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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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ver 1 2 3 4 5. c. That was a prophane Feast and had its End even in great Discontent ver 12 c. But this is an Holy Feast having not only good Chear but also good Company and good Discourse yea and the King himself present at the Table Cant. 1.12 And this Feast doth last longer than that of an hundred and Eighty Days yea and ends with Joy and Comfort yea 't is a Feast without any End it lasts for ever to wit unto all Ages and Generations this Calf lasts long N. B. There be formal Provisions now indeed in some places among formal Professors and Worshippers of God in forms only that seems to be Food but are not really so they feed upon the Skin of this fatted Calf only But to all such as Worship God in Spirit and Truth John 4.23 24. The flesh of this fatted Calf is Meat indeed and his Blood is Drink indeed John 6.55 Those do dwell in Christ and Christ in them ver 56. Here is mutual Complacency on the one part Christ Rejoycing in the Habitable parts of his Earth Prov. 8.31 And Delighting in his People Isa 62. ver 4. And on the other part his People Delighting themselves in the Lord Ps 37.4 Zech. 9.9 as they are round about God Ps 76.11 And a People near to him Ps 148.14 Revel 4.4 and both Eat and Drink in his Presence Luke 14.15 Say with Peter 't is good being here for us Matth. 17.4 He spake nothing of Building a Tabernacle for himself as he did for his Master and for Moses and Elias no he could have been content to lie out of Doors so he might but partake of the grace and glory of Christ Oh then let us Account God lets down a whole sheetfull of Dainties to us in his Gospel Ordinances as he did for this same Peter Acts 10.13 That Sheet was taken up into Heaven again ver 16. But only that it might be let down again to us Daily Therefore the Father saith here Let us Eat and be Merry ver 23. Luke 15. Fourthly The Cooks for Dressing this Feast upon the fatted Calf are Gospel Preachers and Pastors Ministers are compared to most necessary Matters as to Bread Salt Light Water Physick c. As here in this Parable to Cooks 't is the Cursed Jews that were as Servants to the Secret Will of the Father in killing this fatted Calf so Godly Ministers are indeed Servants to the Revealed Will of him in Cooking and Dressing this fatted Calf that True Penitents may feed and feast upon him Ministers must not be as Cooks in this Sense as sometimes they Dress Meat for others and do not partake of any part of it themselves but they must Preach Jesus Christ Acts 5.42 and 17.3 From their own Experiences of that savour and sweetness they themselves have found in him saying What our Eyes have seen what our Ears have heard and what our Hands have handled do we declare unto you 1 John 1.2 3. Those are the Cooks that make the most Savoury Meat for the Souls of their Hearers saying to them as Jacob did Gen. 27.19 Arise and eat of my Venison that your Souls may bless me This is the way to raise up Seed to our Elder Brother the neglect whereof may cause God to spit in our Faces Deut. 25.9 Yet must we know there is Cura officii the Care of Duty and Cura Eventus the Care of Success Now the Office or Duty may be faithfully performed yet not prove successful as Isa 49 4. My Work is with God though I have laboured in vain c. Such Ministers as God makes Fathers of Spiritual Children cannot but be careful Cooks to nourish up with the best Food those they have begotten by the Gospel otherwise they would be worse than Infidels 1 Tim. 5.8 Yea Soul starvers and God will Require their Blood at careless Watchmens Hands Ezek. 3.18 19. As Laban made Jacob Answer for all lost Gen. 31.39 Fifthly The Guests invited to this Feast are such as this Son was who came to himself Luke 15.17 Who Repented of his sin and returned to his Father ver 18 19. whom his Father Kissed ver 20. and to whom his Father gave a Robe for his Back a Ring for his Hand and Shooes for his Feet we may not come to this Feast to Jesus with Old Shoes as the Gibeonites did to Joshua Jos 9.5 We cannot persevere and hold out to the end if our shoes be patched with our own Righteousness Christ is our All c. These Christ calls Friends c. Cant. 5.1 and John 15.14 15. Abraham is called three times the Friend of God 2 Chron. 20.7 Isa 41.8 and Jam. 2.23 So are the Sons and Daughters of Abraham and the Beloved Disciple John leaned upon his Lords Bosom at the Supper John 13.23 25. and 21 20. Oh! That we could do so at the Lords Supper where a Sancta crapula a free and full feeding and feasting upon the fatted Calf is Holily expected We should come to an Ordinance as Leviathan to Jordan Job 40.23 as if we could drink it all up Christ commands his Friends to fall on Lustily and his Beloved to Drink abundantly Cant. 5.1 Till they be filled with the Spirit Eph. 5.18 Yea and Holily drunk with Loves John 2.10 Cant. 7.12 The Angel bad Elijah Eat two Meals together and feed heartily because his Journey was too great for him 1 Kin. 19.6 7. And he went in the Strength of that double Meal fourty Days ver 8. but our Journey is greater c. We must fetch hearty Draughts the Deeper the Sweeter and we must pray that our Spiritual Food may be turned in Succum Sanguinem into Juice and Blood that we may lift up our feet and go lustily as Jacob did after was refreshed with his Vision of the Ladder Gen. 28.12 29.1 Sixthly The Master of this Feast is the Father of the Family Thus God is the Father of the Families of Israel Jer. 31.1 9. and Mal. 2.10 In the Peace-offering under the Law all the Fat was the Lords as before the People must not in any wise eat it Levit. 3.16 17. So the lean part belongeth to them as before but Blessed be God that his Gospel hath amended the Peoples Commons in putting his fat part unto our lean part making us a Feast of fat things full of Marrow and a Feast of Wines on the Lees well Refined Isa 25.6 The Gospel lets down from Heaven a great Sheetfull of all manner of Dainties Flesh and Fowl Acts 10.11 12. This was done thrice to Peter and then the Vessel was received up again into Heaven ver 16. on purpose that it might be let down again where God hath any Hungry Children as Peter was ver 10. Met together to Worship him with their Spirits in the Gospel of his Son Rom. 1.9 God now in the Gospel is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as 't is said of Job who would not Eat his Morsell
Tumult against him Those carnal men whose gain was their God which they adored and their Godliness too soon took fire at this spark and speech began tumultuously to defend their wicked Trade Covetousness as it self is Idolatry Col. 3.5 so it upholds Idolatry as here under a pretence of piety where there is Utility Men think there is piety The Papists are sound in those points that touch not upon their profit as in the Doctrine of the Trinity c. The eleventh Remark is 'T is the Lot and Portion of Gospel-Preachers and professors to be loaded with Accusations by the Adversaries thereof set on by the Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 as here in order to get them condemned and executed for their Supposed Sacriledge and Blasphemy N.B. No better tendency had Demetrius's Invective Oration to his Fellow-artificers verse 26 27 28 c. To those he urgeth many Arguments As 1st That of Profit which Paul's preaching against our Gods made with hands hath already greatly damnified Our Patent and Monopoly for the Manufacture of making Silver Medals will soon be insignificant Our Trade will quickly be under disgrace and die This was the Achilles or most Cogent and Pungent of all his arguments hath not Paul's preaching Intrenched upon their profit in all probability he would not have been so much concerned as to have stirred out of Doors against it N.B. Thus Erasmus wittily told the Elector of Saxony that the principal Reasons why Luther was so much set against by the Romanists was Because he meddled with the Pope's Tripple Crown and the Monks fat Panches 2dly He added to his Argument of profit a pretence of piety Not only are we like to lose our Trade and Liveli-hood but our Religion also our Goddess Diana will be despised our Temple its worship will be lessened yea levelled by their light of the gospel this is madea great aggravation by those Idolatrous worshippers how much more by those who worship God in spirit truth seeing they have a more sure word for their foundation 3dly He inforces another leading motive from the Universality and common consent of worshippers as well as pretended Antiquity hereby he easily heated the Rabble's blood and heaved them into an hideous outrage as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 28. signifies so that never Examining the truth of the case cause they put it to popularity and to a Tumultuous uproar and outcrys crying for two hours together N.B. which was more painful than to hear a Sermon so long yet most hearers think that too long to hear verse 28 and 34. great is Diana of the Ephesians to shew their abhorrency of Paul's preaching down their Grand Idol which they were resolved to perpetuate in her splendour and glory against the Gospel and in this Hurly-burly and confusion of the whole City wherein the greater part as in all popular Tumults knew not wherefore they were come together ver 32. and 't is well if it be better among the multitude of common hearers in Publick Church-assemblies Gaius and Aristarchus the two companions of Paul were caught hold of and carry'd in an Hurry to their great Theatre where their plays were seen their Orations heard and their Malefactors tryed and punished for which end these two Fellow-Travellers of Paul were Hurryed vers● 29. The twelfth Remark is Divine providence can never be enough adored seeing God works Deliverances for his Servants in danger one way or other sometimes by their Friends and sometimes by their Foes made to become Friends as here from v. 29. to the 41. N.B. To say nothing of the deliverance of Gaius and Aristarchus out of that Eminent Danger they were involved into when caught hold of by the Rude rabble and pushing headlong into the Theatre to which they all rushed with one accord Verse 29. because the Scripture speaks nothing expresly how these two were delivered out of their violent and murdering hands yet is this therein necessary implyed because the Scripture doth mention how after this uproar Gaius and Aristarchus did accompany Paul into Asia Acts 20.4 again mention is made of Gaius as Paul's Host and the host of the whole Church Col. 4.10 and of Aristarchus twice after this once as Paul's Fellow-Passenger at Sea and Shipwrack Acts 27.27 and again as Paul's Fellow-prisoner Rom. 16.23 N.B. So that 't is manifest these two Good Ministers who are supposed to be the Messengers of the Churches mentioned 2 Cor. 8.18 19 23. were not now torn in pieces by the outragious rabble of those Insolent Idolaters in this Tumult N.B. But Paul's deliverance out of the most Imminent Danger is expresly Illustrated by the Holy Ghost in three Eminent Circumstances The first is when Paul would have entered in among this rude Rabble not only the Disciples suffered him not for the life of him from whom they had received the Faith was more dear to them than their own a blessed pattern for good people to preserve their Pastors verse 30. but also some of the chief of Asia supposed to be Heathen Priests who usually were Masters of those plays and shows in honour of their Idol-Gods or Princes of the Country do add to the Disciples intreaties their requests sent to him not to adventure himself among such an inraged Rabble such an head-strong ungovernable company that bellua multorum Capitum the beast with many heads or mad multitude verse 31. Whether these chief men who sent this saving Message to Paul were Princes or Priests it matters not However it was a mighty work of God's Providence in over-ruling those Heathens hearts and inclining them to countenance and favour persecuted Paul though these men were bad enough especially if as Beza saith they were such Idolatrous Priests as composed Stage-plays for their deified Diana yet the Father of Spirits made them shew some good affections towards Paul if not towards the Christian Religion The same God who made many Legal Priests obedient to the Faith Acts 6 7. might make these Idolatrous Priests thus far obedient also Christ can either find or make Friends to his Gospel and Ministers even among the worst of their Foes N.B. The second Circumstance was that of Alexander verse 33 34. whom some suppose to be the same man of whom Paul complains in his 2 Tim. 4.14 15 16. That he did him much wrong upon these three Grounds 1. That Paul wrote this Epistle to Timothy who was then at Ephesus c. 2. That same Alexander was of Demetrius's calling a Copper-Smith for they made Copper-Shrines of Diana and her Temple for the poor to buy as well as Silver ones for the Richer sort 3. This Alexander was an Ephesian N.B. But others Judge him to be another of that name yet a Disciple of Paul's at the first for which the mad Mobile caught him and carried him to the Theatre c. However all agree that he was a Jew because the Jews pushed him forward to make a Vindication of their
not so bad as to live without a Calling in the World Of this before at large The second Divine Truth Moses teacheth in this History is That every Man beside his particular Calling must mind his general Calling also There be some Atheistical Persons that stick not to say Let those that have leisure from secular Employs such as Church-men are attend upon the Service of God such as have nothing else to do let them Pray Hear Read and mind Matters of Religion we have other things to heed and to trouble our Head withal we must not Neglect our Callings Dare such Men make themselves worse than Cain who though he had his Calling yet could he as well as Abel set some time apart for the Service of God And so ought all Men to do the particular Calling must not justle out the general for the former is sanctified by the latter as Gen. 24.13 27. Psal 90. last 1 Cor. 10.31 The Duties of our general Calling are to help us in the Duties of our particular as Christs being in the Temple among the Doctors was not any hinderance to him from going home to be subject to his Parents Luke 2.46 51. There is a proper Season for both and every thing is beautiful in its peculiar Season Subordinate things are not contrary but may and must consist together Christs conversing in the Temple rather qualified him for than obstructed him in his filial Subjection so our conversing with Christ in the Temple in ways of Religion which is our general Calling as Gods Servants must make us return home better Husbands Wives Parents Children Masters Servants Ministers People in all the Duties of our particular Calling we lose that sanctifying Influence of Sermons Suppers Sabbaths when we do not carry home some more sweetness of Spirit to our Relations from them than we brought with us to them As the Merchant going out in a Morning about his Merchandizing if he meet with some bad Bargain or disappointment in his Traffick and Trading he returns home in so morose an Humour that none of his Family can please him no not though they all do their Duty so to do but if on the contrary this same Merchant meet another Morning with some brave Bargains that will advance his Estate and fill his Coffers Oh with what Candour and sweetness of Spirit doth he return home then is he all Honey and Love no Action no Relation can displease or disoblige him he takes all things that are done by the right Handle and putteth a most Candid Construction even upon Deeds done amiss to himself yea carries sweetly to all all that day unless or until another bad Bargain happen in losses and crosses to unhinge his Spirit again and to make him uneasie in himself Just so it is with a Christian that Spiritual Merchant Mat. 13.45 Let him go out in a Morning to the Ordinances of God if he there meet with a purchase of the Pearl of price Oh what an Heart-changing and a Life-changing Work is wrought upon that Man he may then say Ego non sum ego I am not the same Man I was as one once said to his tempting Curtizan he returns home fil●'d with meekness and lowliness which he hath learnt from Christ by his conversing with him in his Ordinances Mat. 11.28 29. But if any return home from Gods Worship with sourness of Spirit 't is an Infallible Evidence that they have made no good Bargains for their Souls at that time for 't is an undeniable truth that the Duties of our general Calling should better dispose us for the Duties of our particular Callings No Man is Born principally to serve himself in his particular Calling but his God and himself in Subordination to God and so the particular Calling must be Subordinate to the general and Prayer which is a duty of the general Calling must every Morning fetch down a Blessing upon the Duties of the particular Yea 't is not enough to pray for Gods Blessing upon our Labours in the Morning only and so walk with a carnal careless frame of Heart all the day in our worldly Affairs no but we should drive on the Trade of godliness as well as our own Trades in holy Ejaculations all the day long so shall we be both in Gods fear and in Gods favour all the day Prov. 23.17 and this is dividing aright for God He is a wise Merchant indeed that can drive a Trade in both Indies but he is wiser that can drive on his particular Calling on Earth and his general in Heaven Those two Sons of Adam are mindful of both those Trades and Callings and their practice is for us a pattern as is apparent from those particulars 1. Cain and Abel lived not in the State of Innocency but in that of the Fall as we do Had Man never sinned God expected some solemn Service from him how much more needful is our serving God since the Fall for testifying our Repentance and for Sueing out our Pardons and for seeking Reconciliation with God from whom we have faln and with whom we have faln out even into an enmity against him Rom. 8.7 Col. 1.21 These two Sons of Adam were in the same State we are in the faln State and what they did for recovery out of that State we ought likewise to do the same 2. This Service of theirs was after the promise of Christ in the Seed of the Woman Gen. 3.15 that first Gospel which ever was Preached so 't was Gospel-service which Cain and Abel performed here and surely Evangelical Duties concern us as well as them yea us more than them seeing Christ was only promised to them but he is manifested to us and preached to all Nations therefore we should abound in our Religious Service more than they 3. This Service of Cain and Abel was before Moses long before the Law so it doth not concern the Jews only but us Gentiles also even all Men in general to the end of the World This Service of those two Sons Adam was a natural Duty long before it was written in the Moral Law was a Law written in their Hearts to acknowledge Gods Soveraignty over them and their Dependency upon him Rom. 2.15 so that none of Adam's Off-spring can plead exemption from this natural Duty but all Jews and Gentiles that have been are or shall be are equally bound by the very Law of Nature to this Moral Duty of some Spiritual Service and Worship to God 4. And Lastly This Service of theirs was done per modum Sacrificii by way of Sacrifice and so it representeth to us the great Sacrifice for sin to wit Christ upon the Cross and it also remindeth us of all those Spiritual Sacrifices which we must offer up to God in Gospel-times to wit the Sacrifices of a broken Heart and of a contrite Spirit bleeding for sin Psal 51.17 yea and Sacrifices of praise our Thank-offerings to God for his providing us such a Saviour Psal
Baal exceedeth a better zeal for the true God yea and Cain's zeal as bad as he was outvies the zeal of too many that neither have a Sheaf nor a Sheep for Gods Worship oh how most men abuse those words of Christ I will have mercy and not Sacrifice spoke in reference to Gods tenderness to his Creatures yet they misconstrue it in favour of their own penuriousness saying they must rather have mercy on themselves and their purses than be at too much cost in Sacrificing to the Lord Mat. 9.13 The fourth property of their Service is There was unity in their Worship As they were Twins in their Births so they were Twins in their Offerings There was an Harmony and happy Conjunction in both Cain did not Build one Altar and Abel another but one serv'd both they both Offer'd in one place and at one time yea and the place is supposed to be that very place as is aforesaid where Solomon Built the Temple Hence observe It makes much for the Honour of Religious VVorship when 't is perform'd in the Spirit of Unity The first Inference is Oh let it not be told in Gath nor published in Askelon that there is Altar against Altar and Prayer against Prayer amongst Professors in our Day The Apostle presseth to Unity with many Arguments Eph. 4.3 4 c. We have all one Faith and we have all one Father we be all Sons of one Man as Gen. 42.11 or rather of one God why should we fall out by the way in our going home to our fathers house Gen. 45.24 'T were certainly a great happiness if all Professors could serve God after one manner but this as one saith potitùs optandum quàm sperandum est may rather be desired than expected for Divisions must be Luke 12.51 1 Cor. 11.19 and no unity of faith can be had until we all come to the fulness of the measure of the stature of Christ Eph. 4.13 There is a wonderful variety of faces and voices amongst Mankind yet as it doth most marvellously set off the Wisdom of the Creator so it doth not destroy Humane Society in the Creation but consists well together and is very useful for distinction of Persons one from another Thus also opinionum varietas opinantium unitas non sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the variety of Professions and Unity of Professors may well enough consist together without breach of Peace The second Inference is Yet Unity without Verity is not Unity but Conspiracy There is no true Concord but in Truth That is no right means which destroys the proper end Those are bad means that are destructive to a good end That Contention which promoteth Holiness is better than that Peace or Unity which would destroy it but Unity against God and Holiness is as two sticks becoming one in the Devils Hand not in Gods as Herod and Pilate united against Christ we must not part with Truth for Peace that is a buying Gold too dear We are bid to follow peace with all men Heb. 12.14 But 't is only usque ad Aras so far as will consist with Holiness as that place sheweth The third Inference is That narrow Principles undo Unity could we but own and embrace Saints as Saints 't would much advance it but this loving our own Image better than Christs cuts the very Staff both of Bands and of Beauty Zech. 11.7 10.14 And we verily do no less than love our own Image better than Christs if we can love only those of our own Opinion and not others of another Perswasion though the Image of Christ shine forth never so convincingly in them The fifth Property 'T was equally a solemn Service by way of Sacrifice both these Sons paid their Homage to their Maker the one in a Sheaf and the other in a Sheep Hence observe Holy Sacrifices and Services have been tendered and rendered up to the great God in all Ages of the VVorld by the Church of God Adam Noah Moses David c. all Offer'd Sacrifices and attended upon Gods Service Sacrificium quass sacrum factum a Sacrifice is a sacred Fact solemnly performed by the Creature to the Creator and the Solemnity of this Service consists in four Respects 1. As the Sacrifice was a real acknowledgment of Gods Soveraignty over the Sacrificer Isa 16.1 Even Moab it self should send a Lamb to the Ruler of the VVorld And Psal 118.27 Because God is the Lord therefore bind the Sacrifice 2. As it was a sad Remembrancer of the Sacrificers sin to wit that he deserv'd to be Burnt as his Burnt-offering was even in Everlasting Burnings Hence the sin of the Sacrificer was transmitted to his Sacrifice by laying his Hand upon the Head of the Beast Thus God laid upon Christ the iniquities of us all Isa 53.6 as they transfer'd their sins upon their Sacrifice 3. As it was a solemn protestation of their Faith in Christ whom all their Sacrifices did prefigure as he was the Lamb slain from the beginning of the VVorld Revel 13.18 Abel's Lamb and Moses Paschal Lamb were but Types of that Antitype the Lamb of God who was to take away the sins of the VVorld John 1.29 36. All their Sacrifices were stays to their Faith in Christ Thus Abel Offered his Lamb in Faith Heb. 11.4 His Sacrifice was not only a Confession of his demerit of Death for his sin but 't was also a Profession of his Faith in Christ whereby his Death he deserved was transferred upon his Head Christ who died for him Alas every Man hath eaten Forbidden Fruit and must die for it either by himself or by his surety either our Blood or Christs must go for it and 't is not enough that Christs Blood be shed for us unless it also be sprinkled upon us Heb. 9.19 21. and 10.22 for cleansing our Consciences 4. As it was also an Offering of Thankfulness those Sacrifices were Eucharistical as well as Propitiatory Thank-offerings as well as Sin-offerings VVhat shall I render saith David Psal 116.12 He had nothing to give 't was but a render and he had nothing good enough to render unto God c. Enquiry Why have we no such Sacrifices under the Gospel no such Ceremonies as they had under the Law Answer the first They were all Carnal Ordinances during the date of the Pedagogy of Moses and until the time of Reformation by Christ Heb. 9.10 11. Therefore such as would introduce the Abrogated Jewish Ceremonies may at the same Door bring in the Abrogated Jewish Sacrifices also as Tilham did Circumcision c. first in England and then in Germany and thereby put such a chargeable heavy Yoke in Offering Sheep and Oxen c. upon Christs Disciples which neither they nor their Fathers were able to bear Acts 15.10 much less we And if those very Ceremonies which were of Gods own ordaining be not to be observed much less those of poor Mans devising Surely God respects his own more than Mans by much Gal.
Parents learn from hence to further and not to hinder their Children in the good ways of God Honour is the Reward of the former but Dishonour if no more of the latter The second Choice Remark or Mystery is Though Children be hindred by their Parents from following the Lord fully as Numb 14.24 yet must they not cast off that Duty the Fifth Commandment enjoins them to honour them c. God in many cases requireth Mercy rather than Sacrifice Parents may stand in more need of Childrens Mercy sometimes than God can of their Sacrifice at any time Mat. 9.13 c. The Scripture teacheth that Children should nourish their Parents in their old Age Gen. 47.12 Ruth 4.15 and 1 Tim. 5.4 c. yet the old Pharisees did by their Corban or Devoted things License Children to deny their Parents any further Succour Mark 7.11 12. The same our new Pharisees the Papists do who say That a Monk may not leave his Consecrated Cloyster to relieve his Father but must rather see and suffer him to die for Hunger in the Streets Lyra that Famous English Jew but an Arrant Papist as most were then in the Thirteenth Century hath these words Filius per professionem in Religione factam à parentibus subveniendo excusatur As if a Son Consecrated to God might be excused to do execrable things to Parents Thus they do Ungod as it were God himself and make his Fifth Commandment of no Effect such are of their Father the Devil rather than of Abraham's John 8.44 who nourish'd his old Father in Haran till he died and would not leave or lurch him though under a pretence of his Call to Canaan No Child of Abraham should leap over such a Block as a Parent in his way but should wait as Abraham did at Haran till God remove it out of the way The third Choice Remark or Mystery is Mans Heart needeth many pulls from Gods hand before Man can compleat his Obedience to God Here God gives Abraham two calls or pulls before he pull'd him to the Land of Promise The first pull bringeth him only from Ur to Haran there he setleth and gathereth much Goods Gen. 12.5 Thus Sampson follow'd his Parents till he met with the Hony-comb Judg. 14.8 9 10. So doth the Dog his Master until he meet with some Carrion Though these simile's suit not with Abraham yet they do with too many Professors that Would seem to be the Sons of Abraham Gods second pull at this Holy Patriarch Abraham was an effectual pull it brought him to Gods Foot Isa 41.2 it brought him from Haran to Canaan because he was both called and chosen The fourth Choice Remark or Mystery in the History is As Abraham was call'd 1. From Ur which Hebr. signifies Fire And 2. From Haran or Charan which Hebr. signifies Wrath so God calleth every Child of Abraham from the Fire of Hell and from the State of Nature whereby all are Children of wrath Eph. 2.3 He plucks us as Brands out of the Fire Zech. 3.3 and pulleth us out of the Fire Jude ver 23. as the Angel pulled Lot out of the Fire of Sodom Thus by Grace such as are Born Vessels of VVrath are made Vessels of Mercy The fifth Mystery in the History is As Abraham was call'd from his Fathers House as well as from an Idolatrous Countrey so are all the Children of Abraham call'd to come out of Babylon Revel 18.4 that Land of Graven Images Jer. 50.38 God maketh a Proclamation that his Children should make haste hence and Home Zech. 2.6 Ho Ho Come forth Get ye away this is not your rest for it is polluted Mic. 2.10 See Isa 48.20 and Jer. 50.8 and 51.6 and 45. This Literal Babylon was the Chief City of the Chaldees from whence Abraham was called and his Children are called from their Fathers House as he was Luke 14.26 c. when it stands in Competition with Gods Command as that Noble Italian Marquess Galeacius told his Popish Father solliciting him to Apostacy that his Body and Estate were his Fathers but his Conscience was the Lords All Carnal Respects must be subject to the Spiritual and all Carnal Relations must be bewailed Deut. 21.11 12. yea and relinquished Psal 47.10 So shall their Souls become Christs Spouses and the King Delight in their Beauty ver 11. Give any thing of Man but nothing of God for peace The sixth Mystery in the History Chaldea was an Idolatrous Countrey which Worshipp'd Fire as a God as the word Ur signifies because possibly they had seen Coelestial Fire come down from God to consume the Sacrifices of the Patriarchs and thereupon they would Worship that Element The Jewish Fable is false that Abraham was cast into the Fire or Ur because he would not Worship Fire as a God in the days of Nimrod but was saved by his Faith But 1. He was not Born in Nimrod's Time 2. Then Moses or Hebrews 11. or Ecclesiasticus the 45th or Josephus or Philo would have Recorded it all writing of Abraham's Faith and Life But God brought Abraham from this Fire-worshipping place and acquaints him with himself who is devouring and consuming Fire Isa 33.14 Heb. 12.29 Thus men place their Worship upon a wrong Object when they adore as well as admire the Fire of their own Zeal or Fervency of Spirit instead of God from whence those Flames do flow Isa 4.4 and Acts 2.2 3 c. The seventh Mystery or Remark in this History is Divine Vocation and Adoption floweth wholly and solely from Free Grace Nimrod's Church as one saith had almost swallow'd up Abraham Speciosa Chaldaeorum Superstitione erat inductus sed non seductus while he was young serving other Gods as well as Nahor and Terah who as some Rabbins say got his living by Making and Selling of Images Yet out of this Root so Idolatrous both on Father and Mothers side the whole stock of Israel sprang to be an Adapted people to God and in Covenant with him Therefore to humble this people God minds them of the Rock from whence they were hewed Isa 51.1 and telleth them their Father was an Hittite and their Mother an Amorite Ezek. 16.3 and upon this account some think Abraham is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ungodly Rom. 4.5 as he was at first an Idolater until God call'd and justified him Abraham's Fore-fathers were the Builders of the Tower of Babel they were but newly come down from Mount Ararat whereon Noah's Ark rested into the Plains of Shinar Gen. 10.2 20 21. and Gen. 11.2 where it appeareth that Seventy Families were Born to Noah's three Sons whence the Antients currently concur that the Nations were afterwards distinguished by so many Tongues and Countreys Gen. 10.32 Note here 1. Though the World was newly wash'd with the Floud yet Chaldea was notoriously Idolatrous in Building Babel c. 2. Cursed Cham had a more numerous Off-spring and more sweetly situated than his two better Brethren Shem and Japhet who
in the Faith of it v. 13. It is the custom among men first to take Possession and afterwards to Inherit and Enjoy which may be some reversion only and personal peaceable possession may by some long Lease be Interrupted for some Generations This was Abrahams case yet took he Possession of the Land because of his Title to it which was threefold 1. By Promise 2. By Conquest 3. By Purchase 1. By way of Promise God made Canaan to belong unto Abraham by making a Promise of it to him no less than four times Gen. 12.7 and 13.15 and 15.7 and 17.8 This Promise of God being a fourfold Cord Abraham accounts his best Free-hold hereupon he left his present Possessions in Ur and in Haran though he saw not so much as a Foot of the Land of Canaan made over to him as an Inheritance in his day Act. 7.5 yet he look'd upon all as his own This History containeth a Mystery to wit thus it is with all the Faithful as it was with the Father of the Faithful such have the Spirit of Truth to assure them of their Interest in Divine Promise 2 Cor. 1.22 and 5.5 Eph. 1.14 't is an Earnest This makes them exceeding Rich though they see not the Actual Performance of them in their day The wealth of a man is not reckoned so much by the ready Cash he hath by him in his Coffers as by the substantial Bills and Bonds c. he is able to produce thus the greatest part of a Believers Wealth lyeth in good Bills and Bonds under Gods own Hand and Seal all Signed in his Word and Sealed by his Spirit He therefore accounts Heavenly Promises far better than Earthly Performances as Abraham did only take Possession of Canaan which afterwards he was to Inherit so a Christian takes Possession of Heaven with his Name written in it Luke 10.20 and with his Heart Panting towards it 2 Pet. 3.12 having his Conversation there while his Commoration is here and Abraham asked a Sign to assure him of his Inheritance Gen. 15.8 not because he believed not Gods Promise thrice made over to him before but that he might the better believe after How great is Gods Love to us in giving us his Sacraments wherein he maketh himself Visible as well as Audible to us Yet this is greater Love to give us the Privy Seal of his Spirit as well as the Broad Seal of his Sacraments for our better security 2. By way of Conquest Canaan belong'd to Abraham in his Conquering Chedarlaomer c. Gen. 14.4 15 17. This great King was the Son of Elam the Son of Shem Gen. 10.22 and According to Noahs Prophecy Canaan shall be Shem's Servant Gen. 9.26 this Chedarlaomer was Lord over the Canaanites and over those chief Cities which stood in the plains of Jordan Abraham conquers him in battel so Canaan became the Conquerours by Conquest he became the Heir of Canaan the History holds forth this Mystery that all Christians the Children of Abraham are by their New-Birth Born Heirs of Heaven the Celestial Canaan they should therefore be Valiant for it Jer. 9.3 And Violent to Storm it Mat. 11.12 'T is the meek that Inherit the Earth Mat. 5.6 but 't is the Violent that both wins and wears Heaven as above As Davids worthies brake through all Difficulties to come to the well of Bethlehem 2 Sam. 23.16 So the good Souldiers of Christ 2 Tim. 2.3 should endure all hardness and hold Heroick resolutions to have Heaven by Conquest whatever it cost them that they may be more than Conquerours even Triumphers Rom. 8.37 2 Cor. 2.14 what was said of Cyprus that the Richness of that Country did sollicit the Hungry Romans to attaque and overcome it may be much more said of Heaven in its bliss-ful Riches When Israel heard that Canaan was the glory of all Lands this made them run violently through all dangers to subdue and enjoy it when Joshuah saw the slackness of seven Tribes which had received no Inheritance nor cared to do so consulting their own case and not daring to wage a new War he severely checks them saying How long will ye be slack to go up c. Josh 18.2 3. So we must lay hold on Eternal Life 1 Tim. 6.19 3. By way of purchase Canaan was Abrahams Though all the Land was his by Promise yet he procures only a Burying place by purchase Gen. 23.16 ● not having a Foot of it for his own present possession This purchas'd Burying place was an earnest for all the rest hence all the Patriarchs Dying after desir'd to be Bury'd in it Gen. 47.30 and 50.25 a Sepulchre of ones own was a sign of firm possession Isa 22.16 As in Shebna's case who hewed out for himself a stately Sepulchre in Jerusalem as it he had been of the stock Royal and had a right there whereas he was but a stranger an exotick Plant and a meer Mushroom or Terrae-filius an up-start Forreigner yet died a disgraceful out-cast v 18. but Abraham's Assurance made to him of this Burying-place Gen. 23.20 was a Prophetical Sign of a certain future possession as Jeremy's was Jer. 32.7 10 15 43. Hence flow some Remarkable Inferences As 1. Abraham was the first Purchaser of Land that is mention'd in Scripture yet his Purchase was not a place to build on but to Bury in which teacheth us our chiefest care should not be for this present Life being only Pilgrims here and living only as in Tents but for the life to come the very Egyptians had some notions of this great Truth in their building but mean houses yet most costly Tombs but the Hebrews saw it more clearly in calling their burying-places Beth Cajim the House of the living Job 30.23 Isa 14.13 Psal 49.14 and 89.48 as Heaven is call'd the Congregation-House of the Souls of Just Men Heb. 12.23 So the Grave is the Congregation-House to Which the Bodies of all the Living are assign'd 'T is the publick or common meeting-place hence when Godly Men Die they are said to be gathered to their People Gen. 25.8 17. and 49.33 Numb 31.2 'T was the Jews custom to Hew out their Sepulchres long before their Death to be standing memorials of their mortality thus Joseph of Arimathea had his Tomb in his Garden that his choicest delights there might be moderated with meditations of Death whereof he was there also minded Mat. 27.57 60. The 2. Inference is Abraham is call'd the Heir of the World Rom. 4.13 much more must he be the Heir of this little Land of Canaan reputed no bigger than our Wales wherein he had now sojourned about sixty years yet purchased not one Foot of Inheritance save only this Burying-place in it at that time for his Dear Dead Sarah 't is not Improbable though that some of his Family so numerous might Die in so long a space of time yet we read not a word of his Carking care for purchasing Possessions wherein to entertain his numerous Family
place or private corner which had been a little more tolerable but it must be upon an open Theatre a publick Stage upon a Mountain in the sight and view of the World 11. This perplexed Patriarch as he might not consult with his own reason which certainly would have put him to a stand so he must not consult with his own Wife though she had an equal interest in Isaac who might haply have hung about his neck and hindered him as Zipporah did Moses to the hazarding of his life Exod. 4.24 25. 12. But the greatest conflict of all was that the Messiah was promised to come of Isaac and so the Salvation of the World did seem to perish in Isaac's perishing Notwithstanding all these aforesaid twelve difficulties the Actor Abraham acts his part of obedience with all 1. Alacrity 2. Constancy 3. Prudence and 4. Confidence All which four shew the Excellency of Abrahams Obedience of Faith as before the Difficulty of it in the next place is the third Enquiry How all these were in this Act. Ans 1. With all Alacrity and readiness to obey he rose up early Gen. 12.3 Making no delatory work about it Thus David did saying I made haste and delayed not Psal 119.60 We read of Balaam how he made the like haste to do evil he rose up early Numb 22.21 And shall not we do so for doing good Our Lord Christ rose up early to pray for us Mark 1.35 And shall not we do so for our selves Holy David made it his resolve saying I my self will awake right early Psal 108.2 We should do so every day Especially the Sabbat-day as Joshuah and Israel did Josh 6.12 15. If we would have the Walls of cursed Jericho to fall before us as v. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is not meet for a man that either gives or takes good Counsel to sleep the whole night or too much saith Homer Sanctificat Sanat Ditat quoque Surgere Manè To rise betimes maketh men Holy Healthy and Wealthy Abraham here rose up early to be gone about his work The Sun ariseth and then man goeth forth to his labour Psal 104.12 23. Abraham here stays not to consult with his beloved Sarah lest her affections should have hindred the operations of his Faith nor with his own corrupt reason or natural affections that Old Beldam which is both the Mother and Nurse of all our Disorders and Extravagancies for he was renewed in the Spirit of his mind Eph. 4.23 Cassianus tells us of a young man receiving Letters from his Parents to disswade him from Chistianity cast them into the Fire not daring to tempt himself with reading them so should we do with all those carnal reasonings suggested by our own corrupt hearts or carnal relations to us otherwise we shall never Rest nor Feast in Abrahams Bosom 2. The Constancy and Continuance of this his ready Obedience 't is a wonder how his heart was kept in such an obediential frame for three days together all the time of his Travelling from Beershebah to Mount Moriah which some derive from Marah bitter 't was no other to Abraham in this bitter Tryal while he went all this long-way until on the third day he saw the Hill afar off Gen. 22.4 He could not but in his mind see his Dear Son as it were bleeding upon the Altar all along as he Journeyed thither and so he dwelt with his thoughts upon an Expectation of so heart-breaking an evil all this three days Journey which seemeth worse than the evil it self praestat semel mori quàm semper metuere 't is better to die at once than to be so long a dying a speedy Execution doth mitigate misery whereas delay aggravates it How he paused and pondered all the while upon this Bloody and Barbarous yet Commanded Enterprize We know not yet surely his Faith did so over-rule all his unruly affections as to extricate this blessed Patriarch out of his present perplexities and in all his Ploddings of Mind and Misgiving of heart kept him all along Tight Steady and Constant to continue his resolves in obeying Gods Command to the End Thus we should not ponder the Cross too much then 't will prove too heavy we must not chew the Physical Pill at all 't will tast too bitter we may not plodd too much upon the harshness of Divine Commands then they will appear hard sayings Joh. 6.50 Whereas none of them are indeed grievous 1 Joh. 5.3 As we ought to swallow our purging Pills whole so we should not plodd with our minds below but ply the Throne of Grace above for a good Use a good End and Issue of all our Tryals both in Tribulations and Temptations 3. Abrahams Prudence in leaving his Servants and the Ass at the Foot of the Hill v. 5. Shebu lachem Expectate hic Tarry ye here this he said fearing lest they being present at the top of the Hill might hinder him in his Obedience and Oblation And as he left them there so did he leave his natural affections and his carnal Ratiocinations contrary to Gods Command with them there that he might serve the Lord without distraction 1 Cor. 7.35 Oh that we could learn from Abraham to leave our Servants and the Ass to wit whatever may distract us at the foot of the Hill while we go up into the Mount to Worship God Even whatever is carnal that we may be Spiritual and so Worship God who is a Spirit in Spirit without Formality and in Truth without Hypocrisie for the Father seeketh such to Worship him Joh. 4.23 But alas our Carnal Affections though they be the fittest Companions for the Ass are not so much our Servants as our Masters and they will whether we will or no go up with us into the Mount we cannot with Moses and Joshuah put off those dirty Shoes of wandering thoughts and Earthly imaginations to come clean to the most Holy God with clean hearts before his Throne of Grace for they cleave as close to us as our Skin to our Flesh and we are not cleansed from that Blood Joel 3.21 Nor from the iniquity of Peor until this day Josh 22.17 No nor yet from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit for the perfecting holiness in the Fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 And as we ought to leave the Servants and the Ass below So much less must we our selves stay with the Ass below this is to make our selves Spiritual Asses indeed while we should with our Father Abraham go up to God above 4. Abrahams Confidence herein 1. Speaking Prophetically we will both of us come again to God Gen. 21.5 And 2. God will provide himself a Lamb v. 8. As to the 1. Of these Some Popish Casuists say that Abraham here uttered an untruth or more plainly told a lye seeing he went with a purpose to do that to Isaac which would certainly hinder him from returning again This is wickedly said concerning the Father of those Children who will not
Works hath a double respect The 1. Respecting Gods part ma the 2. Respecting Man 's As it 1. Respects God who is Unchangeable so that Covenant must in some sense be Unchangeable also to wit in the substantial part of it which is as Unchangeable as Gods Justice by this all the Sons of Adam that do not Believe are Condemned and by this Christ was brought from Heaven to be made under the Curse of that Covenant Gal. 3 13. that he might fufil it for all that Believe in him 2. As it Respects Mans part so it is Changeable as to its accomplishment by Man with whom it was made it being not built upon Gods Unchangeable purpose within himself that it should stand for ever in that first Paradise Dispensation and not be changed but it was left to the Liberty and Free Will of Man either to keep it or break it as he himself best pleased God neither purposed nor promised to give Adam any additional Grace of influence whereby he should be caused to keep this first Covenant as he doth in the second Covenant but only Life is promis'd him on condition of his obedience by that Grace he was created with That God never intended the first Covenant Dispensation in Paradise to stand for ever is evident three ways 1. The Scripture saith nothing of Adam after his Fall save only his begetting of Children and of his Dying but little of his Life and as little of the Place of Paradise where it was is not well known which intimates God had a farther design to lay aside that first Law-Dispensation and to set up the Covenant of Grace given therefore to Adam in Paradise immediately after his Fall 2. God no where saith that he would be the God of Adam as he oft saith the God of Abraham for in the first Covenant he was to win this Honour by his Obedience and so to wear it This Royal Charter thus dated expired at his Disobedience God the Creator never said he would be Adam's God in the first Covenant so as to grant him influences to obey and to obey to the end as was to him and to us by God the Redeemer in the Covenant of Grace Ezek. 36.27 Deut. 30.6 Jer. 32.39 40. c. The 3. Evidence is The Lord did purposely give Adam that positive Law of prohibiting his Eating the Fruit upon pain of Death and did purposely suffer the Serpent to tempt him although he foresaw the Tempter would Master the Tempted All this was a Divine design to have the first Covenant abolished and then to deal with faln Man in the Dispensation of a better Covenant They first Covenant gave way for the Theatre of Grace to be Acted in the second to be short the Law Covenant is abolished not only the Ceremonial Law under which the Galatians were not but also the curse of the Moral Law in sundry Respects 1. It remains not for Justification for no Man is justified by the Law in the sight of God Gal. 3.11 for the Law promiseth Life only on condition of compleat Obedience and this is not to be found in any Man save in the Man Christ Jesus 2. It remains not for Condemnation for Christ is the end of the Law for Righteousness and he Redeemeth us from the curse of it so that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 A Believers first Husband as to judging and condemning him is Dead and if he to wit the Law Covenant will he cursing and condemning any one in Christ that soul may say Uxori lis non intenditur the Law cannot commence a Suite against a Wife under Covert Baron I am Married to Christ Go Sue my Husband Rom. 7.2 3 4. Nor 3. Doth it remain in its commanding any more than in its condemning Power as it hath lost its Damning so its Domineering Authority Thus the Apostle argues Ye are not under the Law but under Grace that is not under the First but under the Second Covenant you are not under the Rigour and Irritation under the Curse and Coaction of the Law as Slaves under a Tyrant forcibly provoking or Compelling and Cursing you by Vertue of Sin therefore saith he sin shall not have dominion over you Rom. 6.14 rebel it may but reign it shall not in any under the Covenant of Grace Sin may have a Being and also a Dwelling in a truely Believing Soul but like those Beasts in Dan. 7.12 hath its Dominion taken away though its Life be prolong'd for a Time and a Season Although it be dejected from its regency yet it is not ejected from its inherency By this Men may know under what Covenant they live If you be led by the Spirit as your Tutor into all goodness righteousness and truth Eph. 5.9 and fetching you home from all your outstrays you are not under the Law or Covenant of Works Gal. 5.18 but are Sons of God Rom. 8.14 and have received the Spirit of Sonship or Adoption Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.13 15. mortifying the Flesh c. Thus the Law as a Covenant Christ becoming sin for us and a curse for us and satisfying for all that ever the first Covenant required of us in our stead and as our Surety hath taken out of the way and Nail'd it to his Cross with the same Nails wherewith himself was Nailed Col 2.14 So we are dead to the Law and it is dead to us by the Body of Christ Rom. 7.4 his Body bearing our sins upon the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 So that now 't is only the Rule of all Righteousness in the Hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 and in the Hand of his Spirit also Rom. 7.9 and 8.9 without which subserviency the Law is but a dead and a killing Letter 2 Cor. 3.6 when Christ is not the Writer his Spirit the Ink and Mans Heart is the Table whereon it is written by the Finger of God Rom. 2.15 and 6.17 and Heb. 8.10 To have the Law from which is our only fear a Servant to the Gospel is our great comfort now through the over-ruling Grace of the second Covenant the Law Covenant is become David's delight Psal 119.92 And Oh how he loved Gods Law ver 97. as his Rule and Counsellor ver 24. above Gold ver 127. yea as his Comforter against the sting of Death which is Sin and against the strength of Sin which is the Law not made by the purchase of Christ subservient to the Gospel 1 Cor. 15.56 57. where Blessed Paul Christs chief Herauld proclaims Victory over Sin and Death with a World of Solemnity and Triumph through Christ who had disarm'd Death and unsting'd Sin by satisfying the curse of the Law as he hath taken away not Sin it self but the Guilt of it so not Death it self but the Sting of it it may now be safely put into our Bosoms How the second Covenant is Everlasting though the first be abolished both à parte ante and à parte post will
by Authority taken from thence It seems this great Doctor of the Gentiles was not of the same opinion with those Jesuits who say that the Epistles of the Apostles were intended only for the use of those Persons and Churches to whom they were first written how much more all the Books of the Prophets in the Old Testament must be antiquated and not concern us as some Jesuited Enthusiasts say in our Day prefering their own Phantastick Revelations above the Rule of Scripture though both Testaments were writ by Divine Inspiration We must rather be of Godly Josiah's Mind who saith concerning Moses many hundred years before him that Moses wrote for us 2 Kin. 22.13 the Book of the Law which Moses wrote with his own hand v. 8. and 2 Chron. 34.14 and ordered to be laid up in the sides of the Ark Deut. 31.26 this Book good Josiah reckoned did speak to them in his Day and feared that great Wrath was kindled against them because they had not hitherto hearkened to do all that was written as he saith concerning us Reckoning aright that General Directions Recorded in Gods Word do Infallibly concern all Ages as 1 Cor. 10.6 11. or likewise of Blessed Stephens Mind who speaking of such as live in the Days of the New Testament saith that Moses recieved the lively Oracles of God to give them unto us Act. 7.38 Moses did indeed deliver those Oracles to the Fathers of the old Testament but they receiv'd them to give them unto us under the New and thus the writings of all the other Prophets after Moses were written for us and for our Learning for Paul's learning and for the learning of that famous Church of Rome the fame of whose Faith was publish'd through the World Rom. 1.8 how much more for our Learning who come far short of their high Attainments and cannot pretend to a greater Perfection The fifth Argument If the Old Testament was disannulled by the Death of Christ then the Church was without a Canon or Rule from that time for many years until the N. Testament was written but this is to suppose what may not be supposed For those Scriptures in which Timothy had been trained up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a Child and wherein Paul exhorts him to continue they being profitable to teach reprove c. 2 Tim. 3.15 16. must be the Scriptures of the Old Testament seeing at the time of Timothy's Childhood none of the New Testament was written for Timothy was taken into Paul's Fellowship before any either Gospel or Epistle was published some of the Epistles were writ before any of the Gospels as that of the first to the Thessalonians yet this was writ after Timothy had joined himself to Paul for Paul's Preaching to the Thessalonians must be before his writing to them as appeareth by many passages in that Epistle yet Timothy was taken into Paul's company before Paul Preached there for the former was done Acts 16.1 2 3. but the latter not till afterward Acts 17.1 c. So that the first New Testament Scripture not being writ when Timothy was grown up and received into Paul's Society see Lightfoots Harmony and Chronology for this It necessarily follows that those Scriptures wherein Timothy was trained up from his Childhood were the Scriptures of the Old Testament yet Paul's Testimony of those very Scriptures was that they were Divinely Inspired and profitable to teach Truth to convince Errour to reprove Vice to instruct in Righteousness and to make wise unto Salvation v. 15 16. The consequence then is evident from hence that the Old Testament could not be look'd upon or supposed by the Church as an obsolete and cancell'd Bond or that the Church was then without a Canon The sixth Argument If the Scriptures of the Old Testament were given by Divine Inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 And if the holy men of God the Prophets wrote them as they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 and their Writings were therefore called The Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 then without all controversie there must be the same holy and heavenly Truth or Divine Doctrine found in them as is in the Scriptures of the New Testament There being but one Spirit as there is but one God one Faith breathing in both Testaments Eph. 4.4 'T was this one Spirit which inspired the Pen-men of them both who is the Spirit of Truth John 14.17 leading both the Prophets and the Apostles into one and the same Truth John 16.13 14 15. Therefore the Books of both should be received with the same Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 and neither of them ought to be refused NB. 1. To reject the Old Testament is to reject the Holy Spirit that speaks in it 2. 'T is not only rejecting but resisting the Holy Ghost as Stephen charges the Stiff-necked Jews for rejecting the words of the Prophets which they had spoke to them by the Spirit Act. 7.51 Let none now commit the same sin 3. It can come from no other than from the Inspiration of the Devil to reject the Old Testament which was writ by the Inspiration of God contrary products must proceed from contrary principles The seventh Argument If the Old Testament Scriptures be profitable for such blessed uses as are afore-mentioned then they who cast them away as unprofitable are not only Enemies to the Churches Profit and Edification and are Friends to Errour Vice and sinful Folly all which three the Apostle declareth are disappointed by those Scriptures convincing Errour reproving Vice and making wise to Salvation but are also Blasphemers against God and his holy Spirit that did dictate and indite them There be blasphemous deeds as well as blasphemous words Ezek. 20.27 Now to blaspheme any part of the holy Scriptures either by word or deed is Blasphemy in an high degree and at least borders near upon that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost Matth. 12.31 32. That Opinion of rejecting any part of the holy Canon of the Scriptures which is undoubtedly very hateful to God as well as hurtful to men can never be a good Opinion 'T is not Heaven but Hell-born The eighth Argument If the Prophets as well as the Apostles be the Doctrinal Foundation of the Church as Christ is the Personal thereof 1 Cor. 3.11 then the Books of the Prophets Moses c. may not be rejected But the Antecedent is clear from Eph. 2.19 20. speaking of a Gospel-Church Therefore the Consequent must be clear also Mark well Paul puts no difference betwixt the Doctrines of the Prophets and that of the Apostles he makes them not two but one only Foundation therefore we cannot be true Christians nor indeed a true Church as the Ephesians were and that of Ephesus was unless we be Built upon both such as remove themselves from the Foundation of the Prophets may ere long make as little matter of Building upon the Apostles not regarding any written Word at all but rather
Apostle calls The wages of wickedness 2 Pet. 2.15 it being for a wicked Art and for a wicked End as thinking to bribe him with Gifts that he might curse Israel c. 3. By what Motives beside the Money is Balam's first call seconded Answ Those Princes the Messengers back their Suit to him with two Arguments the first is drawn from their own and their Master's Danger because they saw Israel mightier than they which was the fruit of God's Blessing upon his People according to his Promise Gen. 18.18 and according to his Performance also Psal 105.24 as their Enemies did acknowledge Exod. 1.9 c. the more molested the more multiplied in the very Land of their Affliction and so while wandring in the Wilderness This Balak look'd on without cause as threatning his Kingdom 's Ruin Their second Reason or Argument was from the Facility of the enterprize 't was easie for Balaam to curse Israel which done it would be easie for the King to destroy them ascribing to this Sorcerer an infallible Power of Cursing whom he pleased which is only the Work of the great God Gen. 3.17 18. and 4.12 Mar. 11.21 c. No doubt but herein either Balak flatter'd Balaam greatly or God had suffered to Balak's Knowledge Balaam's Sorceries to be very successful in such Cases as God did to those of Simon-Magus Act. 8.9 10. and among the Pagans such magical publick and particular Imprecations and Execrations against their Enemies did by Divine Permission oft prevail in War by raising up Infernal Spirits which they call'd their Tutelar Gods to annoy their Adversaries by some damnable Contract and implicit if not explicit Covenant with the Devil the Lord judicially suffering them thus to erre in their ways and giving them up to believe the lies of Diabolical Divination Yea and among those blind Heathens the Devil to drive the more subtle Trade for Hell used to play a double Game imploying the Familiars of Magicians not only to lay on Evils as Evil Spirits but also to take those Evils off by Collusion that they might seem to be good Spirits and here this Soothsayer must bless Balak and curse Israel the Devil doing Evil both as an Angel of Light and as a Prince of Darkness and more hurt by resembling the former than by being really the latter and had God suffered the like success here Balak's design was most dangerous for obtaining his Desire could Balaam have compass'd a Curse from God upon Israel they had been easily vanquish'd for whom God blesseth their Enemies flee and whom he curseth they become a Prey to their Adversaries Deut. 28.7 25 33. and Psal 37.22 This Sorcerer had the Devil on his side and at his beck but the God of Israel would not be so as afterwards The Fourth Inquiry is What was the Issue of Balaam's first call by Balak Answ When Balaam had received such an honourable Embassage ver 7. He suspended his Answer to it until the next Morning ver 8. for that Night he took as time little enough to consult with his Diabolical Oracles though this Prophet of the Devil pretended to receive his Revelation from Jehovah the better to impose upon the credulity of those Embassadors that he consulted with God and not with the Devil Hereupon some Rabby's say that his pretending to consult with Jehovah was the Reason why the Princes of Moab are here only mentioned for the Princes of Midian mentioned in Conjunction with those of Moab ver 7. hearing that he would consult with God did thereupon withdraw themselves as despairing of Success For they knew from Jethro their Prince that God would never Consent to the Destruction of that People who were so near and dear to him But suppose it was not the Devil who is call'd the God of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 and might be this Sorcerer's God that He promis'd those Princes He would consult with that Night but Jehovah the true God which may well enough be supposed 1. Because the business Balaam was courted about concerned the People of Jehovah whom Balak sought to turn God's Favour from and to bring God's curse upon them by this Inchanter's means therefore of him he must make his Inquiry 2. The true God might come to this wicked Man by Night as 't is said ver 9. and 20. who used to speak to the true Prophets by Dreams and Visions of the Night Numb 12.6 Job 4.13 and 33.14 15. Jerem. 23.25 28. And sometimes God revealed his Counsels for his People's sake to wicked Men of old in Dreams by Night as to Abimelech Gen. 20.3 to Laban Gen. 31.24 to Pharaoh Gen. 41.25 to Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 2.45 and 4.21 22. so still God gives Gifts of Prophecie to those no better than Workers of Iniquity Mat. 7.22 23. and 24.24 and 2 Tim. 3.8 c. But it may not a little be admired and doubted how this Soothsayer could be thus Confident to have the true God at his Beck that he should have God's Counsel that Night so bring the result next Morning to the Princes because 1. This Spelman of Satan could not be in Coverant with God so as to command him concerning the Work of his Hands Isa 45.11 Though undoubtedly he was in Covenant with the Devil and had his Familiars at his Call and Command Nor 2. Was Prophecy any constant Gift or an abiding Quality by which even the true Prophets might always operate in their Prophesying Work and as often as they pleased but their particular Revelations did absolutely depend upon God's good Will and Pleasure To this I Answer 1. That the ground of this Mad Prophet's as he is call'd 2 Pet. 2.16 Confidence was by Reason of the Experience he had divers times of Divine Revelations granted unto him upon his former Requests 2 Pet. 1.21 Answer 2. Balaam being a Prophet of the Devil and a Magician as Basil Chrysostom Origen Augustin c. prove him to be 1. From his being call'd a Soothsayer Josh 13.22 2. From his using Inchantments Numb 24.1 with 23.23 therefore He built so many Altars c. 3. From his endeavouring to Curse Israel c. He was undoubtedly in contract with that Prince of Darkness and by Vertue of that Covenant He could command the God of Ekron Beelzebub though not the God of Israel according to that of the Poet Flectere si nequeo superos Acheronta movebo Though God might not come at his Call he knew the Devil would And though He had some Knowledge of the true God yet was it notoriously jumbled and mingled with Pagan Superstitions and Diabolical Witchcrafts while he covered the practick Part of his Worship with a fair pretence of Divine Revelations Answer 3. Though the Spirit of God came upon this wicked Man in Divine Revelations that Night as 't is said was done Numb 24.2 yet was it for glorious Ends to discover the Rottenness and Hypocrisie of this mad Prophet who was courted by Foreign Nations as the great Power of God
three ways to spoil the Countrey v. 17 18. it seems not only Saul's Army which he summon'd in by sound of Trumpet v. 3. but also the Three Thousand for his and his Son's Life-guard v. 2. did all shrink away save these Six Hundred when they saw Samuel desert Saul in so high Displeasure and Saul hastening after him from Gilgal to Gibeah v. 15 16. hoping still and hanging upon him for some assistance from him N. B. Secondly In their want of Smiths to furnish them with Arms v. 19. this was the crafty Policy of those Tyrannical Philistines not only to take away all the old Arms of the Subdued Israelites but all their Artisicers also that should have made them new Arms lest they should Rebel with them The Caldeans did the like to Israel afterwards 2 Kings 24.14 to prevent Rebellion Thirdly In the want of all Instruments even for their Husbandry v. 20 21. nothing being allowed but the File and though they had divers Tools for Tillage yet were they so blunt that they were unfit for War as sometime had been used Judg. 3.31 and 5.8 c. and to be sure the Philistines Foges would not sharpen them for any such use much less furnish them with Instruments for Battle N. B. 'T is sad with the Protestant Church when we must go down to Popish Powers to sharpen our Tools for God's Husbandry c. Mark likewise There was such a want of Arms that no Weapon of War was in any hand but in Saul's and Jonathan's v. 22. the Six Hundred Men were Weaponless N. B. All which shews into what Slavery God's People may be plunged by being the Slaves of sin c. CHAP. XIV CHapter the Fourteenth holds forth 1. The Wonderful Victory God graciously granted to Israel by Jonathan in this very low condition as above And 2. Saul's Rashness in imposing an Oath whereby he not only prevented a compleating of that Glorious Conquest but also proclaimed his own Hypocrisie which till then laid lurking in his Bosome The First Remark upon the first part is The Noble and Resolute Undertaking of Jonathan in adventuring to wage War against the numberless Number of the Enemies Army with the Assistance only of his own Armour-Bearer from v. 1. to v. 17. N. B. Saul had dishonoured God as well as displeased Samuel and brought Israel into a desperate Estate now God comes to Honour Jonathan his Son by bestowing upon him a special Instinct of his Spirit and an extraordinary strong actuated Faith founded upon those Divine Promises of One chasing a Thousand c. Deut. 28.7 and 32.10 and possibly this good Son of a bad Father might act Faith upon that Promise God gave to Samuel I will send thee a Man that shall save Israel from the Philistines chap. 9.16 These were Jonathan's Encouragements for so daring an Adventure and indeed the right grounds of all true Valour and Magnanimity N. B. Should we reckon only by the Rules of common Reason this Attempt of Jonathan's would be judged a Fool-hardy Enterprize therefore 't is judged to be the force of his Faith and that which was corroborated by his former experience in Conquering a Garrison of the Philistines without his Father's Assistance chap. 13.3 and hereupon he acquaints not Saul though he was his Father King and General with his present design v. 2. lest he should have hindered him from it unto which he had an extraordinary Call from God to undertake as appeared by God's so signally owning him with Success He well knew his Timerous Father would call him a Temerarious Son c. N. B. Manlius Torquatus's Son lost his Life for Conquering his Foes without his General 's Order to fight though his own Father was the General c. N. B. Though Jonathan durst not acquaint his Father who was above him yet did he his Squire who was under him and he proved an Obsequious Servant resigning up his Will into the Will of his Master when he took in the real Impressions of his Master 's Religious Arguments saying to him Come let us go up to this Garrison of the Vncircumcised So he call'd them to strengthen his own Faith and the Faith of his Servant they are not in Covenant with God as we are so can have neither Hope in God nor Help from God as we may It may be the Lord will work for us which were not words of doubting the thing for he was assured by God's Promise that he would save his People and he felt himself stirred up by God's Spirit to this Exploit yet was not certain that God would do it at this time and in this way and by this means N. B. In all which he sedately submitteth to the Holy Will and Wisdom of God and yet his Faith was above his Fear believing There was no restraint with God to save by few or by many v. 6. Good Jonathan had learnt this Lesson from the experience of Gideon where God said The People are yet too many and used only Three Hundred Men and those Armed only with Trumpets Lamps and Pitchers Judg. 7.4 c. He knew what Shamgar alone did against the Philistines with an Oxe-Goad or a Plough-share Judg. 3.31 and what a Glorious Victory Samson alone had obtained with no other Weapon but the Jaw-bone of an Ass Judg. 15.15 yea and Deborah had done mighty things when Israel were almost as badly Armed as they were at this time Judg. 5.8 yea and that late famous Victory obtained by Samuel was not got by the strong Forces of Men but by the Thunderings of the great God 1 Sam. 7.10 God orders it so that through weaker means Men may see his greater strength the less of Man the more of God c. The Second Remark is Jonathan's putting into practice his designed though difficult Undertaking no sooner had he satisfied his Servant v. 7. who faithfully assured him he was resolv'd to live and die with his Master and embark himself in the same bottom with him then Jonathan having got Assurance of his Servants Assistance wants still some more Assurance of his God's Assistance also for though he had a General Promise of Victory yet wanted he a particular promise thereof and therefore he said only It may be the Lord will help us N. B. Hereupon for the farther fortifying of his Faith he begs a Sign from God which was when we shew our selves if they say Tarry till we come to you then we will proceed no farther but if they say Come up unto us Then the Lord hath delivered them into our hands which latter the Lord ordered as an Answer to his Prayer v. 8 9 10 11 12 13. N. B. Such extraordinary Impulses of God's Spirit for asking a Sign had been before now as in Eleazar Abraham's Servant Gen. 24 13 c. and in Gideon Judg. 6.37 c. which are no Presidents for us for we have the word written for our Rule which they wanted So Jonathan here by the Instinct of
only Mortal Men but common Ghosts yet ascending out of the Earth as if he came again from the state of the Dead N. B. Saul hereupon asks her what is his form Hebr. v. 14. which implieth that the Witch did practice her Witchcraft in a private place where the Spectrum first appeared to her and Saul was not an eye-witness at the first nor as yet saw the Apparition while he made this double enquiry The Witch tells him his form that he asked after namely it is an Old Man that cometh up and he is covered with a Mantle that is the same Mantle he used to wear when he was Israel's Judge and Prophet yea the same that Saul did rend Chap. 15.27 and that wherein he was Buried saith Lyra at random when Saul perceived it was Samuel he stooped with his face to the ground and bowed himself Osiander's Opinion here is with others that Saul saw nothing like Samuel when he thus Worshiped but as the Witch only saw the form but heard not the voice so Saul heard the voice only but saw not the form yet he Worshiped from the words of the Witch that inform'd him it was Samuel but 't is more probable that Saul both saw him and heard him preach his Funeral Sermon to himself notwithstanding his Worshipful Cringes towards this mock Samuel for this was that the Devil chiefly aimed at to delude Saul in his Adoring Satan instead of Samuel well knowing that Saul regarded not Samuel while he was alive yet is now made so mad for his Advice in his Distress that he will give him that Adoration which is due to the Lord only may he but have him raised from the dead N. B. After this Discourse betwixt Saul and his Dame she calls him into her Conjuring Room to see this supposed Samuel and then was the time of Saul's bowing to him at his first entrance and when the Witch had brought them two together she tho' Vilis Operaria a poor Pains taker as Josephus calls her yet had so much good manners as to withdraw from them and to leave them to themselves to debate their Secrets as appeareth from v. 21. she came to Saul Before we come to the Dialogue betwixt Saul and Mock Samuel v. 15. which is the Ninth Remark this Grand and Grave Enquiry is first to be answered to wit N. B. Note well Who was the other party that spake to Saul Answer the First Some Popish and other Writers do affirm it was the true Samuel upon these Arguments As First 'T is said that Samuel Prophesied after his Death Ecclesiasticus 46.21 To which we say that is but an Apocryphal Argument and therefore cannot be a Canonical Proof Besides that Author begs Pardon for his Darkness in his beginning of that Book Their Second Argument is That he is oft called Samuel in this Story To this we say He is called so because both Saul and the Witch thought him to be so though really he was not so as the Sun and Moon are called the two Great Lights though some Stars are really bigger yet seem not so to us As an Actor of a King in a Play is call'd the King but really may be a Rogue Their Third Argument is He foretold future contingents which come not within the compass of Satan's cognizance but belongs to God alone Isa 41.22 23 and to whom God reveals them To this we say Such is Satan's Sagacity from his long Experience that he can foresee such Events as are come to their working Causes He knew Saul's Rejection and David's Election the Philistines Courage and Israel's Despondency therefore might give a shrew'd guess what would be the end of such means that were now at work towards it Moreover the Lord sometimes useth the Ministry of an Evil Spirit revealing future things to him as 1 Kings 22.21 22 23. Judg. 18.6 Answer the Second It was certainly Satan in the similitude of Samuel which appeareth evident upon these grounds as First Briefly The Souls of the Saints do immediately at Death go up to God to Rest there Rev. 14.13 and their Bodies are laid up in the Grave as in God's Repository until the Resurrection God keeps his Servants Bones Psal 34.20 So that neither the Philistines could break David's Bones saith Abenezra nor could the cursed Jews break the Bones of Christ Joh. 19.36 And they cannot be Raised up but by the Almighty power of God and therefore not by any power of the Devil or his Imps. Secondly 'T is altogether improbable that the Lord who so lately refused to Answer Saul by those means of God's own appointment Saul himself being a witness hereof chap. 28.6 should now Answer him or suffer Samuel to Answer here by such means as by Witchcraft which God both Contemned and Condemned Thirdly The very Circumstances of this Relation do discover this Party in the Dialogue to be no good but an Evil Spirit as 1. That he receives that Worship from Saul V. 14. which a Good Spirit would not own Rev. 19.10 and 22.8 9. God only is to be Worshipped 2. This Spirit pretends to be disquieted by Saul and his Witch which is not only absurd but impossible for a Good Spirit to be that is returned to God Eccles 12.7 Entred into peace Isa 57.2 Lodged in Abraham 's Bosom Luk. 16.22 And at Rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 Being made perfect in Heaven Heb. 12.23 The Fourth Argument is Had this been the true Samuel who was so zealous of God's Honour and so faithful a reprover of sin in Saul Amongst his other sins for which he reproves him here he would not have omitted this heinous sin of his asking counsel from this Witch for which great Transgression with others he is expresly said to be Slain by the Lord 1 Chron. 10.13 14. The Fifth Argument is Had it been the true Samuel then either he came on his own accord and so he consented to the Power of this Witches Magick Art when she called him up by Conjuration which is absurd to imagine Or he came unwillingly and if so then the Devil must have a power over the Glorified Souls of Saints to dragg them whither he pleaseth which is a Blasphemous Supposition The Sixth Argument is If it were the true Samuel then must he come by the will of God or by the power of Satan in this Witch He could not come by God's will at the call of a Witch for God had forbidden Witchcraft in many Scriptures aforementioned but in none doth he warrant it nor could he come against God's Will by the force of Magick for then the Devil must be more mighty than Almighty God Here is Saul's Will and the Witches Will but not one word of God's Will Had God sent Samuel he would not have called obedience his disturbance The Seventh Argument is This Spectrum's coming in a Mantle makes it manifest to be a meer Cheat and a Mock Samuel for the true Samuel had now no Mantle to bring with him
Kingdom to him No sooner was Jehosaphat who had awed him while he lived now Dead but he shew'd himself in his black and bloody Colours and being a gross Idolater became so bloody minded that to strengthen himself from Corrivalship in his Kingdom he murther'd all his own Brethren N.B. The Rabbins tell us that he slew them because they did Patrizare follow their Father's steps and walk'd in the good ways of Godly Jehosaphat and would not by any means conform to his cursed Idolatries He was so bad a Son as a good Father could well have c. Remark the Third He had a wicked Woman to his Wife Athaliah the Daughter of Ahab 2 Chron. 21 6. who drew him to follow her Father 's wicked ways 2 Kings 8.18 she degenerated not from that Beldame her Mother Jezebel who stirr'd up her Husband Ahab to work wickedness 1 Kings 21.25 so this Daughter of Jezebel or Sister to Ahab as some say however a second Jezebel did the like to her Husband Jehoram 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like Bird like Egg. Good Jebosaphat saith Peter Martyr was much mistaken in his measures when he match'd his eldest Son and Heir Apparent of his Kingdom with such an Idolatrous Branch and Brat No doubt but Jehosaphat did it upon a Reason of State and out of a seeming Godly Policy that this Marriage might be a means to unite the two divided Kingdoms under one Head and in the true Religion but matters happened quite contrary and this unequal Marriage is noted here and elsewhere as the cause both of the notorious wickedness of his Posterity and of the grievous Calamities that befel them thereupon N.B. Oh the sad Effects of violating Divine Laws for the sake of Humane Reasons After these three Preliminary Remarks come we now to a more particular Description of this degenerate Son of a good Father Remark the First This Jehoram the Son of Jehosaphat laid a bloody Foundation of his Kingdom in the slaughter of his own Brethren and of many of the Nobles of Judah because saith Tirinus his Brethren opposed him in his departing from his good Father's Religion and establishing Idolatry and the Nobles took part with them in this good Opposition and he feared saith Osiander that these honest Noble-men would revenge the murder of his Brethren Hence Sir Walter Rawleigh well observes that this Jehoram was the first that is mentioned to have set up Irreligion by force This desperate Tyrant thought it a greater Happiness to be feared than to be loved he cuts off those he feared by whom he might have been dreadful to others 2 Chron. 21.4 This Foundation laid Romulus of the Roman Kingdom in the Blood of his Brother Rhemus and many more in Ancient History and this is the modern Turkish manner also N.B. A Wicked Wife that Jezebel of Jerusalem Athaliah drew Jehoram to all this Villany Remark the Second See how surely his heinous bloody and inhumane Sin found him out Numb 32.23 for first a terrible and stinging Letter of Elijah's writing came to his hand 2 Chron. 21.11 12 13 14 15. when he saw or foresaw the Spirit of Jezebel working so bloodily in the Butchery of his Brethren and Nobles wherein Elijah lets Jehor●●● know that he sinned wilfully after he had received the Knowledge of the Truth from ●is good Father Jehosaphat and now there remained no more Sacrifice for Sin but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and fiery Indignation which shall devour both his Person and Family Heb. 10.26 27. N.B. There be various Opinions about this Letter of Elijah to Jehoram upon which abstruse Point I am requested to inlarge c. The First is The Romish Doctors Caussinus and this Jesuit Caussinus makes Elijah the first Monk among Mankind who founded the order of the Carmelites and such as do Papizare symbolizing with the Romish Church do affirm that this Letter Elijah sent out of Paradise by the hand of an Angel seven or nine Years after his Translation and Assumption thither Ita sanctis mortuis res vivorum sunt curae Thus the Saints departed take care of the affairs of those that live in this lower World saith Genebrard a Popish Divine of Paris a good Hebrician but a petulant Writer this is asserted to authorize that Romish Doctrine of Saints and Angels Invocation Our Bishop Andrews gives this Character of this Genebrard that he served to verifie much Learning and Railing may be Accidents in one Subject And great Grotius himself doth thus far gratifie this Popish Point saying that this Letter to be written by Elijah after his Rapture is no more to be admired than the Divine Dream of Judas Maccabens wherein he saw Onias the High-Priest and Jeremias the Prophet Praying for the People after they both were Dead 2 Maccab. 15.12 13 14. but Sir Walter Rawleigh saith better that these Conceits grounded only upon the Jewish Rabbins Traditions are Tales somewhat like the Fable devised by Erasmus of our Lady's the Mother of our Lora's Letters or of the Verse that was sent from Heaven by St. Giles 'T is as ridiculous to say that Elijah appear'd with this Letter to some good Man the Messenger hereof as indeed he did to the three Disciples at Christ's Transfiguration Matth. 17.3 4 5. long after his Translation The Second Opinion is That of Maluenda and Mariana who deny that this was Elijah the Thisbite but another Prophet of the same Name or that Elisha was call'd here Elijah because he came in the Spirit of Elijah resting upon him Thus John Baptist is call'd Elias for the same Reason Luke 1.17 Matth. 17.12 13. with this Opinion of those two learned Jesuits both Junius and Piscator seem to concur saying that it was Elisha's Letter yet bearing the Name of Elijah's in whose Spirit and Power it was written that the writing might have the more Authority and weight with it The Third Opinion is That of Dr. Lightfoot who in his Chronical Order of this History placeth this Passage in Elijah's Life-time before his Translation saying 't is ridiculous to hold as the Jews do that Elijah sent this Letter out of Heaven after he was rapt up thither but this Jehoram slew his Brethren and the Princes of Judah presently after his Father had left him in the Throne and was gone away for Moah His Father Jehosaphat being now out of the Land he riseth up against his Brethren and Nobles and slew them resolving to keep the Kingdom Elijah being yet alive heareth of this writes this stinging Letter to him The Fourth and most received Opinion is That Elijah before his Rapture did foresee by his Prophetick Spirit what a wicked King this Johoram would prove so impious as not to endure a living Prophet to declare the Truth to him upon Earth therefore Elijah while alive writes this Prophecy and left it saith Dr. Mayer with Elisha as he did that concerning Hazael's and Jehu's coming to their Kingdoms as they walked and talked 2
and Grotius Jeroboam's Golden Calf there had turned Beth-el the House of God into Beth-aven Hos 10.5 an House of Wickedness as their Names Hebr. do signifie The filthy Dust of those Mawmets must not be allowed to lie near Jerusalem saith Lavater but it was carried about eight Miles from thence to disgrace that Idolatrous City Bethel Mark 2. This zealous King Deposed the Idolatrous Priests c. ver 5. call'd Chemarims Hebr. not only because they wore black Cloaths as the word signifies after a Superstitious fashion which is the concurrent opinion of Junius Piscator Mercerus Munsterus Montanus Pagnin c. but also because they were Tinged Singed and burnt black inwardly with an Hell-fire-fervency for a false Religion saith Avenarius c. N. B. The Prophet Hosea speaks of those Priests Hebr. Chemarims Hos 10.5 affecting a black Habit Sanctimoniae Ergô for Sanctimony's sake And the Prophet Zephany saith in Josiah's Day that God will cut off the Name of the Chemarims Zeph. 1.4 namely Baal's Chimney Chaplains black Sooty Fellows like those Greasie Mass-Priests or Abby-Lubbers in the Romish Church Elias in Tisbi saith these Atratei Black-coats were shut up in Cloysters and the Jewish Rabbins call the Monks Chemarims Many Men addicted to Idolatry entertained those Chemarims in Josiah's time Jer. 3.6 Zeph. 1.1 4. as too many do Harbour Mass-Priests in our Times those Josiah cut off according to Zephany's Prophecy c. Mark 3. Josiah Destroyed the Idolatrous Grove ver 6. either that Grove which was planted nigh the Temple as Flaccherus supposeth wherein the Image of Baal was Worshipped after the manner of the Gentiles who Worshipped Priapus in Groves after which they committed all lascivious Beastiality in promiscuous Copulations therefore the Lord forbade by his Law the Planting of any such Groves Deut. 16.21 because it was the practice of Idolaters 1 Kings 15.13 and might be the occasion of reviving that abominable Idolatry Or rather this was a Representation of that Grove or the Image of it because 't is said He brought out the Grove from the House of the Lord ver 6. and we read of an Image with a Carved Grove about it 2 Kings 21.7 that not God in the Temple but the Devil in the Grove might be Worshipped saith Sanctius And this Image he stamp'd small to Powder at the Brook Kidron and the Powder thereof he poured upon the Groves of that Rascality which had been set on Mischief as Exod. 32.22 23. and which had Worship'd the Groves 2 Chron. 34.4 And this Bastardly Brood so call'd was probably Buried in this infamous place as a brand of Ignominy put upon them saith Tirinus All this was done saith Junius in detestation of Idolatry and for Caution to them that still lived Mark 4. Josiah extirpated the cursed Cells or Seats of the Sodomites ver 7. those abominable Brothel-Houses in which Males prostitute their Bodies to Males which was both a Punishment of Idolatry Rom. 1.23 24 27. and a part of their idol-Idol-worship practised at the Instigation of that impure and diabolical Spirit worship'd in the Idol saith Lavater from 1 Kings 15.12 13. and wickedness was so far spread in this Time saith Sanctius that those heinous Sodomites drove a gainful Trade even in the Temple it self and their spiritual Pollution involved them into such carnal Lusts as the very Women were not ashamed say Sanctius and Osiander to Weave Curtains for hiding the Mens shameless Sodomy acted even by the Priests of the Groves c. Remark the Second Josiah's Reformation after the Temple in City and Countrey Mark 1. He demolish'd all the High Places from the North to the South Coast of the Countrey without Partiality ver 8. neither sparing those Priests of Aaron's Line though they sacrificed not to Idols saith Menochius but to the true God yet because they did it in a forbidden Place Deut. 12.11 therefore he deposed them from their Offices Nor did he spare the Rich more than the Poor saith Junius for when he had polluted all the high Places in other Cities to take away their supposed Sanctity saith Grotius he found an High Place erected by Joshun the Governour of the City at the very Gate after the manner of the Pagans who placed their Tutelar or guardian-Gods at the Gates of their Cities This Joshua in Josiah's Day was a great Man and had a good Name Heb but was a bad Man and of a superstitious Nature He had complied with the Iniquity of former times in setting up an high Place at the Gate nigh his Palace yet Josiah's Zeal spar'd it not Mark 2. Josiah's candour toward those Priests descended from Aaron ver 9. for though they had not kept the charge of the Lord but had foully apostatized in sacrificing to God in forbidden Places either for fear or for favour becoming Time servers and comporting with Idolatrous Kings and therefore must bear their Iniquity namely they and their Posterity must be degraded from their Priestly Functions as a Punishment thereof saith Menochius N.B. Other faults saith Grotius in the Priests were pardoned if they proved Penitent he did not remove them from their Sacerdotal Offices but for Idolatry and Worshipping God in unlawful Places did Degrade them yet because these were 1. Levites of Aaron's Race though lapsed and hurried down the stream of Temptation in former Times And 2. They were Penitents falling by Infirmity but rising again by Repentance Poena or Punishment and Penitency are near of kin being Words of the same Derivation therefore for the Honour of the Priesthood this Pious King takes care of their maintenance when laid aside from the Service of God's Altar as Neh. 13.28 Such an one was that temporizing Priest Nehemiah chased from him But a fuller Example hereof is in Ezek. 44.10 11 12 13 14. they yet were to live out of that allowance for the Priest ver 29 30. Lev. 2.4 5 10 11. and 24.5 6 c. Junius well observeth that their spiritual Blemish put them into the very same State which corporal Blemishes brought them into Lev. 21.17 18. Mark 3. Josiah defiled Topheth ver 10. a pleasant Valley near Jerusalem wherein Idolatrous Kings had cruelly tortur'd and tormented their own Children by burning them to Molech Chap. 16.3 Jer. 7.31 call'd Topheth saith Junius from Toph a Drum which was there beaten lest the Father should hear the most horrible howlings of his Child burning in the Fire N.B. From this abominable abuse of this Valley of Hinnom Tophet was taken for Hell Isa 30.33 which in Matth. 5.22 is call'd Gehenna from this Valley of Hinnom representing that place of Torment without End and past Imagination This fruitful Valley zealous Josiah defiled by Dung and dead Mens Bones c. saith Lavater to prevent the like abuses for ever Mark 4. He likewise took away the Horses of the Sun c. ver 11. which were either 1. Carved Horses to which were adjoined a carved Chariot with the Picture of the Sun according
that this History of Esther seemeth to be after Ezra's Time so that could not be while the Temple-building was hindred N. B. 2. Some Rabbins say the Synagogue of the Jews to whom Mordecai wrote Letters Esth 9.20 was the Author of it But N. B. 3. 'T is the concurrent Conjecture of most Interpreters both Hebrew Greek and Latine that Mordecai himself was its Penman who being a man of God an Eye-witness and a principal Actor in this whole History therefore none so proper and prepared as he for it Besides Serrarius saith Queen Esther her self did contribute to this work who also had the Holy Spirit N. B. 4. Mordecai wrote this Book of Esther yet names not God in it tho' he had many occasions of mentioning that Sacred Name as in prayer fasting and dependance upon God for his Deliverance from most eminent Dangers c. The Reason supposed for his not naming God in it was lest this Book going abroad among the Pagans should be abused as Gen. 1. ver 1. was by them putting in Asima that Samaritan Idol 2 Kings 17.30 instead of Elohim as Aben-Ezra relateth From this corruption of the first verse in the Bible this word Asima afterwards was corrupted into the word Asina which signifies an Ass and from thence the Pagans slandered the Jews that they worshipped an Ass's Head Mordecai foresaw it and prevented this corruption by the Samaritans therefore names not God in this Book This is the more probable because such a mistake some Heathens made of the Hebrew word Jerusalem by making it in bad Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierosulon which signifies Sacrilege c. N. B. 5. This History holds forth the Inconstancy of Human Affairs The lofty Luminaries of a worldly Heaven do fall into an Eclipse and the lowly Shrubs of the Earth are elevated to the Stars Behold here Humility advanced to the Throne and Ambition in its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zenith and Highest Exaltation is hanged upon the highest Gallows This teacheth that the Great Ones of the World ought not to rely upon a Fortune of Ice but to fear every thing Job 3.25 and that the Godly Poor tho' never so low and miserable ought to despair of nothing 'T is the work of Almighty God to look on the Proud and bring him low Job 40.11 12 13. and to lift the Poor from the Dung-hill and set them among Princes 1 Sam. 2.7 8. N. B. 6. Some say Mordecai had a Prophetick Dream wherein he saw a most Dreadful Tempest of Thunder Lightning and Earthquake which was followed with a fight of two fierce Dragons sending forth horrible Hissings many Nations looking on and expecting the Issue of the Combat Then he saw a small Fountain which soon became a great River attended with a Light growing so great as that of the Sun and thereby the Earth was both watered and illuminated Mordecai learnt the Interpretation of this Dream by the great Combat he had with Haman and in the Exaltation of his little Niece Esther that was promoted to so high a Splendour as to Refresh and Englighten her own Nation and others c. The Third General Remark is concerning the Time of this History which 1. Munster Mercator Canus Cedrenus and Vatablus place in some time of the Captivity But 2. All others do unanimously affirm it to be after their Return yet before the Time of Alexander the Great and while the Persian Monarchy stood in its Grandeur moreover 't is said expresly ver 1. in Ahasuerus's Reign Now come we to the Particular Remarks upon Esther chap. 1. which may be reduced to two Heads First The Causes and Occasions of Esther's Advancement And secondly The Occurrences attending the Banquet that occasion'd it all which Dr. Lightfoot doth fix for Time the next following the History of Daniel chapters 10 11 12. Remark the First upon the first Part is the Person who made this sumptuous Feast was the Persian Monarch who is call'd Ahasuerus a Median and Artaxerxes a Persian name saith Bonartius from Dan. 9.1 and Ezra 4.6 7. common Names to these mighty Monarchs 'T is not of necessity to know which of those Persian Kings this was so much controverted among the Learned The Rabbins in Sedar Olam say it was Cambyses call'd by those common Names as is aforesaid upon Ezra 4.6 7. However he was a greater Potentate and Prince than either Cyrus or Darius before him were who had but One hundred and twenty Provinces Dan 6.1 whereas this King had added seven more by his Conquests of India and Ethiopia ver 1. here yet in all his Reign saith Dr. Lightfoot the building of God's Temple lays forgotten Hereupon divers Jews who had gone up to Jerusalem in the first of Cyrus return back during this Disturbance to their old Residences in Babylonia or in Persia again c. among whom were Mordecai with his Niece Esther to do good unto his Country-men abroad when he could no longer help them at home Remark the Second This great Conquerour elevated with his late Conquests of seven more Provinces makes a most sumptuous Feast for all his Nobles c. ver 2. to gratifie them for their former Valour and Victory 'T was a None-such Feast in respect of the number of its Guests largeness of Preparation and continuance of Time for it lasted half a year long and seven days longer in Shushan ver 3 4 5 c. And this he did also to demonstrate his own Splendour and Glory N. B. Tho' this Feast lasted long yet had it an end but so hath not the Feast of a good Conscience Prov. 15.15 Remark the Third Tho' there was much that was Blame-worthy and justly to be condemned at this None-such Royal Feast such as 1. Vain-glory. 2. Prodigality 3. Mis-spending of Time 4. Neglect of Business 5. Contempt of the True God not once acknowledged either by the King or any of his Guests 6. The mad Merriments and profane Jollity and Jovialty for so long a time practised without the least Note of Sanctity or Respect to God's Glory as Merlin well noteth yet something there was very Laudable and rightly to be commended that this King together with his lawful Liberality to his Peers and his comely Courtesie to his People did prescribe by a Law that every man should only Drink what he thought good without either stint or force As there was no Restraint from Sufficiency on the one hand ver 6 7. so there was no Constraint to a Superfluity on the other hand ver 8. This King's Law was that none should compel another to drink more than he listed N. B. 1. Masius reads it none did compel another to drink according to the Law of the Persians which allowed forcing of drink among that loose People this Law Regulated that N. B. 2. Erpenius bewails the Luxury and Intemperance of our Times seeing the Roaring-Boys so they will needs be call'd by a woful Prolepsis Here for Hereafter in Hell when Fire
from the greater to the lesser ver 26 27. saying if none-such Solomon both for Wealth and Wisdom was drawn away by strange Wives unto strange Sins if this befel such a Green-Tree what may Dry Trees expect c. Remark the Second Nehemiah's Severity in special against one of the Sons of Joiada Eliashib the High Priest's Son ver 28. whom he banish'd for ever from all Civil Society either at Court or in the City This Priest is not named here but Wolphius out of Josephus calls him Manasses who Married Sanballat's Daughter N.B. Who being banish'd to Samaria Sanballat built him a fair Temple upon Mount Gerizim near the City Shechem and to keep him with his Wife made him the High Priest thereof Thus this Vile Apostate Brother to Jaddua the right High Priest who met great Alexander as before drew many other prophane Priests like himself and many People also who would not put away their strange Wives unto this Mock Temple of Sanballat and so became the first Founder of that deadly Feud and Sad Schism betwixt the Jews and the Samaritans so as there was no dealings between them John 4.9 Remark the Third Nehemiah in his Vezakarah lehem Hebr. Remember them O my God ver 29. turns the incorrigible of those Priests that hated to be Reformed over unto God to be punish'd by himself for polluting the Priesthood and prophaning the Covenant of that sacred Function wherein God had promis'd to give them an Everlasting Office Numb 25.12 13. 1 Sam. 2.30 Mal. 2.4 5. and wherein they had likewise reciprocally promis'd all faithfulness on their Part according to the Holy Rules God gave them Levit. 8.35 and 21.1 c. and 22.2 c. Vatablus saith here N.B. Wo to those Priests that should outshine all others in godly Patterns yet dare to debauch the People by their wicked Practices Corruptio optimi est pessima the sweetest Wine makes the sourest Vinegar and a wicked Priest is the worst of Mankind and woe to such prophane Priests whom God's People do thus turn over unto God to punish Remark the Fourth Nehemiah's purging the Priest-hood c. ver 30 31. Mark 1. He made all the Ministers of the House of God put away their strange Wives and the Children born of them as Chap. 9.2 and such as would not do so he forced them to forsake both the Temple and the Land of their Nativity lest they should corrupt others Mark 2. When he had purg'd away all the filth and rubbish from the Priesthood and made clean Work he sets all such as willingly Reformed in their several Stations appertaining to them in their sacred Function so caused the Priesthood to shine again as the Word here Tahar Hebr. ver 30. signifieth Mark 3. He prepareth the Wood-offering which saith Vatablus was the sacred fuel to nourish the Coelestial Fire to keep it always burning upon God's Altar And the first-Fruits likewise see Chap. 10.34 35. Grotius out of Josephus saith there was a solemn Day appointed to be observed in Memory of this Wood-offering call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. A bearing of Wood observing both a Season to cut it and a Season to carry it Remark the Fifth The most sweet Conclusion of the Old Testament History a sacred Sentence of his fervent Supplication Mark 1. Nehemiah had prayed before that God would remember those prophane Priests for evil ver 29. and now he shuts up his hole History with this pithy and pregnant Prayer for himself Remember me O my God for good ver 31. as he had done ver 15. and ver 22. and Chap. 5.19 wherein he doth not Brag or Boast of his good Deeds but only produceth them in his Prayer as blessed Testimonies of his Sincerity whereof he begs God's gracious acceptance he prays with so much Reverence as to God yet with so much Confidence as to his God c. Mark 2. This Devout Sentence in Nehemiah's last Supplication is the closing sweet-bit of the Old Testament-Times upon sacred Record for though the Book of Esther be set after this yet is it an History of many Years before this as is abovesaid As for the Prophets they all but the three Last lived before the Captivity Haggai and Zechariah prophesy'd while the Temple was in building Malachy when it was builded saith Mr. Pemble reproving mixt Marriages c. Mark 3. Learned Dr. Lightfoot excellently observeth that though the Scripture be utterly silent to express the number of the Years of the Reign of Artaxerxes Ahasuerus who was Husband to Queen Esther long before Nehemiah's last return to Jerusalem or of any of his Successors in clear Expressions so that we are not told how long he Reigned Yet the Scripture mentions Artaxerxes Darius his second Year Ezra 4.24 his fourth Year Zech. 7.1 his sixth Year Ezra 6.15 his seventh Year Ezra 7.8 his twentieth Year Neh. 1.1 and 2.1 and his thirty second Year Neh. 13.6 but how long he farther Reigned the Scripture gives no account no more than of the former Kings and here the Chronicle of the Old Testament-Times as to any express Terms endeth N. B. 1. It seemed good to the Holy Ghost as the Phrase is Acts 15.28 and to his sacred Penmen to Name some several Years of those Kings intending to continue the Scripture Chronicle until the City Jerusalem was compleated and the Temple thereof was compleatly Reformed and its Worship reduced to its Primitive Purity of the legal Priesthood and there to end the Church's Annals c. N. B. 2. The former of the two last Prophets namely Zechariah doth indeed Prophesy concerning the coming of Christ of his Riding upon an Ass Zech. 9.1 9. of his confounding the three Shepherds to wit the Pharisees Sadduces and Esseans and of his being Sold for thirty pieces of Silver Zech. 11.8 12. and of his Disciples to be scattered Zech. 13.7 and of divers Jews mourning over him whom they had pierced Zech. 12.10 as likewise of the City and Temple now restored to their pristine Beauty their second Destruction Zech. 11.1 c. because of their unbelief Though the Time of Zechary's prophesying be express'd as above yet have we no History of the Time between these Times N. B. 3. The latter of the two last Prophets namely Malachy concludeth his Prophecy Chap. 4. with an Exhortation to the Jews to study well the Law of Moses and the Old Testament and giveth them an Expectation of Elias's coming namely John the Baptist at the beginning of the New Testament Because after the Death of this Prophet Malachy the Spirit of Prophecy was to depart with this Malachy from the Jews and was a Stranger among them until the dawning of the Gospel 'T is true some Apocryphal Books were writ betwixt those Times but they all wanted the dictating of that Holy Spirit which was now departed N. B. 4. Malachy concludeth the Canonical Books of the Old Testament with a Prediction of Elias's the Baptist's coming and with a Threatning
of this Prayer for the Dead Lib. 3. Chap. 19. nor supposing Judas did so is this particular Example sufficient to establish a Doctrine no more than Zipporah's was to prove that Woman might administer Sacraments Exod. 4.25 or the single Example of Rhasis that one may lawfully kill himself N. B. 1. It follows then these Apocryphal Books were upon good grounds not received by the Church among those that were accounted Canonical and plainly of Divine Inspiration because most of them are justly suspected to be stuffed with vain Jewish Fables and not penned in a stile any way agreeable with the Majesty of God's Holy Spirit but far off from bearing the Character of those Scriptures divinely inspired Therefore the Author of this second Book of Maccabees not being inspired of God acknowledges his own Infirmity and desires Pardon for what he had done amiss Chap. 15.39 N. B. 2. Though the Apocrypha cannot prove any Point of the Christian Religion save so far as they consent with the Canonical to confirm the same or rather whereon they are grounded yet may they be read as the Works of Godly Men for the Instruction of Godly Manners as also for advancing our Knowledge of the History of the Jews in which Books is declared that God at all Times had a special Care of his Church never leaving her utterly destitute of means to confirm her in the Faith and Hope of the promised Messiah as likewise they declare the fulfilling of foretold Threatnings by the Prophets for her Exercise and for the Destruction of her Enemies Remark the Fourth in General Beside these Apocryphal Additions to the Canonical Scriptures Josephus the Jew is look'd upon by the Learned as the best of Hebrew Historians and the most curious Searcher of the Jewish Antiquities yet not without his foul Faults as hath been occasionally observ'd all along in this History of the Scriptures and therefore the Romanists especially Barclay by Name are justly blame-worthy for saving that the loss of the Holy Bible would be the lesser loss so Jofephus's Antiquities were but carefully preserved because the whole History of the Old and New Testament may be supplied out of that Josephus the Jew 'T is true Jerome calls Josephus the Greek Livy for the excellency of his History and reckons him in the Catalogue of the Ecclesiastical Authors because not only he was so kind to the Christians tho' himself was a Jew but also and more especially because he speaks so Highly and Honourably of Christ himself in Lib. 18 of his Antiquities therefore Jerom listed up his Name among the Writers of Ecclesiastical History saith Sixtus Senensis Bibl. lib. 4. He was certainly most Learned of all the Jews in his Time both in Greek and Hebrew saith Fuller Miscel lib. 2. cap. 3. and so say Spanhemius Dub. Evang. par 2. Dub. 2. and Vossius de Histor Graec. lib. 2. cap. 8. and Bodinus Method Hist c. but above all Cuneus's Character of him is most observable saying He is an Author worthy of all Praise and who next to the Holy Scriptures deserveth best of all other Authors to be believed And tho' he excells all others in Gravity yet he is not found altogether free from the Dotages of his Jewish Nation-Cuneus de Repub. Hebr. lib. 3. cap. 2 c. Josephus is taxed for this fault by Luther Gen. 34. by Rivet on Exod. 2. and by Chamter c. that writing the Antiquities of his Nation with a design to have them published he describes them as Stately as he could and when he thought the Simplicity of the Scripture did not sufficiently set off the commendaetion of Matters done among the Hebrews he then indented and added many Matters of himself Therefore ought he to be Read with a great deal of Christian Care and Prudence N. B. There was another Jew of later Times who out of True Josephus wrote an Hebrew History under the False Name of Joseph Ben-Gorion above-named Translating Josephus out of Greek into Hebrew By this latter Mock-Joseph many of the Jews were deceived taking him for the True one because both were Priests Learned and Noble c. Geneb Chronol lib. 2. cap. 4. Remark the Fifth in General Tho' both the Apocrypha and Josephus as we have seen be but uncertain Guides to Conduct us through the Wilderness of this History of the Jews in this interspace of time when the Spirit of Prophecy was ceased from Recording the Memorials thereof yet have we a more sure word of Prophecy as 't is said 2 Pet. 1.21 c. even somewhat in the Old Testament which was of Divine Infallible Inspiration to wit the Book of Daniel who writes an History as well as a Prophecy of what assuredly came to pass Mark 1. As First Daniel saw the Vision of the four Monarchies call'd the four Mettal Kingdoms in Nebuchadnezzar's Dream Dan. 2. which troubled the World but especially the Church in the World from the first Rising of Nebuchadnezzar that Golden Head until the Coming of the Everlasting Kingdom of Christ in the Gospel N. B. Notewel Dan. the 7th which Prophecy is as a General Map of all the whole World his following Prophecies are as particular Tables of several Countries therein So in Ch. the 8th he had his Vision of the Persian Ram with a Golden Fleece and full of Flesh but Conquer'd by the Grecian Goat this introduceth some particular Passages relating to the History of the Jews Nehemiah had mentioned Jaduah or Jaddus Neh. 12.22 who was the very High-Priest of the Jews that met this Capering Goat Alexander the Great who was coming with an intent to Plunder Jerusalem in his way to War with the Ram but Jaddus meeting him in his Priestly Vestments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 did so Dazle him that his Fury melted into a strange Veneration more especially when Jaddus shewed him this Prophecy of Daniel that he should certainly Conquer Darius the Ram. Alexander hereby was much encourag'd in his Enterprize and not only offer'd Sacrifice to the True God according to the High-Priest's Direction but also granted much freedom and many favours to the Jews yea whatever they demanded of him Josephus's Antiquities lib. 11. cap. 8. N. B. This 8th Chapter of Daniel is a Notable Abridgment of all Great Alexander's Victories wherein his Pacification toward the Jews while he Warred against all the World are Included and looks more like an History than a Prophecy Mark 2. Daniel Prophetically declareth the History of the Jews distinctly after the Death of Great Alexander who was the Great Horn and broken by a Fever in the flower of his Youth which his Surfeiting and Drunkenness cast him into Dan. 8.8 under a little Horn which sprang up out of one of the four Potent Successors of Alexander ver 9. This was Antiochus Sirnamed Epiphanes Illustrious but Polybius call him Epimanes the Mad-man descended from Seleucus who succeeded Alexander in Syria one of his four Notable Captains and is call'd a
and all glorious within and without and any Alchymy here is abominable Mans Tool pollutes it Exod. 20.25 Secondly Of its Excellent form signifying Eternity This Adopting Ring is round as it is made up of the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9.14 And of Everlasting love Jer. 31.3 So it hath neither beginning nor ending They Disparage the Excellency of this Adopting Union that dare affirm this more than a Gord●an hnot may be untyed by any Alexander our Lord hates putting away Mal. 2.16 Though we oft let go our hold on him yet he abides Faithfull 2 Tim. 2.13 And having this Seal or Sealing Ring the Foundation stands sure ver 19. So that he will never let go his hold of us his love is as unchangeable as himself John 13.1 c. Semel Electus Semper Ditect●s saith Austin if once chosen then ever loved beyond the end c. Thirdly The Mystery of its Excellent Posy which was I am thine and thou art mine as it is phrased Cant. 2.16 doth signifie farther to us the grace of Adoption Grotius saith here Vnus A●●li usus inter alios est signan●● gratiâ Erg●non male veteres donum Spiritus Sancti quo nos obsignamur b●it Annulo Resp●●dere putant the use of a Ring among other uses is to Seal with therefore the Antients did not think amiss in Interpreting by it the gift of the Spirit whereby we are Sealed 2 Cor. 1.21 22. And after Believing me are Sealed Eph. 1.13 and 4.30 Rev. 7.3 to 8. As God sets the Seal of his Spirit to out Souls so we set the Seal of our Faith to his Truth John 3.33 Thus are we said to receive the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father as our Lord cryed to his Father Mar. 14.36 And as this penitent Prodigal did to his here ver 18.21 Rom. 8.15 And because we are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our Hearts Crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Thus Christ giveth the white Stone which hath a new Name written in it like the Posy within this Ring which no Man can read saving he that receiveth it Rev. 2.17 There be many indeed who lay claim to an interest in the Heavenly Father as that Mad Man at Athens laid claim to a share in every Rich Ship that came to shore there c. or as Hanghty Haman who hearing that the King intended to Honour some Man foolishly thought himself to be that same Man c. Esth 6.6 Or as those presuming professours that boldly knock at Heavens Gate and Cry Lord Lord open to us c. Christ who is called an Everlasting Father Isa 9.6 Professeth unto them that he never knew them and bids them depart being but workers of Iniquity Matth. 7.22 23. Alas their Faith was but a fancy and their Confidence no more than Presumption but the True Believer hath a Faith that is unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 and 2 Tim. 1.5 He knows whom he hath believed 2 Tim. 1.12 He apprehends Christ by his Faith as Christ apprehends him by his Spirit Phil. 3.12 So resigning up his All to Christ Gal. 2.20 As this Penitent Son doth to his Indulgent Father He therefore can groundedly say according to the Posy within this Ring My Father is mine and I am his as the Spouse did Cant. 2.16 Fourthly The Mystery of the Richness of this Ring set round about with sparkling Jewels may signifie the Faith of Evidence or Assurance both for Pardon of Sin and for acceptance of Person Indeed there be also plain Rings which is the Faith of Adherence and Recumbency upon Christ the Rock of Ages Isa 26.3 4. Wherein there may be some mixture of Faith and Vnbelief as Mar. 9.24 Yet this Child of light though in some Darkness as to Assurance still leans upon the Lord c. Isa 50.10 They may be True Sons and not Bastards though they cannot Read or Write their own Names So nor such as cannot Read this new Name written in the white Stone or in the Royal Ring which is a Name better than of Sons and Daughters Isa 56.5 The assurance whereof is the Sweet-Meats of a Sanctified Conscience Prov. 15.15 which is Joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 Oh Soul hast thou got this Ring whether broken or whole whether plain or Enambled with Pearls God hath assuredly brought thee into his Miraculous Light 1 Pet. 2.9 A Lease of an Estate for three Lives is much a Lease for a 1000. years is more but this Ring is an Evidence for Eternity Neither Tongue nor Pen can Describe how the Ewe knows her Lamb by smell and bleating Nor how the Spirit of Adoption teacheth Christs Sheep to hear his Voice John 10.3 Cant. 8.13 Oh Soul walk worthy of this Robe und of this Ring This returning Son saith not because I know my Father will disown me no more therefore I will play the Prodigal again c. The 3d. Entertainment this lost Son finds with his loving Father is Shooes for his feet it may well be supposed he returned as good as barefoot Home or with Old Shooes and Clouted like those of the Gibeont●es Josh 9.5 c. N. B. Note well 1. Here is much more restored by the Second Adam than was lost or ruined by the First Adams For the First lost indeed the Robe of Righteousness but the Second Adam redeems not only a Royal Robe for his Redeemed but also a Royal Ring and Royal Shoes yea and the fattest Call after all to Feast upon c. For he is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was Established upon better promises Heb. 8.6 and 7.2 A Covenant of grace and not of works N. B. Note well 2. The Mystery signified by this History of these shoes is the grace of Perseverance in the way of Sanctification Teaching us that every True Repenting Soul returning to his Fathers House hall his feet shod with Gospel Shoes which enableth him to hold on and out in the way of Holiness untill he come to the Race end to wit the Heaven of Happiness 1 Cor. 9.24 Heb. 12.1 N. B. Note well 3. The Mystical feet to be ●●od here are our Affections by which we Run from God untill they be shod with the preparation of the Gospel of Peace Eph. 6.15 Which is Armour of proof indeed then do we Run to God the Natural Motion of our Affections in the fallen Estate is an uneasy Trott untill the Lord take us by the Arms and teach us to go Hos 11.3 The Septuagint reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to pace a more easie Motion to the Rider c. The Gospel is the Doctrine Drine with our peace with God in Christ there is Peace and Joy in Believing Rom. 14.17 and 15,13 And when we are Gospelized that is shod with Gospel Comforts then are our Hearts enlarged to Pallace or to run the way of Gods Commandments Ps 119 32. By the Gospel of Peace God Creates Peace Isa 57.19 Such a Soul toucheth
Evangelist who describes here his miraculous entrance whereas this is only a cunning conveyance 2. Others are of opinion that the Phrase the door being shut John 20 19. Imports only the Evening-tide because that is the common time every where of shutting doors c. But this is to put a Tautology upon the Gospel seeing the Evening tide is expressed before this clause The 3d Opinion which is mostly received saith that he entered miraculously yet the Sentiments of the learned about the modification of this miracle are various also for 1. Some say that the doors a creature gave way to Christ the Creator as above But here Men come with natural Reason wherewith they raise a deal of Dust and Doubts Objecting How could this be a true body that came in while the doors were shut one solid body cannot pass through another body that remains solid this would be a penetration of Diameters or dimensions which rule of Philosophy rendring it impossible is repugnant to the reality and solidity of Christ's body if it so passed Answ The 1st I know the Romanists do affirm that Christ passed through the dours here for the better proving their Doctrine of Transubstantation saying as He passed through the doors so he can make his Body to pass into the Bread but suppose Christ made his Body pass through the door yet retained he the same figure proportion and dimension that He had before which the Papists as is above said cannot show us in their Waters or ●read Therefore there is a vast difference herein Answ The 2d They of the Reformed Religion do more rationally say which brings is the 2d Sentiment about i● modification that Christ by his Almighty power did so alter the very substance of the doors So that his spiritual body so called 1 Cor. 15.44 might pass ●orow He who so Thickened the Waters as to make them able to be●r his Body and to walk upon them in his state of humiliation could much more thin the Sol●●●● of those Doors so as to make them penetrable to himself in his state of exaltation 't was more easy for him to make the Wood so thin as to pass through it in his ●econd state that to make the Water so thick as to walk upon it in his first state But the 3d Sent●ment is that it was not passing through the Wood as the Fire passeth with the heat through the Iron and the Sun with the beams through the Glass Windows c. Both Bodies remaining intire and found but that the doors did really open and shut again unperceived by the Apostles through a Divine miraculo●● power se●ing to more is intimated in Scripture against this opinion than against the other and this is the more probable because we have the like instance in an inferior's ca●● to wit that of Peter and the Apostles the Prison Doors were opened the Prisoners were brought forth and the Gates were safely shut again though the ke●p●rs were present and stood before the Doors yet did not perceive either the opening and shut●ing of the Gates or the escape of their Prisoners Acts 5.28 to 24. So Peter's ease alone Acts 12.4 6 to 12. Answ The 3d If we kn●w the manner how Christ came into the Room by natural reason then would it be no miracle which all acknowledg it to be yea a double miracle both that he came in when the Doors were shut and that he came in so suddenly so unexpectedly and so insensibly to all So that where reason ends and can render no rational account there 's the Room for saith to begin N.B. The Antients say of this double miracle that it was like that of Christs walking upon the Sea and coming to the Disciples whom they supposed to be a Spirit Matth. 14.25 26. And Cyril in particular saith no man need to doubt in what manner our Lord's Body passed in when the Doors were shut when he understand● that this is written not of a meer mortal Man such as we only are but of th● Omnipotent Son of God yea Augustine adds Where the deity is no bodily thing can hinder entrance see more of this point before in Christ's rising out of his Grave where a great stone my upon him As his entrance and invisible approach were both wonderful so were both his posture and situation which put the Disciples into a dreadful affright supposing he had been a Spirit Luke 24.37 which with ver 36. brings us unto The 4th Remark to wit his Actions and speeches to them herein Note 1. That his posture was a Standing and not a Sitting Posture that he might the better demonstrate how he was both alive and in health having no need of a Seat to rest on 2. He situates himself in the midst of that Assembly not only as a pastour in the midst of his people but also to convince them that he was no Spectrum or Spirit which are wont to creep into corners as they imagined him to be and that not one of the good but of the evil Spirits no better than a Devil 3. He Salutes them with Peace be unto you more like God than a Devill whose Visage is Dreadful and his Message War and Confusion but not Peace N.B. Who can but wonder that Christ should bring Peace from the Grave and proclaim it also to a company of forlorn Renegadoes that had most Sordidely deserted him and his service Yet even these very Persons must have peace propounded to them who were worthy of War only and Destruction and this he proclaimed twice for their greater comfort John 20.19 21 Oh happy they though Backsliders to whom Christ speaks peace They shall have Pacem Omnimodam all kind of Peace with their Creator with all Creatures and with their own Consciences 4. To confute their fancies and fears he shewed them his hands feet and Side marked with marks of his wounds on the Cross c. That he was no Spirit Luke 24.39 c. N. B. Here a doubt ariseth how his glorified Body could retain any wounds after his Resurrection For Paul saith that our Bodies shall be raised in glory without any blemish or deformity at all Answ Christ had not yet put on his full glory Those Skars he purposely retained to convince his Disciples that he was the w●ry Body which was Crucified and these were Trophee-marks of his Victors and Triumph N.B. Indeed there is a differing method in the two Evangelist's Luke's and John's Relation of this Fifth Appearance for Luke proposes the Question whether Christ were Truly risen from the Dead shewing how the Disciples doubted of it from two contrary passions Fear and Joy Luke Ch. 24 3● and 41. Says they were afraid it was too good too Joyful news to be true Then he shews how Christ did demonstrate the Truth thereof both by Signs and by Testimonies His signs were two fold By Words in reproving their Idle Fears verse 38. In declaring that it was he he himself ver 39 And
Pleasures He was but once at a Marriage-feast he is now Risen and Ascended above them sometimes we read our Lord wept but we never read that he did so much as once laugh 3. Nor in dead Treasures He sat but once over against the Treasury he is now Risen c. 4. Nor in Ease and Idleness He once slept upon a Pillow in the Ship he is now Risen c. The Spouse could not find him by night on her Bed nor in the broad ways of the World Cant. 3.1 2. 5. No nor in the perfection of Humane Mortality for he is Risen and Ascended c. 3dly That we Rise up and Ascend with Christ to Newness of Life Rom. 6.4 from Prophaneness to Piety this is to have part in the first Resurrection Rev. 20.6 awakening out of sin and living unto God 4thly That we labour after an Experimental Knowledge of the power of Christ's Resurrection Phil. 3.10 and of his Ascension also this we do if we cannot be content to be col●●●●d careless in our Devotion without finding our hearts burning within us while he talks with us in the way of our Duty Luke 24.32 beyond the reach of formality we may live by a form but we cannot die by a form we must feel the exceeding greatness of his power which worketh mightily in his Redeemed Eph. 1.19 making all his Saints heavenly-minded ascending up to him who is Ascended like Pillars of Smoke Cant. 3.6 and drawn up after him John 12.32 Cant. 1.3 and Col. 3.1 as not being wedded to worldly things 5ly That we purifie our selves 1 John 3.3 to be prepared for our own Resurrection and Ascension which we hope for by vertue of our Redeemer's The fourth is a word of Comfort 1. Our Hope may hang the faster and firmer for obtaining a better Resurrection and an happy Ascension because of the two grand Pawns and Pledges we have to assure us of both As he our Head is not only Risen which cannot but Raise the Body also for Christ accounts not himself compleat without his Church which he calls his fulness c. Eph. 1.21 22. but he is also ascended so must draw up John 12.32 his whole Body even the little Toes or least Members thereof that they may be with him to behold his Glory c. John 17.24 but likewise he hath taken our Nature with him into Heaven and hath sent his Spirit down to us upon Earth Our Flesh is above and his Spirit is below this is a double Earnest 2ly May we but be able to say in the Witnessings of the Holy Ghost that the Lord Christ hath raised our Souls up to the life of Grace we then need not doubt but he will also raise up our Bodies to a life of Glory and not only our Souls shall ascend to him at our death but they shall be ●nited again to our Bodies at the last day and shall both together be with him in Glory for ever If we have experience of a Spiritual Resurrection and Ascension in our Souls This doth strongly confirm our Faith that it shall be corporal also Eph. 5.14 1 Cor. 15.32 34. Ro. 6.4 11. Phil. 4.20 1. Th. 4.14 Col. 3.4 3dly The Soul cannot but be without comfort till Christ the Comforter come and appear to us as to Peter Luke 24.34 who had wept bitterly Luke 22.63 Now where-ever Christ is he will appear sooner or later he cannot be hid Mark 7.24 He appeared personally to the Patriarchs as he did to his Disciples but now to us spiritually Matth. 28.20 whereof we should make good proof and then may we hope he will appear to us gloriously at the last our Faith is supported both by Evidence and by Influence from these things All fruits were unholy till the first fruits were heaved Levit. 23.11 Rom. 11.16 All his Redeemed have a Quietus est or Acquittance virtually by Christ Risen and Ascended Rom. 5.18 and 4 25. but it passeth actually upon us when Christ appeareth savingly to and in us c. 4thly If Christ have led us forth as far out of the World and Sin as Bethany he will assuredly bless us as he did his Disciples Luke 24.50 51. at his last farewel Thus Isaac blessed Jacob but he first felt him Gen. 27.12 21. and if he hath blessed us we shall be blessed as Jacob was but take heed we go not about to cheat him for so shall we bring a curse and not a blessing We may know we are right Adopted Children if we have clean hands a pure heart and an holy life then have we the Lord's blessing Psal 24.3 4. and this is the Sugar which will sweeten the bitter Cup of our Crosses and Curses from an evil World the comfort of Christ's Spirit the feeling of his favour and the pardon of our sins c. 5thly 'T is our great comfort to consider Christ ascended as our common Representative with all our Names writ upon his Breastplate Exod. 28.29 Others indeed ascended as Enoch in the time of Nature and Elias in the time of the Law as well as Christ in the time of the Gospel but none ascended as our Lord did Note For 1. They ascended before Death seized upon them so did not Christ 2. They ascended by the power of another as Elias by a fiery Chariot c. but Christ by his own power 3. They made no way into Heaven for any body else but Christ did for all his c. Heb. 10.20 Note He did not shut the door as Lot did when he had taken in the Angel Gen. 19.10 but left a broad door open for all his Members 4. They could not work Miracles in Heaven as they had done on Earth but Christ could send his Spirit down to his Disciples c. 5. They went up suddenly but Christ leisurely that his Disciples might the better behold and believe it and that we may not expect to go up to Heaven in a Whirl-wind but gradually as Israel did to Canaan by 42 Removes The Righteous are scarcely saved 1. Pet. 4.18 Hard travel must help to Heaven 6thly 'T is no less our comfort to have Christ's Spirit Rom. 8.9 11. and witnessing with our spirits verse 15. that the Lord is risen indeed in us and hath appeared to us Luke 24.34 'T is an infallible sign that we are Simons Saints true believers for we find not that Christ after his Resurrection appeared once to any one under the real Denomination of an Unbeliever Thomas tho' Unbelieving yet was no Unbeliever not to any of the Chief Priests Scribes and Pharisees not to Pontius Pilate nor to King Herod c. For these reasons 1. To teach us that his Kingdom was not of this World John 18.36 2. That his Kingdom did not depend on or stood need of humane Patronage 3. Nor was it to come with Worldly Pomp or outward Observation Luke 17.19 20 21. John 20.29 4. That those Kill-Christs and Contemners of Grace and Mercy might begin to taste of the
be either Hector'd by threatnings or allured by Flatteries to lay down his ministry and desist from his preaching-work No doubt but his silence would have been his security both against the malice of the adverse Jews and against the power of the Idolatrous Pagans But a Necessity was laid upon him and a wo unto him if he preached not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 which himself denounced Fourthly This he did also with all confidence and with an undaunted Courage for his love to Christ was somewhat like Christ's love to him stronger than death Cant. 8.6 As Christ had dyed for him so was he ready to dye for Christ Acts 21.13 and he was the more confident because none were found so fool-hardy to attempt the making him timerous and diffident as followeth Fifthly no man forbidding him not because the Jews wanted malice or the Pagans power but because God who setteth bounds to the raging Sea Job 38.11 who suffered not a Dog to bark at Israel's coming so calmly out of inraged Aegypt Exod. 11. v. 7. and who shut the Mouths of the hungry Lions that they hurt not Daniel Dan. 6. v. 22. did deliver Paul both from Nero and from the Jews So that it was then even in Rome-Heathen as impossible to hinder the progress of the Gospel as to stop the Sun from shining or the Wind from blowing Yet such attempts are in Rome-Anti-christian at this day Wherein the contrary to all the afore-said may easily be exemplified Joseph did indeed provide a Granary or store-house of Corn in every City and Village against the famine that lay on the Land of Aegypt But popish Countries want such a Joseph Publick Statutes are made to forbid Christians of the Reformed Religion from having either publick or private places of meeting into worship God and no man incouraging contrary to this here where there 's no man forbiding The Supplement after the last of Acts 28. CHAP. XXIX A Scripture account of Paul while at Rome c. VVHERE Luke the Evangelist tho' guided by the good Spirit of God yet thought it his duty to desist from giving any farther account of the History of the Apostles Lives and Acts and more especially of the Apostle Paul's with whom he was a constant companion in Rome There must I begin this my Supplement N.B. Wherein because Ecclesiastical History having only an humane Testimony is found both various and uncertain about the lives and deaths of the Apostles therefore I shall not dare to confine my following Discourse unto what is Recorded by Nicephorus Eusebius and others from whose Conjectural Relations nothing can be positively and with undenyable evidence asserted N.B. Now that the Sequel and Supplement of this Apostolical History may be as Harmonious Homogeneal and Symbolizing with the former foregoing twenty eight Chapters as the matter may admit I have thought of this Expedient to bottom my Assertions still upon such Historical Hints as are found scattered here and there in the Sacred Scriptures namely in the Canonical Epistles of the Divinely Inspired Apostles themselves which they wrote upon several occasions as they were guided by the Holy Ghost to give an infallible Account N. B. Hitherto we have had lent us by the Lord a Divine Clew of Thread to lead us through this vast Labyrinth of writing the History of the Apostles Lives so far as Luke who wrote their Acts so called hath led us which Book of the Acts might as well be called The Wonders of the Apostles considering what Wonders it containeth not only such Wonders as were wrought by the Apostles but also for them to deliver preserve and incourage them in their prodigious Apostolical Work Insomuch as all the Attempts both of the Tempter himself the Red Dragon and of all his many and mighty Tools which he imployed for silencing the Apostles and for stopping the progress of Christianity which was every where spoken against Acts 28 22. were confoundingly disappointed N.B. We may well therefore call that History of the Apostles not only the Acts a name wherewith that holy Pen-man Luke the Apostles themselves modestly contented themselves but also the Wonder of Wonders wherein the Truth and Power of God did so wonderfully appear that the Gospel should be so irresistibly propagated by them when all men generally both Jews and Gentiles in all Places and of all Ranks both Princes and Peasants opposed it So that the Doctrine of Christianity which the Apostles taught had the multitude the Powers and Authority the Wisdom of the whole World yea and if all the seeming Sanctity that then was in the World to wit among the Jews all these every where were against it Christ was a Sign spoken against as was foretold of him Luke 2.34 in all places by all people N.B. Now what could rationally be expected in such a desperate case and concern which the Apostles undertook and entred upon but that every natural man would at the least suspect that which all the World so generally condemned Notwithstanding all this universal opposition yet did the Gospel prevail and run through the World like a Sun-beam yea and did so much so universally and so constantly flourish in despite of both Angry Men and of Inraged Devils that indeed this became by the mighty Power of God no less than a wonder of Wonders N.B. Now waving Ecclesiastical History let us still stick to the Sacred Scriptures so far as they give light to this Apostolical History Re-assuming the passages of Providence that attended Paul after his coming to Rome The first Remark farther concerning Paul is His writing several Epistles during his Imprisonment at Rome to several Churches and Persons Luke who accompany'd Paul to Rome as appeareth by his phrase We all along Acts 27. and more expresly in Acts 28. And when we came to Rome verse 16 c. gives no farther account of him but only of his lying a Prisoner there for two whole years and Preaching c. Acts 28.30 31. N.B. As it cannot be supposed that Paul spent all this two whole years time in his Preaching work for this would have wearied hoth himself and his Auditors but that there must be a due Interval betwixt one exercise and another not so much for his private Preparations in his Study because he had an extraordinary Apostolical gift c. So nor may it be imagined that such an Indefatigable Labourer in God's Vineyard could carelesly omit the Improvement of his Horae succisivae or spare hours in this two whole years time and therefore 't is no more than rational to affirm that during this his long Confinement he wrote sundry Epistles c. as above But beside the rationality hereof some Scripture-Light may confirm it Note As 1. His Epistle to the Galatians he wrote from Rome this is render'd the more probable 1. From the Postscript of that Epistle unto the Galatians written from Rome tho' this be no part of the Canonical Scripture for in other Postscripts to some
presupposeth that Paul had then made his appearance before Nero-Caesar and was acquitted N.B. But besides this passage in the Epistle to the Hebrews there be other Scriptures that give us a fuller account hereof As 1. That in the 2 Tim. 4.16 At my first Answer no man stood with me but all men forsook me I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge and therefore he orders Timothy to hasten his coming to him v. 21. looking on him as a fast Friend when all others failed From this may be observed 1st That tho' the phrase At my first answer seems to imply that Paul made more Apologies than one and so made more appearances than this as the Postscript understands it making also Timothy a Non-Resident Bishop yet it only intimates that at the very first pinch and appearance of danger All the Christians there that should have been his assistants started from him and left him to plead for himself among whom was Demas verse 10.2 Tim. 4. who sculked away to Thessalonica out of the reach of Rome when he saw this Tryal of Paul to be of a very doubtful issue 2ly Observe It is not sufficient for us to maintain the truth our selves but we ought to assist such as stand up for the truth and not shrink from them when they are in trouble for it and need our assistance Thus all Paul's Friends sinned in shrinking from him through weakness and humane frailty therefore he begs of God that he would grant them a remission of that Sin 3dly It was a very sad Circumstance in Paul's sufferings that when he had appealed to Nero himself and when Nero himself in the Court of Rome heard his cause and defence none of the Church that was at Rome nor any of those that were of his own Retinue durst own him through a fright or stand by him in so signal an encounter and in so eminent Danger where his very Christianity was Crime enough for which to be executed And Paul himself did read his own death near even in Nero's Temper v. 6.2 Tim. 4. 4thly Tho' men failed Paul yet God failed him not but stood by him 2 Tim 4. verse 17. and made him able to plead his own cause so powerfully that he was delivered out of the Lion's mouth namely from Nero so called as Tyrants and persecutors of the Church have frequently in Scripture that name of Lions put upon them Ezek. 19.2 Psal 35.17 and 91.13 Pro. 28.15 and Jerem. 2.15 47. N.B. God is never so sweet and so seasonable to his Saints as in the day of their deepest distresse God loves to help those that are forsaken of their helps and hopes N.B. The next Scripture that giveth light herein is those passages in that Epistle to the Philippians Ph. 2.21 where at this time of his imprisonment also he complains that all seek their own and not the things of Jesus Christ just like all forsaking him c. 2 Tim. 4. verse 16. then he goes on verse 23. Hoping to send Timothy presently to them so soon as I shall see how it will go with me He could not as yet spare him to accompany Epaphroditus until he came to a certainty what would be the Issue of his present imprisonment telling them withal that he had sat down counted the cost of Godliness and cast it up thus that he had made up a total Resignation of his own will into the holy will of God according to Acts 21.13 14. comforting himself and them with those few Considerations As 1. That hitherto his confinement had fallen out for the furtherance of the Gospel c Phil. 1.12 13 14. Tho' the Devil designed it for the hinderance thereof yet through the over-ruling providence of God so ordering it he had Liberty two whole years and opportunity of Teaching the things of Christ whereby his Chains of Iron became a greater honour to him than were those Chains of Gold which King Agrippa the Emperor Nero or any of his Judges wore with so much Ambition therefore would he not have them discouraged but comforted as the Corinthians were 2 Cor. 1.5 6 7. Acts 5.41 James 2.2 It was matter of Joy to him that all Nero's Court began to ring of his sufferings seeing their inquiry after the Cause thereof gave occasion to impart some Notions of Christ to them whereby some of them were Converted Phil. 4.22 2. He lets them know that supposing the worst though his imprisonment should determine in his death and that he should then be offered up a Sacrifice yet as this would be his own advantage so it could be no dis-service to their faith Phil. 1.21 and 2.17.18 if it should be thus sealed with his blood 3. Yet was he persuaded either by a Prophetick Spirit in a Revelation or by the Sanctifying Spirit strengthening his Faith that as his prison had been his Ark of safety for two whole years so now that he should be delivered out of the mouth of the Lion and restored to them to confirm their Faith farther with his personal presence writing thus to them And having this confidence that my still abiding in the flesh is more needful for you I know that I shall abide and continue with you all for your furtherance and joy of Faith Phil. 1.24 25. and again I trust in the Lord that I also myself shall come shortly Phil 2.24 designing to follow Timothy to them Another Scripture which gives light that Paul weathered out this point and was restored to his Liberty in despight of the Lion after so long imprisonment is Philemon verse 22. but withal prepare me a Lodging for I trust that through your prayers I shall be given to you This accords with Phil. 1.25 and 2.24 Paul had long longed to visit the Christians at Rome and had prayed for a prosperous Journey thither but had been long hindered Rom. 1.10 11 12 13. and 15.22 23. yet was he brought to Rome by such a way as he little dreamed of Little thought Paul that when he was bound at Jerusulem and posted from one prison to another that God was now sending him to Rome his longing for it might be one cause of Paul's making his appeal to Rome Acts 25.10 11.12 N.B. Now God sent him and very safe with a great Convoy to Cesarea and from thence with a great convoy God's own protection notwithstanding both the Shipwrack and the Viper as safe to Rome N.B. God goes oft another way to work for granting our desires and for doing us good than we could imagine Paul lyes prisoner at Rome two years at the end of that term he is set at liberty bespeaking his Lodgings for him at Coloss where Philemon was a Minister call'd Paul's fellow-labourer whose wife was Apphia named before Archippus another Minister Col. 4.17 whose house must be now Paul's Lodgings Philemon verse 1.22 Thus have we a full account of Paul's confidence that through the Church's prayers for him both at Philippi and
is like that of Jerm 49. ver 14 c. and the same may be said of Psalm 60. because it is in a great part the same with Psal 108 and so is Psal 14. with Psal 53. But tho' many passages in this Epistle do agree with that of Peter's yet is there so much difference in the whole as makes it manifest that it was not Transcribed thence and yet the Spirit might dictate the same truths to several Pen-men especially when the evil of these times required it that the same truths might be confirmed by the more witnesses N.B. 'T is probable this Jude stood up in his Brother James his charge among the Circumcision of Judea so he directs his Epistle to all those that were preserved in those Apostatizing times and not to any one particular Church as Paul's were like as his Brother James's had done to the twelve Tribes in general Jude exhorts those Christian Jews to maintain the truth with holiness of life least they should be seduced by false Teachers whose manners he describes to whom he thunders damnation But to amplifie a little longer upon the Life of this Jude who wrote that Epistle General and Catholical placed next before the Revelation of John the Divine he was one of the twelve Apostles called Judas as above but he was not that stigmatized Judas Iscariot the Apostate that hanged himself c. The occasion of this Apostle's writing that Epistle was this He survived almost all the Apostles Paul Peter and James were now dead and John only was now alive Eusebius saith This Apostle Jude lived till the time of Domitian the Emperor about fifty years after Christ's death However he lived to behold a most deplorable decay among the Churches of Christ He saw in his day how many professors of the Gospel did then deny the power of godliness and degenerated into gross and open prophaneness and to use his own phrase they turned the grace of God into wantonness v. 4. Namely the Nicolaitans Rev. 2.6.14 15. The Gnosticks and other loose Hereticks of that age who had learnt the Devil's Logick of arguing from Mercy to Liberty and unlearnt that sacred Lesson taught in Christ's School to wit Mercy most strongly obligeth to duty The more merciful God is to man the more dutiful must man be to God least God say do ye thus requite the Lord returning your wicked Liberty for my holy Mercy O! ye foolish people and unwise Deut. 32.6 and as it was said to Hushai is this thy kindness to thy friend 2 Sam. 16.17 This sad sight and observation stirred up the Spirit of this holy Apostle to write this Epistle wherein he admonisheth all true Saints to contend earnestly for the Faith c. and to beware of being polluted with the Apostates sins after he had discovered the black Aggravations of those heinous sinners and denounced the certainty of God's Judgments against them for their notorious provocations at the appointed time assuring them that the day was approaching wherein the Lord will Judge all wicked men for all their ungodly words and works c. In order hereunto this Apostle giveth three famous instances of Apostates The first is Those degenerate Israelites are brought in for an Example who murmured in the wilderness and lusted after the Flesh-pots of Aegypt after they had been so miraculously delivered out of that long and grievous house of Bondage Yet God destroyed all them that believed not v. 5. which shews that their past preservation from that Fiery Furnace as it is called Deut. 4.20 was but a Reservation for a future punishment by fiery Serpents c. for God threatened to destroy them after he had done them good Josh 24 20 even so close Hypocrites and loose professors who seem to be redeemed from the Bondage of sin yet dare return with the Dog to his Vomit and with the Sow to its wallowing in the mire c. The latter end is worse with them than the beginning c. 2 Pet. 2.18 19 20 21 22. The second Instance this Apostle Jude introduceth is that of the Apostate Angels verse 6. who notwithstanding the higher dignity of their nature above that of Man's Psal 8.5 yet upon their Rebellious disobedience they were left to a most dreadful doom c. Their voluntary ambition changed those glorious Angels into damned Devils This argument is not a part ad par from one equal case to another as in the first instance verse 5. but a Majori ad Minus from the greater to the lesser arguing if God spared not such more noble Creatures the Angels who by the grace of Creation were advanced to the highest excellency of all Created beings then assuredly God will not spare men whatever Gospel-priviledges they have and whatever glorious professions they make when the wicked practices of their lives do give the lye unto all their holy professions such Backsliders as begin in the Spirit but end in the flesh Gal. 3.3 that seem Sancti Juvenes young Saints but prove Satanici Senes old Devils not only God's Soul can have no pleasure in them yea rather loaths them but also there is a deep pit behind all such as draw back which they see not even the bottomless pit of endless perdition Heb. 10.37 38. Apostates do hasten into Hells mouth 'T is most true the Lord loveth a returning Prodigal above an Apostate Angel The third Instance is That of Sodom c. ver 7. Which Example is most fitly adapted to the former two The Angels had been betrusted with the blessings of Heaven but they lost them all by their Apostacy The Israelites had the priveledges of the Church in the wilderness so called Acts 7.38 but by their murmurings they lost not only all those but they also fell short of Canaan c. Now come in those Sodomites c. Who had been blest with a most pleasant Land called the Garden of the Lord Gen. 13.10 like another paradice yea and they had been blest also with a marvelous deliverance from Captivity by the prowess of Abraham Gen. 14.11 15. Thus had those five Citys the great blessings of this lower world as the Angels had of Heaven and the Israelites had of the Church yet these also made a forfeiture of their mercies as well as the two former namely by giving themselves up unto filthy Leudness God wrote their sin upon their punishment as they had burned actively with the fire of Hell in their unlawful Lusts so they were burned passively with fire from Heaven The Lord rained down as it were Hell out of Heaven upon them Genesis 19.24.25 yea and above all this we are told here that they are suffering the vengeance of eternal fire and so shall all carnal professors having only a form without the power 2 Tim. 3.5 We may live by a form but we cannot dye by a form and if we live and dye after the flesh we are damned to all Eternity Rom. 8.7 A form of piety and