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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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may receiue to vs his righteousnesse We remaine foule and filthy in Gods sight vntill we be cloathed with the glorious robes of his righteousnesse Last of all it is our duty to forsake our sinnes and to walke in the statutes of God This is the exhortation of the Prophet Esay 1.16 17. Wash you make you cleane put away the euill of your doings from before mine eyes cease to doe euill learne to doe well To this purpose speaketh Ezekiel chap. 20. ver 18 19. Walke ye not in the statutes of your fathers neither obserue their iudgements nor defile your selues with their idols I am the Lord your God walke in my statutes and keepe my iudgements and doe them We are then washed from our sinnes when we haue learned to walke in the wayes of God If we doe not bring forth the fruits of obedience we lie wallowing in the mire of our sinnes and God will finde vs out There is no hiding of our filthinesse from him his eyes see the sonnes of men and ponder his pathes That they defile not their campes in the middest whereof I dwell We haue spoken already of the first reason drawne from the effect of sin it defileth our persons our actions and our places The second reason is taken from the consideration of Gods presence From which reason hee reasoneth thus I dwell among you Therefore yee must bee an holy people and hate all vncleannesse and vnholinesse and do that good which I command you ●ct But heere some will say how is God saide to dwell among his people The heauen is his Throne and the earth his footstoole he dwelleth not in Temples made with hands forasmuch as the heauens of heauens cannot containe him that filleth with his presence and power both heauen and earth Doth he not dwell also among the vngodly and infidels that know him not Or can any hide himselfe in secret places ●er that he shall not see him I answer this phrase is a borrowed speech from the sonnes of men whereby is vnderstood that God is conuersant with vs doth keepe his mansion in our hearts ruling in vs by his Spirit and by his Word Euen as a master of a family ruleth and guideth his house wherein he dwelleth so doth God rule vs ouerrule vs and taketh vp his rest and residence among vs determining to continue with vs. He is present among the vngodly by his power but not by his grace they cannot hide their faces from him but he hideth his fauour from them So then this manner of speech importeth these three things ●w God ●elleth a●ng his ●●●ple First it sheweth the effect and efficacy of his presence wherby he possesseth gouerneth the faithfull which are as his Temple to dwell in hauing dominion ouer them enlightning them to know and guiding thē to practise his will made knowne vnto them Secondly it signifieth that his presence is perpetuall and permanent and continuall for when a man meaneth to inhabite in any place it is a signe he doth not determine to flit away as a bird that wandreth from her nest but to abide there without departing away He is not as a guest that lodgeth with his friend for a day or two nor as a stranger that taketh vp his Inne for a night or two nor as a soiourner that meaneth to remoue when his terme is out but as an owner and possessor that meaneth to set downe his rest and not to leaue that place as Iohn 14 16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter that he may abide with you for euer euen the Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall bee in you Thirdly it noteth the manner of his presence not by the infinitenesse of power as he is present with all his creatures to sustaine them and vphold them but by his grace and gracious effects vniting vs to Christ regenerating vs to bee liuely members of his body crying in our hearts Abba Father and witnessing thereby our adoption Rom. 8 9. Yee are not in the flesh but in the Spirit if so bee that the Spirit of God dwell in you Christ is also said to dwell in our hearts by faith Eph. 3 17. Now let vs examine the reason included in these words in the middest whereof I dwell and consider the strength and power of it how hee prouoketh them to study to bee an holy people separate from all pollutions and prouocations of sinne by the assurance of his gracious presence We learne from hence that the consideration of Gods presence and helpe that euer goeth Doctrine 1 with his children Gods presence and help must prouoke vs to weldoing must prouoke them to weldoing His presence ought to moue vs to all good duties This point is taught in many places of the word of God as Numb 35 34. Defile not the Land which ye shall inhabite wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel Where we see he reasoneth thus I dwell among the Israelites therfore they must take heed they defile not the Land Thus also he speaketh in Deuteronomy chap. 23 14. The Lord thy God walketh in the middest of thy camp to deliuer thee and to giue vp thine enemies before thee therefore shall thy Campe be holy that he see no vncleane thing in thee and turne away from thee Heere he moueth them to holinesse toward him because of his continuall presence with them Thus doth the Lord speake to Salomon concerning the house which hee was building If thou wilt walke in my statutes 1 Kin. 6 12 13 and execute my iudgements and keepe all my commandements to walke in them then will I performe my word with thee which I spake vnto Dauid thy Father and I will dwell among the children of Israel and will not forsake my people Israel So the Prophet Esay reasoneth chap. 52 11 12. Depart ye depart ye goe ye out from thence touch no vncleane thing goe ye out of the middest of her be ye cleane that beare the vessels of the Lord for ye shall not goe out with haste nor goe by flight for the Lord will goe before you and the God of Israel will be your reward In all which places the presence of God that is most holy is brought in vrging vs to the duties of holinesse of life The reasons are very plaine to prooue the same First because God is the Lord hee is of Reason 1 absolute power to command and rule ouer al and therefore hee beeing the Lord God his presence with vs must prouoke vs to watch ouer all our waies and to walke in feare and trembling before him This reason is expressed in the first chapter of the booke of Ioshua verse 9 where the Lord saith vnto him Bee strong and of a good courage be not afraid neyther be thou dismayed for the
they would not enter into their fieldes they would not meddle with their vineyards they would not drinke of their water freely yet see with what a terror and trembling they were stricken at the approch of the Israelites neere their borders And this was the heauy hand of God vpon them as Moses declareth Deut. 2. This day will I begin to send thy feare and thy dread vpon all people vnder the whol heauen which shall heare thy fame and shall tremble and quake before thee Heereby we learne for our instruction That the enemies of God and his people are many times afraid where no true cause of any feare is Doctrine Euil men fear where no feare is Euill men are often afrayd of the people of God that faine would liue in peace So Saul liued in continual feare of Dauid 1 Sam. 18 15 29 he was vexed disquieted in heart and neuer in rest although hee we●e harmlesse though he sought peace and ensued after it yea the more Dauid prospered the more Saul feared him So did Pharaoh and the Egyptians feare the Israelites when they began to multiply and increase in abundance Exod. 1.12 Thus Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a iust and holy man reuerencing him greatly hearing him gladly doing many things at his preaching Mark 6 20. Thus the high Priest feared the Apostles and the officers of the people Acts 5 26. Whē Herod and the rest of Ierusalem heard of the birth of a new King they were greatly troubled and perplexed in mind Mat 2.3 Al these things confirme the truth of this doctrine verifie the saying of the wise man The wicked flye when none pursueth but the righteous are bold as a Lion Prou. 28 1. Reason 1 The Reasons are these First because an euill man carrieth in his owne bosome a conscience for sinne which striketh and accuseth him which citeth and summoneth him before the barre of Gods iudgement seate Albeit no man can bee deposed against him albeit none can giue sentence and iudgement against him yet hee carrieth that about him which is instead of all Mala mens Tert. 〈…〉 1. sc 2. malus animus as the Poet sayth An euill minde an euill meaning an euill conscience arraigning him at the Tribunall of the eternall Iudge who shall giue to euery one according to his workes It shall serue as plaintiffe witnesse iudge and executioner against him This is confirmed vnto vs by many examples in the word of God When Cain had slaine his owne brother shed his innocent bloode which cryed for vengeance vnto heauen the reuenging hand of God pursued him Gen. 4 10 12 17. liuing as a runnagate and vagabond vpon the earth and fearing the sight of euery creature to bee armed against him he began to build a City to hide his head to yeelde him comfort to prouide for his safety and to defend him from iniury but there also the iustice of God ouertooke him the vengeance of his hand followd him and he was driuen from that enterprize The like we see in Belteshazzer Dan. 5.56 when there appeared fingers of a mans hand which wrote ouer against the Candlesticke vpon the plaister of the wall of the Kings Palace albeit hee knew not the substance and signification of the miracle whether it fore-shewed good or euill yet he carryed his witnesse with him that could not be bribed or corrupted so that his countenance was changed his thoughts were troubled the ioynts of his loynes were loosed and his knees smote one agaynst the other This terror of conscience the Lord fortold as the punishment of sinne Leu. 26 17 36 37. and Deuteronomy 28. verses 65 66 67. Againe no maruel if the wicked be oftentimes Reason 2 smitten with feare as with the spirit of giddynesse because they want the shielde of Fayth and the helmet of Hope which are as two strong Anchors to hold the shippe that it be not shaken in peeces with the stormes or dashed on rockes or drowned in the water or swallowed in quicke-sands A liuely fayth in the Sonne of God is the mother of all true comfort the peace of the soule the life of good workes the key of heauen for beeing iustified by Fayth Rom. 5 1. We haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God Wee haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but we haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Ro. 8 15. We haue boldnesse against the day of Iudgment there is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare for feare hath painfulnesse and he that feareth is not perfect in loue 1 Iohn 4 17 18. The stronger our faith is the lesse is our feare as one increaseth the other decreaseth If our faith bee little our feare is great as our Sauiour sheweth in the example of his disciples tossed with a tempest on the sea crying vnto Christ saying Master saue vs we perish Mat. 8 25 26. who saide vnto them Why are yee fearefull O ye of little Faith Now let vs come to the Vses If this be the Vse 1 nature of the wicked that he carrieth about with him a troubled and trembling conscience then a wicked man is a very coward faint-hearted being afraide of euery thing True it is there are many who neyther feare God nor the diuell who seeme to be valiant to aduenture their flesh and to expose themselues to desperate dangers in fighting and quarrelling as the manner of sundry Ruffians and swashbucklers is who feare not to meete any man in the field at any weapon and for euery crosse word are ready to giue the stab yet bring these ventrous and foole hardy fellowes to encounter hand to hand with the enemies of our soules to wrastle against spirituall wickednesses in high places and to striue as for life and death against pride prophanenesse against concupiscence of the flesh and contempt of the word against idle games of euill report against our lustes and sins which fight against our owne soules we shall see no childe so weake and willing to turn his heeles as these Ruffian-like spirits who albeit they walke with long blades by their sides or long poles on their neckes and iet vp and downe as ●ords of the earth ready alwayes to lay the hand vpon the dagger and to pick a quarrell at euery word yet they haue not the hand or the heart to strike one stroke to conquer sin and the tyrany of the diuell in themselues but yeeld themselues like slaues and captiues to do his will and are led away to destruction as an Oxe to the slaughter Notwithstanding this is true valour and manhoode to wound more and more the corruption of the old man He is stronger that conquereth himself then he that winneth a City Prou. 16 32. He is a better man of his hands that ouercommeth his own concupiscence then he that hath the vpper hand
before our eyes the example of Balaam hired to curse the people of God o Iohn 5 34 36. who gaped after gaine and promotion and gaue mischeiuous counsell to the Moabites and Midianites to worke their death and destruction This truth is confirmed by sundry the Apostles Peter Iude and Iohn in the new Testament who mentioning this history declare both that bee loued the wages of vnrighteousnes and laid a stumbling-blocke before the children of Israel to intrap them was reprooued for his iniquity by his Asse Who spake with mans voice and forbad the foolishnesse of the Prophet These things being duly weighed and throughly considered do sufficientlie teach vs who is the author of this Booke not man but God and that the authority of it is diuine and not humane Now let vs see what vse may be gathered from hence and how it may be profitably applyed to our instruction Seeing the Author of this Booke and so of Vse 1 the rest of holy scripture is not man or Angel or any creature but the Lord of heauen and earth we learne that they want not nor stand in neede of the confirmation and approbation of the Church or of men seeing they are approued vnto vs by a greater authority and as it were warranted vnto our consciences from on higher Court where God himselfe sitteth present and president of the same So then as Christ our Sauiour speaketh p I receiue not the record of man but I haue a greater witnesse then the witnesse of Iohn We may truly say the same of his word we haue a better ground to stand vpon and a fairer warrant then the testimonie of the Church to beare record of the dignitie and authority of the word Hence it is that he saith in the same place The works which the Father hath giuen me to fin sh do beare witnes of me that the Father sent me and the Father himselfe which hath sent me beareth witnes of me This serueth to conuince the Church of Rome of the spirit of errour which teacheth that the scripture receiueth authority and credite from the Church insomuch that some of them are not ashamed to auouch q Eckius in Euchirid de autho Eccl. That the authoritie of the Church is greater then of the Scripture and others feare not to blaspheme r Hermannus that they should haue no more authority in regard of vs then Aesops Fables except the authority of the Church did procure it And as they are bold to maintaine that the Church is aboue the Scripture ſ Bellar. de verbo dei li. 4. cap. 12. so they teach that the Scriptures are not in themselues necessary neyther were written to be a rule of our Faith Thus they fall from one heresie into another proceed from worse to worse as euill men doe But the assurance of our Faith touching the Scriptures is not builded on the Churches authority but vppon the illumination of Gods spirit shining euidently in the Scriptures thēselues The holy Ghost openeth the eyes of those that are his that they know discerne his voice from all others For as the Sun is not seene by any ligh● but his owne so we iudge of the truth and all false Doctrines by the Scriptures How do we discerne sweet from sowre but by it owne taste And how can wee better discerne the rellish of the Scripture t Psal 19 10. Which is sw●eter then the Hony and the Hony-combe to the taste then by the goodnes and excellency of it selfe True it is wee doe not reiect and refuse contemne or condemne the testimony authority of the true church as the Papists slander vs u What the office and authority of the Church is but wee confesse these points of the Church First it is as the keeper of the rolles and records to preserue them not to authorize them He that is custos rotulorum doth not giue authority to the writings but hath them of trust committed vnto him Secondly it is as a touchstone to distinguish them from bastard counterfeit Scriptures not to make that Scripture which is no Scripture The touchstone of the Gold-smith doth not make gold but discerneth and distinguisheth gold from other mettall what is base and what is rich stuffe so doeth the Church Thirdly it is as the voice of a x Chrisost hom 1. in Epist ad Tit. crier to preach and publish and promulgate and teach the truth as a cryer pronounceth and proclaimeth the Edicts and Decrees of his Prince but cannot adde to them nor take from them nor authorize them nor any way alter change them Fourthly it is as an Interpreter and expounder to expound and interpret them according to the Scriptures As the man of Law deliuereth the sense of the Law but doeth not make it to bee Law These are holy and honourable seruices of the Church and these wee willingly acknowledge to belong vnto it But that the Scriptures should receiue credite from it or bee of no authority without it we cannot admit or acknowledge For they are cleere perfect firme and worthy of all respect and reuerence without the testimony of the Church for the Authors sake The Apostle saith y 1 Ioh 5 6 9 It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse for that Spirit is truth and afterwarde If wee receiue the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater Thus then wee see that the chiefe cause why wee beleeue that the Scriptures were deliuered from Heauen is not the witnesse of the Church nor the authoritie of man but because the Spirit speaketh euidently in them so that we can no more doubte of the truth of them though the Church should hold her peace then if we heard God openly speaking vnto vs frō the highest heauens Let vs therefore detest the wickednesse and blasphemy of such as say the authority of Gods worde dependeth of the testimony of man which were to preferre man before God to make all his promises hang vppon the vncertaine credite of man and to make the hand-maid take place before the Lady and Mistris which were a presumption and saucinesse not to be endured Secondly we learne from hence who is the Vse 2 best Interpreter of the Scriptures and who is the sole and soueraigne Iudge thereof namely God himselfe who is the author and inspirer of them For as the authority of them dependeth not vppon the Church so the interpretation of them dependeth not vppon the will and pleasure of man according to the saying of the Apostle z 2 Pet. 1 No prophesie of the Scripture is of any priuate interpretation Euery man is the expositor of his owne worke euery Law-giuer knoweth best the meaning of his owne Law a 1 Cor. 2 For what man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him Euen so the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God for God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his
reason why the elect after their calling do not fall from grace is not in the nature of faith or the constancie of grace it selfe but it proceedeth wholly from the mercifull promise of God made to the faithfull to their faith which he cannot frustrate and therefore we cannot be deceiued because he that hath made the promise cannot lie We know and are not ignorant what Christ saith to Peter Math. 16 18. Thou art Peter and vpon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it Lastly these giftes of God though they cannot totally and finally be lost in regard of Gods promise yet the enemies of our Faith and obedience may greatly assault them and greeuously weaken them and pittifully diminish them and thereby make a deepe wound and impression in our soules so that thereby we may lye langui●hing gaping and gasping for life and draw as it were to the point of death The Prophet felt few or no effects of the Spirit working in him when he said There is no hope for me in my God So then albeit it be sure certaine that the sauing gifts of GOD are without repentance and that a true iustifying faith peculiar to the elect cannot totally and finally be lost yet when we haue receiued them if we waxe proud and wanton if we grow secure and giue our selues to commit iniquity these graces of God may so decay in vs as that in our owne iudgement and feeling and in the opinion of others it may seeme that they are quite lost and the Spirite of God to be departed from vs. Take the Galathians for an example who were truely called by the Gospell and receiued Christ Iesus to saluation as appeareth in that they receiued the Apostle as an Angel of light Gal. 4.19 9 11 14. yet by false teachers they so fel away and so dangerously as that Christ was without fashion in them the Apostle did trauell in paine with them as a woman in child-birth vntill Christ were anew fashioned in them Dauid by giuing libertie to the flesh and committing of sinne not watching ouer his owne wayes was brought into that horror and anguish of spirit as that he intreateth God to create a new heart in h m Psal 51 10 1 not to take his holy Spirit from him the work of grace seemed wholly perished and the graces of the Spirit touching his owne feeling were quenched When a man by the force of a violent tentation as it were a sore tempest beating him downe hath prophaned the giftes of God and checked grieued his Spirit quenching with sin as it were with cold water the heauenly graces kindled in his heart wherewith he was sealed to the day of redemption it will cost him deare draw from him manie sighes and sobs driue him into great horrour and greeuous agonies and cause him to shed many teares before he shall recouer himselfe againe yea he would giue the whole worlde to see the louing countenance of God toward him to heare God speake peace to his conscience to feele with comfort the ioy of his saluation The sinne of relapse is a fearefull sin as the relapse into a sharp disease is dangerous to the life God did whip and torment the conscience of Dauid that he roared as a Lion for the disquietnesse of his heart Psalme 6 6. and caused his bed to swim and watered his couch with teares The like wee see in Peter after his falling and denying of his master Math. 26 75. He went out wept bitterly before he could finde the fauour of God renewed again toward him Thus then we see that albeit vpon this ground that our names and our numbers are known to God we learn that our saluation is sure and our state vnchangeable yet we must not grow secure but vse all means wherby his graces in vs may not be in vaine but be cherished as a fire is with Fuell put vnto it that they go not out and die in vs. Fourthly seeing God vouchsafeth in mercie Vse 4 to number vs let vs labor to learne the Art of numbring measuring our daies and times that so we may be wise harted It is a great skil a diuine to number aright as we ought If a man could vnderstand al languages speake with the tongue of men Angels and were not able to vtter the language of Canaan it should little auaile him Wee must all prepare our selues if we would haue the name and reputation of good Linguists and Artists to learne the heauenly Arts and the true liberall Sciences Many there are that are accounted deepe Schollers great Linguists profound Philosophers good Grammarians excellent Mathematitians sharpe Logitians cunning Polititians fine Rhetoritians sweet Musitians rare in all witty conceits yet while they waxe old in humane learning and spend all their time therein to delight themselues and to please others they are vtterly ignorant oftentimes of the right vse of those artes catching after the shadow of them they leaue the substance and studying the circumstances they omit the marrow and pith of them There is a diuine Grammar a diuine Arithmetick a diuine Geometry a diuine Astronomy diuine Musicke there are Christian Ethicks Oeconomicks Christian Politikes and Physicks which are to be knowne of vs and studied by vs without which the other cannot profit He is the best Grammarian that hath learned to speake the truth from his heart It is the greatest incongruity that can bee when the heart and the tongue betweene which two there ought to be a concord do not agree together If wee doe not for an aduantage lye one to another we haue gotten the right arte of Grammar which teacheth to speake truly They are the best Musitians that haue learned to sing the praises of God Ephes 5 19. Speaking to themselues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody to the Lord in their harts giuing thankes alwayes for all thinges vnto God the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ He is the best Astronomer that hath his conuersation in heauen and treadeth vnder foote earthly thinges that setteth his affections on things that are aboue and not on things that are beneath He is the most expert Arithmetitian that vseth daily to number not only his yeares and moneths but his dayes and the short times of his life that he is to liue vpon the earth He is the most skilfull Geometritian that measureth his dayes with a right line and considereth that while the chaine is in his hand some part of his life is consumed and cut shorter Whosoeuer amendeth his life and euery day groweth better and better is cunning in the Ethicks Whosoeuer traineth vppe his family in the feare of God is a good Oeconomicke Whosoeuer is wise vnto saluation and prudent in giuing and taking godly counsell is a good Polititian and if he know aright his owne state how hee
rule ouer him but all the Laity in respect of the Cleargy are as sheepe to the Shepheard Therefore the Ministers of the Church may not be iudged or censured of Lay men I answere Answer this whole argument is figuratiue and therefore cannot be demonstratiue by the rules of their owne Schoole A figuratiue speech cannot conclude necessarily but onely probably If we take the word sheepe and sheepheard in their proper signification the sheepe being brutish and vnreasonable cannot iudge the their sheepeheard But if the words be taken metaphorically or by way of similitude the Magistrate is not a sheepe in all things but onely in Spirituall things belonging to doctrine and faith and a good conscience wherein the Ministers are Sheepeheards If we speake of Ciuill things and prouiding that all things be done decently and orderly in the Church the Magistrates are sheepeheards of the people and all the Cleargy are his sheepe because they are citizens and subiects of his city and Soueraignty As then the Magistrate cannot prescribe to the Minister what doctrine he shall teach so it were pride and presumption for the Minister to set downe rules to tie the Magistrate to his lure in the duties of his calling for then the sheep indeed should iudge their Pastor Thirdly Obiect 3 it seemeth absurd that an earthly Iudge should take and punish the seruants of the chiefest and highest Iudge and those men that are consecrated vnto him I answere Answer an earthly Iudge that sitteth vpon an earthly bench is also the seruant of the most High GOD the Minister of the heauenly Iudge Rom. 13.4 2 Chron. 19.5.6 and the Lieutenant of the Almighty exercising the iudgement not of man but of God It belongeth to his office to iudge others that are Gods seruants so farre as they are subiect to him as sheepe to their sheepeheard by the Law of God and man If one of the Cleargy breake the Law of God and of the kingdom wherein they liue by committing murther theft periury false witnesse-bearing or such like he is punished not as the seruant of God but as the seruant of sinne and an offender against the Common-wealth Against those supposed reasons we oppose the authority of Gods word that subiecteth all persons to the power of the Magistrate Let euery soule bee subiect Rom. 13.1 Ti. 3.1 1 Pet. 2.13.14 put them in remembrance that they bee subiect to the principalities and powers and that they be obedient and ready to euery good worke therefore submit your selues vnto all manner ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it bee vnto the king as vnto the superiour or vnto gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that do well We heard before that Christ requireth obedience and as he commanded it to others so he practised it himselfe for he was subiect to his parents Luk. 2.51 Matth. 17.27 and to the Magistrates he payed polle money for himselfe and for Peter not vsing the priuiledge he had and the liberty he might vse for offence sake lest another emboldened by his example should vse the pretence of liberty that indeed he had not Paul also teacheth subiectiō both by word and deed by his doctrine practise For he was subiect to the Magistrates and vsed their authority for his safety when hee appealed from the malicious Pharises vnto Caesar Act. 26.32 Chrysost homil in Roman Bernard eptst 42. Thus we see what Christ did what the Apostles did what the Christians did they exempted not themselues from the secular power but whether they were Apostles or Euangelists or Prophets they submitted themselues and claimed no freedome from their iurisdiction wherefore they are led by another spirit that broach and practise a contrary doctrine The third res proofe Thirdly they are reproued that are seditious persons and moue rebellion and insurrection against Princes who alwaies or for the most part are mette with all in this life and receiue according to their deseruings Of such persons Iezabel spake truely 2 King 9.31 Had Zimri peace that slew his master as if she should haue said Can any Rebell or Traitor or any that riseth against his superior and Soueraigne prosper and haue good successe For Z●mri a Captaine of the hoste conspired against Elah the son of Baasha king of Israel smote him that he dyed vsurped the kingdom But the time of his reigne the continuance of his sitting on the throne could not be numbred nor reckoned by yeres 1 King 16.9.15.18 nor by months nor by weeks he reigned onely seuen dayes and then being hardly besieged he was constrained to burne himselfe and the kings house with fire so that as he came to his kingdome by vsurpation and held it a while by effusion of blood so he ended his dayes in desperation Reade to this purpose 2 Kin. 15. where we haue set before vs the examples of Shallum 2. King 15.10.13.25.30 who cōspiring against Zachariah the son of the second Ieroboam and smiting him in the sight of the people and reigning in his stead did not long enioy his kingdome but sate in his throne the space of a moneth and then himselfe was slaine so he found according to his works so that as he spared not to shed blood so his blood was not spared Likewise the example of Pekah who conspired against Pekahiah and smote him in Samaria in the place of the kings palace but did he escape for this treason and end his daies in peace No as he did euil in the sight of the Lord and departed not from the sinnes of Ieroboam the sonne of Nebal so Hoshea wrought treason against him smote him and slew him and paid him home in his owne kind So in the former Chapter we see that when the seruants of Ioash king of Iudah wroght treason against their master slew him his sonne did not suffer their hoare heads to go downe to the graue in peace but so soone as the kingdome was confirmed in his hand he slew his seruants which had killed the king his father 2 Kin 14 5. Thus it appeareth that a discontented head a muttering spirit and a seditious mind are dangerous and bring a iust reward of rebellion vpon their heads that are the contriuers of it so that they fall into the pit of confusion that they made for others This is the ende of rebellion and such recompence haue Rebels against Princes Hence it is that such pernitious persons being the common plagues of kingdomes and Common-wealths are hated of God and man odious to euery one yea euen to those that vsed them to serue their owne turnes in disloyal and wicked actions Plutarch in the life of Romulus so that albeit they loue treason well yet they hate the Traitor For he that betrayeth his Prince his countrey and kindred into their hands to whom he is not tyed
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
deformed both wayes they haue too little one way and too much another way and yet alasse they see it not they know it not they feele it not Or if they do know it they will not acknowledge it or if they feele it they will not reforme it and if they see it they glory at it and reioyce in it It were a strange thing to see any body to bee merry and make a triumph of it because it wanteth an eye or an hand or a foot But thus the case standeth with many Churches they consist of confused bodies one member encroching vpon the office of another they want their eyes to see withall and yet they dreame of perfection and despise other that are more faire and forward in good things then themselues Nothing continueth long at one stay in this life nothing is so well ordered but Satan and his instruments seeke to put it out of ioynt Wee must pray to God to open our eyes to see our wants and wrinkles and to labour earnestly as well to restore that which is wanting as to cut off that which is abounding Christ is the King of this Church shall any presume in his kingdome to set vp or pull downe to place or to displace to plant or to destroy This is Gods office it belongeth vnto him onely to do them such therefore are no better then vsurpers Vse 2 Secondly this serueth to reprooue the state of the Iewes as it stood in the dayes of Christ It was time for him to come to reforme and restore all things they had many strange plants growing in the garden of God which his right hand had neuer planted that were as naughty and noysome rootes to bee pulled vp and as byles and blisters in the body We heard before that in the Church vnder the Law there was found no other Ecclesiasticall ministeries which were ordinary then those orders of the high Priest the inferiour Priests and the rest of the Leuites all which were appointed by the law of God And if any were raised vp extraordinarily the same had their calling confirmed from heauen eyther by inward motion of the Spirit or by working of miracles or by euident testimonies of the mouth of God But this gouernment of the Church stood not long without change and alteration for though the field were sowne with good seed yet the enuious man sowed tares in it so that in latter times there arose many sectes and sorts of teachers among thē who by schismes were ready to rent that body in sunder departing from the simplicity sincerity that was established by Gods instistution Epiph. cont haer lib. 1. Some of the ancient that haue taken paines to discouer to the world the heresies that sprung vp and grew apace where once they tooke rooting and footing and so to giue notice of them that they might be auoyded doe testifie that seuen seuerall and principall sects arose among the Iewes Seuen sects among the Iewes whereof some are mentioned in the Scriptures and other are not The first was that of the Scribes Scribes who were Interpreters of the Law but withall as if the law were too base a thing to sticke onely vnto it they deliuered many traditions as from their Elders not contained in the Law and sought taking counsell of humane wisedom to bring in a more exact kind of the worship of GOD then Moses and the Prophets euer taught consisting in many voluntary obseruations and customes deuised by men which they are wont to magnifie preferre before the Commandements of God Mat. 15. Colossians 2. Thus would man become wiser thē GOD Deut. 4 2. who forbad all adding or taking from his word The second sect were the Sadduces Sadduces which were of the race of the Samaritans and had their name of one Sadoc a Priest these denied the resurrection of the body and beleeued not that there is any Angell or spirit Acts 23 and consequently ouerthrew all religion as 1. Corinth 15. For if there be no resurrection of the body or immortality of the soule then are wee of all men the most miserable that professe Christ In vaine wee beleeue in his Name and in vaine wee fight with beasts at Ephesus in vaine we suffer crosses and afflictions for the Gospels sake it were better for vs to do as the most doe and to bee wicked and vngodly if there were no other life or reward in another world If the dead rise not 1 Cor. 15 16 17. then is not Christ raised and if CHRIST bee not raised our faith is vaine we are yet in our sinnes The third sect were Pharisies Pharisies these were the strictest of all others and most reuerenced and best esteemed these beleeued the rising againe of the dead at the last day and that there were both Angels and spirits as the Scribes also did and that all shall come vnto iudgement to receiue according to the things they do in this flesh whether they bee good or euill Acts 23. Acts 23 6 7. When Paul beeing accused by his enemies perceiuing that they were partly Pharisies and partly Sadduces he cryed out in the Councell Men and brethren I am a Pharisie the sonne of a Pharisie of the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question They much honoured virginity and single life they paied tithes of the smallest things they possessed Luke 18 verse 12. They washed cups platters beds and all kinde of vessels that they vsed they fasted twice euery week and differed in their habite from other men Against these are many woes denounced by our Sauiour Christ in the Gospel Math. 23 verse 23 for their hypocrisie that delighted more in outward shewes then in the truth of the heart The fourth sect were the Hemerobaptists Hemerobaptists or Quotidian washers who thought that no man could be saued if hee were not washed euery day that so he might be clensed from the impurity and filthinesse of sinne It is not the water in the whole sea nor any fountaine can wash away the sinnes and corruptions of our life or of our heart It hath no force in it eyther by any naturall power or by any voluntary vse Christ is our Purgatory and purification it is he that must wash vs or else wee remaine vnpure and vncleane He is the water of life whereby our consciences must be sprinkled Heb. 10 22. he is the lauer of regeneration by whom wee are borne againe and washed as with pure water If he make vs cleane then we are clean indeed His passion and the shedding of his blood must be communicated to vs and the sanctifying grace of the Spirit of God And this is necessary vnto saluation not any outward washing of the body which may clense the flesh but cannot touch the soule This is made auaileable three waies First by faith which serueth to apply Christ vnto vs and all his benefits Secondly by repentance from dead workes whereby
speake vnto them all whose sinnes ye remit whose sinnes ye retaine not whose sinnes thou Peter remittest or retainest so likewise he saith whatsoeuer ye all bind on earth whatsoeuer ye all loose on earth not whatsoeuer thou Peter alone bindest or loosest on earth And this is acknowledged to be the power of the keyes by the Romanists themselues The vse of keyes is to open and shut so then they that haue their sinnes forgiuen and as it were the bands loosed haue the gates of heauen opened wide vnto them and contrariwise the dores of heauen are barred fast as with lock and key against them whose sinnes are retained So that we may rightly conclude that seeing the power of binding and loosing is the power of the keyes and giuen to all the Apostles that it is not peculiarly and properly bestowed vpon Peter alone excluding and shutting out all the rest If then here were an headship promised and bestowed we must haue a body with twelue heads according to the number of the twelue Apostles for euery Apostle must be an head as euery of them had authoritie to binde and loose to remit and retaine that is had the keyes of the kingdome of heauen deliuered vnto them Obiect But it wil be further said Christ speaketh by name to Peter I say vnto thee Thou art Peter Solution To thee I will giue the keyes c. I answere he saith indeed he will giue them vnto him but he saith not I will giue them to thee alone he will bestow them vpon him but not vpon him alone for heere is nothing either expressed or vnderstood to exclude the other Apostles The Lord saith to Ioshua I will not faile thee nor forsake thee Iosh 1.5 shall wee conclude from hence that he will leaue other of the faithfull because he speaketh particularly vnto him will God renounce or disclaime others that feare his Name No in no wise for albeit he vttered it vnto him yet it is to be stretched to all beleeuers and as true toward them all as toward him as appeareth euidently in the Epistle to the Hebrews Heb 13.6 It is one thing therefore to speake vnto Peter and another thing to speake vnto him onely But will some say Obiection why doth not Christ name others as well as him if he vnderstood others as well as him for that might haue put the matter out of all doubt and stayed much contention that hath beene about these wordes in the world I answere Answer the words are not doubtfull but to those that purpose to make them gainefull They are plaine to such as will vnderstand Peter spake in the name of the rest as the mouth of the Apostles Christ answereth to him also in the rest Hee had asked the question of them all Matth. 16.15 Whom say ye that I am All of them could not answere without confusion and disorder it was necessary that one should be the speaker as it were the foreman of the Iury and Peter in the behoofe of others as well as of himselfe confessed that he was the sonne of the Liuing God Shall we say the rest did not beleeue as much A like example we reade in the second Chapter of the Actes of the Apostles where they being filled with the holy Ghost and speaking with diuers languages are derided of many and accused to be drunken Peter standing vp with the eleuen did lift vp his voyce and say vnto the Iewes Be it knowne vnto you and hearken vnto my wordes Act 2 14 15. for these are not drunken as ye suppose c. Doth he pleade onely for himselfe and not rather vndertake the common cause of them all yes he is only the mouth of the rest and speaketh for the rest So in this place he made a free confession of his faith and the faith of the Apostles who beleeued no lesse then himselfe and Christ suiting and shaping his answere according to Peters confession speaketh vnto him but in him vnderstandeth all the rest Neither let vs goe about to gather more from them then Christ scattered or the Apostles collected For they did not conceiue that Christ by those wordes before remembred gaue any supremacy or superiority any primacy or principality of power to Peter for then they would neuer afterward haue contended which of them should be the greatest and the chiefest forasmuch as this whole controuersie had beene decided and determined by the mouth of Christ But long after this there arose a great strife among them Luk. 22.24 which of them should bee accounted the greatest Therefore they acknowledge no more authoritie giuen to Peter by those keyes of the kingdome of heauen then to themselues Neither doth Christ build his Church vpon Peter nor call him the Rocke for it is builded vpon the Rocke which Peter confessed that is vpon the Sonne of the liuing God Cor. 10.10 so that the Rocke as the Apostle saith is Christ Hence it is that Matthew distinguisheth betweene Peter and the Rocke Peter is one and the Rocke is another otherwise Christ would haue said Thou art Peter vpon this Peter I will build my Church or vpon thee will I build it he speaketh not after this manner but Thou art Peter and vpon this Rocke which must necessarily be referred to his former confession the name and person being changed Againe there is an expresse place in the Apostle which teacheth that no man can lay any other foundation then hath bene laid which is Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 Paul inspired by the Spirit of Christ can finde no other foundation of the Church then Iesus Christ they then that acknowledge and receiue and teach any other are moued by the spirit of Satan and speake in the spirit of Antichrist Furthermore Peter was one of the master workemen or master builders of the Church as he is bidden to feed the flocke of Christ 1 Cor. 3. so that he cannot be called properly the foundation of the Church and a builder of the Church the foundation being one and the builder that layeth the foundation another for that were to confound the workeman and the worke the founder and the foundation the builder and the building The builder buildeth vpon the foundation and therefore it is against naturall reason that the Carpenter which layeth the foundation should himselfe be the foundation vnlesse peraduenture by a new kinde of transubstantiation neuer heard of before this time as senselesse as the olde if that may be called olde which had no footing in the Church for a thousand yeeres after Christ whereby they turne the labourer into his labour and the builder of the house into the ground-worke of the house But suppose all this had beene spoken to Peter alone that to him alone had beene giuen the keyes that he alone should open and shut binde and loose remit and retaine at his owne pleasure and that the Church had beene builded vpon him as vpon a sole foundation
condemn our churches our ministers our sacraments to be no true Churches of Christ no true Ministers of Christ no true Sacraments of Christ And concerning our Liturgie or forme of publike praier read and prescribed to bee read they account it Antichristian they vtterly detest it and account it abhominable no more acceptable to God then the offering of Swines flesh was vnder the Law which the Lord abhorred as if they had instead of his appointed sacrifices cut off a dogs necke And albeit we haue the examples of all other Churches vnder heauen as presidents that go before vs in this practise and albeit wee follow them as they followed Christ yet they wil not allow vs to be like to them nor wil permit that to the people of God which he here prescribed to the Priests yea albeit they haue no examples whom they can pretend to follow yet they wil be singular in their own conceits condemn al others that will not ioyne with them The 136. Psalme was sung in the congregations long after Dauids daies as appeareth 2 Chro. 20 21. what Did they therein offer vp swines flesh Hezekiah that godly king that set his whole heart to seeke the Lord whom the Lord healed of an incureable disease ● Kings 21 1. Esay 38 8. and wrought a miracle in the heauens to assure him of deliuerance from his enemies this good King so much regarded of God togither with his Princes commanded the Leuites to praise the Lord with the words of Dauid and of Asaph the Seer 2 Chro. 29 30 so they did according to the kings commandement sing praises with gladnes they bowed their heads worshipped 2 Chro. 29 30. Did the King and the Princes command the Leuites to offer vp swines flesh or was their seruice no better accepted then the cutting off of a dogs neck or did it any whit quench their zeale or slake their deuotion that the words were not their owne but penned long before by Dauid the Prophet and Asaph the Seer No they praised the Lord with gladnes of heart and humblenes of mind which they testified by this sign that they bowed their heads and worshipped Obiect But it will be saide This was a thansgiuing I confesse it was but if it be lawfull to vse a set forme of praising and thansgiuing Answer then also of praying and making petition because there is a like reason of both And that we may the better see their errour and themselues confesse they are deceiued let vs examine som of their obiections in this place the rest we will reserue vnto the 10. chapter Numb 10 35 36. where we shal haue farther occasion to search more into this point One obiection which Obiection 2 they alledge is this that this set seruice is to quench the spirit 1 Thes 5 19. and to limit him that teacheth vs to pray to tel him how farre he shal go and to appoint him his banks and bounds beyond which he may not passe whereas we shold pray as the Spirit moueth giueth vs vtterance To vse a set forme or if you list to call it so a stinted forme of praier Answer is not to stint the Spirit but to helpe the Spirit But doth the Spirit of God need the help of man Obiection 3 Is not he al-sufficient by himselfe of himself Answer He standeth not in need of vs but is most sufficient howbeit the Spirit in vs is weake the worke of the Spirit is vnperfect and is perfected not all at once but by degreee If all the true seruants of God had receiued a perfect measure of grace and if all that haue the Spirit of God had the same Spirit fully without any defect or infirmity they should not neede any humane helpes but haue sufficient store of their owne So then to the former obiection I answer 3. things First if hee that taketh a booke and readeth a set prayer did stint the Spirit then he that taketh the Scripture into his hands and readeth a chap. out of the old or new Testament and then staieth goeth no farther might as wel be said to stint the Spirit Or he that heareth another pray should stint the Spirit also because all such as heare the prayers of others are stinted what to heare All cannot neyther ought to bee speakers either in the priuate house or in the house of God 1 Cor. 14 40. this were to breake the order of decencie required in prayer now such as are hearers of others haue words after a sort prescribed vnto them and limited how farre to goe and yet cannot such hearers be iustly taxed to limit or to quench the Spirit Againe obserue that the Spirit of God is neuer stinted or curbed neither can rightly be said to be quenched so long as it is kept within his owne bounds that is the limits of the holy Scripture as it ought to be Hee then that prayeth the prayer of Christ or the salutation of Paul or a Psalme of Dauid which he hath premeditated before or committed to memory cannot be said to quench the Spirit except we will imagine that the Spirit can be against himselfe Lastly to quench the Spirit is to oppose against the voice of the Spirit Rom. 1 18. to crosse and contradict the Spirit and to with-holde the truth in vnrighteousnesse Therefore althogh a man doeth not speake euery thing that the Spirite putteth into his head and into his heart yet hee cannot be charged to quench the Spirit except he set himselfe against it that with a set purpose to gainsay and resist it As for example when wee craue of GOD to feed vs with food conuenient for vs Pro. 30.8 to make vs content to eate our own bread 2 Thes 3 12. though we do not expresly pray to God to keep vs from vsing vnlawful shifts vngodly meanes whereby we seeke to get into our hands the goodes of other men yet we cannot be said to quench the spirit except we refuse so to pray because wee purpose to liue and thriue by iniuries and oppressions by fraud and deceit then indeede we quench the Spirit because we controll the voice of the Spirit speaking to vs in his word Again they obiect Obiection 4 that the scripture techeth that we know not what or how to pray Rom. 8 26. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we shold pray for as we ought c. but when we haue a set forme of prayer framed to our hands and the booke lieth before vs wee know then what to pray and neede not the helpe of the Spirit and therefore such cannot say with the Apostle they know not what to pray for as they ought This is a silly collection and indeede a meere cauillation I answer therfore 2 things Answ First by setting downe the meaning of the words We know not what wee should pray for as we ought to wit of our selues as 1 Cor. 2 14 15.
The naturall man knoweth not the things of the spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned So we may say the naturall man cannot tel how or what to pray but the spirituall man that iudgeth al things knoweth both how what to pray Flesh blood reuealed not the knowledge of Christ to Peter Math. ●● ● but the Father which is in heauen so flesh and blood cannot reueale to vs what we should aske in prayer but the Spirit helpeth our infirmities Where wee see hee opposeth the Spirite vnto our selues in that which we cannot do we shall haue the Spirit to bee our teacher and to instruct vs how to perfourme it Secondly it is falsely supposed that when wee haue a praier composed to our hands and we reade that praier that then we need not the helpe of the Spirit For need we not the helpe of the Spirit to make vs lift vp our hearts to God to giue vs a feeling of our wants to keepe vs frō earthly cogitations wandring thoghts to stirre vp faith in vs with assurance to receiue whatsoeuer we desire and many things of like sort the which if they be wanting whether our praier be conceiued or prescribed read in the booke or made without the booke it is of no vertue or value neither doth God accept thereof Secondly this is a great comfort to such as Vse 2 as are weake and yet withall willing to come to the throne of grace to such I say as haue not the gift to conceiue and inuent praier thēselues Let them from this ground heare a word of consolation Let no man discourage such from prayer neither let such discourage themselues For shall they neuer pray or should they neuer fall downe before the Almighty O yes let them come they ought to come if the mercy of God cannot allure thē let their owne infirmity constraine them If they cannot conceiue a praier themselues shall this excuse them for the intermitting of this duty Let them come to God and vse the praiers of other men As he that could not come vnto Christ by reason of his impotency did not reason thus within himselfe Alas I am not able to goe to him of my selfe I will therefore neuer seeke helpe or labour to be cured Nay he rather reasoned thus as it appeareth by the meanes he vsed I am not able to goe to Christ of my selfe ● 19. I will therefore be borne of others rather then not seeke helpe at all so should we reason I cannot pray of my selfe I will therefore helpe mine infirmity by vsing the benefit of other mens praiers which is no more then to vse the feete of others when we haue not the vse of our owne And as it was all one to him that was taken with a palsie and broug●t in a bed to Christ by the hands and helpe of others to be borne to Christ and to be able of himselfe to come to Christ because hee was cured and made able to walke Luke 5 24.25 So should it be to vs if we come vnto Christ whether we come and beg the graces which we want in our owne words or whether we beg them in the words of others it skilleth not greatly neither is it much materiall so that wee doe obtaine It is not the excellency or eloquence of words or variety of matter that God respecteth ● 13 14. we must come euermore in the Name of Christ and for his sake we shall be heard If the man sicke of the palsie had beene able to walke to Christ and not stood in need to be brought vnto him what other gracious answer could he haue looked for then that which he receiued ●5 Arise and walke So if all persons that liue in the bosome of the Church were well able to put vp their owne supplications in their owne words and had the greatest graces of knowledge and inuention what fruite could we reape and receiue of such our prayers but to be regarded and to haue that comfortable answer which Cornelius had and heard Acts 10 4 31. Thy praiers are heard and had in remembrance in the sight of God As then Dauid did admit Mephibosheth to his table though he were lame of his feete so doth God receiue vs though our seruice wee performe vnto him be weake and many waies defectiue as he did those that came to the Passeouer 2 Chron. 30. Lastly we must learne that albeit God allow Vse 3 vs to pray vnto him by the help of others yet we must striue to goe further and labour in all things to grow to perfection Hebr. 6 1. There is no man that hath any infirmity but doth gladly seeke the meanes to remedy redresse the same the lepers to be cleansed the blinde to recouer their sight the lame to walke the deafe to heare not to be able to pray to God and to lay open our wants to him is a great want and a greater blemish and defect in the soule then to be blinde or deafe or lame is to the body O that all had eyes to see this hearts to bewaile it It is allowed to weake Christians to vse set formes as to him that hath weake eyes to vse spectacles But we must not euermore stand at one stay nor be alwaies as children that must bee taught to goe and be stayed vp with the hand of another It is a great weaknesse to be alwayes weake and to continue in our weaknesse all the daies of our life It is our duty to grow in knowledge in iudgment in vnderstanding in faith and such like gifts If any aske Obiect how shall we be able to attaine to this gift and how shall we be furnished to pray according to the present occasion our owne present necessities I answer Answer wee must obserue these few particulars First we must take notice of our particular sinnes that they may be acknowledged Secondly we must labor to feele our particular wants tha● we may haue them supplied Thirdly wee must call to remembrance the speciall benefits that GOD bestoweth vpon vs that hi● Name may be praised Againe that we should not please our selues too much in our owne ignorance sundry cautions conditions are to be marked in vsing set formes of prayer Cautions to be marked in vsing set ●ormes of prayer as first of all we mus● labour for the graces and affections shewed in the said prayers by the makers composers and pen-men of them that we may pray with the same spirit by which they did endite them For to pray aright and to make it auailable it is not enough to be present at prayer or to heare a prayer read but we must ioyne attention with our presence and with our attention humility and with humility faith and with faith lifting vp of our hearts to him that sitteth in heauen to whom we pray For many a one that cometh to the place of praier and into the company of them that pray
then we must be stirred vp hereby to our duties and haue this meditation with our selues The mini●●● meditation Doubtlesse I am no longer mine owne man nor at mine owne disposition I am wholly dedicated consecrated vnto God True it is all the faithfull are so also after a sort 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Ye are not your own for ye are bought with a price and Ro. 12 1. We are exhorted by the mercies of God that we shold offer vp our selues a liuing sacrifice vnto him Neuerthelesse he that is called to preach the gospel to breake and to bring vnto vs the bread of life and the foode of saluation is knit vnto God by a straighter band he is wholy appointed for the vse of the Church of God The charge and function is of great waight importance 2 Cor 2 16. and who can be sufficient for these things They are Messengers sent from the King of kings vnto vs they reconcile God and man and make peace after a sort between them they assure the penitent of the pardon and forgiuenesse of sinnes by the power of the keyes committed vnto them This laying on of hands serueth and helpeth to assure his heart that is called that God will abundantly furnish him with necessary graces fit for his calling he will endue them with the spirit of wisedome of knowledge of zeal of constancy of charity of meeknesse of patience and such like As then God maketh all the signes that hee hath at any time set in his church to be auaileable so that not one of them is vaine or vnprofitable so may all the Ministers ordained with this signe assure themselues that God will poure out his blessings vpon them to the end they may faithfully execute their office It is not in vaine that water in baptisme is powred vpon our heads it is a good witnesse vnto vs that we shall be washed and cleansed from our sinnes by the bloode of Christ forasmuch as God hath instituted it and his promise is annexed vnto it It is not in vaine that we eate a little morsell of bread and drinke a little quantity of wine it assureth vs that we are partakers of the life of our Lord Iesus Christ and that hee is our meate indeede and our drinke indeede whensoeuer we come to his holy Table The like we may say of imposition of hands God will not suffer it to be superfluous but we shal perceiue the fruit thereof by his pouring of his gifts into the heart as it is said of Ioshua that he was filled with the spirit of wisdome for Moses had laid his hands vpon him and of Timothy that the gift of God was giuen vnto him by the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery ●●●ect ●●●wer But hath the laying on of hands so great power and vertue No but seeing this signe was no inuention of man but an institution of God he will make it auaileable by adding his grace and goodnesse thereunto The putting on of hands was a gage thereof representing Gods pouring out of his Spirite This then serueth to reproue such as haue vndertaken this calling 〈◊〉 2 4 and forsaken the Ministery vpon carnall respects not considering that the soldier that warreth doth not entangle himselfe with the affaires of this life that he may please him who hath chosen him to be a souldier and our Sauiour sheweth that no man hauing put his hands to the plough looking backe is fit for the kingdom of God Luke 9 62. In this number we may also range those that embrace this present world liue as meere worldly men choaking themselues with the fat morsels that they find abroad the bones whereof so sticke in their throate that their voice is stopped and their tongue is tied that they can vtter no other words but bring bring But we must consider that we are takē as it were by the hand of God from amongst the rest of the Congregation to teach the people to giue an attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine 1 Tim. 4 13. and to take heede to our selues that in dooing these things we may both saue our selues and them that heare vs verse 16. We are called of God to his heauenly worke who wil plentifully reward vs if we be diligent in our duty and his businesse Dan. 12 13. 1 Pet. 5 4. 1 Cor. 3 8. He will stand with vs and his hand shall bee effectuall vpon vs if wee make conscience of our calling But if we be carelesse and vnconscionable negligent and idle as slothfull seruants that set not their mindes vpon their masters businesse his hand will be sore seuere against vs to reuenge the dishonour done to his name and the hurt done to his people The Papists boast of giuing the graces of the Spirit by this gesture they greaze their fingers and disguise themselues with apish toyes but all to no purpose as we haue proued already forasmuch as it cannot by the bare outward action confer grace and therefore it is remēbred touching the Apostle Paul that hee receiued grace from God before Ananias came vnto him and laide his hands vpon him Acts 9 17. Thirdly hereby ariseth great comfort vnto Vse 3 him that is lawfully and rightly ordained For it serueth much to confirme and strengthen him being therby admonished that God accepteth him as an holy offering Let vs remember that it is he which hath set vs on worke and he will be present with vs to remoue our shoulders from the burthen or rather to make the heauy yoake which he hath put vppon vs easier and the burthen which we beare to be lighter that wee doe not shrinke and sinke downe vnder the waight thereof True it is men onely did lay their hands vpon vs howbeit God is president of the whole action and he worketh with his owne ordinance and institution Wee haue from hence an assurance of our calling that it is not onely or principally from men but from God which must mooue vs to execute the same with all courage and constancy being terrified with no fear or danger of enemies or opposition against vs and to ouerstride them all with great cheerefulnesse Are wee therefore crossed at any time in the discharge of our duty and doe men rise vp against vs when we stand vppe in the name of God Let vs not bee afraide and holde our peace lest he confound vs before them Ier. 1 17. Let vs not stand in feare of their faces for he is with vs to deliuer vs. Verse 8. and no man shall set vpon vs to hurt vs as Actes 18 10. Let vs call to our remembrance our entering into our Calling that wee were ordained by laying on of hands wherein men were the instruments of Almighty GOD to assure vs of his presence with vs and approbation of vs. This consideration stayed Dauid being ready to shrinke downe vnder the burthen hauing the charge of a great people that could not be numbred nor
against him howbeit this is greater wherein not his enemies reproached him and those that hated him did not magnifie themselues against him but his deerest friends and acquaintance as befell also to Dauid Psal 55 12. The church maketh this complaint Cant. 5 7. That the watchmen that should haue bene both her guide and her gard smote her and wounded her the keepers of the wals took away her veile from her And Christ fore-telleth that a mans enemies shall be they of his owne house Marke 6 4. This befell vnto Iob a man full of sorrowes his owne wife that lay in his bosome and his friends that were as his owne soule were the cheefe causes of his greatest anguish Abel found no worse friend then his owne brother that came with him to the place of Gods seruice Gen. 4 8. So Ismael persecuted Isaac Ismael borne after the flesh him that was borne after the Spirit Ge. 21 9. Gal. 4 29. Ioseph receiued hard measure of his brethren who was by them sold for a bondslaue Ps 105 17. Moses was fain to fly out of Egypt because a Iew one of his owne brethren diuulged his killing of the Egyptian The same befel Zachariah the son of Iehoiada the priest who had saued the kings life and set the crowne vpon his head yet he remembred not the kindnesse of the father but slew his son the father had in a maner giuen him life but he took away life from his son 2 Chro. 24 21. Who vexed the church and trobled the Apostles more then false brethren 2 Cor. 11 26. The cause of this is the enmity betweene Christ and the serpent and the seed of them both which shewed it selfe immediately after the fall in Cain who was of that euil one slew his brother 1 Ioh. 3 12. The vses which wee must make heereof are Vse 1 First to marke the truth of that which Christ teacheth Math. 10 34 35 36. that hee came not to send peace on earth but rather a sword and to set variance betweene man and man And in another place I am come to send fire on the earth and what will I if it bee alreadi● kindled Luke 12 49. Hee speaketh not of the effect but of the euent not what the Gospell bringeth forth properly but what it worketh accidentally not what it procureth in the faithful but what it produceth in the vnfaithfull Secondly God will haue al his to be wel tried Vse 2 which are in the faith euen for their owne good that we may know what we can suffer for the truths sake when we haue sealed it vp by our patience in all tribulations Thirdly hence ariseth comfort in our sufferings For do we suffer affliction at their hands of whom we hoped for better dealing maruell not at it neither thinke it strange but let vs comfort our selues with the examples of Gods children who haue had the same measure measured out vnto them before vs nay let vs lay before vs the example of Christ himselfe who had experience of it not only in his owne countrymen the Iewes but in Iudas one of his owne disciples of whom the Prophets prophesied He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish the same shall betray me Psal 41 9. Matth. 26 23. Lastly from hence we learne in all discomforts Vse 4 to flie vnto God after the example of Dauid who gaue himselfe continually to prayer when hee was vexed by such vnexpected enemies Psal 55 16. when he had complained that his frend and companion rose vp against him hee addeth As for me I will call vpon God and the Lord shall saue me So it ought to be with vs that wee may finde comfort in God when we can find none among men Againe Miriam and Aaron were of great reputation among the people and sanctified in a great measure Aaron was the Lords high Priest consecrated and annointed with holie oile Miriam was a prophetesse and one that sung the praises of God after their deliuerāce from Pharaoh Exod. 15. yet loe how both of them faile in duty and sin against God oppose themselues against his seruant Moses whereby we learn that none are so sanctified but they faile many wayes None so sanctified but manie wayes they faile Let no man therefore dreame of perfection in this life Rom. 7 14 18 19 20 23. Moreouer from this example obserue that contentions are oftentimes in the church euen between the members of the same body Doctrine Contentions and strife are often in the Church True it is it were to be desired that ther were perfect loue and vnity peace and concord in the church but this is rather to be looked for then to be found There arose strife betweene Abraham and Lot Gen. 13 8. betweene Paul and Barnabas Acts. 11 2. 15 39. betweene Peter and Paul Gal. 2 11. So in the Church of the Corinthians though they were sanctified in Christ Iesus and called to be Saints yet there were contentions among them 1 Cor. Reason 1 1 11. And no maruell for first of all we know in part and we prophesie in part wee know somewhat but we are ignorant of much more Reason 2 then we know 1 Cor. 13 9. Secondly there must be euen heresies that they which are approued Reason 3 may be knowne 1 Cor. 11 19. Thirdly Satans malice is exceeding great he soweth the seeds of discord among the godly for his hatred is exceeding great against the church and he desireth nothing more then the ruine thereof Reuel 1.2 4. Lastly selfe-loue remaineth in the best men which is a remnant of the flesh this spurreth vs forward to spurne against one another and while we challenge too much to our selues we ascribe too little vnto others 1 Cor. 13 5. This offereth to vs this truth that vnitie is Vse 1 no note of the true church forasmuch as it is somtimes out of the church when as contention is in it The false Prophets were manie that conspired against Micaiah Eliah and Ieremy Christ was condemned by a common voice of the people and consent of the Pharisies which cried out Away with him Crucifie him crucifie him Luk. 23.18.21 Thus then the mouths of the papists are stopped which doe please themselues in an idle conceit of a generall agreement of many people and Nations which is oftentimes a maintenance of error vnwholesom doctrine when it is ioyned with it The vnity of one faith and of the same doctrine beleeued and confessed wee acknowledge to be a true marke of the true Church Where there is the preaching of this faith the doctrine of Christ and the sealing vp of the same with the true administration of the Sacraments there is a true church of God The vnity which is without that doctrine which is according to godlinesse is as the crie of the whole city in maintenance of their idolatrie Great is Diana of the Ephesians Act. 19 28. Or like to the house which the strong man
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
would make them right beggers indeed So that as Ieroboam made the basest of the people to be the Cleargy so they make the Cleargy to be the basest of the people and desire to bring them to their doores crouching creeping for a crust of bread But we demand that for which we haue laboured of duty not of curtesie and as a recompence not as a beneuolence not as their vassals but as Steward 's set ouer the family or Captaines ouer the host In the law the people were charged with tithes of foure sorts First such as were paid distinctly and directly to the Leuites What tithes were paied in the Law Secondly such as were deducted out of these and to be leuied for the vse of the Priests both these kindes of tithes are touched in this chapter Thirdly such as the people laid aside for the furnishing of their sacred and solemne feasts when they should be at Ierusalem to which the Priests were ordinarily inuited Deut. 14 22 23 28 29 and 26 11 12. Lastly such as euery third yeere were gathered for the releefe of the strāgers the fatherlesse the widow and the poore This last sort I will not deny to be in nature of an almes but such tithes as were paied to the Priests and Leuites were paid as wages is for worke This will bee plainely proued by the doctrine of the Apostle 1 Cor. 9 7. producing the examples of souldiers gardners sheepeheards such like all which claime a recompence of debt not of deuotion If then a common souldier lawfully requireth his stipend of that people for whom he fighteth Tithes are not almes the Minister also fighting for the people against their spirituall aduersaries may do the like and if he that planteth a vineyard he that feedeth a flocke may of duty chalenge to eate of the fruite of the one and the milke of the oth●r then the Minister that planteth the vineyard of the Lord and feedeth the flocke committed vnto him may iustly claime to liue vpon the same Againe almes do alwaies exceed the desart of him that taketh the almes they testifie the mercy of the giuer not the merit of the receiuer for charity is more worth then single thankes and good deeds are to bee valued aboue bare words But it is not so in paying tithes of temporall things all which cannot sufficiently counteruaile the worke of the Ministery 1 Cor. 9 11. Is it a great matter if we shall reape your carnall things And the Apostle is bold to tell Philemon that he did owe to him euen himselfe verse 29. It is a principle written in the heart of man by nature to pay him his wages whom wee set on worke not to send him away empty that laboreth for vs. As then the labourer hath right to his wages so the Minister hath his right and part in the goods of those whom he teacheth among whom he laboureth and therfore when he receiueth his tithes he doth not take almes but receiueth his owne hauing as good right vnto the tenth part as hee that paieth it hath to the other nine No man can say that the begger is worthy of almes he receiueth them by the law of charity but cannot claime them as due by the rule of iustice The day labourer that hath laboured all day and wasted his strength and spirits would thinke scorne though he bee a poore man to receiue his hire for his labour in the nature of an almes as the begger taketh a peny at the doore and shall the Minister receiue his wages as a gift or as a gratuity The housholder that hath agreed with the labourers for a peny a day saith vnto them when he came to pay them Math 20 14. Take that which is thine own and goe thy way as then they receiued their duty so doth the Minister receiue his due his duty Vse 3 Thirdly they are also iustly reproued who treading in the steps of the Bishop of Rome do deteine from the Ministers of the Gospel the tithes appointed vnto them which are not vnfitly called Gods auncient d●maine founded originally vpon the law of nature For as we learne by the light of nature that there is a God and that he is to be honoured so the honour that is due vnto him Sr Henry Spelman de non temerandis Eccles cannot be performed without Ministers neither can the Ministers attend their function without maintenance To this I will adde the saying of the wise man Prou. 3 9. Honour God with thy riches For seeing he is the high possessour of heauen and earth Gen. 14 19 and giueth life breath and all things vnto vs Acts 17 24. it is our duty to render backe somewhat vnto him again thereby acknowledging that wee hold all of him in chiefe except wee will yeeld lesse vnto him then the Infidels did to their heathenish gods Now we honour God with our riches How to honor God with our riches not onely when we vse them soberly without excesse righteously without oppression and ch●ritably without defrauding of the poore but when we employ them religiously toward his seruice The Nicodemites were content to become Christians thus farre as to giue their hearts to God so that they might haue liberty to dispose of their bodies as thēselues pleased but these will steppe one steppe farther they professe to worship God both with soule and body so they may be discharged dispensed withall from honouring him with their riches They will willingly offer the calues of their lips so they may be freed from the calues of their stalles They can be content to trauaile from the East with the wise men to fall down before him and worship him Bernard but they cannot abide to open their treasures and present vnto him gifts gold frankincense myrrhe Mat. 2 11. Paul had almost perswaded Agrippa to become a Christian when hee exempted those bandes and chaines and if euer we will perswade these to become Christians we must also except these bandes and chaines that wee speake off for they are very heauy vnto them they cannot abide them The tithes are the Lords he hath reserued them to himselfe as a rent of the tenant due to the Landlord or as a tribute and subsidy due to the king therefore when they are not truely paid Deut. 14 28. as GOD commandeth but are vnconscionably deteined he complaineth that he is robbed and spoiled Mal. 3 10. so that if wee giue not vnto the Lord the tenth who hath giuen vnto vs the other nine Serm. de Te● p●re 219. Sr Fra●●●●● let vs take heed lest he resume the nine parts and leaue vnto vs the tenth onely And I may say as a worthy and learned knight of our times saith Such as haue taken away the Churches dowry and s poiled her of it it had bene great reason they should haue made her a ioynter to recompence the wrong they had offered and the losse
receiued Thus he dealt with Dauid whom hee greatly fauoured and aduanced to the kingdome when he fell into grieuous sins 2 Sam. 12.9 10. Thou hast killed Vriah the Hittite with the sword and hast taken his wife to bee thy wife and hast slaine him with the sword of the children of Ammon Now therefore the sword shal neuer depart from thine house and I will raise vp euill against thee out of thine owne house So soone as Salomon set vp idolatry and wrought wickednesse in the sight of the Lord he stirred vp aduersaries vnto Salomon 1 King 11. ● 14. and afterward rent the greatest part of the kingdome out of the hands of his sonne This serueth to conuince all such prophane persons as presume of Gods patience and abuse his mercy to all loosenesse and licenciousnesse saying God is mercifull and yet continue in their sinnes But we must know that as he is mercifull so hee is iust as his mercy is toward the penitent so his iustice is toward the obstinate who spareth not his owne people that forget his Law and therefore will deale more fiercely against strangers Vse 3 Thirdly measure not the fauour and loue of God toward our selues or others by outward blessings or outward crosses by prosperity or aduersity which come alike to the godly and vngodly Nay oftentimes the wicked flourish when the faithfull are in great misery as Psal 73.3 4 5. So Salomon teacheth Eccle. 9.2 Therefore Christ our Sauiour correcteth the wrong iudgement of the disciples supposing that such as Pilate slew were the greatest sinners of all the rest that dwelt in Ierusalem because they suffered those things Luke 13.1 2 3. If then we would find sound comfort in our hearts and feele vnfained testimonies of Gods fauour towards vs wee must not seeke for them in outward blessings or in want of outward blessings both which are common to the godly and vngodly but in ioy in the holy Ghost in remission of sinnes in repentance from dead workes in the spirit of adoption in faith in Christ in peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding As for other things place not thy heauen and happinesse in them if blessings come receiue them thankefully if crosses learne to beare them patiently Fourthly wee are hereby put in minde to Vse 4 search our owne wayes to suruey our owne hearts and to prooue by the touchstone of the word our owne thoughts words and workes that we haue conceiued spoken and done what we haue iustly deserued if God in iustice should proceede against vs examining seriously our owne life mourning bitterly for our sinnes past and turning vnfainedly vnto God with all our hearts This duty is vrged by Ieremy the Prophet Lam. 3.39 40 41 42. This is the marke that God shooteth at this is the end that he respecteth euen by his afflictions to bring vs home to himselfe not to destroy and confound vs for euer Heb 12.5 10. Let vs not dispise the chastenings of the Lord nor faint when we are rebuked We haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs for a few daies and we gaue them reuerence should wee not much rather be in subiection to the Father of spirits who chastneth those whom he loueth and scourgeth euery sonne whom hee receiueth Fiftly let vs labour to strengthen our faith Vse 5 by the word and Sacraments and by such ordinary meanes as hee hath appointed for that purpose Hereunto the Apostle exhorteth 1. Cor. 11.30 To examine our selues and so to eate of that bread and drinke of that cup declaring that the iudgements of God were broken in among the Corinthians insomuch that many were weake and sicke among them and many slept Wherefore whensoeuer wee find the hand of God sore and heauy vpon vs it is our duty to seeke strength of faith by the vse of the word and Sacraments whereby wee shall learne to find out the true cause of those iudgements and submit our selues vnder his hand that striketh vs as a father For the Scriptures serue to direct vs the Sacraments serue to comfort vs Psal 116. ● Without which the Prophet had perished in his afflictions Lastly seeing God chastiseth his when Vse 6 they offend then most assuredly the wicked that are not his shall not escape his reuenging hand If he correct the flocke of his own pasture the children of his owne houshold the citizens of his owne kingdome and the members of his owne body fed at his owne table in this life and made heires of heauen in the life to come really possessing that inheritance with what plagues punishments torments will he visit the rebellion of aliants and strangers If the Lord deale sharply toward these to whom he is a mercifull Father and gracious Sauiour and whom he often preuenteth with his liberall blessings Surely his reuenging wrath full of rage Psal 21.8 2 King 21. shall find out all his enemies whom he wipe will away as a man wipeth a dish turneth it vpside down This is that which Salomon teacheth in the Prouerbs Behold ● 11.31 the righteous shall bee recompenced in the earth how much more the wicked and the sinner There remaineth a day of iudgement when they shall be punished as they deserue either in this life or in the life to come With this the Apostle Peter sweetly accordeth 1 Pet. 4.17 18. The time is come that iudgement must begin at the house of God if it first begin at vs what shall the end be of them which obey not the Gospel of God And if the righteous scarcely bee saued where shal the wicked and the sinner appeare Where we see that God will scourge whip his owne children for their frailties and infirmities appearing in them But he correcteth the godly in mercy the vngodly in anger the godly as a louing father the vngodly as a iust Iudge the godly to amend them the vngodly to condemne them the godly albeeit humbled and cast downe with one hand are comforted and raised vp with another whereas the punishments that fall vpon the heads of the vngodly are but the beginnings of sorrow and as the flashings of hell fire Now the earth is not properly the place of vengeance and iudgement For we must vnderstand that God hath appointed three places earth heauen hell for three seuerall purposes ●ree places 〈◊〉 need for ree seuerall ●poses the earth to be a place of working the heauen a place of rewarding hell a place of punishing earth as a shop of labour heauen as a pallace of glory hell as a prison of torment Notwithstanding rather then sinners should escape and sinne goe vnpunished the Lord wil call a priuy or petty Sessions euen in this life and make the earth his gaile or house of correction If then God will visit their transgressions with such heauy strokes Alas what shall become of al prophane persons vnrepentant offenders obstinate sinners such as contemne God and his word euery
was the ordinance of God to build one Temple and to chuse one place to which man shold resort to worship him yet this order is now abolished euery coast and countrey is Iewry euery towne and city is Ierusalem euery faithfull company and godly person is a Temple to worship God in 1 Cor. 6 1● 1 Cor. 6 1● 1 Tim. 2.8 Psal 127 4. We may call vpon God euery where and lift vp pure hands in all places no land is a strange land no ground is vnholy ground And touching their abstinence from flesh on certaine times for religion sake it is a doctrine of diuels 1 Tim. 4 1 3. Lastly it reprooueth such as propound to themselues false and wrong endes of vowes as conceit of merit and opinion of deseruing the fauour of God and euerlasting life For the ends which we respect must be good as to exercise and stirre vp the gifts of faith prayer obedience repentance and other graces of the Spirit and to testifie our thankefulnesse to God for blessings receiued at his hands The intent therefore and meaning is heere to bee considered and we must be well aduised not onely that our vowes be directed to God but for what purpose and how we vow to God not to binde God vnto vs but to binde vs the closer to God to render all honor vnto him Now if we would examine the vowes practised in the Church of Rome by these things before deliuered we shall easily perceiue the fondnesse and falshood nay the wickednes of them For here are condemned all vowes of pilgrimages and abstinence from flesh for religion noted before Bellar lib. ● de M●●●● cap. 36. their doctrine that children may enter into their orders and cloisters against the counsell and consent of their parents and that persons contracted either to other may vow continency without the liking and approbation of the other party which cannot stand with the doctrine of the Scripture or ancient councels Num. 30 ● Co● G●● cap. 16. For the word establisheth the authority of parents ouer their children which the former vowes abridgeth and cutteth short and teacheth that if a woman vow vnto the Lord and bind her selfe by a bond being in her fathers house in time of her youth if her father disalow her the same day that hee heareth all her vowes and bonds they shall not be of value Lastly by the former obseruations fall to the ground the ordinary vowes of single life voluntary pouerty and Fryarly obedience to vaine and superstitious men which they absurdly make and tye themselues necessarily to obserue For such vowes are directly and flatly against the former rules prescribed deliuered vnpossible intollerable beyond our owne strength calling a will worship Col. 2.16 according to the decrees and traditions of men and directly contrary to the commandement of God 1 Cor. 7.9 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Thess 3. ● Againe they are not in the power of him that voweth for no man can promise perpetuall chastity in single life out of the estate of wedlocke Continency is the speciall and proper gift of God who giueth it not vnto all but to whom he will and as long as he will This our Sauiour teacheth Matth. 19. All men cannot receiue this thing saue they to whom it is giuen he that is able to receiue this let him receiue it To this accordeth and agreeth the doctrine of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. I would that all men were euen as my selfe am but euery man hath his proper gift of God one after this manner and another after that Furthermore they abolish Christian liberty in the lawfull vse of the good creatures and ordinances of God as riches and marriage food and apparell making that absolutely necessary which God hath freely left to our liking and liberty Lastly they are made most commonly to Saints and not to God and they are made for merits sake therby to deserue saluation and the substance of religion and worship of God is made to consist in them whereas the Apostle teacheth 〈◊〉 4 6. That bodily exercise profiteth little but godlinesse is profitable for all things Therefore these vowes practised and defended by the Church of Rome being vnlawfully rashly vnconscionably ●●ontra ●l is ●ref superstitiously meritoriously made and vnpossible to be performed cannot binde the conscience but are better broken then irreligiously kept ●si de beno 〈◊〉 ca. 10 in Leuit. according to the doctrine of the former Churches Thirdly seeing vowes be lawful which are promises made to God 〈◊〉 3. of some duty to bee performed to him to some good end the vow which all beleeuers haue made in Baptisme is to be kept of euery one wherein wee promised to beleeue in Christ to obey God to bring foorth the fruites of true repentance to renounce the workes of the diuell the allurements of this present euill world and the lusts of the flesh which lust against the spirit And albeit wee are bound to these duties by our calling redemption without any new vow yet we may lawfully renew our couenant with God and so binde our selues faster and faster As he that hath bound himself in a bond may yet giue greater and better assurance bind himselfe more then before So bee that is bound to haue faith in Christ and to yeeld obedience to all his commandements may yet further and faster bind himselfe to helpe his dulnesse coldnesse and want of zeale and to make himselfe more forward and seruent in duties of the first and second table according to the practise of Dauid I haue sworne and will performe it ●●19 106 that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements He was bound hereunto without and before his oath yet he kindled his zeale and reneweth his couenant with God by this oath to stirre vp the gift of God that was in him and to helpe his owne infirmity We haue all in baptisme vowed to consecrate our selues euen our soules and bodies to God by renouncing the diuell the world and the flesh if wee goe backe as cowardly Souldiers from this our vow shall wee not bee conuinced as false and vnfaithfull to God And how shall we conscionably keepe any other vowes that breake the first vow we made to God What a fault is it accounted among our selues to promise and then to breake But haue we kept this our generall and common vow Hierom. in Esa lib. 7. cap. 19 August in Psal 7● 131. Lumba sent lib. 4. dist 38. to fight vnder the banner and enfigne of Iesus Christ against the diuell and all his works Or rather haue we not walked and do we not still walke in the workes of darknes after the inuentions of our owne hearts And do not our open sins cry out and proclaime as much to the dishonour of God and our owne reproch So that all such as walke in the blindnes of their own minds haue besides all their other sinnes this great
his Master of Paul that persecuted the Saints of Dauid that committed adultery of Salomon that fell into idolatry of Lot that lay with his owne daughters of Noah that offended in drunkennesse of Manasseh that shed innocent blood of Mary Magdalen out of whom were cast seuen diuels of the Iewes that crucified the Lord of life all which returning from their iniquity were receiued to mercy so that where sinne abounded there grace hath abounded much more Rom. 5.20 Hence therefore great comfort ariseth to the heauy soule and troubled conscience oppressed with the burthen of sin and hangring after grace and pardon When terrours and tentations grow strong vpon vs supposing that our sinnes are moe then can be forgiuen and the punishments greater then can be pardoned we must know it is the lying spirit of the diuell to draw vs into the bottomlesse and comfortlesse gulfe of desperation which is as it were the mouth of hell gaping wide to swallow vp the soule quicke to vtter and endlesse destruction If our sinnes be neuer so great and grieuous if they bee neuer so many and monstrous moe then the haires of our head or the sand on the sea shore which is innumerable as heauy as lead as infectious as a leprosie as red as scarlet as filthy as dung and mire yet if God giue repentance and we beleeue there is promise of mercy assurance of forgiuenesse and hope of comfort and consolation Such they are that Christ calleth saying Mat. 11 28 Come vnto me all ye that are heauy laden and I will ease you for my yoke is easie and my burthen is light It behoueth vs all to seeke fauour at his hands to craue pardon and to pleade for mercy and forgiuenes of whom to aske it rightly is to obtaine it assuredly Secondly the trueth of this doctrine of Vse 2 Gods pardoning offenders and the consideration and feeling of this infinite kindnesse of God must worke in vs vnfained thankefulnes and continuall praise sounding out and magnifying his mercies to speake of his goodnes and to shew our selues louing and dutiful vnto him again for his exceeding compassion This sacrifice of thankesgiuing we see offered by the Apostle vnto God for the experience hee had of his bountifulnesse toward him 1 Tim. 1.12 I thanke him which hath made me strong that is Christ Iesus our Lord for hee counted mee faithfull and put me in his seruice when before I was a blrsphemer and a persecuter and an oppressor Now vnto the King euerlasting immortall inuisible vnto God onely wise be honour and glory for euer and euer Amen The like we see in Mary Magdalen who had beene a greeuous and heinous sinner as she had receiued much mercy so shee expressed backe againe much loue and kindnesse as she had beene deliuered out of the chaines of Satan so shee followed Christ Iesus with the fruits of piety and thankefulnesse all the dayes of her life shee entred with him vnto Simons house kissed his feet an ointed them with ointment washed them with her teares wiped them with her haires followed him to the Crosse and was the first with him in his resurrection of whom the Lord Iesus said Many sinnes are forgiuen her for she loued much Luke 7. to whom a little is forgiuen he doth loue a little There is a forgiuenesse in God that goeth before there must be a thankefulnes in vs that must follow after as this womā knowes much to haue bin forgiuen her and therefore she loueth much euen as the debter loueth that creditor most that hath forgiuen him most so should the affection of our loue toward God bee increased as hee giueth euery one experience of his greater mercy As then we feele this sweetnesse and the infinite riches of this benefite so we should open our mouthes and vnloose our tongues and inlarge our hearts to sing and to set forth the praises of God according to the example of the Prophet in the Psalme ●l 103.1 2 3 My soule praise thou the Lord and all that is within me praise his holy Name forget not all his benefits which forgiueth all thine iniquities and healeth all thine infirmities And in another place What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits toward mee ●l ●●6 12 〈◊〉 14. I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord I will pay my vowes vnto the Lord euen now in the presence of all his people For seeing he taketh away all our iniquity and receiueth vs to fauour graciously it is great reason wee should offer the sacrifice of praise and render vnto him the calues of our lips This doctrine of free forgiuenesse of sinnes openeth vnto vs the most blessed newes that euer came into the world it is the summe of the Gospel and of the glad tidings of saluation the key of all our comfort that entrance into life the most precious balme of our health and recouery which giueth more ioy and refreshing to the fainting soule and broken heart to the tender conscience and weary spirit then all the glory of the world can minister vnto it as the Apostle testifieth This is a true saying and by all meanes worthy to be receiued 〈◊〉 1.15 that Iesus Christ came into the world to saue sinners of whom I am chiefe Vse 3 Thirdly seeing there is mercy in store for the penitent seeing God will haue compassion vpon them is ready to fall on their necke and to imbrace them with both his armes as the father of the prodigall childe did ●e 15.20 it is required of vs speedily to turne and not deferre our repentance from day to day lest our harts be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin No sinne is so small but is able to plundge vs downe to the bottome of hell if we liue in it without repentance and continue in it without remorse The longer wee remaine in the dregs of sinne the faster we shall sticke in the myre of it and the harder we shall finde it to come out of the prison thereof This is the vse which we are to make of Gods mercy to miserable sinners Let vs take heed we abuse not his goodnesse nor take occasion of liberty to turne his grace into wantonnesse saying as the manner of some is Oh God is mercifull hee is gracious to great sinners and so conclude therupon that they may liue as they list and may put off the season of repentance to the last gaspe But the Apostle teacheth vs to reason otherwise 〈◊〉 1 2. What shall we say then shall we continue in sinne that grace may abound God forbid how shall we that are dead to sinne liue yet in si●●e Let vs not therefore alleadge the examples of the faithfull that haue offended to incourage vs in sinne or hold them out as bucklers to embolden vs in falling from God Take heede of presumption Many presume confidently with Peter but they weepe not bitterly with
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
sanctified Hob. 10 12 14 Now they offer these kind of Beasts rather then any other because they had heard that the God of Israel commanded them to offer Bullocks and Rams vnto him so that they would giue him his owne desire and please him with the seruice he seemed to bee delighted in But God regardeth not sacrifices that are offered with a corrupt heart Psalm 50 9. Againe they offer seuen Bullocks and seuen Rams vpon the seuen Altars because as this number was thought to be holy so it was supposed to bee of secret vertue seeing God sanctified separated from the beginning the seuenth day and nature hath left examples of sundry seuens in the heauens as the Pleiades the Planets and many other Lastly he commandeth the King to stand by the sacrifices and burnt-offerings very deuoutly and whiles they were burning he withdraweth himselfe seeketh a secret place to worke his feats as the witch of Endor did 1 Sam. 28 13 and as Sorcerers do to the end that by this separation of himselfe he might raise a superstitious opinion in Balak of his doings and the better being solitary to put in vse his ceremonies The euents ensuing after these actions before handled are double First in God and afterward in Balaam God appeared to this prophane man as he hath done to diuers of his enemies for his childrens sake not for their own sakes as also Elisha saide to Iehoram As the Lord liueth in whose sight I stand if I had not regarded the presence of Iehoshaphat I would not haue looked toward thee nor seene thee this day 2 Ki. 3 14. Now as all hypocrites please themselues in theyr outward ceremonies so Balaam telleth God what Sacrifices he had offered vnto him that he had spared no cost nor charges And as he thought he had done well so he looked to haue beene respected he telleth of his good deeds he boasteth of his works he numbreth vp his burnt offerings he hopeth by these allurements that God would change his mind He thought him to bee as one of the gods of the Gentiles which were diuels not Gods and they that sought vnto them sought vnto diuels not to God But whereas he gloryeth in the works of his owne hands and putteth confidence in his worship performed to God he receiueth no answer heereof only the Lord willeth him to returne backe to the King his master that set him on worke and speak vnto him what should be put in his mouth Touching Balaam he goeth hee obeyeth he vttereth a Prophesie before the King and his Nobles The first prophesie of Balaam speaking after the manner of the true Prophets not moued by the spirit of the diuell but inspired by the Spirit of God and declaring truly what he had receiued of God The Prophesie and Parable of Balaam is first vttered then the effect of it is set downe and declared The Prophesie hath three points to be considered First the entrance Secondly the substance and matter it selfe Thirdly the conclusion Touching the entrance into the Prophesie it is taken from the present worke now in action and detecteth the folly and dotage of Balak who had sent from far to fetch a Sorcerer and doubted not of the force of his diuinations seeing he was cunning in the East manners Thus were Idolaters giuen ouer by the iust iudgement of God to beleeue lyes The substance of this Propheticall speech followeth first propounded and afterward proued and confirmed For he sheweth that Israel is blessed of God and therefore not to bee cursed Israel is protected of God as with a shield and therefore it lyeth not in his power or in the power of any man to make them a cursed people to be had in execration and detestation This sentence is vttered by way of an interrogation and asking a question for the greater force and giuing power vnto it for the better assurance of the truth of it and to put it out of doubt How shall I curse where God hath not cursed Or how shall I detest where God hath not detested Now hee proueth that they could not be cursed of God nor hurt by the enchantments of the diuell nor annoyed by the deuices of men first by his owne testimony in the present seeing of them and the comely order obserued among them From the top of the Rockes I did see them as if hee should say The very sight of this people and of their gouernment daunteth my heart and dasheth my purpose so that I am called backe from conceiuing a thought of cursing them both by the authority of God and by the presence of thē which I behold Secondly by the purenesse and holinesse of the people they walked with God they dwelled in his presence they obserued his Lawes they submitted themselues to his ordering and gouernment they embraced his religion they separated themselues from the Gentiles they abstained from theyr superstitions they would haue no fellowship with them they differed from them in theyr Lawes in theyr Religion in their life in theyr sacrifices in theyr sacraments and other ceremonies The conclusion and shutting vp of this Prophesie is double and contayneth two points First in respect of Israel Secondly in respect of Balaam himselfe Touching Israel hee pronounceth the blessing of God towards them that they should encrease as the dust of the earth and as the sand on the sea-shore which is innumerable according to the promise made to Abraham Gen. 12. Heb. 11 12. And to moue the heart of Balak and of all the Moabites the more he vttereth it by way of asking the question and doubling it he encreaseth Gods mercy toward them and saith hee could not number the fourth part of Israel Touching himselfe he testifieth that the blessednesse of this people was great in regard of the life to come and therefore wisheth that in death he might bee like them that after death he might be partaker of the same happinesse with them But wishers and woulders were neuer good Christians For this is a peeuish peruerse kinde of wishing not to performe that which belongeth to the blessednes of eternall life and yet to wish and desire it to come vpon him The effect of this vnlooked for Prophesie is set downe by a question and an answer The Question of the King expostulateth the matter with him why he blessed the Israelites as one forgetting himselfe and vnmindfull of his businesse wheras he was hyred to curse them being his enemies The answer of Balaam casteth the fault vpon God and excuseth himselfe For the same God that opened his mouth constrained him to vtter this blessing against his will As if he should say I haue vsed all my skill and practised my arte to the vttermost but no sorcery wil preuaile against them why then dost thou checke and controlle me for that which I can by no meanes remedy redresse ●●●stion But the question may be asked whether his charmes and coniurations could
pollices of euill men so that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it This is it which Christ teacheth Mat. 3 8 9. He can draw the strong and flinty hearts of the aduersaries to bee his Church albeit all the Iewes were scattered destroyed God is not bound to continue his Church among thē and the priuiledges which in mercy he vouchsafed vnto them if hee remoue his standard and take away his Candlesticke and breake off the succession they boasted of he can call a people vnto himselfe whensoeuer he pleaseth As then we are not to feare the falling away of the Church so wee are not to presume of our selues because wee haue present testimonies of Gods fauour and visible markes of the Church amongst vs but labour to finde out our owne sinnes and turne vnto the Lord assuring our selues that euery Tree which bringeth not foorth good fruite is hewen downe and cast into the fire Lastly seeing prophane persons bee enforced Vse to speake the truth of God let vs know that it is our part who are enlightned with more knowledge and endued with better graces in a more willing and cheerefull sort then they do to testifie the praises of God for conscience sake with care and comfort not grudgingly nor vnwillingly nor enforced vnto it This the Prophet Malachi setteth downe ch 1 11. Where hee sheweth that the Gentiles knew the excellency of his Name and were not ignorant of his greatnesse and therefore if we be the true children of God our righteousnesse and obedience must exceed the righteousnesse and obedience of others For what a shame is it that strangers from the couenant should acknowledge him and those of his family and as it were his houshold seruants come behind them Let vs be like the Angels that be in heauen Mat. 6 10 who obey him readily willingly cheerefully perfectly If we obey him grudgingly and by constraint the reprobates yea the diuels do him as good seruice as we do They performe his secret will against their will Let vs accomplish his will reuealed in his word with the full desire of our hearts otherwise we shall neuer finde true comfort to our selues in that we do If wee would haue God to accept reward our seruice performed vnto him we must not doe it by constraint as Balaam did nor to halfes as Saul did 1 Sam. 15 21 22 23 nor to merit as the Pharisies did but in conscience of our duty as children to their fathers that we may receiue the inheritance of sonnes Verse 9 Loe the people dwell by themselues and shall not bee reckoned among the Nations Now we come to the Prophesie it selfe wherin he confesseth the blessed estate of the church so that nothing can make them miserable or separate them from the fauour of God This wee shall haue fitter occasion to shew afterward Heere let vs consider the reason whereon he groundeth the happines of the Church In the description of the Church he saith they are a people cleauing to God alone beleeuing in him and seuered from other Nations in religion and lawes ●●ctrine 〈◊〉 Church ●●elected 〈◊〉 any frō●e rest of ●he 〈◊〉 From hence we learne That the Church of God is an holy people called and gathered by the word to heare and obey God separated from the prophane of the world in life and conuersation This we see euidently when the posterity of Caine began to multiply and replenish the earth by many generations who were the malignant Church the true Church encreasing later began to diuide themselues from thē to restore the purity of Gods worship and to meet apart by themselues for the publike seruice of God which the Scripture meaneth when it saith 〈◊〉 4 25. Then men began to call vpon the Name of the Lord. The like we see afterward in Abraham whom the Lord called beyond the flood from seruing other Gods 〈◊〉 11 1 2. 〈◊〉 1● 2 3. 〈◊〉 23 7 8. to serue him purely apart from the superstitions of his forefathers This was figured in the vow of the Nazarites the intention whereof is expressed in the description of the ceremony of it To be separated to the Lord. Numb 6 2. Thus Moses describeth the common condition of al that people to be separated to the Lord as God himselfe giueth them to vnderstand I am the Lord your God which haue separated you from other people c. Leuit. 20 24 26. This is it which Christ our Sauiour saith to his Disciples That they are not of the world but he hath chosen them out of the world Iohn 15 19. Hereunto cometh the exhortation of Peter preaching repentance amendment of life to those that had crucified the Lord of glory With many other words he besought and exhorted thē saying Saue your selues from this froward generation Acts 2 ver 40 41. Hereunto cometh the practise of the Apostle Saint Paul Acts 19 9 when the aduersaries were conuinced and their hearts hardened they disobeying and speaking euill of the way of God before the multitude he departed from them and separated the Disciples and disputed dayly in the Schoole of one Tyrannus Reason 1 The Reasons hereof are these First there is an opposition betweene God the world The Gouernour thereof is Satan who is the Prince of this world 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 and hath set vp his throne in it it persecuted Christ and slew him Neyther do the children of God finde any better entertainment then Christ did as it hateth him so it hateth them Iohn 14 17 30. Againe The amity of this world is enmity with God the wisedome of this world is foolishnesse with God 2 Cor. 4 4. Iam. 4 4. And Christ testifieth That the works thereof are euill Iohn 7 7. Seeing then it is euill in respect of the gouernor which is Satan euil in respect of Christ whom it hated and persecuted euill in respect of the Spirit of truth whō it neyther seeth nor knoweth nor receiueth in respect of the Children of God whom it abhorreth euill in respect of the friendship thereof which is enmity euill in respect of the wisedome thereof which is folly and lastly euill in respect of the works thereof which are impiety howsoeuer the beauty of it be glorious and the shew gorgeous and glistering yet the Church is to come out of it is clean contrary vnto it For if the friendship of the world be the enmity of God then the friends of the world are the enemies of God And as there is an agreement betweene the diuell and the world so is there an vnion between God and his Church And as God and the world are opposed so are the Church and the world contrary one to another so that whilst wee are parts of this world wee cannot be members of his Church and when we are called out of the world we are gathered into the bosome of the Church Secondly God hath chosen the Church to Reason 2 himselfe before the foundation of
those workmen that builded the Arke for others but were drowned themselues Let vs then labour after the especiall comfort consisting in the deliuerie of the whole will of God that though our hearers perish and go vnto destruction yet wee may find peace and comfort to our own harts This was it which the Apostle rested in hee preached Christ not onely as a Sauiour to thē that beleeue but as a Iudge of them that contemne him he saith We are vnto God the sweete sauour of Christ in them that are saued in them which perish to the one we are the sauour of death vnto death and to the other the sauour of life vnto life for we are not as many which make merchandize of the word of God but as of sincerity but as of God in the sight of God speake wee in Christ 2 Cor. 2 15 16 17. Thus doth the Prophet Esay prophesie concerning Christ bringing him in on the one side complaining of the contempt of his preaching and on the other side comforting himselfe that his worke was approued of God I haue laboured in vaine I haue spent my strength in vaine and for nothing but my iudgement is with the Lord and my worke with my God Esay 49 4. If we be found faithfull we shall be partakers of this comfort blessed shall that seruant be whom his master when he commeth shall finde so doing So then this duty serueth to comfort such as haue taught the word of God not only truely but wholly and onely so that they are able to appeale to the consciences of their hearers to witnesse with their sincerity Thus did the Apostle Paul in many places In the 20. chap. of the Acts vers 18 26 he saith Ye know from the first day that I came into Asia after what manner I haue beene with you wherefore I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men Where he maketh them witnesses of his diligence in preaching and of the discharge of his duty in his calling and therefore they could not deny it Thus he speaketh in his second Epistle to the Corinthians chap. 3 v. 1 2 The like manner of speaking dealing hath beene vsed by the Prophets and Apostles as appeareth in sundry places yea by Christ Iesus himselfe Samuel cleareth himselfe before the people Behold heere I am beare record of me befere the Lord and before his Annointed 1. Sam. 12 3. So Christ speaketh Which of you can accuse me and rebuke mee of sinne Iohn 8 46. This is a great and singular comfort to all the Ministers that in truth shal be able to auouch to their people this their diligence vprightnesse and to say in the face of the Congregation Ye know that I haue done my duty I take you to record that I haue admonished you I haue blown the Trumpet and taught you the way of saluation This is expedient and necessary for the Minister to vtter of himselfe both in respect of the godly and vngodly of the godly that their soules gained to the faith might cleare him and God haue the glory Of the wicked his aduersaries that they might be left without excuse that their mouthes might be stopped they haue nothing iustly to lay against him But contrariwise when the people haue beene ignorant and without instruction thorough the want of performance of this duty this should bee as great a greefe and anguish of spirit and bring as great trouble of conscience to consider his negligence and want of loue to their soules that were redeemed by the precious blood of Christ Thirdly this serueth to confute and conuince Vse sundry errors and to correct sundry euill practises and corrupt abuses First it meeteth with many errors and heresies of the church of Rome which maintaineth the sowre leauen of false doctrine and poysons the truth of God with their owne inuentions And seeing the Minister is to set downe but the truth of God we must learne to detest apocryphall additions and their humane traditions both which are a derogation to the sufficiency and perfection of the Scriptures For touching the Apocryphall Bookes which they haue lifted vp into the chayre of estate and giuen them equall power and preheminence with the Canonicall Scriptures they are but base counterfet coyne and no part of the Churches treasure they haue drosse mingled with them are not pure and perfect mettall They were not endited by the Spirit of God nor penned by the Prophets 〈◊〉 3 16. Pet. 1 19. the Lords Secretaries as the Scriptures were which haue God for their author and the holy Prophets for their Penmen Againe they were neuer committed of trust to the Iewes nor receiued of them into the Arke as not onely the fathers but the aduersaries themselues confesse and acknowledge but the ancient Church of the Iewes receiued and approued all the Canonical Booke Rom. 3 2. God did commend them to their care committed them to their custody for this was one chiefe priuiledge of the Iewes that they were credited with the Oracles of God And howsoeuer they shewed their ignorance in false interpretations yet they discouered no vnfaithfulnesse in wilfull corruptions additions alterations or manglings of any Bookes for then they should haue beene charged with this ●●h 5 21. as well as with the other Lastly they containe sundry things that disagree from the true Scriptures of God likewise from thēselues as might be declared and demonstrated by many particulars Seeing therfore these bookes called Apocrypha were neyther penned by the Prophets nor deliuered to the church of the Israelites neither are free from diuers contradictions we conclude that the Church of Rome hath no warrant to equal them with the holy Scriptures make them of like credite and authority with the Scriptures Againe 〈…〉 Ses 4 they offend in teaching humane traditions in making a word vnwritten equall with the word written and holding the Scriptures to be vnperfect maimed lame not containing all things necessary to faith and saluation not fully enabling the Minister to discharge his Calling But the holy Scriptures are perfect absolute and all-sufficient to teach the truth to conuince errors 〈◊〉 3 16 17. to correct vices and to instruct in righteousnesse yea to make the man of God perfect and throughly instructed in euery good worke and are of strength ability and sufficiency to make him wise to saluation Lastly they are accursed that adde any thing that take away any thing frō that which is written Deut. 4 2. Prou. 30 6. Reuel 22 18. and therefore no such vnwritten verities are to be taught or preached to the people as the matter of our Sermons or the instrument of our faith or the means of our saluation Moreouer it serueth to redresse and amend sundry corrupt practises too common and familiar among the Ministers of the Gospel Some in stead of building vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Christ Iesus
ouer vs as he hath done them For are wee more excellent or better by nature or desert then they No by no meanes Eph. 2 1 3. we are borne dead in sinnes the heires of wrath as well as others This made the Apostle hauing made mention of the mercies of God shewed vnto him that had bene a blasphemer a persecuter and an oppressor to render thankes vnto GOD and to giue him the praise and glory Thou hast herein greater cause to blesse and praise the Name of GOD then for thy creation which onely gaue thee a being vpon the earth whereas this doth ioyne thee to GOD and entitle thee to the kingdome of heauen Verse 4. He hath said which heard the words of God and saw the vision of the Almighty falling into a trance Wee heard before how Balaam was inspired of God to deliuer vnto the Moabites Midianites and Ammonites the will of God Now here is offered to our considerations the meanes and manner that God vsed in giuing vnto him his diuine inspiration and that is by a vision or trance We heard before what a trance is to wit an extraordinary worke of the spirit vpon the whole man casting the body as it were in a deepe sleepe making the minde fit to receiue the things which are reuealed of the Lord. Thus it pleased the Lord to deale with Balaam at this present that his words might be knowne to be diuine not humane Doctrine In forme● times Go● reuealed d●uers thing● by visions From hence wee learne that God in former times hath reuealed diuers things vnto men by visions by dreames and otherwayes as seemed good to his heauenly wisedome God hath not vsed one meanes alone but diuers to speake to the world either by Angels or by the cloud or betweene the Cherubims or by Vrim or by dreames or by visions To this purpose there is a rule set downe Numb 12 6. If there be a Prophet of the Lord among you I will be knowne to him by a vision and will speake vnto him by dreame This is further taught in the booke of Iob by the words of Elihu instructing Iob in the maner of Gods dealing with sinners shewing how God admonisheth them in dreames and visions God speaketh once or twice and one seeth it not in dreames and visions of the night when sleepe falleth vpon men and men sleepe vpon their beds Iob. 33 14 15. So when Paul was conuerted by the voyce of Christ the Lord spake to Ananias in a vision to goe vnto him and Paul likewise in a vision saw him comming in vnto him and putting his hands on him that he might receiue his sight Acts 9 10 12. When Peter lodging with one Simon a Tanner waxed hungry and would haue eaten he fel into a trance he saw heauen opened and a certaine vessell came downe vnto him as it had beene a great sheete knit at the foure corners and was let downe to the earth c. Acts 10 10 11. So the Apostle being compelled by the false Apostles to glory of himselfe maketh a rehearsall of the visions and reuelations of the Lord that were offered vnto him 2. Cor. 12 1. Vnto these examples wee might adde sundry others out of the Scriptures as of Iacob of Samuel of Ezekiel Gen. 46 ● of Daniel of Iohn all declaring that GOD vsed to reueale many things by visions to his seruants the Prophets and to others when it pleased him The reasons are First to discouer and Reason manifest his will vnto them sometimes to admonish them sometimes to teach them somtimes to terrifie them and alwayes to declare and reueale his heauenly pleasure vnto them as we heard before out of the booke of I●b Iob 33 15 16. For it hath bene the ordinary maner of God euen from the beginning to warne comfort and declare what hee would haue done or forbid what he would not haue done both in the day time and in the night season partly by visions to such as were waking partly by dreames to such as were asleepe Reason 2 Secondly God would haue the reuelation of his will appeare to be onely his and not of themselues For howsoeuer it pleased the Lord to deale with his seruants and what way soeuer he vsed to signifie his good pleasure in all these cases he imprinted in the mindes and hearts of them to whom hee shewed himselfe certaine notes and euident tokens whereby they might expressely and manifestly know that it was his doing This we noted before to be one of the causes why it pleased the Lord to deale by visions that we should chalenge nothing to our owne selues but ascribe all vnto him Vse 1 Now let vs come to the vses First consider from hence the greatnesse and excellency of Gods hand who hath diuers wayes to reueale his will and to teach his people to call them and gather them vnto himselfe Some meanes he hath to preserue a sinner from falling and some to restore him being fallen He is the head Physician of the world he ministreth the best Physicke and of most sure and certain working He neuer faileth in his cures both because hee knoweth the nature of the disease and the working of the ingredient The woman in the Gospel diseased with an issue of blood twelue yeeres suffered many things of many Physicians and spent all that shee had yet it auailed her nothing but shee became much worse Marke 5 26. But such as seeke to God to heale the diseases of their soules and submit themselues to be his patients doe alwayes receiue from him health and depart from him better then they came Hee vseth partly preseruatiues and partly restoratiues He speaketh by admonitions in dreames and visions And these being ceased hee speaketh by chasticements and corrections he preacheth vnto vs by the Ministers of his word and by all meanes desireth to doe vs good True it is the diuell hath his visions being as it were the ape of God which are so many delusions of men as when hee maketh men beleeue they see that which they see not or perswadeth men strange things of themselues that they are that which indeed they are not 1. Sam 28.14 His drift and purpose in both is to deceiue and seduce But God vseth sundry meanes to draw vs to himselfe to draw vs out of our selues to draw vs to his kingdome He is not as a poore practitioner that hath but one plaster for euery sore or one medicine for euery disease he hath variety of meanes store of prouision for al maladies which serueth to commend vnto vs the goodnesse mercy greatnesse power and wisdome of God to be acknowledged and confessed of euery one of vs. Secondly wee learne that God neuer leaueth Vse 2 them destitute of a teacher that in a reuerent feare of his Name seeke vnto him and call vpon him We see he oftentimes admonisheth and informeth of his will such as are out of the Church and know him
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
Christ the reproch redounds in part to the head Fourthly it behoueth vs from hence to Vse 4 learne to auoyde all allurements and enticements that may draw vs into this sinne For to auoyd sinne is to auoyd the occasions of sinne Whosoeuer doth nourish the occasions cannot be long free from sinne And whosoeuer maketh no conscience to follow the prouocations of lust and the meanes that may bring it vpon vs will shortly make no conscience of whoredome it selfe Therefore our Sauior correcting the false glozes of the Scribes and Pharisies and expounding the true meaning of the seuenth Commandement saith If thy right eie cause thee to offend plucke it out and cast it from thee for better it is for thee that one of thy members perish then that thy whole body should be cast into hell Math. chap. 5 29. Whereby our Sauiour meaneth that the Law of God not onely forbiddeth the sinne expressed but restraineth all occasions and allurements though they were as deare vnto vs as our right eye or as necessary vnto vs as our hand A notable example hereeof wee haue in Ioseph when he was tempted by his wanton mistresse to commit folly hee was so farre from consenting to adultery that he absented him selfe from her company Gen. 39 10. Many are the allurements that leade the way vnto this sinne wanton apparrell filthy communication vncleane songs wanton lookes beastly drunkennesse vnlawfull embracings excessiue dyet hurtfull idlenesse and too familiar company with those that may entice vs and tempt vs to lust The following after these the delighting in them is the path that guideth vs to the practise of all vncleannesse and therefore we must abhorre them if we would hate whoredome it selfe Such then as say they cannot abide whoredome and they doe detest it from their harts and yet do not shun these allurements do not consider their owne weaknes but offer themselues leade themselues into tentation yea as much as in them lyeth they make God a lyar and there is no truth in them Lastly let vs according to our duty with Vse 5 all speede forsake this filthy kinde of life and renounce our former vncleannes so the hearty repētance may follow after wher this sin hath bin cōmitted before For there remaines mercy to such if they repent and turne with all their hearts and with all their soules The Lord is full of compassion and mercy slowe to anger and of great kindnesse If the wicked man forsake his waies and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations if he returne vnto the Lord and craue mercy at his hands hee will not alway chide neither keepe his anger for euer Esay 55 7. He will not deale with vs after our sinnes neither reward vs according to our iniquities Psal 103 10. Dauid through the lust of his eye fell into this sinne and committed folly in Israel but when he confessed his fault and forsooke his sinne he was receiued to mercy For when Dauid saide vnto Nathan I haue sinned against the Lord Nathan saide vnto Dauid The Lord also hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die 2. Sam. 12 verse 13. The Lord seeketh no more but that the sinner turn vnto him When once we are reconciled vnto him he hath no more controuersie against vs. This we see in Rahab the harlot she led a filthy and vncleane life among her people but when she heard of the great workes that the Lord had done for the children of Israel in deliuering them out of Egypt in drying vp the red sea in feeding thē from heauen and in preseruing them from all their enemies she ioyned in heart with the Church forsooke her euill life and in token of her true repentance Heb. 11 31. Iam. 2.25 she receiued the messengers sent vnto her with the danger of her life and sent them out another way This the Apostle speaketh of the Saints at Corinth for hauing denounced a fearful iudgment against fornicators adulterers wanton persons that they shall not inherit the kingdome of God he addeth 1 Cor. 6 11. Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Seeing therefore God is ready to forgiue our sins why should not we be ready to forsake our sinnes This vncleannesse maketh vs guilty of temporall and eternal punishments yet God offereth to discharge vs of both and to receiue vs vnto his fauour if we will turne from our sinnes to him bring forth fruite worthy amendment of life Let vs therefore confesse with Dauid that wee haue sinned let vs call for mercy at the hands of God saying Haue mercy vpon me O Lord according to thy louing kindnes acording to the multitude of thy compassions put away mine iniquities wash me throughly from mine iniquity and clense me from my sinne Psalme 51 the first second verses Verse 4. And the Lord said vnto Moses Take all the heads of this people and hang them vp to the Lord before this Sunne In the words before the punishment that fell vpon the people of Israel was set downe in generall now hee setteth downe vpon whom it fell in particular to wit both Princes people for the wrath of God was so kindled against them that they were cut off as rotten members all through the counsell of Balaam For when he saw that God opened not his mouth to curse the Israelites but rather when he was resolued to vtter curses hee was inforced to pronounce blessings hee gaue diuellish counsell as his last shift to the Moabites that their beautifull women should allure the Iewes into their cōpany and by their company vnto adultery by adultery vnto idolatry wherby they shold prouoke Gods indignation and so bring vpon themselues vtter confusion Now we must obserue in this place that God in punishing these sinnes beginneth first with the heads of the people Doctrine Superiors lye open to iudgmen●s as well as others From hence we learne that Superiors and men of high places lye open to greeuous iudgements as wel as others All sorts of men high and low rich and poore noble and vnnoble shall taste of the punishments of God for sinne This the Prophet pointeth vnto when he faith God powreth contempt vpon Princes and causeth them to erre in desert places out of the way Psal 107 40. In the first chapter of Esay verses 10 23 24 this truth receiueth plentifull confirmation Heare the word of God O Princes of Sodome hearken vnto the Law of our God O people of Gomorrha thy Princes are rebellious and companions of theeues euery one loueth gifts and followeth after rewards they iudge not the fatherlesse neither doth the widdowes cause come before them therefore saith the Lord God of hostes the mighty one of Israel Ah I will ease me of mine aduersaries auenge me of mine enemies And in the Chapter following the same Prophet saith The high lookes
soule returneth to God that gaue it For the question stil remaineth vndecided whether God giue it immediately or not that God gaue it which is al the wise man saith euery wisemā acknowledgeth but how and in what manner by meanes or without means remaineth yet in doubt as before The opposition made in that place betweene the soule and the body rather prooueth the contrary for as the body was of the dust so is the soule of God his gift But how is the body of the dust not immediately but of the Parents so that it is apparent that Salomon hath relation to the first creation of Adam of whō it is true that God formed man of the dust and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a liuing soule Gen. chap. 2 verse 7. I purpose not to enter into this controuersie much lesse take vpon me to define whether the soule come by traduction or by infusion whether from the parents or from GOD a question much debated both among ancient and moderne writers wishing rather all men to be wise with sobriety to content themselues to know that it is given of God and to be his Title to bee the God of the spirits of all flesh and to consider what vses wee may make of it First this serueth to ouerthrow diuers errors Vse 1 and heresies touching the soule raysed vp in former times to trouble the Church to destroy the faith Such were the Sadduces who held that spirits were only certaine qualities or accidents but no substances at all nor hauing any subsistence of themselues Acts 23 8. We learne on the contrary side to acknowledge that the soule is a creature of God as the body is and a thing essentiall as also the heauenly Angels are and liueth when the body dyeth as may be easily proued by infinite testimonies of holy Scriptures for this is the more noble part of man created but yet immortall inuisible but yet subsisting Salomon saith It returneth to God that gaue it Christ our Sauiour commendeth his spirit into his Fathers hands Luke 23 46. So Stephen prayeth Lord Iesus receiue my spirit Acts 7 59. Thus do they make GOD the keeper and preseruer of the soule when once it is deliuered out of the prison of the body They then that make the soule nothing but a blast or breath or a certain power infused into mens bodies but such as hath no essence or substance are grossely deceiued and mistaken exceedingly Vse 2 Secondly it is our duty to yeeld obedience to God both in body and soule and to submit our selues to him in all things especially vnder the Crosse euen when the flesh is most prone to murmure and rebell Hebr. 12 9. If we must yeelde reuerence to our fathers of whom wee haue receiued our bodies then should we be subiect to God of whom wee haue receiued our soules The Apostle chargeth vs to glorifie God in our body and in our spirit which are Gods 1 Cor. 6 20. they are both his and therefore both are to be giuen to him agine Vse 3 Thirdly the soule being from God it commeth neerest to his essence wherby we beare his Image and resemble him in knowledge wisedome and therefore it is a most precious substance more worth thē all the bodily creatures of the world for when the body returneth to the dust the soule goeth to God that gaue it The Prophet saith Psal 49 7 that no man can redeeme his brothers soule or pay a sufficient ransome to God for him it goeth beyond his power and ability All the gold treasure in the world cannot equall one soule in value The murthering of the soule is the highest and most horrible murther that can be and it is the greatest sin to destroy a mans soule Math. chapter 16 verse 26 on the other side to saue a soule is one of the best works and that which shall receiue the best reward Dan. 12 3. Lastly it belongeth to vs to haue the greatest Vse 4 care of the soule for as it excelleth the body so the care of it should exceed and surmount the care of the body The Scripture oftentimes calleth men from the excessiue and immoderate care of the body to which wee are too much enclined Math. 6 25. 1 Cor. 7 32. Rom. 13 14 that we may haue care of the soule and set our affections vpon heauenly things Obiect But are we to cast off all care of the body and to minde nothing but heauen the prouision for the soule Nay not so Answer GOD hath made the body as well as the soule therfore the body is to be regarded as well as the soule I say as well though not as much As then Christ saith This must bee done but the other must not be left vndone Matth. 23 so the soule is especially to be regarded but the body is not to be neglected Besides the body is as the Tabernacle and instrument of the soule the tabernacle of it to dwell in it and the instrument of it to worke by it and therefore the soule cannot do the duties proper vnto it except the body prosper and be prouided for Howbeit our cheefest care ought to bee for the soule that it may liue to God in this life and liue with God in the life to come If our greatest care be to adorne and decke the body it is most certaine wee are carelesse of the soule Verses 17 18 20. Which may goe in and out before them c. In these words we haue the summe and substance of the prayer of Moses and of the commandement of God vnto him touching Ioshua which I will ioyne together that we may end this Chapter for of laying on of hands mentioned verse 18 and 23 and of asking counsell of God wee haue spoken oftentimes before Moreouer we haue heere many particular points offered vnto vs touching Magistrates and Subiects as that God appointeth none to serue in any calling but he furnisheth him with sufficient gifts for that calling as it is saide Ioshua is a man in whom is the Spirit that is the gifts of the Spirit fit for gouernment As when Saul was appointed annointed to be king of Israel he was after a sort changed into another man and Moses is heere willed to put some of his honour vpon Ioshua verse 20. When it is said he should goe in and out before the people we learne that Magistrates and men that be in authority ought to be examples in all good things to their people not giue themselues liberty to do what they list verse 17. And when the reason is rendred lest the people should bee as sheepe without a Sheepheard we learne that that people is in a most wretched estate where they haue no Magistrates to go in and out before thē Iudg. 17 like a flock of sheep without a Shepheard By this similitude also our Sauiour expresseth in what fearefull condition the people are that haue
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
gift he hath receiued Rom. 12 3. Peter when he saw the high Priests seruants to lay hands on Christ drew the sword and cut off the eare of one of the messengers but he is reproued by his Master and commanded to put vp the sword againe into his place Because all being priuate persons without a calling that take the sword Math. 26 51 shall perish with the sword Whosoeuer hath receyued a speciall calling God giueth an assurance of it to his owne heart and leaueth no scruple or doubt in him of his calling so that to aske the question of others whether a man may haue such a calling or not is an euident argument that hee hath not receiued any such calling For albeit we cannot iudge of the callings of others yet may we of our owne know that which no man knoweth beside our selues The Disciples thought amisse of Peter the Apostle for going to Cornelius For when he was come vp to Ierusalem they of the circumcision contended against him because he went in to men vncircumcised and had eaten with them Acts 11 2. vntill they had heard him giue a reason of his doing make an apology for himselfe then they held theyr peace and glorified God And so is it with those that sit in iudgement of other mens callings condemne those things whereof they are ignorant Verse 8. He thrust them both through then the plague ceased frō the children of Israel The sins of this people into which they fell were very greeuous and the iudgements of God that fell vpon them were heauy and answerable to their sinnes Some of them to fill vp the measure of their iniquities to the ful brought their harlots into the host of GOD euen among them that the Lord theyr GOD had chosen to be an holy Nation Deut. 14 2 and a precious people vnto himselfe aboue all the people that are vpon the earth When these were punished and the publike scandal taken away God is pacified the plague is remoued the people are deliuered Doctrine When once sinne is punished God is appeased From hence this Doctrine is offred to our considerations that when sinne is punished God is appeased So soone as euill is taken away the iudgements of GOD are called in VVhen the old world was destroyed by the flood of waters which God sent vpon the earth and all flesh perished in whose nostrils the spirit of life did breathe then GOD entred into a new couenant with the remnant that was left and Noah offering a sacrifice the Lord smelled a sauour of rest and said in his heart I will henceforth curse the ground no more for mans cause neither will I smite any more all things liuing as I haue done Gen. 8 21 22. So long as Achan was vnpunished the hoste of Israel could not prosper but turned their backes before their enemies but when he was found out and stoned to death with stones and burned with fire the Lord turned from his fierce wrath gaue vnto his people the victory Iosh 7 26. When he had plagued the people that caused Aaron to make the calfe that he made whereby they committed foule and grosse idolatry and turned God into the similitude of a bullocke that eateth grasse he was reconciled vn them and well pleased with them Psal 106 19 20. So when Corah Dathan and Abiram were destroyed and God visited their rebellion with a strange visitation his anger continued no longer against them When Miriam had bin shut out of the host 7. daies punished with leprosy the wrath of God was appeased she restored to the hoste againe Nu. 12 15. VVe know how the wrath of God was kindled against Israel against Dauid for numbering the people so that he sent a pestilence among them from the morning euen to the time appointed whereof there died 70000. men then the Lord repented of the euill and said to the Angel that destroyed the people It is sufficient hold now thine hand 2 Sam. 24 16. All these places of Scripture are euident proofes of this Doctrine that so soone as execution is done vpon malefactors the sword of Gods iustice is put vp and his wrath ceaseth Reason 1 And the Reasons heereof are plaine For first what is it that separateth betweene God and his people and causeth a diuorce and diuision betweene him them Is it any thing else then sinne When sinne therefore or the sinner are taken away he hath no more controuersie against them This is it which the Prophet Esay testifieth cha 59 2. Your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sinnes haue hid his face from you that he will not heare for your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with iniquity And in the fourth chapter of the Prophet Hosea ver 1 2 conuincing them of swearing and lying of killing and stealing and whoring he declareth That the Lord had a controuersie with the Inhabitants of the Land and would cut off euery one that dwelleth therein If then it be sin that causeth iudgement and sharpeneth the point of the Lords sword against the world against a kingdome against a citty against a family against euery particular person when the cause is remoued the effect shall be restrained and whē the sinner is reformed the wrath of God will be appeased for so soone as we turne vnto him his indignation shall be turned away from vs. Secondly when sinne is punished it bringeth Reason 2 downe a blessing with it For so long as vngodly men lye in their sinnes without punishment and runne on in theyr wickednes to the dishonour of God to the reproach of his Name to the offence and infection of others and to the confusion of theyr owne faces so long the wrath of God is kindled his hand is stretched out still But when they are eyther plagued of God or punished of men he blesseth the places which before hee scourged rewardeth the persons by whom iustice hath beene administred We haue a notable example heereof in the punishing of the Idolatry of the Israelites for worshipping the molten Calfe he willed the Leuites to consecrate theyr hands that day Exod. 32 29 euen euery man vpon his sonne and vpon his brother that there might bee giuen them a blessing The Lord had laide this as a punishment vpon Leui and his posterity To diuide them in Iacob and scatter them in Israel Gen. 49 7 but he turned this curse into a blessing when the Priesthood was translated to this Tribe to teach Iacob his iudgements and Israel his law that no corner of the Land should be without instruction So in this place when Phinehas rose vp executed iudgement vpon the adulterer and the adulteresse the Priesthood was confirmed vnto him and his posterity verse 12 13. If then the execution of iustice bring a blessing from God who is so delighted with it that he will neuer leaue it vnrewarded it must needs testifie