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B05828 The catalogve of the Hebrevv saints, canonized by St. Paul, Heb. 11th further explained and applied. Shaw, John, 1614-1689. 1659 (1659) Wing S3032; ESTC R184043 112,894 165

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rationall creatures and therefore proposeth rationall methods to engage us to accept his Grace rationall punishments and rewards because we are to deal with a righteous Judge Who will render to every man according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternall life But unto them that are contentious and doe not obey the truth but obey unrighteousnesse indignation and wrath Rom. 2.6.7.8 11. It s the Observation of Theoph. Moses accounted it a sin not to suffer with the people of God and unlesse it were a sin not to be sensible of the sins and sufferings of his Flock God would not have caused a mark to be set Ezek. 9.4 nor upbrayded and threatned their either dulnesse or hardnesse of heart who grieved not for the afflictions of Joseph Amos 6.6 nor the Apostle required us to be kindly affectioned and this to be expressed as in others so in this Duty to weep with them that weep Rom. 12.15 12. I shall adde one more from Haymo Quando quisque c. in suffering times and condition look and remember the promised reward and these Texts Mat. 5.10.11.12 Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousnesse sake for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evill against you falfly for my sake Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us 2 Cor. 4.16.17.18 For which cause we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternall weight of glory While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are not seen are Eternall Promises though alwayes necessary yet most usefull in extremities The Third Part. O Lord God of infinite excellencies and mercies who sent thine onely Son holy Jesus to redeem us from an intollerable servitude the commanding and condemning power of sin and to teach us an holy Religion to despise the world the pomps and vanities thereof and the sinfull desires of the flesh strongthen us by thy grace that as we would accept of thy Son for our Saviour so we may follow him as our teacher refusing the glories and treasures of this Egypt this land of darknesse wherein all things shall be forgotten choosing the better part which shall not be taken from us esteeming our Adoption to be called the Sons of God the highest honour the mercies of God and merits of Christ the most desireable treasury the Kingdom of Heaven the best Inheritance the glory and joyes of Heaven the onely satisfactory pleasures the most happy exchange to give or lose all for the fruition of Christ make us to covet the best things And to this end make us wise and prudent in our choice to be men in understanding to approve what is excellent being filled with all spirituall understanding not to be ashamed to suffer for well doing to count it all joy when we are called to endure affliction with the People of God and to beare in our bodies the marks of the Lord Jesus Sanctifie them to us by thy grace attend them with thy spirit and reward them with thy glory Satisfie our Soules that we may tast and see how gracious the Lord is even in those his dispensations and fill them with the apprehensions of the excellencies and preciousnesse of the promises in Jesus Christ that we may resolve with David Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none on Earth we desire besides thee That like as the Hart c. Break O Lord we pray thee the powers infatuate the policies of the persecutors of thy Church Bring her out of Egypt and leade thy People by the Hands of Moses and Aaron Sanctifie all their sufferings and conduct them to the heavenly Canaan to live with their Lord unto all Eternity to whom be honour and power might majesty and dominion for ever Amen MOSES his Courage Heb. 11.27 By Faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him who is invisible MOses had before mastered the false hopes of Egypt now he is to encounter with the foolish fears thereof and having quit himself of the right hand assaults of the World its allurements objects promises he is now to conquer the left hand temptations threatnings force and fury of Pharaoh and his Host the Gyants and Sons of Anak and by Faith in Christ he is in all these more then Conqueror For the Discourses and Reasoning of Faith first taught him to sleight Pharachs Court then his Power First to conquer himself and Fortior est qui se quam qui fortissima vincit and then his and the people of Gods enemy It first instructed him with Piety and then furnished him with Resolution and Courage For By Faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King c. The first Part. Moses did twice forsake Egypt The first time was as was last Recorded When at forty Years old he fled into Midian Exod. 2.15 The second time was when that after Egypt was smitten in every quarter he and the whole Body of the Israelites departed thence And upon this difference of time a question ariseth which time the first clause here in the Text relates unto Some will have the former to be referred unto here as Iun. Paral. lib. 3. because the Apostle in this Historicall computation strictly observeth the circumstance and order of time through all the fore-going and subsequent instances And it 's clear Moses celebrated the Passe-over before the second time which yet is after related here in the following verse and therefore it cannot relate to this unlesse we invert the Order And also because in the 29. ver the Peoples departure out of Egypt is set by it self as a severall and distinct instance of Faith from this here Others conceive it to be meant of the second time for if the former were here considered the Apostles Position here seems to contradict the Historicall Natration Exod. 2.14 where it is said He feared and fled Others as the most judicious Calvin understand it of both times tam de priore quam secundo For though it be said that at the first he feared yet this fear was a fear of prudence he had not strength to oppose Pharaoh and so he could not he had not as yet sufficient authority and so he might not not of difference or the event that God would not preserve him from Pharaoh if he used the most safe course for his preservation and reserved himself for a
life they begun not till they had well-nigh finished their course when the negotiations and transactions of State was a burden when the multiplicity of businesses had tyred them or the variety of pleasures surfetted or spent them But Moses was now in his prime most able both to undertake and under-goe weighty employments as after he did and to receive what content any worldly delight could afford at his best both to endure hardnesse and enjoy softnesse 4. From this Observation let us learn this Instruction to be wise in time to employ our choysest opportunities our best strength and vigor of body and spirit for the purchase and possession of the Eternall Inheritance God will have the prime of our years devoted to his service while we have marrow in our bones and life in our senses and clearnesse in our spirits Mal. 1.8 If ye offer the blind for sacrifice is it not evill and if ye offer the lame and sick is it not evill offer it now unto thy Governour will he be pleased with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hosts and then also to encrease in knowledge and spirituall understanding not to be children carried away with every wind of Doctrine or with the togish garish vanities of the world but to be men approving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 2.18 the things that are excellent that we embrace not Nubem pro Junone a vain empty shadow of comfort for reall solid substantiall happinesses gaudy fantastick appearances like Caligula's Banquet to please the Eye not to satisfie Nature in stead of the Heavenly Reward that so we may fix our desires there where true joyes are to be found being skilfull in the word of righteousnesse that we endeavour to be as Moses was of full age that is perfect such as by reason of use have our senses exercised to discern both good and evill Heb. 5.13.14 For every one that useth milke is unskilfull in the Word of Righteousnesse for he is a Babe But strong meat belongeth unto them that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evill For this commended and approved his Faith that he did this when he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 great in years and discretion great in knowledge and learning great in temper and moderation great in fame and favour at Court and therefore it was an act of great Faith to refuse to be called the Son of Phar●ohs Daughter 5. He refused 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or denied and he refused not in complement and civility to gain the reputation of being modest humble and moderate an Art which self-seeking ambitious spirits have learned and exercised seeming to decline that which they most passionately fancy and labor for and by under-hand and secret contrivances most greedily prosecute neither in cunning and policy that he might be more earnestly follicited to accept what he had plotted and gaped for another Art which ambition also hath found out to deceive the World neither was it an humour of discontent or desire of change accompanied with an overgrown troublesome Zeale for then this act had been either designe or pretence an handsome piece either of hypocrifie or civility But he refused as upon serious and sober consideration so in truth and singlenesse of Heart a direct proper work of self-deniall and so a clear evidence of his Faith True piety and contempt of this World is not a bare naked pretence set forth in a demure look or holy language but an effectuall mortification of all Worldly motions contrary to justice and charity a not daring to venture on any unlicensed artifice a serious fixed endeavour of exact walking not to value any transitory thing at an higher rate then the Rule of Faith and Law of Christ hath set upon them that they be currant to us not upon the old vulgar account of interest or self-preservation to purchase or preserve an Estate with an evill Conscience but upon the new reformed account of love to God and our Neighbour Indeed men may usurpe and assume the Title and Appellative of Saints to themselves and yet be so far from observing the self-denying Ordinance of Christ Mat. 16.24 that they strictly lay hold on every advantage which shall fall in their way and if none be tendered they will cast about all wayes to find one and upon any discovery chase and follow the wayes of unrighteousnesse with all passion and eagernesse by all indirect and unlawfull wayes some of these pretenders following the way of Cain some of Balaam some of Corah some of Achan some of Gehazi some of Ahab some of Judas c. whereas indeed there is no surer Title to Heaven then contempt of the World no better assurance that we are in the Faith then our overcomming the World 1 John 2.15.16.17 Love not the World neither the things that are in the World If any man love the World the love of the Father is not in him For all that is in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but of the World And the World passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever And 1 John 5.4 For whatsoever is born of God overcommeth the World and this is the Victory that evercommeth the World even our Faith No stronger proof that we are true Israelites indeed then that we forsake Egypt and come out of Babylon that we are Disciples then that we deny our selves the advancement of our interests the satisfaction of our passions and take up our crosse unite our selves to the body of Beleevers and persevere in their Communion in despight of all temptations and follow Christ as a Law-giver in his Precepts and a Leader by his example both for obedience unto and patience under his Fathers will 6. For a season the pleasures of sin are short the punishment is long Sin may be sweet for a while but it is sharp for ever And who would hazard a lasting pain for a little pleasure or be tickled either into a Disease or unto Death An optares malam scabiem quod scalpendi sit altqua voluptas Eras Epic. It were madnesse to be in love with a Leprosie or Itch for the pleasure of scratching to lose everlasting pleasures and the fulnesse of joy for a transitory delight nay a meer out-side formall delight without all inward content and satisfaction for the whole World and every thing in it is but a Scheeme a shadow an appearance an empty nothing in two Apostles judgements 1 Cor. 7.31 And they that use this World as not abusing it for the fashion of this Word passeth away 1 John 2.17 And the world passeth away and the lust there but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 7. Of Christ Moses then was a Christian and then God had a People God had alwayes a Church and
so in an ordinary saving Faith a little if sound will receive a blessing to encrease and multiply a power to remove evill habits out of the soule contracted by evill Education or Example by naturall corruption or complyance with sinfull customes and plant and seed holinesse there which if it be diligently manured and managed all tares weeded out as they bud will fructifie to maturity We have a promise for it Mat. 25.29 Habenti dabitur to him that Husbands well even the least Talent he shall receive an addition and a plentifull one too for he shall have abundance upon every improvement shall receive more that he shall have over-plus a sufficient stock of grace to employ and turn his hand with and serve all his uses 3. Rahab a Cananite a stranger from the Covenant of Promise an Alien from the Common-wealth of Israel is now admitted and received into that Society and Communion and made partaker of the same Grace and Hope with Abraham and Sarah by her Faith She was one of the Primitiae Gentium an earnest of the after calling of the Gentiles that they should be no more strangers and forreiners but fellow Citizens Ephes 2.3 an exact discovery of that great Mistery of Christ that the Gentiles should he fellow heires and of the same Body c. And so it is expresly mentioned of this Rahab That she became an Israelite indeed Iosh 6.25 where she is said to dwell in Israel untill this day for she was Allied to the noblest descent and extraction being Married to Salmon who begat Boaz of Rachab Mat. 1.5 the Progenitors of David and of whom Christ came according to the Flesh So that here we may affirmatively conclude with Saint Peter Acts 10.34.35 Of a truth I perceive that God is no respector of persons But in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him And with Saint Peter 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing but the keeping of the Commandements of God And Gal. 5.6 For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision avayleth any thing nor uncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love 4. Rahab beleeved and therefore separated her self from the company and communion of her hardened fellow Citizens and joyned her self to the society of Gods people and yet she was none of those sensuall separatists spoken of by Saint Jude 19. who walked not with the Church of God but after their own ungodly lusts heaping to themselves Teachers choosing and carving for themselves without the Order of Gods Church and taking them on heaps either confusedly or unsatisfactorily when they have their own choice being never contented put off one to day and another to morrow and so if possible in infinitum and all this from a malignant humor an itching in the eare 2 Tim. 4.3 nor those Pharisaicall separatists who divide themselves from the Body of Christ either upon a vain supposition of Pride that they are holier and the rest prophaner and therefore Procul ô proeul ite come not neer them stand far from them or upon as bad of uncharitablenesse as if the Congregation were not holy and they good soules are afraid to receive infection from it as if the true service of the true God could be unholy and poysonous because some of the servants in that duty are false and wicked For how can their supposed ir-reall it matters not in this case but I will suppose it reall nakednesse touch and defile me when I abhor it for it self piety it and pray against it in them and I onely joyn and communicate with them in that which is confessedly good But she was an holy separatist who forsook the service of false Gods and betook her self to the Worship of the true God her Idolatrous Worship she exchanged for the true and divided not from the Cananites quasi homines as men but from their sins For doubtlesse she desired and wished their conversion and it is a most just and lawfull separation to depart from all iniquity and to keep themselves unspotted from the World James 1.27 Rev. 18.4 And I heard another Voyce from Heaven saying Come out of her my people that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her Plagues 2 Cor. 6.14.15.16.17 Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbeleevers for what fellowship hath righteousnesse with unrighteousnesse and what communion hath light with darknesse And what concord hath Christ with Belial or what part hath he that beleeveth with an Infidell And what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols for ye are the Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall be my people Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing and I will rective you and such was her separation whereas dayly experience doth evidence That the other humerous separatists are the greatest manuonists designers plotters and contrivers for the World in the whole World and the greediest unsatiable pursuers of the things of the World devourers not onely of Widows Houses but of Kingdoms Inheritances holy things mixing and confounding all with most Heathenish Worldly Policies not considering that the love of this World is enmity with God 5. It was Rahab the Heathen the Gentile house-wife who was the Harlot Rahab the Beleever the Convert is joyned to an Israelite in chast and holy Wedlock Fornication is a Work of the Flesh a pollution of our Bodies Marriage is honourable in all Those may justly suspect their Faith and distrust their conversion who indulge and allow themselves in those unclean satisfactions of the Flesh and Heathenish pollutions Reade that one Law of God Deut. 23.17.18 There shall be no Whore of the Daughters of Israel nor a Sodomite of the Se●t of Israel Thou shalt not bring the hire of a Whore or the price of a Dog into the House of the Lord thy God for any Vow for even both these are an abomination unto the Lord thy God Consider what Saint Paul presseth 1 Cor. 6.15.16.17.18 Know ye not that your Bodies are the Members of Christ shall I then take the Members of Christ and make them the Member of an Harlot God forbid What know ye not that he which is joyned to an Harlot is one Body for two saith he shall be one Flesh But he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit c. And remember that direfull judgement Revel 21.8 But the fear full and unbeleeving and the abominable and murderers and whorem●ngers and sorcerers and Idolaters and all lyar shall have their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death 6 Rahab beleeved and was saved True Faith is the saving grace Infidelity the damnable sin because Faith is alwayes attended with Obedience Infidelity is still followed with Impenitency Indeed Faith and Obedience like Hippocrates Twins
Hearts and affections with Peace that when he shall return to make inquisition for blood transgression and sin we may by him and that league and Covenant of Peace concluded with thee in him be delivered from wrath to come and for him receive forgivenesse of sins and Inheritance among them who are sanctified by Faith in him O let us not have our portion with unbeleevers nor our part with the disobedient for then we shall certainly perish but think upon us O Lord for good that we may be saved with that remnant who have their Robes washed and whitned in the blood of the Lambe who have separated themselves from the children of Belial and Table of Devills and keep themselves unspotted from the World and so both they and we may be presented in our Bodies our Soules and Spirits holy blamelesse and undefiled at the comming of our Lord. Holy God keep as from the contagion of sin and sinners preserve us in thy truth and love in the Vnity and Communion of thy one true holy Catholique Church that having the Seale of Gods Servants in our Forcheads we may cry and sing eternally Salvation to our God who fitteth on the Throne and to the Lambe Amen The CONCLUSION Heb. 11. from the 32. verse to the end of the Chapter And what shall I say more for the time would faile me to tell of Gideon and of Barak and of Sampson and of Iephthah of David also and Samuel and of the Prophets Who through Faith subdued Kingdoms wrought Righteousnes obtained promises stopped the mouthes of Lyons c. THe Apostle now coms to a Conclusion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a pre●●●on cutting short his Discourse and cursorily casting up the residue of the Faithfull which were to be inserted in this Catalogue even all the Succession of Beleevers who lived from the time of the Judges ruling under God in Israel till that present Age wherein he Wrote to these Hebrews nominating onely some shortly touching their works and patience intimating onely and hinting at others by their acts and sufferings by which we may guesse and conjecture at their Names and Persons And having thus compleated his Designe and Canon he gives a full Testimoniall and Certificate of approbation in the two last Verses both of these thus in the close either expressed or alluded to and of those foregoing whom he had honoured with a larger Narrative and more distinctly and aithfully insisted on and more amply commended I shall therefore here leave my former Method in the respective Observance of the Apostle and summarily and briefly run over these subsequent Examples and Presidents of Faith as they lye here in their severall order contracted and so follow his Abridgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the words following in course And what shall I more say If these Hebrews be of tractable and teachable Spirits enough is said already to establish and strengthen them in the holy Faith and what needs more then enough sufficient is said what is more is ex abundantia The time would faile me c. An Hyperbolicall expreson importing thus much So numerous is the company of the Faithfull Ancients and so many their Faithfull Actions in the holy Registery that a full enumeration of them and what is Recorded of and concerning them would exceed the bulk of an Epistolar Exhortation and Remonstrance and rise into a large and exact History These here mentioned will serve strongly to make good the Induction and thereby prove the Position Faith is the substance of things hoped the evidence of things not seen c. and therefore it is unnecessary altogether to enlarge further and therefore also take them more succinctly and compendiously Thus your Painters being to deliniate a Croude or a Thronged Multitude doe not take them whole and in full but draws them out by the Pole and presents you nothing but the tops and crowns of their Heads amassing their bulks altogether Gideon whose faithfull expedition is Recorded Judges 6. and 7. whose stratagem with the number of three hundred men struck a Panick fear into the numerous Mideanitish Army that they Fled and killed each other Baracks Prowesse and Faith was manifested That with a small inconsiderable Body he durst encounter and did totally Rout the vast and well-provided Army of Sisera King Iabins Captain Generall Iudges 4. and 5. Samson follows whose Faith was greater then his admired and renowned strength admired it was because it lay in those excrescences of his Body his Heires which in other Men are of the least use and most weaknesse Renowned it was to a Proverb and deservedly for without any offensive or defensive Weapons by his bare Arme of Flesh he tore in pieces a Lyon like a Kid Iudges 14.5.6 when his Hands were bound he brake the Cords like scorched Flax and being loosed with the law-bone of an Asse flew a thousand Men Iudges 15.14 c. when he was Beseiged and immured by the Philistines he carried away the Gates of the City with the two Posts Barr and all Iudges 16.3 and by leaning upon the two middle Pillart of the House the whole Fabrick dissolved Iudges 16.30 Iephthah is the last mentioned of the Iudges though he was before Samson as Barack was before Gideon who notwithstanding was first here nominated You may finde the History of his Resolution and Noble Attempts against the Ammonites in the defence of Israel Iudges 11. I shall referre you to the Text and leave them after a not very impertinent Digression and two Practicall Observations The Digression aimes at a Fact of Samsons and Iephtha's and depends on these following Quaeries 1. Whether Samson in that his last mentioned Enterprize was not Felo de se guilty of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of selfe-murder which not onely the Rule of Faith but reason it selfe condemns as sinfull and unnaturall Arist lib. 5. Eth. cap. 11 But to wave some mens conjectures Saint Augustines Answer seems to me most cleare who accounts this inter beroica an extraordinary act proceeding from an extraordinary motion of Gods Spirit in no wise or case imitable For saith he lib. 1. de Civitate Dei cap. 21. Spiritus latenter hoc jusserat he had a secret or private Order for it And more fully cap. 26. of that Book Non humanitas deceptus sed divinitus jussus nec arrans sed obediens It was not a crime but duty in him And he adds this reason Cum Deus jubet seque jubere sine ullis ambagibus intimat quis obedientiam in crimen vocet quis obsequium pietatis accuset If God command and clearly intimates his command this supersedes the guilt and absolves it from disobedience 2. Concerning Iephtha's Vow Whether it in it selfe were rash Whether he executed this rash Vow and in the Execution thereof did sin against the Law of God This in Saint Augustines judgement is Magna ad dijudicandum difficilima Quaestio Tom. 4. quaest sup Iud. lib. 7. cap. 49. a great
is alwayes Victorious whether he Conquer by Prowesse or by Patience If Faith teach not his Hand to fight yet it will teach his Body to suffer it either acts wonderfully or endures nobly And there is as much gallantry nay truely more because greater magnanimity in cheerfull undergoing of hardnesse then involuntary undertaking For undertakers and very forward ones too many times faint and flag and give over whereas a sufferer shews his resolution and clears all suspition of falshood or inconstancy to his undertaking Indeed a true Beleever is the same in every contingency and state of affaire and is equally resolved and disposed both for prosperity and adversity and when most afflicted his Faith is most glorious for then it appears in those eminent Graces of humility meeknesse resignation c. which otherwise perhaps had been obscured And so it is of very faithfullnesse that God suffereth the faithfull to suffer even that the tryall of their Faith might be much more precious then Gold though tryed with fire 1 Peter 1.7 The Devill and the World opposeth to them the Passengers Argument to Christ on the Crosse If thou be the Son of God come downe from the Crosse c. Mat. 27.40 And is it not a notable reply to answer with Christ in Prayer by Faith Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from me yet not my will but thine be done It was a weaknesse in Gideon to argue thus with the Angel If the Lord be with us why then it all this befallen 〈◊〉 Judges 6.13 A strange reasoning to a considering man to conclude God doth net love because the World hates this certainly is an infirmity in Faith and David acknowledgeth so much though withall he acknowledgeth himselfe to have been overtaken with it and so continued until he neut into the House of God and diligently enquired after the wayes of Gods Providence and there he found though the depth of his judgements are unsearchable and his wayes past finding out what was obvious and legible That no successe or prosperity of the wicked hath power enough to make them happy or entitle them to Gods favour no adversity or crosse emergent can make without any sullen Stoicisme a godly man miscrable Psal 73. Because and his Reasons are strong the wicked man in his best estate hath no hold hat what will fayle him when be most needs and need he must but the Godly hath a strong hold which as long as he is godly will be a Sanctuary and Protection to him his dependance and hope in God who never fayleth them who trust in him Saint Paul gives us an experiment of this truth That God loves when he chasteneth for we are saith he 2 Cor. 4.8.9 perplexed that may very well be and frequently it is so because of impendent or incumbent sadnesses and disasters but not in dispaire for we live by Faith and our hope is an anker of the soule both sure and stedfast Persecuted we may be we must be Ye shall have tribulation saith Christ Iohn 16.33 Shall suffer Persecution 2 Tim. 3.12 forsaken ye cannot be For what can separate us from the love of God in Christ Romans 8.39 Cast downe humbled 2 little but not destroyed not cast off or rejected and this condition is so farr from being miserable that it is honourable and comfortable The former is expressed in the 10.11.14 Verses The latter in the 16.17.18 Verses Nay an Ancient goes yet higher Quanto quis severius patitur tazto melius coronabitur the greater their crosses the more glorious shall be their crownes the more their crosses the more their crownes And agreeably to this the Schoolemen have assigned and assured to the Martyrs the largest share and measure in the accidentalls of Eternall blisse what is over and above the essentialls belonging to them Aquinas Suppl per 3. qu. 96. art 12. How true this supposition is that there are such accidentalls of beatitude and that they are belonging to Martyrs I define not yet I beleeve this to be among the Piè Credenda But this I am sure of is an infallible Divine Truth That whether God chastise his Children with Rods as he doth every Son or cherish them with externall additions whether they be in adversity or prosperity he is equally a Father to them in both estates and equally a Father of mercies Hebr. 12.5 c. to them And as in all so chiefly in these dispensations he hath ends and purposes of Infinite Wisedome and Goodnesse and God is pleased by these unpleasant Providences to manifest his own glorious Attributes and his servant eminent Graces So they prove excellent Methods to set forth Gods glory and set forward mans salvation for hereby God makes known his infinite Power and Wisedome by bringing light out of darknesse good out of evill extracting Cordialls and Restoratives out of Poyson curing desperate distempers by corrections his infinite goodnesse suffering the Bush to burne but not to wast and consume the Body to smart but the Soule to joy the Body to be weak but the Spirit strong in the Lord and in the power of his might sustaining their infirmities and supporting in their greatest sadnesses even to a Miracle Vt intelligeritis neminem esse qui ant sine ratione velit poename subire aeut tormenta siue Deo possit sustinere saith Minutius Faelix Oct. None would suffer those torments Christians did unlesse they had good grounds for it neither indeed could any suffer them unlesse he had a good God an Almighty Father to hold him up and succour him And yet as the same Ancient Quod corporis vitia sentimus patimur non est poenae militia est Their sufferings are not truely punishments they are exercises and conquests over the World the malice of men and corruptions and rebellions of lust and nature But besides this The patient submission and resignation of Gods servants under the Crosse discovering Graces which otherwise would be concealed and unknown Had not Job contested with and baffled the Devills policy and pretences by his dependance on God in the greatest miseries the Devill could invent or inflict his Faith and fincerity had been either under suspition or under a Cloud his constancy and adhaerence to God in those great conflicts and tryalls both cleared and experimented his innocency for in such exigents the case is cleared That God is beleeved loved and obeyed in and for himselfe without any mereinary servile respects Christ is followed for his Doctrine not his Loaves The innocent sufferer that endures for Gods sake all the evills of the World cannot be suspected to drive a secular designe it is evident he seeks for Heaven and the enduring substance in that continuing City Times of suffering times of tryall then we are Christs probationers whether we be fit to be admitted into the society and number of his Disciples then Christs Souldiers and whether we be fit to be listed into the Roll and taken into their
things of good report 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 4.8 For though it be true that a good report and opinion of men be no good foundation to build upon yet it is a good stone in the building and he that intends to rayse a faire Structure must not onely have a good Foundation that is for the most part invisible but he must have faire stones which alwayes appear a good report is a good mans comfort not his confidence that wherein he may rejoyce not that whereunto he must trust and he will seek it not so much that he may find it as it may follow him not because he affects it but deserves it Sequi debet gloria non appeti It is servile to Court a good name it is dessolute to contemne it But though these all obtained a good report yet they obtained not the Promises God having provided c. Not the Promises that is not the objects or things Promised or rather the full draugth of what was represented in those Promises For indeed Promises they had and they received what was Promised in particular reference unto themselves as it is above expressed ver 33.34 But the generall Promife or that happinesse which concerned them as a community or whereof they were participate as a full body or society with all Beleevers from Abel to the end of the World with all these their Predecessors and all their Successors in the holy Faith they received not inasmuch as this consisted in a state of perfection which they could not receive till they were incorporated into the society of Beleevers under the Dispensation of the Gospel and New Testament for whom it was chiefly and principally intended without whom none of all these were in a capacity to receive this perfect consummation and blisse So that here the enquiry will be First What was the Promise which they received not What the provision made for us What the full perfection of all both them and us But because one Resolution will satisfie all these Demands and Interrogatories And the clearing any one of the three will be the decision and finall determination of the rest Therefore I shall return onely one Answer to the Quaeries yet in order thereunto I shall give you the severall conjectures and judgements which I find in this instance declare what I conceive most rationall and satisfactory allowing to others the same liberty which I challenge to my selfe to take what they like best or ought to doe according to the Rules of Art and Religion And there are foure severall Opinions in this Point The first and in my conceit the worst as being meerly conjecturall and phantasticall is the received interpretation and common Tenet of the present Romish Doctors who affirme That these received not the promise because immediately after death they were not received into Heaven But as they fancy the separated foules of these faithfull ones departed into a subterraneous place bordering upon the confines of Hell or rather the upper or higher Region of Hell which they call Limbus Patrum where they were in durance and detained Prisoners untill Christs Ascention into Heaven whereupon having received their liberato and dismission they were received and admitted into the Seat of Glory Whereas Beleevers under the Gospel have an higher Priviledge thereby even to passe immediately after their departure into Heaven This is their Resolution But in truth what measures or degrees of felicity these all received by Christs Ascention or what immunities or liberties is not the postulate or matter of inquiry here For it will be granted that they received larger favours then before were indulged to or allowed them and that thereby their joyes and felicities were encreased and multiplyed For if the Angels themselves obtained by Christs comming into the World an addition and augmentation of light and knowledge and so consequently of glory and happinesse as the Apostle very positively assirmes they did Eph. 3.10 that new c. then we need not scruple to give to the Soules of Beleevers some accidentall measures and increments of felicity thereby neither can it be any prejudice to the Faith to acknowledge that God would and did perfect their beatitudes and blisse at divers times and in different degrees for their blisse was not completed simul semel altogether and at once and that the most eminent principall and noblest perfection was reserved for this great solemnity of Christs Resurrection and Ascention And yet further it may be granted as very probable that the degrees of future happinesse shall be proportioned to the measures and degrees of Grace and Revelation which God hath respectively and in severall successions imparted to his Church And if so then it will follow That as confessedly God hath exhibited greater abundance of Revelation and Grace unto the Beleevers under the Gospel then to those under the Law so those shall be partakers of higher Formes or Sears of happinesse then these all could Neither doe these liberall concessions any whit advantage the Romanists perswasion or conceit because they no way conclude or infer their Position for they peremptorily exclude the Soules of these all from Heaven and not onely so but keep them under restraint confine shut them up in under ground Vaults and Cells not far from Hell And this Position we reject as contrary to an Old Testament Revelation Eccl. 12.7 the spirit returns unto God who gove it Which words of the Wise Man though they doe not in terminis terminantibus expresse Language determine whether their Soules return to God mediately or immediately upon their separation yet the context makes the meaning plain and the Text a clear proof of their immediate return for as the dust immediately after the departure of the Soule returns to what it was even so the Soule after its divorce from the Body returns immediately to its Creator And this is also agreeable to Gods just and gracious dealings with his chosen in all Generations to reward the work of Faith labour of love patience of hope to order and appoint to Travellers when at their Journyes end their resting place To Runners when their Course is finished the Prize To Crown his Souldiers who have fought the good fight of Faith with Glory To receive his Servants when they performed their duty and done their work into his presence and to enter them into their Masters joyes settle and possesse his Children of their Inheritance which resting Place Prize Crown of Glory Glorious Presence Joyes and Inheritance hath been purchased and bought and so demised and granted to the these all in this place as well as to the succeeding Generations For although then Christ had not actually suffered and so they not actually ransomed yet even then he being the Lambe slain before the Foundation of the World Legally or in the Eye of the Law or rather of the just Judge and Soveraigne Lord he did suffer and they were Redeemed inasmuch as God had Decreed that satisfaction made
on the Crosse to his justice should be as available to them as to us and the merits of Christs death as imputable to them as to us And upon that account God accepted these all as his Redeemed ones Even as an honest Creditor will release his Debtor when a faithfull Solvent Surety or undertaker makes satisfaction or gives security to content and according to desire and demand And as Jesus Christ was yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13. so the vertue of his death is Eternall both à parte ante and à parte post is from and to all Eternity But besides all this premised we have expresse Evidence for our Plea and Cause for the precedent Verses of this Chapter where it is set down in plain Language that some of these all had passed from Earth to Heaven and particularly instanced in Enoch and Elijah and it s said of Abraham that he looked for a City and that sure was a free Priviledged Place conspicuous eminent and glorious not a close dark hole or Prison and of the Patriarkes that they aymed at Patriam Caelestem an Heavenly Country and that jam tum illis paratum even then prepared for them Heb. 11.10.16 And hereupon Haymo thus concludes Nunc verò quiescunt in animae in heatudine Regui Caelestis ineffabili laetitia perfruontes It seems this conceit of the present Romaniscs was not at that time a Catholike truth or else he was mistaken The second is that of some of the Ancient Fathers who referr this common perfection to be received solely to the day of the Resurrection supposing That no Soules enter into Heaven or enjoyes the beatificall Vision till the day of the generall Resurrection But although the souls be extinguished at the time of their separation from the Body yet they did lye in seeret receptacles in a profound or deep sleep untill the Resurrection doing nothing suffering nothing in the mean time but onely the delay of their Glory For so some of them conceive That Heaven shall not be opened till the day of Judgement unlesse to a few priviledged persons And of this opinion was Irenous Iust Martyr Tertull. August Ambrose Iohn 22. and the Greeke Church still maintains it The Text upon which they ground this perswasion is Apoc. 6.9.10.11 I saw under the Altar the soules of them that wore slain for the Word of God c. Indeed there are severall Expositions of this place Some making it Allegoricall Others Figurative c. Whatsoever the true meaning is Certainly the Text strongly proves the Immortality of the humane Soules by their subsistence after separated But whether their Conclusion let others judge Indeed some later Divines have moderated the supposition Neither with the Romanists dooming their soules to inferior Vaults if not infernall Nor placing in severall resting receptacles yet withall allowing them no residence in Heaven the Throne of Gods Glory But they pretend they are carried into Abrahams bosome or which is all one with them to Paradise thus distinguishing Paradise from Heaven which distinction they attempt to prove from these following places of holy Scripture First from Luke 23.43 To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise From which words they thus argue how concludingly let others examine That Paradise must needs import a Place or Seate of blessednesse because it is promised as a mercifull reward and favour and this reward the enjoyment of the society of Iesus yet Heaven it cannot be because that Kingdom of blisse was not opened till Christ made the first entry and took Possession thereof at his Ascension when he was solemnly inaugurated intoch is Kingly Office And so they Expound Christs descent into Hell to signifie a state of separation or common receptable of Spirits so that with them both are Seats of Glory but the one far excelling the other And this they in the second place strengthen from 2 Cor. 12. supposing Saint Paul had two Revelations One When he was caught up into the third Heaven The other When into Paradise which say they was the place from whence Laezarus his soule was called back But that the chief and highest degree of blisse is reserved for the last day they infer from Mat. 13.43 and 25.34 2 Tim. 4.8 But the now common received opinion which is all I adde by way of censure is That all the soules of the saints departed goe straightwayes to Heaven upon their separation To this purpose compare Heb. 10.19 with Heb. 12.22.23.24 which words seem to have this sense The spirits of the just could not be perfect unlesse they were in Heaven enjoying the society of God Christ and the Angels and by enjoyment of these their being in Heaven is concluded So 2 Cor. 5.1 If our Earthly Tabernacle c. then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have immediately thereupon a building of God c. as soon as the Tabernacle is dissolved Otherwise the Apostle would not have said we have but we hope or expect and to expect is but in reference to a reversion to have supposes Possession For here we hope for Heaven we have it not and here we desire we may have For so it follows ver 2. In this we groane c. Yet we would not have desired to be uncloathed ver 4. but upon this account and assurance That as soon as we were uncloathed we would be cloathed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life And further yet We are willing to be absent from the Body that we might be present with the Lord ver 8. of the same Chapter Hence St. Paul saith Phil. 1.23 I desire to depart and to be with Christ And St. Stephen when he dyed thus Prayed Lord Iesus receive my spirit Acts 7.59 and he Prayed so because he beleeved for this was a Prayer of Faith Iesus would receive his Spirit But super totam materiam we shall anon find as hath been proved and shall be further that waving the supposition upon which this second judgement is given it yet comes neer the mark and the truth if it be not the truth it selfe And therefore we passe to the third The third is that which is commonly asserted by most of the Writers of the Reformed Churches who apprehend this promise to relate to Christs Incarnation and with these the words are thus Paraphrased they obtained not the promises that is The promised Messas had not in their times assumed the humane nature and become flesh So Beza Non obtinuerunt they obtained not that is Eminus viderunt Christum they looked for Christ to come they saw him as Abraham afar off So Major Non sunt consecuti promissionem viz. promissum semen mulieris the promised Seed of the Woman And so Calvin Iunius Piscator and certainly their judgement herein is true the dispensation under Christ more glorious then that under the Law and greater perfections received and better provision made by Christs comming then was before insomuch that our Saviour affirmeth