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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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for the State The Argument is of force to urge a State to use kindnesse and to intreate lovingly and to speake comfortably unto those both Ministers and people that are truely religious as Darius did well conceive it Ezra 6.9 10. And that which they shall have need of let it be given unto them day by day whether it be young Bullocks or Rams or Lambs for the burnt offerings of the God of Heaven Wheate Salt Wine and Oyle according to the appointment of the Priests that are in Jerusalem that there be no fault that they may have to offer sweet odours unto the God of Heaven and pray for the Kings life and for his sonnes for they often stand in the gap and keepe away much evill yea they prevaile for much good One of these is better than a multitude of others as Chrysost of wicked and godly Hom. 26. ad pop Ant. as one precious stone is better than a thousand pibbles And that breeds but confusion and subversion of all when we desire multitudes as they doe in Theaters and not an honest and good multitude It is I say of force for the good but not for these wicked hypocrites and treasonable Priests and Jesuites and all such specially understanding Papists who have given up their name to Antichrist whose prayers cannot profit the King and State who if they pray pray but as Balaam blessed Gods people against their hearts who if they could pray with their hearts yet should never prevaile nor be accepted being as they are And to them wee may use that of Tertul. Apolog. cap. 34. * Esto religiosus in Deum qui vis eum imperatori propitium Tertul. Apolog. cap. 34. Be thou religious towards God who wouldest have him to be favourable to the Emperour This teacheth the fearefull case and condition of that Church and State Vse 2 where they who should stand in the gap breach before him to turne away his wrath lest he destroy them are men themselves who provoke Gods wrath of whom it may be said as Ezek. 13.4 5. O Israel thy Prophets are like the foxes in the waste places yee have not risen up in the gaps neither made up the hedge for the house of Israel to stand in the battell in the day of the Lord undoubtedly that State must expect a judgment from God besides that it is one it selfe when God takes away good men such as were the Charets and horsemen of Israel their defence and preservation who prevailed more by their prayers as Moses Exod. 17. then all the Hoast did by their speares specially when their successours are wicked and prophane men that provoke God to wrath by their wicked lives It goes hard with the Church when her good Prophets are by God forbidden to pray for it as Jer. 14.11 But yet if they remaine with them though they cannot prevaile at one time yet they may at another but more hard when he takes them away when they are without hope of having them to stand up for them againe but worst of all when they are such as are of lewd life who thereby provoke God against them Therefore these both shoudl bee mourned for the losse of the one and the succession of the other for the former are as the King said the Charets and the horsemen of Israel the latter are the Charets and horsemen against Israel for not being with it they are against it of good Ministers we may say as Psal 127.4 5. as are the arrowes in the hand of the strong man so are they who are her good Ministers blessed is the Church that hath a quiverfull of them here is her prosperity and peace hence is the ruine and overthrow of her Enemies And on the contrary may we say of wicked Ministers whose prayers shall never be heard for the Church but rather against it This granted then have we a warrant to separate our selves from the Church or congregation Object where a wicked Minister is for why shoudl we joyne with a Minister that God will not heare The Donatists made the same objection to August loco praedicto to which the summe of his answer is that when they pray with the congregation they are heard though for their own wickednesse they deserve to bee rejected because of the piety and devotion of the people who joyne with them whence I collect that though the Minister speake the words yet they are not his prayers only but the prayers of the Church As in an other case though the Minister deliver the signes yet it is not his sacrament but Christs and so may be profitable notwithstanding the corruption insufficiency of the Minister soin this For this must be understood that in the congregation some one must conceive a prayer for all the rest lest in a multitude there should be confusion and tumult if every one should in his own words utter his prayer in the Church therefore the Minister he is the mouth of the Church If he be a faithfull one he shall bee heard together with the Church if otherwise not he but the faithfull people who speake to God by his words But you will say then what losse have we if the Minister be wicked I answer many wayes because the corruption of men is such that as they like the Word and Sacrament worse because they dislike him that brings them and finde not such joy and comfort in them as by his hands they like so they cannot bee nor are not so affected to joyne in prayer with a man they like not or thinke not well and reverently of to whose persons they have just exceptions so their prayers are not as they should be neither he with that spirit and affection utters their petitions to God which might affect their hearts to more zeale in prayer Besides they want the benefit of his prayers in pivate who should mourne for them and pray for them when they are following their necessary affaires or their convenient pleasures or are living in their sins be a Moses to hold up his hands for them a Job to sacrifice for them as Jer. 13.17 or as Paul Act. 20.31 All which a good and faithfull Minister will doe but hee that is not will be as carelesse and secure as he can be and never doe it or if he should yet not be accepted This hath been by your meanes the sinnes of the people are imputed to the Priests because they taught them not better nor reproved them of this ante verse 7. Will hee regard your person Hee will not your office and place and dignity in the Church shall not make him receive your prayers As God to elect and call men Doctrine and to give them the promises and possession of Heavenly things is moved by no outward priviledge or dignity of the flesh so to heare their prayers and to accept their service is he not moved by any dignity of person any vertue of place of office nor by outward priviledge
of it in Priest and people hee forsakes not their assemblies but cōmmunicates with them in their service sacrifices Men ought not to separate themselves from a visible congregation or assembly a visible Church for the abuse of it Doctrine and the corruption of it it being not in fundamentalls As here the Prophet did not neither read we of any Prophet who left the Church but in most corrupt ages remained there reproving and threatening them praying and mourning for them but not forsaking them It is that Ezek. 9.4 they are noted as St. Augustine Observeth that mourne for the corruptions of the time not who separate themselves from the Church In the New Testament we find not Christ nor his Apostles to forsake the Church but remaine in it though marvellous corrupt teaching reproving correcting mourning for it So of the Pastors of the six Churches of Asia their corruptions noted and their Angels biding with them To this purpose is that Hebr. 10.24 25 38 39. Because no man ought to separate himselfe from the true Church of Christ Reas 1 Now such is an assembly professing the true saith notwithstanding other coruption for as holinesse if it might be supposed without true saith cānot make a true Church but false doctrine and errour in the foundation overthrows it for being a Church So è contrà corruptions in manners cannot make it no Church when true faith is taught and maintained Because separation and excommunication from a particular Church is the most heavy and greatest censure of the Church Reas 2 which as no man should incurre by his evill behaviour so no man ought to inflict upon himselfe for the corruptions of others who happily deserve to be separated themselves To condemne all those who withdraw themselves from our assemblies because of corruptions amongst us Vse 1 crying out of those who will remaine among them to the benefit of the good that is there to be had But to such an one I say as Augustine answered Petilian That he did not well to leave Christs heape of Corne Non habes quod objicias fiument is Dominicis paleam usque ad ventilationem ultimam sustinentibus à quibus tu nunquam recessisses nisi levior palea vento tentationis ante adventum ventilatoris avolasses Aug. cantr Petilian Cap. 1.18 because the chaffe was in it till the great winnowing day and that he shewed himselfe to be lighter chaffe driven out by the wind of temptation that flew out before the comming of Christ the winnower What folly is it for a man to leave the Jewells and Plate in the Cold-finers shop because to the Iron tongs and black coals What warrant have they when as Noah left not the Arke for all the uncleane beasts To teach every man not to be so offended for the corruption of the times Vse 2 as to separate himselfe from the Church for them * Si amarent pacem non discinderēt unit atem Aug. contr lit Petiliani lib. 24. broken unity saith August And in another place A vessell of honour ought to tolerate those things that are vile * Vas in honere sanctificatum debuit tolerare ea quae sunt in contumelia nec propter hoc relinquere domum claritatis Dei ne vel vas in contumeliam vel stercus projectum de domo sit Aug. contr epist Parm. lib. 3.5 and not therefore to forsake the house of God lest himselfe be cast out as a vessell of dishonour or as dung That certainly which is 1 Cor. 5.13 Put away from your selves the wicked person is to be understood of those who have authority which if they exercise not is their sinne not mine or thine Shall I forsake the good and the Church where I may be safe for their evill Nec quisquam sine consensu cordis sui ex ore vulneratur alieno Let no man then separate himselfe for why should a good pure and sound member separate it selfe from those that are corrupt and cut it selfe off both to make the whole worse and to lose to it selfe the good it might have by abiding For us The Prophet who had the least hand in the sinnes and was the least cause of the burden he feares and as it were mournes and seeketh how to avoid it when the Priests who were the cause of it are secue and carelesse It often falls out Doctr. that the faithfull mourne and feare the plagues they foresee when they who have deserved them sleep securely and rather provoke God still Mich. 1.8 Therefore will I mourne This hath beene by your meanes Here is the reason why God will not accept their prayers because they are authors and principall causes of the evill and sinnes amongst them The prayers of hypocrites and wicked men Doctrine whether Ministers or Magistrates or private men whether superiours or inferiours cannot be profitable to the Church nor others for whom they pray nor accepted of God This is manifest here as also by that where the prayers of the wicked are rejected with divers such places This the Lord taught when in his Law he commanded that the Priest should first offer for himselfe Levit. 4.3 and Heb. 5.3 Because they are not profitable for themselves Reas 1 neither shall be accepted much lesse for others Not for themselves Isaiah 1. and 66. Because they are in Gods sight abhominable Reas 2 Prov. 15.8 such cannot prevaile with him Balaam prayed for the people of God Object and was heard for them and yet he was a wicked man Numb 23.19 20. A truth it is Answ St. August so answereth Parmen contr Epist Parm. lib. 2. cap. 8. proving they ought not to separate themselves as they taught because men are pollured But for the example I think we may say Balaam was not heard saving his judgment because he certainly never prayed hee did prophesie indeed in a certaine former of prayer therefore that speech of his is accounted a blessing because he did ominate and foretell happy things which would befall to the people of God But he never prayed indeed for his heart went against it it was utterly against his will who for the wages of Balac would rather have desired to curse onely hee was compelled to it by the Spirit of God Therefore he was not heard which prayed not but the Spirit of God which in the good worketh the affections and suggesteth words did onely put such words into his mouth for any good that should come by them to the people of God as for the terrour and destruction of Balac who had set himselfe against the people of God to shew him tha not they before him but he should fall before them This sheweth the folly and the vancity of the reason of some Popish and Popishly affected who plead for lenity Vse 1 connivence and impunity because the King and his Children the Realms and Dominions may enjoy so man prayers from them unto the Lord their Jesuites and Priests and all would pray
stony conduits God conveyeth the water of life as a Gardener doth water to his plants but it is not better in regard of them who doe it for it maketh their condemnation more grievous Judas preached condemnation to himselfe and yet no doubt converted some as the rest did Noah was glad he could get some to build his Arke himselfe and his sonnes being no workmen fit for it but it profited them not a whit that built it as good never have done it This may teach us what to judge of our Church-Papists Vse 1 who for feare of law avoiding of losse for escaping of imprisonment doe resort to our congregations without conscience and care they are worse than those who doe refuse to come than open recusants for if to come to Church for a shew to prophane Gods worship and to doe it rashly for sinister respects and in hypocrisie be worse than not doing then they are greater offenders in comming than others in abstaining The Shechemites were greater sinners with Hamor and Shechem his sonne in taking the Sacrament of Circumcision for profit and satisfying their pleasure and to make a prey as they thought of Israel Gen. 34. than the other Gentiles who refused it So in this they come to Church for advantage or profit or saving of that they have then is it better they should not come at all Nay not so but it is lesse e vill not more good The goodnesse is that they labour to be instructed in that they ought and to know how they ought and to endeavour to come with care and conscience as is required In the meane time hee that abstaines and comes not is lesse evill than he that doth come carelesly c. Why then should Magistrates compell men to the service of God Object when he shall make them sinne and sinne more than if they abstaine The Magistrate may not compell any man to doe evill Answ that is a thing simply forbidden of God but hee may compell a man to doe that which he may sinne in doing of it Things that men doe are of three sorts good and commanded evill and forbidden indifferent and neither commanded nor forbidden of God In this last the Magistrate ought to have a speciall and tender respect to the conscience of his subject though it be erronious specially when they are things of no moment the doing of them little profits the Church or Common-wealth and the omitting of them doth prejudice it nothing at all For the other Ad fidem unllus est cogendus invitus sed per severitatem into per misericordiam Dei tribulationum flagellis perfidia castigari August contr lit Petil. lib. 2 cap. 38. And againe Si quae igitur adversus vos leges constitutae sunt non bene facere cogimini sed malè facere prohibemini Ibid. he is not to respect the erronious consciences of men as not to suffer them unpunished for evill doing though they should pretend conscience in it so is hee not to abstaine from compelling them to that which is good for that evill is adjoyned to it it is not his fact that commandeth but comes from their infidelity and corruption who are commanded of which he cannot be accused when he hath carefully endeavoured that they be duely and rightly instructed and informed for when he may say the things I require are commanded in the Scriptures I have done my best endeavour that you may know the truth and not perish and I will not cease for hereafter to perswade and exhort and command you doe you need the Scriptures conferre with the Ministers pray God to open your eyes he hath then done his part This teacheth the fearefull condition of such as onely doe and performe the service of God Vse 2 but marvellous carelesly and corruptly they heare the Word they make prayers they receive the Sacrament but they are no more acceptable unto God than if they did them notat all God saith unto them as a Father to his Child and a Master to his servant seeing them scambling over their duties and businesse without care and respect I had as leese you did them nor at all Now what would we think of him that should never pray never heare the Word never receive Sacrament would not every one thinke hee is an odious man to God verily such and more odious if it may be is every one that doth these but without care of course without conscience they heare the Word but without profit God had rather have them away than come to Church to deride his Word to sleepe or talke there to prophane his worship So they pray but not with their hearts but with their lips their hearts are taken away with their pleasures profits and delights As Hosea 4.11 he esteemes of them as well when they pray not they receive the Sacrament but without preparation without understanding what they doe most unworthily they intrude themselves to the Table of the Lord God had as liefe have them away their roome were as acceptable to him as their thronging as his without the wedding-garment at the feast of the King Matth. 22. This is their fearefull condition he that heares is as though he heard not he that prayes as though he prayed not he that receiveth the Sacrament as though he did not and so of all the service of God he is as acceptable to God in not doing them as he is in doing and è contra as odious Then a man had as good not doe at all Object and so while you reprove one thing you open the gap to another from carelessenesse to prophanenesse If any man doe gather so Answ it is his collection not my assertion he like a Spider or Toad gathered venome and poyson from sweet flowers and wholesome herbs If a Master should tell his servant doing his businesse negligently that he had as lieve he did it not Will he reply then he will not if he doe shall he not for such contempt be beaten with more stripes Nay a servant that would avoid that and receive any wages and reward will seeke to correct his errour and reforme his corruption so in this This ought to instruct us that have any desire to be accepted in our service of God Vse 3 and not to be rejected as if we did neglect it altogether to doe it with all care and diligence and in the best manner that may be doe we must And then not to lose our labour and have no respect nor reward we must endeavour to doe them as they ought to be done heare with an honest heart to profit pray with a fervent spirit to prevaile use the Sacraments in knowledge and due preparation for them these and all other parts of his service as he requireth else we are in a strait as the Lepers were 2 King 7.3 4. without the walls of Samaria if they enter the City there is death if they sit still there is death also So we if we
similitude but certainty That as they were acceptable to the Lord and Scripture which is truth hath said it so as certainly shall these sacrifices be accepted Then When they are pure and their offerings pure not else though they be Iudah and Ierusalem whatsoever their number glory and dignity is God accepts no mans prayers Doctrine and service moved by any outward things as dignity of persons vertue or place or office nor outward priviledges if they want faith and holinesse vide Cap 1.9 Then shall they be acceptable When they are purged and not before A mans prayer shall not be accepted unlesse he be purged Doctrine and clensed reconciled to God and justified and sanctified è con tra vide Cap. 1.10 As in old time and the yeares afore Here is amplified the former the acceptation of their offerings either by similitude as those so these or the certainty set downe that as certainly as they were received and were acceptable so certainly should theirs be It is as certaine a truth that God will graciously Doctrine and favourably accept the offerings prayers almes and other the spirituall service of those under the Gospel as it is certaine he did graciously accept the offerings of Abel Abraham Iaacob the holy Patriarkes and other of the forefathers now this is certain for it is apparently set down in the Scriptures as Gen. 4. and 22. and such then the other the 11. to the Heb. proves the one and is applied Cap. 12.1 to prove the other manifestly unto us For they are brought onely for a provocation to those duties but as an assurance of the like acceptation To this purpose for prayers is that Jam. 5.16.17.18 Because God as he is ever one and the same in himselfe Reason 1 so is he to all those who are his the like affected to them as a father loves all his children and will accept the service of one as of another will heare the request of the yongest as the eldest Because they have the same thing Reason 2 which made their prayers and workes pleasing and gave them boldnesse to the throne of grace Heb. 11.4.6 Which is faith Because they have the same spirit helping their infirmities Reason 3 Rom. 8.26 And the same Mediator giving them favour in his eies boldnesse and entrance Ephe. 3.12 Yea and the spirit in greater measure and more abundance and the Mediator more manifested unto them Then have we no need at all to pray Vse 1 and invocate the S●ints departed that they would commend our prayers to God and pray for us when we are certaine our prayers may be heard as well as theirs Upon this ground sure it was that in all the Scriptures we find not any thing touching this no succeeding ages praying to their predecessors not Iaacob and the Patriarkes to Abel or Abraham not the posterity ever to them not the people to their Prophets departed not in the Gospel ever found either Precept or Practice of it nor in the Primitive and first Church for divers hundred years after Christ If Bellar. l. 1. de sancto beatit C. 20. give us it for a reason why the Fathers before Christ neither prayed in particular for the Church upon earth neither were prayed to because they were absent from God and did not enjoy his sight and presence but were in Limbus and not in heaven The same reason can e give them that for a long while after Christ there was none because it was doubted in the Church whether the faithfull departed out of this world be immediately received into heaven and enjoy the happy presence of God or whether they remaine and stay in Abrahams bosome or some place of rest till the day of the resurrection yea Iraencus Iust Martyr Tertullian and others thought that they abode in some part of hell or in some hidden and invisible place sequestred from the presence of God til the second comming of the son of man Therefore must it follow that invocation is but an innovation But to conclude seeing they know not our wants nor can take notice of our prayers heare us neither can we have any certainety of it if it were so and are certaine from the word of God that our prayers shall be heard as well as theirs We have not need to pray to them nor reason to induce us to it we neither in this nor any other thing adore them but as S. August de verâ religione 55. We honour them for imitation but adore them not for religion This teacheth us the priviledge Vse 2 those who are reconciled justified purged and sanctified have above others because they may both have accesse to God and have assurance to be heard To encourage every one that is Gods Vse 3 to doe service unto him to bring offerings and offer up their prayers being assured before-hand that they shall be accepted not onely heard but graciously heard not onely received but favourably received therefore ought they to come with confidence and boldnesse unto the throne of grace And if at any time they be fainting and doubing whether they shall be accepted or no let them call to mind how God hath received others and their offerings and apply this unto it and so strengthen and encourage themselves with assurance to be graciously accepted seeing they know God is the same now that before he that is not onely as a father like affected to his children but that which a father is not able to doe that to oft as to another to the youngest as to the eldest to the children of the Church of the Gentiles as it were his second wife as of the Jewes his first wife Provided they have the same faith the same spirit the same mediator when they come unto him which others have had who have beene graciously accepted then shall they be certainely received If they object that they are not so worthy as others have not such strength of faith such greatnesse of grace and such like I answer first this smells of infirmity and pride that as they thought to be heard for their much babling so these for their great worthinesse And secondly that children who seeke any thing from their father and hope to receive as others have done doe not looke upon their worthinesse but the naturalnesse of their fathers love VERS V. And I will come neere to you to judgement and I will be a swift witnesse against the sooth-sayers and against the adulterers and against false swearers and against those that wrongfully keepe backe the hirelings wages and vex the Widow and the fatherlesse and oppresse the stranger and feare not me saith the Lord of bosts AND I will come neere unto you in judgement The Prophet having spoken of the effect of Christs power touching the godly and faithfull and in them he speakes now of it in respect of the wicked whom he would judge and condemne neither should there be any evasion from his judgements neither any way to
The Table of the Lord is polluted and the fruit thereof even his meate is not to be regarded 13 Ye said also Behold it is a wearinesse and ye have snuffed at it saith the Lord of Hostes and ye offered that which was torne and the lame and the sick thus ye offered an offering should I accept this at your hand saith the Lord 14 But cursed be the deceiver which hath in his flock a male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am agreat King saith the Lord of Hostes and my Name is terrible among the Heathen The parts of this Chapter are two 1. A Preface or Inscription 2. The Oracle or Prophecy 1. The Preface in the first verse generall to the whole 2. The Prophecy in the rest 1. An expostulation with the people and Priest for their ingratitude and corrupting of his worship from verse 2. to the 9. 2. A Commination of judgment deserved by it or a Commination of divers judgments from vers 9. to the end In the Preface or Inscription we conceive two things The substance and circumstance of it 1. The substance being the subject or matter of the whole is in that it is called a Burden 2. The Circumstance of the person which is three-fold 1. From whom as the Efficient 2. To whom as the Object 3. By whom as the Instrument VERSE I. The burden of the Word of the Lord to Israel by the ministery of Malachy THE Burden Here is the matter or subject of this Booke or Prophecy He calleth it a burden usuall with Prophets in their writings all almost in some place or other But Nahum Habakkuk and Malachy thus begin their prophecies It signifies as Hierome a woefull and sorrowfull prophecy full of threats and judgments called therefore a Burden because it presseth those against whom it is spoken the hearts and spirits of them as a burden the body and suffers them not to lift up their heads and themselves as in former times Some thinke it signifies not onely this but also the Commandement of the Lord by which the Prophet was burdened as from the Lord that he should declare it in so many words unto Israel which they thinke follows thence because it is to Israel not against but I feare this is somewhat nice for it was so to them as it was against them for their sinnes and that which is against is as much as a burden to the Prophet but this must be understood Tropicè here being a Synecdoche for the whole Prophecy is not a burden or threatning of punishment but part onely of it and so the whole is denominated of the part The punishment of sinne Doctrine the affliction God inflicts upon men for their sinnes and transgressions is a burden not a light one not such as are the feathers of a bird onus sine onere but as a talent of Lead spoken of Zach. 5.7 heavy and grievous so is it here and in many places of the Prophets as Nah. 1.1 Hab. 1.1 Jerem. 23.33 fine he shewes what is the burden I will cast you off and send you into Babel captives vers 36. that is whosoever shall say The burden he shall for that word beare his burden that is be punished of the Lord it is proved further by Matth. 7.9 Galat. 6.8 Hence is the complaint of David Psal 32.4 Thy hand was heavy upon me Because sinne the deserving and procuring cause Reas 1 is a very grievous burden Psal 38.4 Matth. 27.38 that is to living men and such as have the use of their sences not to dead and benummed men then the punishment is grievous Because the wrath and displeasure of God Reas 2 which is the efficient cause of it is very heavy and grievous The displeasure of a Prince is heavy the Kings wrath is as the roaring of a Lion Prov. 19.12 Now hence are afflictions heavy and burdensome Because none can give ease in it or deliver from it Reas 3 save God onely Hos 1.6 1 Sam. 2.25 2 King 6.26 27. The wound that is had by the biting of a Scorpion is grievous when nothing can cure it but the ashes of that Scorpion much more this This may teach us what to judge of those men who are in some affliction under a judgment and yet finde no burden Vse 1 but goe as light under them as a bird doth under her feathers and sometimes make advantage of them as beggers doe make gaine of their sores they are senselesse they are benummed they are dead men In common sence if any have halfe an hundreth weight laid upon his hand or foot and pressing him sore and he feele it not what judgment is to be given of it but to be a mortified and a dead member so alas how many dead men are in our times and daies The burden not of the Word onely but of the rod of the Lord not threatned but executed hath beene upon our Land and Church by the fearefull Plague now well towards three yeares wee have walked in the land of the dead we have beene in the house of mourning Indeed the living hath laid it to his heart but so few have done it that the dead are more than the living not onely our wanton women and voluptuous men to whom that 1 Tim. 5.6 They are dead while they live but our worldly men our ambitious and others all dead for this they have not felt We sorrowed for fifty odde thousands that dyed in the former yeare we have as much need to sorrow for so many thousands yet living and dead amongst us they never indeed felt nor yet doe feele this burden Their irreligious carriage when it was here amongst us both at home abroad in the City and abroad their small conformity since to the Law of God little reforming of their corruptions nay their monstrous deformity in themselves wives and children perswades my heart as 't is Psal 36.1 The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart there is no feare of God before my eyes so that they had no feeling of this at all for they who truely felt it would grow somewhat better if not altogether reformed If an heathenish people who knew not God at the burden of the Word of the Lord did so humble themselves that the Lord said Jonah 8.10 He repented of the evill he said he would doe to you and did it not what shall be thought of Christian men by profession living in the Church of God if at the burden of his Word they repent not nor depart from their evill wayes but Isaiah 8.8 Though they be stricken revolt more and more it is because they are dead men and cannot feele it Oh then weepe not for me but for your selves and children as those not for the departed but for the living dead for if it be true The beginning of the remedy is the sence and acknowledgment of the malady how farre are they from cure that have not yet the feeling
as a faithfull dispenser giving to every one his portion where and to whom the Spirit of God hath set them downe to Priest and people to old and to young to married and unmarried to the good and prophane without feare and flattery or any other sinister affections remembring that this in the first is in the whole and to every verse it is the word of the Lord fearing to corrupt as well as to adde lest that I heare as 't is Prov. 30.6 Adde not to his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyer remembring that of Luke 12.42 that I may be a faithfull and wise Steward that I may obtaine that Vers 43 44. which how soone it may be generall or to me in particular whether before I have gone through the whole or this Chapter or this verse I know not This teacheth all to whom I am to speake Vse 2 first they must heare for it is the word of the Lord and never withdraw themselves negligently or carelesly preferring vaine pleasure and profit of no value before it If any withdraw himselfe the soule of God shall have no pleasure in him to use the words rather than the full sence as Israel said to Sihon King of the Amorites Judg. 7.24 so wouldst not thou heare that thy Prince Father or Master saith unto thee nay will not Idolaters heare that which their gods say unto them how much more you that the Lord shall speake to This is the word that we shall speake is but the delivering of it in moe words which is here set downe in fewer pressing it at large which is here set downe more briefly this as a clew of thread wound up by us it is but drawn out at length yea and it must be heard as the word of God with all reverence received with humility believed by faith obeyed with care for the Lord having spoken it it was not for the time and persons present onely but for all successive ages and people As the Lawes of Princes and Decrees of Parliaments are not onely for them that live then but for whosoever shall afterwards be borne subjects to the same Soveraignes therefore not any sinne is here reproved but it is reproved in whomsoever it is found nor is there any judgment threatened but menaced against the men of our time that heare it not any duty commanded but it is appertaining to us as to them because it is the word of the Lord who is our Lord as well as theirs of the Gentiles as of the Jewes I cannot say as Daniel 4.19 fine so the Prophecy is for others and the interpretation of it is for others and judgments to your enemies but as Peter Act. 2.39 It is to you and to your children so these things here commanded and reproved are for you and your children But why should I speake thus sharpely unto you Verily because God will neverthelesse bring these if I should hold my peace and by speaking I may prevent he should not if so be my exhortations this day may finde place in your hearts and hereafter in your lives But shall I come unto you not with a rod but in love and the spirit of meeknesse 1 Cor. 4.21 then as Chrysostome ad pop Antioch Hom. 27. by our mutuall love yours and mine by all the travell I have felt for you till Christ be formed in you fully Gal. 4.19 give me that wherein I may glory before men and devils and in the presence of God And what is my glory but your progresse and increase in piety here and your salvation in the life to come Believe me beloved Si fieri potest me pro vobis certamen bene gerere vos autem bene gestae rei praemia ferre nunquam profectò vobis tantum turbationis ingererem sed non licet boc nobis non licet inquam Chrysostom de virtut vitiis sermo If it were possible for me to undergoe the Combate and you to beare the Trophies of the victory I would not put you to so much trouble But this may not be this may not be for every one must live by his owne faith and passe to heaven by his owne piety and obedience It is neither bought nor borrowed oyle in our Lamps will serve to enter in with the Bridegroome To Israel The second person to whom as the Subject to Israel that is to the whole people who were lately delivered out of Captivity and now enjoyed their Land and the liberty of Religion and as men not sufficiently instructed under the rod and crosse or forgetting their former calamities returned to their former corruptions and sinnes whose sinnes were the worse by that they had received and made the more inexcusable when they should have beene bettered by his mercies they grew worse By Israel he understands the whole company both Priest and people calling it Israel which for distinction was before called Judah after the rent happened betwixt the ten and two Tribes Judah and Benjamin and some of Levi to the house of David and the rest to Jeroboam for the ten tribes by Salmanassor were so led into Captivity that they never returned he now called these two Tribes by the old and wonted name To Israel then his owne people chosen out of the world yea reserved to himselfe from those ten Tribes thus specially beloved he sends though with griefe thus threatning God will punish his Doctrine even his owne for their sinnes and offences how deare soever they be unto him it is indeed his love unto them that he will passe by many infirmities and weaknesse in them as Matth. 7.18 but yet sinnes of greater nature habit and custome he will not passe by unpunished 2 Sam. 7.14.18 not onely the threatnings but the execution of many afflictions and plagues recorded in the Word upon the whole Church of Israel upon particular persons on Moses Numb 20. on Miriam Numb 1. David often and other the good Kings who were punished proves this manifestly Because hee loves his owne Reas 1 therefore will hee correct and punish them for the sparing of the rod is hatred not love Nulla ira magna ira the fondnesse of affection not the favour of judgment Prov. 13.24 It is love because of that 1 Cor. 11.32 when we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world Because he would be justified Reas 2 not as wisdome of her children onely but even of wicked and enemies for if he should spare his owne then would they say God were wicked like them as the wicked when he spares themselves say Psal 50.21 hence was the death of Davids child denounced and performed to prevent or to stay the blasphemy of the wicked 2 Sam. 12.14 as he insinuates in his Psalme of Repentance Psalme 51.4 Because he may manifest his hatred of sinne Reas 3 when he punisheth it not in those that are wicked onely whose persons he may seeme to hate but in
nothing so currantly with God neither when we looke for so much from God Man will not give God so much give him our selves and that we have received one will give him his heart another his body not his heart another will part both with him as if he created not both as one as if his title be not as great to one as to another or to the whole as to part He is the Father of our spirits and the Father of our bodies or if thou wilt give one and not the other thou condemnest thy selfe by the one for with-holding the other for his right is in this respect to both and must have both and be honoured in the whole But why pay they as much because they would receive more and have not yet enough So in this no man is perfect though he have received much And why hath not God made him perfect Verily it was as one said not because he was covetous and niggard but because he was loving and bountifull knowing that it was good for him to be such an one not that he should be poore but humble not as alwayes needy but as alwayes looking up to him and remembring to honour him with that he hath given him that he may receive that he wants and further perfection pay then thy debt and pay it to receive more that thou mayest be perfect and thinke he speakes to every one If I be thy Father honour me remember me thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth and thy age even as one saith so often as thou breathest so often thou oughtest to remember God And seeing thy being is ever in one so thy thankfulnesse should be ever both for thy ever being And as Chrysostome thou wilt say Lord keepe me as the Apple of thine Eye he will answer thee againe Keepe my Commandements as the Apple of thine eye so thou wilt come to God and say Lord keepe me for thou hast made me I am thine and the workes of thy hands God will answer thee then Keepe the words of my mouth and so honour me for thou art the workes of my hands The election of God Doctr. by which he hath freely chosen men to be his sonnes and to be heires of eternall life binds them to obedience service and honouring of him so the Lord reasoneth here if I be a father if I have adopted and chosen you for sonnes where is my honour He challengeth but that he hath title To this purpose is that Ephe. 1.4 1 Pet. 1.17 Math. 5.16 Because his choise and adoption is so free Reas for it is without any merits of deserts of man of his owne free will and pleasure Ephe. 1.5 long before there was any merit of man for it was before he was it is ancienter then the world it is coeternall with God himselfe for as he is from all eternities so he hath loved his from all eternity then free and most franke is this choice of men to be sonnes Now benefits the more free undeserved the more they bind men to performe thankfulnesse for them So in this And this is that God would have for it Honour him Because it is so rare a benefit not all not many Reas 2 but few of many Math. 20.16 few chosen Benefits that are rare are pretious rara chara and so deserve and exact more when as then God amongst so many Nations of barbarous men and in such a multitude of condemned men hath called a man to so happy a condition that he should be in the number of those who are chosen his sons and to inherit eternall life the benefit being so much the greater as the number is smaller must needs binde to this duty This may serve to stop the mouth of desperate wretches Vse 1 that make the doctrine of Gods decree an occasion of carelesnesse and from it take liberty to dishonour God that reason if they be elected they are sure to be saved whether they live well or ill and so è contra whence they give all liberty to themselves and live licentiously and dishonour God of these I would demand whether they thinke the former testimonies and this particular preface was written by the spirit of Christ If they say no they shew themselves in the state of reprobation what soever God hath decreed of them If they say it is then let them compare the spirit they speake with and this spirit by which these are written and see themselves not to be led with the spirit of Christ which can not so contradict it selfe It requireth duty and reverence service and honour because thou art his thou wilt give none because if perhaps thou beest thou needest not if not it is bootlesse and doubtfull in this thou determinest not to honour God but to dishonour him Tell me this thou thou art a father and disposest of all thy goods in secret before ever thy sonne knows how or hath enquired and used means to know how if he should set light by thee and carry himself undutifully towards thee as if he would give thee an occasion to give all away from him if thou hast not done it already wouldest thou not thinke it a marvellous preposterous and impious course and yet this is that which thou wilt doe with God like a desperate miscreant not knowing whether God hath purposed thee salvation and heaven which he had disposed and made his will of in secret yea not taking so much paines to search and enquire by the booke of God and the notes in it whether thou be in the number but yer ever thou seeke after it to know whether thou be in his booke so wilfully behavest thy selfe as if thou meantst to make him alter his will if it were possible if he were purposed to deale well with thee before But know thou if he were purposed to disinherit thee yet thou oughtest to honor him because he is the father And this without all consideration of Heaven and Hell much more if he have elected thee and thou be his sonne this way too oughtst thou to honour him And know that if thou beest his no such thought can possesse thy heart long lesse allow thy mouth to speake it boastingly in a secure and carelesse course of life what may come from a man of a troubled minde and in a temptation that is not to this purpose but the other can never bee Nay know that God disposeth all things sweetly and orderly to bring a man to this end if he have once chosen him As a father that aymes at some state of life for his sonne as to make him a Lawyer or a Divine he traines him up so and brings him up in learning and studies and directions This should admonish every one who by a divine search findeth himselfe the son of God by adoption or election Vse 2 or thinks himselfe is one to remember what he is and what it requires of him even to honour God as a father The former bindes
and trade of sinne Vse 2 and that neither the pleasures nor displeasures of the world the delights nor the dreads of it shall draw him to be enticed and openly sinne to labour for this feare by which he shall be able to overcome temptations on all sides For if he have this feare a man would never sell himselfe to eternall torments for a draught of pleasure or for a Million of Gold when it might be said to him as Joshua 22.18 Ye also are turned away this day from the Lord and seeing yee rebell to day against the Lord even to morrow he will be wroth with all the congregation of Israel Loe to day he offendeth and to morrow God will be wroth and he shall perish in his wrath surely no profit or pleasure tendered unto him would make him incurre this danger And for the other temptation hee would easily overcome it by this even the feare of mens feare with the feare of Gods punishments and say happily as David though he spoke it more sanctifiedly Psal 119.161 Princes have persecuted me without cause but mine heart stood in awe of thy words If he have this feare hardly such temptations will assault him For as Chrysost Hom. 15. ad pop Ant. If it be once knowne and heard that an armed Souldier stands watching in a house for the defence of it there is neither thiefe nor robber nor any that practiseth such evill will come neere it So when feare is the keeper of mans heart there is neither the temptation of pleasure or profit or worldly feare will set upon a man but will fly away or be easily expelled subdued as it were by the command of feare God hath set two Schoole-masters over us Pudor Timor shame and feare that should lead an ingenuous nature but if not that yet this should unlesse we will be worse than beasts The second effect of this feare is that it is tanquam acus ad filum the needle or the bristle to the threed that is that as they goe before and make way for the threed but abide not there when it is once come but goes out againe So this feare first entereth the heart of man and makes way for love or the Child-like feare that loving feare first when he is converted and it entereth in for this end to bring or draw in love after it and love when it is once entered casteth feare out of doores that made entrance before 1 John 4.18 This is further manifest by the example of Paul Acts 9.3 6. and Josiah 2 Chron. 34.19 27. so Act. 2.37 38. and 16.30 Rom. 7.10 Because God respects and accepts men to give them grace when they are troubled Reas 1 and are smitten with this feare Isaiah 66.2 and it is spoken exclusivè none but them this then must needs goe before Because mans heart is not capable of grace without this first Reas 2 without this it is not fit to receive the impression of Gods Spirit It gives no grace but it makes capable of grace as we see fire though it give the metall no fashion yet it maketh it liquid and fit to be cast in any mould it maketh the waxe fit to receive any impression of the Seale So this feare though it worke no grace in the heart but leaveth it as corrupt as it findeth it yet it mollifieth it and maketh it plyable for Gods Spirit to worke upon which before could not take the stamp of Gods grace This manifesteth that many men must needs be without grace Vse 1 because many have not had this feare which is ever before grace wheresoever it comes and grace never comes any where where this Usher hath not beene before it is the forerunner of grace as John Baptist was of Christ As God appeared to Elias so he approacheth to the soule 2 Kings 19 12 13 14. he was neither in the winde nor earthquake which rended the earth and clave the rockes nor in the fire that devoureth all before it nor he went not before them but he was in a soft voyce which came afterwards So is the spirit and grace of God it goes not before the servile feare it is not with it when it rends the hard hearts of men and when it melts and mollifies them with the fire of Gods wrath but it cometh after and speaketh peace and rest to the soule whereas many never tasted of this feare and shew it by their lives they have no feare of God nay in words brag they had never no such rentings and meltings of heart nay jest at those which have they shew themselves voyd of grace of true grace yea many who are not so outragious but civill or rather secure who indeed never felt any such trouble and fight in them any such feare or terror but all things is and ever was at peace within they are men voyd of true grace and saving grace they may have the shaddow and similitudes of grace but no substance and truth of it This may teach every man that hath this feare in him Vse 2 to make much of it and nourish it it being the forerunner of grace and as it were the harbinger of it without which it never appeares as God never comes with grace unlesse this apparitor go before as men therefore who desire the Prince and joy in his comming will rejoyce at the comming of his Harbinger and make much of him so ought they of this feare yea and the greater this feare is the more rejoyce at it aswell as men may rejoyce in feare for the greater grace follows after for in the examples of the Scriptures those who have had most feare and conflicts in their conversion have been the best men and women most full of grace God saith Bernard hath two feet the one of feare the other of love and when he would enter a mans Soule he is wont to send afore or step first in with his foot of feare then after his foot of love and the greater the feare is which went before the greater the love is which follows after The third effect of this feare is to make the party it possesseth credulous apprehending every surmise against him making him encline to the worst and forecast the utmost of the evill As in that feare which the Goaler was possest with Acts 16.27 he apprehended the worst and utmost In Samuel and Josiah so in the Ninevites Ion. 3.5 therefore it made them apprehend the worst and beleeve it would be so Because feare brings to minde a mans sinnes and deserts Reas 1 even those which were long before committed and for them makes him apprehend danger and deeper then indeed it is As in the brethren of Joseph Gen. 42.21 no marvell then if it make them easily beleeve that such things may fall upon them Because they know by themselves Reas 2 that those who are injured and offended doe hate the offenders and where hatred is joyned with power and might there must needs be
quality yea and of a step or a degree higher Hay or stubble or any combustible matter dryed and heated by the Sunne soone takes fire the resisting of humidity is taken away So in this For when temptation is offered to some or other sinne that the conscience shall at first seeme to make nice of the corruption of the heart will be ready to make answer and suggest that he may as well and as safely doe this as the former there is no more danger in the one then in the other and therefore that it is to no end to make dainty of the one seeing he is so farre ingaged in the other Therefore hee that would be free from greater when the lesse hath seased upon him let him haste and by true repentance as by an ejectione firmae cast him out of possession Take the foxes when they are little and if not at first yet as they come in by little and little cast them out by little and little and go back againe by degrees as the sunne went backe in the Diall of Ahaz Vse 3 This may teach every man to account it a mercy and goodnesse of God to him when he gives a meanes to prevent his entrance into a sinne or his continuance in it when he hath slipped aside to any though but a little one St. Aug. saith that Omne peccatum c. Every sinne that God prevented in him and kept him from committing of it he accounted no lesse mercy than if he had pardoned him And doubtlesse in this respect the mercy is more for while that sinne was prevented more and perhaps greater sinnes were prevented in him Men are nothing so sensible in this but it is their corruption as they are not so sensible of the benefit being kept from transgressing the Law as getting a pardon after nor in preventing a disease as in removing it after But the merecy is great whether it be by the voice of a Minister if he open his heart to it or the voyce of a judgment or the voice of his conscience or the voice of the Spirit Es 30.21 It is a benefit when a man is setled or secure in his sinne by any of these meanes to be admonished as David was by Nathan after he had sinned in numbring the people and Peter was by Christ after the third deniall though it had beene greater if the admonition and prevention had beene at the first or second step So should men esteeme it when they are turned or turning to the right hand or to the left by pleasure or profit It is good that God will so admonish them and prevent this by whom or howsoever by publikc or private meanes by good or bad And let them hearken and obey and be thankfull to the Authour and the meanes Nec ullus omnino sermo qui adificat ad pietatem ad virtutes ad mores optimos negligenter est audiendus quoniam illic iter quo ostenditur Salutare De i. Bern. in Cant. serm 57. Si corripuerit me justus in misericordia id ipsum sentiam sciens quia aemulatio justi benevolentia iter faciunt ei qui ascendit super occasum Bonus occasus cum ad correptionem justi stat homo corruit vitium Dominus ascendit super illud conculcans hoc pedibus conte●ens ne resurgat Non ergo contemnenda increpatio justi quae ruina peccati cordis sanitas est nec non Dei ad animam via Bern. Ibid. Vnusquisque pro modulo suo audiat sicut sibi conscius fuerit ita vel doleat corrigendus vel gaudeat approbandus Si se deviâsse invenerit redeat ut in via ambulet Si se in via invenerit ambulet ut perveniat Nemo sit superbus extra viam nemo piger in via Aug. in Psal 31. praefat As St. Bernard speakes No word that edifies to godlinesse to vertue and good manners is to be heard negligently because there is the way in which is shewed the salvation of God And a little before in the same Sermon saith he The admonition of the righteous is not to be contemned which is sinnes ruine the hearts health and Gods way to the Soule And as S. Aug. to the same purpose of publick hearing and admonition Let every one heare as he can and as he is conscious to himselfe so let him either grieve being to be corrected or rejoyce being to be approved If he finde that he hath gone astray let him returne that he may walke in the way If he find himselfe in Gods way let him walke on to the end let no man be proud out of the way nor slothfull in it In that you say That is thus thinke in your hearts and this is known to God 'T is not likely they were so impious to utter their prophane conceits of Gods service but as it is Ps 14.1 Psal 30.6 Not onely workes and words Doctrine but even the thoughts are known to God The very hearts of men have eares to heare God and mouths to speake to God Corda Deo aures os gerunt saith St. Aug. As God said to Moses in another case Exod. 14.15 so to the wicked Why cryest thou against me when haply they speak no word but onely blaspheme God in their hearts as it is Psal 10.13 The Table of the Lord is not to be regarded They aske wherein they have despised and polluted God In that they think basely of his service they pollute him in polluting his Altar They who thinke basely of Gods board they contemne and pollute God whose board it is By Table is understood not that of the Shew-bread but the Altar of burnt-offerings And so is Ezek. 41.22 Whatsoever abuse is committed in the worship of God or against the meanes of his worship Doctrine it is held to be done against God himselfe Thus answereth God this people In polluting my Altar you pollute me the meanes of Gods worship with us are the Word Sacraments and Prayer as the Law Sacrifices and Sacrament were with them Now then as the contemning of these were the contemning of him so is it with us It is that which is 1 Cor. 11.27 to be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord that is of a heinous offence committed against his person he is absent so was God from the sacrifices yet he was polluted in them because they were offered unto him So is it in these Sacraments of ours because he offereth them unto us as signes of himselfe Hence it is Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me And wherefore they more than other men but for this because they were the Candlesticks that held forth the light they were they who brought the Word to them and that was it not for their persons Because he that denies God all worship and honour must needs contemne and
he to hold them to himselfe they to draw them from the Gospell Because saith Chrys the people of Israel who were brought up in Aegypt had polluted themselves with Idolatry would have sacrifices ceremonies so that if they were not permitted unto them they were ready against to fall to Idolatry though God desired a people to worship him in spirit truth yet he granted them unto them dealing as a wise Physitian who having a patient sick of a feaver by reason of heat desiring earnestly cold water and unlesse it be given him he is ready to seek a halter to strangle himselfe or some waies to destroy himself there the Physitian compelled by necessity gives him a cup of water prepared by himselfe and commands him to drinke but forbids him to drinke of any other but that so God gave the Jewes goodly ceremonies but so as it was not lawfull for them to use any other And then were they grieved saith he when he shewed his wrath upon them for making a calfe of their ear-rings c. So in cunning and mischievous policy hath the Church of Rome when they saw how the nature of man was affected with holy things because of the outward meanes when simple and base because the Gospell is such they little regarded them but glorious things were those that affected them therefore have they fallen from the simplicity of the Gospell to that whorish Babylonish pride they are now in when it was with her as Boniface the Bishop and Martyr said to one that asked whether it was lawfull to administer the Sacrament in woodden cups he answered In times past they had golden Priests and woodden Chalices then would they bragge of nothing such a multitude as now when they have woodden Priests and golden Chalices since Pope Vrban hath made all the ministring attire golden and gay and so because they are led by their sences therefore they are violently carried after this superstition This teacheth us Vse 2 why in the Church the meanes of Gods worship his word and table are so little esteemed or regarded because men are so led by their sences and when the meanes are base and simple they thinke so of the worship it selfe as Hierome said putabant altari deesse religionis sanctimoniam quia deerat aedificationis ambitio they thought the Altar was not to be so religiously regarded because it was not richly bedecked and adorned such are they as give no respect to the word because the Minister is of no great respect but a meane plaine man who have not learned more to esteem the earthen vessels for the treasure but lesse to account of the treasure for the earthen vessels Hence many set light by the holy Table because they see nothing here but bare bread and wine very base and meane elements such as they use ordinarily to feed on else where and so as a foole or a naturall if he light on an obligation or a deed he maketh no more reckoning of it then of a piece of parchment a little wax because he understandeth not the contents and end of it So in these things not considering the end and use of them by whom they were appointed As there are some who overvalue these mysteries specially the Sacraments that tye the grace of God inseparably to them and make the opus operatum a matter of sufficient vertue that ascribe some divine power to the very outward elements and so bring a divine adoration of them that of holy mysteries make magicall miracles as the Church of Rome doth so againe are there many in the Church of England that undervalue them that make no other reckoning of them then as of ordinary elements and repaire unto them as to the bodily food because they are in nature and substance the same the Doctrine here being the ground of it they being so dull sighted they can look no further then that which is object to the sence of them they can see no end nor use of them more no secret grace nor vertue in them and that which is worse will not submit themselves to be taught or if taught not believe when oportet discentem credere To teach every one in these actions sursum corda habere Vse 3 and to lift the eyes of his minde upwards as with his bodily eyes he seeth the outward elements here so with the eye of faith to apprehend the matter of it that which these outward things represent to the minde The word of God for letters and syllables is but the same with other humane writings but it hath another manner of worke with it in regard of the spirit and grace of God accompanying it unto those that heare it with a sanctified eare As we see that ordinary water and aqua vitae in a viall or glasse look both alike but they differ much in work and effect because there is a kind of Spirit in the one which is not in the other so the Word and the Sacrament though the same in substance with ordinary Bread and Wine yet they have a farre divers worke and effect with them unto those who receive them with a holy heart and a faithfull in regard of Gods covenant whose seales they are in regard of the mercy of God of which they more assure us in regard of Christs Death that they represent unto us and put us in minde of and in regard of the grace of Gods Spirit that accompaineth them in those that so receive them for the effecting of these former matters VERSE VIII And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice it is not evill and if yee offer the lame and sicke it is not evill offer it now unto thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hostes ANd if you offer the blinde for sacrifice The Lord proceedeth to prove that they despise him and his table shewing how they have erred both against his law and the rule of honesty and comelinesse Levit. 22.21 22. And if you offer the blinde for sacrifice it is not evill These words are read of some by way of interrogation When yee offer the blinde is it not evill Now a negative interrogation ever affirmeth strongly q. d. it is very evill and yet yee doe it Hierom Junius others read these words by way of affirmation God continuing to tax their thoughts you think it not evill you think it is good enough for God you make it no fault and this is the common reading which is more agreable to the context but the matter is not great how we take it both tend to one end and one effect both a disliking disallowing of such sacrifice For the sacrifice here spoken of some understand it only of the sacrifice the Priests offered for themselves Levit. 4.3 Heb. 5.3 Others for the sacrifice the people brought which when they were burnt offerings which were all consumed upon the Altar the Priests nothing regarded but the
sinne-offering to be eaten by the Priests for those they were marvellous carefull they might be of the best and some expound them of the peoples offerings in generall whether they were burnt offerings sinne offerings or peace offerings or whatsoever and those words it is not evill some take for the Peoples words it is good enough for the Priests or it is good enough to be burnt to ashes others make the Priest heartening the people in that practise which is very probable God before directing his speech to the Priests In summe it is like to be both as both are here accused The Prophet had told them of their base thought of Gods Table to this they might happily reply or object you take too much upon you to see into our hearts and to censure our thoughts to this the Prophet makes by insinuation in an answer though closely that he need not to dive so deepe their life and practice taught as much a man might easily read the prophanenesse of their hearts in the uncleanenesse of their gifts and their contempt of God in their carriage The thoughts of men are knowne either immediately and directly by God alone Jer. 17.10 Matth. 9.4 or mediately and indirectly and so man may know them either as God revealeth them Ezek. 14.1 2 3. or as men discover them by their actions looks or speeches First Matth. 7.16 Ye shall know them by their fruts doe men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles Secondly Isaiah 3.9 The shew of their countenance doth witnesse against them Thirdly Luke 6.45 In this place the first is understood Now this people are not reproved for bringing no sacrifice but faulty sacrifice faulty for quality contrary to the Law Levit. 22.21 22. Now what is spoken of their sacrifice may be spiritually applyed to ours that we may make some benefit out of this The Sacrifice of the Church in the New Testament are First men themselves and that first in life soules and bodies consecrated unto Gods service both in their generall callings their particular places Rom. 12.1 Present your bodies a living sacrifice not to slaughter them but the corruption of them Rom. 6.6 13. Now the mortifying of the affection killeth not the man Psal 51.17 As the Ram not Isaac was slaine though hee was offered Read Gen. 22. Mar. 12.33 1 Sam. 15.22 Secondly in death in offering their soules to Gods hand Luk. 23.46 Acts 7.59 and their bodies for testimony of the truth being called to it Phil. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 Secondly the Sacrifices of the New Testament are some thing from themselves immediately to God as praises and prayer compared to Sacrifice Psal 50.14 15. Drinke offering Psal 116.31 Incense Psal 141.2 Hosea 14.3 Apocal. 5.8 and 8.3 4. Secondly to man for God as Almes Heb. 13.16 Psal 4.18 Matth. 12.7 Now as their Sacrifices signified ours so their imperfection noteth out ours The first is blindnesse which in the Scripture signifieth ignorance as Rev. 3.2 1 Pet. 5.9 shewing that he detested such service as was done of ignorance without knowledge By lame he may meane when things are done without minde and heart with the outward man not inward for fashion feare praise c. By sick when it is without spirit and affection the spirit is gone when it is without zeale fervency affection Offer it now unto thy Prince The second reason they have offended against nature and civility He that offereth the Lord of Hosts such things as he would not offer unto a man which the Prince will not accept saith that the Table of the Lord is not to be regarded ye offer such c. Offer now unto thy Prince Captaine or Ruler there was then no King in Israel for the kingly dignity was extinct in Jechoniah Jer. 22. but they onely had Captaines over them appointed by the Persian King to whom they were in bondage As Zerubbabel is called the Captaine of Israel Haggai 1.1 and so it is made more offensive that they used God as they would not doe a meane man not a King but a Captaine and it is as if God had said Now make tryall of the good will of your Captaine towards you which is more familiar to you being a man and inferiour to a King whom if thou labourest thus to reconcile unto thy selfe thou shalt more offend and excite against thee What an indignity is this then against me that I should be no more or not so much accounted of as a meane Captaine how should not this in stead of reconciling me more displease and provoke me And what can you looke for from me so mighty a God to defend and vindicate my glory and service from such indignities but wrath and displeasure Will he be content with thee or will it please him as if hee said undoubtedly it will marvellously displease him Or accept thy person or accept thy face That is will he kindly and lovingly looke upon thee and grant thee the things thou desirest as Gen. 19.21 Job 42.8 9. so here Will he friendly respect you and grant your request No he will be more offended with you In the whole he answereth that they might object that he tooke too much upon him to pry into their thoughts hearts when he did no otherwise than ordinarily he might doe judge their lives by their practices The point then is The wickednesse of the life proclaimeth and preacheth to men the prophanenesse of the heart as Psal 14.1 Doctrine The foole hath said in his heart there is no God they hve corrupted and done an abominable worke there is none that doth good Was not this enough to convince them of impiety and Atheisme before God which searcheth the heart So there is another way for man to know Titus 1.16 They professe that they know God but by works they deny him and are abominable and disobedient and unto every good worke reprobate And this is enough to condemne them of impiety and prophanenesse of contempt of God want of the feare of God before man that seeth the outward man onely and must by it judge of the inward Matth. 7.16 17 18. Ye shall know them by their fruits Doe men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles So every good tree bringeth forth good fruit and a corrupt tree bringeth forth evill fruit A good tree cannot bring forth evill fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit * Non ex foliis non ex floribus sed ex fructu arbor bona mal●ive dignoscitur Bern. Epist 107. A good or evill tree is knowne not by the leaves or flowers but by the fruits 1 John 3.10 In this are the children of God known and the children of the devill whosoever doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loveth not his brother Because the tongue will bewray the irreligiousnesse of the heart when it speaketh folly Reas 1 as Jan. 1.26 If any man among you seeme religious and refraineth not his tongue but
principally this The other a man may well have and have a lawfull marriage but without this it can be nothing so holy a marriage seeing it wanteth the principall and the most holiest end which was the end of it even in mans innocency when he was without sinne Therefore ought every one principally to aime at this and indeed to have it and therefore ought they to chuse so or give consent that this may follow not with those who have a false religion or no religon because it hardly will be that the Church should be increased by them for children will ever follow the worse part though it be the weaker for a little strength drawes downward it must be a great strength that must pull upward Corruption is downeward and with the tyde Religion is upward and against it And having a fit match children ought to be desired of them and to account it their honour Psal 128.3 Not for cost or paines avoid it or feare it and having them to give all care and diligence for their education to bring them up in the feare and instruction of the Lord to instruct them in knowledge of God and his true worship and to edifie them by example For parentum exempla decere possunt magis quam vox St. Hierem. That when they are gone they may praise them as Augustine did his mother Majore solicitudine me parturiebat spiritu quam carne pepererat Confess 5.9 Their care was more to bring them up religiously then their paines was to bring them into the world they loved their soules better then their bodies and they desired more that they might be Gods sons and daughters then theirs by which they shall increase their glory for they who beget many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for ever Dan. 12.3 And they who shall increase Gods Church here he shall increase their glory as they his worship Vse 3 Then are not they bound who have the gift of continency not to marry for though marriage be a remedy yet is it not onely nor principally for both this is an end and more principall They who can preserve their chastity in virginity may desire it but not absolutely but in respect of some troubles and incumbrances which for the most part accompany marriage yet they may marry for this end which is the more excellent I doe not say they are bound to marry for this end because marriage is of those things which are indifferent as Bernard speakes of virginity It is not commanded but advised and onely they who cannot containe are commanded to marry yet as there is more necessity in marrying for that end so there is more religion in this end In that a man principally respects himselfe in this God the increase of the Church and the inlarging of the kingdome of Christ that which Saint Augustine speaketh de bono conjugali Cap. 15. may be applyed here Iustus qu indò cupit dissolvi esse cum Christo tamen sumit alimentum non cupiditate vivendi sed officio consulendi ut maneat quod necessarium est propter alios Sic misteri foemin is in re nuptiarum officiosum fuit sanctis non libidinosum Quid enim sit eibus ad salutem hominis hoc est concubitus ad salutem humani generis And so specially for the Church and increase of Gods Kingdome for though he can make children of stones yet hath he ordained this meanes Therefore little reason and lesse religion hath the Church of Rome to preferre virginity before holy marriage for besides that may be said to them it were better they would approve virginity by their deeds then praise it by their words And as Hierom adfuriam why doth the tongue sound out chastity and the whole body shew forth uncleannesse Or as Epiphanius of the Origenists You refuse marriage but not lust It is not holinesse but hypocrisie that is in honour amongst you Besides this virginity is never save onely in some respect better then marriage but marriage is oftentimes absolutely better then virginity and by no reason more then this because this may increase the Church and bring forth sonnes and daughters to God not that Neither is it against this that some object that Christ saith That after this life there is no marrying at all and that 1 Cor. 7.38 He that giveth her to marriage doth well but he that giveth her not to marriage doth better For the first it is not against us seeing we speake of the state of this life onely after which as there shall be no marriages so no vowes of virginity And as for S. Paul Better with him is as much as fit or more commodious For if it were simply better it were never lawfull to do otherwise which he alloweth Therefore he thus spake not for the nature of the thing but in respect of circumstances as you may see verse 26.28.32.35 Finally if virginity be the more holy why have they made marriage a sacrament rather then it Sure if it were more holy it should rather be a sacrament then marriage Therefore keep your selves in your spirit The dehortation of the Prophet from this vice and the better that they may doe it and not transgresse he perswades them to labour for sober mindes and chaste affections from thence riseth this sinning against their wives which would easily be avoided if their mindes were sober and chaste The way for a man to keep himselfe from actuall and outward sinne and the practise of it is to labour to keep his heart pure Doctrine and to take heed to that On the contrary if he neglect his heart he shall be sure to be corrupt in the outward man and to fall into outward sinnes against God and man He may happily in some sinister respect and by some circumstances of time place or person for want of opportunity ability and meanes refraine them but those things befalling him he will easily fall into that So much this exhortation sheweth So much also that sheweth Prov. 4.23.24.25 Keep thine heart with all diligence for thereout commeth life Put away from thee a froward mouth and put wicked lips farre from thee Let thine eyes behold the right and let thine eye lids direct the way before thee Matth. 15.19 Out of the heart proceed evill thoughts adulteries c. and Jam. 1.13.14 1 Pet. 2.11.12 Because the heart and spirit is the fountaine of actions Reason 1 whence they all spring the other parts are but the chanels and it is a flowing fountaine not a standing water which ever sends out such water as it hath if then the fountaine be clean and sweet so will the chanels be and è contra Because it is the commander of the whole man the whole life Reason 2 Now such as the Commander such is the Subject such as the Captaine such are the Souldiers Much more here for the conjunction is neerer and when they are subject to it as the weapon is to him
that useth it Rom. 6.13 So that it commanding any thing that they all doe more then the Centurions servants Luke 7. Rom. 7.25 Then the flesh and outward parts follow not the minde and the heart Quest There is no opposition there betwixt the inward and outward Answ the heart and the body but betwixt the part regenerate and the unregenerate for by flesh it is usuall with the Apostle not to understand the body but the unregenerate part as in that place Gal. 5.17 not any opposition betwixt soule and body but the fight of the unregenerate with the regenerate and vers 24. not the crucifying of the body but of the unregenerate part For the heart and inward parts as farre as they are unregenerate are flesh also and understood under the outward by the Apostle Then may a man certainly judge a man to have a corrupt heart when hee hath a polluted outward man Vse 1 life and conversation Vide Malach. 1.8 Doctrine 1. Use 2. To reprove such as judge men to have corrupt hearts for the care and uprightnesse of their lives Vse 2 Vide ibid. ex Use 1. To teach men Vse 3 who desire any outward holinesse or to be free from externall corruption or pollution to looke well to the heart to keep sinne or to kill it within for this is the best and the first to purge the heart and the other will be so And let none transgresse The dehortation from the evill and the outward practice of it Of the particular hath been spoken in the former verses yet somwhat hence It may be that some may think this speech hangs that way that it may seem to favour free-will to call upon them to abstaine from evill which if it were not in their power it were in vaine thus to speake to them I answer this is no more then other precepts and exhortations in the word which doe but teach us what we ought to do not what we are able which is but to make us assay and when we finde not power then to seeke it elsewhere Lege opern̄ dicit Deus Jae quod in bee Jege fidci dicitur Deo da quod iubes Aug. de spirit lit In the law of workes God saith to us Do what I command thee In the law of faith wee say to God What thou commandest us inable us to doe God therefore thus speakes to man to make him speake againe to him commanding that he may require and obtaine to doe seeing Phil. 2.13 It is God which worketh in you both the will and the deed even of his good pleasure Bernard in the audience of some commending the grace of God as that which he acknowledged in God did prevent him and he found did make him to profit and he hoped would perfect it in him Bernard de gratia lib. Arbit initie giving all to grace and taking nothing to himselfe One replied what then hast thou done or what reward can thou looke for if God worke all To whom he answered What counsell then doest thou give me or how wouldst thou advise me Give glory saith he to God who hath prevented thee excited thee and begun this good in thee and for that is to come live worthily that thou mayest approve thy selfe not unthankfull for those thou hast received and fit to receive more Bernard replies You give good counsell but that is but if you could make me able to obey and doe it For it is not so easie a thing to doe as to know what ought to be done for these are divers things to lead a blinde man and to give strength to the weary * Nec quivis doctor statim dator erit boni quodcunque docuerit Duo mihs sunt necessaria doceri juvari Tu quidem homo rectè consulis ignorantiae sed si verum sentit Apostolus spiritus adjuv at infirmitatem nostram Rom. 8. Inso vero qui mihi per os tuum ministrat consilium ipse mihi necesse est ministrat per spiritum tuum adjut erium quo valeant implere quod consulis Ecce enim ex ejus munere velle adjacet mihi perficere autem non invenio nisi qui dedit velle det perficere pro bena voluntate For whosoever is a teacher whatsoever he teacheth cannot bestow goodnesse Two things are needfull to me to be taught and to be helpt thou being a man doest well instruct my ignorance but the spirit helps our infirmities Rom. 8. yea he that gave me counsell by thy mouth must also send me helpe by his owne spirit that I may be able to doe what thou advisest by his grace I am willing but cannot performe unlesse he that wrought the will doe also worke the deed of his good pleasure And when to this he replied * Vbi ergo sunt merita nostra an t ubi est spes nostra Where then are our rewards or where is our hope He answereth with that Tit. 3.5 Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the holy Ghost Hence I gather and upon this inferre that God that calls upon us by his word to do must give us also power to do then therefore he calleth because he would have us cry to him for helpe And as S. Augustine O man acknowledge in every precept * O home in praeceptione cognosce quid debeas habere in cerreptione tuo te vitio non habere in oratione unde accipias quid vis habere De corrept gratia c. 3. what strength thou shouldest have in every reproofe what strength by thy own fault thou wantest in every prayer whence thou mayest have what thou wantest The hands must be purged as well as the heart the outward man as the inward VERS XVI If thou hatest her put her away saith the Lord God of Israel yet he covereth the injury under his garment saith the Lord of bostes therefore keep your selves in your spirit and transgresse not I Hate putting away saith the Lord God of Israel In this verse the Prophet proceeded to the third maine sinne here reproved in this people Divorces not simply condemning divorce as if in no case it were lawfull but for every vaine cause and light dislike when they hated or disliked them for that to put them away is that he reproves In the verse we observe two things First the reproofe of this sinne secondly an admonition generall including the particular In the first which is the sinne we observe the amplifications of it which is first from Gods hatred Secondly from an effect of those husbands who used and practised divorces that they made the law of God a covert to cover with it that violent injury and indignity they did to their wives as men cover the body and defaults of it with their garment If thou hatest her put her away Some thinke this dependeth
not mention it An observation that offers unto our thoughts The very great necessity of acquainting our selves with Gods Law the benefit of which I referre the Reader to find commended unto him in a learned and very fruitfull Treatise of Mr. H. Mason Hearing and Doing chap. 5. This point hath beene much beat upon by the Fathers in their Sermons or Homilies to the people in their Exhortations and Epistles to their private and deare friends Many of our men in handling the controversie about permitting the reading of the Scripture to the people have collected many and plentifull instances I spare them Only I would note the piety of some persons in their assiduous study of Gods Law It is a known History which they relate of Alphonsus King of Arragon Let mee adde what Herebert Rosweyd the Iesuit reports of Thomas a Kempis the devout Author of those books which are and deserve to be in every ones hand De Imitatione Christi That as he spent his houres in reading the holy Scripture so hee wrote out the whole Bible divided into foure Tomes fairely and legibly with his own hand And yet a great scholler too he was a man wedded to his book so much that this was his usuall saying and that which hee was wont to write in the beginning of his books In omnibus requiem quaesivi nusquam inveni nisi in angelo cum libello In een hoexken met een boexken I have sought content in all things but never found it unlesse with a booke in a nooke But his most delight was in the booke of God How much was his zeale beyond the temper of these times when many think it would hinder their schollership to read much or oft in the Bible which perhaps also is not to bee found in some well furnished studies The neglect of which and preferring the handmaids which yet are beautiful and they blind that doe not confesse so before the Mistresse hath been much complained of by many pious and learned men Who can be large or full enough in the praise of the Booke of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The soules food as Saint Athanasius calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Invariable rule of truth as Saint Iraeneus The Aphorismes of Christ The library of the Holy Ghost The circle of all divine arts The Divine Pandects The wisdome of the Crosse The cubit of the Sanctuary The touchstone of errour But I will take my selfe off lest it be said to me Who ever dispraised Hercules Only let me insert another instance for other kind of people for lay people for women Not the example of any of those glorious women found and mentioned in S. Hieroms Epistles famous and renowned for their piety this way but a moderne example of Maudlin the wife of D. Pareus of whom writing to Iohn Newerus Pastor of Saint Peters Church in Heidleburg to preach her funerall Sermon hee reports that after shee was married and more than forty yeares of age out of love to the holy Scriptures shee learnt to reade and tooke such delight in it and specially in the Psalmes that she got them almost all by heart So much for this point the necessity of which some think the Spirit of God would teach us by the great Zain in the word Zicru Recordamini in the Text in many Bibles See Iohn Buxtorf in Comment Masor cap. 14. 2. Hee takes occasion to prepare their expectation by prophecying againe of his forerunner the Baptist vers 5.6 we have 1. His comming vers 5. 2. His work or office vers 6. I. His comming vers 5. Behold I will send you Eliah the Prophet before the comming of the great and dreadfull day of the Lord. The interpretation of this place hath very much divided the Expositors Saint Hierom took it once for all the Prophets that should come but hee goes almost alone A farre greater party understand it of Eliah the Thisbite For so the Lxx. reade the very Text The Vatican and ordinary copies of the Lxx but not that which is in the King of Spaines Bible and so also the Arab. which usually followes the Lxx and some of the Fathers but not all whom Bellarmine alleageth for Origen Lactunt Hilary Hierom who are produced by him are examined by Dan. Chamier Panstrat Tom. 2. lib. 17. cap. 5. sect 17.18 and found to bring him no proofes Saint Chrys Theod. Saint Aug. and haply others of the Ancients being misled by the corrupt reading of the Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I send unto you Eliah the Thisbit But this is not in the Hebr. Text which the learned Popish Expositors know and yet they follow that of the Lxx for another purpose than the Ancients were aware of as it is sufficiently knowne to Divines in the Question of Antichrist Benedict Pererius De Antichristo Disput 10. against Ioh. Annius makes it one of his demonstrations that Mahomet is not Antichrist and so doth Bellarmine that the Bishop of Rome is not because Enoch and Eliah are not yet come and are to come in his time Doctor Sharp a learned man of ours De Antichrist part 1. cap. 31. doth hereupon take occasion to compare Bellarmine to a frantick woman whom he saith he knew that pretended great acquaintance with the Angell Gabriel and tells us That surely Elias was the carrier Mee thinks too lightly I reade nothing with pleasure that puts off a learned adversary with a scoffe but not without offence him who through his weaknesse doth magnifie all Bellarmines Arguments as surely the Suffolk Author of the Five Discourses Ann. 1635. did who in his Treatise of Antichrist useth no other I will not take this Text as a sufficient occasion to enter into the Question who That Antichrist should be Let the characters used by Saint Iohn and Saint Paul be impartially applyed and without ends and I suppose there will bee lesse controversie especially that of Saint Paul 2 Thess 2. For light unto which I referre the Reader unto Quirinus Reuterus his Supply to Zanchy who here through age and dimnesse of sight broke off which Reuterus undertooke at the request of Zanchy's Executors and said much to this point and with much approbation But to passe by the question it selfe whether the Pope be Antichrist which the interpretation of this place however it bee doth not conclude The Cardinals arguments that the Thisbite is prophecied of are not unanswerable Object 1. This day before which this Eliah is to come is the great and dreadfull day of the Lord. Therefore the day of the second comming of Christ for his first comming was an acceptable time and a day of salvation Answ 1. The Hebr may be rendred Before the day of the great and dreadfull Lord come And so the Chald. reades it 2. But granting it as wee reade it yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not properly Terribile but Timendum to bee feared or dreaded Now feare is either from Terror or from Reverence so it is