost and great feare came vpon all the Church and vpon as many as heard these things Iudas when hee perceiued that Iesus whom he had betrayed was condemned brought back again the thirty peeces of siluer to the chiefe Priests and Elziers and cast them downe in the Temple and departed and hanged himselfe Matth. 27.5 Wee see an this present place which now we haue in hand how the Lord vsed the bitter waters of iealousie to find but the adultresse We doe not find throughout the whole Testament the like solemnity in the searching out of any sin no not idolatry or witch craft or sorcery or blasphemy or murther neither was the person suspected compelled to subscribe to certaine words
to whom therefore ought they of right to be returned and in whose seruice should they be imployed but in his who is Lord of all things So then we must know that we haue Gods gifts which must bee disposed by vs as Dauid saith Both riches and honour come of thee 1 Chro. 29.12.14 in thine hand it is to make rich and great and afterward he confesseth that albeit they had offered much yet al things came of him and that they had giuen vnto him nothing but of his owne We must all then consider that whatsoeuer we giue to the maintenance of his worship we do not giue so much that which is our owne as that which is his Cyrus an heathen king acknowledged that it was the Lord God of heauen had giuen him all the kingdomes of the earth Ezr. 1.2.9 and that hee had charged Vse 1 him to build him an house at Ierusalem This reproueth such as bring the worst to God Mal. 1.8 yet thinke the same too good for him Hence it is that Malachi saith If ye offer the blind for sacrifice is it not euill and if ye offer the lame and sicke is it not euill offer it now vnto thy gouernour will he be pleased with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of hostes Many there are of this sort I will onely touch two First such as dedicate to the best seruice the worst seruants such as chuse those to bee Seers and ouerseers of the house of God which are starke blind or at least lacke their right eye Such as haue not knowledge and yet haue a calling to teach knowledge Hosea 4.6 God reiecteth that they shall be no Priests vnto him God would be serued as we haue heard before in this booke with the choycest flower of all the people with the first borne the best is bad enough for him 2 Cor. 2.16 for who is sufficient for these things Giue not to him therefore the worst These are blinde guides and vnsauory salt fitter for the dunghill then to be dedicated to the seruice of the most High Againe it taxeth those that would bee thought to serue God aright and not to offer him the lame and sickely and yet they halt before him they will not serue him with the chiefest thing nor glorifie him with the best member that they haue Esay 2● 1 Matth. 15 If we draw neere to him with our mouthes and honour him with our lippes onely but keepe our hearts from him what doe we but worship him in vaine and withhold our best treasure from him Hypocriticall seruice is a blind and lame seruice it halteth with one foot we keepe from God the chiefest and diuide our selues betweene him and the world It is vnpossible that with one of the eyes we shold look down to the earth and at the same time looke vp to heauen with the other so it is vnpossible that wee should loue God and withall loue those things that are quite contrary vnto God The Samaritanes were reiected and separated from the people of God because they worshipped God and did cleaue also to the gods of the Assyrians 2 King 17.41 No man saith Christ can serue two masters The hypocrite is like to a Tauerne with a bush without at the doore when there is no wine within in the Cellar or like the gold of the Alchymists which appears beautiful outwardly but will not beare the touch He is like to rotten wood that shineth bright in a darke night but hath no true light in it or to a Painter that beginneth to paint the face outward feature but neuer regardeth what the inward parts be There is no painting will serue our turne when we come to appeare before the Lord we must bring him the best and offer him the chiefest gift Psal 103. ● that we may say with the Prophet Blesse the Lord O my soule and al that is within me blesse his holy Name The wise man exhorteth vs to looke to the heart Prou. 4.23 and to keepe it with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life If the fountaine of water be muddy miery it is quickly troubled and made vnseruiceable If the root of the tree be rotten it is sooner turned with wind and weather so the heart of man if it bee corrupt it soone defileth and polluteth all other things that proceed from it Halt not therefore with him that can abide no halting but walke with an vpright foote and offer vp all to him of whom we haue receiued all Secondly from offering to God the best Vse 2 things we haue to further his worship we may conclude that the maintenance of the Min●stery should be very sufficient that so they which preach the Gospel might liue of the Gospel 1 Cor. ● 1 And as they doe not sow sparingly so doubtlesse they ought not to reape sparingly I plead not the cause of those that are negligent slothfull that feed themselues but not the flocke but such as open their mouthes spend their strength to feed the soules of others deserue to haue liberal maintainance for their own bodies and as th●● dispence spirituall things it is no great thing if they receiue carnall things The heathen men the idolatrous Egyptians prouided liberally for their Priests in the seuen yeeres of famine 〈◊〉 7.22 and would not suffer them to alienate their lands from the vse to which they were consecrated no not in the generall alienation of other men 〈◊〉 ● 7 God loueth a cheerefull giuer when the gift is giuen vnto men much more in duties performed vnto God would he haue vs cheerfull forward and bountifull There is no calling more honourable in many respects vnder the heauen then the Ministery I am not ignorant that it is much disgraced neuerthelesse it is a great grace to be set in it The Apostle sheweth that by Christ Iesus declared mightily to be the Son of God throgh the resurrection from the dead 〈◊〉 1.4 5. he had receiued grace and Apostleship And although some by grace vnderstand the grace of reconciliation and attonement with God others referre it to such gifts as did fit him for the function of his Apostleship yet I rather take it by a Grammaticall figure called Hendiadis to signifie the grace of Apostleship or the fauour and free gift of God to be an Apostle So then it noteth out the nature and fountaine of his Apostleship and sheweth that to be in the Ministery is not any disgrace but a speciall grace of God if we beleeue the Spirit of God speaking in the Scriptures 〈◊〉 1.12 Hence it is that he giueth thankes to Christ Iesus our Lord for that he counted him faithfull putting him into the Ministery inabling him to discharge the same And this honor farther appeareth as wel by the special gifts giuen to thē aboue the rest of the people as also by the reward recompence ●●c
they may be bold and confident in dangers Psal 23 4. No enemy shall hurt them no danger shall ouerthrow them The enemies may oppresse them for a time but God is not farre off if he be on our side who shall be against vs Vse 2 Secondly woe be vnto all the enemies of God they cannot stand nor prosper which serueth to terrifie all euill dooers They are as out-lawes or rebels that liue no longer vnder the protection of law or Magistrate so are the vngodly proscribed of God and lye open to iudgement They are as souldiers without weapons they haue neither shield nor buckler nor brest-plate nor helmet nor sword their loynes are vngirt their feet are vnshod their heads are vncouered in the day of battell they lie open as naked men to be wounded and destroied They haue nothing to defend them or to doe them good all creatures are against them nay the Creator himselfe Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of the faithfull to look to their waies seeing the Lord is with them and dwelleth among them He is a God of pure eies he seeth vs and all our waies let vs therefore carry our selues vnspotted of the world and labour to be holy as he is holy Leuit. 11 44. and 19.1 and 20 7. lest we giue him iust cause to leaue vs. If we haue any friend come vnto vs we are willing to giue him the best entertainment we can we are loth to depart from him we are willing to content him how much more ought wee to receiue the Lord for we may expect more of him and bee assured of defence protection from him greeue him not therefore nor his Spirit by our sinnes So long as they are fostered in vs he cannot be welcome vnto vs neither shall we be welcome vnto him They will driue him away make him depart from vs. Our bodies should be the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6 19. and therefore we must remember that as we are not our owne but bought with a price so we ought to glorifie God in our body and in our spirit which are Gods 10. But all the Congregation bade stone them with stones and the glory of the Lord appeared in the Tabernacle of the Congregation before all the children of Israel These rebels had raged against God no maruaile therefore if they raged against his seruants who notwithstanding had not vsed any rigour or force against them onely they perswaded thē to trust in the promise of God and boldly to proceed on their iourney toward the Land But this is accounted as an hainous crime and they deale with them as men worthy of death according to the saying of Salomon Prou. 9 7. He that reproueth a scorner getteth to himselfe shame and hee that rebuketh a wicked man getteth himselfe a blot Thus we see how wicked men can abide no reprofe nay they cannot suffer a word of exhortation they cannot abide that others should do better then themselues Againe such as are carnal and corrupt are prone to hatred malice and reuenge yea when no cause of offence is offered vnto them See also how God protecteth his seruants in times of danger But to passe ouer these points from hence obserue that such as are Gods seruants Doctrine Such as are gods seru●●● shall be e● intreated and stand for good causes shall be persecuted maligned and euilly intreated as if they were murtherers and malefactours Though they deserue to be fauoured and loued yet they shall be hated cursed and contemned So it was with Moses when he came to Pharaoh moued him to let the people goe Exod. 5 1 2 5 6. Dan. 3 19 and 6 16. Acts 4 20 21. and 5 18. Iohn 16 2. 1 Kings 13 4. Thus was it with Eliah and Elisha thus was it with Michaiah Ieremy and thus it was with all the Prophets Math. 23 34. The reasons because the world hateth the Reason 1 truth and the professors of it The Preachers and professours of it because they manifest publish the truth Gal. 4 16 The truth it selfe because men loue darkenesse more then the light inasmuch as their owne deeds are euill Iohn 3 19. They are chosen out of the world therefore the world hateth them whereas if they were of the world the world would loue his owne Iohn 15 19. Secondly Satan is their enemy and seeth Reason 2 that by them his kingdome is in danger to be ouerthrowne hence it is that he rageth and raiseth persecution that thereby he may stop their mouthes stop the course of the truth Reuel 2 10 and 12 13. Thirdly God will haue his seruants tryed Reason 3 in their faith patience constancy and obedience Reuel 2 10. We must learne to walke through good report and euill report and bee ready to renounce all rather then the truth which we must buy at any rate Prou. 23 ● but neuer sel it though we might gaine all the world because all such gaine is the greatest losse Math. 16 verse 26. The vses follow First maruaile not at it whē Vse 1 we see this come to passe neither condemne the truth or the professours of it 1 Iohn 3 13. Maruaile not if the world hate you Let vs comfort our selues with this consolation that it is no rare thing neither is our case singular neither do we suffer alone it hath beene the lot of all Christians nay of Christ himselfe let vs not seeke to be better then he was the seruant may not be aboue his Lord if they haue persecuted him they will persecute vs Ioh. 15 2. Christ himselfe pronounceth such as suffer for righteousnesse sake to be blessed for so did they persecute the Prophets that were before vs Math. 5 12. Many men in the world are discouraged from godlinesse of life and walking in a sincere profession because they see the godly persecuted and the vngodly to prosper and flourish therefore Iohn doth forewarne not to maruaile heereat because this ought not to seeme strange vnto vs it hath beene so from the beginning and so it hath continued The world though it be full of changes yet changeth not his nature neither taketh vpon it any other shape Wherefore we must not ceasse from godlines for hatred of the world but rather goe more zealously forward remembring the words of Christ Math. 11 12. The kingdome of heauen suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Secondly we must reioyce vnder the crosse Vse and be glad when we suffer for the truth not as euill doers 1 Pet. 3 17 and 4 15. but for well doing So did the Apostles Acts 5 41 so did the Hebrewes chap. 10 34. They considered with themselues that they had in heauen a better an enduring substance they accounted it a great honour that they were accounted worthy to suffer for his Name they knew that they were made partakers of the sufferings of Christ and that the trying of their faith would worke patience Iam.
familiar with them through disparagement of our nature wee cannot haue them alwayes present with vs through distance of place Therefore the Spirit that could haue taught the Eunuch by inspiration Acts. 1 ● commanded Philip to goe neere and ioyne himselfe to his chariot to be a guide to the blind a light to him that sate in darkenes and an instructer of the vnlearned The Angel that appeared vnto Cornelius could haue told him and taught him those heauenly mysteries of saluation whereby hee and all his house should be saued but he directeth him to Peter to tell him what He ought to doe Lastly Act. 10 ● our owne request hath concurred with the ordinance of God desiring that man cloathed with the same infirmities and subiect to the like passions might speake vnto vs. For when the Israelites at the deliuering of the Law saw the signes of his glory as it were certaine prints and footsteps of his Maiesty the sounding of the trumpet the cracking of the thunder the flashing of the lightning the trembling of the earth the darkenesse of the aire the appearing of the cloud the quaking of Moses himselfe at these sights 〈◊〉 19 19. they cryed out to him with great vehemency of spirit Talk thou with vs and we will heare thee but let not GOD talke with vs lest we die Seeing therefore the maiesty of God is incomprehensible who dwelleth in light that no man can attaine vnto 〈◊〉 6 2 5. whose glory the Angels cannot beholde without couering their faces seeing the excellency of the elect Angels is so great that wee cannot so much as endure their presence neither can we be so familiar with them as we do desire and should be to deliuer our estates to them neither can at all times when we desire being on earth haue conference and recourse to them being in heauen seeing the Word is the same in the mouth of God in the mouth of an Angel and in the mouth of the Minister and is with like regard and reuerence to bee heard as Luk. 10 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth mee Lastly seeing we desired the ministery of man to teach vs and God approued of our desire saying 〈◊〉 5.19 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear me keep all my commandements alwaies that it might go wel with them and with their children for euer the intollerable pride and presumption of those appeareth that embase the high ordinance of God in the ministery of his word would call God or his Angels out of heauen to attend vpon their fancies to minister to their wantonnes To the second obiection 〈◊〉 second ●●●●ction an ●●ed pretending reading of Scriptures and Sermons at home and asking whether we can make the Bible better we answer that we preach not to make the Scriptures better but the people the Scriptures need it not the people do And albeit there bee enough set downe in the written word yet men vnderstand litle as Acts 8. whē Philip heard the Eunuch reade the Prophet Esay he saide But vnderstandest thou what thou readest 〈◊〉 8 31. ●● 17 11. He saide How can I without a guide The reading of the Scripture I confesse is profitable comfortable and necessary to fit vs and frame vs to the sauing hearing of the word preached to keepe vs that we bee not easily deceiued by false teachers 〈◊〉 5 20. 〈◊〉 5 1 2. But notwithstanding the reading of the Scripture we must haue it further opened diuided and applyed as 2 Tim. 2 25. Study to shew thy selfe approoued vnto God a workeman that needeth not to be ashamed diuiding the word of truth aright When a mā is grieuously wounded it is the salue that healeth yet is the skill and cunning hand of the Surgeon necessary and requisite to make the plaister to spred it and apply it to the part diseased It is the meate that nourisheth the body yet must it be cut chewed and digested If there be little children in an house and they haue an whole loafe which is great hard set before them they find the crust too strong for them so that it must bee cut for them and diuided vnto them in due season Moreouer we find by experience that such as plead for reading either Scriptures or Sermons at home when they should attend the publike exercises of religion do indeed spend the time nothing lesse then that way as appeareth by their palpable ignorance neither let such looke for a blessing from God at home when he requires them to ioyn themselues to the congregation of the faithfull so that while they think to deceiue others they do most of all deceiue thēselues Last of al why do they not say as much of the other part of the Ministers Office For as he is to preach the Gospel so he is to administer the Sacraments Now then as they alledge they can reade Scriptures Sermons at home themselues as wel as heare them at the mouth of the Minister so can they not poure Water on the face of their children and rehearse the words of institution as well as the Minister Can they not themselues take Bread Wine breake the one poure out the other receyue them both and eate and drinke them in their priuate families as wel as take them in the publike assembly at the hand of the Minister But should such water so sprinkled on the child be holy baptisme Or should such bread and such wine so taken so broken so eaten drunken be the Lords Supper No such idle actions are not holy Sacraments but shameful prophanations of the precious blood of Iesus Christ Wherefore notwithstanding all our shew of reading in our houses to our housholdes yet must the Lords holy ordinance be magnified among vs to seek the law at the Pastors mouths as the Prophet teacheth Mal. 2 7. The priests lips should preserue knowledge and they shall seeke the Law at his mouth c. And examine when you will those that pretend reading to exclude preaching you shall finde them for the most part ignorant in the grounds and principles of Religion knowing neyther the vse of the Law nor the end of the Gospel vnderstanding neither the Petitions of the Lords prayer nor the Articles of faith and therefore if they bestow so much time as they would make the world beleeue they are yet in the number of those whom the Apostle speaketh of 2 Tim. 3 7. Which are euer learning but are neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth To the third obiection The third obiection answered boasting of sufficient knowledge we answer That as we prophesie in part so we all know in part and the Ministery of the word serueth not onely to begin faith and repentance in vs but to build vs vp to the day of Iesus Christ It serueth not onely to teach vs knowledge but obedience
possession To this Moses answereth that albeit it could not be denied and gain-sayed but that the Cities were in former time within the Borders and Territories of Moab yet Sihon had taken them away by right of warre and conquest of the sword so that now they were alienated from the Moabites and appropriated to the Amorites who possessed them and dwelt in them So then the Israelites offered no wrong to the Moabites but recouered the places to their owne vse out of the hand of the Amorites Neither did Moab lay any claime to them for many generations as Iephtah declareth Iudg. 11. And this is the right that Israel had to these Cities Thus we see what dealings passed betweene the Moabites and the Amorites before Israel came to these places both of them were idolaters both wicked men both grosly ignorant of the true worship of God and desperate enemies to the true Church one is ready to cut the throat of another and killeth one another in battell We learne from hence Doctrine God often punisheth one euill man by the hand of another as euil that God punisheth oftentimes one wicked man by the hand of another He raiseth vp and armeth one of them to destroy another to eate vp and consume another This truth appeareth in many other places of holy Scripture Chedor-laomer vsurping dominion ouer other Nations made warre against them Gen. 14 5 6.7 8. and tooke away all the substance as a prey booty out of Sodome and Gomorrha God in his prouidence causeth one euill man to slay another The Sodomites were exceeding sinners against the Lord. He raised vp an enemy not much better then themselues for their destruction The like we see in the example of the Midianites Who sheathed their swords in their owne bowels Iudg. 7 20 22 Indeed Gideon gaue his men at armes that went with him to that seruice Lampes Trumpets and Pitchers and thus he marched against his enemies they sounded their Trumpets they brake their Pitchers they lighted their Lampes then the hoast of the Midianites fled euery mans sword was set against his neighbour their own weapons were their owne bane their owne men were their owne murtherers and so they destroyed one another This the Prophet Habbakkuk Hab. 1 6. sheweth when the Law was dissolued Iustice oppressed cruelty practised and all wickednes was aduanced among them the LORD would worke a wonder among them He wold raise vp the Chaldeans against them a bitter and furious Nation to destroy them a people worse then themselues This is that which Esay the Prophet pointeth vnto when he saith Euery one shall eate the flesh of his owne arme Manasseh Ephraim and Ephraim Manasseh and they both shall be against Iudah Esay 9 21. Likewise he prophesieth the destruction of Babylon by the Medes and Persians chap. 13 17. The destruction of the Egyptians by the Assyrians chap. 19. Yea he would set the Egiptians against the Egiptians so that euery one should fight against his brother and euery one against his neighbour City against City and Kingdom against Kingdom The reasons of this order and manner of Gods working are not hard to finde For first Reason 1 who shall limit him what meanes to vse and what persons to imploy in his seruice Dare any Subiect prescribe vnto his Prince whom he shall send Or shall a seruant teach appoint his master whom he shall entertaine to performe his busines Or will any Magistrate master take well such pride presumption Shall God then the King of Kings the master ouer all men be stinted and limited whom he shal vse As none can appoint him what he shall do or when he shall punish or whom he shall correct no more can we decree or determine the meanes and manner of his proceedings He appointeth the times and seasons of punishing he singleth out the persons to bee punished For who hath knowne the minde of the Lord Or who was his Counseller Hee will finde out his enemies in their sinnes and he will chuse out the instruments of his owne iudgements He armeth many times men of euill hearts and of vncleane hands to doe his works diligently and to accomplish his waies feruently When the Lord would smite the house of Ahab and auenge the blood of his seruants the Prophets Iehu is annointed King ouer Israel made the Rod of the Lord who performed his word and will to the full hee slew Iehoram 2 King 9 7. 10 31. cast downe Iezabel and slew the Priests of Baal yet notwithstanding all his zeale which he pretended for the Lord his heart was not vpright before him neither regarded hee to walke in the Law of the Lord God of Israel neither departed hee from the sinnes of Ieroboam which made Israel to sinne As then the worke is the Lords so is the workman and as the iudgement is his so is the instrument which hee chuseth and fitteth to effect the same without the prescription appointment of any other Reason 2 Againe albeit they be wicked and vngodly men infidels and idolaters that hee imploieth to finish his worke to bring his decree determination to passe yet he frameth their harts to serue his prouidence as seemeth good in his heauenly wisedome He hath the hearts of all men in his hand euen of Kings to turne them about to be instruments of his will If then he can change the hearts of enemies no maruaile if he vse them as his seruants So he vseth the seruice of the diuels and euill spirits and maketh them to do his will and against their will further the saluation of his children whō they purposed to bring to despaire and damnation as appeareth in the History of Iobs Iob 1 and 2. tentations Albeit they be not his faithfull seruants to do his wil cheerefully yet they are his slaues to serue him by constraint and compulsion This the Apostle Iohn declareth in the destruction of that great whore which is drunke with the blood of the Saints with whom the Kings of the earth committed fornication namely that they gaue their power and authority to the Beast but they shall hate the whore make her desolate eate her flesh and burne her with fire for God hath put in their hearts to fulfill his will and to doe with one consent for to giue their kingdome vnto the Beast vntil the words of God be fulfilled Reu. 17 15 16 17. Nothing is done without the will of God He holdeth in his hands the hearts and purposes of Princes and great men vpon earth and directeth them by a secret motion to worke what hee pleaseth whether they know his will or know it not the whole action commeth of him and from him For howsoeuer it might seeme hard and harsh that the Angel saith it was GOD that put it into the harts of Kings to aduance the Papacy which was the work of the diuell to seduce the world yet after
him and asketh him what the men were that came to him not that God was ignorant and needed to be taught or in structed what those persons were but to draw from him a voluntary confession of the matter which being truely opened and declared God forbiddeth him to go to the Moabites because they had a mischieuous purpose and to curse the Israelites because they were a blessed people Whē he perceiued to his great griefe that God had concluded and determined to continue his mercy and blessings vpon his people which no deuice of man could diminish no works of the diuell could abolish the morning being come he returned an answer to the messengers and sent them backe without their long-hoped desire excusing himselfe that he could not goe with them as himselfe desired and as they had deserued at his hands and hauing his minde wholly fixed on his reward he saith Ioseph 〈◊〉 lib. 4 cap 6. Returne backe to your Lord as for me I desired nothing more then to accompany you but the Lord hath stopped and restrained my purpose and will not suffer me to go with you or to helpe you Wherein obserue how this couetous hyreling false Prophet being willing to vndertake the worke because of the wages and to promise his best helpe that he might finger the hyre behaueth himselfe fraudently and vnfaithfully as hyrelings do mincing the matter and reuealing one part but concealing another part of the reuelation giuen him of God For whereas God had said Thou shalt not goe thou shalt not curse the people because they are a blessed people denying vnto him as well his purpose of going as his promise of cursing he declareth the former but dissembleth the latter he sheweth to the Princes and Gouernors that GOD restrained him from going but hideth this that the same GOD had forbidden him to curse the people together with the reason of it That they are blessed lest the messengers should be offended and his expected hyre denyed deteyned This is the summe and substance of this diuision But before we enter into the handling of the Doctrines offered heerein to our considerations to the end we may cleerely see into the meaning of the whole history it shall not be amisse for vs to answer certaine doubts and difficulties that arise as well from the purpose of Balak as from the person of Balaam Some of reuerent account in the Church Caluin 〈◊〉 in 4 ●ib 〈◊〉 interpret this history otherwise then can stand with the circumstances of the Text and the proportion of faith in other Scriptures For they suppose that Balak sought helpe of the true God reuerenced his Prophet and had the seed of religion remaining in his heart If this were so why doth he not himselfe fly to God by prayer And why doth he not stirre vp his people to prayer Why do they not all as one man ioyne in supplications and intercessions to be helped of God Why did he require Balaam to come with cursings and bannings against Israel if there were any sparke of true piety left in his heart Againe it is imagined that Balaam was a Prophet of God and endued with the spirit of Prophesie to whom GOD vsed oftentimes and ordinarily to appeare so do make him as it were a meane betweene the true Prophets and the false Prophets therby God making himselfe knowne among the Infidels and neuer leauing himselfe without witnesse Such were the Sybils thought to be liuing among the Gentiles and giuing testimony to the truth of God But we know no such meane betweene true and false Prophets ●●swer For whosoeuer is not a true Prophet is a false Prophet and whosoeuer is a false Prophet cannot be a true Prophet of God He that is of God is a true Prophet he that is of the diuell is a false Prophet Neither doth the deliuery and vtterance of some truth make a true Prophet for then the diuell should be a true Prophet who sometime speaketh the trueth albeit to a sinister end For he confessed the Messiah to be the Sonne of God ●arke 1 24. thereby to darken the Doctrine of Christ and to discredite the power of the Gospel raising a suspition that he hath some familiarity friendship with Christ by drawing men to doubt of the truth of our redemption inasmuch as the diuell is a lyar from the beginning 〈◊〉 8 44. the father of lying And touching the Sybils they carry not any certaine credit and authority being all or the most part forged foysted in 〈◊〉 13 2 to win credite to the word of God which needeth not the lyes of any to vphold the truth and authority thereof For they are brought in speaking more clearely and euidently more plainly and particularly of Christ and his kingdome then any of the Patriarkes or Prophets then Moses or any that liued after him Esay is worthily accounted to bee an Euangelicall Prophet prophesying distinctly and determinately of the passion sufferings of Christ yet it is as nothing in comparison of that the Sybils expresse 〈◊〉 S●billine 〈◊〉 ●●nter●●ffe I●●a ●sa●o Ex● 〈…〉 11. touching the name and nature of Christ touching his originall off-spring touching his death and resurrection touching Antichrist and other enemies of the Church Now shall we thinke that God would reueale more to them then to his owne Prophets and the sonnes of the Prophets to such as liued out of the Church more then to all that were brought vp in the Church and sucked the sincere milke of the Scriptures and had the most sureword of the Prophets 〈◊〉 1● to the which they did take heede as to a light that shineth in a darke place Besides we cannot hold this Balaam for any true Prophet but for a false Prophet 〈…〉 such as Simon the Sorcerer mentioned in the Acts Notwithstanding all the goodly glozes that he maketh to winne himselfe credite and estimation whereof wee shall speake more afterward Furthermore others thinke that Balaam meant his own false gods when he saith Tarry heere this night Obiect and I will giue you an answer as the Lord shall say vnto me And againe Returne into your Land for the Lord hath refused to giue me leaue to goe with you but that he was preuented of his purpose by the true God appearing vnto him But this coniecture is ouerthrowne by the expresse words in this place For the word is Iehouah Answer a name alwayes in Scripture giuen to the true God onely and neuer applyed to any false gods yea the true God was knowne by his name among the Gentiles and by it was discerned distinguished from the Idols of the Nations which indeed are no Gods Now that we may attaine to the true meaning of this Scripture and resolue of the right interpretation thereof I will set downe certaine rules and conclusions which concerne the matter in question which being fully determined and throughly descided the truth will euidently appeare
doe in the rest when it pleaseth him We know by experience in all ages and learne by relation and report of all histories that the diuell hath spoken in the mouth of other creatures what impiety then is this to yeeld that to the diuels which they deny to God and detract from the most High Hitherto of the reproofe of the Asse reprehending his master now of the reproofe of the Angel True it is hee was vnworthy of any other teacher then his owne Asse being a fit master for such a scholler for such as refuse to heare the Lord speaking are worthy to bee sent to learne of bruite beastes and senselesse creatures Notwithstanding because this proud Prophet scorned so base a teacher and disdained to learne wisdome in the Asses school to the end he should not be exalted out of measure nor insult with contempt ouer his beast the Angel of God appeareth vnto him represseth his folly and giueth light and sight to his blinde eyes This sheweth that his eyes were first of all closed and shut vp whereby he was withholden from discerning the Angel And this restraint was rather miraculous then naturall For if it had beene naturall it would haue fayled in the discerning of other obiects as well as of this one But his eyes being opened then hee began to behold the Angel to cast himselfe downe before him to confesse his owne wickednes and ignorance to submit himselfe wholly to his pleasure after that the Angel had reproued his cruelty and testified the Asses innocency who if she had not been warier and wiser then her master had procured the speedy death and destruction of the Sorcerer Lastly Balaam hauing acknowledged his sin and confessed his ignorance the Angel giueth him leaue to goe his iourney so he goeth merrily with the messengers hoping that as he had obtained liberty to resort repaire to the Moabites which before was denyed vnto him so hee should in time likewise draw the Lord to giue his consent that hee might curse the people Question But here the question may be asked who or what this Angel of God was that had this conference communication with Balaam whether it were one of the created Angels or not Some suppose it was Michael the Archangel that was appointed ruler ouer that people Theodoret in hunc locum Iustin Mart. Athan s Some that it was another of the elect Angals and inuisible spirits Others affirme that it was Christ Iesus the Angel of the couenant the Prince of the Angels of God and the head both of men Angels What is meant by the Angel appearing to Balaam And this I rather assent subscribe vnto for these causes and considerations First because so often as Moses doth make mention of the Angel of God for the most part or alwaies hee vnderstandeth Christ the leader and conducter of his people in the wildernesse and therefore the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 10. They tempted Christ in the wildernesse and were destroyed of serpents Whosoeuer shal diligently reade the books of Moses carefully obserue his maner of speaking shal easily find that when he speaketh of the Angel of God and the Angel of the Lord he meaneth Christ Iesus calleth him sometimes the Lord as Gen. 16 7 13 22 20 12 16 31 11 13. Exod 4 19. So in this place he cals him sometimes the Angel sometimes the Angel of the Lord sometimes the Lord vnderstanding by them al one the same Christ Secondly it is said verse 31. that Balaam fell downe and worshipped him which no one of the elect Angels and blessed spirits albeit excel-cellent and glorious creatures would euer haue accepted but all of them would with one consent haue refused and reiected the same For when Iohn rauished with the glory of the Angel fell at his feet to worship him he forbad him and shewed the reason thereof Reuel 19 10. 22.8 See thou do it not I am thy fellow-seruant and one of thy brethren the Prophets of them which keepe the words of the prophecie of this booke worship thou God Now the Angel of God in this place doth not forbid diuine worship to be exhibited vnto him but if he had bene a creature and had vsurped the honor of God he should be an angel of the diuel not of God Neither let any say Fu●k on Reuel 19. that he bowed himselfe vpon his face adoring God when he saw his Angel ready to take vengeance of him which doth doth not appeare by any circumstance of ●he Text but rather that he vnderstood this Angel to be the same Lord that had before appeared and spoken vnto him This Angel of the Lord talketh with him as God himselfe Ver. 32. saying I came out to withstand thee because thy way is not straight before me he doth not say his way was peruerted before the Lord as Peter speaketh to Simon the Sorcerer Acts 8 21. Lastly Balaam speaketh to him as to that God which had before appeared vnto him restraining him from cursing the people and the Angel repeateth the same words verse 35. which the Lord himselfe had vttered before verse 20. For the Lord Iehouah had said vnto him Forasmuch as the men are come to call thee Rise vp Verse 2● and goe with them but onely what thing I say vnto thee that shalt thou doe so here the Angel is brought in speaking in the same manner Go with the men Verse 3● but what I say vnto thee that only shalt thou speake He saith not what the Lord saith vnto thee but what I say vnto thee Now then if it were the Lord that said before vnto him What thing I say vnto thee that onely shalt thou doe then the same wordes being also pronounced by this Angel making himselfe equall with the Lord must needs be accounted to be vttered by God himselfe Neither let any thinke it vnfit or vnlikely that Christ should appeare to a Sorcerer for we heard before how the Lord oftentimes appeared vnto him and wee see that when Agar was fled from Abrahamt house Gen. 16 and 1● ● the Lord spake vnto her from heauen Thus much touching the order of the History the interpretation of the words and the clearing of the Obiections that arise out of the same Now let vs come to the doctrines which the Spirit of God offereth to our considerations to be marked and remembred of vs. Verse 22. But the wrath of the Lord was kindled because he went and the Angell of the Lord stood in the way to be against him Here we haue to weigh and ponder in our hearts in these wordes the care of the Lord watching ouer the godly The Israelites after the fresh discomfiture of their enemies doe thinke themselues out of all danger and imagine not either Balak to be consulting and the Midianites to be assisting or Balaam to bee practising and all of them ioyning and confederating against them they know
haue hurt the Church if they had beene pronounced against them 〈◊〉 I answer the curses of the wicked cannot hurt or hinder the godly as Balaam in euery Prophesie acknowledgeth And Salomon teacheth That the curse which is causelesse shall not come Prou. 26 2. Wherefore then did not God suffer him to run his race to follow his owne imagination Why did God appeare vnto him and not suffer his curses to be denounced Surely because hereby the Name of God is more glorified the Sorcerer confounded and all the expectation of the enemies dashed in that the curses are not pronounced and their desires and endeuours disanulled Verse 1. Build me heere seuen Altars and prepare me seuen Bullocks and seuen Rams They begin theyr worke with great pompe shew of zeale and religion as the manner of the heathen was ●●●●g 3. 〈◊〉 pr●●ci●●● when they went about any enterprize He buildeth not one Altar alone but seuen he contenteth not himselfe with one Bullocke and one Ram but prepareth seuen so that on euery Altar hee offereth two burnt offerings to appease the Lord toward them He nameth the Name of the Lord and goeth apart from the society of men as it were to haue conference with the liuing God whereas his drift and purpose was nothing but to practise his sorcery Thus we see the Gentiles obserued the manner of sacrificing receiued by tradition from their Fathers yet not purely and vncorruptly both because they had not respect to the Messiah promised and supposed the outward work of sacrificing to be so precious and meritorious that for it theyr sinnes should be forgiuen and because they mingled and corrupted the worship of God with their owne inuentions 〈…〉 For the sacrifices instituted of God are defiled and depraued partly by the opinion of merit partly by the addition of new-fangled worship 〈…〉 or●● zeale Hereby we learne That all religion pretendeth order and zeale although it be remoued from truth Howsoeuer all false religion proceed from the spirit of disorder and confusion that is the diuell yet it maketh some shew of holinesse putteth on a shadow of the true religion This appeareth in the high places that Solomon built for his outlandish women Where they burnt Incense and offered oblations to strange gods 1 Kin. 11.7 8 and 18 26 28. It is noted touching the Priests of Baal that they prepared a Bullock and called vpon the name of Baal from morning to noone They cried aloud and cut themselues as their manner was with kniues and Launces vntill the blood gushed out vpon them Loc what zeale and forwardnesse here was The like appeareth in Zedekiah one of the former generation he made hornes of yron in resemblance imitation of the true Prophets who taught by such signes and said With these shalt thou push the Aramites vntill thou hast consumed them 2 Kings 22 11. The same is offered vnto vs in the Prophesies of Ieremy chap. 32 34 35 where describing the zeale of Idolaters hee saith They set their abhominations in the house of God to defile it they built the high places of Baal and caused their sonnes and daughters to passe through the fire to Molech So when Hananiah brake the yoke of Ieremy he said Thus saith the Lord Euen so will I breake the yoke of Nebuchadnezzer King of Babel from the necke of all Nations within the space of two yeares Ier. 28 10 11. The Reasons are to be considered First Reason 1 because Satan can turne and transforme himselfe into a resemblance of the glorious Angels that dwell in the heauenly light albeit he dwell in vtter darknesse yet he neuer appeareth in his owne likenesse he shadoweth his lyes with the Name of God and couereth his tentations with the vizard of holinesse This Reason the Apostle vseth 2 Cor. 11 13 14 15. If then Satan hide his hornes and dissemble the hollownes of his dealings so that his baytes and snares are not perceiued and the poyson of them is not seene no maruaile if his instruments that are led by his spirit follow theyr master in theyr hypocrisie For as the spirit is that leadeth them so are they that are led Secondly it satisfieth ignorant and foolish men from further searching and enquiring into Reason 2 the hidden mysteries of corrupt religion If it should bee propounded in the name of the diuell and the rottennes thereof appeare in his likenes euery one would defie it and spit at it and Satan well knoweth he should gaine nothing to his kingdome But when he taketh vp the Name of God pretendeth the zeale of God and sometimes alledgeth the Scriptures of God he carrieth many blindfold to perdition and leadeth away captiue simple soules laden with sinnes and led with diuers lustes for they neuer make further enquiry nor diue to the depth of Satans wylinesse This appeareth in the Idolatry of the ten Tribes erected by Ieroboam who saide to the people It is too much for you to goe vp to Ierusalem ●●hold O Israel thy gods which brought thee out of the Land of Egipt and this thing turned to sin for the people went because of the one euen to Dan. 1 Kings 12 28 30. Iudg. 17 13. The ignorant multitude ran headlong after this counterfeit worship coloured with shew of reason and followed those Idols that they might go wi●h ease to the diuell Vse 1 Let vs make vse of this doctrine and see what may be learned from hence for our edification First acknowledge from hence that ●ll zeale and appearance of zeale is not good Balak and Balaam hee●e pretend the worship of God and who would th●nke they intented my mischiefe Yet they were in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity Therfore the Apostle saith of the Iewes I beare thē record Rom. 10 2 3 that they haue the zeale of God but not according to knowledge for they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God and going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse haue not submitted themselues to the righteousnesse of God So the Church of Rome besotted with superstition and hauing drunke deepely of the cup of abhominations makes an outward shew of great zeale by their multitude of ceremonies partly borrowed from the Iewes and partly patched from the Gentiles by their Pilgrimages to Sai●ts by the counterfeit strictnes of their disordered orders by their solemne vowes of pouerty chastity and obedience by the pretended streightnesse of their whipping Iesuites and Ieluited disciples imitat●ng heerein the Priests of Baal and resembling the heretiques Aug. de haeresib which of whipping themselues are called Flagellantes But notwithstanding all these shewes of holinesse they are farre fr●m true zeale hauing a voluntary religion like vnto thosewhom the Apostle Paul reproueth Col. 2 21 ●2 23 In which place the Apostle doth liuely describe what the Romane Religion is and portrayeth it out as a Table before our eyes It hath goodly shewes which indeed seeme to haue some
exquisite and excellent thing in them but the inward and spirituall worship is neglected among them the Name of God is dishonoured the Sabbath is prophaned the Scriptures are abused the doctrine of faith and repentance is buried many open sinnes are maintained amo●g thē If that bee the true rel●gion which giueth all glory to God the Popish religion cannot bee so wh●ch giueth all glory to themselues and robbeth God of the honour due to his Name by their doctrine of merits by their works of supererogation which indeed is more then supererogation If it be the true religion that magnifyeth the Scriptures resteth in the perfection of them submitteth all persons causes vnto them and acknowledgeth them the sole and supreme Iudge of all Questions and Controuersies of religion then that must bee a false religio which patcheth other writings and traditions vnto them which in matters of ●octrine flyeth from them which preferreth the authority of the Church before them and ●enveth to be wholly ordered by them If that ●e the true religion which aduanceth the sufferings of Christ and resteth in his perfect Oblation once performed vpon the Crosse Heb. 10 1● which acknowledgeth Christ to be the onely Sauiour and Redeemer of his people and ●eacheth to relye vpon him alone for our iustification then that must bee confessed to bee a counterfet religion which setteth vppe a mocke Christ and honoureth instead of him the cursed Idoll of the Masse whereby the remembrance of his death is shamefully e●uded and the people of God are miserably deluded Learne therefore that all zeale is not true zeale and to hate all euill albeit it haue the appearance of good and come masked vnder the vizard and habite of holinesse For counterfeit piety is double impiety Secondly let vs not bee carried away and Vse 2 seduced with euery vaine blast of false Doctrine but stand constant setled and vnmoueable as they that are builded not on the weak sand but vpon the firme Rocke that cannot b● remoued This the Apostle teacheth Heb. 1 9. Bee not carried about wi●h diuers and strange doctrines for it is a good thing that the heart bee stablished with grace and not with meates which haue not profited them that haue beene occupied in them This vse is vrged by the Apostle Paul 2. Tim. 3 5. This know that in the last daies shall come perillous seasons for men shall bee louers of their owne selues c hauing a shew of godlin●sse but haue denied the power therof turne ●way therfore from such We see how easily the grea●est part are carried away with shadowes without substance and shewes without inward tru●h They haue itching eares after new Te●chers and forsake the ancient Teachers that haue fed them with the milke of the word gained them to the fai●h of Christ Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to take hee● wee be not seduced and deceiued with ●a●e P●ophets and to make a tryall of their doctrine by the truth of the Scriptures according to the counsell of Christ our Sauiour Math. chapter 7 verses 15. 16. Lastly it is our dutie● to learne to discerne Vse 3 the spirits and to be able to iudge of the Doctrine whether it be of God or not Christ commandeth his Disciples to beware take heed of the leauen of the Pharisies and Saduces Math 1 and 2 ● that is of their doctrine but in another place he chargeth them to heare the Pharisies obey their doctrine sit●ing in Moses chaire because they were appointed for the time to be the Teachers of the Church Now then if they must heare and do what they say and yet auoide their mixtures corruptions of sound d●ctrine it is required necessarily of the people to discerne betweene the Law of GOD and the leauen of the Pharisies being charged to cleaue to the truth and to forsake error This is that vse which th● Apostle Iohn vrgeth 1 Iohn chap. 4. verse 1. De●rely beloued beleeue not euery spirit but try th● spirits whether they bee of GOD For many false Prophets are gone out into this world And in the second Epistle chap. 7 8. hee speaketh to the same purpose Many deceiuers are entred into this world which confesse not that Iesus Christ is come in the flesh looke to your selues that wee lose not the things which we haue done but that we may receiue a full reward Hereunto likewise cometh the exhortation of Eliah to all the people that were seduced by false Prophets 1 Kings 18 21. How long halt yee betweene two opinions If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal bee hee then go after him And the Apostle Paul chargeth the Thessalonians to try all things and to hold fast that which is good 1 Thess 5 21. This condemneth the Church of Rome of sacriledge that take from the people the key of knowledge and nuzzle them in ignorance as the mother of deuotion accounting it sufficient that they beleeue as the Church beleeueth and credite in all things theyr Pastours and Teachers and forbid them all tryall of the doctrine deliuered vnto them But the Scriptures require of them the spirit of discerning 〈◊〉 12 2. ●il 1 10. ●ph 5.15 17. and all iudgement that they may allow those things that are best and that they may bee without offence vntill the day of Christ to take heed that they walke circumspectly and wisely that they may vnderstand what the will of the Lord is and beware that they be not seduced And it is no excuse to the people beeing misled and misguided to say Thus haue I bene taught and instructed For when the blinde leade the blinde they both fall into the pit of destruction Mat. 15 14. So that if they embrace not faith vnto saluation but withdraw themselues vnto perdition they that follow false Teachers are sure to perish as well as they that leade them the way or rather out of the way and if the Watchman see the sword drawne 〈◊〉 33 8. and iudgement comming and blow not the Trumpet albeit the blood of the people shall bee required at his hands yet they shall also be taken away in their sins Verse 5. The Lord put an answer in Balaams mouth Heere is set downe the Author of his Prophesies He sought a cursing but God put in his mouth a blessing so that the spirit of Prophesie is sometimes giuen to wicked men as appeareth in Saul sundry others Wherefore it is said God put his word in his mouth not in his heart He hath God plentifully in his mouth but his heart was farre from him so that he speaketh not farre otherwise then his Asse spake before because God compelled him against his will to vtter that which he put in his mouth ●●rine 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 ●●●e● to ●●ui● o●●e 〈◊〉 Heereby we learne that Gods truth is oftentimes enforced and drawne out of those that know it not nor beleeue it Prophane men of an euill spirit are constrained
vncleannesse and filthinesse and pursued them into their filthy stewes and brothel-houses where he thrust them both thorough reuenging the dishonour done to God the scandall laide vpon his people A worthy example for all Magistrates to follow to be sharpe seuere in punishing sinne and taking away euill out of the citty of God Thus the plague was stayed and the anger of God turned away after that iustice was executed and so many thousands at one time and for one sinne swept away But heere two questions arise which are to be discussed before we proceede any further the first touching the fact of Phinehas the second touching the number of the dead heere remembred Touching the fact of Phinehas Obiection it may be thus obiected How can it be lawfull in him being a priuate person to exceede rhe bounds and lists of his calling Hee was of the tribe of Leui and of the family of the Priests to whom it belonged not to draw the sword For as the other tribes were not appointed to the seruice of the Altar so the tribe of Leui was not called to the execution of iustice Besides there are generall rules directing all priuate men and generall Lawes restraining them from shedding of blood as he that sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed hee that smiteth with the sword shal be smitten with the sword loue your enemies and doe good to them that hate you The seruant of God must not striue but must be gentle toward all men suffering the euill and instructing them with meekenesse that be contrary minde 2. Tim. 2 25. How then can we iustify this act of Phinehas departing from these holy rules of Gods Religion I answere Answer there is a double kinde of calling an ordinary calling and an extraordiry calling the one necessarily distinguished from the other For God doth oftentimes giue vnto his seruants a new and special vocation and addeth it vnto their former function Hence it is also that some workes are ordinary and some are extraordinary Ordinary workes must be guided and directed by ordinary rules such as those are which wee haue set downe before Extraordinary workes proceede from a special motion of Gods Spirit warranting them and making them albeit going against the common rules lawful cōmendable and necessary Such was the fact of Moses smiting the Egyptian Exod. 2 12 the fact of Samuel hewing Agag in pieces 1. Sam. 15 35 the fact of Eliah slaying the Priests of Baal 1. King 18 4 the fact of the Israelites spoyling the Egyptians and such like Exod. 12 35 who had an inward motion like to the commandement giuen to Abraham to kill his sonne These actions albeit warranted to the doers Luth in Gen. cap. 29. are not to be drawne into example and imitation vnlesse we haue the inspiration of the same Spirit and therefore Christ our Sauiour answereth his Disciples that would haue called fire from heauen to consume the Samaritanes Yee know not of what spirit ye are for the Sonne of man is not come to destroy mens liues but to saue them Luk. 9 55. Now that this fact of Phinehas is of the same nature it appeareth both because the plague ceased by it and Gods wrath kindled against his people was appeased so that the action is both commended rewarded This the Spirit of God teacheth in the Psalme Phinehas stood vp and executed iudgement and the plague was staied and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse from generation to generation for euer Psalm 106 30 which is not so to be vnderstood as if he were iustified before God by this one acte because whosoeuer will bee iust by the Law is bound to keepe the whole law according to the tenour of the law Do this thou shalt liue Gal. 4 12 20. One good worke doth not serue or suffice to make a man perfectly iust and righteous in the sight of God seeing hee that continueth not in all things written in the booke of the law is accursed So then we must know that the Psalmist meaneth that this fact was lawfull and allowed For hauing set down the vengeance that Phinehas tooke vpon this adulterer and the adultresse hee preuenteth the Obiection which might be made Was not this horrible and damnable murther in him who being a priuate man had not the sword of iustice committed vnto him and being one of the Priests of the Lord was to meddle onely in matters belonging vnto God and not in ciuill things who was to draw out the censures of the church not a materiall sword to strike offenders No saith the Prophet it was not murther it was a righteous and commendable acte he beeing stirred vp by Gods Spirit inasmuch as it proceeded from faith and aymed at the glory of the great Name of God Wherefore this place is falsely alledged and peruersly wrested by the Church of Rome to ouerthrow iustification by faith alone and to establish iustification by good works For there is a double iustification one of the worke the other of the person The Prophet speaketh in that place of the iustification of the worke which albeit in the sight of men it might seeme sauage inhumane yet God did accept of it account it as a good and iust work which pleased him being done in faith which purifieth the heart Acts 15 9. He speaketh not of the iustification of his person which was by apprehending the mercy of God in Christ by beleeuing not by doing Thus the Apostle in the fourth chapter to the Romanes verses 4 5. maketh a double kinde of imputation saying To him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauor but by debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is accounted for righteousnesse Thus much of the first question touching the acte of Phinehas whether it were lawfull or vnlawfull whether it were priuate reuenge or publike iustice The second Question is touching the number that dyed in this plague Obiect wherein appeareth some difference and disagreement in outward shew betweene the old Testament and the new For Moses in this place verse 9 sayeth There died foure and twenty thousand But the Apostle Paul alledging this iudgement of God mentioneth onely Three and twenty thousand 1 Cor. 10 8 subtracting one thousand from the former number which Moses added I answer some reconcile these places thus that the Scribes or Penmen fayled in copying out the books of Pauls Epistles which shold haue written foure twenty thousand where they wrote three twenty thousand But this is shifting rather then reconciling cutting the knot with a sword rather then loosing it asunder with the hand inasmuch as all the copies generally with full consent as it were with one voice agree in the former reading Others suppose and surmise that it might bee a slip of memory in the Apostle according to humane infirmity But this answer is worse then the former and these are
who afterward was reckoned amongst the sonnes of Midian that were slaine by Moses Numbers 31 8. These names of the two persons are singled out amongest the rest vnto their perpetuall infamy and reproach For as the names of the righteous are registred and remembred to their euerlasting praise so the name of the vngodly shal rot Prou. 10 ver 7. Their families are fingled out that part of the disgrace and dishonour should blemish them to humble them and to instruct them to nourish sinne in none of their kindred Their high place is singled out to teach that GOD the Iudge of all the world iudgeth without respect of persons and that all men of what credite and countenance soeuer should feare before him Verse 7. And when Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saw it hee rose vp c. This holy man of God slew the adulterer and the adulteresse with a speare If he had beene a meere priuate man this shedding of blood had beene vnlawfull in him howsoeuer they deserued it But the Spirit of God was his direction and hee had a secret calling to be to him as a sure safe warrant So then albeit priuate persons may put no mā to death as appeareth in the Commandement Exod. 20 13 yet such as are warranted from God are his Officers and Magistrates Doctrine Actions in ●hemselues vnlawful are by a calling made lawfull We learne from hence that actions which of themselues and in their own nature are vnlawfull vnseemely and against humanity by a calling from God become lawfull warrantable and necessary This speciall calling giuen vnto speciall men is sometimes outward and sometimes inward The inward calling is when God by the motion of his Spirit moueth the heart to doe some speciall worke against the ordinary rules that he left to the rest of the sonnes of men Heereof we haue plentifull examples in the booke of Iudges in those whom God extraordinarily raised vp to saue his people and to destroy their enemies Whē Eglon King of Moab oppressed Israel kept them in great slauery and subiection as a tyrant and vsurper the Lord stirred vp Ehud Iudg. 3 15 16. who made him a Dagger with two edges conueyed it closely vnder his garment and when opportunity serued he thrust it into his belly and flew him This action had beene sinfull without this calling for though Eglon were an oppressour yet the killing of him had not beene warrantable The like we see afterward in the same booke set before vs in the example of Sampson for there we see he tooke to wife an vncircumcised Philistim Iudg. 14 and 15 and 16 he tyed firebrands to the Foxes tayles to burne their Corne he carried away the gates of Azzah he slew many with the iaw-bone of an Asse pulled down the house of Dagon whereby hee killed the Princes people and himselfe He was inwardly called and commanded to doe these works of God For when he spake to his father to giue him one of the daughters of the Philistims to wife that pleased him well his father and his mother faide vnto him Is there neuer a wife among the daughters of thy brethren and among all thy people that thou must goe take a wife of the vncircumcised Philistims For they knew not that it came of the Lord that hee should seeke an occasion against the Philistims Iudg. chapter 14 verse 4. The same we noted before in Moses slaying the Egyptian which fact howsoeuer some condemne as vnlawfull both because he was not appointed a Iudge ouer that people but was a priuate man and because he seemed to passe the bounds of iustice supposing he were a Magistrate punishing the smiting of a blow Exod. 2 12 with the taking away of life seeing God commanded a tooth for a tooth Exod. 21 24 wound for wound and blow for blow yet it appeareth by the words of Stephen that GOD had giuen him commission and endued him with authority to deliuer the Israelites and to auenge their iniuries when he saith He supposed his brethren would haue vnderstood that God by his hand shold giue them deliuerance but they vnderstood it not Acts chap. 7 25. Againe when Moses had receiued the Law in the Mount written with the finger of God and beeing come downe had seene the molten Calfe Hee tooke the two Tables and cast them out of his two hands and brake them before their eyes Deut. chap. 9 verse 17. He did not this through any vnaduised zeale or hastinesse or fleshly affection but God gouerned him by his holy Spirit stirred him vp by this exraordinary meanes to declare to the people that his Couenant was broken and disanulled that was made betweene them Likewise some haue had an outward calling commanding and warranting the doing of extraordinary things So Abraham was commanded by liuely voice to take his sonne his onely sonne him whom he loued euen Isaac the sonne of promise and to offer him vp for a burnt offering vpon one of the mountaynes which God would shew him Gen. 22 2. This also appeareth in one of the children of the Prophets who willed his neighbour to smite him by the commandement of the Lord and in smiting to wound him that hee might disguise himselfe when hee spake vnto the King 1. Kings 20 35. The reasons making these extraordinary Reason 1 workes lawfull are apparent First true obedience standeth not in mans will but in the commandement of GOD. Whatsoeuer hee commandeth howsoeuer our carnall reason iudgeth of it and whatsoeuer iniquity it may seeme vnto vs to contayne or prescribe wee must account it lawfull That which hee forbiddeth what shew soeuer it carrieth of piety and holinesse is vnlawfull This appeareth in the answere of Christ vnto Iohn Baptist putting him backe and refusing to baptize him Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to fulfill all righteousnesse Math. 3 15. And to this purpose the Prophet speaking of this act of Phinehas here remembred sayth It was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Psal 106 31. If then in those actions the children of God obeyed him and followed not theyr owne corrupt wils they must needs be held and pronounced to be lawfull Reason 2 Secondly none can withstand his commandements That is righteous which he accounteth righteous And if he will haue it done who shall contradict it Who is so strong as to resist his will This doth the Apostle Peter declare when he had beene with Cornelius he maketh this defence for himselfe Forasmuch as God gaue them a like gift as hee did vnto vs when wee beleeued in the Lord Iesus Christ who was I that I could let God Acts 11 7. Thus we see the Doctrine confirmed now Vse 1 let vs see likewise how it may bee applyed First marke heere the difference betweene God and our selues His word is our light and direction Wee haue no other way or warrant to approue our actions but from God and his word but
blood haue they shed like water and there was none to bury them Psal 79 2 3 4 5. Neuerthelesse they shal not be able to separate them from God Rom. 8 35. If we be the children of God nothing shall bee able to hurt vs though death come vpon vs sodainly as it hath done vpon many it shall bring vs to God not diuide vs from his presence Wee do for the most part take vpon vs through a generall corruption to iudge those the most greeuous sinners that suffer the greatest sorrows as it appeareth by Iobs friends and Christs followers Luke 13. howbeit this is an opinion that must be reiected as full of error and empty of charity 15 And Moses spake vnto the Lord saying 16 Let the Lord the God of the spirites of all flesh set a man ouer the congregation 17 Which may goe out before them and which may go in before them and which may leade them out and which may bring them in that the Congregation of the Lord be not as sheepe which haue no sheepheard 18 And the Lord said to Ioshua c. 19 And set him before Eleazar c. Heere is offered vnto vs the second occasion of the election and inauguration of Ioshua to wit the prayer of Moses Wee must not thinke that hee vsed no more words then heere are expressed for this is onely the substance and cheefe effect of his prayer In it wee are to note first the preface or entrance into the same for no man ought rashly to enter vpon this holy worke but well aduised and throughly prepared Secondly the prayer it selfe The Preface containeth a description of God by his titles and effect giuing life and breath to all creatures for thorough him wee liue and mooue and haue our being Act 17.28 The prayer it selfe is that he would appoint a mā ouer the congregation to succeede him in the administration and gouernment of the Commonwealth considered farther by the ends that being endued with the Spirit of God he may be able to performe the duties of his calling and go before them by his example expressed by going in and out before them and by leading thē out and bringing them in as Salomon prayeth for wisedom and vnderstanding for the same purpose 2 Chron. 1 10. 1 Chro. 27 1. Secondly that the people may not be as sheepe without a sheepheard scattered vpon the mountains but may keepe together liue in order and society one with another to performe such mutuall duties as are required for this life the life to come Thus much of the occasions now we come to the calling of Ioshua and separating him to beare office among the people wherein wee must obserue the commandement of God the obedience of Moses The commādements of God are many Take him c lay thine hāds vpon him set him before Eleazar the Priest c. giue him charge c. and Eleazar must aske counsell of the Lord for him after the iudgement of Vrim and Thummim What the Vrim and Thummim were Exod. 28 30 What this Vrim and Thummim were is diuersly vnderstood it were endlesse and fruitlesse to rehearse the seuerall opinions of all neither is it easie to determine Some of the Hebrew Doctors thinke they were not the work of any Artificer but that they were a mystery deliuered to Moses from the mouth of God or they were the worke of God himselfe as the two Tables of the Law were and that when the Priest asked counsell of God by Vrim hee made answer by liuely voice 1 Sam. 30 8. The words are both plurall and the Septuagint doe translate them The manifestation and the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but properly they signifie the lights and the perfections and both of them were a figure of Christ who communicateth vnto vs from his father the true light and perfection being made our wisedome and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1.30 for in the heart of him beeing our great high Priest the true Aaron were the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure Ioh 3 34. Col. 2.3 Againe others thinke that as those words holinesse to the Lord were grauen on a plate and put on Aarons forhead so these words Vrim and Thummim were likewise grauen on a golden plate and put in the brest lap which was double for something to bee put therein Lastly others thinke they were no other then the precious stones spoken of Exod. 28 and that they put the Priest in mind of his office that hee must instruct the people both by the light of his doctrine and by the integrity of his life But whatsoeuer they were it is most certaine that the vse of them was to enquire of GOD and likewise to receiue an answer of his will as appeareth in this place and in sundry others Iudg. 1 1 20 18 28. 1 Sam. 23 9. 10 11 12. These were lost at the captiuity of Babylon and wanted at the peoples returne Ezr. 2 63. Neh. 6 65 neither do wee reade that euer God gaue answer by them any more thus much of these The obedience of Moses is set downe generally particularly he did as the Lord commanded hee tooke Ioshua and set him before Eleazar and put his hands vpon him gaue him a straight charge to execute his office faithfully in the gouernment of all the people committed vnto him Let the Lord the God of the spirits of al flesh This is the preface or preparatiue to the prayer The faithfull were alwayes wont to make some entrance or introduction into this holy exercise as it appeareth in the forme of prayer left to the church by Christ our Sauiour In these words Moses acknowledgeth the Lord to be the God of the spirits of all flesh as before chap. 16 22 whereby he meaneth Doctrine God is the creator of the soule that he is the Creator of our soules and hath giuen them vnto vs. The doctrine God is the Creator and maker of the soules of men and hath giuen vnto them not onely their bodyes but also their soules Gen. 2 7. Iob 27 3. Eccl. 12 7 c. And how can it be otherwise For first he it is that hath formed al things Reason 1 he is the creator of things visible and inuisible Col. 1 16 that are in heauen or in earth and without him was nothing made that was made Iohn 1 3. Secondly he is the father of our spirits so called of the Apostle Heb 12 9 if then he be the Father of them doubtles hee is the former of them It is confessed that God is the Creator of the soule neuerthelesse it will not follow from hence necessarily that it is created immediately or giuen immediatly by him as it is certaine it was at the first creation And albeit many places bee produced to proue an immediate creation yet the opinion is rather weakned by those testimonies from whence it is thought to be established as for example Eccl. 12 7 The
how the houre be spent so it be spent and respect not what they say so they haue said somewhat which is as fond a thing as if hee that buildeth an house should neuer regard with what stuffe he buildeth or hee that soweth whether he sow in the highway among the rockes and thornes or in his field Many there are that goe vp into the pulpit that neuer spend themselues nor waste their spirits nor decay their strength they are rather like those that are halfe asleep or stand vp to tell a tale or to vtter a dreame Whosoeuer is ignorant of the state of his people that neuer considereth hee speaketh to a deafe people that cannot heare but is carelesse in his place endangereth his owne soule and the soule of the people committed to his charge Hee then that would teach aright must put on zeale and be earnest in the Lords cause that so he may worke vpon their hearts and leaue stings in their consciences as Acts 2.37 while Peter preached they were pricked in their hearts and said Men and brethren what shall we doe Wee say commonly that cold coales heate no body It must therefore first come from his owne heart there must be heat there or else there shall neuer come any heate to others We see by experience that cold iron and hote can neuer be mixed together but before they can be tempered they must both of them be well heated in the fire so except the heart of the Minister and of the people be heated hee shall neuer fasten any thing vpon them or worke any good in them It is true it is the worke of the Lord to heate the soule as it is he that warmeth the body this hee doth by instruments the fire and the Sunne so hee doth the soule and conscience by his Ministers and by his word All parents are charged to whet the Law vpon their children Deut 6 7 if parents must do this to their children then much more ought the Ministers of God to be earnest in this duty If any aske wherein this earnestnesse and feruency consisteth I answer not barely in crying out with a loud voyce as many suppose For many men haue no voyce to speake loud and there are many that speake loud who haue little heate or zeale in them Some will be as earnest in alledging a bare testimony of Scripture as others can be in making application These doe it more out of vse or custome then from any feeling or touch of conscience in themselues Seeing then the earnestnesse that we require may be without the loudnesse of voyce and the loudnesse of the voyce may bee without earnestnesse wee must find it elsewhere to wit in the power of the Spirit that speaketh in him It is not the earnestnes of the voyce that is so much required albeit it falleth out many times where the heart is truly affected that there the voyce will be extended to the vttermost and yet euen in a weake voice proceeding from a weak body a Minister may truly shew the zeale of his heart as well as if the word were deliuered with a loud and powerfull voyce and God requireth no more then a man hath 2 Cor. 8 12. The Apostle saith that his bodily presence was weake among the Corinthians and his speach held as contemptible 2 Cor. 10 10 whereby it seemeth he was not one of the sonnes of thunder that had a great voyce neuerthelesse we find that the power and efficacy of the Spirit did both appeare and abound in him So then the Ministers of God must be zealous and feruent in their places that so they may the better discharge their consciences and also bring the more profit to those that are committed vnto them Vse 3 Thirdly it condemneth those that censure the Ministers of God for their earnestnes and zeale in deliuering the word of God Such persons as are ready to commend a seruant that is earnest in doing his Masters will with a good affection will condemne the Minister of God when hee deliuereth the word with such earnestnes These spare not to say to him as Paul did to Festus Act. 26 24 that they preach as if they were mad or beside themselues But if the answere of Paul will not serue and suffice these men who replyed to that accusation I am not mad most noble Festus but speake forth the words of truth and sobernesse Acts 26 24.25 let them take the words of the Prophet Hoseah chap. 9 7 the spirituall man is mad for the multitude of thine iniquity The abundance of iniquity and the obstinacy of wicked men running on in their sinne as a violent flood that runneth ouer the bankes were able to make the Minister mad with crying to them to leaue their sinnes and to forsake their euill wayes when they are so set vpon them that say the Minister what he can and let him cry out as loud as he list they will not abate one haire or a pinne of their pride or remit one houre of their prophaning the Sabbath or drinke one draught nay not one drop the lesse or the couetous person giue one penny or halfe penny the more to relieue the needy members of Christ I say the consideration of this were able to make the Minister euen mad in deliuering of his message which God hath put into his mouth If a father should be beside himselfe for the wickednesse of his gracelesse children would not euery man pitty the father and spit in the faces of those children and hold them worthy of all punishment but what would they say to such children as should go vp and downe and boast themselues that they were the causes of their fathers madnesse Are there not some graceles hearers O that there were not too many that when they haue made their Minister as it were mad with reprouing them that will insult ouer them and glory among their companions that they haue made their Minister preach as if he were madde howbeit if it be for the glory of God and the benefit of his people they need not care nor esteem to be iudged of men or account it any disgrace from the mouthes of gracelesse people to be accounted mad we must walke through good report and euill report it skilleth not therefore though wee be reputed madde so it bee for a good cause for the beating down of prophaning the Sabbath of contempt of the word of oppression pride couetousnes and such like enormities There was not a man more meeke vpon the earth then Moses yet when he came from the mount and saw that the people had sinned he presently grew so angry that hauing the two Tables of the Law in his hand written by the finger of God he threw them downe to the ground and brake them in pieces The people of this generation account their Ministers for a lesser matter then this to bee mad and out of their wittes but while they cry out aloud that their contempt
Iesus euen as it is written in the second Psalme Thou art my Son this day haue I begotten thee From hence it appeareth plainly that as the bookes themselues were seuered the one from the other so likewise euery part of one and the same booke kept his order and the proper station wherein it was set by the first Author This reprooueth all confounding and vnfit vsage of the holye Scriptures mingling one booke in another the old Testament with the new that the distinct parts cannot appeare The Turkes receiue the Law of Moses and some other parts of the old Testament but so disfigured deformed so corrupted and confounded with their horrible superstitions and the abhominable impieties of their wretched Alcoran that it ceaseth to be the Scripture of God and is turned into a most detestable idoll Wherefore it standeth vs vpon to keep the scriptures whole and sound without intermingling one part with another that the comely proportiō of euery part may appeare to euerie one that looketh vpon them whereas if we shall confound booke with booke and part with part wee shall lose the beauty of them and turne them into a mishapen and deformed monster which were monstrous impiety and presumption Secondly by this Title we learne that all Vse 2 the works of God are made in number weight and measure and created exceeding good in regard of the goodly order and comely beauty of euery one of them For that which is said of this booke is true also of the other Scriptures and verified of all the rest of the workes of God Where no order is there is all tumult and confusion A good Father of a family taketh order in his house that euerie one do his dutie A wise Pilot in a Shippe looketh that euery one know his place and so manageth it with discretion A prudent and prouident Magistrate appointeth order in his Citie and Commonwealth and ordaineth lawes to keep men in vnity The order of the heauens and the setting of times and seasons teacheth vs the wisedome of the Creator who gouerneth all things aboue and beneath by a wise and wonderfull disposition So that hee is called by the holy Apostle e 1 Cor. 14 33 The God of order and not of confusion True it is it cannot bee denyed we see it with our eyes there is great confusion and much disorder in the world but from whence doth it come who is the author of it and to whom shall wee ascribe it Not vnto God who hath made all things good and gouerneth all things well And if not vnto God to whom but to the spirit of the diuell the vglinesse of sinne which haue altered the workmanship of God and blemished the glorie of his creatures The wiseman in the Booke of Ecclesiastes leadeth vs to this consideration f Eccle. 7 3 1 Loe onely this haue I found that God hath made man righteous but they haue sought many inuētions If then there fall to bee any disorder in the creature we must not accuse the Creator but the corruption of man is to bee blamed from whence it proceedeth It is sin that hath turned all things vpside downe and brought a spectacle of all miseries as Moses sheweth Gen. 6 5. The Lord sawe that the wickednesse of man was great in the earth and all the imaginat●ons of the thoughts of his heart were onely euil continually Thus wee learne to magnify all Gods works and to acknowledge from what spring and fountaine as well order as disorder do proceede God is the God of peace and of order and requireth that al things be done honestly and in order It is Sathan th●t is the author of strife contention and confusion who laboureth to bring all things out of order But of this wee shall haue occasion to speake more in the second chapter where Moses describeth the order of the Tents and the names of the cheefe Heads and Captaines of the Israelites Vse 3 Thirdly seeing there is diuine numeration in this Booke let vs reade it diligently bee more and more in loue with it and with the rest of the Scripture which haue the same author handle the same matter resemble the same forme respect the same end and worke the same effect in the hearts of men Manie there are that come to the Church and professe themselues members of the same that are most ignorant in the Scriptures which are the helpes of our Faith the keyes of our comfort the meanes of our saluation and are able to make vs wise to eternall life Some know no difference betweene them and other Bookes but make them all alike containing some things true and some false Others are so ignorant that they know not the number of the Canonicall books nor the argument of them nor the order how they stand which plainely bewrayeth that they are little conuersant in them Others when they heare any book or chapter of the booke read vnto them full of names either of men or places or of both of which sort are sundry in this Booke they slake their attention they thinke it belongeth not vnto them they perswade themselues there is no profit to bee learned by it But wee must know and vnderstand that the whole Scripture was giuen by inspiration and came by the will of God When such parts and parcels of the word are read vnto vs the vse wherof we see not the purpose whereof wee vnderstand not let vs obserue these few rules and directions following First let vs condemne our own ignorance and sit in iudgement vpon the darknes of our owne hearts who of our selues are able to vnderstand nothing except it bee reuealed from aboue It is the saying of Christ to Peter after his worthy confession that he was the son of the liuing God a Math. 16 17 Blessed art thou Simon the son of Ionas for flesh and bloud hath not reuealed it vnto thee but my Father which is in heauē And the Apostle witnesseth as much b Rom. 8 7. 1 Cor. 2 10 14 The wisedom of the flesh is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeede can bee Likewise in another place God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit but the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnes vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned The manner of many in reading the Scriptures when they come to that which passeth theyr capacity is to condemne them not themselues But if we would profit aright and benefite our selues by them wee must set this downe as the first rule and as a principle of our faith that the fault is in our selues and in our owne weaknesse Secondly it is required of vs to be of humble spirit which is a thing much accepted of God Such onely are right hearers and such God requireth vs to bee when wee heare him come and speake vnto vs. This
appeareth by the Prophet Esay when hee bringeth in the Lord speaking vnto vs c Esay 66 3. To him will I haue respect euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my words The scripture is compared by one to a great and high palace but the doore that entreth into it is very low so that the high-minded and proud presumptuous man that standeth vpon the high conceites of his owne minde cannot run in but it is necessary that he stoope downe low humble himselfe whosoeuer intendeth to haue any passage into it This spirituall pride is the mother of all error but humility leadeth vs into all truth d Iames 4 6. For God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the lowly Lastly we must come to the Scriptures to hearing and reading of them with prayer desiring him to direct vs and crauing his blessing vpon our labors The word of God is as an hidden treasure laide vp in the Lords Coffers Prayer is the Key to open it the way to come to it the hand to receiue it The Prophet Dauid prayeth oftentimes to God to open his eyes and to giue him vnderstanding e Psalme 119 18 34. that he might see into the wonders of his Law We haue a gracious promise from God that hee which asketh shall receiue hee that seeketh shall finde and hee that knocketh shall haue the doore set open vnto him Many of Gods Seruants haue attained to more knowledge and vnderstanding in the mysteries of the Kingdome of heauen by prayer then by their own study labour reading and searching If then we shall ioyne it to our reading and hearing it shall bring a great blessing with it reueal the secrets of God vnto vs. Thus much touching the Title of this booke Let vs now proceede to handle the Vses The ends and Vses of this Booke and speciall ends of this Booke for which it was written and thereby take a general view of the benefit that may redound vnto vs. There are many chapters that seeme to be verie bare and barren and to containe nothing in them but a naked Catalogue of places and persons but we shall plainly perceiue in the particular handling of the speciall matters taught therein that we haue great cause to giue attention and to marke what is offered to our considerations forasmuch as whatsoeuer was written afore-hand was written for our instruction that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. And albeit the vses come after to bee spoken at large yet it shall not bee amisse to giue a taste of them in the beginning thereby to set an edge vpon vs to procure vs an appetite to hunger after them First we see in the state of the Israelites as Vse 1 in a glasse what is the condition of the Church and of all the godly in this life they are as a barke tossed on the Sea ready to suffer Shipwracke and to be cast vpon euery rocke vnlesse they cast out the anchor of hope sure stedfast that they may in time appointed ariue in safety at the hauen desired For euen as the Israelites neuer rested in the wildernesse but trauelled from one place to another vntill they came into the Land of promise so the Church in this world is as in a wildernes they haue no certaine abode no setled dwelling to assure them any continuance but they walke and wander vp and downe as poore banished men vntill they bee translated into their heauenly Country We are heere as pilgrimes and strangers our hope is not in this life a 1 Cor. 15 19 For then of all men we were the most miserable Wee know we must all leaue it and we know not how soone We looke for a life to come and most earnestly desire to bee translated to that heauenly inheritance The Apostle hath many meditations to this purpose Phil. 3. b Phil. 3 20 2 Cor. 5 6 7. Heb. 11 13 14 Our conuersation is in Heauen from whence we looke for a Sau●our the Lord Iesus and 2 Cor. 5. Whiles we are at home in the body wee are absent from the Lord for wee walke by faith and not by sight And Hebr. 11 speaking of the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob he saith They confessed that they were strangers and Pilgrims on the earth for they that say such things declare plainely that they seeke a Countrie We must not looke to finde Heauen vpon the earth we shall heere meete with many afflictions and it is profitable for vs to exercise our faith patience and prayer leste the flesh shoulde waxe proud against the spirit and lift vp it selfe against God Secondly we learne who is the Patrone Vse 2 and protector of the Church namely GOD himselfe he is the shield and buckler of it to defend it How many were the troubles and dangers and enemies and wants of the Isralites while they liued in the wildernesse Yet did God maruailously and miraculously nourish and preserue them Is he the God of the Iewes onely and not of the Gentiles yes euen of the Gentiles also For as hee kept them and carried them as vpon the Eagles wings so he is with his Church at all times when it seemeth most to despaire of help then commeth the helpe and comfort of God from on high and deliuereth them out of their distresse O that men would therefore confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and his wonderfull workes before the sonnes of men Let vs also looke for helpe from him from whence our saluation commeth c 1 Sam. 2 6 Who as Hanna the mother of Samuel singeth in her Song k●lleth and maketh aliue bringeth down to the graue and raiseth vp In dangers therfore let vs trust in him in wants let vs relie vpon him in chastisements let vs humble our selues before him in troubles let vs flye vnto him in temptations let vs fight vnder him and in all necessities let vs pray vnto him and call vpon his name Thirdly we haue in this booke a liuely picture Vse 3 of the state of the Church what it is in this life and of what persons it consisteth it standeth not wholly of such as haue receiued the grace of sanctification but it hath many hypocrites mingled with them and many wicked persons are found among them and come as the Ghest did in the ●ospell whoe came without his wedding garment In this body are many members but are not all liuing a great part are dead and rotten members Yea they which are indeed Saints by calling are not so sanctified that they liue without sinne For as d 1 Cor. 13 12 they know in part and beleeue in part so they are sanctified in part not fully and perfectly which shall not bee vntill the next life when we shall know euen as wee are knowne and see euen as we are seene of God Among the Israelites which did beare the name of the