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

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they that reap carnall things must be as ready to sow spirituall things Such then as are idle drones that will not labour or dumbe dogs that cannot barke Esay 56 10. haue no right from God to take the maintainance of such as discharge their places with care and diligence He that hath no lust to labor ought to haue no liberty to eate But it is the manner of many men to looke more to the feeding of themselues then to the Pastours of the sheepe and to mourne not so much for the losse of the flocke as for the lacke of the fleece These do possesse much more th●n they doe deserue None can call for more duty to bee paide nor looke more narrowly to the vtmost peny but none performe lesse duty to the people then themselues And if the people may not deteine their tithes vnder colour and pretence of not being taught no more may the Minister withhold his paines vnder colour of hauing his tithes withholden from him For albeit the people deale sparingly with vs yet wee ought not to sowe sparingly vnto them The more sparingly we feede the more hardly they fare It is not enough to preach now and then for that were to nuzzle them in ignorance O what greefe is it to see the sheepe of Christ famished and how should it make our bowels to yearne within vs to heare the young children aske bread to haue no man breake it vnto them Lam 4 4. God would haue his sonnes and daughters fed to the full and the table of his children furnished with bread plentifully or richly Col. 3 17. Psal 23.5 and as Dauids table with a cup running ouer to keep them not onely liuing but in good liking not only from being famished but also fat and florishing 23 But the Leuites shall do the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation they shall beare their iniquity it shall be a statute for euer throughout your generations c. 24 But the tithes of the childrē of Israel which they offer as an heaue offering vnto the Lord I haue giuen vnto the Leuites to inherite therefore I haue said vnto them Among the children of Israel they shall haue no inheritance The office of the Leuites is set downe they must take the charge of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and do seruice therein Now among these no doubt were men of all sorts and of sundry gifts some were more learned and some lesse 2 Chron. 30 22 yet the dispensation was committed vnto them and therefore all must be regarded and respected the Leuites though inferiour as wel as the Priests and among them both such as were more meanely qualified And as God had giuen thē charge of the Tabernacle so he giueth charge to the people to accept of their Ministery Doctrine Ministers of very meane gifts must be regarded The doctrine is that all in the Ministery whatsoeuer their gifts be are to be accepted yea though their gifts oftentimes be small slender True it is they must all haue some gifts to fit them to teach the people but howsoeuer they be inferiour to many others yet for their office sake they must be regarded I do not say the people should depend vpon them that are vtterly ignorant and vnlearned but if meanely gifted in comparison of others the people must not forsake them neither wāder from one Leuite to another Marke therefore that Ministers endued with a small and yet a competent measure of gifts may notwithstanding doe vnto God good seruice in the Church and gaine glory to his Name He putteth his rich treasures in vessels not of siluer and gold but of earth Among the Apostles it is to be thought that some had greater gifts then others Marke 3 17. 1 Cor 15 10. Roman 15 19 some were the sonnes of thunder and some laboured more abundantly then others no doubt according to the gifts they had receiued yet all profitable to that Church There is a difference of gifts by the same Spirit neuerthelesse all giuen to profite withall 1 Corin. 12 4 5 6 7. And Paul saith he spake with tongs more then others 1 Cor. 14 18. Experience teacheth this among our selues that many of meane gifts and little humane learning yet haue beene profitable teachers and powerfull instruments of much good in the Church of God gaining many to him The reasons First of all the blessing of God is all in all Reason 1 vpon the labours of those that are called he for the most part bringeth to passe the greatest works by the weakest means and the meanest instruments and by them he will get and gaine glory to himselfe as well as by men of the greatest gifts albeit they also bee of his owne planting Exod. 4 10 Moses was not eloquent yet Moses was potent he was not fine in speech but he was full of the Spirit Ieremy complaineth he could not speake chap. 1 6. but God supplied his wants and made him able to thunder out iudgements against the impenitent Secondly that the power glory might Reason 2 be of God alone If God shold alwaies worke his will by men of highest place of greatest gifts the force of the word and the conuersion of the soule would be iudged to proceede from man and not from God As the host of Gideon were too many for God to saue withal Iudg. 9 7 2. so sometimes the gifts of men are too great for him to conuert with them lest we should say we haue done it therefore doth God often put this treasure in vessels of meaner account that the excellency of the power may bee of God and not of vs 2 Cor. 4 7. Thirdly such as Reason 3 are conscionable in their places do bring many blessings to the people and conuert many soules so that the worke of God doth prosper vnder their hands which seeke Gods glory Ieremy 23 ● not their owne praise that the people might thereby be encouraged to heare them and to depend vpon them It is an hard matter to deny our selues in the worke of the Ministery and to trample our owne credite and estimation in the world vnder our feete as the great Rabbies know well enough that wee may seeke the glory of God onely with a right affection What then Is it needlesse to haue schooles Obiect 1 of learning or for the childrē of the Prophets to be trained vp in them and there prepared for the Ministery I answer Answer No these are notable necessary helps to fit men to this great worke and high calling all meanes if they were greater are little enough for who is sufficient for these things 2 Cor. 2 16. We must vse these and leaue the successe to Gods prouidence who is not tied vnto them no more thē Christ to chuse his Disciples out of the company of the Scribes and Pharisies Againe if God worke his will whensoeuer Obiect 2 he will by men of meane gifts
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
vs aboue other nations The more he hath honoured and exalted vs aboue others the more vile and odious we shall become he will poure shame contempt vpon vs he will make vs a mirrour and example of his iudgements to others vnlesse we bring foorth fruites answerable to so great goodnesse Who so is wise-hearted let him consider these things Verses 22 23 24. God brought them out of Egypt their strength is as an Vnicorne for there is no sorcery against Iacob Hitherto wee haue spoken of the spirituall blessings bestowed vpon the Church to wit the forgiuenesse of their sinnes the presence of the Spirit and the vse of the word Now followeth another priuiledge being an effect of the former that nothing shall hurt them they may fall into many afflictions but none shal be able to destroy them He alludeth in this place to the practise of the Vnicorne purging and clensing the water with his horne against the poison of venomous beasts From hence we learne Doctrine No attempt● shall hurt th● Church that no meanes and attempts shall hurt or ouerthrow the Church Whatsoeuer the enemies of God and his people imagine what counsell soeuer they take what mischiefes they deuise God will make them frustrate and of none effect This truth appeareth by sundry examples in the word of God When the Church of God was in Egypt the Egyptians said Let vs work wisely with them lest they multiply they vexed them with bondage they destroyed their children they oppressed them with burthens they plagued them with taskemasters and euery way they encreased their miseries Ex. 1 2 3. yet after all these diuellish practises they preuayled nothing against them This appeareth likewise in the ambition and pride of Haman Ester 3. and 7 and 9. He thirsted after blood but the plot he had contriued was disappointed and he fel into the pit which hee had digged for another the snare was broken and the Church was deliuered Infinite are the examples that might be produced to this purpose of the Churches dangers and deliuerances The Prophet Dauid handleth this argument at large in sundry Psalmes In the 91. Psalme verses 3 4 5 c. he assureth those that trust in God that into whatsoeuer dangers they fall they shall neuer miscarry nor be dismayed in theyr afflictions Where the Prophet meaneth that howsoeuer these afflictions may come to the godly yet they shall not bee able to hurt or hinder their eternall peace with God but he will make them and all things besides to further theyr saluation This is it which the Apostle teacheth at large Rom. 8 35 37. Thus we see that no attempts can hurt the Church inasmuch as God taketh the wise in their craftinesse and scattereth the deuices of the wicked Iob 5.13 as he turned the wisedome of Ahithophel into foolishnesse The Reasons of this Doctrine seruing for confirmation of vs are direct euident For Reason first it is God that watcheth ouer his to deliuer and to preserue them from all the dangers that go ouer theyr heads We shall not neede to feare hauing so good a keeper being assured of right good keeping He will alwayes protect vs by his great power and infinit goodnesse This the Prophet handleth at large Psal 121 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. So Moses declaring the cause that Balaams curses coniurations did not preuaile but were turned into a blessing sayth It was because the Lord loued his people Deut. 23 5. No policies can preuaile where there is such a keeper who being on our side what skilleth it who bee set against vs Reason 2 Secondly hee hath appointed the Angels also to guard and defend them to pitch their Tents round about them to bee ministering spirits sent out for their good which alwayes behold the face of their Father which is in heauen God is the cheefe watchman whom nothing can escape the Angels are second watchmen vnder God whom God hath deputed to that office to serue the necessities of the Church This the Prophet Dauid that sweet singer of Israel setteth downe Psal 91 10 11 12. Where the prophet proueth that no crosse or calamity shall come neere them or their dwellings to hurt them because not onely God himselfe will care for their defence but appoint the holy Angels as his heauenly messengers to preserue them Not that the helpe of God is not sufficient or that we should put our trust in their helpe but to teach vs for our comfort that we haue God and all the hoast of heauen as an army ready mustered marshalled to succour and sustaine vs in all our dangers Now it remaineth to consider what Vses Vse 1 may be made of this Doctrine First we must confesse to our singular comfort that great is the power and goodnesse of God which can neuer faile or forsake those that are his No counsell or wisedome or policy can escape his knowledge or encounter with his power we see this notably in this example before our eyes This false Prophet Balaam was an enemy of God and of his people he had set both his heart to couet and his tongue to saie all his purpose was to curse the people hee leaueth nothing vnattempted to compasse and contriue his enterprize yet we see all is vanity and commeth in the end to nothing Great therfore is the power and might of God We heard in verse 19. that he was constrained to say That God is not like to mortall men therfore we ought to be ashamed to call the truth or power of God into question wherein there is neither want nor weaknes All the power that is in men and Angels is nothing to the infinite power of God Let vs therefore acknowledge and confesse this might and maiesty of God let vs in all our dangers and calamities reuerence it and rest in it Let vs not measure it by ordinary meanes but know that he is able to work as wel without means and against meanes as by meanes The faith of Abraham is commended by the Apostle Ro. 4 18. Heb. 11 That aboue hope he beleeued vnder hope and that God was able of the ashes of Isaac offered vp in sacrifice to raise him againe to life 〈◊〉 2. Secondly wee may in assurance of his fauour conclude the blessednesse of the people of God and their happy estate and condition yea we may truly say with the Psalmist Psal 144 15. Blessed are the people that are so yea blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. None are harder assaulted none are better protected Their confusion is sought but they stand in the strength of God This is a great blessing to be shaken and yet to abide firme in stormes and tempests Happy are they that haue so vigilant a watchman as the Lord is That City is safe that kingdome is sure that house is quyeted that soule is secured that hath such a keeper What City vpon the earth sauing the City of
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
and spake vnto you but yee would not heare nor answere I saide Obey my voyce and I will be your God and ye shall be my people and walke ye in all the wayes that I haue commanded you that it may bee well vnto you but they would not obey nor encline their eare but went after the counsels and stubbornnesse of their wicked heart went backward and not forward I haue sent vnto you all my seruants the Prophets rising vp early euery day and sending them yet would they not heare mee but hardened their neckes and did worse then their Fathers Thus hee layeth open their sinne therefore no maruaile if that hee threaten to stretch out his hand against them so that the famine should pinch them the sword shoulde slay them the pestilence should waste them the dogges should teare them the wild beasts destroy them and the fowles of the heauen deuoure them Secondly as it reproueth those that refuse to heare The second repr●ofe so it condemneth such as onely heare and go no further these rest in it as if they had done their duty and as if no more were required at their hands But know this and marke it that outward seruice separated from inward obedience is not respected but reiected of God This naked hearing is an halting with God which he cannot suffer If we keepe from him the heart he careth not for the eye or the tongue or the eare This is it which the Prophet saith When ye fasted and mourned in the fift and seauenth Moneths Zach. 7 5 6 7 euen these seuenty y●ares did ye fast vnto me Doe I approue it Should ye not heare the words which the Lord hath cried by the ministery of the former Prophets when Ierusalem was inhabited and in prosperity and the Cities thereof round about her when the south and the plaine was inhabited To like purpose is Esaiah bold and saith What haue I to doe with the multitude of your Sacrifices Esay 1 11.12 13.14.15 saith the Lord I am full of the burnt offerings of Rammes I desire not the blood of Bullocks when ye come to appeare before me who required this of your hands to tread in my Courts Bring no moe Oblations in vaine Incense is an abhomination vnto me I cannot suffer your new Moones nor Sabboths c. they are a burthen vnto me I am weary to beare them and when you shall stretch out your hands I will hide m●ne eyes from you and though you make many praiers I will not heare Were not these his owne ordinances Did not hee appoint the solemne times of his worship and command sacrifices and oblations to be offered vnto him Yes he set them in his Church and was the Author of them but they perfourmed them in an euill manner without faith without repentance without loue without conscience and therefore as they did them God loathed them So may it be saide of our common and customary hearing remoued from faith obedience Who required it at our hands The Lord cannot abide it he cannot suffer it it is a burden vnto him that he cannot beare God ioyneth hearing and obeying together and cursed is hee that maketh a diuorce betweene them This doth the Prophet Ieremy denounce against all hypocriticall hearers chapt 11. Thus saith the Lord God of Israel Iere. 11 3 4 5 Cursed be the man that obeyeth not the words of this Couenant which I commanded vnto your Fathers c. He protested vnto them and their Fathers rising early and saying Obey my voyce yet they would not obey nor incline their eare but euery one walked in the stubbornnesse of his wicked heart thus they made a conspiracy against God and hee brought his curses vpon them Thus our Sauiour teacheth it shall bee with many in the last day that saw his person and heard his doctrine they conuersed and continued with him and were partakers of his miracles and ministry who shall then begin to say We haue eaten and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streetes Lu. 13 26 27. but he shall say I tell you I know you not whence ye are depart from me all ye workers of iniquity Woe shall then bee to all such hearers and cursed shall their state and condition be These haue an heauier account to make then such as neuer were hearers and neuer had so great mercy offered vnto them Hence it is that Christ pronounced sundry woes against Bethsaida Corazin and Capernaum who had the worde and other meanes of saluation offered vnto them yet liued without repentance and are pronounced to bee worse then the Sodomites For the greater mercies are abused the deeper iudgements are deserued Let vs sette this Capernaum a Citty in Galile before our eyes and looke vpon it as in a glasse that therein we may behold our selues The Lord Iesus was brought vp there and because hee did so much frequent it and was conuersant there many thought hee had beene borne there so that it is called his owne City Mat. 9 1. Secondly the miracles which he wrought there were many he healed the seruant of the Centurion and a man that had an vncleane spirit Math. 8 5. in so much that the Nazarites as it were enuying and repining thereat that that place should be preferred before them saide vnto him Whatsoeuer we haue h●ard done in Capernaum do it heere likewise in th●ne owne Country Luc. 4.23 thereby implying that the greatest part of his miracles had not beene done among them but among the Capernaites Thirdly there he began to preach saying Repent Math. 4.13.17 Mark 1.14 Iohn 6 59. Luc. 4.31.32 for the Kingdome of heauen is at hand and there he preached of the eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood likewise hee taught on the Sabboth day in their Synagogue with power and authority so that they were astonied at his doctrine In all these respects and priuiledges partly of the presence of his person partly of the working of his miracles partly of the preaching of his Gospel Christ pronounceth that they were lifted vp to heauen Mat. 11 23.24 highly aduanced aboue many other Townes Cities that wanted the seeing and hearing of him but because they became vnthankfull and to all these did not ioyne true obedience hee denounceth against them that they should be brought downe to hell the reason hereof is rendred in the next wordes For if the great workes which haue beene done in thee had beene done among them of Sodome they had remained to this day but I say vnto you that it shall be easier for them of the Land of Sodome in the day of iudgement then for thee An heauy doome and a most fearefull sentence and yet most iust and righteous if it bee weighed in the ballance of iustice The sinnes of Capernaum greater then of Sodome Gen. 19 3. Rom 1 27 28. Ezek. 16. Sodome indeede was guilty of vncleannesse and
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
essentiall parts of that Sacrament I answere Answer they are able to doe this but forasmuch as they doe it without a calling their doing is as no doing their powring on of water is no better then a defiling of it For who gaue them their commission so to do When possession of any house is giuen by deliuering a white wand and turfe another man may do as much in shew he may take a wand turfe as good as the others and make a deliuery of them and yet those actions may bee idle being done without warrant neither can assure the bargaine and sale It is no great matter or hard to doe to take bread and wine and deliuer the same by reciting the words of institution and yet if it be vndertaken without a calling it is a plaine and manifest prophanation of the Supper of the Lord. If they iudge this vnlawfull how can they hold the other lawfull The people of God or any among them were as well able to handle and carry the Arke as the Leuites they were an holy people to God they were all circumcised they did all carry about in their flesh the marke and impression of the Couenant yet the Lord sorted out the Tribe of Leui to beare the Arke of his Couenant Deut. 10.8 to stand in his presence to minister vnto him and to blesse in his Name He will haue vs wholly to obey his word he regardeth not our blinde zeale or purpose to serue him except it be ordered aright To proceede Hath God onely placed order in the Church and not in the common-wealth yes in the common-wealth also wherein euery one both superiours and inferiours must doe their duty He hath appointed the Magistrates their office to minister iustice without partiality and respect of persons 2 Chron. 19. 5 6. considering that they execute not the iudgements of men but of God who will be with them This is the comely order that hee hath set this is the way wherein he will haue them walke this is the ordinance that he hath established If then lawes be bought and sold or if they be made as the spiders webbe to catch the silly flie but to let the hornet escape or if they punish the poore and let the rich escape if the weake that cannot resist be intangled and the mighty be deliuered this is a great disorder and the Lord will not haue these things handled so confusedly Let such set before them the example of God who will reward euery man according to his workes He doth not spare the wicked Rom. 2.6 and reuenge himselfe vpon the Godly but he sheweth mercy to thousands of these and will not hold the other innocent So such as God hath called to execute iudgement and sit vpon the bench of iustice must know what God requireth of them they must not peruert the right ouerturne the Seat of equity they must not turne the edge of the sword vpon the poore because they are poore nor put it away from the rich because they are rich or from the mighty because of their might or from the greater sort because they haue many friends but they must smite them with the sword of Iustice that deserue to be smitten and defend them from that wrong that the malice of the oppresser would lay vpon the innocent On the other side God requireth that such as are inferiours should obey Princes and Magistrates submitting themselues vnto them reuerencing both their places and persons They therefore are reproued as breakers of this order of God and ouerturners of States and Common wealthes that rebell against them and moue sedition among the people Such walke in the steps of Corah and his company who were consumed and destroyed according to their deserts as appeareth afterward in this Booke ●hap 16. These proud spirits and ambitious men haue neuer preuailed but euer beene punished Such are they that Salomon speaketh off Eccle. 10. ●ccles 10.6 7 Folly is set in great excellency and the rich set in the low place I haue seene seruants on horses and Princes walking as seruants on the ground Such persons as seeke to take away the crownes and kingdomes of Princes are the very plagues of humane societie and goe about to take away as it were the Sunne out of the firmament and to leaue vs in miserable darkenesse nay to take from vs the breath of our nostrils and to expose vs as a prey to all violence and villany Let all such know that they fight against God and therefore cannot prosper or preuaile All sedition is pernicious to the contriuer and author thereof and no iniury receiued can bee any sufficient cause for any man to plot Treasons and rebellions Let euery soule therefore be subiect to the higher powers considering there is no power but of God and that whosoeuer resisteth the power resisteth the Ordinance of God and therefore purchase to themselues damnation Vse 3 Lastly seeing God requireth orderly obseruation of his ordinances we learne this duty that we must be carefull to obserue it and practise it with a due regard of his Commandement This is the generall rule that the Apostle commendeth vnto vs 1 Cor. 14. 1 Cor. 14 40. Let all things bee done decently and in order Order is nothing else but the meanes of peace and the auoiding of confusion or it is a disposing of diuers things August de ciuit dei lib 19. cap. 12 C●cer de effic lib. 2. giuing to euery one his proper place The end of all good order tendeth to profit as on the other side the end of confusion to losse and destruction The more common generall a good thing is so much the better it is and the more to bee esteemed aboue all other The benefit of good order stretcheth farre to the land and Sea and to the house and ship to the Common-wealth and Church If it be commendable to appoint a profitable order in the lesser charge of a priuate family it is a great deale better and more excellent to manage a Common-wealth prudently and to gouerne the Church wisely Gouernment that is right presupposeth order because it is vnpossible that any man should rule rightly and duely without order For gouernment is a right disposition of those things whereof a man taketh charge to bring them to a conuenient end This is done in the Church of God when there be Pastors and Teachers to preach the word truely and to minister the Sacraments sincerely when the people hearken to them are ready to seeke the law at their mouthes This is seene also in the obseruation of these rules First Rules of order to be obserued in the Congregation when one alone prayeth for many cannot pray with a loud voice together without confusion The Minister is to bee the mouth of the people to God his voice is in publike place to be heard that the people may ioyne with him with pure and humble hearts and
it were brought downe to reside and remaine among vs. So long as the word which is the scepter of his kingdome is with vs we shall not need to feare he will goe from vs neither shall be constrained to make long iourneyes to seeke him out When once his word is departed and the Gospel gone his standard is remoued and he is quite turned from vs. It is in vaine to dreame to find him when we cannot find him in his word Hence it is that Abijam telleth Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne that God was gone from them seeing he had driuen away the Priests of the Lord the sonnes of Aaron and on the other side he ioyneth together the presence of the Lord and the preaching of his word saying Behold this God is with vs as a Captaine 2. Chron. 13.12 and his Priests with the sounding trumpets to cry an alarme against you This then is a speciall token of Gods speciall presence when he sendeth his word as a gracious raine vpon his inheritance and thereby watereth the dry furrowes of the barraine hearts of his people Thirdly we haue the promise of his presence and the seales thereof in his Sacraments whereby we are at one with him and he with vs. Whensoeuer we meditate of our baptisme the Sonne of God doth witnesse vnto our spirits that we are cloathed with his righteousnesse as with a garment Gal. 3.27 for all such as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ Whensoeuer we receiue the Supper of the Lord hee sheweth vs that he is our food and that the bread which we eate at our tables and in our houses doth not nourish vs better then we be nourished by his substance at his heauenly table insomuch that we liue in him by him and through him according to the testimony of Iohn Ch. 6. Ioh. 6.54.55 Whosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day for my flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed Thus we are spiritually one with him and mystically he is one with vs so that we haue a communion with him as the members haue with the head so that we must receiue it as most true which the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 10. 1 Cor. 10.16 The cuppe of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the body of Christ the bread which we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ for we that are many are one bread and one body because we all are partakers of one bread Fourthly when we come together in the Church to call vpon his Name he is neere vnto vs and most familiar with vs. For our LORD Iesus Christ assureth vs that he is there among vs whensoeuer we are assembled in his Name and by lifting vp our eyes and holding vp our hands toward heauen wee shew that our coming thither is to present our selues in the sight presence of our God To this purpose our Sauiour saith Math. 18 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the middest of them so that we must consider that we are heere not onely before the Angels of heauen but also that the Sonne of God both seeth and heareth vs. True prayer doeth ascend vp to Heauen as Incense and lifteth vs vp to talke familiarly with God and bringeth downe his blessings vpon vs except we vse this heauenly exercise whereby we speake to him he is a stranger to vs and we are strangers to him Lastly he dwelleth among vs whensoeuer he preserueth vs from euill and deliuereth vs from our enemies If the fauour of GOD were not a shield buckler about vs to preserue and protect vs from our enemies wee should lie open to ten thousand dangers and deaths If our Lord had not a continuall care ouer vs and stood not mightily for our defence we should bee a prey to the iaw of the Lyon and should perish euery minute of an houre We are of our selues ouer-weake and haue no meanes to deliuer our selues this is our comfort that God is on our side dwelleth among vs. Let vs also take heed we walk in feare before him and doe not prouoke him to wrath and indignation against vs by committing euill in his fight who can abide nothing that is prophane or polluted as Deut. 6 15. The Lord that is in the middest of thee is iealous beware therefore that his wrath kindle not lest thou be rooted out of the Land which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee To this purpose the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 6. 2 Cor. 6 16 17 Yee are the Temple of the liuing God as God hath saide I will dwell among them and walke there and I will be their GOD and they shall be my people wherefore come out from among them and separate your selues saith the Lord and touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you and I will be a Father vnto you and ye shall bee my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty This sheweth that we ought to walke alwaies as in Gods presence and to consider euermore that his eye is vpon vs. Our bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost for him to dwell in If then we shall defile them and make them as swine-styes we greeue the holy Spirit whereby our adoption and redemption are sealed and driue him from vs and chase him away out of our hearts Vse 2 Secondly albeit the placing of the Tabernacle in the middest of the host be gone and past long agoe and were verified among the Iewes vnder the shaddowes of the Law yet it serueth to teach vs to what end God hath instituted ciuill States and Common-wealths in this world to wit to be staies and proppes to the Church to vphold and strengthen the same that the people of God may assemble together in peace and quietnesse and be free from all dangers of malicious enemies that labour to do euill to the Sanctuary To this purpose the Prophet teacheth Psal 102 2● 22. and 122 3 4. that The Name of the Lord shall be declared in Sion his praise in Ierusalem when the people shall be gathered together and the Kingdomes to serue the Lord. And Psal 122. Ierusalem is builded as a City that is compact together in it selfe whereunto the Tribes euen the Tribes of the Lord goe vp according to the Testimony to Israel to praise the name of the Lord. Heereby we are put in minde of three notable duties First of all let all persons Princes and people high and low do good to the Church of God and imploy their best endeuours to promote the glory of God and the safety of the Church For wherefore was the Tabernacle taken and pitched in the middest of all the host not placed in a corner nor set in the skirts of that mighty army but was inuironed round about with the strength of Israel but to
and Paul chargeth the Philippians to let their patient and equall mindes bee knowne to all men But of this vertue of contentation we haue spoken at large before ●he fift re●oofe Fiftly it reprooueth such as contemning their owne callings as vile and base become male-content and thinke better of themselues and their owne gifts then there is iust cause and better then they would indeed if they rightly and truely knew themselues Such are all ambitious and aspiring spirits that loue to be aloft and scorne to be below that seeke for themselues an higher place and a better estate then God hath alotted vnto them as if the bramble should seeke to be promoted ouer the rest of the trees If our first parents through the tentation and instigation of Satan grew discontent with that estate wherein they were created sought to be as Gods knowing good euill Gen. 3 verse 5 no marueile if their posterity draw this corruption from them as the childe that sucketh the brest of his mother Absolom through his high mind 2 Sam. 15 4. was moued to fawne vpon the people and to seeke his fathers kingdome and life also iudging basely of his present estate and climbing vp to an higher What caused the Scribes and Pharisies to contemne and disdaine Christ and his Disciples Mat 23 6 7. but this they loued the chiefe places at feasts and desired the highest seates in the assemblies and looked to be greeted and saluted by men Rabbi Rabbi What was the cause that Diotrephes would not receiue Iohn and the other faithfull Ministers of the word 3 Iohn 9. but did prattle with malicious words against them neither would he himselfe receiue them nor suffer others to entertaine the brethren He loued to haue the preheminence in the Church Loe here the horrible plague and as it were the ranke poison of pride vain-glory and ambition These are the causes of all confusion and disorder These weeds must be pulled out of our hearts by the contrary graces if we would haue any wholesome hearbs grow therein We haue many sharpe tooles lent vs put into our hands if we list to set them on worke to grub them vp by the rootes First we must consider the state of our bodies what it is We are but dust and ashes Meanes to pull downe pride and ambition and to dust we must returne Gen. 3. What a vaine and foolish thing is it to thinke so highly of our selues that were raised out of the earth do carry about vs the matter of our mortality If we had come downe from heauen and had our beginning aboue the Clouds we should haue had wherein to glory but being all of vs fraile and mortall creatures that are here to day and lye in the dust to morrow like the grasse of the fielde Math. 6 30. which flourisheth for a time and by and by withereth away what vanity hath possessed our hearts that earth ashes should waxe proud Our life standeth wholly in vncertainty it is appointed to all men once to die and after death commeth iudgement Heb. 9 27. Neither do we know at what houre the Lord will come Math. 24 42. Why then should we soare so high seeing we must lie so low Why should we say in our hearts I will ascend into heauen seeing our pompe shall be brought downe to the graue and the wormes must couer vs Secondly we are altogether set vpon sin and bring foorth the bitter fruites of our corruption in regard whereof we are more wretched then other creatures They sinne not against God they prouoke him not to anger but keepe their originall condition wherein they were created but we miserable sinners are turned out of the right way and become abhominable so that there is none that doth good no not one Rom. chapt 3 verse 12. If then we will glory of our selues or any thing in our selues we must glory in our shame hauing nothing of our owne but sinne and iniquity Thirdly we are not able of our selues so much as to thinke one good thought neither are we sufficiently furnished to doe the least and smallest duty that God requireth of vs we haue the spawne and seed of all sinne in our nature We are ready to fall into the most horrible sinnes except God sustaine vs and hold vp our heads and strengthen our weake knees We cannot set forward one foot toward the kingdome of heauen It is as vnpossible for vs to doe any good as for a dead carcase to flie We are as poore miserable wretches that are dumbe and cannot speak blind and cannot see deafe and cannot heare The Prophet acknowledgeth that he is a man of vncleane lippes Esay 6.5 and another confesseth he could not speake Ier. 1.6 our eares also are stopped so that we cannot heare the voyce of God that we might liue Ioh. 8.47 Matth. 13.13 our eyes are closed vp so that seeing wee see not but grope as blind men in the darkenesse The light shined in darkenes and the darknesse comprehended it no Ioh. 1.5 Men naturally take themselues to be sharpe eyed and quicke sighted Ioh. 9.41 but because they say We see therefore their sinne remaineth because the carnall mind is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8.7 Fourthly whatsoeuer gifts are bestowed vpon vs we must thinke meanely and humbly of our selues and of them The Apostle willeth vs to decke our selues with lowlinesse of mind Phil. 2.3 and that each esteeme other better then themselues We know that our best gifts are stained with many blemishes we feele our owne corruptions more then the corruptions of other men so that Gods grace and our nature are ioyned together in one subiect We are not therfore to despise other men or dwell in the contemplation of their imperfections but be alwayes working vpon our selues and considering our owne vnworthinesse that so we may more and more mortifie the deeds of the flesh and grow in the graces of Gods Spirit Fiftly let vs set before vs the example of our Lord and Master Iesus Christ we must be ready to learne of him the lesson that he offereth to teach vs by word example Hence it is that he calleth all to him that are weake and weary and saith Take my yoke vpon you and learne of me for I am meeke and lowly in heart and ye shall finde rest vnto your soules Matth. 11.29 He disdained not to wash the feet of his disciples to teach them humility not only by doctrine but by practise He is a perfect patterne as of all other vertues so also of this and therefore the Apostle setteth him before vs for our imitation Phil. 2.5 6. Let this minde be in you which was also in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God c. He made himselfe of no reputation and tooke vpon
according to the number of the persons there might be an equall diuision and distribution of their functions Now for the better vnderstanding of this numbring heere commanded and executed we must know that the reckoning vp of the Leuites is not done after one manner but is much differing not only from the other tribes but also from it selfe so that this Tribe is numbred diuers waies The first is from a moneth old and vpward as we haue learned out of the third chapter because then they were fit to be offered to the Lord. Numb 3 15. The second is at fiue and twenty yeare old at what time they began to be tried and proued whether they were fit or not this is set downe chap. 8 24. The third is at 30. years of age vntill 50 when they executed their office fully without any denying or gainsaying Thus we see the different account that is taken of this Tribe and the reasons thereof now let vs proceede to the order obserued in this chapter Heerein we are to obserue two parts The first containeth a commandement touching the numbring of the Leuites from 30. yeares old vnto 50. together with a description of the proper and distinct office of euery family Secondly the obedience of Moses in the execution of the commandement of the Lord. Touching the commandement of God we are to consider that the whole seruice of the Tabernacle is parted according to the wil and pleasure of almighty God the author of the Ministery among the three families springing out of Leui and spoken of in the former chapter namely the Kohathites the Gershonites and the Merarites Heere Moses doth a little inuert the former order and beginneth with the Kohathites because the Priests were chosen among them and he insisteth longer vpon them then vpon other both because many things are spoken of them which notwithstanding are not properly to be restrained to them alone but generally to be applied to the rest and likewise because they had a more worthy honourable office so that the chiefest charge was committed vnto them The commandement is generall in this diuision then particular in the verses following The generall sheweth who among them were to be numbred to wit all persons from thirty yeares old to fifty to do the seruice of the Tabernacle Thus much touching the order ●o obiect ●wered Before we come to the doctrines we are to answer two questions thereby as it were to vnloose the knots that might trouble those that are weake in knowledge and slender in iudgement ●estion As first of all it may be demanded why the Lord commanded the Leuites in this place to be numbred that were full 30. yeares old ●swer and not before I answer it was because he would haue those that serued him in the Sanctuary and did as it were represent his person to the people and were to teach them to be ripe in knowledge in iudgement in experience in moderation in learning and such like gifts of his holy Spirit Young men for the most part haue greene heads light braines rash wits shallow iudgements head-strong passions being altogether vnsetled and vngrounded Thus it was in Rehoboams Counsellers 1 Kings 12 8. where we see young Counsellers young counsell graue Counsellers graue counsell as the men are so is their counsell Such as were to follow the warres were numbred from 20. yeares old and vpward Moses the muster-maker tooke their names and enrolled them at the age of twenty but such as were the Lords warriers to fight his battels ●ings 2 12. and as it were the Chariots horsemen of Israel must not be fresh-water or white-liuerd souldiers they must not turne their backes to their enemies nor be afraid to looke them in the face nor shrinke backe at the push of the pike nor haue their sword rusty in their sheath but alwaies be prepared stand ready for the encounter But if such had beene admitted to this office as were yong in yeares their lightnesse in gesture and behauiour might haue cast a contempt vpon the holy things of God and caused the people to abhorre the word which they deliuer and the Sacraments which they administer whereof we haue an example 1 Sam. 2 in Elies sonnes The sinne of the young men was great and they caused the people to contemne the offerings of God To this end the Apostle aduiseth and admonisheth Timothy chap. 4 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an ensample to the beleeuers in word in conuersation in charity in spirit in faith in purity But of this we shall haue occasion to speake more afterward Secondly a man may aske the question Question whether the Priests and Leuites ceassed the execution of their office at the age of fifty For seeing God commandeth in this place all to be numbred that were imployed in the worke of God and none were numbred that were vnder thirty and aboue fifty it may seeme to some that they did nothing afterward What then Were they as souldiers dismissed of their seruice and put to their yearly pension Or were they released from all labours as those sword-players Horat. epist lib. 1. epist 1. that had a rod deliuered vnto them in token of discharge I answer this was done for diuers causes Answer First such as execute this holy calling ought to be qualified with iudgement grauity sobriety integrity diligence yea with power courage strength and to haue agility and ability in mind and body that they may doe all things wisely exactly studiously constantly But all these agree to a man most fitly and fully betweene the age of 30. and 50. limited in this place Youthfull age may be adorned with strength courage and earnestnesse but it is not so well furnished with iudgement grauity skilfulnesse and staiednesse On the other side old men in their declining age albeit they be filled with knowledge and vnderstanding and seasoned with moderation of affections yet through weaknesse of nature debility and other infirmities that follow them grow dull and heauy Analys Iun. in 3. Numer slowe and cold and haue not that quicknesse and readinesse of dispatch which they had and others haue so that their body is not answerable to their mind nor the outward man to the inward Againe this was the ordinance of God that they should giue place to younger men that vnder them they might be trained vp to the seruice of the Sanctuary that he might neuer want any to attend in that calling Whereas in the multitude and encrease of that Tribe to so many thousands if they had all serued during the terme of their liues many of them could neuer haue beene imployed whose labor might be profitable in the church So then they were at that age to ceasse to make way and passage for the imployment of younger men Thirdly as religion is more precious then all earthly things so God heereby tooke order and prouided that the weaknesse
Secondly touching the Merarites which are another of the familes what he saith of them verse 31 of this present chapter compare it with the 36 and 37 verses of the former chapter Lastly touching the Gershonites the 25 ver of this fourth chapter with the 25 verse of the third chapter and we shall see hee telleth them againe and againe what burdens they are to beare and what seruice they are to performe He might haue referred vs to that which hee had before set downe but he doth againe particularly rehearse and repeat it God forbiddeth needlesse repetitions in praier and condemneth much babling that bringeth no benefit with it therefore he vseth it not himselfe neither do any of the Penmen of the holy Scriptures who wrote as they were inspired by the Spirit of God the Author of them They were chosen vessels of God and as it were his Secretaries so guided by him that they could not erre in writing no more then in speaking of it We learne from this practise of Moses in this place Doctrine It is lawful for the Ministers to repeat the points that formerly they haue taught that it is lawfull for the Ministers and Teachers of the Church to make repetitions of things formerly taught and to deliuer the same points and parts of religion againe and againe both for matter and forme not thereby to ease themselues or to maintaine sloth in thē but for the benefit of the Church Moses in the booke of Deuteronomy repeateth to the people many things done before and expressed in the former bookes and therefore it is fitly called a repetition of the Law and there he rehearseth the ten Commandements againe Deut. 5. So do the Euangelists declare how Christ our Sauiour often repeateth the same things and preacheth againe the same points he had deliuered before and therfore his practise may well be our warrant and his example our direction Thus doth the Apostle Peter shew what he did and what he will do 2 Pet. 1 12. Wherefore I will not bee negligent to put you alwaies in remembrance of these things though ye know them and be established in the present truth And afterward in the same Epistle he professeth that hee had written to them of those things whereof his beloued brother Paul had written in all his Epistles The Epistle of Iude is a repetition of those things handled by Peter in his second Epistle and is as it were an abridgement of it So the bookes of Chronicles do repeat many things before set downe in the bookes of the Kings albeit it be done with much accesse of matter profite to the reader as we shall see by diligent obseruation in the reading of them In like manner the Apostle Iohn wrote vnto them those things which they had beene taught before I haue not written vnto you because ye know not the truth but because yee know it and that no lye is of the truth 1 Iohn 2 21. This may plentifully appeare vnto vs in the comparing of the olde Testament with the new one strengtheneth and confirmeth another and sundry things are repeated in the new which are deliuered in the old We see the Gentiles in the Acts of the Apostles Acts 13 42. besought Paul and Barnabas that the same words might be preached vnto them the next Sabbath day which they had first offered vnto the Iewes All which examples as it were a cloud of witnesses do confirme the lawfulnesse of their practise that teach againe what they haue taught and deliuer the same points which before they haue deliuered and so bring forth out of their storehouse things both old and new for this custome could not be vsed without some accesse and addition of new matter according to the manner of God vsed in the holy Scriptures Reason 1 This is not done without cause and good reason For first men are commonly dull in hearing slacke in comming weake in remembring and slowe in practising They are as a tough oake that is not felled at one stroke as an hard stone that is not broken in peeces with one blow they are as marble that is not pierced with once dropping of water vpon it but requireth a constant and continuall falling vpon it according to the Commandement of God directed to his Prophet Ezek 21 2. Sonne of man set thy face toward Ierusalem and drop thy word toward the holy places and Prophesie against the Land of Israel For albeit we be often taught and plainely instructed heere a little there a little yet we cannot conceiue and carry away the things we heare The Apostle saith Heb. 5 11. We haue many things to say and hard to be vttered seeing ye are dull of hearing where he giueth this reason why he had need begin againe the first rudiments of Christian religion as it were to lay the foundation of the house againe before hee went forward with high mysteries euen in regard of their dulnes and slacknes in learning Reason 2 Secondly it is safe and sure for all hearers to haue often repetitions It hath his good vse and speciall benefit Many witnesses do make sure worke and confirme strongly and stedfastly the things taught Hence it is that the Apostle saith writing to the Philippians chap. 3 1. To write the same things to you to me indeed is not greeuous and for you it is safe That which is once spoken is through our infirmity and corruption as good as neuer spoken as one witnesse is no witnesse GOD would haue euery truth confirmed by two or three witnesses and forasmuch as the historie of the life and death of the doctrine and myracles of the resurrection and ascension of Christ is so maine a pillar of our religion in the knowledge whereof our saluation consisteth hee would haue it confirmed by foure authentike witnesses and Christ carried by them as on a fourefold Chariot in triumph like a mighty Conqueror that hath subdued all his and our enemies Thus doth God prouide most plentifull meanes to remoue our infidelity to take away our doubting and to remedy our infirmity Thirdly repetition worketh a deeper impression Reason 3 in vs and serueth to beate it into the conscience as well as into the vnderstanding It is necessary that we be stirred vp quickned to the practise of good things by the goad of repetitions This consideration made the Apostle say I thinke it meete 2 Pet. 1 13. as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you vp by putting you in remembrance Practise is an hard thing and rare We are not easily brought to performe such things as wee know If then once speaking take not hold on vs it may the second time beeing commended vnto vs againe Fourthly we ought not to forbeare from Reason 4 this course because our life is short wee know not how soone we may be called out of this world and giue an account of our Ministery how carefull wee haue beene to gaine
iudgment vpon the vnbeleeuers and impenitent persons Great is the authority of Princes and Rulers of the earth They may banish from their kingdoms such as are offenders but they cannot banish and exclude any from the kingdome of God They may binde the hands and feet of the body but they haue no power to binde the soule and conscience The Magistrate may say Take his body but the Minister may say Let him be deliuered to Satan Lastly we see from hence that those Churches are deceiued that cast from them this holy ordinance of Christ Iesus they are as a body subiect to many diseases yet want a soueraigne medicine to cure them For albeit they haue the Christian Magistrate to assist them and to resist euils yet his iudgement is externall not internall he may punish he cannot amend and reforme Euery Church therefore ought to haue this remedy to take away euill out of Israel The second point in the description of excommunication is ●e second 〈◊〉 of the de●ption that it must bee executed vpon him that is a member of the Church For as it is the sentence of the Church so it extendeth onely to such persons as are professours in the visible Church and haue giuen their names to Christ and submitted themselues to the doctrine and discipline thereof This is expresly grounded vpon the words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 5 11 12. If any that is called a brother be a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a drunkard c with such a one eate not 2 Cor. 2 6. For what haue I to doe to iudge them also that are without Doe not ye iudge them that are within In like manner Christ in the Gospel prescribing this spirituall physicke to recouer dangerous sinners saith If thy brother trespasse against thee From hence we learne what person is to be excommunicated to wit such an one as was called our brother and registred in the number of the children of the church For how can he be excommunicated that is cast out of the communion who neuer was in the communion Wherefore it belongeth nothing at all to those that are out of the church as Turkes Persians Iewes Pagans and other Infidels that were neuer baptized in the name of the holy Trinity neyther had entrance into the church This censure concerneth such as are reckoned among brethren and not accounted strangers from the faith and aliants from the Common-wealth of Israel Hence it is that when Paul had written in an Epistle to the Corinthians that they should not keep company with fornicators lest they should thinke he wrote this of all the fornicators of this world he expoundeth himselfe that he vnderstood it not of all wicked persons in generall for then they must needs goe out of the world Verse 10. but of such as were members of the church and would needs be called brethren These are they that giue scandall to the enemies of God and his Gospel through them the Name of God is blasphemed the church is contemned slandered the word is reuiled the weake are offended and the rest of the parts infected and therefore deserue worthily ro bee excommunicated The church taketh care of all her children shee is as a carefull mother and tender Nurse that hath promised to bring them vp to see them rightly ordered and gouerned and therefore ought to vse all good meanes for their recouery that their spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord. Againe we are put in mind heereby of the folly and corrupt dealing of the Church of Rome who directly crosse the doctrine of the Apostle and set themselues in the place and seate of God For as they haue defiled the most holy ordinances of God the word praier sacraments and worship of God so they haue horribly abused the institution of excommunication as wee shall see farther afterward The truth is they haue nothing to doe with excommunication they are fallen from grace they haue denyed the faith they haue defiled themselues with Idols they will not haue Christs righteousnesse imputed vnto thē they set vp their owne works seeke iustification by thē they will not receiue Christ to be their onely King and Priest they will merite saluation for themselues and therefore they are not a true but a false Church But excommunication is the Churches right it is none of theirs that are not the Church so that albeit they curse vs and banne vs euery yeare yet it hurteth vs not forasmuch as the curse that is causelesse shall not come But suppose they were the true Church and wee out of the Church who hold all that refuse to be subiect to the Popes supremacy to bee no Church at all how commeth it to passe that they dare excommunicate vs who neuer were of their communion and do not belong to their iurisdiction They teach we are out of the bosome of the Church and Paul affirmeth that the Church is not to iudge them that are without they are therefore abusers and prophaners of this ordinance euen by their owne confession Let them either admit vs to be parts of the true Church or else remit vs to the iudgement seate of God who iudgeth them that are without 1 Cor. 5 13. For as a Prince draweth out the sword against none but his owne subiects so is this censure to be drawne out against none but such as are subiect vnto it that is the Church If the Church proceed any farther it may be said vnto it Who made thee a Iudge and Ruler ouer them Lastly let not vngodly persons atheists that are out of the Church bee encouraged heereby to continue in sinne neither let any enuy their freedome and liberty because they are not to be touched with Church-censures but rather let them consider that they shall not escape scotfree they haue God the Father high possessor of heauen and earth a sharpe and seuere Iudge against them and all their euill deeds for thē that are without God iudgeth who wil giue to euery one according to his deserts Thus much of the second point The third part of the description Let vs go forward in the description The third thing necessary to be obserued in excōmunication is that the person offending bee conuicted of some greeuous hainous crime either against the first or second Table of the law Hence it is that the Apostle nameth not onely whoremongers couetous drunkards railers 1 Cor. 5 11. and extortioners but also idolaters so that as well hereticks and worshippers of Images sorcerers and enchanters and such like brethren as drunkards and adulterers are to be excommunicated In like manner Christ himselfe expresseth not the seuerall kindes of sinnes for which the brother that offendeth is to bee excommunicated but contenteth himselfe to say onely in generall If thy brother trespasse against thee So the Apostle Paul teacheth Tit. 3.10 A man that is an hereticke after the first and second admonition
accusation I restore him fourefold He testifieth his repentance by his readinesse to make restitution whereas he that keepeth stollen goods stealeth still and is no better then a theefe and consequently farre from repentance Reason 2 Secondly without restitution there can be no remission forasmuch as repentance is falsely counterfeited and not truely practised God will not forgiue such as retaine with them their neighbours goods To steale from them and to keepe that which is stollen is a plaine token that we are resolued to continue in sinne He that is perswaded and determined not to depart from stollen goods which are sweet morsels vnto him is resolued to be a theefe and not to giue ouer Thus God is mocked and dallied withall and his law neglected and despised This the Prophet Ezekiel pointeth out chap. 18.7 9 12 13. and 33 15. He that hath not oppressed any but hath restored to the debter his pledge he shall surely liue saith the Lord God but he that hath oppressed the poore and needy and hath spoyled by violence and hath not restored the pledge c. he shall surely die his blood shall be vpon him Seeing then such as restore and so make recompense of that they haue taken away haue promise of forgiuenes contrariwise such as neuer make restitution haue a terrible threatning of death denounced against them it followeth that this is a duty required of all persons Reason 3 Thirdly the performance of it is a very speciall meanes to bring a blessing vpon vs a blessing I say from him to whom restitution is made For when he shall see how God hath touched their heart with a feeling of their sin that they can no longer keepe that which is not their owne albeit power be in their hand to do it it shall stirre him vp to desire and procure their good and to craue a blessing to come downe vpon them This is that which we reade in Moses Deut. 24.12 13. If the man be poore thou shalt not sleepe with his pledge c. that he may blesse thee This end is not to be neglected forasmuch as the eares of God are alwaies open to heare the cry of the poore and he hath promised to helpe them and to bring a curse vpon al their oppressors to their destruction Reason 4 Fourthly as the loynes of the poore shall blesse them that restore so God will accept it as a worke of iustice and righteousnesse and as a fruit of his spirit iustifying vs by the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus his Sonne and sanctifying vs to his glory In the place of Scripture before remembred Moses teacheth this and layeth it downe as a strong reason Deut. 24.13 where speaking of such as had taken pledges of the poore he saith In any case thou shalt deliuer him the pledge againe when the Sunne goeth downe that he may sleepe in his own raiment c. and it shall be righteousnesse vnto thee before the Lord thy God This also is a most forcible reason to mooue vs to restitution forasmuch as God setts it down as an infallible testimony of a iustifying faith and therefore the contrary is a fruit of infidelity so that we shal neuer repent vs of that we haue done nor wish it to be in our owne hands againe Reason 5 Fiftly the vniust retaining of other mens goods hindereth many good things from vs inasmuch as God will accept no seruice nor duty at our hands vntill we haue ridde our hands of things euilly gotten We may come to heare his word and to call vpon his Name and sit among the Saints and seruants of God in the Congregation howbeit we heare without fruit and we pray without profit For this poisoneth and corrupteth vnto vs the best things of God This is that which Christ teacheth vs in the Gospel of Matthew chap. 5.23.24 If thou bring thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee but he hath some iust action against vs so long as we keepe any of his goods wrongfully from him leaue there thy gift before the altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift If then we desire that God should heare our prayers or be well pleased with the hearing of his word we must be careful to make recompense and satisfaction for such iniuries as wee haue offered and our brother hath sustained Now let vs come to the vses which are as Vse 1 it were the life and soule of this point that hath beene prooued First of all it serueth to reprooue all such as neglect this duty and so offend against this doctrine The first reproofe And among them it meeteth directly chiefly with those that commit sacriledge robbing the Church and defrauding the Ministers of that portion which God hath granted vnto them in his holy word The wise man saith Pro. 20.25 It is a snare to the man who deuoureth that which is holy and after vowes to make inquiry Our Sauiour himselfe saith Matth. 10.10 The labourer is worthy of his wages The Apostle Paul saith 1 Cor. 9.14 The Lord hath ordained that they which preach the Gospel should liue of the Gospel This sinne came first from the man of sinne by whom tithes were first alienated and impropriations erected and Church-liuings spoiled for the maintenance of idle persons that sate still and did nothing but eate and drinke and fat themselues in cloysters as oxen in a stall and these deale with the goods of the Church as the souldiers did with the garments of Christ Matth. 27.35 Psal 22.28 Luke 7.5 they parted his garments among them and cast lots for his vesture The Centurion is commended in the Gospel that builded a Synagogue for the Iewes but these men doe what they can to pull downe Churches and to impouerish the Ministery and to destroy the soules and saluation of many whom Christ redeemed These spirituall theeues and Church-robbers must learne to pay their due and not muzzle the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corne 1 Tim. 5.18 They robbe God greatly of his honor and dishonour him more then the heathen did their idols which are no gods These men glory in their Christianity and yet are enemies vnto Christ So that the Gentiles that knew not God shall arise in iudgement against them and condemne them The second reproofe Secondly it reprooueth all oppressors that fill their houses with the spoiles of the poore and needy as Esay 3.14.15 The Lord will enter into iudgement with the ancients of the people and the Princes thereof for ye haue eaten vp the vineyard the spoile of the poore is in your houses What meane ye that ye beat my people to peeces and grind the faces of the poore saith the Lord God of hostes And to this purpose speaketh Micah in his prophesies against this sinne chap. 3.3 They also eate the flesh of my people and flay their skinne from off them they
with suspicion of adultery when as oftentimes she is innocent I answere Answer that God dealt with his people two wayes sometimes he commandeth that which is simply and in it selfe good and honest and forbiddeth that which in it selfe and owne nature is euill as when he commandeth to restore and forbiddeth a witch to liue and infinite such like precepts Againe sometimes he winketh at some euils that could not be auoyded as it were bearing with an inconuenience to remedy and to preuent a mischiefe To the end they might sly from the greater he tolerateth and permitteth the lesser euill This we see euidently in the cause of diuorse Deut. 24.1 He suffereth them to put away their wiues vpon priuate grudge and dislike as he doth allow it simply in the case of adultery Matth. 5.32 and 19.8.9 Not that he euer approued of it but Christ saith it was for the hardnesse of their hearts howbeit from the beginning it was not so The like we might say of marrying many wiues a common custome among the Patriarkes and godly kings which was as a mighty streame bearing all things before it it was permitted but neuer allowed Mal 2.15 it was practised but neuer pronounced to be lawfull Sometimes therefore God giueth lawes as Lord and God to their consciences which did binde them for euer and sometimes as a Lawgiuer he tolerateth that which he could not take away as Princes doe such abuses as haue taken roote among their subiects and are growne to an head so that custome is turned into another nature For to beare with corruptions is one thing and to remooue them is another So in this place howsoeuer the iealous head of the surmising husband offendeth against God when vpon euery light occasion and suspicion he accuseth his wife that is innocent of adultery yet lest he being wayward and head-strong should rage and rise against his wife in fury and lay violent hands hands on her and so be his owne iudge and executioner it pleased God to remedy that mischiefe allowing them an ordinary meanes to make tryall of their wiues whether they were guilty or not guilty of vnfaithfulnes and falsehood toward them In the meane season God alwayes condemneth iealousie suspicion arising without iust causes forbids to receiue a false accusatiō not only against their wiues but against any their friends neighbors or enemies as we shall shew more afterward And the Priest in this case if he saw no cause of suspition that he could approue off no doubt both might and did put backe the husband and reiect his needlesse tryall and therefore he is commanded when he intendeth such a matter to goe first of all to the Priest euen as the leapers were sent to the Priest who did pronounce them either cleane or vncleane and was made a competent iudge in the matter So that al husbands were not altogether left to their libertie to accuse without cause to try without proofe and to suspect without occasion And albeit the same allowance be not giuen to the wife to make tryall of the suspected husband yea though the spirit of iealousie come vpon her yet the husband was warned hereby that he is no lesse guilty in the sight of God who would also find him out in his sinne and that he ought to deale with all meekenesse and moderation with his wife as it is noted touching the Pharisees when Christ said to them that would haue the woman taken in adultetery to be stoned Ioh. 8.7 9. Let him that is without sinne among you cast the first stone at her they which heard it being conuicted by their owne conscience went out one by one beginning at the eldest euen vnto the last Thus much touching the first Question Againe others may obiect and say What Obiect 2 needed this solemne meanes of purgation which was to be put in practise by so many seueral ceremonies some to be done by the husband some by the wife some by the Priest forasmuch as there was a neerer course and a more ready way to bring the matter to light For the high Priest hauing on his breast-plate might in all doubtful and difficult cases whatsoeuer haue asked counsell of God and giuen answer vnto men as Numb 27.21 Exod. 28.30 and in the bookes of Samuel This was practised oftentimes when the people of God were in distresse and vncertaine what to doe Whereas this law of tryall of the suspected wife was not often if at any time it was practised As for that which is read and found in the forged and counterfeit Gospel of Iames Da●●d 〈…〉 that the blessed Virgin espoused to Ioseph had these bitter waters giuen vnto her and that she dranke of them and thereby cleared her selfe is no better then a grosse fable of some idle head hammered in the times of darknesse and vented abroad to deceiue the simple I anwere ●●swer to the obiection that the hauing of one means is not the taking away of another True it is that it is needlesse to be done by more which may be done by fewer but repetition and iteration of moe meanes in Gods matters is not needlesse In earthly things we say commonly that store is no sore and that if a man haue two strings to his bow it is the better ●tle 4.9 so that in all things two are better then one A more plentifull prouision doth not hurt but helpe Howbeit it pleased God to adde this meanes also to diuers others to declare how greatly he hateth and detesteth adultery and that thereby he might terrifie all women and make them afraide to commit secret sinne through the reproach and infamy they were compelled to vndergoe if they should giue any suspicion of adultery vnto their husbands Obiect 3 Lastly the question must be asked what is meant in this place by the spirit of iealousie when it is said If the spirit of iealousie come vppon him verse 14. ●●swer I answer it is an Hebrew phrase and manner of speaking noting thereby an eager and earnest desire a feruent and forward inclination vnto any thing which are deepely rooted in their hearts So that the Hebrewes cal all earnest inclinations and passionate affections by the name of the spirit as the spirit of lying 1 King 22.13 the spirit of giddinesse Esay 19.14 the spirit of drowsinesse Esay 29.10 the spirit of vncleannesse Zach. 13.2 the spirit of fornications Hos 14.12 the spirit of errour 1 Ioh. 4.6 In all which places it signifieth the exceeding forwardnesse and wonderfull pronenesse of mans corrupt nature vnto those euils as though the soule were wholly set vpon them and minded nothing else Againe by a figuratiue speech it pointeth out vnto vs the chiefe author and principall cause from whence it is deriued euen Satan the vncleane spirit the euill spirit the worker of all wickednesse the first father and founder and fountaine of all sinne whatsoeuer For euen as when we reade of the
spirit of wisedome and meeknesse the spirit of knowledge and vnderstanding the spirit of grace and prayer the spirit of prophesie of faith of a sound mind and such like it signifieth not only the seuerall effects and gifts but the author and giuer of them from whence they proceed to wit the holy Ghost so likewise to apply these things to the point and purpose we haue in hand the spirit of iealousie mentioned in this place giueth vs to vnderstand two things first the swing and sway that this corrupt affection did beare in this people as they transgressed sundry wayes against their wiues both by taking many wiues together and by putting them away so soone as they displeased them so they gaue themselues exceedingly to nourish euill thoughts suspicions and surmises against them as if they might vse them at their owne pleasures and were not giuen them to be their companions Mal. 2.14 and so made two persons in one flesh Secondly we learne thereby from whence iealousie commeth to wit from the euill spirit the diuell is the authour of it who soweth the seedes of malice and setteth debate betweene a man and his wise and disturbeth their peace and tranquility and kindleth dissension as it were a fire burning among them that they might pull downe their house with their owne hands forasmuch as an house diuided against it selfe cannot stand and euery kingdome diuided against it selfe is brought to nought Matth. 12.25 Wherefore heereby they are put in minde to beware and take heed lest by these blinde and vncertaine suspicions they offend the Maiesty of God that hateth and abhorreth all false suspicions trouble the quietnesse of their owne family corrupt the ordinance of marriage and bring a perpetuall slander and reproach vpon themselues Thus much of the questions now we come vnto the doctrine And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Speake vnto the children of Israel and say vnto them If any mans wife goe aside c. In these words we see God maketh a Law touching the iealousie of the husband toward the wife whom he suspecteth of adultery And albeit this ceremony heere touched be a part of the legall worship which hath no place of practise in the Church of Christ where no such thing is permitted and though we neuer read of any that vsed this remedy to rid himselfe of iealousie to detect his wiues adultery yet there is a morall equity in it which concerneth vs all others to the end of the world indeed it belongeth to the obseruation of the seuenth commandement and of the ninth commandement which require the chastity of the person and the innocency of our good name The ende of the seuenth commandement is to teach both that as God is the authour of mariage so he is the reuenger of the breach of it being the most holy couenant of all other and that women should not pollute and prostitute themselues to be common through hope of impunity and of escaping without punishment The scope and drift of the ninth commandement which forbiddeth false witnesse-bearing is to take order for the honour and estimation and good name of our brethren that they bee not slandered and defamed and if of all our brethren and neighbors much more of the wife which is the neerest neighbor So then God restraining such breaches and abuses declareth euidently that hee doth not allow the iealousies that euery fond or hare-braind husband conceiued in those dayes neither doth enact or establish this Law in fauour of them but rather in fauour of the innocent wiues that they bee not headily and hastily cast off without cause and thereby a way made for more vsuall and more often diuorsements which were too common already among that people Wherefore he reprooueth and checketh this euil spirit of tormenting iealousie as hauing no good ground or warrant from God and his word From hence we learne that it is the part of a good and godly man Doctrine We must interpret all doubtfull things to the best to interpret all doubtfull things to the best as much as may be This we see practised by Iacob when he saw the party-coloured coate of his sonne Ioseph stained with blood and knew not what was become of him he said It is my sonnes coat an euill beast hath deuoured him Gen 37.33 Iosepth is without doubt rent in peeces The matter was doubtfull how he should come to his end and very suspicious the circumstances were to be examined his brethren were throughly to be examined of the time and place when and where they found the garment the place was to bee viewed where he is supposed and suspected to be deuoured forasmuch as some part and parcell of him would haue remained When Iezebel was eaten with dogges the skull and the feete 2 King 35. and the palmes of her hands remained so might somewhat of him bee found out or at least the men of that place were to be asked whether any rauenous beast haunted those quarters But Iacob was so ouercome with sorrow that he hath the euill beasts in his owne house and yet cannot discerne them and is so carried away with credulity to beleeue the forged tale of his treacherous sonnes that he least suspecteth where the greatest cause of suspition was forasmuch as he could not be ignorant that they hated him in former time Gen. 37.4 But not knowing where the fault lay nor able to try out the fact he enterpreteth and expoundeth all in the better part he concludeth that surely some rauenous beast had torne him in peeces The like we might say of Izhak the father of Iacob when he came to him in the name and garments of his eldest brother being doubfull who it should be because the voyce was Iacobs voyce but the hands were the hands of Esau Ge. 27.22.23 in the end he concluded that it was Iacob and so blessed him We haue many examples seruing for confirmation of this truth in the new Testament In the first Chapter of Matthew when the virgine Mary was found to bee with child by the holy Ghost and Ioseph was ignorant what to think of it being espoused vnto him hee reasoned with himselfe that either she had committed adultery after their contract or else fornication before the contract in the end of after he had considered this seriously in his mind he resolueth vpon the lesser that she had committed fornication and so belonged to another rather then to him as Matthew 1.19 Ioseph her husband being a iust man and not willing to make her a publike example was minded to put her away priuily to wit that she might be giuen to wife to him that had accompanyed with her In like maner after that Peter had reproued the Iewes because they had denyed Christ in the presence of Pilate preferred a vile cut-throat and murtherer before him killed the Prince of life whom God had raised from the dead and glorified in heauen and set
is against them that do euill to cut out the remembrance of them frō the earth Lastly wee may conclude from hence the Vse 4 wofull estate and condition of all cruell and mercilesse oppressors that grinde the faces of the poore and plucke off their skins from the flesh and the flesh from the bones by their couetous and corrupt dealing who measure hard measure vnto others and pull from them that which is their owne without conscience of sinne or feeling of iudgement to come These are they that regard not how they racke the poore how they ingrosse and withhold the fruites of the earth they make the Epha small and the Shekell great that is they sell little for much lessening the measure and enhauncing the price they sell a little come for a great deale of money they make a dearth without scarsity and bring a famine vpon others when God hath giuen plenty to themselues For it falleth out oft-tentimes when GOD is liberall to vs wee deale niggardly one toward another and when the Lord heareth the heauens 〈◊〉 2 21 22. and they heare the earth and the earth heareth the come and the wine and the oyle and all they heare Israel what a shame nay what a sinne is this that we will not heare one another so that the cry of the poore people is not heard of vs nor the misery of them that are in need is not felt of vs When GOD sendeth fruitefull times and seasons 〈◊〉 28 23. that neither the heauen ouer the head is as brasse nor the earth vnderneath our feete is as iron but that they yeeld their raine and fruite in due season how cometh it to passe that our hearts are as hard as iron as tough as steele and as inflexible as brasse one to another And seeing the eye of God is good to vs how cruell are we that make our eyes to bee euill toward our brother ●se 34. These are they that wish with all their soules for dearth and famine nay they not onely desire it but cause it when God hath not caused it and send it vpon others when God hath not sent it vpon them This is to them a day of ioy and delight of feasting and banquetting of meriment and pastime when as their poore brethren weepe and lament with their wiues and children This is the day that they long looked for and they stirre vp themselues to reioyce and be glad in it that they may enrich themselues with the spoiles of them that are in necessity But let them know that this sweet meate hath sowre sawce belonging vnto it and that a fearefull woe belongeth vnto thē which shall come vpon them and seize vpon their bodies and soules and sonnes daughters and goods and all that belongeth vnto them when they shall be dealt withall by others as they haue dealt and distributed the measure vnto others They shall finde as little fauour in the day of trouble as they haue shewed vnto others in their trouble Consider the example of the rich man in the Gospel when poore Lazarus lay at his gate hee called for mercy in his misery Luke 16 21. and craued the crums only that fell from his table but they were denied vnto him And what was the issue or how sped he in the end We reade in the Parable that himselfe in the end called for mercy at the hands of Abraham but could not haue one drop of water to coole his tongue and quench his heat being tormented in the flames of hell that neuer goe out He would not grant to Lazarus a small request the crums of his table nay the crums that fell from his table Luke 16 24. and he cannot obtaine himselfe a little water not so much that Lazarus might dippe the tippe of his finger in water to giue him thereby any ease refreshing To conclude he that would shew no mercy findeth iudgement without mercy torment without ease heate without cooling and misery without end The time was when he was prayed and sued vnto but would not heare now he praieth and entreateth but cannot be heard All humane things are fraile and vncertaine He that is to day aloft may be cast downe low enough the next day Boast not thy selfe of tomorrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth Pride goeth before destruction and an high minde before the fall for euery one that exalteth himselfe shall bee brought low and he that humbleth himselfe shal be exalted The Lord in the Law forbiddeth to trouble the widow to vexe the fatherlesse and to oppresse the stranger lest he punish those that oppresse them But how wil that be and in what kinde doth he threaten to punish he saith My wrath shall be kinled and I will kill you with the sword Exod. 22 24. so that your wiues shall be widowes and your children fatherlesse See how the Lord threarneth to bring woe vpon them that worke woe to such as are in misery and adde affliction to them that are in affliction and multiply sorrow vpon them that are in sorrow This is the vse vrged by the Prophet I say chap. 33 1. Woe to thee that spoilest and thou wast not spoiled dealest treacherously and they dealt not treacherously with thee when thou shalt ceasse to spoile thou shalt be spoiled and when thou shalt make an ende to deale treacherously they shal deale treacherously with thee God suffereth them to haue their times when he holdeth his peace and letteth them alone to fill vp the measure of their sins howbeit God hath his seasons also and hath concluded and determined what to doe vnto them and how to deale with them the spoiler shall be spoiled the robber shall bee robbed the oppressor shall be oppressed they that do wickedly to others shall haue others to deale wickedly against them This is that which Christ our Sauiour speaketh vnto Peter that went beyond the bounds of his calling and forgatte that the weapons of their warfare were not carnall but spirituall and that the sword which he was to draw out and to fight withall was the two edged sword of the Spirit coming out of the mouth of God Math. 26.52 Put vp thy sword into his place for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword God will set sword against sword and wound against wound yea and life against life In the booke of the Reuelation the Spirit prophesying of the destruction of the Romane Monarchy which oppressed the church and persecuted the Saints of God with cruell slaughter sheweth that it should bee cast downe and passe the same iudgement they gaue against others chap. 13 10. He that leadeth into captiuity shall goe into captiuity hee that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword It is a iust thing in all ages and times with God to recompence tribulation to thē that trouble his Church Indeed we do not see such iudgements executed and such threatenings
to his glory and to the good of others Wee must referre them to him as we haue receiued them of him As all riuers runne into the sea so all our riches should returne to God Thirdly we must be ready and willing to leaue them whensoeuer God shall call for them For hee that bestowed them may he not require them againe when he pleaseth we must leaue them rather then leaue him If we haue this godly resolution then may we perswade our owne hearts that we are thankefull for them Thus it was with Iob 〈◊〉 1.21 when he could say The Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. Fourthly wee must not put our trust and confidence in them and if riches encrease 〈◊〉 10. we must not set our hearts vpon them because then we commit grosse idolatry with them This is a fearefull sinne Many such idolaters it is to be feared remaine stil in great store among vs ●nd albeit idols be banished out of our Churches yet many doe yet set them vp in their hearts This idolatry is so much the more dangerous because it is more close and secret coloured vnder the name of vertue practised by such as detest popery and idolatry and therefore is lesse perceiued and discerned Lastly we must not account these the chiefest riches or the best treasures inasmuch as the vngodly haue commonly the greatest share of them Luke 12. and 16. and therefore we must labour to be rich in faith 〈◊〉 6.11 in loue in righteousnesse in godlinesse in patience in meekenesse and in all good workes Heere is true riches if we adorne our selues with these we shall be truely rich although we be poore Reuel 2.9 and though we haue neither siluer nor gold Acts 3.6 yet he hath giuen vs all things 2 Pet. 1.3 And though we haue nothing at all yet we possesse all things 2 Cor. 6.10 89 And when Moses was gone into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to speake with him 〈◊〉 i● with 〈◊〉 then he heard the voyce of one speaking vnto him from off the mercy seate c. Hitherto of the offerings of the Princes receiued of Moses and giuen to the Leuites Two tribes offered one wagon and euery wagon had two oxen therefore they offered six● wagons and to draw them twelue oxen These were thus distributed ●ret comment in 7. cap. Num. the Ge●shonites had two wagons and consequently foure oxen commited to them the Meratites ha● foure wagons and consequently eight oxen so that they carryed the greatest burdens Touching the Kohathites the third family of the Leuites nothing was bestowed among them because to them were committed the vessels of the Sanctuary which were carryed vpon their shoulders so that they had no need ether of wagons to beare them or of oxen to draw them themselues seruing in stead of them both In this verse we see the oracle of God speaking to Moses We might note heere that God spake diuers wayes to his Church in the old Testament as also that all blessings come from God to vs through Christ the true propitiatory couering our sinnes out of Gods sight and reuealing Gods will to vs that wee should know it and haue benefit by his Priesthood But to passe ouer these we may note that Moses went into the Tabernacle The Tabernacle signifieth his Church There is God to be spoken vnto The doctrine Doctrine is this God is present in a speciall manner in places set apart for his worship True it is God is euermore present wheresoeuer his Church is assembled hee is euery where the heauen is his throne and the earth is his footstoole howbeit wheresoeuer his Church and people are assembled hee is present with his Spirit with his grace and with his blessing and assistance Hence it is that the place appointed for his seruice is called his face Gen. 4.14 This is afterward called the presence of the Lord verse 16. So Psal 46.5 God is said to be in the middes of the City of God And Christ teacheth that wheresoeuer two or three are gathred together in his name he is in the middes of them Matth. 18.20 So then wheresoeuer the place of Gods worship is there is God euer present For first he hath promised to dwell there Reason 1 Where dwelleth the master of the house and where is he readiest to bee found but where he dwelleth as Psal 132.13.14 The Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation this is my rest for euer heere will I dwell for I haue desired it Secondly he is knowne by a speciall worke of his presence sanctifying Reason 2 those that are his by his word heereupon the Prophet saith Psal 87.2 3. The Lord loueth the gates of Sion more then all the dwellings of Iacob glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Thirdly he delighteth in his own ordinances Reason 3 In Iudah is God knowne his Name is great in Israel in Salem also is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion Psal 76.1.2 It is Gods ordinance that we should meete together in one place for this cause hee commanded the Tabernacle to be builded and afterward the Temple these he sanctified for the word for sacrifices and for prayer these doth the Lord loue and in those doth he take pleasure and with them will he vouchsafe his presence This being an euident trueth from hence we must learne so to carry our selues in such places as are sanctified and set apart for his seruice as that wee may call him to bee a witnesse of our sincerity Will a subiect dare to behaue himselfe rudely and vnreuerently in the presence of his Prince or the child in the presence of his father How then ought wee to stand in awe of the Maiesty of Almighty God whose glory is incomprehensible who dwelleth in light that none can attaine vnto Heerepon the wise man saith Eccle. 5.1 Keepe thy foot when thou goest to the house of God and be more ready to heare then to giue the sacrifice of fooles for they consider not that they doe euill No man ought to come before the Lord vnprepared or to set his feete in the Lords house rashly and vnreuerently Were it not vnseemly and vnciuill to enter into a kings pallace with foule and filthy feete defiled with dung and myre or to sit downe at a Princes table with vnwashen hands And is it not more vndecent and vndutifull to come into the house of the great King the King of Kings and to be partakers of his Table before wee haue cleansed and sanctified our hearts This was shadowed out at the giuing of the law by commanding them to wash their garments and to abstaine from their wiues Exod. 19.14 15. Thus they were to be prepared before they receiued the Law Likewise before they could behold the wonderfull workes of God they were spoken to to pull off their shooes because the place whereon they stood was
weaknesse in iudgment Thus also was Ieremy troubled ch 12 1 2. and no lesse the Prophet Habbakkuk ch 1 13. Wherefore lookest thou vpon thē that deale treacherously holdest thy tongue when the wicked deuoureth the man that is more righteous then he This which we esteeme to be a confusion is indeed no confusion and that is in order which we suppose to be out of order For God is a God of patience and long suffering who will take vengeance on his aduersaries and he reserueth wrath for his enemies Naum 1 2. and therefore is the Prophet much perplexed in spirit willed to waite by faith the issue that God will make for the vision is yet for an appointed time but at the end it shall speake and not lie 〈◊〉 37. though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry Hab. 2 3. Then the Caldeans thogh vsed of God as his rod to afflict his people shall be destroied Thus God hath set them in slippery places Ps 73 18. so as they passe away are ●ot they are sought but cannot bee found Ps 37 3● The transgressours shall be destroyed together the end of the wicked is to be cut off ver 38. Lastly from hence euery man must learne Vse 5 to do the duties of his own calling God ha●h set euery man in a certaine calling as it were in a certaine field to till wherein he is to labour We are apt indeed to break out into the callings of other men as if we we●e pinned vp in too narrow a roome This made Salomon to say I haue seene seruants on horses Eccl. 10 7. Prou. 2● 27. and 19 10. and Princes walking as seruants vpon the earth And as God hath set euery man in a calling so must euery man waite and attend vpon that calling whether it be in the Church or in the family or in the Commonwealth In the Church there is order to be obserued in reading in preaching in prayer in the Sacraments that such as be at them may say in their hearts Surely God is in this place and repo●t that God is in them of a truth To this purpose doth Paul deliuer sundry instructions 1 Cor. 14. If any man speake in an vnknowne tongue let it bee by two or at the most by three and that by course and let one interprete 1 Cor. 14 27. Let the Prophets speake two or three let the others iudge v. 29 If any thing be reuealed to another that sitteth by let the first hold his peace v. 30. All Churches of the Saints haue this order v. 33. Let your women keepe silence in the Churches for it is not permitted vnto thē to speak but they are commanded to be vnder obedience as also saith the Law if they will learne any thing let them aske their husbands at home for it is a shame for women to speake in the Church And if it be not permitted vnto them to preach neither is it permitted them to baptize which is an appendance vnto the Ministery Their duty is to be in subiection but to baptize is a part of power iurisdiction So also ought euery one to learne and practise the duties of his calling in the priuate family An house diuided against it selfe cannot stand Math. 12 verse 25. but quickly falleth Luke 11 ver 17. Happy is that house when such as are Gouernours know how to rule and such as are inferiours know how to obey But if one encroch vpon the place of another there followeth much confusion And in the Commonwealth euery soule must learne to bee subiect to the higher powers for there is no power but of God the powers that be are ordained of God whosoeuer therefore resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance of God and they that resist shall receiue vnto themselues damnation Rom. 13 1 2. Without this the whole order of nature will be peruerted A kingdome diuided against it selfe is brought to desolation When he sendeth Magistrates and Princes he meaneth to preserue mankinde by them he striketh a feare of them not only into men but also into beasts Dan. 2 38. Such then as rise against them and labour to set all in a broile 1 Pet. 2 14. and to bring al things to confusion are worse then the brute beasts that are without vnderstanding We cannot honour God except we honour the Magistrate And it is very apparent that they are possessed with the giddy and frantike spirit of vprore and sedition which will not be vnder the rule of such as God hath ordained We cannot honour God except we honour such as he hath set in his place He hath printed his owne image in them and in their persons we obey him And when superiours are no longer reuerenced all will be set in a tumult and turmoile and must needs goe to spoile and hauocke Now if we would speake of the practise of the Church of Rome The Church of Rome is wholy out of order there is no good order obserued among them but the whole ordinance of God is vtterly ouerturned the preaching of the word is little esteemed the word and praiers are in a strange tongue praiers also are made to Saints the vse of the Sacraments is horribly prophaned they permit baptisme vnto women and the Supper they haue quite abolished Christ and Antichrist are not more contrary then the Romish church to the true Churches of Iesus Christ They haue pulled vp the foundation of Christian religion and vtterly denied the faith The Scriptures they make vnsufficient and to containe a maimed and vnperfect doctrine They subiect them to the iudgement of the Bishop of Rome and to the authority of the Church They banish the people from them as if they were very dangerous vnto them They contemne Magistrates claime power to dispose of their kingdomes if they be supposed to be heretikes Ver. 29 30 c. And Moses said vnto Hobab the sonne of Roguel the Midianite Moses father in law We are iournying c. The next point is the conference betweene Moses and this Hobab Conference between Moses and Iethro For inasmuch as the passage thorough so many Mountaines and Deserts was exceeding both difficult and dangerous Moses leaueth nothing vnforethought which might serue for the aduantage of his enterprize and therefore instantly intreated his father in law to accompany them in their way toward Canaan Such as yeeld their helpe to further the Church shal neuer lose their labour promising to him such part and profit of the promised Land as GOD should bestow vpon them True it is Moses had liued long in those parts of Arabia thorough which he was now to trauaile yet the better to assure his passage and to saue so many thousand soules as he had brought out of Egypt which could not be so few as a million it was needfull for him to vse many guides and conducters and therefore he is so
10 11 13. The Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Iacob regard it Psal 94 7. Depart frō vs for wee desire not the knowledge of thy waies what is the almighty that we should serue him and what profit should we haue if wee pray vnto him Iob 21 14 15. Exod. 5 2. Mal. 3 14. In the second commandement the Lord saith that hee would visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children to the third and fourth generation of thē that hate him Exo. 20 5. Howsoeuer therefore they pretend friendship and loue to him as Iudas did to Christ yet their hearts are farre from him they hate him and cannot abide him Reason 1 And no marueile For first they fight against his Lawes and resist his ordinances They wish there were no God no hell no heauen For as they are the friends of God that do his commaundements so doubtlesse they are his enemies that will not submit themselues to his kingdome nor do his wil. Hence it is that Christ saith Luk. 19 27. Those mine enemies which would not that I should reigne ouer them bring hither and slay them before me They that will not haue him to reigne ouer them and in them are his enemies but such are all the vnregenerate therefore they are Gods enemies Secondly they are vnder the dominion of the Prince of darknesse who is Gods professed enemy he ruleth in them to him they giue homage and obedience From him they will not depart and of him they shal receiue their wages So Christ telleth the Pharisies they were of their father the diuel Ioh. 8 44. they did the lusts of the diuell and therefore they were the children of the diuell The God of this world ruleth in them and therefore they can bee no better then the enemies of God 〈◊〉 2 19. for of whō a man is ouercome of the same hee is brought in bondage Lastly the godly that seeke to feare the Lord are both called and accounted the friends of God as Abraham was Iam. 2 23. To this purpose speaketh Iehoshaphat in his prayer 〈◊〉 20 ● Art not thou our God who didst driue out the inhabitants of this land before thy people Israel and gauest it to the seed of Abraham thy friend for euer If then the faithfull be the friends of God doubtlesse the vnfaithful what are they but his enemies Vse 1 T●e Vses First conclude from hence that most certainly God wil be their enemies Wil he hold friendshippe with those that care not for his loue and fauour that professe and proclaime though not in wordes yet in their workes that they are and will bee his enemies No doubtlesse ●e will cast them of● he will renounce them for being any of his people Thus the Prophet speaketh Psal 78 ●6 He smote his enemies in the hinder parts hee put them to a perpetuall shame And Esa 63 10. ●hey rebelled and vexed his holy spirit therefore he was turned to be their enemy and he fought against thē Would any man haue the displeasure of great men Do not all men feare to haue such as are in high place to become their enemies But behold he that is higher then the highest and greater then the greatest is an enemie to all wicked persons as they are enemies to him Who would not therefore make all possible haste to come out of such a wretched condition as pulleth the enmity of God vppon his head and setteth God against him Secondly let no man glory in their fauor Vse 2 friendship or that they are any way nere vnto them or great with them He that toucheth pitch cannot but be defiled with it Hee that is inward with Gods enemies will learne in time to be enemie also W●e must therefore auoid their company and entertaine no familiarity and acquaintance with them They are Gods enemies and they are enemies vnto vs why then should not we be enemies to them The Prophet setting downe the note of the Citizens of heauen maketh the contempt of the wicked to be one Psal 15 4. He in whose eies a vile person is contemned The Prophet Elisha witnesseth and auoucheth euen to the face of Iehoram the King of Israel that had it not beene that he regarded the person presence of Iehoshaphat he would not once haue vouchsafed to looke vpon him 2 King 3 14. Whatsoeuer titles they claime and challenge vnto themselues this is their true title they are the enemies of God and we must haue no society with Gods enemies Thirdly it sheweth the certaine destruction Vse 3 of all the vngodly for they are his enemies and can they then prosper They fight against him and he will fight against them are they stronger then he or able to preuaile against him No in no wise for though hand ioyne in hand and all of them should combine thēselues in one against him yet the breath of his mouth shall blow them away and they shall not stand in iudgement before him To this end they are compared to chaffe which the winde scattereth away Psalm 1. The godly are like a Tree planted by the Riuers side that bringeth foorth his fruite in due season his leafe also shall not wither but the vngodly are not so they are like the chaffe they are of no more reckoning or account with GOD then the chaffe is with men in comparison of the good corne Hence it is also that they are compared to dung they cast vp as soule and filthy a sauour in the nostrils of almighty God as dung doth in the nostrils of men Therefore the Church in their praier against them Psal 83 9 10. desireth God to do vnto them as vnto the Midianites as to Sisera and Iabin at the brooke of Kison which perished at Endor and became as dung for the earth So doth Ahijah tell the wife of Ieroboam that the Lord would bring euill vpon the bouse of Ieroboam and take away the remnant of his house as a man taketh away dung Iob 20 7. till it be all gone 1 King 14 10. Let them therfore magnifie themselues neuer so much lift vp their hornes on high they are of no price they are in no account they are of no estimation with God they are lothsome and abhominable to him Their sins cry aloud in his eares they haue a stinking sauour in his nostrils they are odious in his eies they greeue his heart and can they escape May we not make an vndoubted conclusion from all these things that they shall certainly perish Vse 4 Lastly to shut vp this point it is a duty required of all of vs to seeke to be at peace with God and to giue vnto him our hands or rather our hearts For so long as we stand out against him and bid him open defiance there can be no peace betweene him and vs neither any hope at all of reconciliation For as Deut. 32 41. If he whet his glittering sword and his hand take hold on
Neither doth this any way derogate from the authority of the writings of Moses which were giuen by the inspiration of the Spirit seeing we confesse the Prophets which came after spake by the same Spirit But howsoeuer it be this is certaine that Moses and the Prophets whether they praise or dispraise themselues wrote no otherwise then as they were commanded and appointed Besides these words may be restrained to the cause and matter in hand namely that as by nature he was very milde and gentle so he departed not from his humility though hee were exceedingly prouoked by those whom he least suspected and at whose hands he least deserued it Hee became as a deafe man that heard not and as a dumb man which openeth not his mouth but vsed this as a reason to cast downe himselfe farther before God and as Dauid said I will bee yet more vile in mine owne eyes so Moses saith 2 Sam. 6 2● I will bee yet more milde in mine owne eies And herein was his meeknes seene hereby it was tried Euery man will seeme to be milde when he is not prouoked but when we are teazed and troubled if then we keepe our meeknes we shew that we haue this gift It is no commendation to keepe silence and hold our peace when no mā wrongeth vs but if we can beare with patience the wrongs that are offered vnto vs thē we may assure our selues that this vertue is in vs. We learne from hence That euery one in his owne cause should bee meeke and lowly Doctrine Euery 〈◊〉 should be milde g●●tle in his 〈◊〉 cause ready to put vp wrongs offered vnto them Prou. 24 29. Ro 12 17. Meeknesse is a vertue which adorneth al persons estates degrees as the Magistrate Iosh 7 19 the Minister 2 Tim. 2 25 the master Eph. 6 9. Math. 26 50 the wife 1 Pet. 3 4 a meeke and quiet spirit is of great price and much accepted in the sight of God the hearer of the word of God Iam. 1 21 the seruant 1 Pet. 2 20. To be short it adorneth euery Christian in his generall calling Eph. 4 1 2. The examples of the Saints are many that haue gone before vs. Dauid toward Saul Stephen praied for his enemies Christ setteth forth himselfe as a patterne of this vertue Math. 11 29. and he hath left himselfe an example of it by washing the feet of his Disciples Iohn 13 5 15. and by bearing the reproches of the vngodly 1 Pet. 2 23. Luke 9 5● The reasons to confirme the point follow Reason 1 First God the Father dealeth thus with vs he beareth with patience and long suffering and forgiueth such as repent Secondly Exod. 34● Eph. 4 32 Col. 3 13. vengeance is the Lords it belongeth to him only to his assignes to wit the Magistrates not to priuate persons Such as take the sword into their owne hand doubt of Gods iustice Rom. 12 ● Nah. 1 ● and in effect deny him to be iust Thirdly meekenes is a gift of the Spirit Gal. 5 23 and the contrary is a fruite of the flesh and of our corrupt nature If this be necessary for all then we must Vse 1 learne the nature of it and for this purpose consider what it is the matter whereof it standeth and the fruites thereof Meekne● what it 〈◊〉 Meeknesse is a gift of the Spirit which moderateth anger desire of reuenge forgiuing offences and pardoning iniuries for peace and quietnesse sake so that albeit a man be prouoked by iniuries receiued yet he doth not intend nor enterprize to requite it but brideleth all hatred impatience The matter wherein it must bee shewed is priuate vnto our selues The m● whe●●nesse 〈◊〉 shewed In the wrongs and iniuries that touch our persons we must be as Moses was in this place wee must set his example before our eyes but in matters of God when his glory is impeached or his truth diminished we must be earnest zealous not patient not forbearing not long-suffering but as this Moses was in the case of God Exod. 32 19 27. when he saw the Calfe he waxed hot not meeke wheras in this place in a matter concerning himselfe he waxed meeke not hot So it was with Dauid who held his tongue at his owne wrongs and was as a man that could not heare 〈…〉 14 ●9 and 〈◊〉 yet hee consumed away with zeale against the enemies that forgat Gods word The like we see in Christ our Sauiour 〈…〉 7. ●32 he was as a Lambe meeke before the shearer opened not his mouth yet whē the Temple was abused and the worshippe of God prophaned he made a whip of cordes and draue the buyers sellers out of the Temple 〈…〉 ●1 12. 〈…〉 of ●esse Lastly touching the fruites of it we must vnderstand first that it maketh a man with a patient and quiet heart to submit himselfe to the iudgments of God and not to murmure at thē or to faint vnder them as Dauid beeing in great distresse through Gods heauy hand vpon him doth shew foorth this grace Secondly it maketh a man to beare the iniuries of men with a quiet minde yea to forgiue and forget them Thirdly it maketh a man not onely to beare the iniuries of others but to forbeare to offer wrongs and iniuries vnto others For whosoeuer is patient and meeke in spirit will rather suffer then offer wrong Secondly we ought to labour for the moderation Vse 2 of al our affections especially anger hatred malice rancour and reuenge The motiues to stirre and induce vs hereunto are many and of much force First it is the right way to blessednesse 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 to ●esse Mat. 5 5. If we would be happy or any whit regard this promise we must get the spirit of meeknesse into our hearts expresse the power of it in our liues Secondly we must deale with our brethren as God hath dealt with vs we daily wrong him by our offences and prouoke him by our sinnes yet he beareth with vs shall we then be so vnlike to our heauenly Father as by and by to reuenge the wrongs done to vs and chalenge him the combate that any way toucheth our credite and estimation Col. 3 13. Thirdly without it we cannot heare the word of GOD to our comfort and saluation but it is made vtterly vnprofitable vnto vs Iam. 1 21. Fourthly a soft and milde spirit pacifieth wrath and heapeth coales of fire vpon the enemies head 〈◊〉 1. ●● 2. 〈◊〉 5 32 It must be our wisedome to giue place to wrath Rom. 12 19. It is our duty to be pitifull and courteous and to loue the brethren 1 Pet. 3 8 9. Lastly it moueth vs to cast vp our eye to Gods prouidence and to assubiect our selues vnto it as we see in the examples of Iob and Ioseph who neuer sought reuenge on them that did them wrong but rest in the will and pleasure of
nothing in the world shold trouble vs more then that the law is transgressed God is offended Dauid was not in person stricken with the pestilence thogh it did destroy at noon day and thousands fell at his right hand ten thousāds at his left neither came it neere him yet he was no lesse humbled grieued in his soule 〈…〉 21. 〈…〉 ●g 20.6 〈…〉 ●o 32.25 then if his body had beene stricken with many running sores Hezekiah had an expresse promise from God of adding fifteene yeares vnto his dayes and when his heart was lifted vp glorying in his riches and treasures in his siluer and gold in his armour and ointments in his spices and iewels which he had shewed to the messengers of the king of Babylon the Lord threatned that in his sons dayes all those precious things should be caried to Babylon so that he had peace and truth in his daies 〈…〉 39.8 ●o 32.26 yet he humbled himselfe for the pride of his heart both he and the inhabitants of Ierusalem The reasons are plaine for first this is a Reason 1 signe of true humiliation repentance when we can mourne for sinne being free from the least touch of punishment it is a plaine token that we are touched with a conscience for sin it selfe If only we be cast downe for sin when Gods wrath lieth vpon vs we rather complain of the punishment then cry out for the sin Secondly Reason 2 sin is able to separate betweene God and vs whereby he is dishonoured and what ought to enter deeper vnto vs then to consider how God is dishonoured We may from hence lawfully and truely Vse 1 pronounce a fearefull woe vnto them that are no way humbled when the hand of God lyeth vpon them and writeth bitter things against them doubtlesse we need craue no pardon if we affirme constantly confidently that they are desperate sinners They feare neither God nor man nor hell nor death nor damnation it selfe Esay 1.6 They haue beene stricken from the soale of the foot euen vnto the head there is no soundnes in them but wounds and bruises putrifying sores yet they will not know nor vnderstand the hand that hath stricken them Thus doth the Lord complain by the Prophet that he hath giuen them cleannesse of teeth in all their cities Amos 4.6.7.9.10 11. and want of bread in all their places yet they had not returned vnto him he had withholden the raine from them and yet they returned not vnto him he had smitten them with blasting and mildew yet they returned not vnto him he had sent among them the pestilence after the manner of Egypt and ouerthrew some of them as God ouerthrew Sodome and Gomorrha and yet they returned not vnto him Thus did they run on from euill to worse filled vp the measure of their sins that they could not be reclaimed by any punishments though neuer so greeuous I will propound one famous or rather infamous example to this purpose very remarkable in the Scriptures and that is of Ahaz the Lord brought great affliction vpon him but he sought to the king of Assyria who helped him not but not to the Lord who could haue helped 2 Chro. 28.22 in the time of his distresse he did trespasse yet more against the Lord. This was king Ahaz Woe vnto vs if it be so with vs woe bee vnto vs if his iudgements doe not soften vs but harden vs not better vs but make vs worse The fire purifieth the gold maketh it more perfect but the drosse and refuse it maketh worse then it was before So is it with impenitent persons and all the reprobate whom the Lord will in the end sweep away as dung from the earth Secondly it is our duty to walke in obedience Vse 2 to God principally because he commandeth it not for reward sake chiefly for so doe hirelings who if once the hire ceasse wil work no longer We must be obedient for loue to God his law But is it not lawful to do good in hope of reward Obiect to propound to our selus that end It is lawfull ●nswer Heb. 11.26 but that must not be the chiefe and principal end Moses had respect to the recompence of the reward wherby he did shake off all drowsinesse encourage himselfe in well doing and quicken his zeale in the seruice of God and his people neuerthelesse he had other maine ends that he aimed at The loue of God must constrain vs his cōmandement bear sway in our hearts far aboue all rewards So doth Paul encourage himselfe to preach the Gospel because hee should haue a reward if he did it willingly and a feareful woe hung ouer his head is he did it not 1 Cor. 9.16 17. howbeit in another place he telleth vs that the loue of God constrained him 2 Cor. 5.14 And the Apostle Peter stirreth vp the Elders of the Church to feede the flocke because when the chiefe Shepheard shall appeare they shall receiue a crowne of glory that fadeth not away 1 Pet. 5.4 yet himself was stirred vp by Christ our Sauiour to feed his sheepe and lambes if he loued him Ioh. 21.15 16. So then we must labour to do good though we see no reward euen in conscience of our duty to God And it is lawfull to abstaine from sinne for feare of punishment but chiefly because the righteous God hateth it and the iust Iudge condemneth it Vse 3 Lastly let vs hereby examine our selues what account we make of sinne whether it be greeuous vnto vs as it is sinne or not If it be we may comfort our selues that we haue receiued grace to humble our selues before the crosse commeth for then it is a free and voluntary humiliation If wee leaue sinne because sinne leaueth vs because we cannot follow after it because we must leaue the world because we grow weary of it because it bringeth shame and reproch because we waxe old and our youthfull yeeres are spent this repentance is not thanke-worthy but falleth out sildome to be true repentance This is a forced and constrained repentance and consequently oftentimes vnsound seeldome sincere If we yeeld obedience for conscience sake it is a token of sincerity We see the example of Peter after he had fearefully denyed his master and sworne that he neuer knew the man it pleased the Lord of life graciously to looke vpon him with an eye of mercy and to restore him by the spirit of meeknesse he had no punishment vpon him yet he went out of that place and separated himselfe from that vngodly crue and wept bitterly Matt. 26 75. Happy are we if we can doe the like This humiliation shall bring peace and comfort at the last It is a true note that we haue learned to know sinne ●f our souls can mourn in secret whē we are in health peace at liberty and in prosperity it is a great mercy of God vouchsafed vnto vs and his Name
to cast him out with all his forces it is more able to preuent iudgements threatned or to remooue them when they are inflicted But against this point many things are obiected Obiect 1 first it is said in general that the prayers of many are fruitlesse that they call vpon God but can receiue no answer To this I answer Many make their prayers vnprofitable ●●swer because they pray amisse Iam. 4.3 the fault is in themselues not in God Againe albeit he doe not heare and helpe his seruants presently yet he doth it when the doing of it is better both in respect of his owne glory and our owne good He best knoweth the times and seasons which he keepeth in his owne power Act. 1.7 Heb. 4.16 For this cause hee would not by and by worke a miracle at the request of his mother Ioh. 2.4.7 nor heare the Canaanitish woman at the first Mat. 15. but delayed her sundry times Lastly it falleth out oftentimes that when the faithfull aske one thing he granteth them another fully equiualent to that and sometimes farre better and thus hee heareth them 2 Cor. 12.8 9. Mat. 26.39 Paul prayed against a tentation hee hath grace to withstand and resist it Christ Iesus prayed to hand the cup of the Crosse remooued he must drinke of it but hee hath strength sufficient giuen him to ouercome it God therfore heareth our prayers when he giueth vs as good a blessing or a better though we obtaine not the particular which we desire Obiect 2 Againe it may be said Moses prayed that he might enter into the land of promise and yet was not heard Deut. 3.25 of which we spake before ●●●wer I answer he prayed after a sort against the expresse will of God onely he was ignorant whether the threatning were conditionall Besides we cannot say that this was altogether friuolous and fruitlesse because he obtained to see the Land so that albeit he did not set foot in it yet the Lord shewed him all the land to his great comfort strengthning of faith so that in effect he said or else might say with Simeon Luk. 2.29 30. Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation Obiect 3 Thirdly we heard before that Dauid prayed for the restoring of his child to health whē it was sicke yet the child dyed and he was not heard ●●●wer 2 Sam. 12.16 Answer He was not heard in that one particular howbeit afterward God gaue him another sonne another sonne by the same mother another sonne that sate vpon his throne after him Againe God had mercy on the soule of the child of which he was perswaded because he saith I shall go to him but he shall not returne to me 2 Sam. 12.23 so that his prayer was an acceptable sacrifice to God a profitable sacrifice to himself Obiect 4 Lastly it may be obiected that God who hath no greater to sweare by sweareth by himselfe that though Moses and Samuel stood before him yet his mind would not be toward this people Ier. 15.1 and though these three Noah Daniel and Iob were in the land they should deliuer but their owne soules c. Eze. 14.14 they should deliuer neither sonnes nor daughters ●●●●er verse 16. I answer this is nothing to the purpose for heerein nothing is expresly affirmed but the matter is onely supposed as 1 Cor. 13.1 2. Againe it is said expresly that they should deliuer their owne soules and therefore we cannot say that their prayer is without profit Now let vs proceed to the vses First we may hence conclude that great is the vse vtility and necessity of prayer in the church greater thē of the Sun in the firmament Vse 1 For what haue we left when God is offended and prouoked but this when this is rightly performed it calleth in his wrath gone out against vs. Neuerthelesse the Apostle requireth two things to make our prayers effectuall and of great profit toward vs the one in respect of the person that prayeth the other in respect of the prayer of the person Touching the person of him that prayeth if he desire to haue his prayer heard hee must be iust righteous it is not the prayer of euery man whatsoeuer he be that auaileth much but the prayer of a righteous man that feareth God that beleeueth in Christ that serueth him in spirit and truth and walkes before him in holinesse and righteousnesse of life these are they whose praiers pierce the heauens and preuaile much with the Almighty This is taught in many places of the word Psal 34 15 and 145 19. 1 Pet. 3 10. 1 Tim. 2 8. Prou. 15 29. The praiers of such are like to Iacobs ladder which was set vpon the earth and the top of it reached vp to heauen Gen. 28 12. so do the praiers of the faithfull they are made on earth but they reach vp to the clouds nay to heauen and come into the presence of God himselfe our praiers ascend to him and his graces descend to vs. On the other side as the praiers of the righteous are most acceptable to God profitable to vs so the praiers of the wicked and vnrighteous are most abhominable Prou. 15.8 and 21.27 and 28.9 Esay 1 11. and 66.3 Amos 5.22 Ier 6.20 and 7.22 Ezek. 8.18 Mich. 3.4 Ioh. 9.31 As the one sort are sweet in the nostrils of God and ascend as incense so the other are vnsauoury and stinke worse then dung and mire in his sight Wherefore let not the vngodly men perswade themselues of Gods fauor or think he any whit regardeth the words of their mouthes for such as incline their hearts to wickednesse the Lord will neuer heare them Againe our praiers must be feruent earnest they must be kindled with a burning zeale against all coldnesse they must flow from vnfained faith against all doubting and wauering Luk. 11.6 and 18.3 and 21.36 Ephe. 6.18 1 Thess 5.17 Matth. 15.25 26 27 28. they must be continued with great constancy and perseuerance against all wearinesse and giuing ouer before we haue obtained As then hee that prayeth must be righteous so must his prayer be feruent if he will obtaine any thing at the hand of God Secondly hence ariseth great comfort to Vse 2 the people of God that grone vnder affliction and are ready to sinke downe vnder an heauy burden Let none of Gods seruants despaire of helpe but hope in God who hath left vs this as a plaster to heale all our wounds or as a medicine to cure all our diseases Hence it is that the very infidels by light of nature and other superstitious persons haue confessed this truth that haue not yeelded to the truth of God The Marriners that were ignorant of the true God cryed vnto their gods when the sea wrought and was tempestuous against them Ion. 1.5 and the shipmaster stirred vp Ionah to pray to his God if so be that God would
mastery they wil hardly leaue their hold We shall finde it little better then to wash a Tile or brick and go about in a manner an vnpossible worke they are become a Cart-ropes which are not easily vntwisted Esay 5 18. Or as a threefold cable which is not quickly broken Eccles. 4 12. Cōsider the truth of this in these three things Drunkennesse whoredome and swearing what meanes soeuer are vsed to take these away they are vnprofitable the drunkard will follow it still Pro. 23 35. Such as comit whoredome sildome returne againe and take holde of the paths of life Prou. 2 19. when a man hath once accustomed himselfe to swearing he cannot but sweare at euery word he neuer feareth an oath Custome taketh away feare of sinning where no fear is to offend men are bold to sin when men are growne bold and past shame they haue no sense of sinne You shall heare them sweare ordinarily and horribly and yet they know not of it or at least neuer consider it Rom 2 4. Eph. 4 19. Vse 5 Lastly it behooueth vs to vse all the meanes we can to keepe vs from sinne as wee would do to keepe vs from the pestilence least wee grow secure and senslesse and think our selues in good case when we are neerest to destruction and farthest off from saluation ●nes sanc● or God 〈◊〉 vs 〈◊〉 The meanes which God sanctifieth as so many preseruatiues to worke in vs a conscience of sinne and to stay vs from falling into the same are many First the ministery of the word I range this in the first place both because of the power of it and because it giueth force vnto the rest God commandeth his Ministers to cry alowd and spare not to preach the doctrine of repentance and to tell the people their sinnes Pro. 1 20 21. and 9 2 33. Ephes 4 11 12. Thus hee sent Ionah to the Niniuites Ionah 3 4. Nathan to Dauid 2 Sam 12 1. and the prophets continually to the Israelites 2 Chronic. 36 14 15 Acts 2 37 38. Secondly the benefites and blessings of God which are many and great daily continuall vpon soule and body hee saueth and preserueth vs in him we liue and mooue who reneweth his mercies to vs euerie morning Psal 68 18 Lam 3 23. be daileth loadeth vs with benefits wonderfully Moses telleth the people that the Lord bestowed so many benefits vpon them that they should loue the Lord with all their hearts and with al their soule Deut. 10 12. That they should cleane vnto him and knit their hearts vnto him Iosh 23 8. and 24 14. 1 Kings 14.7 8. Paul beseecheth the Romanes by the mercies of God to offer vp their bodies as an holy sacrifice vnto God Rom. 12 1. God hath made vs to abound with this argument and hath often spoken vnto vs. Thirdly he hath bestowed vpon vs his own Sonne the greatest blessing in heauē or earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of vs Rom. 8 32 He spared not his owne Son but deliuered him vp for vs all Ioh. 3 16. He gaue his owne his onely Sonne for vs his enemies euen vnto the death that wee should be reconciled vnto him If the consideration of this and the earnest meditation in it will not mooue vs to repent of sin nothing in the world will put life into our hard hearts Fourthly the corrections and chastisements which are laide vpon vs Psal 89 31 32. Iob 33 16. The Lord openeth the eares of men euen by their corrections which he hath sealed so that we should humble our selues when we feel them Heb. 12 6 11. It is our duty therfore to mourn for sin betimes which wil bring with it comfort in the latter end Luk. 6 21. Blessed are yee that weepe for ye shall laugh This vse did Dauid make of them Psal 119 71. To this wee may ioyne the chastisements of God sent vpon others though we feele them not ourselues for if we see them or heare of them they should be as so many warning peeces to our selues to call vs to repentance Esay 26 9. Fiftly priuate admonitions and exhortations yea reproofes and threatnings of iudgement when the former will not serue Leu. 19 17. Prou. 9 8. Rebuke a wise man and hee will loue thee Math. 18 15. Iames 5 20. Thus he may be wonne by his brother Psal 141 5. Let vs not therefore refuse this meanes but make good vse of it Lastly the inward motions and inspirations of the holy Spirit which he stirreth vp in our hearts as it is saide of Dauid that God caused his owne heart to smite him 2 Sam. 24 10. and Psal 16 7. We haue all of vs at one time or other some good motions and desires put into our mindes let vs make much of them and entertaine them into our soules lest hee withdraw his Spirit from vs and giue vs ouer vnto our selues 40. And they rose vp early in the morning and gate them vp into the top of the Mountaine saying Loe we be heere and will goe vp vnto the place which the Lord hath promised for wee haue sinned 41. And Moses said Wherefore now doe you transgresse the commandement of the Lord but it shall not prosper 42. Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you c. Heere we haue the behauiour of this crooked and peruerse people hearing from the mouth of Moses the minde of God that they must go backe againe by the way of the red sea and shall wander vp and downe fourty yeares in the wildernesse for the false report which the spies had brought vp of the Land and for their own beleeuing of that report Now they will not obey but will needs goe forward though God had commanded them to retire and returne See heere the peruersenesse of our nature as if we had made a generall conspiracy neuer to obey him but to oppose against him whatsoeuer he say so we euermore striue against that we are forbidden They refused before to goe into the Land now they will needs in a Brauado proceede when they are forbidden When they should go forward thē they will go backward and make them a Captaine to conduct them into Egypt When they should go backward then they will goe forward though they perish for it This is our corrupt nature that which God willeth vs to do we will not do and that which he willeth vs not to do that we will do whereby we see that the lustes of the flesh are enmity against God Againe obserue that when God is not with a people they cannot prosper his presence is the cause of victory 2 Chron. 20 27. If he be gone from vs and goe not foorth with our armies we fall by the sword of the enemy wee cannot stand before them we go out one way and flie before them seuen waies Deut. 28 25. Moreouer we see in the example of this disobedience that God oftentimes punisheth one
confirme our word by testimony from himselfe in his mercies toward them that beleeue in his iudgments vpon the wicked that resist and in preseruing vs because wee haue beene faithful in doing the message for which we are sent Ezek. 33.32.33 Matth. 10.19 20 22 26 28 29 30. It is also a comfort to all such as doe heare aright such as bring foorth the fruit of the Gospel doe not onely receiue the Gospel but they receiue God himselfe 12 And Moses sent to call Dathan and Abiram the sonnes of Eliab which said We will not come vp 13 Is it a small thing that thou hast brought vs vp out of a land that floweth with milke and hony to kill vs in the wildernesse except thou make thy selfe altogether a Prince ouer vs 14 Moreouer thou hast not brought vs into a land c. Moses hauing spoken to Korah the principall conspiratour that first began to roule this stone and nothing at al preuailed against him doth not giue ouer Ier. 5.4 5. but tryeth if any of the rest had any more sparke of grace or feare of God in them But the farther he proceedeth the lesse hope he findeth For Dathan and Abiram refuse to come vnto him Before this they assembled themselues tumultuously before they were called but now being lawfully called they will not assemble Nay they open their mouthes to accuse him of cruelty and treachery both of them heinous crimes but both of them falsely ascribed vnto him Of cruelty as if he purposed to kill them in the wildernesse of treachery as if hee had brought them from a land flowing with milke and hony but had brought them to possesse no land Thus they preferre Egypt before Canaan the place from which they were gone before the place to which they were going And yet this is not the depth of their impiety 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 doe mocke 〈◊〉 and him for I take this answer of theirs to bee a very mocke and scoffe cast out partly against Moses and partly against God which will appeare if we compare the words of Moses to Korah with this answer For Moses had said Seemeth it but a small thing to you to seeke the Priesthood also they borrow his own words and cast them in his owne face Is it a small thing that thou hast brought vs into the wildernesse to kill vs As if they had said Thou tellest vs that it is a great mattter to vsurpe the Priesthood but why dost thou not consider that it is also a farre greater matter to kill so great a multitude And whereas God so often promised to giue to Israel a land flowing with milke and hony they turne it into a iest and tell Moses that Egypt was that fruitfull land as for other land they could see none for their feet to rest vpon ●●●trine ●i●ate ●ers reuile ●aile at 〈◊〉 that re●e them We learne hereby that they which are hardned in sinne and resolued not to giue ouer doe not onely stoppe their eares against all reproofe which notwithstanding is a great sinne but reuile raile vpon and despise such as tell them the trueth and lay before them their faults though they be the Ministers of God that doe it This wee saw before verse 3. in Korah and his company They gathered themselues against Moses and against Aaron and said vnto them Ye take too much vppon you 1 King 18.17 and 21.20 and 22.8 Ierem. 15.10 and 18.18 and 44.16 17. Actes 17.18 Reason 1 The reasons first because as no bitter things are pleasant to the sicke man who would euer haue his humour serued so no reproofes are pleasant to the sinner 1 King 22.7 Euery sinner is as a sicke man and euery reproofe is as a bitter ingredient nothing pleasing to the taste A wicked man desireth to heare nothing but pleasing things to giue a reproofe vnto him is no better welcome vnto him then if you gaue him gall and vineger to drinke Reason 2 Secondly they are fallen into a sweet sleep of sinne and cannot abide to be awaked or any way disturbed and disquieted They loue to goe to hell with ease they would not bee troubled in their iourney But the reproofes of the Minister doe crosse them and therefore they speake all manner of euill against him Vse 1 This sheweth the miserable condition of such as iustifie themselues in their sinnes who being conuicted of a great height of iniquity and impiety doe cast the Ministers reproofe as dung into his face and defend whatsoeuer themselues haue committed A sicke man that is so farre from taking the potion giuen him by the counsell of a learned Physitian that in stead of taking it he doth cast it in the Physitians face may well be thought to be in a desperate condition and must needs perish so it is with men spiritually sicke with sinne euen heart-sicke who are so farre from receiuing a rebuke at the hand of the Minister that they will be impatient toward him and returne rebuke for rebuke vnto his face nay storme and raile at him with opprobrious and contumelious termes it argueth they are forlorne men and in a pitifull and desperate estate It were infinite to speake of all sorts that are possessed with a spirit of contradiction to gainesay the trueth Some find fault because we reprooue such sinnes as are not found in the place where we preach others because by reprouing sinners we would seeme to make the world beleeue that they are more sinfull then other people and thereby make them odious to others Others accuse vs that we reprooue sin out of hatred and malice not out of loue malice to their person not hatred of the sinne But the Minister is to reprooue any sinne that is in the land besides how know they it is not in that place And if it be not we know not how soone it may be We must learne to detest all sinne but how shall wee detest that which we know not and if wee doe know it no man knoweth it so well but hee may know it better and no man detesteth it so much but he may learne to detest it more The assaults of Satan and tentations to sinne come suddenly if we be not forewarned we may be surprised suddenly Againe the reproouing of sin in one place is not the clearing of another or in one person is not the iustifying of another Lastly to accuse the Ministers of reproouing through malice proceedeth in themselues from want of charity 1 King 22.8 Ahab accused Micaiah of hatred because he neuer prophesied good vnto him but euill but indeed the hatred was in himselfe as also he charged Eliah to be the man that troubled Israel whereas indeed it was he and his fathers house 1 Kin. 18.17 18. we are thought to be their enemies for no other cause but because we tell them the trueth Gal. 4.16 Vse 2 Secondly beholde from hence the cause why the Minister of the Gospell is so ordinarily hated of the
the former And therefore themselues teach that infants baptized though they cannot be tryed yet goe immediatly into heauen and receiue the crowne of life But suppose this were a good conclusion yet he plaieth the notable Sophister in that he prooueth not that sinne is not worthy of death which he ought to haue done before hee conclude that some sinnes are in their owne nature veniall For many sinnes doe not bring death which notwithstanding are worthy of death they doe not bring death through Gods mercy but they are worthy of death through their owne merit Wherefore this place of the Apostle being well vnderstood directly ouerthroweth this distinction of sin from whence it goeth about to seeke shelter and defence Vse 3 Thirdly vnder these types and shadowes heere rehearsed touching the water of separation which was made with the ashes of a redde heiffer without spot wherein no blemish was which was brought out of the host to be killed and the Priest must sprinkle her blood seuen times before the Tabernacle of the Congregation c. I say vnder these shadowes the chiefe mysteries of our faith are handled For there was no way of saluation but by Christ from the beginning ● 14 6. and there shall bee no other new way vnto the end He was euermore the doore by which all enter into the kingdome of God ● 10 9. He is the same yesterday and to day and for euer Heb. chapter 13 verse 8. This the Apostle teacheth vs plainely by alluding to these words Hebr. chapter 9 verses 13 14. If the blood of Bulles and Goats and the ashes of an Heiffer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serue the liuing God Heere the Apostle hath reference vnto the redde heiffer mentioned in this place whose ashes gathered together were sprinkled in the waters of separation and serued to sanctifie touching the purifying of the flesh so that such as were shut from the Congregation being sprinkled therewith had free liberty to come to the Tabernacle The truth of all this was Christ Iesus he is this redde heiffer his blood is the true purging Psal 51 verses 2 7. 1 Pet. chap. 1 verse 2. And as the doore postes of the Israelites were sprinkled with the blood of the Lambe so must our hearts with the blood of Christ Now of this type obserue these principall points of religion First that Christ Iesus is true man found in the forme and shape of man That hee might humble himselfe and become obedient vnto death euen the death of the Crosse Phil. 2 verse 8. This is the cause that hee is pictured out vnto vs in the colour of the redde heiffer rather then in any other to put vs in minde of his death and the shedding of his precious blood Thus also he is described by the Prophet Who is this that commeth from Edom with died garments from Bozrah c. I that speake in righteousnesse to saue Wherefore art thou redde in thine apparell and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine fatte Esay 63 verses 1.2 This is no small comfort vnto vs especially in all tentations thogh our sinnes haue a bloody face before his face though they be red as scarlet yet the blood of Christ hath washed them away These are they which came out of great tribulation and haue washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambe Reuel chapter 7 verse 14. Hee hath a feeling of our sorrowes and is touched with our infirmities being made like vnto vs in all things sinne onely excepted Heb. 2 17 18. and 4 15. Secondly we learne from this consideration that the Heiffer must be without spotte and without blemish that Christ Iesus was a pure and perfect offering without any sinne Hebr. chapter 7 verse 26 he was holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the heauens This is our comfort also and consolation for if he had bene sinnefull we should yet walke in our sinnes as an infant walloweth in his blood and the price of our redemption were yet vnpaid Hence it is that Moses doth so carefully set downe this in describing of all sacrifices burnt offerings meate offerings trespasse offerings peace offerings all oblations brought to God must be without spotte and without blemish thereby to teach the people vs to the end of the world that there was no sinne in him that tooke vpon him our sinne For hee was wounded for our transgressions and hee was bruised for our iniquities Esay 53 5. He suffered indeed for vs but the iust for the vniust 1 Pet. 3 18 and 2 22. Thirdly in that this Heiffer was such vpon whom neuer came yoke Verse 2. it appeareth that Christ being at his owne liberty bound to none offered himselfe freely for our deliuerance therefore when such as were sent to take him told him they sought Iesus of Nazareth hee answered If yee seeke mee let these goe their way Iohn 18 8. Hee gaue himselfe not by perswasion of others not by compulsion from others but willingly euen vnto the death Phil. chapter 2 verse 8. Iohn chap. 18 verses 4 5. Esay chap. 53 verse 12. His death was not by constraint for then it could not be meritorious If it had not beene voluntary they could not haue taken it away from him for they often lay in waite for him and sought to put him to death Iohn 10. verses 17 18. What he was able to doe if it had pleased him hee shewed in the Garden for so soone as hee had told them that hee was the man whom they sought for they went backward and fell to the ground Iohn 18 verse 6. He knew all things that should come vnto him yet he went forth vnto them that were come with Lanternes and Torches and weapons to take him verses 3 4. He had therefore power to lay downe his life or not to lay it downe but how then should the Scriptures bee fulfilled But they had no power of themselues to lay hands vpō him as he telleth Pilate chap 19 11. This also serueth for our comfort that Christ died not against his will but willingly and of his owne accord performing obedience vnto his Father Not that his enemies could ouercome him for he ouercame them cast thē backe to the earth with a word speaking And what words did he speake Were they terrible and dreadfull Were they words of thunder No he rored not as a lyon but spake mildely as a lamb I am he Now if the voice of CHRIST by gentle and amiable were notwithstanding so effectuall to throw them all downe headlong to the ground how powerfull shall the angry voice of Christ be to throw his enemies as with a sudden flash of lightning into the pit and paines of hell at the last
Sun the Moone and the Starres should bee pulled out of heauen Deut. 4.19 Ier. 7.18 in as much as the whole hoste of heauen haue beene worshipped as gods So the bread and wine in the Lords Supper should be abolished seeing they haue beene horribly abused to palpable idolatry Besides wee must make a double difference in the deciding of this doubt First betweene the ordinances of God abused to superstition and the inuentions of men abused to superstition The meere deuices of men when once they are abused may be taken away but the ordinances of God which he hath appointed must not bee repealed and refused for the abuse of them Againe wee must make another difference betweene the ordinances of God instituted vpon speciall and particular occasion for a temporall benefit at some one time and such ordinances of God as haue necessary and perpetuall vse which for no abuse are to be omitted and cut off as the Sunne the Scriptures the Sacraments and such like But the brazen serpent was not so wherefore by Hezekiah it was religiously demolished and destroyed albeit at the first setting vp it were a comfortable and profitable ordinance of God for the present good of his people yet being grosly abused and then no necessary vse of it remaining to the Church counteruailing the danger of the continuance thereof 2 Kings 18.4 he is commended by the Spirit of God for his zeale toward God in stamping it to powder and vtter defacing that brazen stuffe Neither did he account it sufficient to withdraw worship from it or to forbid the people to burne vnto it or to send out the Leuites to instruct them better in the seruice of God or to punish such as gaue the glory of God whereof he is iealous to a molten image Esay 42.8 but cast it downe in detestation and the better to auoyde the sinne tooke away the occasion which was as a stumbling blocke before their eyes Verse 4 5. The soule of the people was sore greeued because of the way for the people spake against God and against Moses c. Heere we see how they fall againe into their former sin and murmuring so often noted in this booke and elsewhere as Exod. 15.24 and 16.2 3 and 17.2 3. for the greatnesse of their labour for penury of water for lacke of flesh for want of dainties delicates they distrust Gods great prouidence and for these rebellions they had beene often greeuously punished yet loe they fall into the same sinne againe Their tents were replenished with his heauenly blessings all places did yet smoake with the fire of his iudgements yet beholde there is no ende of their rebellions verifying the saying of the Prophet Can the Blacke-Moore change his skin Ier 13.23 Nazian orat 1 ●n Iulian. or the Leopard his spots then may ye also doe good that are ●●●stomed to doe euill Heereby wee learne four our instruction Doctrine Our weakenesse is such that we are ready to fall againe in●o the same sins which we haue renounced that lamentable is our condition if God leaue vs we fall into the same sinnes againe and againe which before we refused and renounced I say such is our great frailty and weaknesse if we be not stayed and vnderpropped by the assistance of the Spirit that we returne with greedinesse vnto our former sinnes which wee seemed to haue forsaken and abiured This the Prophet plentifully teacheth Psal 78.40 41. How oft did they prouoke him in the wildernes and greeue him in the desert yea they returned and tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel Thus did Pharaoh Exod. 9.37 38. I haue now sinned the Lord is righteous but I and my people are wicked pray ye vnto the Lord for me for it is enough and I will let you goe but when the haile was gone and the thunder ceassed and the iudgement was remooued his heart was hardened and hee continued in his sinne The like we see in Saul who could cleare Dauid more then he His owne conscience rouzed him vp which before was asleep and he confesseth with teares Thou art more righteous then I 1 Sam. 24.17 18 and 26.21 22. for thou hast rendred me good and I haue rendred thee euill thou hast shewed this day that thou hast dealt well with mee for as much as when the Lord had closed me in thine hands thou killedst me not yet the same Saul fell againe into the same sinne and acknowledgeth his owne wickednesse I haue sinned come againe my sonne Dauid for I will doe thee no harme because my soule was precious in thine eyes Wee see this in the example of the Israelites in the booke of Iudges Iudg. 3.7 12 and 4 1 2 and 6.1 2. they committed euill againe and againe they transgressed by idolatry they knew what that sinne was they had experience of Gods seuerity against it they had confessed it and cryed for mercy yet the same people and the children of the same people not taught by their former falles nor admonished by former iudgements nor instructed by former deliuerances doe proceed in the same sinne and prouoke God to punish them by their relapse into the selfe same iniquities Heereunto commeth the allegory and similitude of the vncleane spirit that wandred in the wildernesse and ranged vp and downe without rest but in the end found his house empty Mat. 12.45 46 swept and garnished so that he tooke seuen other spirits worse then himselfe they enter in and dwell there So the places of the Apostle Heb. 6. Do directly offer this point that many sinne againe after the receiuing and acknowledgment of the truth according to the faying of the Wise man Pro. 26.11 As the dog turneth againe to his owne vomit so a foole turneth to his foolishnesse So that except the Lord vphold and hold men backe they fall into the same sins before committed and prouoke him afresh by those sinnes which before they refused Reason 1 For first of all who is the author of constancy and perseuerance in any good worke Is it of our selues Is it of our owne power Nay as euery good giuing and perfect gift is of God so he that in his nature is vnchangeable giueth vs the gift to stand and preserueth vs from falling as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 11.18 19 20. Where he taketh away all occasion of boasting from the Gentiles against the Iewes reasoning from their chargeable condition not being firmely fastened and deepely grounded as the roote it selfe but mooueable and mutable as the boughes and branches knit to the root being easie to be broken off So then God is the author of constancy and of perseuerance Phil. 2.13 Who worketh in vs both the will and the deed not man by his own proper strength who if he be not stayed by him that is the stay and strength of Israel he falleth into horrible sinnes and such as goe against his owne conscience as may appeare very euidently
9. Acts 2 23. Luke 19 8. The reasons First because repentance onely Reason 1 made generally confusedly for knowne sins is neuer true repentance but a common hypocriticall repentance of one resolued and setled to continue in sin not yet touched with a true feeling thereof True it is for secret and vnknowne sins which we in weaknesse ignorance commit the Lord accepteth a general confession as we see in the practise of the Prophet Dauid saying Who can vnderstand his faults Cleanse me from secret sins Psalm 19 12. Thus did the rest no doubt of the godly deal such an acknowledgment of their vnknown sins which they tooke not to be sins did they make in a general manner which were hidden not onely from other men but euen from thēselues This we may say of their polygamy or their marrying of many wiues and other their dail infirmities Secondly we must make a particular account to God at the houre of death when we Reason 2 must pleade guilty or not guilty at his bar A generall reckoning and account will not then be taken neither will the Lord set before vs grosse summes but the account shall be made of specials which may cause the stoutest and strongest men to tremble and quake for very feare of that day All the sinnes of thy former life shal be represented before thee like ● squadron of enemies ready set in battell aray to assault thee to giue in euidence against thee This is taught and witnessed vnto vs by the Apostle Iohn describing the manner of iudgement to which we shall be summoned Reuel 20 12. I saw the bookes opened and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their works It standeth vs vpon in regard of these bookes to make vp our bookes and to looke to our reckonings forasmuch as we must gaue an account of our stewardship Luk. 16 2. Let vs now make vse of this doctrine First Vse 1 we learne from hence that it is not enough to say we are sinners and so to cry God mercy for a pa●g or a brunt and so away or to desire God to forgiue vs our sinnes but we must vncase our selues and vncouer our particular trespasses if we would haue God to couer thē with the precious garment of Christ If a sicke man come to the Physition and onely tell him he is sicke and neuer shew him his particular greefe and disease that troubleth him in what part he is pained and in what sort he is taken he can neuer look to be cured and restored to health If we come vnto God the Father of spirits and Physition of soules and onely say We haue sinned we cannot assure our selues of pardon We declared before that we must cōfesse our vnknowne sinnes generally but our knowne sinnes we must confesse particularly without any excuse or defence without any hiding or diminishing of thē as the same Prophet doth after he had sinned in numbring of the people I haue sinned greatly because I haue done this thing ●hro 21 8. c. Wherfore ●t standeth vs vpon with great greefe heauinesse of heart to confesse our speciall sinnes to giue sentence against our selues and to pray with earnestnes of spirit as for life and death for the pardon of our offences which we haue committed at such and such times in such places with such persons and in such manner otherwise our repentance is only in shew and for fashion sake which is neuer acceptable to God being done in hypocrisie and without a conscionable feeling of sinne in the soule Vse 2 Secondly this particular confession ouerthroweth and ouerturneth sundry corruptions and abuses in the case of repentance It condemneth all impenitent persons such as liue continue in one estate neuer sorrow for any sinne neither at any time turne from it neither haue any feeling or ●●eefe for sinne neither know what it meaneth This is a dangerous estate and a most perilous iudgement For as a sick man is then most dangerously sick when he hath no feeling of his sicknesse and is ready to say he is well and hath small sense or none at all of any paine or perill so sinfull man is then in greatest misery by reason of his sinnes when hee thinketh himselfe to bee no sinner Such one is farre off from mourning sorrowing for sinne from turning from them and returning to God seeing be taketh himselfe to be in good ●ase and to stand in need of no repentance Such were the Pharisies in the dayes of Christ whom he reproueth Mat. 9 12 13. Besides it cōdemneth ceremonial repentance which carrieth an outward shew of dying to sinne but is separated from the inward truth of a sound heart Thus Saul repented 1 Sam. 15.74 and 26 21 and 24 17 18. And Ahab rent his clothes but not his heart hee fasted from food but not from sinne 1 Kin. 21.27.29 Thus the hypocrites repent mentioned in the Prophets when a man afflicteth his soule for a day Esay 58 5. Mic. 6 7. and boweth-downe his head as a bulrush yet looseth not the bondes of wickednesse and therefore immediately afterward he imbraceth his former sinnes and returneth to his old wayes as Phazaoh did who being annoied with the frogs smitten with the haile terrified with the thunders troubled with the grassehoppers pestered with the flyes disquieted with the darkenesse this was the euen● and issue of all as soone as he had rest giuen vnto him he hardned his heart and hearkened not vnto the Lord. This is the common sicknes of the common repentance that men ordinarily practise in these daies whereby they deceiue themselues and their owne soules dealing in hypocrisie dissembling with the Lord catching at the shadow instead of the body resting in shewes instead of the substance Lastly it condemneth all such as haue hardened their hearts in sinne and are growne therby to be past feeling such as cannot discerne betweene good and euill nor tremble at Gods iudgements but draw sin ●o themselues as it were with cart-ropes and worke all vncleannesse euen with greedinesse These haue their conscience seared with an hot Iron and it accuseth them not for any sin but bringeth them into a reprobate minde so that they are so farre from confessing their proper and particular sinnes that they haue no sense or remorse of any sin but are full of all wickednesse and vnrighteousnesse Lastly it behooueth vs to search out our waies to see what we haue left vndone and Vse 3 what lyeth most vpon our consciences and especially bewaile the same otherwise there is in vs no sound conuersion This the Prophet testifieth Lam. 3 40 41. Some are specially inclined to lust vncleannesse some to couetousnes some to surfeiting drunkennes some to enuy reuenge some to swearing blaspheming some to pleasures delights of the outward man now where we are weakest Satan will be strongest where our defence is
Thou art the Lord my God When Christ saith If thou beleeue al things are possible to him that beleeueth Mark 9 23 the beleeuer answereth Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe When God requireth to do his will the beleeuer saith to him againe Loe I come O my God I am content to do it yea thy law is within mine heart Hence we must all learne to abhor abiure the false faith of the false church of Rome which teacheth that to be true faith which generally beleeueth the word of God to be true This is the faith of the reprobates and thus the diuell and all damned spirits may be said to haue faith For euery article of the Creed teacheth vs to beleeue not onely generally that there is a God Iames 2 19 a Sauiour a Sanctifier a Church of God a Communion of Saints a forgiuenesse of sinnes a resurrection of the body to euerlasting life which the diuell and his angels knoweth confesseth and beleeueth but particularly that God the Father is our Father that Christ is our Sauiour that the holy Ghost is our Sanctifier that there is an holy Catholike Church and that we are true members of it that we haue our part and fellowship in the Communion of Saints that our sinnes are forgiuen vs and that we shall rise againe to glory and immortality Hence it is that we pray daily not onely for remission of sinnes to be giuen to the faithfull but for the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes Hence it is that in coming to the Lords Table we receiue Christ as the bread of life and the food of our soules There can be no eating and drinking but by a particular taking and receiuing so can there bee no beleeuing in Christ without a speciall receiuing apprehending of Christ according to the saying of Christ Iohn 6 56 He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him No man is fed by the meate that another man eateth so no man is iustified by the faith whereby another man beleeueth but the iust man liueth by his owne faith Hab. 2 4. For he is the bread of life that came downe from heauen He that cometh to him Iohn 6 35 shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth on him shall neuer thirst Let vs therefore labour for this speciall faith and affiance in the mercy of God and make particular application of the merits of Christ Let vs beleeue in him who is the true brazen serpent or rather the truth of the brazen serpent let vs make him to be our life who is of God made vnto vs to be wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. 10 And the Childrē of Israel departed thence and pitched in Oboth 11 And they departed from Oboth and pitched in the hilles of Abarim in the Wildernesse which is before Moab at the rising of the Sunne 12 They departed thence and pitched vpon the Riuer of Zared 13 Thence they departed and pitched on the other side of Arnon which is in the Wildernesse coming out of the Coast of the Amorites for Arnon is the border of Moab betweene the Moabites and the Amorites 14 Wherefore it is spoken in the booke of the battels of the Lord against Vaheb in the Land of Suph and against the Riuers of Arnon 15 And the streame of these Riuers which goeth downe to the dwelling of Ar lieth vpon the border of Moab 16 And from thence they remoued to Beer the same is that Well whereof the Lord said vnto Moses Assemble the people and I will giue them water 17 Then Israel sang this song Rise vp Well shout ye vnto it 18 O Well which the Princes digged the Nobles of the people digged it by the direction of the law-giuer with their staues And from the Wildernesse they went to Mattanah 19 And from Mattanah to Nahaliel and from Nahaliel to Bamoth 20 And from Bamoth to the Valley which is in the Land of the Moabites at the beginning of the Hilles and looketh toward the Wildernesse In this diuision is contained the third part of this Chapter describing the peregrinations and perambulations of the Israelites in what places they pitched their Tents till they came to the possession of the Amorites Touching these seuerall iournies some are barely and nakedly mentioned because no notable matter or extraordinary and memorable accident fell out therein other are passed ouer and not at all mentioned or remembred because the whole order of their trauelling in the Wildernesse is particularly recorded afterward Numbers chapter 33 how they remoued from place to place and after what manner But vpon some other of their remoouals Moses doeth somewhat more largely insist and as it were make a stay as in the setting downe of two points First rehearsing the boundes by which the Israelites passed into the Land of promise secondly describing the well which they digged for water Touching the first point they are said to haue pitched in Oboth then at the heapes of the hilles of Abarim situate right ouer against Moab then at the brooke Zared lastly at the borders of the Amorites neere to the Riuer Arnon Now because these were at the first the bounds and borders of the Moabites Moses sheweth how by conquest they were lost declaring both who lost them and likewise who wonne thē by the dint of the sword For he telleth vs by the Spirit of God that these places were once in the power possession and dominion of Vaheb who before managed the state and kingdome of the Moabites but Sihon thirsting with ambition to enlarge the boundes of his dominion set vpon Vaheb bad him battell and wonne these Coasts Countries from him Now to continue the memoriall remembrance heereof to posterity there was a publike register made hereof to posterity shewing that the name of those quarters was Suph ●●t 1 1. and declaring that Vaheb had bene the lawfull possessour of thē as Sihon was now the wrongfull vsurper Neuerthelesse as all things else are ouerswaied by an higher power so this battell was fought and directed by the prouidence of God that the Moabites for their horrible idolatry might be punished that Sihon prouoking Israel to battell might be repressed and that thereby an inheritance for the people of God might be prepared and obtained This is the cause why God drew out the swords of these Infidels one against another that the Moabites lost a part of their dominion and the Amorites enlarged their borders Thus the Israelites took nothing from the Moabites neither possessed any part that was in their present possession as Iephtah prescribeth in the booke of Iudges chap. 11 26. For when the King of the Amonites challenged Israel for encroching vpon his ancient dominion deteining part of his Country from him to wit from Arnon vnto Iabbock and Iordan after their departure out of Egypt and required of them to make present restitution Iephtah conuinceth them and disproueth this allegation
things as trauellers not possesse any thing as Conquerers yet nothing at al albeit neuer so right or reasonable and so equall or honest is granted permitted to Gods people Wherefore Sihon either resoluing with himselfe to deale vniustly and vnkindly or suspecting that vnder a faire colour and outward shew of honest dealing they might haue a further proiect and hide the depth of their cunning deuises as oftentimes is vsed at the dyets and consultations of Princes and beeing enflamed with the malice of his owne heart Guicciard hist lib. 11. 19. he dealeth more vnmercifully with thē then the Edomites and Moabites had done and denieth that fauour and friendship which they had found among them Indeed the Edomites denyed them passage thorough their Land as we saw before chapter 20 yet they suffered them to trauell by their Coast Borders and solde them foode for their money Deut. 2 29. The Moabites another enemy permitted them indeed to passe by their Borders but refused to giue them meate or water for mony as appeareth Deut. 23 3. But the Amorites worse then both the former not only affoorded them no commodity but being destitute of all sparkes of humanity denyed thē passage in word and deed In word he answered Thou shalt not passe In deed he vnited his forces he tooke the field and so prouoked Israel to battell who lay still and stirred not against him True it is Israel had Gods purpose reuealed vnto them to subdue them and enter their Land but Moses waiteth with wisedome vntill they were teazed and constrained to defend themselues lest if they had begun and giuen the occasion the enemy should vpbraide them with iniustice and charge them with oppression chalenge them for wrongfull vsurpation Now they deale vprightly euen their enemies being Iudges inasmuch as Nature teacheth euery man to resist force with force Cicer. pro ●lo●e and defend himselfe with his weapon against open and outragious violence The occasion being offered and the fire kindled by Sihon Israel being compelled fighteth against him ouerthroweth him in the battell and inuadeth his Dominion and maketh them all passe vnder the mercy of the sword without compassion sparing neither men Deut. 2 34. women nor children This victory is amplified by a particular enumeration of the Cities which they subdued and they inhabited euen in the head-Citty Heshbon Afterward their right to these places is proued and confirmed For albeit Heshbon properly belonged to Moab as a part of his Dominion yet all that coast euen to the Riuer Arnon was come by conquest into the possession of Sihon King of the Amorites so that the Israelites tooke not away any thing from the Moabites according to the commandement of the Lord Deut. 2 9. Iosh 13 25 but from the Amorites whose whole Countrey was alotted to his people GOD scattering the people that delight in war and take pleasure to shed blood This is that mercy of God which Nehemiah magnifieth chap. 9 8. Thou madest a Couenant with Abraham c. And Psal 78 55. Hee cast out also the heathen before them c. Thus did God shew himselfe to be the Shepheard of Israel that led his people like sheepe and brought them into the Borders of his Sanctuary which his right hand had purchased Here was the beginning of all comfort heere they began to set down their rest heere they saw the first fruites of their labours assuring them that as God had begun to performe his promise so he would continue to finish his owne worke Furthermore their right in possessing of these places is declared by a publike song of triumph and victory as it were a Trophie fet vp which was made by the Poets of that time to make knowne to posterity the victory of the Israelites and their lawfull claime to those Cities which they had won by the dint of the sword This Poeme was not a song made by the Amorites as many suppose but composed by the Israelites as appeareth by these reasons First we see it to be a most common and vsuall thing with the people of God when they had obtained any victory or receiued any benefit to leaue some token monument of it to posterity to acknowledge by whose hand they haue preuailed This we see in the words going before ver 17 18 where they sang a song of thankesgiuing for the Well which God had granted and they had digged Secondly it is no ordinary and vsuall thing with God to alledge the sayings of heathen Poets and so to sanctifie their prophane writings to be holy Scriptures True it is the Spirit sometimes produceth a short sentence to conuince the heathen by their own Prophets but neuer citeth an whole Poeme as Moses doth in this place Thirdly in the 30 verse it is saide We haue destroyed them vnto Nophah and subdued Sihon that had conquered the Moabites by which meanes Israel came to dwell in the Cities of the Amorites Fourthly here is pronounced and concluded the wofull and wretched estate of Moab ●g 11.33 for their idolatry and trusting in their god Kemosh which had deceiued them and deliuered them into the hands of their enemies which agreeth not to the Amorites as deepe in the sinne of idolatry as the Moabites and worshipping the same Idoll the Moabites did For Kemosh was the god of the Amorites Ammonites and Moabites Therefore as the Prophet saith ●y 2 11. that the Gentiles will not change their gods so it may be truely said they will not reproch and reuile their gods Thus then we see this was one of the songs of the Israelites most likely to bee penned and published by Moses himselfe who as he was brought vp in all the learning of the Egyptians ● 7 22. so he was cunning in this faculty as appeareth in other places of his works This Song or Sonnet remaining as a Testimony and witnesse of their iust conquest to ages succeeding setteth downe both the vsurping of the Amorites the recouery of those places out of the hands of the Amorites by the Israelites First it sheweth how Sihon inuaded the Moabites and exhorted his army to play the men appointing Rendevous place of meeting to be at Heshbon willing them to resort thither to begin the battell stirring thē vp to repaire the breaches of that City which Sihon made the head and mother-city of his kingdome and then inuading other parts of Moab which were wasted consumed with fire and sword Thus he seemed to haue most reason and right ● A●al ● who had greatest strength They got their superiority by cruell iniustice and wrong vsurpation the distressed Moabites chusing to sell their liues in the field with honor seeing they could not enioy them with safety in their Cities Sihon then beeing thus Conqueror the Poet bringeth him in insulting ouer his enemies vaunting in his owne strength and ascribing the victory to his own power their god Kemosh the
no gifte of perswading is read in any prophane author but the same is found in the Scripture as in a plentifull store-house yea with farre greater grace and excellency then any where else let vs acknowledge the maiesty of the word and reuerently esteeme of it aboue all other Writings Secondly seeing Poetry is a good gift to Vse 2 be reuerenced and receiued for the antiquitie and worthinesse it serueth to reprooue those that abuse this gift to the reproch of the Art it selfe and to the dishonor of the giuer And howsoeuer many among the Heathen excelled in this kinde and haue lighted a candle to others yet was this Art no where more disgraced and disgraded from the former glorie and ancient estimation thereof then amongst themselues For whereas Poetry at the first was vsed to expresse some memorable accident and record some great worke to posterity that it might bee better remembred and regarded they turned these vses into wrong ends changed the truth into horrible lies For ●e the works Homer Vir● O●d o●ers what are all the Poems of the Infidels vnbeleeuing Gentiles but a detestable mingling of histories with Fables of trueth with lies of deedes done with their owne dreames and inuentions And whereas of olde time there was no difference between a plaine story and an artificiall Poem but in the manner of penning and enditing the one being easie and euident the other curious and cunning more exquisite and laboured they haue set the one against the other and opposed them as contraries ● f●mil epi. ● lib. 1. Orator ●t de Art 〈◊〉 charging an historie to speake the truth all the trueth and nothing but the truth but discharging a Poeme of this burthen They require the foundation to be some deed done indeed and then build vpon it Fables and falshood so that the plaine song being a truth the descant shall be a lye Neither hath this Noble Science beene abused onely among the Gentiles but the remnants of it haue crept into the Schooles and defiled the pens of many Christians We must feek to restore its ancient honor and being a graue matrone wee must pull from her the Ornaments and deckings that do not become her Therefore let not yong men addicted to this Art abuse this gift but vse it to the praise of God and to the publishing of his works Let them in their Poems shew themselues Christians and manifest themselues to differ from the vnbeleeuing Gentiles that know not God Let all songs and Sonets of loue or rather Lusts all scurrilous iests and Satyricall Pamphlets be banished from vs which are not the fault● of Art but of the Artist not of Poetry but of the Poet not of the matter but of the man Let al inuocation of strange gods and heathenish inducing of many gods be odious to our eares speeches vsuall among many but not seasoned with salt as they ought to be Wee haue liberty enough to follow the verse without wandering into such licentiousnes wherunto the Apostle directeth vs Ephes 4 29. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouths but that which is good to the vse of edifying that it may minister grace vnto the hearers Lastly seeing the Art of Poetry is lawfull Vse 3 and lawdable let vs praise God and sing to him in spirituall songs penned by the Prophets and endited by the Spirit of GOD for the instruction and direction of the Church not onely in the booke of Psalmes but in other places of the Scripture And surely it were a worthy and profitable labour tending to the aduancing of the glory of God seruing for the comfort of the Church if all the songs of prayer and praises which are found in the Law and the Prophets were turned and tuned for the ordinary vse of our assemblyes and ioyned to the booke of Psalmes as the song of Moses of Miriam of Deborah of Esay of Hezekiah of Habakkuk of the Canticles and Lamentations together with some others in other places to bee found that wee might haue plentifull matter and perfect direction to lift vp our hearts and voices vnto God vpon all occasions that shall be offered vnto vs. Hereunto commeth the exhortation of the Apostle Paul Col. 3 16. Let the word of God dwell in you plentifully in all wisedome teaching and admonishing your owne selues in Psalmes Hymns and spirituall songs singing with a grace in your harts to the Lord. This duty of singing Psalmes is not proper to the Church and the publicke assemblies of the Church but an exercise of our Religion to be vsed publikely priuately whether we would giue thankes for some deliuerance or craue forgiuenesse of sinnes or desire restoring of health or craue the graces of Gods Spirit which wee want True it is there are many abuses of this part of Gods seruice as also in the rest yea euen in singing the Psalms of Dauid 1 Cor. 14 15 26. as vsing of an vnknowne tongue without vnderstanding the spending of too much time shutting out thereby the preaching of the word and hindering other exercises of our Religion as we see it vsuall in the Church of Rome where the chanting of their Mattins and Masses hath iustled out the publishing of the Doctrine of the Gospel making the deed done to be meritorious auaileable for the forgiuenesse of sinnes singing many sinfull and superstitious things touching the intercession of Saints and such trumpery bringing in their broken Musicke that nothing can be vnderstoode any more thē if it were in a strange tongue an vnknown language whereas al things should be done to edifying in the Church of God Notwithstanding all these abuses we must maintaine the right and holy vse of singing in the Church and in our houses which is an exercise excellent in it selfe acceptable to God profitable to our selues and those that heare vs. The Apostle exhorteth the Ephesians Not to be drunke with wine wherein is excesse but to be filled with the Spirit spe●king vnto themselues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs making melodie to the Lord in their hearts Ephe. 5 18 19. Likewise the Apostle Iames chap. 5 13. Is any among you afflicted Let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalmes This was the practise of Paul and Silas while they were in prison They praied at midnight and sing Psalmes vnto God Acts 16 25. Let vs follow these examples of godly men and take vp this exercise better then we haue done beeing a notable gift of God which duty albeit commanded by precept and commended by example is greatly decayed in all places and among all estates of men in stead whereof prophane songs and beastly Ballads are come in places filling and defiling all shops houses and meetings iustling out the other to the decay of Religion to the disgrace of the Psalmes to the corrupting of youth to the contempt of the word and to the dishonour of God They that spake in Prouerbs say
faith is vaine ye are yet in your sins 1 Cor. 15 13 14 17. So if there be no beleef in Christ nor truth in religion nor knowledge of God nor saluation of soules the foundation of al go●lines is shaken and the word of God is made of none effect Wherefore those Atheists and godlesse persons which hold in iudgment affirme in words auouch in disputation contrary to Scripture Nature Lawes and common reason that there is no God at all ought worthily according to their deserts to dye the death Murtherers and malefactors theeues and robbers for their owne offences haue the reward of death are carryed to the place of execution of how much sorer punishment suppose you shall they bee worthy that cōmit high treason against God murther the soules of men tread vnder foote the Son of God and count the blood of the Testament as an vnholy thing and do despite the Spirit of Grace Of which sort there are too many that finde greater fauour then such as better deserue it And first the vniuersality of Religion Reasons against Atheisme dispersed ouer all places entertayned of all persons embraced acknowledged at all times prooueth it to be no deuice of man Wee haue read and heard of diuers and sundry Nations and people that haue liued without Lawes without Magistrates without Mariages without Garments without Houses without ciuility and common honesty wandering nakedly vppe and downe in holes and caues of the earth but neuer of any Nation or people so barbarous and beastly from East to West or from North to South Cicer. de nat ●●or lib. 2. Os●r l. 3. de rebus gest Emma which were without God without Religion without worshippe without prayers or without sacrifices Albeit there bee indeede diuersities and differences in theyr Religion beeing destitute of the knowledge of the true God but there hath bene no Region without some Religion which prooueth it could bee at the first entertained and afterwards retayned by no compact or conspiracy amongst men Besides wee may reason from the spirituall Natures that reason and experience teach namely that there is a diuell and his angels set vpon mischiefe and going about seeking whom they may deuoure Arist Top lib. 6. cap. 3. Contraries compared together do receiue light and luster one from another as blacke layde to white and vertue matched with vice are better seene and manifested what they are All lawes diuine and humane all Nations both Iewes Gentiles Cicero de legib lib. 1. euen the twelue Tables of the Romanes decreed against witches and sorcerers which haue familiaritie with diuels and worke by euill spirits And we see by Witches and Coniurers that sathan is stronger and mightier then wee If then the deuill haue a spirituall nature and be our enemy hee would haue brought desolation and destruction vpon vs had there not beene a Soueraigne and superiour power aboue him to restraine his will and to keepe him short But this superiour power can be nothing else but God himselfe otherwise how is it that we are not all destroyed Why doe wee not perish and come to confusion if we stoode at the mercy of this our great aduersary Where as this is our comfort that his power is limited and that he can doe nothing farther then he is licensed and allowed All the hayres of our head are numbred Hee cannot hurt a Sparrow or a Fly without the will of God Hee could not touch the body of Iob before he was permitted Iob 2. verse 6. Hee could not enter into the Swine before he was suffered Matth. 8 verses 31 32. He cannot runne out at his owne liberty but is restrained and reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darkenesse vnto the iudgement of the great day Iude 6. Thirdly men in all dangers by sea land in time of sickenesse and in extremity of their distresse by the very light and instinct of nature call vpon God which sheweth that we haue naturally a common notion that there is a God Wee see it not onely in the Children of God 1 Kings 22. verse 32 as Iehoshaphat when by his confederacy and friendship with Ahab he was in danger of sodaine death hee cryed vnto the Lord for helpe in the battaile but in the very Infidelles when a mightie Tempest threatned to ouerwhelme them in the Sea the Marriners being sore afraid they cryed euery man of them vnto his God Ionas 1. verse 5. These principles written in Nature ingrauen in the heart and sealed vp in the conscience of man remaine to giue light as a flash of lightning in the darke night and teach a difference betweene good and euill betweene right and wrong to those that neuer knew the law of God and to such as thorough prophanenesse regard not his wayes Ham and Canaan being both euill men and scoffers at godlynes Genesis 9. verses 22 25. and 23. verse 42 saw it was vncomely and vndecent for their father to ly with his shame vncouered being ouercome with wine Esau though a wilde and wicked man yet hee would not kill his brother Iacob till the dayes of mourning should come for the death of their father Absolon though hee wrought wickednesse in the sight of God and rebelled ●gainst Dauid his Father yet rebuked vnkindnesse and vnthankefulnesse in Hushai toward his friend 2 Sam. 16. verse 17. These generall notions as sparkles kindled in our hearts by the gift of Nature serue to set forth the difference betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse and to make men altogether without excuse Because when they knew God they glorified him not as God Rom. 1 20 21. Lastly not to vse in an vndoubtfull poynt vnnecessary proofes nor to prooue that the Sunne shineth at noone day Er●s● conci● which were to make a question of that which is without question euery man carrieth a witnes about him to wit his owne Conscience He that hath committed any sinne as blasphemy rebellion murther adultery fornication robbery and such like albeit he can so smother and conceale it that no man liuing know it or can accuse him of it yet oftentimes hee hath a greefe and griping in his Conscience and feeleth the very flashings of hell fire the which prooueth inuincibly that vse which now we vrge against all Atheists whatsoeuer that there is a God before whose iudgement seate hee must one day stand and answere for his fact and fault which hee hath so heynously committed Neyther let any say that this commeth thorough the guiltines of the Law shame of the world and feare of punishment for let them haue security giuen them from all Law a discharge from all reproach and freedome from all punishment yet a murtherer should neuer bee quyet his Conscience would euer beate and whip him trouble and torment him affright and follow him vp and down in all places and open his own mouth to betray and bewray himselfe For GOD hath many wayes to discouer most secret sins and most close dissembling
Name If he deliuer his will to his enemies he will shew himselfe to his friends If he vouchsafe to instruct such as be strangers doubtlesse he will open himselfe and reueale his secrets to those that be Citizens of his kingdome If the seruant bee taught by him who doth not know what his master doth he will not passe ouer his owne sonnes who shall be heyres of his inheritance that he hath prepared for them that desire the knowledge of his wayes For he will fulfill the desires of them that feare him hee also will heare their cry and will saue them Psalm 145 19. Thus did Dauid assure his sonne Salomon standing by him when he was going the way of all flesh If thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer 1 Chron. 28 2. 2 Chron. 15 2 3. So when the noble Eunuch repayred to Ierusalem and gaue himselfe to reade the Scriptures that his knowledge might be encreased the word of God dwell plentifully in him the Lord sent Philip vnto him Acts 8.35 who ioyned himselfe to his Chariot and expounded vnto him the way of God more perfectly Likewise when Cornelius the captaine Acts ● a deuout mā and one that feared God had prayed to God for further knowledge that God who had begun his good worke in him would bring him to perfection he is directed to send for Peter who should tell him what he ought to do verifying the saying of Christ Math 13 12 and 25 29. Vnto euery man that hath it shall be giuē and he shall haue abundance but whosoeuer hath not from him shall bee taken away euen that hee hath Would we then know why we are ignorant in the wayes of God weake in faith bare and barren in the gifts of God We do not beleeue the promises of God offering himselfe to those that seeke him and opening to those that knocke at his gate neyther hunger and thirst after his graces nor know the want of them in our selues or others Fourthly let vs follow the example of God Vse and do good to those that are euill He maketh the Sunne to rise vpon the euill and the good hee sendeth raine on the iust and vniust so should wee do good to all although especially to the houshold of faith Math. 5 45. Gal. 6 10. Let not theyr vnworthinesse hinder our goodnesse but labour that our light may so shine before them that we may gaine them to the faith heape coales of fire vpon their head Let vs admonish and exhort them with all patience and long-suffering that they may come out of the snare of the diuell of whom they are holden Let vs preach the Gospel in season and out of season and 1 Cor. 9.22 take all occasions to win those that are without that by all meanes we may saue some What though they be not turned and conuerted to God by the preaching of the Gospel we seeme to bestow our labor in vaine Many are enlightened of God that are not saued they attaine to knowledge that neuer grow to faith We are the sweet sauor of God as well in them that perish as in them that are saued to the one we are the sauour of life to life and to the other the sauour of death to death 2. Cor. 2 15 16. And this must serue and suffice to comfort vs and strengthen vs to beare out the heate of the day the weight of the burden that lyeth vpon our shoulders to consider that howsoeuer our persons be entertained our doctrine receiued Esay 4● and our strength bee wasted and consumed in vaine yet our iudgement is with the Lord and our worke with our God who will reward vs according to our labour Lastly Vs● seeing GOD maketh knowne his will and word to wicked and prophane men who are sundry wayes enlightened with many gifts of the Spirit let vs not rest in seeking after common gifts but labor to be partakers of such as are proper to the elect and doe alwayes accompany saluation and eternall life This is it that the Apostle exhorteth vnto 1. Cor. 14 where mentioning diuers gifts of the Spirit as the gift of knowledge the working of myracles the word of wisedome the power of healing the discerning of spirits the diuersity of toongs the interpretation of tongues all wh●ch are common to al sorts of men both good bad he addeth as the vse that now we teach perswade But desire you the best gifts and I will shew you a more excellent way 1 Cor. 14 30 31. Let vs not therefore content our selues with such knowledge and illumination as the reprobate and vngodly haue but let vs couet such as are peculiar and proper to the elect that we may be the Temples of the holy Ghost that the Spirit of God may dwell in vs not for a time but for euer and dispose our hearts as the owner of the house and gouerne it wholly after his owne will Let vs labour to feele a certaine knowledge of our reconcilation to God in Christ 〈◊〉 3. 〈…〉 5. 〈◊〉 25. 〈◊〉 6. the gifts of regeneration a dying vnto sin arising vp to newnesse of life the grace of hearty praier comfort in distresse and such like which the elect of God finde in some measure wroght in them These are infallible notes of election these are the best gifts that the Apostle vrgeth these are such fruites of the Spirit as wee must delight in and follow after If these be in vs do abound we shall haue that peace of conscience through them that passeth all vnderstanding if these bee not in vs whatsoeuer knowledge we haue beside though we haue tasted of the heauenly gift beene enlightened by the Spirit beene partakers of the holy Ghost tasted of the good word of God and receiued the Gospel with ioy wee shall finde no more sound comfort in them then Balaam did in this place by the reuelation which he had receiued from God 15 Balak yet sent againe moe Princes and more honorable then they 16 Who came to Balaam and said vnto him Thus saith Balak the sonne of Zippor Be not thou staide I pray thee from comming to mee 17 For I will promote thee vnto great honour and will do whatsoeuer thou sayest vnto me Come therfore I pray thee curse for me this people 18 And Balaam answered and saide vnto the seruants of Balak If Balak would giue mee his house full of siluer and gold I cannot goe beyond the word of the Lord my God to do lesse or more 19 And now I pray you tarry ye heere also this night that I may wit what the Lord will say vnto me more 20 And God came vnto Balaam by night and saide vnto him Forasmuch as men are come to call thee rise vp and goe with them but onely what thing I say vnto thee that shalt thou do 21 So Balaam rose vp early
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
the Saduces Luke 20 27. Actes 23.8 which denyed the rising againe of the body and the subsisting of the soule after the separation For when Paul cryed out in the Councell I am accused of the hope and resurrection of the dead there was a dissention betweene the Pharisees and the Saduces for the Saduces say That there is no resurrection neyther Angel nor spirit but the Pharisies confesse both These Christ confuteth and conuinceth in the Gospel by the testimony of Moses I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Matth. 22 32. Exodus 3 6. And if these heretickes and enemies of God would not for conscience sake yeelde to this truth and subscribe with heart and hand vnto it yet at least for the profit of it and the excellency aboue their beastly dotage about the mortality of the soule they should embrace it and cleaue vnto it For it is surer and safer to beleeue as the Church holdeth For if this opinion bee true that the soule is immortall It is mor●ty le●●ger to b● the soul● be imm● then m● whosoeuer beleeueth it not in heart and confesseth it not with the mouth shall suffer eternall punishment and beare his condemnation If it should not be true which we speake onely by supposition the doctrine being most certaine there is no daunger after death to haue holden the immortality of the soule in the time of our life forasmuch as if the soule do not remaine it cannot be reproued of error nor punished for sinne Againe it is most honest and honorable to hold the dignity of our soule receyued of God and so to thinke reuerently and religiously of it resembling it to God the Angels not to debase and disgrace it making it like vnto the beasts and vnreasonable creatures Lastly it is better to beleeue the soules eternity as fitter to stirre vs vp to liue soberly righteously godlily in this present world and to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts to minde heauenly things that we may bee holy as our heauenly Father is holy For if we beleeue our selues to be immortall Math. 16 26 wee will haue a greater care of vertue a greater respect to the reward a greater conscience of Religion a greater feare of sin and of the punishment due to sin So then as there is greater verity so there is more safety security to hold the immortality of the soule against the erroneous opinions of all hereticks that haue desperately and damnably denyed the same to the decay of piety dishonor of God and vnto the vtter confusion of their owne soules Vse 2 Secondly acknowledge from hence a great difference betweene the soule of man and the soule of a beast Euery beast and liuing creature hath a kind of soule which perisheth with the body so that he which killeth the body of a beast destroyeth also the soule which ariseth from the mixture and temperature of the Elements But man was made after the image of God Gen. 1 26. according to his likenesse Eph. 4 24 to resemble him especially in his soule which is of an heauenly nature albeit not of the substance of God This difference and distinction Moses teacheth and obserueth Gen. 9 4 6. But the flesh with the life thereof I meane with the blood thereof shall ye not eate who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood bee shed for in the image of God hath hee made man Where hee maketh an opposition betweene man and beast and between the soule of man and beast Man was made in his soule to resemble his Maker and Creator but the soule of a beast is in his blood And therefore God charging his people to abstain from eating of blood euen of cleane beasts vseth these two reasons Leuit. 17 11 14. First because theyr blood is the seate of the soule secondly God hath commanded it to be vsed in attonemēts for sinne as a type and figure of the blood of Christ The soule of man is a substance the soule of a beast is an accident whose being is alwayes to be in another The soule of man is a spirit the soule of a beast is a quality arising of the matter of the body vanishing also with the body and hauing no beeing at all out of the body Thirdly see here a difference between the Vse 3 soule and the body of a man For as this truth teacheth a distinction betweene the soule of a man and the soule of a beast so it maketh a diuision betweene one part of man and the other Man consisteth of two parts of the bodie which is visible and of the soule which is inuisible The body dyeth and is laid in the graue for as it was taken out of the earth so it returneth to the earth againe But the soule as wee haue proued by diuers Scriptures and confirmed by strong reasons neuer dyeth or decayeth Therefore albeit we be taught in the Articles of our faith to beleeue the resurrection of the body yet wee are neuer taught to beleeue the resurrection of the soule For a rising vp presupposeth first a falling down The soul falleth not into the iawes of death nor goeth downe into the house of the graue This difference the wiseman teacheth Eccles. 12 7. Dust returneth vnto the earth as it was and the spirit returneth vnto God that gaue it The dwelling place of the body is the earth the habitation of the soule is with God The soule neuer dyeth nor decayeth nor sleepeth nor riseth againe but is a spirituall substance and inuisible hauing neyther flesh nor bones liuing and abiding for euer as wel out of the Tabernacle of the body as in the same But the body is an earthly and visible substance consisting of sensible parts neuer liuing nor breathing without the soule Wherefore these abide together as two the nearest and dearest friends reioycing together sorrowing together and alike affectioned one toward another yet the day of separation commeth and will come when a departure must be made of these two that cannot alway continue together the body must returne to the earth the soule must bee carryed vnto God the eternall Iudge who immediatly wil passe the sentence of life or death vpon the same Fourthly we must be careful to liue a godly Vse 4 and vpright life that when we shal goe the way of all flesh our soules may bee receyued vp into the heauenly habitations and bee carryed by the Angels into the glorious presence of God There is no man if he bee to stand before Princes and to come into the presence of great men but prepareth and maketh himself ready for that purpose When Ioseph was to appeare before Pharaoh Gen. 41 14. albeit he were called hastily and brought sodainly before him yet he shaued his head and changed his rayment How then ought our care to be increased and how ought we to work out our
testimonies of the fauour of GOD blessing them both with spirituall blessings in heauenly things and with temporall blessings in earthly things In regard of benefits belonging to the life to come and accompanying saluation hee sheweth diuers priuiledges bestowed vpon them concerning their iustification sanctification regeneration and comfortable vse of the Word vouchsafed vnto them Touching their iustification hee saith Hee seeth none iniquity in Iacob and hee beholdeth not transgression in Israel Whereby hee meaneth not that they were freed from sinne for if wee say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and there is no truth in vs 1. Iohn 1 8. but that he imputeth it not he layeth it not to their charge but he couereth it and freely forgiueth it Hee doth not charge them with it but discharge them from it Hee seeth their sinnes well enough with the eyes of his knowledge but because they are couered in Christ 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 31. he will not looke vpon them with the eyes of his iudgment he beholdeth them as wel able to discerne them but not with a purpose to reuenge them Touching their sanctification he saith The Lord his God is with him not onely with his presence but with his grace and Spirit of sanctification For if wee speake of the presence of his essence and being hee is with all persons and filleth all places This Salomon in his worthy and excellent prayer 1. King 8 27. confesseth to GOD saying Is it true indeed that GGD will dwell on the earth Behold the heauens and the heauen of heauens are not able to contain thee how much more vnable is this house that I haue built Heereunto accordeth the saying of the Prophet Ieremy Ier. 23.24 Can any hide himselfe in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Losd Doe not I fill heauen and earth saith the Lord How then is this made a speciall priuiledge and prerogatiue bestowed on the people of GOD to haue GOD with them which is the common condition of all places and persons I answere that in respect of his Natute and being he is no more in heauen then on earth with the godly then with the vngodly in the Church then out of the Church but in respect of his effects and the presence of his grace fauour and protection For as the soule of man is wholly in the whole body and sitteth therein as a Queene ruling in euery member and part of the body in respect of the essence thereof and is no more in the head then in the hand nor in the hand more then in the heele but it is saide to bee especially in the head and in the hart because there it exerciseth most worthy and weighty effects so God is present euery where in the world euen in the wicked and reprobate in respect of naturall gifts of preseruation knowledge and such like But he is present in the godly in more speciall manner by more speciall graces of regeneration and sanctification of faith and repentance ruling them by his Spirit pardoning their iniquities and remembring their sins no more so that howsoeuer he may leaue them for a season to see their owne infirmity and the necessity of his mercy yet he neuer totally and finally departeth from them but returneth in compassion toward them and followeth them with his louing kindnes vntill he haue brought them to eternall life In these respects he is said Numb 14 42. 2 Chro. 5 7. to be farre from the wicked and not to come neare their habitation Touching the next priuiledge which is his word he saith The ioyfull shout of a King is among them that is he ruleth them by the Scepter of his Word which soundeth shrill among them as the blast of a trumpet whereby is wrought in them both faith and sanctification Touching temporall blessings he painteth and pointeth out the long experience which his people haue had of his mercy in sauing them and of his power in ouerthrowing their enemies This he sheweth by a particular example of his wonderfull deliuerance from the tyranny of the Egyptians who could not holde them in that slauery and bondage but were constrained by great wonders and grieuous plagues to let them go And as he deliuered them from the hard and heauy yoke of their oppressors so he armeth them with strength as with a shield against all their enemies and fenceth them with his mighty hand as the Vnicorne is with his borne so that al the diuelish deuices that diuelish men can practise can no more preuaile against them then poyson against the Vnicorne For we reade partly in the holy Scriptures and partly in other authors that haue searched out the nature of foure-footed beasts both of the strength of the Vnicorne and of the nature of his horne to expell poyson This is it which the Lord himselfe speaketh in the book of Iob Iob. 39 12 13 14 15 Psal 22 22 and 92.11 Esay 34 7. Will the Vnicorne serue thee or will he tarry by thy cribbe Canst thou binde the Vnicorne with his band to labour in the furrow or will he plough the valleyes after thee So the Prophet Dauid describing his enemies resembleth them for their cruelty to the Lyon for their strength to the Vnicorne Aelian lib. 16. hist animal cap. 20. Likewise all men agree about the Vnicornes horne Writers doe confesse and experience doth confirme that it hath force to expell poyson therefore his horne being put into the water purgeth it and driueth out the poyson that he may drinke without harme if any venomous beast happen to drink therein before him So the Israelites are compared to the Vnicorne in this place partly in respect of their owne strength who whilst they were obedient to God and serued him with a faithfull heart could not be ouercome of their enemies but stood victorious and inuincible against all dangers and partly because no hurtfull or noysome arts vsed against them should be able to worke their confusion Now to the latter point which respecteth the person of Balaam he acknowledgeth that notwithstanding his sorcery and diuellish diuination he was destitute of all power ability to hurt them by his enchantments therfore saith There is no sorcery against Iacob nor southsaying against Israel that is the people of God which were his posterity Some vnderstanding these words as if the people were praised and commended because they were not giuen to sorcery and such like superstitions as GOD condemneth in the Law and had forbidden to be among his chosen people Deu. 18 10. but the meaning of Balaams words rather seemeth to be this that the elect people of GOD were so protected from aboue that no sorcery or southsaying could haue any force against them to doe them hurt This mercy of GOD was so great so maruailous so miraculous in the eyes of the very infidels their enemies that from hence forward Balaam resolueth to leaue his Magicke and extoll the workes of GOD toward
be effectuall to stay vs in our obedience because God wil continue the same God of mercy and truth vnto vs without alteration which he was to Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph and all the faithfull so highly renowned and greatly commended in the Scriptures so it must serue to bee a bridle in the iawes of the vngodly and prophane wretches of the world that as he hath plagued consumed and throwne downe into the bottomles pit of hell the wicked heretofore that rebelled against him and resisted his will so he is vnchangeable in Name and Nature and therefore he will do the same to them now and to as many as shall walke in their steps for euer This we may see to be a plain case in the righteousnes of God Eccl. 8 12 13. Though a sinner do euill an hundred times and God prolongeth his dayes yet I know it shall be well with them that f●are the Lord and do reuerence before him but it shall not be well to the wicked neither shall he prolong his daies he shall be like a shaddow because he feareth not before God And the Apostle Iude in his Epistle Iude 6 7. 2 Pet 2 1 5. alledgeth and applyeth the examples of Gods vengeance vpō the wicked past to those present and to come shewing that if God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hell and deliuered them vnto chaines of darknesse to bee kept vnto damnation neyther spared the olde world but brought in the flood vpon the vngodly c. Let vs remember that wee shall finde God the same toward vs for euer neuer presume that he can or will be changed now from that which he hath beene heeretofore toward others Verse 21. He seeth not iniquity in Iacob he beholdeth not transgression in Israel Hitherto we haue spoken of the vnchangeablenesse of Gods loue toward his Church Now let vs see the reasons of it both in spirituall things and then in temporall The cheefest priuiledge of the Church standeth in the fruition and enioying of spirituall blessings Among all spirituall blessings this is one of the cheefest Remission of sinnes This is expressed by this phrase that God seeth not sinne in them that is he forgiueth theyr iniquity and imputeth not sinne vnto them To the same purpose the Prophet saith Our sinnes are couered Psalm 32 verse 1. These may seeme at the first strange speeches and phrases For shall not he that made the eye see Psalme 94. Shall not he that made the eare heare He that made the heart shall not he vnderstand and know the secrets of the heart Are not all things naked and open before him or can any hide himselfe from his presence and winde himselfe from his prouidence The meaning is not that God doth not behold them but it is a borrowed speech from the custome of men which lay away those things out of sight which they do not vse or would not remember so that he doth not see them when he doth not punish them he couereth them when he doth pardon them and account them as if they were neuer committed So Hezekiah saith Esa 38 17. God had cast his sins behind his backe Thus the Prophet speaketh Esay 1 18. Though your sinnes were as Crimson they shall be made white as Snow though they were red as Scarlet they shall be as wool And chap. 44 22. I haue put away thy transgressions like a Cloud and thy sinnes as a Mist So the Prophet Micah saith chap. 7 19. He will turne againe and haue compassion vpon vs he will subdue our iniquities and cast all their sinnes into the bottome of the sea From all these Testimonies we learne this truth That to euery true member Doctrine of the Church To all the members o● the Churc● belongeth the forgiu●nesse of 〈◊〉 belongeth the forgiuenes of all theyr sins It is a peculiar priuiledge of the faithfull for the merits and righteousnesse of Christ to haue theyr sinnes forgiuen whereby it commeth to passe that God esteemeth of sinne as no sinne and of iniquity as if it had neuer bene committed Heere then we haue offered to our considerations a principall and fundamental point of our Christian Religion and of the holy faith That all our sinnes wants and impections originall and actuall as well in the committing of euill as in omitting of good in thought word deed are couered healed and released thorough the righteousnesse of Christ imputed vnto vs which being apprehended by faith and applyed vnto vs doth not onely make them as if they had neuer bene but also iustifie discharge vs causing vs to appeare blamelesse and spotlesse in the sight of God Thus God proclaimeth him selfe to be a most gracious and merciful God readily inclined to forgiue sins Exod. 34 6 7. Esay 33 24. and 43 25. Ier. 31 31 32. and 33 8. Reason 1 And this truth to wit that iustification stādeth in the remission of sinnes through the satisfaction of Christ is confirmed vnto vs by sundry reasons out of the worde of GOD. For first we must appeare as iust and perfect in Gods sight either by the imputatiō of Christs righteousnesse or by the merite of our owne workes there is no third way can be deuised This is a full distribution of causes as appeareth by the Apostle speaking of the election and calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 6. If it bee of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it bee of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke Thus we see hee maketh an opposition betweene the grace of God and the workes of men But no workes can iustifie vs neither of congruitie nor condignity neither of nature nor of grace wrought in vs by the spirit of God but by Gods acceptation of the intercession and merits of his owne Son This the Apostle witnesseth Rom. 3 20. Gal. 3 6. By the workes of the Law shall no flesh be iustified in his sight And in another place I count all things but losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus my Lord that I might bee found in him not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith Phil. 3 7 8 9. Reason 2 Secondly whatsoeuer giueth the creature cause of boasting and robbeth God of his glory may not be admitted and cannot be accepted in the worke of our iustification But all things sauing the righteousnesse of Christ minister to vs matter of boasting depriue God of the honor and glory due to his name This the Apostle teacheth in sundry places Rom. 4 2. If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce 〈◊〉 2 8.9 but not with God By grace are ye saued thorough faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe So
his countenance from vs. Moreouer this serueth to teach vs that in our troubles and necessities we stand not in need of the intercession of Saints and Angels wee shall not neede to pray vnto them to be our Mediators to God the Father For seeing God the Father is neere vs yea euen at hand shall wee turne our backes to him and goe from him seeing he turneth to vs to giue vs helpe This inuocation of Saints hath neither commandement to moue vs to pray nor example to go before vs in the practise nor promise to assure vs that we shall be heard The direction that we haue in prayer is to go to God and to say to him Our Father which art in heauen Mat. 6 9. This the Prophet acknowledged when he sayde Psal 73 25. Whom haue I in heauen but thee I haue desired none in the earth with thee God is euermore present with vs the Saints departed are absent from vs they know not our particular wants Esay 63 16 Psal 94 9. 1 King 8 39. they vnderstand not our desires they are ignorant of the motions of our hearts and the estate of our liues Besides wee are charged to worship the Lord our God to serue him onely who onely searcheth the hearts tryeth the reines as the God that made them in the beginning Let vs therefore go directly and immediately to God and when wee haue helpe at hand let vs not seeke helpe farre off Let vs still trust in the liuing God for vaine is the helpe of Saints or Angels Were not hee a foolish man and worthy to perish who in extremity would refuse the helpe of an expert excellent Physitian present with him able to helpe him willing to helpe him offering to helpe him and giue him present ease and yet calleth and cryeth to some Mounte-banke a thousand miles from him not so able not so skilful not so ready to releeue release him And are not they much more simple and sottish that when God willeth them to call vpon him in the day of trouble and promiseth to heare and deliuer them will not come to him but fly from him to the Saints Psal 50 14. that know neither him nor his griefe When the Prince is present and calleth to come to him were it not madnes to go to the subiect So forasmuch as Christ saith Come vnto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Matth. 11 28 let our soules answer Lord we will come accept thou the prayers of thy seruants Vse 2 Secondly we learne from hence That as God is neere to all those that feare him not onely in respect of the presence of the place but is with them by the presence of his fauor granting their prayers and succouring them in their aduersities so he is farre from all the wicked and vngodly not in place but in help He will not grant their requests he wil not be their shield and buckler hee will not know them in their miseries He is indeede neere to all that call vpon him euen to all that call vpon him in truth but he stoppeth his eares against the prayers of the vngodly which are abhomination vnto him Psal 145 18. This is it which Salomon teacheth Prou. 15 29. The Lord is farre off from the wicked but hee heareth the prayers of the righteous Great is the iustice of God vpon the wicked and great is his fauour towardes the godly True it is in respect of place God filleth heauen and earth He is not far distant frō vs forasmuch as in him we liue and mooue and haue our being Actes 17 27 28. but touching his grace he is farre from the dwellings of the vnrighteous hee is farre from hearing theyr voyce and regarding their necessities he leaueth them to themselues and withdraweth his holy Spirit from them So then albeit God bee in euery place and nigh to all things yet God will not heare them no more then men heare such as are very farre off when they call and cry out vnto them This is it which the Prophet Dauid setteth downe Psal 119 155. Saluation is farre from the wicked because they seeke not thy statutes And the Prophet Esay accordeth heere unto Chapt. 59 1 2. The Lords hand is not shortned that it cannot saue neither is his eare heauy that it cannot heare But your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sinnes haue hid his face from you that he will not heare They regard not his word therefore he giueth not them his helpe They will not heare him when hee calleth by his word therefore hee will not heare when they call vnto him by their prayers He is far from them because they runne farre from him and will not know his wayes nor regard his truth that he offereth vnto them Wherefore great is the misery and destruction of the wicked that shall come vpon them they shall call but the Lord will not heare they shal cry but he wil not answer The righteous in this world doe seeme to be cursed and forsaken of God but they are blessed and happy and this is not the last part of their blessednes and happines that he heareth their prayers On the contrary side the vngodly seeme to themselues to others to be the onely happy men in the world but they are wretched and miserable and through theyr malice blindnes and obstinacy this is not the last part and portion of theyr misery that they haue no agreement with God hee heareth not their prayers but abhorreth thē their thoughts and all their workes When we are in affliction the cheefest comfort and stay to rest vpon is that God is neere vs and ready to help vs. The wicked want this staffe to leane vpon God professeth himselfe their enemy he refuseth their prayers he forsaketh and casteth them away out of his presence They can haue no peace of conscience nor comfort in trouble they shall houle in their miseries and not be heard Zac. 7 13. This shall especially appear at the last day when the heauen shall not receyue them the Lord shall not know them no creature shall comfort them no mercy shall be shewed vnto them thē they shall weepe and waile without redemption and without release Thirdly it is our duty to behaue our selues Vse 3 in all our actions and dealings as in his presence It behooueth vs to set him alwayes before vs and to know he continually walketh among vs. It is remembred of Henoch that he walked continually before God Genes 5 22. that is all his life time hee considered that the eye of God was euer vpon him knowing that all things are naked and manifest before him Heb. 4 13. Thus the Apostle chargeth Timothy in the sight of God who quickneth all things and before Iesus Christ which vnder Pon●ius Pilate witnessed a good confession to keepe the commandements which he gaue vnto him without spot and vnblameable If the childe
of our warfare are not carnall but mightie through God to cast downe holds To conclude this vse seeing God hath thus aduanced vs let not vs disgrace our selues but maintaine our dignity and adorne our profession that wee may finde comfort by it in our chastisements and afflictions A Starre shall come out of Iacob We haue seene in the former Doctrine the glory of the Church that the people of God are set apart by Christ to be spirituall Kings vnto GOD the Father a dignity giuen to them by him Now before we passe from this place let vs consider of the title that is giuen vnto Christ where we see hee is compared to a Starre and called a Starre that shall come out of Iacob This Starre wee haue shewed typically to signifye Christ who is called the Light of the world the Sunne of righteousnesse the morning star the day-spring from on high He is called by this name 〈◊〉 ●easons 〈◊〉 Christ is 〈◊〉 a Star and described by this title First because hee is the fountaine of all saluation and comfort Secondly to teach that all men by nature walke in darknesse and in the shadow of death Thirdly because he will giue those that are his the light of knowledge in this life and the light of perfect glory in the life to come by which they shal be as starres of heauen and shine in the firmament afterward Heereby we learne that Christ Iesus is as the morning starre vnto vs ●●●rine ●●st Iesus ●●e Day●●●ing in 〈◊〉 hearts bestowing vpon his people two excellent priuiledges blessings First hee riseth vp as a bright starre in our hearts casting from the the thicke clouds of blindenesse and taking away the darke mistes of ignorance enlightning them with the true sauing knowledge of God sufficient for saluation begun heere in this life but shall be perfected in the life to come Secondly he will bestow vpon vs the light of perfect glory in the kingdome of his Father by the which we shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and as the starres for euer euer These are two vnspeakable mercies vnprizable vnmatchable to be deliuered out of the kingdome of ignorance and to bee brought into the kingdome of light to be glorified in heauen and to be made partakers of eternall life So then we see by this comparison that by Christ we haue the light of vnderstanding shall haue the glory of immortality to know God euen as we are knowne Touching the first clause that he will manifest all the mysteries of God vnto his Church the Prophet Ioel foretelleth chap. 2 28 That he will poure out of his Spirit vpon all flesh their sonnes daughters shall prophesie their olde men shall dreame dreames and their young men shall see visions they shall be all taught of God and they shall know him from the least to the greatest So our Sauiour sayeth to his Disciples Math. 13 12. To you it is giuen to know the secrets of the kingdome of heauen Now saith the Apostle we see as in a glasse darkely but then wee shall see face to face now I know in part but then shall I know as I am known 1 Cor. 13 12. Touching the second clause that the faithfull shall receiue the light of perfect glory after this life the Prophet Daniel witnesseth That they which bee wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and they that turne many vnto righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer ●an 12 3. The performance heereof is remembred where thousand thousands out of euery nation kindred and tongue praise the Lambe for that hee hath made them Kings and Priests to reigne ouer the earth Reason 1 The truth of all this will yet better appeare vnto vs if we marke the Reasons First Christ hath receiued a fulnesse of the Spirit and graces without measure that they might flow vnto all his members who receiue from him grace for grace sufficient for their places in the Church heere and for their saluation afterward For in him are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge as a Fountaine that is without bottome which can neuer bee drawne dry Col. 2 3. Therefore the Euangelist saith That of his fulnesse wee all receiue and grace for grace Iohn 1 16. So then Christ is full of heauenly graces and spirituall gifts that we might bee annointed by him and receiue our portion frō him For he obtained them not to keepe them to himselfe or to couer them vnder a bushell but to bestow them vpon his Church So long as he is full we need not feare to be empty Iohn 1.14 so long as he is stored we cannot be destitute If once we depart from him it is in vaine to look for one drop elsewhere Secondly he hath obtained by prayer of Reason 2 his Father who can deny him nothing that from him we should receiue the light of glory because as he is ioyned to the Father and one with him so we shall be ioyned to him receiue of his glory Heere we know in part and prophesie in part and all good things are vnperfect but when that which is perfect is come that which is in part and vnperfect shall bee done away 1 Cor. 13 10 for as he being Mediator between God and man hath receiued of the Father so shall we receiue of the Father being in him This he speaketh to his Father Ioh. 17.22 23. The glory which thou gauest me I haue giuen thē that they may be one as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loued them as thou hast loued mee Christ is the band or knot of the vnion betweene God and vs for in him the Mediator heauen and earth is as it were ioyned together which otherwise could not be So then when he shall appeare wee shall appeare with him cloathed with righteousnesse and cloathed with his glory which he also receiued to make vs partakers of Thirdly such as keepe his words they loue Reason 3 Christ and they that loue Christ are beloued of him and of his Father so that he will shew himselfe vnto them and withhold no good thing from them This Christ our Sauiour setteth downe Iohn 14 21. The vses of this title giuen to Christ being Vse 1 called the starre of Iacob are diuers First this teacheth vs that they haue no property nor interest in this Starre eyther touching the light of sauing knowledge or the brightnesse of heauenly glory that liue in blindnesse and ignorance that follow the works of darknesse delight in sinfull pleasures and leade a loose and lewd life If we haue no light of Christ shining in our hearts scattering the blacknesse of darknesse from our soules and yet looke to receiue any comfort or refreshing from him when this Sunne of righteousnesse shall appeare in glory wee are vtterly
away empty Luke 1 52 53. Vse 1 The vses follow to be obserued First from hence consider and confesse the difference betweene earthly and heauenly honour between the honour of men and that which is of God Earthly honour when it is at the highest can giue no assurance of continuance nor minister peace of conscience nor satisfie with the benefite of contentment because it endureth but for a season but the honour which we shall enioy after this life with God is like himselfe Hee is vnchangeable and without shadow of turning hee is constant and euer like himselfe so is the honor and glory which he hath reserued for vs It is laide vp as a treasure in heauen where neither the moth nor canker corrupteth and where theeues neither dig through nor steale Math. 6 20. We see what the fauor and friendship of men is wee see what the highest preferment is that men can attaine vnto both they and their aduancement fall as the Sommer fruite and their place knoweth them no more But the honour which wee shall finde in heauen and enioy with the glorious Saints of God in the heauenly habitations lasteth for euer and there shall be no end thereof What foolishmen are we therefore and more then foolish that so much admire the vaine glory of the earth and haue our eyes dazled with the deceitfull beauty of the dignities of this world and doe not consider the stablenesse of that glory reserued for vs which time shall not consume nor the enemy abolish Hence it is that the Apostle Iohn saith Loue not the world neither the things that are in the world if any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him and the world passeth away with the lust thereof but he that fulfilleth the will of God abideth euer 1. Iohn 2 15 17. All earthly things last and endure but for a season men are mortal riches are vncertaine fauour is vanity honour is changeable treasures are transitory pleasures are mutable profites are corruptible friends are fading and oftentimes turne to be enemies onely the treasures of heauen the fauour of God the pleasures of eternall glory the riches of the world to come are immortall and neuer decay For all flesh is as grasse all the glory of man as the flower of the field the grasse withereth the flower fadeth but the word of the Lord endureth for euer 1. Pet. 1 24 Thus we see that there is as great difference betweene earthly and heauenly honour as is betweene heauen and earth Secondly we must learne to vse this world Vse 2 as though wee vsed it not and make it as the hand to helpe vs and further vs toward the kingdome of heauen The hand is made to serue vs and not wee to serue it Wee must learne to place the world vnder vs not aboue vs we must make it seruant to vs not Lord ouer vs we must teach it to obey not suffer it to rule ouer vs as the Church is described to be cloathed with the Sunne but hauing the Moone vnder her feete Reuel 12. For seeing humane things are transitory mutable and changeable it standeth vs vpon to haue our conuersation in the heauens and to cast the eyes of our mindes toward the estate of glory and the eternall happinesse prepared for vs. A pilgrim in a strange land hath alwayes his eyes toward his iourneyes end is greatly grieued when he wandereth out of his way Wee are pilgrims in this world and are farre from home so that our hearts should be fully and wholly set on euerlasting life and bee grieued when wee are hindered from the straight way This is the exhortation of the Apostle to the Corinthians 1. Cor. 7 29. Many follow it with all greedinesse albeit it be full of vanity But if we esteeme of heauen or regard the saluation of our soules wee ought to be little affected to the things of this life neuer setting our hearts vpon them but desiring to dwell in that house where wee shall abide for euer Many there are that liue long in this life and haue beene many dayes vpon the face of the earth who neuer thinke of the kingdome of heauen nor dreame of another world nor meditate of the life to come vntill they lye at the last gaspe and are going the way of all flesh which is a most wofull and miserable thing to consider Let vs not suffer Sathan thus to circumuent vs and this present world to abuse and bewitch vs the deuill is a deceiuer the world is but a shadow and hath no true and enduring substance in it Abraham the father of the faithfull is commended by the Spirit of God who being called of God willingly obeyed to goe into the place which afterward hee should receiue for an inheritance Heb. 11 8. so that he departed from his kindred fathers house not knowing whither he went and by faith he abode in the land of Canaan as in a strange countrey and as one that dwelt in tents A naturall man would thinke hee had made a simple change and be ready to condemne him for a foole but the Scripture giueth this reason as the cause that mooued him to wit euerlasting life for hee looked for a city hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God In comparison heereof let vs make little account of this transitory life or of any the vaine profits pleasures or honours that may be found in it Lastly let it not grieue vs to see euil men Vse 3 exalted and set aloft they hold their possessions and honour with the greatest vncertainty that can bee in their life time and when they are taken from hence they can carry nothing with them of all that they possesse They are oftentimes depriued suddainly of all things they desire and doe most of all delight in Sometimes they are taken away from their goods sometimes their goods are taken away from them and sometimes albeit neyther they be taken from their goods nor their goods taken from them yet God in his iustice depriueth them of the comfortable vse of them while they doe enioy the possession of them This is the vse that the Prophet Dauid toucheth Psalme 49 5.16 declaring the vanity and vncertainty of mortall things and the suddaine fall of all flesh he addet● Wherefore should I feare in the euill dayes when iniquitie shal compasse me about as at mine heeles Be not thou afraid when one is made rich and when the glory of his house is encreased for he shall take nothing away when he dyeth neither shall his pompe descend after him We haue knowne many by our own obseruation gone on a suddaine that looked not for any change Wee haue seene them set on high and suddainly they haue come to nothing Who is ignorant that great trees grow til they be great 〈◊〉 c●●t de 〈◊〉 Alex. ● 7. and then be plucked vp from the root in a moment It is a foolish
voluptuousnes and sensuality which could not be subdued by warre or witchcraft according to the receiued opinion Difficili●● es● voluptatem vincere 〈◊〉 d●●erem It is harder to ouercome prosperity then aduersity and pleasure then sorrow Indeed we are compassed about with many tentations and the subtle serpent layeth baytes before vs of all sorts some on the right hand and other on the left hand yet none are more dangerous or deceitfull then such as come masking vnder the vizard of honour pleasure profit and preferment as we see in Dauid in Sampson in Salomon in Lot in Noah and in the Israelites in this place all which were caught with these hookes Wherfore Moses hauing already set downe what outward dangers they had ouerpassed threatning theyr ruine and working together to stop their passage into the Land of Canaan now he declareth an inward danger greater then the former arising from themselues and setled in theyr owne bowels euen theyr owne sinnes against the first second Table which had consumed them in the Wildernesse vnlesse God in mercy had bene appeased toward them at the intercession of Moses and the execution of Phinehas Such is our weaknesse in all our wayes and thus wee halt in our obedience so that our strength is to confesse our owne frailty and a step toward perfection is to acknowledge our owne imperfection Hauing therefore in the chapters going before considered the entrance into this history as also the history it selfe of Balak and Balaam let vs now heare the end and conclusion of all in this chapter wherein wee are to consider three things First the sinne of the Israelites committed against God Secondly the reconciliation and attonement whereby his wrath is pacified Thirdly the commandement and decree of God against the Midianites through whom the scandall and offence came Touching the first point deliuered in this diuision which is the sinne of the people the Spirit of God setteth downe both the circumstances and substance thereof For first it is described by the time when it was committed by the place where it was committed and by the meanes or maner how it was committed The time and place were while the Israelites rested and remained in the plaine of Moab ●t Shittim which is the two and forty mansion and the last place where they pitched their tents in the wildernes as appeareth in the three and thirty chapter of this book of Numbers ver 50 which serueth to increase the greatnesse of their sinne in that being now brought by the prouidence and mighty hand of GOD to the frontiers and confines of the land of promise they doe shamefully and shamelessely fall from him The manner and occasion of theyr sinne was in that the Moabites and Midianite brethren in euill combined together both to one purpose by Balaams counsell made theyr daughters common to entice and allure the Israelites beeing no doubt adorned with whorish attyre decked in all wanton and lasciuious manner fit to bring them to their lure and loue or rather lust and so to worke theyr ouerthrow as we see Salomon describing the harlot painteth her out in her colours and cunning that shee maybe well knowne better detested Prou. 3 4. and 6 24 25. and 7 10 11. and 9 13 14.15 Thus much of the circumstances of theyr sinne Touching the substance of theyr sinnes we are to obserue both theyr wicked facts and theyr obstinate contumacy and setled continuance in their sinne Their facts or actions are noted to be these three First bodily fornication and vncleannesse condemned in the seuenth Commandement defiling the hoast hindering true sanctification and estranging them from God who is a God of purity and holinesse and who commanded them to bee holy Secondly Idolatry which is spirituall fornication forbidden in the first Commandement which prohibiteth vs to haue to acknowledge and worship strange gods This is vtterly to renounce our faith to God the Husband of his Church to defile the marriage couenant Hosea 2 19. and to deny that true Religion into which we are entred Thirdly they coupled themselues to Baal-Peor that is to the Image of Baal which was adored and worshipped in Mount Peor Numb 23 32. where no doubt the Idoll had some Shrine or Chappell erected for his seruice ●●cel lib. 4. 〈◊〉 1● l●b 〈◊〉 vlt. in like manner as the Papists do call her the Lady of Lauretto which is worshipped in that place With this filthy and detestable Idoll they ioyned themselues and worshipped it with diuine worship and consequently renounced the worship of God being made one body with the Idolaters For when once his worship is mingled and corrupted the true God is turned into an Idoll such worship is Idolatry and abhomination in his sight for as the Prophet saith If God be God follow him if Baal bee God follow him 1 Kings 18 21. Now in setting downe these sinnes marke how the Israelites fell into them by steps and degrees If the Moabitish women had at the first tempted them to worship Baal and had said vnto thē Come let vs go serue strange gods no doubt they would haue detested and abhorred so great wickednesse But Satan is a more expert and cunning workman and his instruments are more subtle and wise in theyr generation Therefore first they call them to their feasts and banquets to eate of the meates and delicates that they had prepared and afterward they draw them to Idolatry which for the most part hath fornication a companion with it as we shall see hereafter further opened vnto vs. The next point is their obstinacy and continuance in the dregs of their sinnes ioyned with shamelesnesse and hardnesse of heart But because all stubbornnes and contuma●y presupposeth of necessity both reproofe and chastisement Moses setteth downe the obseruation of this course and order For first the chiefe heads of that people which fell to commit Idolatry and fornication were apprehended and executed before the going downe of the Sunne to pacifie the wrath of the Lord lest if that wickednesse had remained vnpunished the whole body of the people should be defiled Thus God declareth Acts 10 34 35. That with him is no respect of persons but as he that doth righteously is accepted of him so he that prouoketh him sinneth against his owne soule The higher the place of men is the greater is their sinne who hurt more by theyr example then by their offence Thus the chiefe in the offence are also the chiefe in the punishment After this hanging vp of the heads of this rebellion he chargeth the Iudges and Officers of the people that had kept themselues pure and vndefiled to kill al those with the sword that had sinned against the Lord which belonged to their charge and iurisdiction according to the ordinance of God and order that he had established Exod. 18 25 appointing them to bee Rulers ouer hundreds Rulers ouer fifties Rulers ouer tens Thus the wrath of God was appeased
the other side we are to shun the euill company of euil men lest we learne their wayes True it is if we would abstaine altogether from the acquaintance and familiarity of fornicators Idolaters extortioners railers drunkards and such like We must go out of the world 1 Cor. 6 10. But albeit we cannot wholly auoide them yet wee must not thrust our selues into them nor delight in them but bee greeued at them so soone as we can winde our selues out of thē We shall learne no good by their society Therefore Salomon saith Hee that walketh with the wise shall be the wiser but a companion of fooles shall learne foolishnes Prou. 13.20 Now albeit we cannot at all times forsake the familiarity of the vnfaithfull yet wee must euer abandon and abiure their vnfaithfulnes and vngodlines we cannot euer refuse their company but wee must euermore renounce their impiety Let vs take heed we embrace none of their sinnes He that standeth farthest from a raging flame is frees● and farthest off from burning hee that walketh a great distance from the banke of the Riuer is safest from drowning He that commeth not neere places of infection is surest to escape the danger And as wee are to beware of all their sinnes so especially it behoueth vs to be suspicious and fearefull of those sinnes vnto which wee know our selues most prone enclined For they do most of all delight vs and those are they which will soonest ouerturne vs and bring vpon vs destruction of soule and body Secondly it serueth to reproue condemne Vse 2 all such as are companions with prophane men The shrowding of our selues into such company argueth a conformity in affections howsoeuer wee would haue it thought to be otherwise We see in the course of nature that like will to like and birds of a feather will flie and flocke together And if they be not yet made like vnto them and corrupted by them it is greatly to be feared they will be allured and enticed Iehoshaphat was reproued for his friendship and aliance with Ahab and in the end it was the ruine of his owne house The Prophet came vnto him and said Wouldst thou helpe the wicked loue them that hate the Lord Therefore for this thing the wrath of the Lord is vpon thee 2 Chron. 19 2. Happy is their estate whose abode is continually amongst Gods people as the Prophet saith Psal 65 3. Blessed is he whom thou choosest and causest to come to thee he shall dwell in thy Courts and he shall bee satisfied with the pleasures of thine house euen of thine holy Temple On the other side wee must confesse it to bee a wofull and heauy condition to endure the company of the wicked It is a part of our greefe and sorrow to be in their society being alwayes ioyned with sinne and to the dishonour of God This made the Prophet cry out with great perplexity while hee liued amongst the vngodly and to acknowledge his case to be pittifull and miserable Wo is me that I remaine in Mesech and dwell in the Tents of Kedar Psal 120 5. There is nothing that more discouereth what lyeth in the hart then the company with whom we ordinarily resort and the places to which we commonly resort The heart of man is deceitfull and the secret corners of it are past finding out but the company which we vse shall try what is in it If the heart be set vpon goodnesse we will not delight in those that are enclined to leudnesse The Prophet Dauid testifieth heereby the vprightnesse of his heart that all his delight was in the Saints Psal 16 3 And Psalm 119 63. I am a companion of all them that feare thee and keepe thy precepts And Psal 26. I haue not haunted with vaine persons neither kept company with the dissemblers I haue hated the assembly of the euill and haue not accompanied with the wicked Such therfore as make themselues merry with lewd company and can laugh most heartily at their sinnes declare that they haue corrupt and sinfull hearts and haue not yet giuen them vnto God Thirdly wee must learne in regard of the Vse 3 danger of euill company to cast out euery foule spirit out of our societies Wee haue heard much of some places that haue beene haunted with euill spirits and indeed it is most true for there are few places or Parishes that are not frequented and pestered with many euill spirits There is no house or family almost to be found that doth not hold boulstersome euill spirit In the family of Adam was Caine in the family of Noah was Ham in the family of Abraham was Ishmael in the family of Isaac was Esau in the family of Dauid was Absolon and these were foule spirits The children of God that labour to direct their wayes aright and to haue their families purged from grosse corruptions as Iacob cleansed his house from Idolatry cannot so sanctifie and reforme them 〈◊〉 35 2. but some vncleane spirit or other will winde in himselfe infecting infesting the family with his presence and corrupting the rest by his example and poysoning them by his euill suggestions Achan must be found out vnlesse we would haue the whole hoast of God to be discomfited Iosh 7 11. Ionah must be cast out into the sea vnlesse we would haue the Ship drowned Ion. 1 12. It was an expresse commandement of God giuen vnto Abraham Gen. 21 10. To cast out the bond-woman her sonne because he should not be heire of the inheritance with Isaac It was an expresse charge giuen to the Church by the Apostle 1 Cor. 5 13. To purge away from among themselues that wicked man and to deliuer him vnto Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit might be saued in the day of the Lord Iesus To these commandements and precepts ioyne the practise of the Prophet Dauid where he promiseth to God how hee will order his family I will do wisely in the perfect way till thou commest to me I will walke in the vprightnesse of my heart in the midst of mine house there shall no deceitfull person dwell within mine house he that telleth lies shall not remaine in my sight betimes will I destroy all the wicked of the land that I may cut off all the workers of iniquity from the City of the Lord Psal 101 2 7. We see heereby whom we should entertaine in our houses and suffer to dwell vnder our roofe to wit the godly for he saith Mine eyes shall be vpon the faithfull of the Land that they may dwell with me he that walketh in a perfect way he shall serue me and therefore we must keep none such as are sturdy and stubborne that are incorrigible and scorne to serue the Lord. Many there are that make a mocke of all religion and despise all meanes that can bee taken for amendment these are a burden to the family and must bee cast out We see in the
body when Nature hath any euill and vnprofitable humours that oppresse the stomack it is forced to cast them out for the preseruation of the health of other parts so should it be with vs when we perceiue the family greatly endangered by obstinate and obdurate persons Leuit. 18 25. it should vomite them out as raw and vndigested humours by timely eiection left the whole head waxe heauy and the whole body sickly and so the vital parts languish Lastly seeing it is dangerous for vs to haue Vse 4 fellowship with the wicked let vs auoid their company and flye their society as from an infectious and contagious disease This is that vse which the Scripture maketh in sundry places The Prophet Ieremy teacheth this ch 51 9. We would haue cured Babel but shee could not be healed forsake her and let vs goe euery one into his Countrey for her iudgement is come vp vnto heauen and is lifted vp to the Clouds Hereunto accordeth the exhortation of the Apostle when he had shewed that there is no concord and agreement betweene Christ and Belial he addeth Wherefore come out from among them and separate your selues saith the Lord and touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you and I will be a Father vnto you and ye shall be my so●nes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty 2 Cor. 6 17. We must all know that sinne is of an infectious nature no disease so infectious no sicknesse so dangerous In the time of plague and pestilence the Physitians giue these rules and receits as directions to be followed of such as would be free from danger First that men flye with al speed secondly that they flye farre enough lastly 1. Cit● longe ●arde that they returne slowly When the ayre is once infected dangerously no remedy can be deuised to secure vs. These rules are to be applyed of vs as carefully in regard of the welfare of the soule as we are willing to practise them in regard of the health of the body The plague that breaketh out into a sore and runneth full of corruption is no more contagious and venemous then the wicked are neyther doth it more annoy the ayre then the wicked infect those places wherein they are and those persons with whom they liue This the Prophet Dauid did see and confesse which caused him at sundry times to complaine Away from me yee wicked for I will keepe the Commandements of my God Psal 119 115. For we must consider how hard it is to auoyd sinne when occasion is at hand and opportunity tempteth to sinne It is easier for the bird to passe by the net then to breake the net so it is easier for a man to auoyde tentations then to ouercome tentations It is a great deale easier to auoyde their company then to stand vpright in their company Peter thought himselfe a strong man and auouched with great boldnes that he would rather dye then deny his Master Mat. 26 35 but yet warming himselfe at Caiphas fire and thrusting himselfe into euil company was ouercome by a silly damosell to doe that which hee neuer thought euen to renounce and forsweare his Lord and Master He had made a notable confession of his faith hee had acknowledged Christ to be the Sonne of the liuing God Mat. 16 16 and that he had the words of eternall life Iohn 6 68 yet the company of euill persons foyled him Are we better then he or are we stronger then he or haue wee a greater priuiledge from falling then he This serueth to checke the folly and rashnesse of those that haunt wicked company and drunken ale-houses and yet say we are in no danger we will looke to our wayes that we offend not we can leaue such places whē we list This is to check the word to giue Gods Spirit the lye who in euery place warneth vs of our weaknesse This presumption is the certaine fore-runner of a fall The first step that bringeth vs downe is to be puffed vp in the opinion of our owne strength as Salomon saith Prou. 16 18. Pride goeth before destruction and an high minde before the fall Likewise the Apostle putteth vs in remembrance heereof where remembring the manifold downefals of the people of Israel consumed by the pestilence stung by the serpents and destroyed by the Angel he maketh this vse Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10 12. It is a part of the armour wherewith the seruants of God are armed made able to stand in time of tentation to feare themselues and to acknowledge their owne weaknesse for thereby they are made more wary and circumspect to looke to their wayes that they offend not So it is the beginning of our ruine the first degree by which we fall to thrust our selues into places of danger and yet thinke we haue a sure footing For what calling haue we to goe into such places Or what warrant can we haue to be protected of God while wee wander out of our calling So long as wee walke in the wayes that God hath set vs in we haue a promise of his protection and wee haue comfort in the doing of our duties but when we passe the boundes and limits of our particular vocations we haue God no longer to be our defender but we lye open as a prey to the enemy to wound vs to death and to worke our confusion Wherefore the wrath of the Lord was kindled against Israel We haue seene before the sin of the people now let vs heare also the punishment Their sinne was pleasant in the beginning but it was bitter in the ending verifying the saying of the wise man Prou. 16 25. There is a way that seemeth right vnto a man but the yssues thereof are the wayes of death Hence it is that Moses sheweth in this place how the wrath of the Lord was kindled against Israel so soone as they fell into fornication So then furnicators and adulterers are heere remembred to be great sinners and very hurtfull and noysome vnto the people of God From hence we learne that adulterers and vncleane persons Doctrine Fornication calleth do● great plagu● iudgmen● draw vpon themselues and others fearefull iudgements of God I say no sinne is more strong and auayleable to call downe the plagues and punishments of almighty God vpon a people and company or vpon particular persons then fornication and vncleannesse This was the chiefe sin among others that brought the flood vpon the whol earth and destroyed all mankinde Gen. 6 1. What was it that caused the Lord to raine downe fire and brimstone vpon Sodome and Gomorrh● Gen. 19 25. and to ouerthrow the Cities of the Plaine and the inhabitants therof and all that grew vpon the earth but their filthy and vnnaturall lust which was growne so outragious that the sauour thereof ascended vp to heauen and the cry of their sinnes pierced the eares of God When Abimelech did in
youth Shall wee make a mocke of it and a may-game at it These prophane beasts haue filled vp the measure of their sinne and are set downe in the seate of the scorners God alloweth no more liberty in sinning to youth then he doth to age The wise man willeth such to remember their Creator in the daies of their youth Eccl. 12 1. 11. and telleth them that for all the lustes of their eyes the vanity of their mindes the swinge of their pleasures and the lewdnes of their harts God will bring them to iudgement The Apostle teacheth That whoremongers and adulterers shall not inherite the kingdome of God 1 Corinth chapter 6 verse 9. The wise Salomon saith He that committeth adultery with a woman destroyeth his owne soule Prou. 6 verses 22 33. and so is accessary to his owne death And in another place he saith He shall finde a wound and dishonour and his reproch shall neuer be put away and shall wee make a sport of it to delight our selues in it We are admonished by the Apostle Paul that our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Corinth 6 19. so that seeing God vouchsafeth vs this honor to choose our vile bodyes which are dust and ashes earth and rottennesse to make them Temples and Tabernacles for his holy Spirit to dwell in let vs not turne them into filthy stables and vncleane styes and so driue him from vs who would possesse vs as his mansion and dwelling place Heereby then we vnderstand that wee are not to iudge of whoredome after the common opinion of men which make but a sport and pastime of it as we see how scoffers iest at it and despisers of God make a game of it Such mockers were risen vp long agoe in the dayes of the Apostle of whom he exhorteth vs to beware For hauing said that no whoremonger neyther vncleane person hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God he addeth in the next place Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for for such things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 6. And this example of the people of Israel which now wee haue in hand in this Chapter is able to strike a terror and feare into our hearts for euer breaking out into this iniquity The life of man is precious and deare vnto God we are creatures created according to his image he taketh no pleasure in our destruction Now in that hee destroyed such a number of his owne Images and Creatures for this sinne must not this sinne of fornication be great greeuous which kindleth such a fire of his vengeance and indignation that flamed out so farre and could not bee quenched but with the slaughter of so many thousands Thirdly it behoueth euery one according Vse 3 to his place and calling to punish this sinne seuerely that so euill may be taken out of Israel But such as haue a light estimation of this sinne which is the cause of the encrease of it do obiect the example of Christ who hauing a woman brought before him Obiect that was sound committing adultery in the very acte would not condemne her nor pronounce sentence of death vpon her but said vnto her Goe and sinne no more Iohn 8 11. Heere our Sauiour seemeth to free her from the law of Moses Leuit. 20 10. I answere this is Popish Diuinity Answer taught in the dayes of darknesse which cannot beare the tryall of the light For this is to make it not onely a venial sinne but no sinne at all Christ forgaue her freely and denounced no punishment at all against her neither of limb nor life nor chasticement nor other mulct bee inflicted vpon her so that if it doe not proue that the Magistrates should not punish whoredome sharply it proueth as well that he ought not to punish it at all if it ought to receiue no correction we cannot acknowlenge it for any transgression Furthermore the Iewes beeing in subiection vnto the Romanes and constrayned to beare the yoke of forraigne gouernment had the ciuill punishments of death eyther wholly taken from them or at least suspended vpon the will and pleasure of their officers which were sildome vpright often corrupted This is it which the Pharisies confesse in the Gospell For when Pilate willed them to take Christ to iudge him after their owne Law although the malice of their hearts and the cruelty of theyr hands were against him yet they sayde vnto him It is not lawfull for vs to put any man to death Iohn 18 31. Lastly the office of Christ was not to be an earthly Iudge to giue sentence of death but to be a Sauiour to call sinners to repentance Hence it was that hee refused a temporall kingdome when it was offered vnto him Iohn 6 15. and denyed to diuide the inheritance when he was requested as wholly impertinent vnto his calling and therefore he said Man who made me a Iudge or a diuider ouer you Luke 12 14. So then this Obiection being remoued it belongs to all Magistrates to be zealous in punishing this sinne and to sharpen the law against this other sins that bud vp and grow apace among vs lest they ouerthrow good Corne. Yea it appertaineth not onely to Magistrates but generally to all men to bring such offenders to open shame that so they may come to amendment of life The Apostle speaking of vnclean liuers saith If any that is called a brother bee a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such an one eate not 1 Cor. 5 5 11 and speaking of an incestuous person he chargeth the Corinthians to put him from among them and to deliuer him to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus Such vncleane liuers should bee swept out of the Church of God and haue the sword of excommunication drawne out against them that so they might learne not to transgresse But so long as wee beare with such persons and foster them in the bosome of the Church as the practise is too common neyther are we their friends neyther are we the friends of the Church neyther indeed are we the friends of almighty God For if we were their friends and loued them aright we would seeke their conuersion and repentance wee would vse the meanes to bring them to a shame of their offences to a sight of their sinnes and vnto a confession of their iniquities And if we were the friends of the Church we would labour to separate the vncleane from the cleane and the infected from the sound knowing that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe And if we were the friends of God we would be zealous of his glory and not suffer his Name to be prophaned through the lewde and wicked life of such rotten members For so long as such are harboured in the Church which is the body of
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
he is not tyed to any guide or Gouernor We are put in minde heereof by Moses Deut. 29 29. The secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things reuealed belong vnto vs and to our children for euer that wee may do all the words of the law God is not tyed to his reuealed wil the Law-giuer is aboue his law For the law must be vnderstood with this restraint and limitation except God command the contrary who is free and not bound to ordinary rules He commanded Moses in the building of the Tabernacle to make the Cherubims and other similitudes as also afterward when the people were stung with fiery serpents to set vp a brazen serpent which without his commandement had bin a breach of the second Commandement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the similitude of any thing in the heauen aboue or in earth beneath or in the waters vnder the earth Exod. 20 4. He commanded Ioshua to compasse the City of Iericho seuen dayes with the men of warre and the Arke of God seuen dayes together and therfore also on the Sabbath day Iosh 6 15 which without the Commandement of God had bin a breach of the fourth Commandement Remember thou keepe holy the Sabbath day So God proued Abraham and charged him to offer his son which he could not haue done without horrible murther Gen. 22 1. except God had commanded it being a breach of the sixt Commandement Thou shalt not kil In like manner God willed his people to aske iewels of siluer and iewels of gold of theyr neighbors the Egyptians Exod. 12 35 wherby they spoyled them but neuer made restitution vnto them which without a peculiar direction from God had not stood with the eyght Commandement Thou shalt not steale Thus thē we see for the encrease of our knowledge how the Law of God is to be vnderstood to wit with this caueat and prouiso Vnlesse it please God to command the contrary who alwayes worketh according to his owne will For as such as haue to do in the Statutes of earthly Princes do teach to restraine them and vnderstand them thus sauing the Kings prerogatiue so are we to do in the interpretation of the law of God alwayes to vse this exception of Gods prerogatiue For if Princes claime a prerogatiue aboue theyr lawes much more are we to giue vnto the eternall God a prerogatiue and priuiledge aboue the lawes giuen to the sonnes of men Secondly we learne from hence that all examples Vse 2 set downe in Scripture are not set downe for our imitation albeit reuealed for our instruction Our Sauiour in the Gospel reproueth his Disciples who would haue called downe fire from heauen vpon the Samaritans to consume them pretending to follow the example of Elias saying vnto them Yee know not of what spirit ye are Lu. 9 59. The examples of the godly set downe in Scripture are of foure sorts The first generall and common standing in the law of nature taught in the ten Commandements commanding vs to worship God to honour our parents to doe wrong to no man Hence it is that we are cōmanded to follow the faith of Abraham 1 Cor. 11 1. the chastity of Ioseph the zeale of Dauid the patience of Iob the repentance of Peter the attention of Lydia the restitution of Zacheus and such like these are set before vs both for our instruction and for our imitation Secondly the godly haue many infirmities and imperfections whereby it commeth to passe that some of theyr actions are sinful and vngodly which are set downe for vs not to follow but to auoyde Such are the incredulity of Moses the adultery of Dauid the idolatry of Salomon the drunkennesse of Noah the incest of Lot the ambition of the Apostles These are not written that we should alledge the fals of the Saints to warrant and iustifie our sinnes but to teach vs that no mā is free from sinne in this life seeing the elect and regenerate do offend that we should not being suddainly ouertaken with sin despaire of Gods mercy that we should be watchfull and looke to our footing seeing these men sinned beeing adorned with such great gifts so highly in Gods fauour that shined as Starres in the Firmament and were eminent aboue other men as the Cedars aboue other Trees Thirdly some things were well done of the Fathers that cannot bee followed of vs without offence to God as those that were ceremoniall and endured only vntill the comming of Christ and the restoring of all things by him as the cutting of the foreskinne the offering of sacrifices the killing of the Passeouer which cannot be brought into vse and practise againe Acts chap. 15 ver 1 5 without iniury to Christ and the abolishing of his death Lastly some examples were singular and proper vnto those to whom they were giuen so as neyther others in those dayes nor we in our times may any way follow them without the same inspiration of the Spirit and of this number is the zeale of Phinehas mentioned in this place and such extraordinary examples as we named before Thus we see both that all examples of the faithfull are not to be practised and likewise what are to be followed and what are not to be followed Heereby we learne to meete with all prophane men who resolue to continue in their sinnes defend themselues with the slips and faylings of the faithfull These men sinne with the godly but they repent not with them they fall asleepe with them but they arise not with them out of sleepe Heereby also the Church of Rome is conuinced who alledge the making of the Cherubims of the brazen serpent and such like to iustifie their imagery and idolatry by the example of Moses which we haue shewed to be speciall not generall commanded to him not warranted to all Lastly hereby they are condemned that would bring in any of the ceremonies of the law which are long since buried together with the Synagogue cannot stand with the simplicity of the Gospel and with the sufficiency of the death of Christ Lastly as no man must bee rash in pretending extraordinary callings so we must take heed we bee not rash in censuring the doings of other men Do we know or can we vnderstand the motions and inspirations of other men What man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him 1 Cor. 2 11. We may not therefore examine theyr callings by our owne nor measure extraordinary actions by ordinary rules especially in the times of the decay of religion of the ruines of the Church of the planting of the Gospel when God doth many times giue some of his people speciall motions guide them with an extraordinary direction of his Spirit but euery man must looke to the warrant of his owne worke No man must presume aboue his calling but euery man must be wise according to sobriety and consider what
men and Angels to execute his purposes so often as it pleaseth him Another question arising out of this Commandement Obiection is touching the persons against whom it is directed as the first was touching the persons to whom it was directed For why should the Midianites be named onely seeing the Moabites also were the professed enemies of the Israelites seeking their ruine and hyring Balaam to curse them I answer Answer the Moabites did not escape but were also punished as appeareth euidently Deut. 23 6. But the Midianites are first in the punishment because albeit they were farther off yet they had the cheefest hand and carried the greatest stroke in this wickednes who made their daughters common yea euen the cheefest among them by the counsell of Balaam as we saw by one example in this Chapter the like whereof we do not reade to haue bene in the Moabites Besides after that Balaam was departed we reade not that the Moabites attempted any thing against Israel but the Midianites gaue the Sorcerer farther entertainment and ceased not as may be presumed presupposed to plot and contriue their destruction Hitherto of the commandement the first part of this diuision the reasons enforcing the commandement follow to be considered which are two in number First because they cunningly gulled and craftily circumuented the people of God Secondly because they allured them both to idolatry and to fornication For this is the meaning of the words when Moses saith They haue beguiled you as concerning Peor and as concerning their sister Cozbi And hereunto Iohn pointeth in the Reuelation saying Balaam taught Balak to put a stumbling blocke before the children of Israel that they should eate of things sacrificed to Idols and commit fornication Reue. 2 14. Both these reasons may be gathered into one and thus concluded If the Midianites drew you into sinne and brought vpon you the plague of God then spare not to smite them But the Midianites drew you into sinne and brought vpon you the plague of God Therefore spare not you to smite them This is the force and strength of the reason to mooue the Israelites to make themselues strong and to be of good courage assuring themselues that God will giue them victory enable them to destroy them that did compasse their destruction Thus wee haue seene the interpretation of the text and the order of the words This is the naturall meaning intended by the Spirit of God But before we passe any further it shall not bee amisse a little to consider the notable abuse of this place and of other Scriptures auouched by some of the Church of Rome For one of late Alabast apparat in Reuel Ies Chr. not onely a common professor of our Religion but a publike Preacher of the same in our Church hath reuolted from vs through some worldly tentations runne into our enemies campe lifted vp his heele against vs and in bitter and biting manner rayled at vs. This man wanting no good will to write against vs and yet finding no strength in himselfe to deale against vs out of euident and plaine Scripture hath turned all into allegories and out of his inward and hidden senses wresteth and wringeth all things against the Protestants As for example when the Lord in this place is saide to haue spoken to Moses in this manner Vexe the Midianites and smite them because they troubled you with their wiles and beguiled you as concerning Peor Apparat in Reuel cap. 6. pag 96. the meaning according to his interpretation is this Christ said to the Vicar of Christ Suppresse the writings of heretikes and confute them because they trouble you with their guiles and make their false doctrines appeare beautifull to the shew and outward appearance the heretickes receiuing a counterfeit word in stead of the true Scripture which is condemned in the day of the Popes censure Behold here the heauy iudgment of God vpon this man since his apostacy and reuolting from the true Church to the Synagogue of Antichrist Are not here strange proofes and farre set interpretations to proue the Pope to be the Vicar of Christ that the writings of heretiques are to bee suppressed and that the heretiques themselues doe deceiue and delude the world vnder a colour of the word of God a pretence of the bare literall meaning Apparat. cap. 1 7. And yet this is the profound inward mysticall and right Scripture that he so often boasteth of But let the indifferent reader iudge whether this manner of interpretation bee not the highway to set vp all Atheisme to ouerthrow the authority and certainty of the Scripture to shake the foundation of true religion to leaue no grounds for Christians to stand vpon And this hath beene the ancient practice of such disciples as haue learned such diuinity in the schooles of Antichrist It is well known that Pighius compared the Scriptures to a nose of waxe and to a rule of Lead Pigh hi●● lib. cap. 3. Cens C●lon pag. 112. Cusan epist 2 7 The censure of Colen affirmeth the like in the same words And to the same purpose Cardinall Cusane teacheth that the Scriptures must be expounded diuersly and framed to the time practice of the Church so that at one time they are to bee vnderstood and interpreted one way and at another time another way These are some of those bolde blasphemies which many of the Popes Minions haue vttered to the world Now such as apply the Scriptures to their owne fancies turne them into allegories do not come farre behind the former If we suffer the Scriptures of God to be thus wrested and corrupted the Religion of Christ cannot long continue If a man pull down the foundation of an house whereon it standeth or shake the maine pillars whereon it leaneth the house it selfe cannot long hold out but must fall downe The Church of God is builded vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Eph. 2 20. so long as the doctrine contayned in them is maintayned and kept pure and vndefiled the Church shall stand vpright and remaine without danger of being shaken in peeces But when once it beginneth to be mingled with the chaffe of mans inuention or infected with the poyson of the diuels deuice by and by it tottereth decayeth vntill in the end no remedy being prouided it languish and die Now to apply this to our present purpose howsoeuer some glory of the hidden senses of Scripture which they haue found out and please themselues in their foolish conceits it is no better then to make merchandice of the word and to turne the truth of God into a lye 2. Cor. 2 17. For whereas out of this commandement of God charging Moses to slay the Midianites that troubled Israel with their guiles and drew them to fornication this construction is gathered that Moses is the Vicar of Christ that the Midianites signifie the writings of heretiques with such like trash the onely
or not or another diuerse from it or whether any wise Athenian could precisely tell when and by what workman euery peece and parcell was patched and supplied vntill the old was wholly gone or when and at what time it ceased to bee that ship and became a new ship The Romane Religion is almost become like this shippe it hath bin patched and peeced at seuerall times by cunning workmen there is little or nothing remaining of the old ship wherein Peter fished I meane of that Church wherein they say Peter sate as Bishop one error succeeding another and one heresie making way for another vntill little faith truth is found among them Notwithstanding all the secret conueyances made in that Church it is not hard in very many particular points to shew the beginning proceeding and establishing of the same touching pardons and indulgences touching the Popes supremacy vsurped the Images of the Trinity and the beginning of Idoll worshippe touching the merit of workes forbidding of marriage The Masse one of the greatest Idols began not all at once but came to this height by degrees It were endlesse to name all that might be alledged and to shew how and by whom these points were resisted and the truth euermore defended Secondly this serueth to condemne the Vse 2 foolish practise of popish pilgrims who vndertake long and laborious iournies to Ierusalem and the land of Iudea or to this that Idoll and make it a meritorious worke to visite eyther the Sepulcher of our Lord or the Image of our Lady For albeit this Land haue bin heeretofore famous because the Law came from Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem E●●y 2 3 and because Christ himselfe liued and preached and wrought many miracles there and it be oftentimes called The holy Land yet the presence of Christ infused no holines into it more then into any other place And all the Papists in the world shall neuer be able to prooue that it is more meritorious to goe to Ierusalem in a pilgrims weed then to go to Antioch or Ephesus or Constantinople or any other City in the East or West or that it is more acceptable to God or auaileable to the soule to trauaile thither then for the English to go to London or the French to Paris The house where the King resideth all the while he is there is an honourable house and there the Court lyeth but when the king is once remoued out of the house it is afterward neuer a whit the more honourable for the kings beeing there before so is it in this case albeit Christ in his life time and the daies of his flesh did many great works and wonders in it yet being ascended and the Christian religion also remoued there remaineth no more holines in that place then in any other and therefore it is great vanity and idolatry for any people to practise such impiety These are like to the Pilgrims among the Turkes Sarazens The turkish Pilgrims that go yearely with great shew of deuotion to Meccha to visite the Sepulcher of Mahomet and account it a work very meritorious The Cittie 's Gilgal and Beth-el were sometimes famous and renowned Cities yet true religiō being once remoued the Prophet chargeth the people not to come at them and to haue nothing to doe with them Hos 4 15. Hence it is that Christ saith Iohn 4 23. The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth If then we may worship God with great benefit to our selues and as great glory to him in our owne Country I see no cause why we should resort to Ierusalem or go on pilgrimage to Rome or any other place forasmuch as we may lift vp pure hands euery where and be heard 1 Tim. 2 8. But thus these crafty workmen keepe the peoples heads busie with outward deuotions and shewes of holinesse that they may not espy their fraud and deceit in greater matters Lastly this teacheth all men how they may Vse 3 make themselues to bee of good name and their houses and habitations truely famous to wit by holinesse and true religion by faith repentance which are the ornaments of all Christians Thus shall the noble man make himselfe and his house truely noble If they worshippe God aright they shall haue true worship with God and man for he will honour them that honour him 1 Sam. chap. 2 verse 30 and without true religion the most noble blood is stayned and taynted and neuer restored since the treason and rebellion of Adam against God For that which maketh a man reprochfull or any place reprochfull is sinne and wickednesse which make our names rotte Prou 10 7. See then the difference betweene the iudgement of God and man Men do commonly magnifie Cities by the stately buildings goodly Monuments that are found in them but this is no true or well grounded fame the true praise and commendation of any City is the piety of the Citizens A well ordered Towne or City embracing zealously true religion The True praise commendation of a City and maintaining the worship of God in integrity drawing out the sword of iustice against vice and countenancing the faithfull in their godly courses is indeede a right famous and flourishing City Ierusalem the City of God and the praise of the world Psal 122 3 4 5. and 87 3 and 48 11 12 13 was neuer so famous for her buildings and stately Towers and outward magnificence as it was for the word and worship of God Wee see then heereby who they are that are the honor and ornament of Cities of Townes and of houses to wit such as honour God and are truely zealous and religious and likewise who are the shame and reproch the blot and blemish the dishonour and disgrace of them to wit such as are wicked and prophane Do we see a City or Towne or priuate house full of drunkards of blasphemers of light and lasciuious persons these are they that poure contempt vpon them and bring shame infamy vnto them Euery one therefore should be carefull to looke to their charges committed vnto them the Magistrate to gouerne the people the Minister to looke to the flock Ouer which the holy Ghost hath made him Ouerseer euery father and mother to haue an eye to their children and euery master and gouernor to looke to their seruants as their seuerall charges that their houses may not be houses of wickednes of riotousnes of deceit of cursing and euill speaking but rather the houses of God All men are ready to condemne the Ministers that are absent from their flockes and to call for residency at their hands but let these look also vpon themselues and consider the duties of their own callings Doubtlesse all Gouernors haue a certaine kinde of residency required at their hands All gouernors of houses haue a kinde of residency required at their hands and their presence is meete to be among them
made and then how performed The making thereof was wont alwayes to be ioyned with prayer to note that the faithfull alwayes lifted vp theyr hearts to GOD crauing his blessing Psalm 61 5. Gen. 28 20. Iudg. 11 ver 30 31 so that such as were fit to vow must be faithfull iustified before God and reconciled vnto him otherwise they can neuer call vpon him aright And as they must be made with prayer so they must be performed with thanksgiuing Psal 61 5 otherwise it were better neuer to haue vowed and promised vnto God that cannot be deceyued Fourthly it behoueth vs to know the right ends of vowes which are these First The true and right ends of vowes concerning Gods glory and the aduancement of his worship Secondly to testifie our speciall thankfulnesse to God for blessings which we haue receyued at his hands Thirdly to chastice our selues that thereby we may preuent the wrath of God for by iudging of our selues we escape his iudgement 1 Cor. 11 Fourthly to make our selues more circumspect and watchfull ouer our owne wayes for when we haue fallen into some sinne we do heereby make ourselues more wary and heedfull for the time to come Fiftly to binde our selues more strongly as by a two-fold cord which is not easily broken to yeeld obedience to God Lastly to strengthen the weaknes of our faith hope and other spirituall graces and to giue vs greater assurance of the mercy of GOD which we shall receyue at his hands Lastly it is a duty belonging to euery one Vse 3 to consider diligently what vowes they haue vowed to God We are ready and not sparing to vow in times of our afflictions troubles O that we were as carefull to performe them Psal 66. But if we haue not vowed this way there is a common vow which we haue all vndertaken the vow of our baptisme that wee will beleeue in God and serue him that wee will forsake the diuell and all his works and this is the answer of a good conscience toward God 1 Pet. 3 21. The master of the Sentences calleth baptisme The common vow because therein men protest promise and professe to consecrate themselues theyr soules bodies vnto God both which are his by right of creation and redemption Ierome maketh holinesse in body and spirit the matter of a Christian vow In Esay lib. 7. cap. 19. And S. Austine to this purpose in many places teacheth that to beleeue in God to hope for eternall life and to liue according to his commandements August in Psal 75 131. are the things which we are to vow to God And in another place What doe we vow to God but to be the Temple of God These Christian duties containe the truth of the Iewish vowes They vowed external sacrifices and oblations bound themselues to the outward seruice in the exercise whereof it pleased GOD for a time to traine that people howbeit in all these he called them to the true practice of piety to the inward affections of praise thankesgiuing Psal 4 5 50.14 23 51 17 107 22 115 17. Ionah 2 9. Hos 14 13. Neyther is the holy Scripture silent what their ceremoniall vowes imported to them and to vs. The vow of humbling and afflicting themselues by fasting did teach them to forbeare their owne desires to renounce their own wils to subdue their owne corruptions and to abstaine from cruelty oppression Esay 58 6. Mic. 6 as appeareth by the reproofe of the Prophet when he chargeth them that in the day of their fast they sought their owne wils verse 3. This wee see notably in the vow of the Nazarites a principall one among the rest of which wee haue spoken before The meaning of the vow of the Nazarits whereby they were separated to the Lord Numb 6 2. And this was the chiefe intendment of that ceremony to signifie the common condition of all that people that the Lord their God had separated them from all other people and therefore they must be holy vnto him because the Lord himselfe is holy and hath separated them from other people that they should be his Leuit. 20 24 26. And this is that which Balaam vttered concerning Israel Numb 23 9 Loe the people shall dwell alone shall not be reckoned among the nations This then was a speciall vow of ceremonial obseruations wherein by abstayning from many outward things as separating themselues from wine strong drinke suffering no rafor to come on their head and other outward things expressed in that place they were diuided from the common and prophane conuersation both of themselues and others among that people howbeit a special spiritual respect was had of preseruing inward piety holines toward him so that such diuided persons were so many spectacles and examples of the condition of all the faithfull of whom Christ our Sauior hath told vs and taught vs that they are not of this world but he hath chosen thē out of the world Iohn 15 19 they must flye the corruption that is in the world 2 Pet. 1 4 and they must heare the voyce of God calling and crying vnto them Come out from among them separate your selues from them and touch no vnclean thing and then hee will receiue them 2 Cor. 6 17. In al which he alludeth to the vow of the Nazarites who were a separated and selected people retiring themselues from others of which see more before chapter 6. So then the vowes that temaine in the Gospel and belong vnto vs are the vowes of prayer of praise thankesgiuing of obedience to God of denying our selues of subduing our sinnes of mortifying the corruptions of the old man of mercy and compassion toward our brethren and briefly of keeping our selues holy vnto God and vnspotted of the world Psal 27 8 58 12. 79 13. 80 17. 86 11.119 34 35.106 Mat. 16 24. Col. 3 5. Rom. 6 13 12 1. 2 Cor. 6 20. These are the holy and solemne vowes that we promised to God in our Baptisme wherein wee were dedicated and consecrated vnto God and these we doe continually renue when we come to the Table of the Lord. Let vs diligently thinke of these vowes and be careful to practise and performe them that God may be duly glorified in vs. 3 If a woman also vow a vow vnto the Lord and binde her selfe by a bond being in her fathers house in her youth 4 And her father heare her vow her bond wherewith she hath bound her soule and her father shall hold his peace at her then all her vowes shall stand and euery bond c. 5 But if her father disallow her in the day that he heareth not any of her vowes c. shall stand and the Lord shall forgiue her because her father disallowed her 6 And if shee had at all an husband when shee vowed or vttered ought out of her lippes wherewith she
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
Exod. 20 7 and therefore the errour of the Romanists is blasphemous who lay this iniustice vpon God that he forgiueth the faithfull theyr offences but retayneth the punishment All men doe very willingly confesse that it is a very haynous crime to condemne the iust man but they doe not in like manner and with like zeale abhorre from iustifying the vngodly but the Spirit of God testifyeth that they are both abhominable in his sight he abhorreth the one no lesse then the other Why the guilty ought not to bee spated and so it ought to bee with those that sit in place of iudgment otherwise they transgresse the Law of God which commandeth that his blood should be vpon his owne head Againe such persons are for the most part made worse and worse and are neuer brought to repentance as experience commonly teacheth Besides by this sparing and winking at euill the godly are often grieued and sometimes are emboldened to euill Lastly other wicked men by their example are encouraged and theyr hearts are hardned Hence it is that Salomon sayth Prou. 24 24 Hee that saith vnto the wicked Thou art righteous him shal the people curse nations shall abhorre him This equity doth Moses also propound in the Law If there bee a controuersie betweene men and they come vnto iudgement that the Iudges may iudge them then they shal iustifie the righteous and condemne the wicked Deut. 25 2. But it will be said Obiect that the Scripture teacheth that God iustifieth the vngodly Rom. 4 5 and therefore hee that executeth iudgement may do the like also I answere first Answ that is lawfull for God to do which is not lawfull for man Againe God in iustifying the vngodly of vnrighteous maketh him righteous and by paying a deare price for him cleanseth and washeth away his impiety and giueth vnto him another minde then he had before which no mortall man is able to do and therefore it is vnreasonable to pretend the example of God or to alledge it to iustifie themselues when they iustifie the vngodly This corruption must needes be euill because it proceedeth from euill fountaines for iudgment is stayed or peruerted eyther through feare or couetousnesse or hope or hatred or fauour or malice or letters or such like affections which blinde the eyes and stoppe the eares and peruert the wise 2 Chron. 19 6 7. But in the meane season they displease the Lord and by winking at the wicked they make thēselues abominable to the chiefe Iudge of heauen and earth before whom they must come to be iudged and in sparing of greeuous transgressours which ought to be punished they make themselues accessaries to theyr transgressiōs many times like Saul Ahab Pilate they beare a part of the punishment Secondly this admonisheth all Iurers that Vse 2 they take great heed whom they acquit and whom they condemne If they condemne the innocent theyr blood will be required at their hands And if they iustifie any that are guilty of blood which is a crying sinne or other haynous enormities labour the rest of their fellowes companions to ioyne with them they are brethren in euill and stayne the iudgment seat with vnrighteous proceeding which is worse then if they should cast dust and doung in the Iudges face These doe often forget that they are sworne men and giue theyr verdict vpon theyr oth for if they did they would not so lightly set theyr soules to sale These for the most part thinke themselues excused by the Iudge and hang more vpon his mouth then hold themselues to the matter Such persons ought not to be simple men but such as should be able to iudge and to discerne betweene right and wrong Vse 3 Lastly let vs come to witnesses which are other parties in the matter of iudgment and are especially aymed at in this place it directeth and informeth them to know what they do and where they stand Let them take heed what they depose lest by forswearing themselues they renounce the liuing God and bring damnation vpon theyr soules A man would thinke that an oth were such a weight and burden vpon the conscience that no man would dare to steppe forth and lay his hand vpon the booke and afterward sell himselfe to the diuell There is nothing so vile wretched but some will bee found as vile to set it on foot If Ahab be sicke for Naboths vineyard Iezabel can quickly by her letters procure two false varlets and vnthrifts in Samaria to beare false witnesse against him 1 Kings 21 10. So when the malice and enuy of the Pharisees grew to be extreme against Christ and that they feared the fall of theyr kingdome though he were innocency it selfe yet there were found false witnesses to condemne the innocent Math. 26 60 61. Hence it is that the Ecclesiasticall Lawes haue not hand ouer head admitted all without difference and discretion to be brought and allowed as witnesses but haue set downe seuen iust considerations of exceptions against witnesses in this manner Aetas conditio sexus discretio fama Fortuna fides The first point to be respected in witnesses is that they be of age for such as are infants children or yonglings know not the depth of the cause nor the validity of an oth nor the distinction of matters whereupon they are to be produced and therefore they may stand by while the iury is impanelled And to these we may ioyne the old doting age which decayeth in vnderstanding no lesse then it doth in strength of body Secondly the condition of the persons whether they be bond or free The tenant for his land-lord the seruant for his Master the father and sonne one for another are worthily esteemed to be partiall witnesses Thirdly the sexe whether it be man or woman for a womans testimony wanteth much of the weight of the other because many of them are partiall and passionate light creatures if it be opposed against the testimony of a wise and considerate man They are soone ledde aside by affection by pitty or fauor and therefore neuer any of them were admitted to sit in place of iudgement where the Iudge should know neyther father nor mother Fourthly discretion for idiots and lunatike persons or mad men would prooue but mad witnesses to be admitted in tryals of truth who cannot discerne aright of themselues and of theyr owne estate For how should they be able to diue into the causes of other men that haue not the vse of reason or vnderstanding Fiftly fame is not to be contemned in this case for they should bee men of good report and credit in the places of theyr abode not common swearers not lyers not drunkards and ruffians for such as sweare commonly make no more conscience of an oth taken before a Iudge then of an oth sitting vpon theyr ale-bench and such as are tainted and stayned with the reproch of many euils will easily bee drawne to adde one sin of periury
purpose of God was to saue them together and therefore he telleth them Except these abide in the ship yee cannot bee safe Act. 27.22.31 God is absolutely able to preserue our life without the taking of food or the labour of our hands or the apparelling of our bodies as the fowles are fed and the Lillies are clothed which neither sow nor reape Mat. 6.26 28. neither labour nor spinne yet he commandeth vs to labour the thing that is good In the garden of Eden in the time of mans innocency Adam was called to labour and after the fall it was saide In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eate bread Gen. 2.15 and 3.19 till thou returne to the earth So God can nourish to eternal life without means of man otherwise we shold diminish his power yet he will haue his word preached in season out of season he will haue it heard and attended vnto with all diligence to begin and to encrease faith in vs and he sendeth a comfortable blessing vpon his owne meanes And therefore the Apostle teacheth Ephes 4.12 That Christ ascending vp to heauen and leading captiuity captiue gaue gifts vnto men for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministery fitting teachers to their callings although he can saue without meanes The reasons follow First we are commanded Reason 1 to further Gods prouidence by lawful endeuors in our callings This is to vs most comfortable and giueth euident assurance of the blessing of God without which holy endeuor we want this comfort and assurance Thus the Apostle reasoneth directly 2 Pe. 1. The election of God in it selfe is sure for the foundation of God remaineth and hath this seal 2 Tim 2.19 20. 2 Pet. 1.5 6 9 10. The Lord knoweth who are his yet he requireth of vs to giue all diligence to increate in knowledge faith temperance patience godlinesse loue brotherly kindnesse If ye do these things ye shall neuer fall Reason 2 Againe the end why God hath giuen vs meanes and fitted vs to our calling is to serue his prouidence not to make vs idle in our selues vnprofitable vnto others Gods gifts are to some purpose they were not giuen and granted in vain we must not hide them in the earth but imploy them to their vse This the Apostle teacheth 2 Tim. 1.6 7. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the gift of GOD which is in thee by the putting on of mine hands for God hath not giuen to vs the spirit of feare but of power loue and a sound minde And thus Mordecai reasoneth in his charge to Esther that she should goe into the king Eccle. 4.8 13 14. make supplication before him for her people Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time declaring that we haue not our callings singled out and fitted vnto vs to hide our talents in the earth but to employ them to encrease and aduantage The vses remaine First we must know that Vse 1 extraordinary courses are not to be looked after nor to be depended vpon we must leaue them to extraordinary times seasons which are now ceassed and not to be expected Many desire that God should shew among his people such great and miraculous works as hee shewed in bringing his people out of Egypt with a mighty hand and out-stretched arme and so feed themselues with fancies and are carried away after their owne imaginations God hath tyed vs to ordinary courses which are more for our comfort and therefore he that walketh plainely walketh safely Luke 16.27 28 29 30. This vse is concluded out of the parable where the rich man desireth to haue Lazarus sent from the dead to his fathers house to warne them lest they also come into the place of torment But Abraham answered They haue Moses and the Prophets let them heare them and when the rich glutton would haue other meanes If one come from the dead they will repent he said againe vnto him If they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead and come vnto them Whereby our Sauiour sheweth that whosoeuer depends vpon extraordinary meanes visions or reuelations or dreames or the dead when God hath left vs ordinary wayes is to follow by-pathes of our owne to dig cesternes that hold no water and to trust in lying words that shall not profit God hath ordained to teach vs by the Ministery of his word and hath put his hidden treasure in earthen vessels whereunto we must attend as to a light shining in darke places This is the ordinary way and common meanes left vs to attaine saluation and eternall life Hereby then all ignorant persons are reproued and conuinced who neglecting this vsuall way to begin and confirme faith and the rest of the graces of God in vs say O if God would himself speak vnto vs from heauen or if wee might heare Christ preach vnto vs wee would repent and beleeue the Gospel as for men we know not whether they speake the truth or not Others say we haue the Scriptures in our houses we can reade them at home can they by all their teaching preaching make the word of God any better Besides if you vrge Sermons so much we haue Sermon bookes at home wee reade them and can serue God in our houses as well as they that run after Sermons Others also think they haue knowledge sufficient already that they need neither heare nor reade any more Lastly others obiect we haue good prayers and good homilies why should not men be content with them as the law prescribeth and enioyneth All these excuses are but fig-leaues to couer ouer their owne shame when once they are sifted and examined We answer to the first obiection many waies The first ●●iection a●swered First we are not able to endure the dreadfull presence of Almighty God and therefore the faithfull haue cryed out Alasse wee shall die because we haue seene the Lord. Wee heare not the thunder without feare we behold not the brightnesse of the Sun without dazeling how then shold we heare the immediat voice of God or see his glory without confusion Againe if the Lord should speak from heauen and vtter his voyce from the place of his habitation he would speake no otherwise hee would teach no other trueth then the Prophets and Apostles haue deliuered And if wee should heare one of the elect Angels he wold set before vs no new points of religion hee would bring vnto vs no new article of faith and therefore the Apostle saith Gal 1. ● Though wee or an Angel from heauen preach vnto you otherwise then that which we haue preached vnto you let him be accursed But it is more comfortable and profitable to vs to be taught by men like vnto our selues then by the angels that are spirits we cannot abide their glory through weaknes of our flesh we cannot be
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
descendeth not from aboue Iames 3 15 but is earthly sensuall and diuellish Hereupon the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 1 20. Where is the wise Where is the Scribe Where is the disputer of this world hath not God made the wisedome of this world foolishnesse If then God hath made it foolishnesse let vs not account it our happinesse nor those happy men that haue nothing to commend them to God and men but that If God will destroy it let not vs thinke it can saue those that trust in it Secondly we should not content our selues to be worldly wise This the Gentiles sought after and obtained Let not vs care so much for this learning as to be heauenly wise to know Christ that we may haue him liuing dwelling in vs. This the Apostle teacheth Ro. 16 19. where he sayth Your obedience is come abroad among all I am glad therefore of you but yet I would haue you wise vnto that which is good and simple concerning euill Heere he requireth wisedome but simple simplicity but wisedome Then he sheweth wherein these must appeare and how we must bee both the one and the other We must not be wise to do euill nor simple vnto that which is good But our wisedome must consist in following that which is good our simplicity in eschewing euill There is a wisedome of God there is a wisedome of men there is a wisedome of the diuell The first is heauenly the second humane the third diuellish The end of the first is the saluation of the godly the end of the second is the commendation of the world the end of the third is the condemnation of hell The first is a spirituall gift of God the second a naturall gift of man the third a wretched worke of the diuell The heauenly wisedome which is from aboue is holy the diuellish wisedome which is from hell below is vnholy the humane wisedome which is from the earth is in it selfe and of it selfe indifferent and partaketh of a meane nature neyther holy nor vnholy The heauenly wisedome teacheth to know God and is the beginning of godlynes the earthly wisedome standeth in humane knowledge of naturall things and in vnderstanding the things of this life the diuellish wisedome consisteth in Machauilian policies and in desperate deuices Guic. hist ● to accomplish by right or wrong by force or flattery by life or death that which the corrupt heart intendeth and hath contryued This last kind wee must alwayes auoyde which was first taught by the diuell and practised by his disciples The first day wee begin to practise it we begin to be the diuels schollers The further we go forward in it the more we profite in the diuels schoole This was the profound wisedome of Ahab and Iezabel 1 Kings 12 when as they plotted to get the possession of Naboths vineyard This is to be found in many fine wits in the world that set thē a worke on wickednes and abuse it to the dishonour of God to the hurt of theyr brethren and to the destruction of theyr owne soules The humane wisedome standeth in humane things in ordering matters belonging to the Commonwealth and priuate families whereunto belongeth the knowledge of Arts and Sciences This differeth much from the former that being alwayes vnlawfull the end beeing to accomplish some mischeefe by fraud and deceite where the end of this is to delight to profit And yet this wisedome cannot bee acceptable to God 1 Cor. 3 19 but is foolishnes with him vnlesse it be seasoned and sanctified with the heauenly wisedome which is ioyned with the feare of God The heauenly wisedome may stand with the earthly and the earthly of it selfe may bee ioyned with that which is diuellish But when the Spirit of God commeth putteth true heauenly wisedome into the heart it rectifieth the humane wisedome and giueth it a pleasant taste that pleaseth God it separateth and abolisheth all diuellish wisedome and suffereth it not to lurk and lodge with in vs any longer Let vs all therefore seek to be wise in God in his word and in godlines and then the naturall giftes that God hath giuen vs shall bee sanctifyed vnto vs. CHAP. XXIIII 1 WHen Balaam saw that it pleased the Lord to blesse Israel then hee went not as at certaine times before to fetch Diuinations but set his face toward the wildernesse 2 And Balaam lift vp his eyes and looked vpon Israel which dwelt according to their Tribes and the Spirit of God came vpon him 3 And he vttered his Parable and saide Balaam the sonne of Beor hath said and the man whose eyes were opened hath said 4 He hath said which heard the words of GOD and saw the vision of the Almighty 1 Sam. 19 24. falling in a trance and hauing his eyes vncouered 5 How goodly are thy Tents O Iacob and thy Tabernacle O Israel 6 As the valleyes are they stretched foorth as Gardens by the riuer side as the Aloe trees which the Lord hath planted as the Cedars beside the waters Cant. 4 4. 7 The water droppeth out of the Bucket and his seede shall be in many waters and his King shall be higher then Agag and his kingdome shall bee exalted 8 God brought him out of Egypt his strength shall be as an Vnicorne he shall eate the nations his enemies and bruise their bones and shoote them through with his arrowes 9 He coucheth and lyeth downe as a yong Lyon and as Lyon Who shall stirre him vp Blessed is be that blesseth thee and cursed is he that curseth thee IN the former Chapter wee haue heard and handled the two first prophesies of Balaam wherein we see how he hath blessed and not cursed the people of God 〈◊〉 pro●● of Ba●●● Here Moses proceedeth to finish the rest of the history wherein we are to consider two things First the residue of his prophesies remaining secondly the euent of thē all The prophesies are of two sorts first speciall prophesies concerning speciall and seuerall people to the 23. verse Namely the Israelites the Moabites and Edomites the Amalekites and the Kenites secondly generall prophesies belonging to all the nations bordering together and inhabiting Assyria Iudea Palestina and all Syria which shall taste of the same misery of warre and be consumed with the violence of the same fire The first point is touching the Israelites in which propheticall history we must consider as we did before three things first the preparation that is made vnto it secondly the prophesie it selfe thirdly the effects and consequences thereof ensuing Touching the preface and preparation vnto the prophesie it selfe it serueth to confirme the authority and truth of this prophesie For albeit it were deliuered by the mouth of a wicked man who was conuinced by the light of his owne conscience and by the testimony of Gods Spirit that hee should not curse his people yet he worketh and wrastleth against the will of God as if hee could couzen deceyue
the most Highest Therefore he did not seeke a solitary place as hee was wont to worke his witchcrafts at which time he saw God met and preuented him but turneth his countenance at a sodaine toward the desart of Iordan Chap. 22 1. where the Israelites soiourned and pitched their Tents purposing presently to breake out into a cursing of them before the God of the Israelites should be aware of it supposing he would haue put no prophesie in his mouth before he should go to fet his wicked and wonted diuinations Thus he determined with himselfe to vtter the wicked imaginations of his own heart before God shold worke any impression in his minde or reueale his counsell vnto him But God which catcheth the wise in theyr owne craftinesse 1 Cor. 3 19 20 and knoweth that the thoughtes of the most wily are vaine represseth his diuellish purpose and doeth not onely bridle his tongue but inspireth him with his Spirit being as it were changed into another man that he should speake not his own deuices but the words of God So then God casting as it wer his hand vpon him taketh hold on him staying his intent and stopping his course two wayes the one outward the other inward The outward meanes vsed of God to hinder him was the beholding of the dwellings and lodgings of the Israelites distinguished according to their Tribes For when hee saw with his eyes their goodly and comely order whereby the presence of God amongst them was claerly manifested and theyr fayth in him was testified euery man encamping by his standard and vnder the Ensigne of his fathers house Numb 2 2. Numb 2 2. he was vpon that sight and situation of them withholden from proceeding in his curses and execrations The inward meanes was yet more forcible to stoppe the streame of the waters ready to ouerflow the people of God for the Spirit of God came sodainly vpon him that whereas he determined to serue the diuell and damned spirits he is constrayned against his will to serue the purpose and prouidence of God to speak what God would not what himselfe wished desired Thus we see that neither sathan nor his instruments can worke any hurt to the saluation of the people of God Rom. 16 20. but both they and all their endeuours come to nothing Hitherto of the preparation now we come to the prophesy which he vttereth by the Spirit of God In this we are to consider first the entrance into it then the prophesie it selfe In the entrance or beginning to procure attention and purchase credit to his words he setteth downe three things first the inscription and title of the prophesy wherin is a description of himselfe by his name and the name of his father For albeit Balaams name bee of no such waight and moment with vs that we shold for the persons sake giue credite to the prophesie or respect more who speaketh then what is spoken yet this simple plaine dealing professing his own name and confessing himselfe the vnwoorthy instrument of God serueth to adde some authority to the speech that followeth Secondly he stileth himselfe to be the man whose eies were opened wherby he teacheth that he would publish nothing of his owne inuention but that onely which he had receiued by diuine inspiration As if he should say Though Balaam be by nature as blind as a beetle in the matters of God and vnderstand nothing of heauenly things yet he hath receiued a spiritual and heauenly reuelation of the Spirit from aboue that of a blinde man whose eyes through couetousnes of mony and ignorance of God were closed vp he is become a seer to see for others not for himselfe nor his owne saluation Some reade the sentence thus that his eyes were shut vp but the other reading agreeth better to the circumstances of the text and the words folowing as euen Lyra himselfe confesseth that he was enlightned of God to see with the eyes of his mind more clearly then he could do with his bodily eyes Lyra in Numb cap. 24. inasmuch as the light of the mind is more plaine and perspicuous then the light of the body Thirdly he confesseth hee had heard the words of God Thus he speaketh after the manner of the true Prophets who were wont to beginne their prophesies with prefixing the name of God Thus saith the Lord Heare yee the word of the Lord to shew that they vttered not their owne inuentions but the Oracles of God Now as Balaams sight which is the sharpest quickest sence saw nothing before God opened his eyes so hee declareth he was dull and deafe of hearing before God had opened his eares to heare and deliuered his word vnto him Lastly he saith he had seen the vision of the Almighty rauished in mind but hauing his eyes vncouered whereby hee meaneth that being as it were in an extasy he was carried ●u● of himselfe The like is noted touching Saul ● Sam. ●9 he went to Naioth in Ramah and the Spirit of God came vpon him also and he went prophesying vntill he came thither Hereby Balaam sheweth two things first the author of the prophesie to wit the Almighty ascribing all to God challenging nothing to himselfe secondly the manner of his prophesie which was in a vision Ezek. 3 14 Dan. 8 27. and 10 8 which farre surpasseth the communication of Gods wil by dream albeit God be the author of both Thus hath God oftentimes made himself known among the Infidels both by visions and by dreames as to Abimelech Pharaoh Nebuchadnezar and others who may be sayd to haue the holy spirit but had not the spirit of holines for whersoeuer he worketh he is holy but he doth not alway work holines and sanctification which euermore accompany saluation What a 〈◊〉 is what a● the parts ends of it Now because it is said he fell into a trance it shall not be amisse to shew what a trance is what are the parts and ends of it being away and meanes which God hath vsed to reueale his will vnto men A trance is an extraordinary worke of the Spirit of God vpon the whole man casting the body and senses into a deepe sleep withdrawing the soule from the fellowship of the body to a fellowship with God for the better enlightning thereof It is I say an extraordinarie worke of the Spirit aboue the work of nature or constitution of the body or strength of the imagination whereby the whole man is for a time changed in body and mind the body the senses thereof both outward and inward cast into a deepe or dead sleepe made senselesse the soule withdrawne or separated from the communion and fellowship of the bodie to the fellowship of God for the better enlightning thereof to vnderstand the secrets counsels of God This is a trance or to be rauished in the Spirit which God vsed often to his Prophets It standeth in two parts or actions