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A00753 Comfortable notes vpon the bookes of Exodus and Leuiticus, as before vpon Genesis Gathered and laid downe still in this plaine manner, for the good of them that cannot vse better helpes, and yet are carefull to read the Scriptures, and verie desirous to finde the comfort in them. By the Reuerend Father in God Geruase Babington ... With a table of the principall matters contained in this booke. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1604 (1604) STC 1088; ESTC S100580 531,878 712

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by reason knowledge so differeth one man from another by more more knowledge in this Booke Woe to those Teachers then that lull vs a sléepe and tell vs that Ignorance is the Mother of Deuotion that giue vs not leaue either to reade or pray or doo any duty in a tongue that we know but like those cursed Scribes and Pharises those hypocrites shut vp the Kingdome of Heauen before men neither going in themselues nor suffering others that would enter to come in Let this now spoken make vs sée their fault and that miserie so to liue as also this most swéet blessing of knowledge now vouchsafed to vs by the mercie of God through the happy gouernment of his Annointed seruant our déere and dread Souereigne and sending vp to God our thankfull thoughts both for it and him and begging the continuance of both long and long vnto vs. 2. It followeth in your Chapter But all the children of Israel had light where they dwelt Which surely was a very admirable thing the houses of Egyptians and Israelites ioyning as it should séeme one close to another as ours in these daies doo For else why should the blood be striked vpon the doore posts of the Israelites for a signe to the destroying Angell where to kill and where to passe ouer if all the Israelites had dwelt by themselues and had not béene mingled with the Egyptians This minde was Gregory Nyssen of and therefore hee saith Nontantum in Gosen vbi cōmuniter morabantur sed cum inter Aegyptios promiscue etiam habitarent in hoc maximum miraculum Not onely in Gosen where onely Israelites for the most part dwelled but among the Egyptians being mingled and dwelling together the Israelites had light and the Egyptian darknes And heerein was the greatest miracle The good wee may take by this strange worke of GOD is first to learne how able our Heauenly Father is to make a separation betwixt his Children and the Wicked when he executeth wrath and Justice if his good pleasure be so to doo though they be in one field together in one house together and in one bed together yet can bee choose the one and refuse the other Wherefore true is that Saying of the Psalme If his wrath be kindled but a little Blessed are all they that put their trust in him Feare wee not then in the time of Plague of Warre or other Publique calamitie least we should perish with the wicked hand ouer head but remember this Place and say in your heart with comfort and faith O Lord my GOD and gracious Father I knowe thine able hand to make a separation if thou please in this calamitie betwixt thy poore Lambes and the Goates as thon diddest in that darknes betwixt the Israelites and Egyptians therefore I flie vnto thee in humble acknowledgement of my sinne and for him that had no sinne I begge that if thy good pleasure may bee so thou wouldest vouchsafe to saue mee from this Sword of thine to let the light of thy mercie and louing countenance shine about my dwelling as thy chéerefull light did about the Israelites So shall my soule and heart euer praise Thee and thanke Thee But if otherwise LORD and Father thy Will bee done and not mine onely in the world to come acknowledge mee as I doo not doubt but thou wilt and it shall suffice Secondly let this place be obserued as a very plaine Figure of that which wee sée amongst vs euery day At one house dwelt an Egyptian and it was all darke at the next an Israelite and it was all light so nowe at one house dwelleth a superstitious Recusant or a prophane Atheist and all is darke At the verie next house dwelleth a zealous Professour of the truth who readeth the Scriptures heareth them preached frequenteth the Sacraments and faithfully laboureth that himselfe with his whole Familie may liue according to the Word and héere is all light which shall leade to the light eternall with God and all his hoste when the good houre commeth God strengthen our hearts euermore in the loue of this light and make vs truly thankfull for these lightsome daies Amen 3. The couetousnes of this great Tyrant verse 24 shadowing the greedie mindes of all Persecutors The stoute care of godlie Moses to haue the Lords whole Will performed and not to rest in a part verse 25. 26. The fearefull driuing away of Moses from his presence shewing the rags of Tyrants towardes their end to bee greater and so comforting the godlie that when they sée the like they may knowe the time is not long and remembring vs what a dangerous thing it is to driue away Gods Ministers from vs with diuers other things in the ver 28. and 29. because I haue béeste too long in this Chapttrr I will leaue to your owne Meditation and so end héere CHAP. 11. There is nothing more common both in these Bookes of Moses and other Bookes of Scripture than to set that after which in precise order was to goe before so is it in this Place For what now is said in these first Eight verses of this Chapter by due order should be put before the 28. verse of the former Chapter which if you doo and bring in the 28. verse after those words in the 8. verse And after this I will depart then the 29. verse of the former Chapter will followe well and after that the end of the 8. verse of this Chapter to wit So he went out from Pharaoh very angry c. The chiefe Heads of this Chapter are these three 1. A Denuntiation of a new plague 2. An Admonition to the Israelites what to do 3. The Plague it selfe 1. COncerning the first it is contained as you sée in these wordes Yet will I bring one plague more vpon Pharaoh and Egypt And to make vse to our selues of it you that are acquainted by your priuate reading with the Course of the Scriptures very well knowe the manner of Gods dealing in this matter from the beginning to the end First how milde it was then how by degrées it encreased to sharper and sharper till the deliuerance of his Church and people were effected At the first he appointed Moses and Aaron with the Elders of Israel to goe to Pharaoh and to entreate him mildly and dutifullie saying The Lord God of the Hebrewes hath met with vs WEE PRAY THEE therefore let vs goe three daies iourney into the Wildernes that we may sacrifice vnto the Lord our God But this praying would not serue wherefore the Lord went néerer them by great and powerfull wonders yet by degrées touching them and not with the greatest at the first He caused Moses rod to be turned to a Serpent c. A thing that hurt them not yet in all reason should haue moued them Then he turned their waters into blood which did somewhat touch them After when that preuailed not hee annoyed them
it would be thought of though the persons of such Messengers may be thought contemptible yet he that sent them will beare no contempt in the end 6. But Pharaoh by this myracle was made nothing better Therefore euidently it appeareth that albeit signes and myracles be required of some men to satisfie an itching humour to sée newes and vnder a pretense that if they sawe such thinges they would beléeue yet indéede these meanes will not reforme them but euen more and more they become rebellious against the truth as héere was Pharaoh Wherefore the Lord doth not yéeld to the foolish fancies of men in this behalfe but answereth in the Gospel to such humours This adulterous and crooked generation seeketh a signe but none shall be giuen them more than the signe of Ionas the Prophet The consideration whereof should make vs wise and to cease from vaine spéeches as what signe shewe they what myracles worke they with such like And to kéepe in the knowne way To the Law and to the Testimonie that is to the written word of God extant among vs confessed and acknowledged by both sides and if our doctrine and perswasions be according to that then are they assuredly right then is there light in our doings and the Sunne of true vnderstanding shineth vpon vs. For the Word is truth the Word is olde and oldest a lanthorne a rule a guide a teacher not to be excepted against euer This way doth God choose and trie myracles by it if you remember in the 13. of Deut. not admitting of all the wonders in the world if they leade contrarie to this neither reiecting this though there be no daily wonders added to it since the doctrine being the same the signes and wonders alreadie done by Christ and his Apostles mentioned in the Scriptures abundantly serue But how doth Pharaoh shift of this great Signe séeing he is not disposed to yéeld to it surely if you marke it euen in the very same sort that some now a-daies doo who talking of Religion and séeming as if they were willing to be resolued when they heare a reason which they cannot answere in stéede of yéelding say were such and such heere they could answere you c. So playeth Pharaoh hee thinketh of his wise men and learned men whereof Egypt had store and though he cannot tell what to say himselfe to so manifest a Signe yet hee perswadeth himselfe they can and send for them hee will to sée what they can say rather than yéeld to the worke of God They being come as they were blinde themselues mingling with good learning vaine errors of Magicke incantation and inuocation of Spirits so in the iust Judgement of God they became instruments of blindnes vnto Pharaoh to holde him still in disobedience and hardnes of heart against the Lord and his true Messengers A thing worthie marking and due remembrance whilest wee liue to the end we may learne to affect truth better and to giue place to reason in our hearts and soules when it is laide before vs without pinning our selues to other mens sléeues who erring themselues in that which is sought though otherwise happily learned and to be liked can neuer doo any better Office to vs than these Enchaunters did to Pharaoh namely still and still with their iuglings make vs stiffe and stubborne against our God and against our good till we perish in Hell as Pharaoh did in the Red-sea S. Paule therefore rightly naming two of these Enchaunters compareth all false whisperers vnto them saying And as Iannes and Iambres withstoode Moses so doo these also resist the truth men of corrupt mindes reprobate concerning the faith But they shall preuaile no longer c. 7. But how did these Enchaunters kéepe Pharaoh in his blindnes The Text saith They did the like and so abated the credite of Aarons myracle Whereupon question is made whether in déede and truth they did the like or onely in shewe by deceauing the sight And answere is giuen by some that if we affirme God in anger Judgement towards Pharaoh to haue changed the rods also of the Enchaunters into true Serpents there is no absurditie but other much better like to say there was a deceauing of sight and whatsoeuer shew they made it was but false and phantasticall Non fuisse veros dracones sed sic apparuisse virtute Daemonis ex aeris transmutatione That they were not true Serpents but so onely seemed to be by the power of the Deuill changing the ayre This then especiallie is to be noted that false signes and wonders can be done by Sathan and his members God so permitting and therefore that wee stand fast in the truth which wee haue learned out of Gods Booke and trie myracles by truth not truth by myracles according to the Rule of God taught vs in his Word For were it neuer so strange and admirable a thing if the drift of it be to leade vs from truth to error the worke is naught the worker is a deceauer Antichrist saith the Apostle shall be powerfull in lying signes and wonders In regard of which Admonition S. Augustine said Contra mirabiliarios cautum me fecit Deus meus c. Against wonder-workers and myraclemongers my God hath made me warie fore-telling mee That in the latter dayes there should be such which if it were possible should deceiue the very Elect. The Schoolemen say héere Moses Aaron fecerunt miraculum Magi autem mirum non miraculum Moses and Aaron did a myracle but the Enchaunters did a meruaile no myracle meaning because what they did was counterfeit But I stand not vpon it It is further most worthie marking héere that Aaron his Rod deuoured their rods for thereby wee are notably taught the end of falshoode and error at the last Truth shall deuoure it in Gods good time for Magna est veritas praeualet Great is truth and preuaileth If you continue in my word saith our blessed Sauiour you shall knowe the truth and the truth shall make you free Yet Pharaoh could not sée but his heart was still hardened euen as in our times wee knowe the fearefull blindnes of some in the greatest light that may be giuen them A wise heart will note this earnestly and neither be moued to such obstinacie nor cease to feare the like iudgement if vnthankfully Gods fauour vouchsafed be passed ouer Much doth God for either man or place when hee graciouslie giueth good Teachers and where such Enchaunters as these are receaued and hearkened vnto what can follow but Pharaohs hard hart to eternall woe Beware beware whilest God giueth you time To day if you will heare his voice harden not your heart How knowe you what iudgement and wrath to morrowe day may bring vpon you Truth may be oppressed for a time God so pleasing either to punish or trie his people but finally suppressed it shall not be God being stronger than all his enemies
this a fore-shewing of that and that a true fulfilling of this In like sort doth S. Paule when he saith Our Passeouer is offered vp speaking of Christ If the Familie were too little to eate a whole Lambe then must they take their neighbours next vnto them to make a fit number Whereby was noted and figured that Christ is not deuided into diuers houses and families kingdomes and Countries but he doth vnite and gather diuers houses and Nations to make one Church euen as héere many did eate one Lambe A comfortable Figure and worthy often remembrance Wee may not deuide the Lambe but we must gather our selues to the Lambe and that is the true Church where people are so gathered Be sure then of the Lambe and not of the place where the Lambe once was but now is not féede vpon this Lambe in manner prescribed that is beléeue in Christ according to the Scriptures and be sure you are right other notes may deceaue you this will not And if as yet you be not thus gathered make no longer stay in so dangerous an estate but be reformed and blesse God for his Truth 4. Your Lambe shall be without blemish saith the next verse first to prefigure the puritie and vnspottednes of Christ frée and cleane from all sinne And secondly to teach that a more excellent ransome was to be had to saue man from sinne than in all mankinde was to be found which wholly was sinfull In Apish imitation of which immaculate puritie our profound Romists take great care that their Cake be whole round and sound not bitten nor broken but without blemish as this Paschal Lambe was giuing themselues rather to abolished Ceremonies than to the teaching of Christ now come in whom these Ceremonies had end It must be a Male not a female thereby figuring the spirituall strength of Christ according to which the Prophet Esay spake of him before That hee should deuide the spoile with the strong and that great number of Angels about the throne euen thousand thousands saying that he is worthie to receaue power and riches and wisedome and strength and honour and glorie and praise Thirdly the Lambe must bee of a yeere olde thereby to prefigure our Sauiours experience of infirmities and miseries which euen a daies continuance in this wretched world yéeldeth both to man and beast much more a yéere Of which the Prophet also foretolde when he said of Christ Hee is a man full of sorrowes and hath experience of infirmities Surely he hath borne our infirmities and caried our sorrowes c. Reade ouer the whole Chapter Whereunto the Apostle agréeth againe when he saith We haue not a High-Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sinne The comfort and vse whereof followeth in the next verse Therefore let vs goe boldly vnto the throne of grace that wee may receaue mercie and finde grace to helpe in time of neede And indéede a Comfort of comforts it is that in his owne bodie and our true Nature it pleased him thus to taste our woes For hee did it onely that wee might be assured of his knowledge and loue that he both knoweth our case better than we can expresse it and in his loue towards vs will helpe and succour vs as shall be fit Fourthlie ye shall take it of the Lambes or of the Kids saith the Text To shadowe out how Christ should be taken from amongst the stocke of sinfull men from whom hee descended without sinne as appeareth by the Scripture 5. And you shall keepe it vnto the 14. day of this Moneth from the 10. day wherein it was taken Whereby Two things chiefely were figured First that Christ should not by and by suffer after he was borne but liue and abide a certaine time in the world and then die euen as this Lambe taken vp the 10. day was not killed till the 14. day All which we knowe was fulfilled accordingly he being at the time of his Passion about thirty and thrée yéeres olde Secondly it both serued to prepare their hearts to the right eating of it being a Remembrance before their eies those 4. daies before and also to prefigure vnto vs with what meditation and preparation wee ought euer vnto our liues end come to the eating of the true Passeouer whereof this Lambe was but a shadowe in that holy Sacrament which is left vnto vs as a Remembrance of his Passion for mankinde Other conceipts haue some Writers which I omit onely I will remember His words that saith Decimo quarto die immolabatur quia tunc plenilunium est Luna recepta luminis sui plenitudine Sole iam occidente in Oriente consurgit quia morienti Christo Sole iustitiae Ecclesia quae in Luna intelligitur ad vitam consurgit c. The 14. day this Lambe was offered because then the Moone being at full and rising in her full light when the Sunne was set thereby might bee shadowed that the Church vsuallie signified by the Moone riseth with light and to light that euer shall endure in great fulnes after the setting of the Sunne that is by the death of Christ the true Sunne both of light and life to all that faithfully beléeue in him 6. It was to be killed at night and why at night more than any other time Surely to note and remember vnto them alwaies the time of their Deliuerance out of Egypt which was in the night Againe it might shadowe out the time of Christ his comming in the flesh which was as it were in the Euening of the world that is in the last times 1. Cor. 10. In regard whereof as some haue noted many of his mercies and miracles were shewed vpon men in the Euening or towards Euening as when it is saide in the Gospell When the Euen was come they brought vnto him many that were possessed with Deuils and hee cast them out c. Likewise in Marke when Euen was come at what time the Sunne setteth they brought to him all that were diseased and hee healed them Thus shewing by the time of Euening that he was indéede that health of mankinde which in the latter time should come 7. The blood was to be sprinkled and striked vpon the doore posts with a bunch of Hyssope that it might be a signe for the Lord to passe ouer their houses by when he executed wrath vpon the Egyptians Non quod incorporea natura huiusmodi signis egeret sed quia conueniebat vt per symbolum intelligerent illi prouidentiam Dei c. Not that God had any neede of such signes but that by such outward meanes it was comfortable to them to knowe and be assured of Gods prouidence for their safety saith Theodoret. And it figutatiuely shewed the effect and vertue of Christes blood the true paschal Lambe euer to saue from
shall heare God that deceiueth not speake vnto you knowing that as these people of the Iewes were tied to the Propitiatorie so are we now to Christ in his word The Table of the Shew bread 1 THou shalt also make a table of Shittim wood of two cubits long c. The building and parts you must read in your Bible This Table againe was a third figure of Christ who is propounded of God to his Church as a table furnished with all dainties and contents Nothing is wanting in him that we can want and is good for vs to haue but aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall finde He is the riches of God to all that beléeue in him The Shew bread vpon this Table represented the word and the preaching of the same whereby as by bread man is fed strengthened and continued aliue The one thus worketh to his bodie the other effecteth it to his soule A great blessing is the one a farre greater is the other And therefore labour not for the meat which perisheth saith our Sauiour Christ but for the meate which indureth to eternall life c. It was called Shew bread because it alwaies shewed it selfe before God For it was not lawfull to remooue the olde before they brought and placed their new and so it neuer wanted vers 30. In Hebrew the bread of faces because it euer stood before the face of God as a continuall remembrance of the twelue Tribes of Israell The being of it continually figured how preaching ought to be continuall 2 When as the Israelites did eate of the same wheate whereof the Shew bread was made the same being of the first fruites of their corne offered they were thereby admonished by type and sigure to eate and drinke euer as if they sate before God and were his guestes And that the bread meate whereon they fed was in some sort holy and consecrate to God to be vsed therefore soberly and reuerently The like good meditation may we haue at this day although we haue not the same Ceremonie For whose are all the creatures we vse for the refreshing of our bodies but the Lords And should we then abuse them riotously prophanely wastfully and wickedly as many do The fault is manifest the truth and right is as manifest Such as be Gods will note it and amend it if there be any fault giuing thanks both before and after for such goodnes as we little deserue and vse them well 3 Thou shalt also make dishes to set the bread vpon for it and incense-cups and couerings and goblets c. Deseruedly was that Bishop commended which solde the holy vessels in the time of famine to relieue the poore with the money and excused himselfe to the Church That because GOD neyther eateth nor drinketh therefore hee needeth no dishes nor cups But to haue said thus in the time of these Ceremonies and by that pretext to haue robbed the house of GOD of those things had not beene well For euerie thing hath his proper time As then to take them away being commaunded for Types and figures had béene euill so now to bring them in without commaundement and to kéepe figures when the truth and bodie is come is also vnlawfull Which might yéeld a sober minde due contentment against the idle and superfluous furniture of Popish Churches neither to desire it when it is wanting nor to like it whē it is present Neither is the Church now in her infancie nor true beléeuers in their minoritie but shadows are gone Christ is come his true worshippers worship him in spirit and truth Moses and the Prophets are read and preached mens hearts are opened by the holy Ghost in the ministerie of the word being powerfull and strong Good life is sought and sinne is reprooued Prayers are offered vp vnto God in a tongue vnderstood the Sacraments administred dulie according to their Institution this is a blessed beautie in a Church though there be neither Gold nor Siluer shining vpon the walles The truth and comfort of conscience shining within vs is far more excellent c. The Candlesticke ALso thou shalt make a Candlestick of pure gold of work beatē out with the hammer shal the Candlestick be made his shaft and his branches his bowles and his knops and his flowers shal be of the same Six branches shall come out of the sides of it c. A fourth figure of Christ is this Candlesticke and of other good things also taught by it mystically As first the whole Candlestick beeing an instrument of light noteth out fitly that euen so Christ is the light of his church which light of his in his holy Scriptures he proposech continuallie to Men Women that will reade them The Heathens Pagans had their Religion but because they had not this Candlesticke Christ therefore they had no light but were vaine in their thoughts and their foolish hart was ful of darknesse They turned the glorie of the incorruptible God to the similitude of the image of a corruptible man and of birds and foure footed beastes and of creeping things They turned the truth of God into a lye and worshipped and serued the Creature forsaking the Creator c. The Faithfull haue this Candlesticke and therefore their Religion is true they haue light and know what they worship Their actions and manners also are directed aright for they are made to sée what truly pleaseth what truly displeaseth not following their owne imaginations and willes dooing what séemeth good in their owne eyes but what God hath commanded that doo they 2 The Candlesticke was in the Sanctuarie or Church and the light of the Word whereby Christ shineth should be in the Church that all the congregation thither comming might sée and receiue the comfort of it This is the true beautie of a Church indéede as hath bene saide and therefore either their ignorance or their malice was monstrous who set Candlestickes of Gold and Siluer and Shining brasse in their Churches but could not abide the word vnlesse it were in a strang tongue all light but that light was regarded banners and pictures and silkes and smelles and all beautie but not the Scriptures Therefore séeing they had not the true Candlesticke Christ in his Word giuing light their glorie was vanitie and their light was grosse and grieuous darknesse 3 The Candlesticke as you sée in the picture of your Bible had an vpright stemme and six branches issuing out three on either side of the stemme The stemme represēted Christ from whom all light groweth euen as the six brāches come from the stemme The branches are set in the stemme and so are all that giue light set in Christ The branche saith our Sauiour cannot beare fruite of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can ye except ye abide in me I am the vine ye are the branches he that abideth in me I in him
good Magistrate 314. Creation the Booke thereof 154. Cryes are consequents of Gods plagues 182. Earnest prayer is a crying 215 280. Crosse see afflction Creatures armed in wrath 102. Creatures haue excellent vertues 238 239. Creatures of God must be soberly vsed 392. and not abused 240. Creatures the vse of them giuen or taken away by God 88. Crueltie forbidden 354. curiositie in searching secrets 319 322 357 451 452 454. Custome in sinne 152. D. Darkenesse of Egypt 145 c. Darkenesse in iudgement 62 147. Darkenesse outward inward compared 148. Inward darkenesse how it groweth 150. Darkenesse wherein God was noteth him to be incomprehensible 325. Daunces of ancient time what they were 235. Daunces on the Sabbath 269 438. Dauid how hee offended in numbring the people 429. Ciuill Death 340. Death comming with circumstances of Gods anger is more fearefull 177 178. Sodaine death 178 179 180. No earthly prerogatiue can free from death 182. After Death no helpe 179. Dead mens desires are truely to bee perfourmed 207. Dearth in the time of Poperie 257. Delay of religious duties 98 182 217 229 423 456. Descend how it may be sayd of God 38 322. Despaire to be auoyded 73 258 285. we may not despaire of Gods prouidence 260 265 nor of his mercie 117. Deformitie of bodie is recompenced by vertue of minde 17. Diuell see Sathan Diligence required in Gods businesse 113. Discipline 397. Discontentment 277 278. Disputations 398. Distrustfulnesse 265. Dissimulation 123. Diuision of this Booke 2. Domitian proclaymed himselfe God 80. Doubting 48 287. Diuersitie of gifts 81 355 361 363. Diuersitie of plagues 94 129 224 291 333. Diuinitie as a Ladie ought to be serued by all other Sciences 172 173 363. E. Eare is required that God may enter 209. The Eare signisieth obedience 419. The boring of the Eare what it signified 330 419. Egyptians crueltie to the Infants 16. it was punished 88. Egyptians ten Plagues the first of the turning of their waters into blood 87. 88 c. the second of Frogges 91. the third of lice 101. the fourth of flyes c. 105 the fifth of murraine of Cattell 109. the sixth of a scab 112. the seuenth Thunder haile and fire mingled with the haile 119. the eight Grashoppers 131 the ninth Darkenesse 145. the tenth the death of the first borne 177. Egyptians destroyed in the Red Sea 217. Elder a name of Office not of yeeres 43. Elect may be afflicted but not finally ouer-throwne 138. Ends of Gods punishments 331. End of Gods benefits 72. Enemies God is able to preserue by them 20. our enemies are to be helped 351 352. Enuie 5 82 292 395. it cannot alter the Lords purpose 168. Ephod of two sortes 409 the high Priests Ephod 410. the stone on the Ephod and the names on the stone 410. Equalitie is a propertie of a good Iudge 350 Equitie of al gods lawes euer remayneth 337 Euening what it signified 189 Euill God is not the author of it 82. nor religion the cause of it 129. Extraordinarie instincts 459 Extraordinarie things may not without like warrant be followed 172. Extraordinarie prouidence 260. 265. 272. Excuse taken from the wicked 62 174. F Factious men 44. 45. Fa 〈…〉 es on the Sabbath 269. Faith 18. confirmed by signes 41. it must rest vpon Christ. 404. by it we are partakers of Christ 202. signified by oyle 396 423. it is required to all spirituall duties 424. Families are raysed by God 4. Fat of the sacrifice what it signified 416. Fathers a comparison between their affection and Gods loue 56. 57. Fauoure to strangers wrought by God 47. 48. 172. Feare of God 12. it is the propertie of a good iudge 314. Feare is comforted 117. 210. 231. 232. it hath sometimes a good end 172. Feet signifie actions and affections 420. Deadly Feud reprooued 16. Finger of God what it signifieth 434 435. Fire of grace is to be kept within vs. 274. Firstborne of the Israelites were gods by a double right 204. Flies c. 105. to which are resēbled worldly cares byting of conscience sorrow for sinne Tyrants Vsurers c. Forgetting of benefites is a mother of much mischiefe 7. Forgetfulnes of Gods workes is displeasing vnto God 197. 243. God prepareth sundrie meanes to awake it 203. 272. Fortune 20. 230. 417. A friends wrong striketh deepe 70. French disease 112. Fryer 46. 47. Frogges 91. they resemble crokeing crewes c. 101. G Garments strange and costly 409. marg Garments of the Priests 408 421. Genealogie of the Israelites to what end it is described 76. Gentiles more obedient than Iewes 299. Gestures may be diuers in Prayer 298. Gifts doe corrupt iudgement 352. 353. Gifts of God diuers to diuers men that one might haue neede and vse of another 81 355 361 363. 395. Gifts and graces of Gods Church 401. prefigured by the garments of the high Priest 408 modest men are not proude of them 461. Glorie of God to bee preferred before all thinges 445 446. b. God is an existence by himselfe 72 God is eternall 231. God is true in his promises 3 73. 169. 427. God is vnchangeable 38 42. 72. 210. 426. God is incomprehensible 325. yet hee hath many names from manifold affections in vs 72. we may not search his Maiestie but in the cloud that is the humanitie of Christ 357. God reuealeth himselfe so as man may endure to behold 34 he appeareth diuers 〈…〉 to diuers men 357. 358. in appearing hee applieth himselfe to the intent of his appearing 32 33. the more hee openeth himselfe the more man feeleth and findeth his wants 35. hee vouchsafed a glimse of himselfe to Aaron c. 356. his manifestation to Moses preferred before that to Abrabam 71. he promiseth to dwell amongest vs 425. that he will bee with vs in our calling is an encouragement 40. how he is saide to come downe 38 322. how hee hath beene seene 453. and how he shall bee seene of vs. 454. his backe-parts ibid. he did speake out of the bush out of the cloude from betwixt the Cherubims 389. as he now speaketh by his Ministers so heretofore by his Angels 322 it is a mercie that he now speaketh not himselfe but by men 324. 407. God his goodnesse might iustice 210. God his loue truth and power 285. God is almightie he passeth all men of war 231. he can do great matters by weake means 38 51 54 93 103 129. his mightie power is fearefull and comfortable 198. fearefull because with one word he destroyed many first-borne 198. he is able infinite wayes to punish 102. 131. he hath power ouer all creatures to giue or take the vse of them from vs 88. yea to arme them against vs 102. infinite is his power to comfort them that cleaue to him 260. it strengthneth vs against despaire 285. he being able to performe his promises 73. he can giue strength to any man in his vocation 214. in new perils he can giue new remedies 217. hee can turne
preuented by God 206. Sinne is not to be extenuated 447. Sleep God prouideth for vs therein 270 c. Snuffers and snuffe dishes 396 397. Sorrow of heart 116 117. our secret sorrow seene heard and knowne of God 36 72. Sorcerers See Inchanters Souldiers 294. Soure hearbs in the Passeouer what they signified 190. Speech blessed by God 76. Stranger it is no reproachfull name alwaies 27. wee must be fauourable to strangers 343 353. Our strength is to commit all to God 214. Strife 291. Subiects dutie 53. Subiects are the Kings hands 311. Succession of place is no essentiall note of the Church 186. Superstition in reseruation of the Sacrament 423. Suspition 5 6. T. Tabernacle to what end it was builded 367. the fashion of it 375. the matter of it 377. why it was called the Tabernacle of the Couenant 382. the couerings of it 399. the distinct roomes of it 400 what they signified 402. The Tabernacle was a figure of the visible Church 401. Table of shew-bread 391. Communion Tables 326 403. Tables of the Law written with the finger of God 435. they are broken 446. the second written Tables 455 456. what was figured by them 456. We discerne matters of the second Table better then of the first 449. Talio 335 336. Tale-tellers 25. Talke 302. Teacher See Minister Temptations and tryals suffered by God according to our strength 205 206 305. Temptations to be repelled 284. a threefold remedie against them 285. Tempt the Lord how men do it 279. Testaments old and new agree in one 389. Thankefulnes for loue shewed 26 73 170. for benefits receiued 228 229. Thankefulnes is not to be deferred 229. Thankesgiuing to God should be from euery particular man though the benefit be publique 230 243 298 303 416. Thankesgiuing before and after meate 392. Theft diuersly punished 337. Thoughts knowne of God 45 56 88. Thracians 437. Time discouereth falshood 95. Time of affliction appointed by God 110. and the time of our deliuerance out of the same 200. it is to be left to God 226. Titles 329 330. Tolleration of two religions in one gouernment 458. Tongues why the Holy Ghost appeared like elouen fierie tongues 3 〈…〉 Tongue must be gouerned 252 302. Torments in the persecution of the Church by the Emperours 10. Trades and handicrafts 408 409 434 Tradition 356. Transubsta●tiation 422. Tree that made sweet the waters 237 238. Tribute for maintenance of the Tabernacle 428 6. the Romanes tooke it to themselues 430. Truth in the end preuayleth against falshood 86 87 95 100 103 the aduersaries of truth seek to oppugne it by the selfe same meanes God doth teach it 94. A rule to finde truth by 422. The loue of truth is the propertie of a good Magistrate 315 347. Truth in trust 340. Turke seeketh the prayers of Christians 96. Tyrants vse first craft then rage 14. they rage most against such as God blesseth most 64 66. and increase from wordes to blowe 67. Tyrants are Sathans instruments 212. and yet their power is Gods appointment 311. 312. Tyrants shall die 27. God ouerthroweth their purposes 14 20 22 56. 62. they can doe but what God will 117. Tyrants compared to flyes 105. Tythes are to be payd cherefully 365. and of the best not of the worst 416. V. The Vaile what it signified 402. Vaine glorie 280. 281. 330. Varietie of names of God is from a varietie of affections in vs 72. Verses an ancient kinde of writing 228. Vertues giuen to creatures 238. Vertue is the chiefe nobilitie 463. Visions are ceased 390. Vnderstanding darkned 62 461. Vnion betwixt God and his Ministers 227. Vnion betweene God and his Church 232. Vnitie 224. 463. Vnnaturall lusts 342. Vnthankefulnesse 7 25 229 253 437. Voluntarie sinnes 332. Vrim and Thummim 410. 412. Vsurers 106. Vsurie 153. 344. 345. W. VVarres from Rome 139. VVarre is lawfull 290. the causes thereof 291. c. VVashing what it signified 430. 431. VVaters turned into blood 87. VVaters bitter 2●5 VVeather is disposed by God and therefore to bee ascribed neither to Nature nor Diuell 121. VVhisperers 25. VVicked their thoughts and harts are knowne of God 45 they are left without excuse 62. they mistake the causes of things 65. in extremitie they seeke the prayers of the godly whom earst they contemned 96 145 200. they deferre good thinges 98. they can doe but what God will 117. yet they boast as if they could do what they list 233. when their destruction is at hand there are baites offered to pull them on 211. they quickely repent them of their good but ●ieldome of their euill ibid. VVidowes 344. VVill of God performed by the wicked 117. for none can resist it 167. it must be all and not in part obserued by the godly 130. 199. it is the rule of right 172. no reason is to be demaunded aboue it 55. we must be pleased with it 243. 279. Our Will is wayward 62. obstinacie of will is euer the refuge of a reprobate 63. and of a worldling 153. it is the measure of sinne 332 VVill of the dead is to be regarded with faithfulnesse 207. VVill-worship 376 386 393 397 403 410 465. VVillingnesse in Gods seruice 364 365. VVinde commaunded by God 217. VVitches 109 341. they are instruments to worke yiouth to marriages 342. VVi●cs dutie 54 234. brawling wines binder religious husbands 59. they should not bee an hinderance to men in their callings 300. they must goe to Church with their husbands 369. VVomens wits best in extremitie 19. VVomen may not baptise 60. VVomen are wedded to iewels yet wil part with them to maintaine Idolatrie 439. VVonders may be wrought by Sathan and Antichrist 86 the difference betweene them miracles ibid. VVord of God blasphemously mistearmed 65 66. it is to be preferred before miracles 84. in diuers it hath diuers effects 118. it must affect the heart 119. it is a guide to the promised land 107. 466. it must concur with signes 216. compared with the foode of the bodie 289. VVorkes 288. VVorld not to bee loued too much 108 151 152 192 256 259 273. VVorld inconstant 4 280. 281 282. VVorld vnthankefull 438. VVorship of God must be comely and without pompe 326. VVrath of God can arme all creatures against one 102 and yet God remembreth mercie in the middest of wrath 117 199. VVriting better than tradition 356. Y. Yea●e had the beginning thereof diuersly taken 184 185. Youth is to be catechised 127 196 333 370. Z. Zeale 274 445 b. Zipporah bringeth her husband into danger 59. her act in circumcising her Child is no warrant for womens baptising now a dayes 60. Corrections of faults escaped in the Printing Page 15. line 13. yet he is not Page 20. line 29. all you Page 23. line 28. vniust Page 25. line 6. whisperers Page 37. line 18. possessed Page 67. line 1. bricke as before Page 102. line 6. if it do worke Page 106. line vlti want Page 139. line 9. miseries Page 202. line 10. who
forget This maketh the child vndutifull to his parents because hee forgetteth what they haue done for him which made the olde father Tobiah call vpon his sonne earnestlie to remember what his mother suffered for him when he was in her bodie what care after when he was brought into the world to make much of her as long as she liued when she should die to burie her by him The good father doubted not but due remembrance would work gratitude as he well knew vnkind forgetfulnes would do the contrarie This is the sinne of seruants to their Maisters of Maisters often to their seruants Of one neighbour towards another of all the world almost this day But could such seruice may you thinke as Ioseph did to Egipt be euer forgotten yea yea we sée it héere noted by God himselfe and therefore we must know it for truth that ingratitude will make no bones to swallow vp any vertue any merit any goodnes whatsoeuer Which causeth a saying to be most true Si ingratum dixeris omnia dixeris if thou canst truly say he is vnthankfull in that one word thou hast saide all the euill of him that may be spoken Honourable therefore was it and thrice honourable in King Henry the 3. King of this land so to remember the seruices of his oppressed seruant Hubert Lord chiefe Justice of England thereupon to frée him from the malice of his enemies and to saue his life I sée no reason saith he why we should deale so hardly with Hubert when his enemies vrged his execution and expected the Kings cōmandement for the same for first from the time of his youth he serued mine Uncle King Richard then my father King Iohn in whose seruice as I heard say beyond the seas he was driuen to eate his horse and in my time he hath stoode constantly in the defence of that Realme against forreigne Nations kept the Castle of Douer against king Lewis and vanquished the French-men vpon the seas also at Bedford and Lincolne he hath done great seruice If hee should be guiltie of anie thing done vntruly against me which is not euidentlie proued yet by me he shall neuer be put to such a villanous death For I had rather be accounted a king foolish and simple than to be iudged a tyrant and séeker of blood especiallie of such as haue serued me and my Auncestors in manie perils so dangerously weighing more the few euils which yet be not proued than so many good deserts both to me and the whole Realme euidently knowne vnto all men As then remembrance and forgetfulnes of a good are contrarie so you sée the effects of them are contrarie the one bringing forth all honourable actions the other oppression and crueltie as in this place These were the foure causes of this great affliction of Gods people and let vs neuer forget them nor their vse 3. In the next place let vs note their manner in bringing their purpose to passe first they haue a méeting and a consultation then an exeeution of what they haue deuised Their méeting the king caused when he said Come let vs work wiselie c. In which wee sée the guise of the world the wicked haue a Come as well as the godlie but farre and farre differing for the godlie haue their Come as a word of encouragement to religion and the exercises thereof as when they say O come and let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs hartily reioyce in the strength of his saluation But the wickeds Come is to conspiracie and practise in which they are more diligent than the children of light are in their good for their bodies méete their heads méete their hearts méete both outward inward they are earnest in euill Such a Come we reade of against holie Ieremie Come sayd the wicked and let vs imagine a deuise against Ieremie let vs smite him with the tongue and not giue credite to any of his words Such another haue Kuffians and théenes and swaggering fellowes in the booke of the Prouerbs Come and cast in thy lot with ours for we will haue all but one purse c. Such another hath the harlot to the young man Come my husband is not at home c. But against such cursed Comes let vs euer remember what the Psalme saith Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the counsell of the vngodly nor stand in the way of sinners and hath not sit in the seate of the scornfull And that Arnobius an olde Writer well noteth vpon those words Primus psalmus vnde scit beatitudinem perijsse inde recuperat In consilio impiorum abijt Adam id est in serpentis et mulieris Et nunc Adam noster id est consensus noster beatus erit si non abierit in consilio serpentis et mulieris id est inconsilio carnis et diaboli aut si abierit non ibi stet aut si steterit non sedeat c. The first Psalme saith he where it knew happines was lost there beginneth to recouer it againe for Adam walked in the counsell of the wicked namely of the woman and of the serpent And now our Adam that is our consent shall be blessed if it doo not walke in the counsell of the woman and of the serpent that is of flesh and the deuill or if it happen to walk yet standeth not still or if it stand still yet sitteth not downe in the same that is abideth not and tarieth in it but remembring the law of the Lord taketh his delight therein and in the same doth exercise himselfe both day and night This cursed conuenticle and malicious méeting albeit wholely it sauoreth of crueltie and blood yet if you marke it it is couered and smeared ouer with a vizard and die of wisedome for Come faith the King let vs wisely worke So still is the Deuill like himselfe if you marke it and euer in his colours His followers learne of him and they also delight in colours The proud man is cleanlie the couetous man is prouident the drunkard a good-fellow and such like But the day will come wherein all such colours will be washed away and the cleare sunne breaking out and dispiersing all clouds sinne will be discerned to be sinne and eternally punnished Thus of their méeting and their counsell 4 The conclusion resolution of their counsel if you marke the text is to lay burthens vpon this people and to kéepe them downe Burthens of labours as appeareth and burthens of payments as some write So that by this way their strength should be shaken and their liues made wearisome vnto them that thereby lesse encreasing might be amongst them and lesse feare had of them Where marke if you doe not sée the deuises of some in our daies wise as they thinke but héerein wicked as we know séeking by such practises to breake both backs and hearts of those that deserue better then
that followed to wit when for assurance that hée would deliuer Jerusalem besieged by the Assyrians he said This shall bee a Signe vnto thee O Ezechias Thou shalt eate this yeare such as groweth of it selfe and the second yeere such things as grow without sowing and in the third yeare sow ye and reape and plant Vine-yardes and eate the fruits thereof As if he should haue said whereas vsually and by reason after war commeth famine because men cannot husband their grounds yet it shall not bée so with you but for two yéeres the ground it selfe shall féede you and let this suffice for a Signe of hope and comfort against this feare So in this place Moses feare not for I will be with thee and for a signe thou shalt bring them forth and serue me in this mountaine This thou shalt sée as truly as I tell thee and then this will be asigne that I was with thee according to my promise What a nature now is this in our déere GOD thus to submit himselfe to mans weakenesse and in steade of chiding and punishing man for it to helpe it and stay it with all comfortable tokens and signes O who would not trust in this God and beléeue what he promiseth Nay who hath not cause that obserueth these things to bée of the Prophet Dauids minde Blessed is the man that putteth his trust in him 15. This as it ought contented Moses and therefore leauing the matter of his owne infirmity be casteth his mind next vpon the infirmity of the Israelites to whom he must goe And fearing lest according to their former backewardnesse whereof hée had tasted they would stand in doubt of the truth of his authority to deliuer such matter from the Lord vnto them hée prayeth the Lord to instruct him what he shall say if they aske him what is his Name Which question was allowable in Moses because it had relation to others not to himselfe For when Iacob would know the Angels name that wrestled with him for himselfe that is to satisste his owne curiosity he was answered wherefore doest thou aske my Name and it was not told him yet he blessed him So Manoah Samsons Father asked the Angell the like question in like sort was answered Why askest thou thus after my Name which is secret or wonderfull and told him not The reason may appeare in the place because Manoah askes it that hée might honour him not with an eye to the profit of others as Moses did héere Therefore the Lord answered Moses said I AM THAT I AM thus shalt thou say to the Children of Israel I AM hath sent me vnto you That is the God that is no Changeling but the same for euer who as hee hath done for them and their Fathers very great things so can he againe if they will be obedient to his will with like power mercy and goodnesse deliuer them and free them from this bondage wherein they groane as cruelly vexed and oppressed See then a sweete Comfort in all our feares euen his name I AM. Noting that as he hath beene to penitent sinners so euer he will be without any change If I turne vnto him call vpon him and withall faithfull trust of my inwarde soule depend vpon him I AM is his Name and I may not doubt of him Haue not I my selfe fonnd him sweet cōfortable good 10000. times as well as other sinners Hath not your hearts beene touched by him sundry times to very good purposes Hath not another-man founde him gratious and kinde in his worldly estate and aduancement to honour when hee might have passed him ouer and haue had choise inough So let euery man run-ouer his priuate fauours How then may euer any of vs fall from him without most great reproofe or euer faint and feare that he will forsake vs. I AM I say againe is his Name and we must be taught by it that hee is a God without all change towards such as stedfastly cleaue vnto him The Lord then giue vs vse in all our feares of this Comfort strengthen our weakenesse to beleeue and euer in mercy looke vpon vs. 16. After this hée appointed Moses his Order of going and publishing this message to wit that first hée should goe to the Elders and call them together and make them acquainted with it before he dealt with the Common people Where wée must take the name of Elder for a name of Office not of yeares for so we know the Scripture speaketh Not euer the oldest men beare Office either in Church or common wealth but as God giueth guifts and appointeth in his prouidence Places vnto them of gouernement and charge so in regard thereof they are called the Elders that is the Rulers and Gouernours though in yeares somthing young as Timothy and others were Now marke we to our good in this first that vnder the great tyrannie of Pharaoh yet some liberty was giuen these Israelites to meete for Religion and knowledge instruction and vnderstanding according to the right way which the Lord had acquainted them with albeit that same of the Egyptians was not receiued nor allowed And how doth this amplifie the bloody crueltie of Antichrist who yeeldeth not so much to his fellow-Christians I meane to people professing Christ as he pretendeth he doth as bloody Pharaoh yeelded to the Jewes who ioined not in profession with him Secondly obserue we the Wisedome liked prescribed of God for a Rule euer to guide our selues by and our actions to wit when any new thing is to be published that concerneth any change in the Church or Common-wealth first to acquaint the Magistrates Rulers and Gouernors with it to approue our commission and matter vnto them with all modesty humility loue and care of order and vnitie and then with their consents approbation and aide vnto the people and multitude This is a right course wée sée and this shall haue a blessing from the Author of it as here it had Then shall they obey thy voice c. ver 18. id est credent acquiescent tibi vt prudentes qui promissiones Abrahae patribus factas norunt maximè Gen. 15. Quarta generatione reuertentur huc c. That is they shall beléeue thée and yéelde vnto thee as wise-men and such as know the promises made vnto Abraham and the fathers especially Gen. the 15. In the fourth generation they shall returne hither c. Other vaine-glorious factious and disorderly dealings will haue their confusion and will bee strangled with the haulter of their owne disobedience euen in their youth that is before they come to any perfection or ripenesse For God is the Author of Order Gouernement and Rule who appointing Elders and superiors for the peace and quietnesse of his Church euer hindered with diuisions and tumults will haue them duly regarded and respected as they ought not as far as wee lift Thinke we then of it with a religious féeling and the
stoode in their way as they came out from Pharaoh To whom they said the Lord looke vpon you and iudge for ye haue made our sauour to stinke before Pharaoh and before his Seruants in that ye haue put a sword in their hands to sley vs. A third euent of the ambassage of Moses and Aaron is this bitter expostulation of these Officers wherein as in a glasse most bright and cleare you sée the condition and lot of faithfull Ministers in this wretched world First the King and now the people accuse them as worthie of great reproofe both gréeuous to good minds but especiallie to be accused of their brethren when they doo as their dutie requireth O it is double gréeuous and euer was But thus was it euer and will bee euer and therefore praemonitus praemunitus forewarned forearmed and praeuisaiacula minus feriunt Darts espied before they come hurt lesse God giue vs patience loue still to them that loue not vs. Heere is great bitternes and yet vndeserued in this their spéech if you marke it and heere is great inconstancie compared with the Chapter before where they worshipped and welcommed these happy Messengers of a gracious God who saw their oppression and miserie and sent to helpe them But quae nocent docent things hurtfull instruct and giue wisedome While all is well good is the Minister and when the crosse commeth he and his doctrine though the truth of God is cause of all away with that and away with him The word which thou hast spoken to vs in the name of the Lord wee will not heare it of thee But wee will doo whatsoeuer thing goeth out of our owne mouth as to burne Incense to the Queene of Heauen and to poure out drinke offerings vnto her as we haue done both we our Fathers our Kings and our Princes in the Cities of Iuda and in the streetes of Ierusalem now marke their reason for then had wee plenty of victuals and were well and felt no euill But since we left off to burne Incense to the Queene of Heauen and to poure out drinke offerings vnto her we haue had scarcenes of all things and haue beene consumed by the sword and by famine This is the stay of the multitude and this is the line they measure all things by their prosperitie in worldly matters and immunitie from trouble and affliction any wayes But it is a crooked rule if we hearken to God and he that will followe him must take vp his crosse and followe him when his good pleasure shal be so Take héede also by these mennes examples to expect deliuerance from any calamitie sooner and faster than God pleaseth For because of this they breake out in this sort against Gods Seruants they will not tarie the leasure of God but when themselues will and as they wil they must be deliuered A dangerous dealing and no way fit for them that are séekers and crauers 12. Wherefore Moses returned to the Lord and said Lord why hast thou afflicted this people wherefore hast thou thus sent me For since I came to Pharaoh to speake in thy Name he hath vexed this people and yet thou hast not deliuered thy people Sée sée the right remedie in all affliction euen to returne vnto the Lord as Moses did here For he woundeth and he healeth hee killeth and he maketh aliue he bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp againe But Moses manner of returning with such expostulations here is not to be commended for hee pleadeth with the Lord as though hee did contrarie to his promise because as yet there appeared no fruite of his ambassage He also complaineth as though his calling were in vaine since worse worse was the condition of the people from his first comming Wherefore sée and marke the weakenes of the strongest sometimes and especiallie when of such they are vexed as they haue deserued well and indéede should receiue a kinder course frō them O gall of friends how bitter art thou how strikest thou to the very bottome of a fleshie heart and leauest a sting behinde thée that killeth with the poyson and venome of it if God succour not Neither the furie of Pharaoh nor the crueltie of the Egyptians moued Moses any thing but his owne to wrong him whose good hee sought and with all perill to himselfe endeauoured it moueth him so that his weakenes breaketh out euen before his God This should moue men and all that looke to be liked and liue with God to forbeare and flie from the like vnkindnes toward those whom God hath sent to them for their good and this must remember such messengers to pray for strength and as Moses yet forsooke not his Office for all this so neither they to doe but still going on to expect the Lords mercy which here to Moses now shewed it selfe and gaue him comfort as followeth in the next Chapter CHAP. 6. The parts of this Chapter are two First a repetition of things done before from the 1. verse to the 12. Secondly a short Storie by way of digression of the names and families of the Israelites from the 12. verse to the end of the Chapter 1. TThen for vse of this Chapter let vs consider these wordes of the Lord ver 3 And I appeared to Abraham Isaac and Iacob by the Name of Almightie God but by my Name Iehouah was I not knowne vnto them and vnderstand the true sence and meaning of them Wherein wee may not thinke that this name Iehouah was vnknowne before this time for expreslie hee named himselfe thus to Abraham Gen. 15. 7. and to Iacob Gen. 28. 13. as also in the 26. ver 24. where Iacob prayed vnto the Lord by this Name But the Lords meaning is by this kinde of spéech to prefer by way of comparison this manifestation of himselfe which now he entended to make before all others made to the Fathers in former times because those contained but promises this should haue the effect and performance of the promises so as the words are as if the Lord should haue said I appeared to Abraham Isaac and Iacob by the name of Almightie God that is I gaue them promises which they by faith laide hold on and beléeued moued with the assurance they had of my Almightie power and all-sufficiencie but by my name Iehouah was I not knowne vnto them that is I gaue them not the accomplishment and matter of my promise as now at this time I will doo to you For now as my Name Iehouah signifieth an existence by my selfe of whō in whom by whom and for whom whatsoeuer is is and hath being so shall you sée it come to passe in your Deliuerance from this raging Tyrant and cruell bondage I will performe what I haue said and I will now cause it to be what heretofore I haue onely said should be S. Bernard hath a good Saying touching this matter when hee teacheth vs thus
Pharaoh being offered to appoint the time himselfe appointed the next day saying To morrowe rather than presently the Frogges being so vgly and no place frée from them no not the Kings Chamber Who would not haue cryed now now euen forthwith pray that I may be deliuered from this plague rather than to haue stayed till the next day It is answered first that hee still doubted whether it was the Finger of God or an enchauntment and therefore was content to deferre the time to trie whether of it selfe it would passe away and so to discredite Moses and Aaron Such hollowe holes are in Hypocrites hearts when they séeme religious and carefull of Prayer or other good things Secondly héerein he shewed the nature of the wicked who not onely deferre their owne duties from day to day but as much as they can put ouer others also that offer good things vnto them as for example if a Preacher tender his seruice this Sabaoth he is tolde the next will be far more fit and if he come also the next Sabaoth then is either the Maister from home the Gentlewoman sicke the weather too hote or colde or some such thing that be Moses neuer so readie yet Pharaoh is not readie but cras cras to morrowe to morrowe is still the song till the Lord strike and all Morrowes end wee passing away to woe without end for our deferring That Moses taketh his owne time and saith Be it as thou hast said it is to teach him that at all times the Lord is the Lord his myracles no enchauntments but a powerfull working for his owne glory the gracious Deliuerance of his Church 11. Then Moses and Aaron went out from Pharaoh and Moses cried vnto the Lord concerning the Frogges c. Why went Moses forth might not hee haue stayed in the Court and haue prayed there God forbid but wee should thinke Courts to be places of prayer for such as haue a censcience in euery place to lift vp hands and heart to God yet would God also the hinderances and impediments so to doo in those places were fewer Surelie great Courtiers are found that a meaner place hath yéelded their hearts more heate to good things than those glistering places haue as sometimes a Country-house and sometimes a darke hole in a close prison Moses cried vnto the Lord saith the Text and prayer doth what neither doores nor lockes nor any strength or wit of man could doo the weapons of Gods children are such and so mightie The word of Crying noteth the vehemencie of Moses prayer against colde formalitie too common in most prayers It noteth not any loudnes of voice although that also be lawfull at times since the same Moses is said to crie in another place when hee spake not a word but from his inward Spirit Ezechias thus cried vnto his God and escaped both a mortall disease and the huge host of the Assyrians But what prayer can doo I hope you knowe and therefore goe no further 12. And the Lord did according to the Saying of Moses Sée the credite that Gods seruants haue with their mercifull God they aske and he giueth without any stop Can you thinke God heareth Moses alone no saith the Psalme God is neere vnto all that call vpon him yea to all all and euer remember it Hee will fulfill the desire of all them that feare him he will heare their crie and will saue them The Lord preserueth all them that loue him but he will destroy all the vngodly Wherefore my mouth shall speake the praise of the Lord and all flesh shall blesse his holy Name for euer and euer Daily experience sheweth the like and therefore as Moses héere euen despised Moses was stronger with his God and by his God than all Egypt to remoue a plague so shall wee euer be more strong than our enemies in what God shall sée vs fit to be enabled Wherefore one Moses is better for a kingdome than many others that are iudged to be of greater vertue c. 13. So the Frogges dyed in the houses in the townes and in the fields And they gathered them together on heapes and the Land stanke of them saith the Text. Had it not béene as easie for the Lord to haue taken them quite away assuredly to the Lord all was one but this was done to shewe the truth of the myracle that they were Frogges indéede no enchauntments thereby to méete with the vnbeléefe of the King and all his Courtiers who either openly in words or secretly in heart thought otherwise And by one meanes or other the Lord shall euer in his good time deliuer his truth from false surmises his faithfull Ministers from false imputations and write the wickednesse of Atheists and carnall men vppon their faces to their confusion Onely be wee patient to tarie his will to like of his way and be we assured we shall both sée his glory and receaue comfort 14. But when Pharaoh sawe that he had rest giuen him he hardned his heart and hearkened not vnto them as the Lord had said Sée the corruption of our nature if God worke not No sooner is the rod off but as the Dogge to his vomite and the Sowe to her myre so wretched man returneth to his olde bias and falleth to his former sinne againe When wee are sicke or distressed any way wee pretend repentance wee pray wee crie wee vowe and what not in shewe But forasmuch as all riseth from feare and not from loue it vanisheth againe as soone as the feare is past and the Deuill returneth with seauen worse than himselfe making our end more odious than euer our beginning was This hath béene touched before but yet euer marke it and feare it your selfe as you haue a care to please God For if you forsake God you can neuer blame God if hee forsake you and if after God hath giuen you rest you become retchlesse as Pharaoh was here then if as hee in the sea so you in eternall woe be drowned for euer you haue your desert and GOD is iust 15. The Frogge is as wee all knowe a foule filthie creature abiding in foule places as bogges and myrie plashes all the day long and at night péeping out with the head aboue the water making a hatefull noise with many others of his sort till the day appeare againe Wherefore Diuines haue thought that by these foule creatures fitlie might be resembled such croking Crues as hiding themselues all the day in an Ale denne or such like place of vncleanenes as soone as night commeth put out their heads and make a hatefull noise against Gouernours and Superiours neighbours and honest persons till all that heare them be wearie of them Which filthie Frogges the Lord assuredly will deale with all in his good time as here he did with these Egyptian Frogges namely kill them destroy them and make the stinch of them knowne to manie Till then let patience and
procure one drop of water to coole his scalded tongue The gaine of Gold makes many loose their soules The gréedy wretch that for himselfe still spares doth hoord-up nothing but continuall cares Hermocrates lying at the point of death bequeathed his goods to none but himselfe The fire burneth ●●ercer the more it hath and so the worlds wormes The Bées doo flocke to the hony dewe and so these wretches vnto gaine The greatest fish deuoure the smaller frie and so these wretches their weaker brethren In aworde as you neuer sée the Sea without waues so shall you neuer see these wretches without woes And as the cloudes doo hide the Sunnes light so their gréedie hearts repell Gods grace But let this suffice touching some vse of this Chapter ¶ ⁋ CHAP. 9. The chiefe heades of this Chapter are these three plagues more The Fifth Plague The Sixth Plague The Seauenth Plague 1. WHereof that we may make like vse as before let vs first note frō whence any murren of cattell doth come when wee are that way punished in a countrie surely euen from the Lord as we sée héere Not simply frō Witches and Sorcerers set on by malicious neighbours as we vsually thinke for what can a whole Legion of Deuils doe to one swine without leaue graunted from the Lord you know the place and it ought to be thought vpon God sometimes trieth by this afflictiō and so teach the Scriptures Cursed shall be the increase of thy kine and the flocke of thy sheepe The beasts and the birdes are consumed for their sin that dwel in the land Euery way thē it is the Lord euery way therfore we ought to séeke to the Lord not to Witches and Sorcerers 2 But still the Lord spareth the Israelites True and sée the vse of it First God in his Justice this way more tormenteth the mindes of the wicked who for their rebellion against him deserue all punishment so saith the Psalme The wicked shall see this and consume away Secondly the Lord assureth his Chosen in all the world that albeit in lesser matters he trieth them or chasticeth them as hee dooth others yet when his great plagues come of Judgement vnto death and destruction eternall he will surely make a separation to the vnspeakeable Comfort of his owne and to the eternall praise of his mercie The wordes of the Prophet are plaine For a little while haue I forsaken thee but with euerlasting mercie haue I had compassion on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer Againe in the Psalme if his wrath be kindled but a little Blessed are they that put their trust in him Meaning because there is euer as I say a partition betwixt the Lords wrath and his Chosen Good therefore is that prayer of Dauid euer to be in our minde wheresoeuer we are O knit my heart vnto thee Lord that I may feare thy name that I may euer cleaue vnto thee euer be thine and neuer be drawne away from thee by any temptation whatsoeuer 3. And the Lord appointed a time saying To morrowe the Lord shall finish this thing in this Land So that not onely the Judgement and affliction which happeneth is of the Lord but the very time also when it shall begin and when it shall end before which time no malice of man or Deuill can bring it no power of any creature can take it away Tempus pr●fixit vt non casu factum putent vt certitudinem Diuin● virtutis ostenderet cui nemo potest resistere Hee appointed the time saith Theodoret that they might not thinke these things came by chaunce likewise to shew the certaintie of Gods power which no creature can resist Againe the truth of his comminations and threatnings you sée héere when it is said So the Lord did this thing on the morrowe all the Cattell of Egypt died but of the Cattell of the children of Israel died not one Learne therefore to tremble when the Lord threatneth and to feare the Euent for as here so euer he will be true vnlesse heartie Repentance step in betwixt and turne away his wrath from vs. 4. Then Pharaoh sent to sée and found all as hath béene said yet saith the Text the heart of Pharaoh was obstinate and hee did not let the people goe Marke it well and thinke with your selfe whether any Preacher or Teacher can be plainer in words than GOD was héere by works or whether any man can euer bee made to sée a truth by teaching more euidently and manifestly than Pharaoh héere sawe this hand of God smiting Egypt and sparing Israel yet though GOD be the Teacher himselfe and the matter subiect to his eyes without deniall Pharaoh still is obstinate still the same still a striuer against God and his grace How then doo wee wonder that where the Word is preached truth soundly and plainly taught yet all be not reformed and reclaimed frō their errors Is there any fault in the Word or Teacher are not things plaine how then commeth this to passe but euen as héere it did from the fearefull wrath of GOD hardning such hearts and closing such eyes that they can neither sée féele or vnderstand to saluation All because they haue not a loue to the truth but are hypocrites scorners deriders and such as heare onely for fashion thinking themselues abundantly skilfull when indéede they are most ignorant and when as they may sée the Lord by his Prophet affirming that he will looke vnto none but such as are poore of a contrite spirit and tremble at his words That is humble in their owne eyes receauing the Word with reuerence hungring and thirsting after the same as the Spirituall foode of their soules saying in their hearts as Samuel did Speake on Lord thy seruant heareth Surelie neither true matter nor plaine manner will serue vnlesse God strike a holy stroke within vs by his powerfull Spirit that wee may be moued Therefore as it is a blessing to haue truth tolde vs so is it a double blessing to haue a soft heart giuen vs moued yéelding to the truth Otherwise as you sée in the Smiths shop as many hard blowes laide vpon his Anuile as vpon the Iron hee worketh and yet the Anuile remaineth all one and the Iron turneth to the Smithes desire because in the one there is heate in the other none So in the same Auditorie as manie proofes and reasons are laid open to one as to another and yet one moued and not another S. Augustine saith Non verbis hominis fit vt intelligatur verbum Dei facit Deus vt intelligatis The words of man cannot make man vnderstand God his word but it is God that maketh them to vnderstand Joy therefore in the Lord his mercie towards you when you haue féeling knowe that it is a grace not giuen to all you sée Pharaoh héere and such hath the world many whom no preaching can reforme c. 5.
away and their Deliuerance be wrought by a gracious GOD. Thus comforted Paule the Church in his time saying As Iannes and Iambres withstoode Moses so doo these also resist the truth But now marke they shall preuaile no longer for their madnes shall be euident vnto all men as theirs also was An end therefore will be of all troubles which these Locusts shall worke vnto the Church and Elect of God Fiue moneths is not long in respect of that eternitie which followeth and therefore in comfort be wee patient their time is set and they shall haue an end Againe this place may notably assure you and euery one that all which died in the time of Poperie were not cast-away but that at one time or other by one way or other the Lord gaue them light a holy departure in his truth and Stories tell vs how still in the time of darknes God raised vp some zealous and able Teachers of their brethren by whose ministerie and helpe many receaued light and ouercame the power of error Whereunto agrée the words of Primatius Illi hic intelliguntur qui licet falsis fuerunt irretiti doctrinis circa finem tamen vitae compuncti diuinam recipiunt veritatem They heere are vnderstoode who though they haue beene abused by false Doctrine yet in the end of their life hauing remorse they entertained the Heauenly truth The words following that in those dayes men shall seeke death and shall not finde it and shall desire to die and death shall flie from them verie effectually shew forth the tortures of conscience which Popish Doctrine casteth men into so well knowne by fearefull Examples as I néede not to stand vpon it Also the misteries of the Time wherein the Locusts should swarme fully expressed in Stories which indéede made many a man and woman wearie of life The little short time of Quéene Marie her Reigne how full it was of vexation and griefe is not nor cannot be forgotten Thirdly in the place of the Reuelation it is saide The forme of the Locusts was like vnto horses prepared vnto battell And sée how it resembleth Romish Locusts Horses are proud so are they Horses are bolde and sturdie fierce and cruell not turning backe but rushing forward so are they bold and bloodie sturdie and mercilesse not looking backe by repentance but rushing forward in hardnes of heart Horses are fat and faire and full of neighing so are they And for being prepared to battell all Histories shew what warres they haue caused and still doo in the world themselues being Leaders Captaines and Generals in them whereas wee knowe that the true Church of God by the Rule and Example of the Gospell ought to be a Daughter of peace not a Mother of debate A forgiuer of iniuries not a renenger of her selfe or a séeker of warres The Tragicall Storie betwixt Frederick the 2 and Gregorie the 9 may serue in steade of many to prooue what warres and treacheries come from Rome That horrible slaughter betwixt both sides of thirtie thousand the most Citizens of Rome whom will it not moue that readeth it This Pope was in the daies of Henry the 3 King of England The open warres proclaimed against the Gréeke Church shewe much But I will lay downe the very words of Pandolphus who wrote in Italian the life of this Frederick the 2 that such as haue not the Storie may sée this point fully and I pray you marke them well Truly saith He when I consider with my selfe that Christ whose Vicar the Romaine Bishops boast themselues to be said vnto his Disciples that they should follow him and imitate his Example as of their Maister and Teacher and commaunded them farther that they should not draw the sword but put the same into the scabbard and gaue them in precept that they should not onely forgiue iniuries 7. times but 70. times 7. times to those that offended them And when I now compare the liues of the Bishops of Rome how neere they follow him whose Vicars they say they are and consider so many and so great conspiracies treasons rebellions disloyalties lyings in waite and treacherous deuises so many Legates of the Popes being Ecclesiasticall persons which will needes be called the Sheepheards of Christ his Flocke to be such Warriours and Captaines of Souldiers in all the parts of Italy Campania Apulia Calabria being the Emperours Dominions in Picenum Aemilia Flaminia and Lumbardie to be sent against him Also when with my selfe I meditate the destruction of so many great and famous Cities the subuersion of such Cōmon-weales the slaughter of so many men and the effusion of such Christian blood Lastly when I behold so victorious prosperous and fortunate Emperours to be and so many miserable infortunate vanquished Popes to be put to flight I am perswaded with my selfe to thinke and beleeue that the Iudgements of God are secret and marueilous and That to be true that Aeneas Siluius writeth in his Historie of Austria That there is no great and marueilous clade no notorious and speciall calamitie that hath hapned either to the Publique-weale or else to the Church of GOD whereof the Bishops of Rome haue not beene the Authors Add vnto this that Notable place in the Prophet Micah where speaking of Gods true Church it is saide they shall breake their swords into Mattocks and their speares into ●ithes that is their fierce affections shall by the power of the word be mortified and brotherly loue encreased with desire of peace and quietnes But these men euen contrarie breake their Mattocks into swords and their ●ithes into speares being so great so fierce so ambitions and common Warriours as they are The strange cruelties of Vrban the 5. making bloodie great warres vpon many and bringing them by force in subiection to him I omit These things shew how truly this Prophecie of the Apocalyps concerning Locusts like vnto horses prepared to battell agréeth to these Romish Locusts Popes Cardinals Legats Monkes Fryers Priests Iesuites and such like Nicholas Machiauel saith all the ruinous calamities and miserable clades that either Italy or whole Christendome hath suffered haue béene brought in by the Popes of Rome A faire warning to all Gods people to know them and auoide them Fourthly on their heads were as it were crownes like vnto gold And these haue Shauen Crownes tokens as they say of their Priestly and Kingly dignity Such Crownes are rightly said by S. Iohn to be like Crownes not Crownes indeede Surely right Notes they are of Romish Locusts and that may suffice as many as will be warned by any thing Fiftly And their faces were like the faces of men So are these not terrible in shew but curteous kinde fawning flattering watching catching with smooth wiles to effect their purpose They pretend all good making men beléeue that they can bring them to true Blessednes that they will teach them true Religion true Deuotion and giue them Pardon for
all sinnes So in Daniel is it saide that to Antichrist are giuen the eyes of a man still therefore marke how these properties hit Sixtly Their haire as the haire of women So are these they are delicious and wanton full of light allurements so trick and trim in silke and sutes of their fashion that the very Persians may séeme to giue place vnto them when they are in their Pontificalibus and gay attire In a word nothing may be saide more truly than that their haire is like the haire of women Their loose life hath to● much proofe Seauenthly But their teeth were as the teeth of Lyons So are these passing cruell and beyond all the butchering Tyrants that Stories speake of No mercie no bowels no respect of age se●e or circumstance vsually respected of men that haue any remnants of pitie Their Inquisition Oh how mercilesse their new deuised Torments Oh how strange Againe their teeth may bee well said to be like Lyons because they deuoured and eate vp such great things Looke vpon their Abbies Priories Nunries and all Religious Houses iudge what teeth they had and when there was not enough to satisfie them of temporall Lands then they preyed vpon the Church making Impropriations the venome whereof remaineth yet So that one way or other they were planted placed seated and setled in the very fat of the earth and had they continued still and not béene limited to fiue moneths who or what should haue escaped their Lyon-like teeth Eightly They had Habbergions like to Habbergions of yron And ●o haue these if you well marke them for by these yron Brest-plates are noted two properties found in the Romish rabble First a most obstinate stubbornnesse and inflexible frowardnesse not enduring any perswasion not yéelding any way but crying euer The Church The Church I am setled I am resolued and as a Captaine of theirs an English Apostata saide once Heaue at vs whilest you will and whilest you may you shall neuer remoue vs. This is to haue an Habbergion or Brest-plate of yron or euen to bee turned into yron Blessed be God who hath thus foretolde vs of this striffe con●umacie of theirs to the end we should take no offence that they are not conuerted vnto the Truth but stand and die in their wilfulnes Secondly they are defended by that Antichristian power as it were by an Habbergion of yron claiming an impunitie immunitie from all secular power and authoritie and hauing in readines curses and threats of Excommunication euen against the Greatest Princes and against All their Subiects who shall obey them whereof many a wofull Tragedie hath followed Againe themselues many of them haue béene Princes younger Sonnes Noble-mens younger sonnes greatly allied and friended so that in regard of this power and strength they might truly be saide to haue Habbergions of yron Ninthly The sound of their wings was like the sound of Chariots when many horses runne vnto battell So haue these winges when they flie aloft by the Names of MOST HOLY FATHERS MOST BLESSED MOST EXCELLENT and such like themselues giuing out That they are more blessed than the holy virgin Mary because she bare Christ but once and they make him and beare him in their hands euery day at the Altar Thus flying with their light wings of proud Titles they make such a noise and sound as Chariots drawne by many horses into the battell For denie any of these things and how violent how vehement are they by Disputations Excommunications Suspentions and Sentences of death it selfe Surely no whéeles of Chariots can flash out fire so as these men doo if their flickering wings of flattering Titles be touched Fitly therefore the words of S. Iohn hit them Their Scorpion tailes and power to hurt was touched before therefore I omit it now The tenth Marke is Those Locusts haue a King ouer them And so haue these Romish Locusts their Pope acknowledging no Magistrates authoritie ouer them but exalting him and exempting themselues from all others This King of the Locustes is héere called The Angel of the bottomlesse pit and in the eleuenth Chapter The Beast that commeth out of the bottomlesse pit Wordes of weight to mooue all Popish mindes if the Lord had not a purpose to destroy them For they must néedes acknowledge such a King is not worth the following and that their Pope is this King that which hath béene said and may further be noted of him clearely sheweth For hee that crosseth and crusheth to his vttermost power His Doctrine that came from Heauen he is the King that commeth out of Hell in whom S. Hierome saith the Deuill dwelleth bodily But the Pope doth so as proofe enough will manifest and Ergo the conclusion followeth as I said His Name also is folde héere which giueth againe great light For albeit the Pope be called Holy Father and so forth yet indéede he is a bloodie Destroyer and so his right Name in Hebrewe is Abaddon and in Greeke Apollyon that is destroying Thus in the Prophecie of the Reuelation hath God you sée described a fearefull kinde of Locustes vnto the consideration whereof by reason of these Egyptian Locusts or Grashoppers we haue slipped I hope not without some encrease of féeling how dreadfull their steps be that continually walke in Romish wayes and will not be reclaimed by any meanes Our owne safer iudgement God make vs thankfull for and continue the blessed helpes of our confirmation in his Truth euer vnto vs his holy and Heauenly Word a fréedome to vse all the profitable exercises thereof as Preaching hearing reading writing praying conference and whatsoeuer else without feare vnder the swéete smelling gouernment of a gracious Prince our dread Souereigne Amen Amen 10. Therefore Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron in hast and saide I haue sinned against the Lord your God and against you And now forgiue me my sinne onely this once and pray vnto the Lord your God that he may take away from me this death one 〈…〉 Thus the wicked in extremities seeke to Gods Ministers whom in their heart they hate and cannot abide But this hypocriticall holinesse of this dissembling King we haue diuers times noted before and therefore may passe it ouer now Yet marke the great vehemency of his wordes and consider in your minde what a déep sin Hypocrisy is how disagréeing from the nature of God who is all Truth and from that blessing in the Gospell of a pure heart Moses yéelded againe to pray to God And by a mightie strong West-winde the Grashoppers were taken away and violently cast into the Red-Sea so that there remained not so-much as one in all the coast of Egypt But when it was done Ph 〈…〉 h shewed himselfe in his olde colour and would not let them goe The 9. plague 1. VVHere vpon the Lord spake againe to Moses and said Stretch out thine hand toward heauen that there may be vpon the land
more pericula fugere illos voluit id nos facere docens etiam dum apertissimé Deum adiutorem habemus God doth not worke all things as he can but sometimes doth eschew perils after the maner of men therein teaching vs to doe the like namely by vsing meanes euen then when most plainly we haue God our helper 2. The Children of Israel went vp armed out of the Land of Egypt saith the Text. And it may teach vs warinesse and circumspection in our vocatiens euer reckoning of the enemie in this our holy march towardes the Land of Promise Iosephs bones are caried away with them according to the oath made vnto him which may teach vs faithfulnes and truth in the desires of dead men euermore a thing alwaies of good regard with good men and too little regarded by many that would be iudged good men But no shewe of warrant héere for the Popish fooleries and impieties vsed about their Reliques For this promise to translate his bones was taken by Ioseph to shew his Faith in the promise of GOD touching the Land of Promise to be giuen in time and it was performed by the Israelites in discharge of truth without any superstition or Idolatrie as in Poperie is vsed most offensiuely The 3. part THe last generall Head is concerning the signes of direction which the Lord vouchsafed them namely a Cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night Whereof the Psalme speaketh alluding to this Storie In the day time he led them with a Cloud and all the night long with a light of fire And againe Hee spread a cloud to be a couering and fire to giue light in the night season By this Great miracle shewing that the Israelites deliuerance was from himselfe and by no other meanes vnder Heauen Secondly that hee was present with them to defend and saue them from all their enemies And thirdly that in like sort hee guideth and protecteth his faithfull marching out of Egypt towardes the promised Land through the Wildernes of woe and affliction which indéede hee still doth by his Word and Sacraments two guides to vs as these pillars were to them So necessarie is it after deliuerance to be guided that without the one the other will not serue And if more particularly you wil meditate on them consider in the Cloud how it not only directeth the way but is spread as the Psalme saith for a couering namely against the heate of the Sunne sauing them from the violence thereof and comfortably cooling and refreshing them Remember also howe the afflictions of this world in the Gospell are noted by the heate of the Sunne And be you assured in a true Faith that euen euer euer against these heates the Lord in his good time will send you defence and comfort For still you must know that yesterday and today and for euer He is the same Meditate on the Apostles experience 2. Cor. 1. Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of all mercies and the God of all comfort which comforteth vs in all our tribulations sée the cooling Cloud that wee may be able to comfort them which are in any affliction by the comfort wherewith wee our selues are comforted of God For as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs so our consolation aboundeth through Christ c. Thus to Paule thus to you thus to all assuredly In the other pillar of fire obserue that beside direction by going before it also gaue light vnto them in the night And thereby learne with a féeling comfort that whosoeuer followe Christ as their Guide and Leader they still haue light in others darknes So saith Hee himselfe Hee that followeth mee shall not walke in darknes but shall haue that light of life In both the one and the other sée a Notable Figure of Christ in whō there is cooling without whom there is scorching heate in whom there is light and without whom there is hellish darknes In the world yee shall haue trouble but in mee yee shall haue peace The wordes which followe That they might goe both by day and by night most notablie remember vs that in trauelling towardes the spirituall Canaan we must not rest but labour forward continually The Chiidren of this world are often looking back toward Egypt and often pitch downe their Tents so in this Wildernes that they are loath euer to take them vp and to remoue But with the Sonnes of God it is not so but they say with themselues We haue here no abiding Citie and fixing both eye heart on their Heauenly house they iourney on still both day and night in true pietie and obedience and they are not quiet till they haue attained to the Hauen sée their God with his holy company in the highest Heauens Last of all when it is said Hee tooke not away the pillar of the Cloud by day nor the pillar of fire by night from before the people Let it euer assure your fearing heart cooling comforting shining and lighting guiding and directing his little flocke shall neuer be taken away frō any member thereof but euer be readie present with vs both by day night to the eternall praise of his goodnes and vnspeakeable comfort of our soules blessed againe and againe be his name for it And thus far of this Chapter CHAP. 14. The Heads of this Chapter may be these 1. The pursuing of Pharaoh after them 2. The feare of the Israelites whē they saw him v● 10. 3. Their fall and sinne through their feare ver 11. 4. The Lords deliuerance of them 1. TOuching the first marke what a straite the Lord brought his people into when He commaunded Moses to speake vnto them to campe before P●-hakiroth betweene Migdol and the Sea ouer against Baal-zephon where the Sea was before them Mountaines on either side and Pharaoh with his Host at their backes the Lord hardening his heart to follow after them yet was not this distresse for their hurt but for their good that God might be honoured they miraculously deliuered and their enemies gloriously ouerthrowne How then doo wee feare in euery aduersitie before wee sée the end Surely we wrong the Lord much and our selues in so doing he being as good as euer he was as mightie as euer he was to finde meanes and as iust as euer hee was to punish our malicious enemies O thinke then with your selfe and reason thus Loe héere I am distressed on euery side as the Israelites were at the Red-Sea and it is the prouidence of God that I should be thus as it was his Will they should pitch in that place But doo I know the Lords meaning what he will doo No indéede And therefore I will patiently waite for his blessed Will not murmuring as the Israelites did but comfortably assuring my selfe that one way or other the Lord will giue issue to his glory and my
children of Israel c. Secondly an argument drawne from the former benefits of God to them in these words Yee haue seene what I did to the Egyptians and how I caried you vpon Eagles wings and haue brought you vnto me Thirdly an Argument from future benefits If you will heare my voice indeede and keepe my couenant then you shall be my chiefe treasure aboue all people though all the earth be mine Yee shall be to me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation All which if you will applie vnto your selfe and make vse of them then may you in like sort euer stir vp your hart and prepare your minde to good things in this sort and by the selfe same Arguments As for Example to goe to the Church and to ioyne with the Congregation both in prayer hearing of the word preached First because it is not mans Cōmandement but God requireth the Minister to call speake to you for it as here he did Moses Secondly the fauours of God passed to you require it Thirdly future fauors if you do it shal be added vnto you It is also worthy marking still how he ioyneth here hearing keeping together saying If you will heare my voyce indeede and keepe my couenant Keepe without hearing you cannot hearing without keeping will neuer profit you or any Joyned therefore you sée they must néedes be as the Lord shall make vs able Moses doing as God bad him teacheth all Ministers to bee faithfull and to doo their Message Many are the Commaundements in Scripture to them to speake to crie to lift vp their voyces like trumpets and to tell their people what God requireth If they doo it great is their reward with God and if they bee false and idle and negligent men-pleasers and time-seruers as great againe is their iudgement Grandis est dignitas sacerdotum grandis est ruina si peccant Great is the dignitie of Priests by their office and as great is the fall of them if they offend It can neuer be too often repeated nor too much remembred The peoples aunswere to Moses what is it They answered all together and said all that the Lord hath commaunded wee will doo A most notable patterne for a Christian congregation to looke vpon and to followe Thus should it be betwixt Pastor and People euer Hee to speake what God commaundeth and they to heare answere zealously we will we will doo what God commandeth vs. O swéete ioy where this agreement is Such care and such conscience both in pastor and people will giue no place to iarres and contentions to sutes and vexations or to any thing that displeaseth God and is offensiue to the world c. 2. The particular preparation followeth frō the 9. verse to the end of the Chapter hauing 4 members First the maner of Gods Communicating of himselfe to Moses namely in a thick cloud together with the end thereof that the people may heare whilest I talke with thee and that they may beleeue thee for euer A singular instruction to all men in the world that desire to please God and especially to Great Ones shewing them how carefull they should be to grace and countenance the Ministers of the word before the people to the end their wordes may haue more weight with their hearers and their seruice and paines doo more good Would men doo thus O how comfortable to the painfull and faithfull Teacher and how profitable to the Church would it bee The Lord would sée it and acknowledge it done for him and with eternall comforts reward it for euer But now it is otherwise with too many For Great men must shewe their greatnes in disgracing the Lords Prophets and meaner men must shewe their malice in spreading false rumors of their spirituall Teachers in open assemblies and priuate conuenticles motes are made mountaines and spots surmised where none are Neuer I thinke since the world was did mens eares so itch and their hearts so boile in this sinne as at this day But what shall wee say Surely euen turne to the Lord in prayer and comfort our selues in this example of the Lords goodnes who as hee is not Moses his God alone nor Moses alone his messenger so will not he tye his countenance onlie to him but giue euery true labourer in his good time his due credite notwithstanding all the malice of man and Deuill O Lord doo it for thy Name sake and as thou gracedst héere Moses that hee might euer be beléeued so couuert or confound these Disgracers of thy Ministers whose iniquitie tendeth to hinder Beleefe and consequentlie to destroy the soules of thy poore people Encrease the number of them that followe thy example and labour by all meanes to further thy worke in the hands of thy workemen Set a Crowne of glory vpon their heads and dailie reward their loue into their bosomes with thy good blessings vnto them and theirs 3. The second branch of this particular preparation is laid downe in the 10. verse and the rest following to the 16. consisting in certaine outward matters vsed in those times among those people and figuratiuely teaching inward puritie and cleanenes of heart to come to God with all As washing of their cloathes not comming at their wiues and such like The Ceremonies are taken away but the truth remaineth namely that we are all by our corruption most vnfit profitably to heare the word of God vnlesse we be sanctified and prepared thereunto by the good Spirit of God And therefore we ought to make readie for so holy a worke by all due care before hand to purge our hearts from other cares troubles and impediments whatsoeuer The word of GOD is not to be handled with vncleane hands neither will enter into vncleane hearers It is a precious pearle it should not be cast before Swine For this cause assuredly many heare and reade without profit because they came without feare and reuerence in their mindes This abstaining from their wiues noteth no impuritie in holy Matrimonie but by this particular figuratiuely teacheth a godly abstinence from all worldly pleasures whatsoeuer in generall for a time that wee may more fully attend the seruice of God wee goe about vpon speciall occasion To which end the Apostle Paul also requireth the like by consent for a time to giue themselues to fasting and prayer and then to come together againe that they be not tempted of Sathan to incontinencie Thomas Aquinas himselfe could say thus of it Hoc ex sepeccatum non erat sed multa tunc ad carnis munditias exigebantur quae iam non sunt necessaria quia lex uostra spiritualem munditiam requirit non carnis This was not a sinne of it selfe but many things were then required to the outward clensing of the flesh which are not now necessarie because our lawe requireth spirituall cleanenes not an outward of the flesh onely c. 4. The markes that
comfort to his Church touching Christ if you remember That we haue not a high Priest which cannot be touched with the feelings of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sin And thereupon concludeth Let vs therefore goe boldly vnto the throne of grace that we may receaue mercie and finde grace to helpe in time of neede If wée be not in abilitie to doo Strangers any good yet comfortable words shal please both them and God that made this law for them The other law concerning Widowes fatherlesse Orphanes as the Lord made it in great mercie so will he euer punish the breaches with sharpe iustice Affliction saith Salomon is not to be added to the afflicted Widowes fatherlesse children therfore must be pittied comforted helped if neede require séeing they haue lost their head not oppressed and wronged vexed grieued as often they are Now that the Lord wil punish you sée the Text plaine and how O reade it againe for it is fearefull with the sword will he destroy those wringers and crushers that their wiues also may become widowes and their children fatherlesse So verifying the wise Saying By what a man sinneth by that shal he be punished Careful therfore was Iob to auoide this danger and voweth vehemently that he neuer restrained the poore of their desire nor caused the eyes of the widow to faile by long waiting for her request Let this mooue vs and strike vs and euer profit vs. If thou lend money to my people that is to the poore with thee thou shalt not be as an Vsurer vnto him ye shall not oppresse him with vsury This matter of vsury is so largely handled by many and so little regarded by moe that I spare my labour in it To allow all that some allow or to condemne as much as * some condemne as yet I sée no reason Many are the cases and intricate are the questions mooued mentioned in this matter Orphanes are left with nothing to bring them vp but a portion of money some in the Vniuersities some in the Country Spend the stocke and it will soone be gone vse it occupy it themselues they cannot So they haue money and want a trade others haue trades and want money Bucer in Cambridge was asked this question and did not dislike of some interchange profitable to the Orphane and yet not opening the way to flat vsury Stran gers likewise and exiles out of their countrey for religion and good causes bring a little money with them for easines of carriage and nothing else themselues happily may not trade in a forraigne land how then shall they their wiues and children liue workmen peraduenture also they are not but of an higher degrée In short therefore we know the end of the cōmandement is loue so far thē as borrowing lending breaketh not that but agréeth with it moderate men may do what is fit for them no scope giuen to the condemned vsurer To méete with one inconuenience to bring many others into the common-wealth was neuer wisedome Wherefore let euerie man search his own heart and well obserue his owne dealings in lending to his neighbour that liueth with him as knowing that nothing is hid frō God but must be accoūted for one day If cōtracts charitie agrée not together but what profiteth you hurteth your neighbour the case is altered I speak of what agréeing with loue is by learned men allowed the same disagréeing from the same is condemned blamed 9 The next law is concerning pawnes and pawne-takers A great trade still in this wringing world And of them thus the Lord speaketh If thou take thy neighbours raiment to pledge thou shalt restore it to him before the Sun go downe for that is his couering onely and this is his garment for his skin wherein shall he sleepe Therefore when he cryeth vnto me I will heare him For I am mercifull The 24. of Deutro is to be referred hither for explication further of the mercie that God requireth in this matter frō all men Mark it euer remember it the nakednesse miserie of the poore body cryeth against thée to the Lord and hée hath vowed to heare All is not gained then that is put in thy purse but only that which is wel put in The other laws of reuerence to Magistrates neither reuiling them nor thinking lightly of them of due and true paying of tythes to the maintenance of Gods truth and Ministers and so forth will come hereafter to be touched againe and therefore no more now of this Chap. CHAP. 23. THis Chapter also as hath béen said goeth on with mo Lawes tending likewise to the exposition of the Morall Law and namely of the 8. and 9. Commandements Touching the procéeding with moe lawes we may make vse of these and the like Sayings Arcesilaus in Laertius did not like that there should be many laws saying Quemadmodum vbi multi medici ibi multi morbi it a vbi permultae lege● ibi plus vitiorum Like as where there are many Phisitions that are many diseases so where there are very many laws there are moe faults Demonax very vnaduisedly spake against all lawes saying Leges prorsus esse mutiles Vt quibus boni non egerent mali nihilò fierent meliores That lawes were altogether vnprofitable because the good needed them not the bad would not be bettered by them But Chrisostome with a better spirit both approoued goodlaws and would haue thē ALL to be obeied Saying In citharanon satis esse in vno tantum neru● concentum efficere Vniuersos oportere percuti numerosè decenter ita ad salutem non satis esse vnam Legem vniuersas esse audiendas seruandas To make musicke on a Harpe it is not sufficient to playe on one sting but all must be striken in due measure and proportion so to saluation one Law is not sufficient but all must be wel vnderstood duly kept These laws therefore here following cōtinued by God himselfe seruing by explanation to helpe our vnderstanding consequentlie to direct our practise concerning former lawes are dillgently by vs to be obserued In the two first verses obserue the vertues of a good and vpright iudge and add them to that which was spoken in the 18. Chap. His first vertue is Truth Truth I say in his sentence and iudgment which he must euer carefully labour for by all good waies and meanes Contrary to truth are false tales rumors which therefore here in the first words are forbiddē either to be receaued of the Judge or reported by others Thou shalt not receaue a false tale neither shalt thou put thy hand with the wicked to be a false witnesse The Word signifieth both to receaue and report therefore both forbidden That the Iudge may thus doo he must euer remember Epicharmus his little saying Memēto
diffidere Remēber to distrust or be not too credulous which Cicero so commendeth and liketh that he doubteth not to call it the synews and ioints of all humane Wisedome It hath place in all our priuate life and actions but especiallie in iudgment This cannot hée doo vnlesse he haue an other vertue included in this namely diligence to heare both sides patientlie fullie indifferently which euer good Iudges doo for want whereof how fowlie some haue bene caried awrie many Stories testifie That one let me remember of Apelles the Ephesian who was accused to Ptolemie by his enemie Antiphilus that he had imparted to one Theodorus treasonable conspiracies plots against the King which Theodorus in truth Apelles had nener seene in his life The King lightlie and hastelie gaue credit to this tale and clapt Apelles vp with full purpose to execute him for it And indeede had so done if a prisoner in the same prison mooued in conscience had not opened the whole truth acquainted Apelles which when the King saw he perceiued also his great fault in crediting too lightly and gaue that accuser to Apelles to doo with him what he would or as some write to be his Bondman for euer Iudges therefore must beware of this great fault and heare euer the defence of the accused Now because we be not al Iudges doth not this law concerne vs yes yes your owne heart can tell you if they must not receiue them we must not tell them raise them and coyne them If we do the Lord séeth it and marketh it and although they wisely auoid the snare of them and set frée the accused and slaundered yet God remaineth a swift Iudge and verie sure to consume such wretches who so against his lawe haue wrought euill against their neighbour and brother If we may not rashly smite and kill with the hand although he be a thiefe no more with the tongue although it be true for charitie hideth a multitude of faults The phrase moueth me and therefore I note it that if God so please it may moue you also Thou shalt not put thy hand with the wicked to be a false or cruell witnesse If to giue the hearing be in some measure to put to the hand surely to haue an itching eare to heare euil reportes of our Christian brethren with delight contentment to beléeue them wholy or half to report thē againe is to put to the hand much more and to be grieuously guiltie before God Yet what so common in our mouthes as I am not the author I am not the first rayser I heard it I haue my author and so forth God that made this law against receiuing knoweth hearing goeth before receiuing if not receiue then not heare not beleeue not report to others For he shal bée thy Iudge who will not be mocked with shifts How many men satisfie their owne consciences herein I know not when they heare with gréedines and haue their instruments laid abroad for that purpose neuer imparting to the partie what they heare that he may answere it but kéeping all close from him and thinking what they please I know there may be some reason to conceale the accuser but to conceale the accusasion I know none For if they will heare with one eare let them heare with the other in the name of God the wrong side being as broad as the right and after two or three accusations cléered they will better know both the accuser and accused to their owne good Would God this fault were not where it least should be and where the sinne of it is as well knowen as others féele the iniurie Till it be amended let the childe of God say with Dauid O God of my righteousnesse and againe God thou knowest mine innocencie and my faults are not hid from thee To thee therefore I flie as knowing all both my good and my bad and in thy knowledge I rest be it vnto me as thou wilt I know thou hast meanes to humble Dauid and what thou doest shall be euer good in the end After a cloude the sunne breaketh foorth and the weather cleareth and is more comfortable 2 After Truth and diligence to attaine to it by hearing both sides the Lord also requireth in a good Iudge Skilfulnesse in the law Constancie saying in the next verse Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do euill neither agree in a controuersie to decline after many ouerthrow the truth Skilfulnesse in law to giue a right sentence not fitting the line to the stone but the stone to the line The line is fitted in the stone when the multitude is followed to doe euill than the which multitude nothing is more mutable and vncertaine The stone is fitted to the line when sentence is giuen according to law and truth that the Iudge hauing his name of Iustice his name and his actions must agrée Constancie stayeth the Iudge skilfull to discerne right and to doo what hee discerneth notwithstanding any company gainsaying it and therefore is Constancie also required in him Now if this may not be done in ciuil matters whose heart will not tell him much lesse may it be done in religion and matters of faith The wordes are playne Thou shalt not follow a multitude to doe euill therefore a multitude may erre and doe euill Neyther decline after many to ouer-throw truth therefore a multitude may ouerthrowe truth And how then can it bee a rule to guide my conscience by either in ciuill or ecclesiasticall matters O weigh it well and with a religious heart and let neither poperie tell you of multitude nor Anabaptists of fewnes and paucitie but euer looke you for truth be they many or few and let that be the issue For proofe there is too much to be recited now that many may erre and many holde truth therefore neither the one number nor the other any rule to a Christian conscience 3 The next vertue in a Iudge is equalitie which is opposed to respect of persons Equalitie giues like vnto like according to one rule certaine from which there must be no departing a haires breadth for any qualities in men as wealth or pouertie and such like On the contrarie part respect of persons giues to like vnlike to like causes vnlike and differing iudgements for qualities in the partie corruptly carying the Iudge his affections As Alexander the Great more respected Ephestio nothing so well deseruing than Craterus a valiant Gentleman and right well deseruing of the common-wealth This equalitie and indifferencie God requireth that it may expresse his nature vpright and indifferent to all men eyther in accusing them by his lawe or sauing them vpon repentance by his Gospell in neither of which he respecteth any mans person Which as it is a iust terror if we do euill how great soeuer we bée so is it as iust a comfort if we turne from it be we neuer
so small poore wretched vile and miserable Remember Saint Peters words in the tenth Chapter of the Actes If Iudges will be frée from respect of persons then needes must they be free from giftes for giftes will lead their affections will they nill they the olde saying being true Beneficium accepisti libertatem amisisti Hast thou receiued a gift then hast thou lost thy libertie and freedome All this is contained in the words ot the text Thou shalt not esteeme a poore man in his cause And if al Iudges followed this course Hesiodus should not néede to feigne that Astraea hath left the societie of men is flowen vp to heauen But it is to be feared that as Ulisses seruants when he was asléepe opened a bottle which Aeolus had giuen him wherein the windes were all inclosed and so let the windes out they thinking there was treasure in the bottle which as well at sea as at land they loued so some Iudges opening mens purses whilest they looke for gaine let truth escape from them to their owne hurt and the Common-wealthes If any do so God make his word profitable to them and so I leaue them to him 4 It followeth in the text If thou see thine enemies Oxe or his Asse going astray thou shalt bring him to him againe If thou see thine enemies Asse lying vnder his burden wilt thou cease to helpe him thou shalt helpe him vp againe with it Let vs heere remember that Gods actions are after two sortes generall and particular Generall to all men Particular to his friends So must ours be taking our president from him As therefore by his generall Action he suffereth his Sun to shine vpon the bad aswell as vpon the good and such like so must we extend our loue which is the common bond of mankinde as well to our enemies as to our friends By which common loue all hurting of the bodies or goods wiues or children of our enemies without iust and necessarie cause is forbidden and contrariwise the law of nature to be obserued Quod tibi non nocet alteri prodest praestandum What hurteth not thee and profiteth an other is to be performed From which fountaine of this generall loue spring many lawes and by name this bringing back our enemies straying Oxe and helping vp his oppressed beast That also which you read in Deuteronomie of not destroying the fruit trees in the enemies ground which they did besiege because there is vse of such trees Againe as God hath his speciall action to his friends to his Church namely Sanctification so must friendship which is our speciall Action reach it selfe but to such as are of the householde of faith and our friends For although we must loue with that generall loue all mankinde Turkes Pagans c. Yet to such may we not be friends and familiars but must beware inward and vsuall conuersation with them that hate God and all his graces Both these are conteyned in that rule of Christ Be simple as Doues and wise as Serpents for by the Doues simplicitie is meant we should learne to hurt no bodie but as neere as wee can be helpfull to all by the Serpents wisedome that we should yet know to put a difference betwixt the houshold of faith and Gods enemies betwirt the religious prophane betwixt the godly and the wicked By this distinction you may see better the meaning of that Scripture Loue your enemies Concerning this helping vp of our enemies beast vnder his burden fallen I pray you marke if the margent of your Bible note it not wel That if God commaund vs to helpe our enemies Asse vnder his burden will he euer suffer vs to throw down our brethren with heauie burdens It reacheth to many thinges wherein is hard dealing if you thinke of them Thou shalt not ouerthrow the right of thy poore in his suite Before vers 3. he commaunded that a poore man should not be spared for pittie Héere now he enioyneth that a poore man should not be wronged in respect of his pouertie such equall steppes would God haue Iudgement to walke in Thou shalt take no gift for the gift blindeth the wise and peruerteth the words of the righteous The equitie of this lawe was séene by the dimme eye of Nature for the Romanes as appeareth by the lawes of their twelue Tables Used to punish that Iudge with death which was conuicted to take a Bribe for giuing iudgement Dioclesian the Emperour likewise enacted Sententiam a iudice corrupto prolatam fore ipso iure infirmam sine prouocatione That a sentence giuen by a bribed Iudge should by the lawe bee of no validitie without any farther appeale Now corruption and giftes as One saith are not onely Money Gold Siluer and Presents Sed etiam propter laudem qui iudicat ●ale munus accipit munus quo nihil 〈…〉 anius But he also which iudgeth wrongfully to get PRAISE thereby receiueth a GIFT and a GIFT than which there is nothing more vain Patuit enim illi auris ad accipiendū iudicium linguae alienae perdidit iudicium conscientiae suae For his eare hath beene open to receiue the flattering verdict of another mans tongue and hee hath lost the comfortable testimonie of his owne conscience Innocentius reprooueth corrupt Iudges with these words Vos non attendit is merit acausarum sed personarū non iura sed munera non quod ratio dictet sed quod voluntas affectet non quod liceat sed quod lubeat Nunquam enim vobis est tam simplex oculus vt totum corpus sit lucidum Pauperum causam cum mora negligitis Diuitum causam cum instantia promouetis c. Aliquid semper admittitis fermenti quototam massam corrumpitis In giuing iudgement YOV respect not the worth of the causes but of the person not the lawes but gifts not what reason doth counsail but what the wil doth affect not that which is lawfull in it selfe but that which is pleasing to your selues For your eye is neuer so single that the whole bodie might be light Poore mens causes with prolonging delay you neglect rich mēs causes with instant earnestnes you set forward c. You alwaies mingle some leauen which corrupteth the whole lumpe 5 The law of mercie to strangers vers 9. hath béene touched before therefore obserue next this law of Rest to the ground the 7. yeare for the reliefe comfort of the poore Six yeares shalt thou sow thy land and gather the fruits of it the 7. yeare thou shalt let it rest lie stil that the poore of thy people may eate and what they leaue the beasts of the field shall eate In like maner thou shalt doe with thy vineyard with thy oliue trees with great profit we may note sée this gracious care which the Lord our God hath ouer all his creatures learne
the Lord biddeth That the right hand know not what the left hand dooth 12 Moses put a couering ouer his face c. For the signification whereof you may reade S. Paul 2. Cor. 3. 7. It was figure of the Couer that is ouer our vnderstanding till the Lord take it away whereby we are not able to discerne the things of God Pray we therefore euer that as our Sauiour hath come out of the bosome of his Father to reueale all truth and hath in his holy Word perfectly taught the same so he would be pleased to open our eyes to bore our eares to soften our harts that we may receaue to our endlesse comfort what he hath reuealed Thus much of this Chapter CHAP. 35. THese last six Chap. following doo but repeat how those things were done which GOD in the former Chapters commanded to be done and therefore néede not further to bee stood vpon the chiefe things in them hauing beene before spoken of As in the twenty fifth Chapter you haue this Chapter and so on if you cōferre them together Onely I will remember two or thrée things out of the Fathers not noted before as I take it in the 25. Chapter The first is an earnest and an aftionate Spéech of Origen Ho. 13. in Exod. Domine Iesu praesta mihi vt aliquid monimēti habere queam in tabernaculo tuo Ego optarem si fieripotest esse aliquid meum in illo auro ex quo Propitiatorium fabricatur vel ex quo Arca cōtegitur vel ex quo candelabrum fit luminis et lucernae aut si aurum non habeo et argentū saltē aliquid inueniar offerre quod proficiat in columnas et bases earū aut certe vel aris aliquid habere queam in Tabernaculo vnde circuli fiant et caetera quae sermo diuinus describit Utinam mihi esset possibile vnum esse ex Principibus et offere gemmas ad ornamentum pontificis humeralis atque 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sed quia haec supra me sunt certe vel pilos caprarū habere merear in Tabernaculo Dei tantum ne in omnibus ieiunus et infoecundus inueniar Lord Iesu graunt that I may haue some monument in thy Tabernacle I woulde wish if it could be that some part of that gold might cōe from me whereof the propitiatorie is made or with which the Arke is couered or whereof the Candlestick is made or if I haue no gold or siluer at the least I may be found to offer some thing that may helpe froward the pillars and sockets of them or that I may haue some brasse in the Tabernacle whereof the rings may be made and other things prescribed by thy Word O that it were possible for me to be one of the Princes and to offer precious stones to the adorning of the Priestes garment But because al these are aboue my power at the least let me finde fauour to offer goats haire in the Tabernacle of God that I be not found emptie vnfruitfull in all Let this deuout Spéech much mooue thee good Reader The second thing is concerning the skilfull workemen Bezaleel and Aholiab For the first beeing well descended of the honorable tribe of Iuda the 2. not so well but from a more vnnoble tribe that tribe of Dan it affoordeth vs this good obseruatiō that God bestowes not his gifts euer according to birth but maketh them in vertue equall whom earthly respect humane descent haue made very vnequall Neither doth he yéeld them praise for birth but for gifts graces of his Spirit in themselues and for a singular abilitie to teach others which euery man cannot doo either by some impatiencie in his nature or for slouth or for one thing or other Uery well therefore said S. Hierom Summa apud Deum nobilitas clarum esse virtutibus nescit religio nostras personas nec cōditiones hōinū sed animas inspicit In Epist ad Caelantiū It is the chiefest nobility with God to be indued with vertue Religion knoweth not our persons neither dooth it looke vpon the conditions of men but vpon their minds Thirdly in the example of these worthy workemen is notably commended vnto vs the vertue of agreement and consent in the Lords worke that they ioyne and are not seuered A thing of great consequence if I would follow it by discourse But God make vs all follow it in our places their faithfulnesse in not conuerting any thing to their owne vse and many other good things might be noted in them but I stay CHAP. 36. TUrne backe to the 31. Chapter for the explanatiō of this Chapter concerning these workemen thus raised vp of God and inabled with skill for this great worke In this place note the singular liberalitie of the people to this house of God when they brought so much that they were stayed and stopped from bringing any more O where are these hearts now a daies Note also the rare faithfulnesse of the workemen who gaue notice of this bountie and said vers 5. It was more than needed being much of it gold and pretious stones and costly things What might they in such plentie haue put aside for their priuate profite if they had béene men of such a stampe Thirdly sée the Magistrate in this matter how he also wil not haue the people further charged than is cause when once he knoweth of it All these are examples to vs to learne in our seuerall places to doe the like that with God and man wee may reape like commendation CHAP. 37. 38. 39. REade oueragaine the 25. 36. 27. Chapters where these thinges now repeated are explaned CHAP. 40. OBserue how often in this Chapter is repeated as the Lord commaunded and see how sweete commanded obedience is Were it as swéete to God to be serued with inuentions neuer would these Repetitions be made Beware therfore of these waies and in verie reason conclude that if you looke of your seruant seruice according to your will and not according to his much more may God And if your commaundement be a discharge to your seruant much more is God to his a sure rest and comfort 2 Consider heere what Saint Augustine noteth Moses that is appointed to anoint and consecrate others was neuer anoynted and consecrated himselfe that so we might learne not to value externall Sacraments or signes by the dignitie of the Minister but by the ordinance of God Againe that the inuisible grace is of force without the visible signe when God will haue it so as in Moses here 3 The cloud couered the Tabernacle and the glorie of the Lord filled it That thus hee might grace that outward place now appoynted for holy assemblies to serue him and so to the worldes end teach how great account all people ought to make of their Churches and Churchmeetings whereof I haue spoken before Chap. 25. The cloud ascended when they should trauell and was vnto them a
ende but contrariwise bitter at first and swéet at the ende He that forsaketh not all and followeth me cannot bee my Disciple How bitter is this at the first but in the end how swéete You shall sit vpon twelue Seates and iudge the twelue Tribes of Israel You shall eate of my Table c. Lastly Christ puffeth no man vp as Leauen doth the Dough neither sowreth his seruant in whom he dwelleth but he maketh him lowly and humble and swéete in behauiour to his brethren poore and gréeued and néeding comfort Melancton not vnprofitably saith Hony was forbidden also to be offered to God to teach that the Word Doctrine of God is not to be turned to popular applause not to content the Prince and to please the people contrary to the Truth and edge of it Art may not drawe his Diuine precepts to make them delight humane Reason but his Word must be left to his right Nature please it or displease it the Hearers For such Hony-offerers are but dawbers and sowers of pillowes vnder mens elbowes flatterers time-seruers hatefull to God and hurtfull to his people Others haue noted that if hony be burned it smelleth not well and therefore was forbidden to be vsed in the Sacrifice shadowing Christs death as this Sacrifice by fire did because his death smelleth most swéetly and right deere vnto God also is the death of his Saintes for him The Gentiles againe vsed to offer hony in their Cakes to their Gods as we read and therefore happily God also forbad it The third Rule you haue in the 13. verse All the Meat-offering shalt thou season with salt neither shalt thou suffer the salt of the Couenant of thy God to be lacking from thy meat-offering but vpon all thy Oblations thou shalt offer salt First it is called the salt of the Couenant of God because God required it in all these Sacrifices as a Couenant and thing agréed vpon firme and stable not to be broken which kinde of Couenants were called Couenants of salt Num. 18. 19. 2 Chro. 13. 5. Secondly the Commandement is generall All the Meat-offerings whereupon our Sauiour Christ taketh occasion to exhort that all men would addresse themselues vnto the perpetuall faul●les kéeping of Gods holy Couenant by the example of these Offerings which without salt were no way acceptable nor tollerable To the continuall kéeping I say because the Text sayth Thou shalt not suffer the salt of the Couenant of thy God to bee lacking from thy Meat-offering which is as if he had said euer haue in thy selfe the Word and Law of thy God with which thou art seasoned as with salt the Offerings of strangers from Gods Couenant being neuer acceptable but an abhomination to God For the true seasoning which findeth grace with God is no where found but in the Word and therefore all worships deuised by man séeme they neuer so wittie and gay in the eyes of the Inuenters are vnsauorie and odious Others looking at Christ his alluding to this place in the 9. of Marke abouesaid gathered thus of it that Christ from this Ceremonie draweth his exhortation to his faithfull that they patiently indure to be purged and purified if they desire euer to be acceptable to God For euery Sacrifice saith he must be salted with salt and euery man shall be salted with fire that is our corrupt affections by the Word and the Crosse as by a holy fire clensed and cléered from that displeasing sauour they yéelde and we wholly seasoned vnto God as this mortalitie will giue vs leaue If you thinke farther of salt thus preferred before Leauen and hony you shall sée that salt is most commodious for mans vse For salt kéepeth our meate from putrifaction it kéepeth wine from sowring it preserueth dead bodyes a long time swéet and sauourie it yéeldeth our meate a good taste and dryeth vp the superfluous moisture of it in our bodyes which might bréed diseases and in a word so good it is that the Prouerbe ioyneth it with the Sunne without which we cannot liue saying Sale Sole nihil viilius Than Salt and the Sunne nothing is more profitable Wittie and sharpe pleasant speeches haue their name of salt and hée that hath no wit is said to haue no salt in him Salt then was required in the Sacrifice to figure out Christ who indéed is the true salt that seasoneth vs all our works or else neither we nor they please God Sinne hath made vs vnsauourie to God and till this salt be sprinkled ouer vs we haue no accesse to him nor fauour with him but when once we are seasoned with Christ Then he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine Eye And as our persons so our workes then please him before béeing foule and as a stayned cloath So that now it is said He that beleeueth in me shall not perish but haue eternall life To Christ we are begotten by the Ministrie of the Word and therefore the Apostles were called salt and the Ministers of GOD still are the salt of the earth For as salt lighteth vpon the flesh and byteth and dryeth vp corrupt moystore pre●eruing and kéeping swéet the same euen so the Ministers by their labours consume and dry vp the errors the lustes the pride the vaine-glorie the couetous affections and whatsoeuer maketh vnsauourie preseruing body and soule swéete vnto God in Christ and frée from eternall corruption If thou offer a Meat-offering of thy first fruites vnto the Lord thou shalt offer eares of Corne dried by the fire and wheat beaten out of the greene eares c. It was sayd in the beginning that these Meat-offerings were here layd downe in three kindes The first raw flesh the second flowre not raw but either baked fryed or sodden the third Corne not ground to flowre The two first kindes you haue séene with their Ceremonies and now followeth this third kinde You may here remember the many sorts of Offerings of first-Fruites mentioned in the Scriptures whereof this is but one In Deutro you read of first-Fruites but in a basket and carried to the place appointed In Leuiticus here you read of a sheafe of the first-fruites of the haruest to be brought vnto the Priest In Exodus you read of that generall Offering of first-fruites In Deutro againe of the offering of Tenths In the Chapter also aboue noted of this Booke you read of two leauened loaues to bee brought And in Numb of cakes to be made of their first dough Lastly this kinde here noted of Eares of Corne dryed by the fire c. By this diuersitie wée may well note and sincke it déepe into our hearts what a reckoning God maketh of Thankfulnesse in man for the benefits and mercies he receiueth at Gods hands and how odious it is to him and dangerous to man when it is otherwise And by this sort we may still sée Christ figured and taught wherevpon Christ compareth himselfe
of the booke of Judges how still still they were deliuered ouer to their aduersaries for transgressing in this behalfe All the dayes of Ioshua saith the Storie there and all the dayes of the Elders that out-liued Ioshua which had seene all the great workes of the Lord that he did for Israell But when that generation was gathered to their fathers there arose vp an other generatiō which neither knew the Lord nor yet the works which he had done for Israell And these did wickedly in the sight of the Lord and serued Baalim c. Wherefore the wrath of the Lord was hote against them and he deliuered them into the hands of spoylers c. And whithersoeuer they went the hand of the lord was sore against them c. Marke with your selfe the vehemencie of these words and the greatnesse of this wrath for worshipping him after other wayes than hee himselfe appoynted In the 8. Chap. Gedeons Ephod made without warrant did it please O marke the words All Israel went a whoring after it which was the destruction of Gedeon and his house Hee and his house perished for worshipping God otherwise than God himselfe appointed This is no small punishment if God giue a heart to thinke of it fruitfully The like you read of Saul who would offer sacrifice contrary to the word He and his house also perish for it Ieroboams golden Calues set-vp without warrant worshipped without warrant ouerthrew him and all his also I exalted thee saith God to Ieroboam and made thee Prince ouer my people Israel c But thou hast not beene as my seruant Dauid which kept my Commandements and followed me with all his heart and did onely that which was right in mine eyes For thou hast gone and made thee other Gods and molten Images to prouoke me and hast cast me behinde thy backe And therefore behold I will bring euill vpon thy house and will cut of him that pisseth against the wall euery Male euen to the dogges as the Marginall Note hath and I will sweepe away the remnant of thy house as a man sweepeth away doung till it be all gone Judge then in your secret thought hearing these words whether it be a small matter to worship God otherwise than he in his word appointeth to vs. It is a very memorable thing that is written of Gregorie sometimes Byshop of Rome the best of all that followed him the worst of all that went before him how hée in a most grieuous plague deuised and appointed those Supplitions to Saints set downe in the Letanie hauing for it neither commandement nor example nor any warrant in the word but all to the contrary very plainly and that so God reuenged this wicked boldnesse as in one houre fourescore of those that so prayed and rehearsed those suffrages suddenly fell to the earth and breathed out their last breath Thus the Lord liketh deuises of men in his seruice Why should not all flesh be resolued then that in vaine doe wee worship God teaching for doctrine mens precepts And consequently of the impudencie of that speach of a Popish Doctor that GOD respecteth not so much what we doe as with what minde wee doe it The vntaught Romanes vnderstood more trueth than this man when béeing mooued to receiue Christ into the number of their gods they answered that euery God must needes bee serued according to his will and not according to his worshippers will and therefore since they vnderstood that Christ would haue no fellowes but would be worshipped alone they must needes either forgot all their other Gods which they might not doe or worship him otherwise than his will was which would offend him So they resolued to reiect him which turned to the destruction of them in the ende Discamus Deum ex ipsius voluntate honorare c Let vs learne to worship God according to his VVill saith S. Chrysostome c. Cyprian telleth vs VVe must follow Christ he that doth not so is not a Priest of God but walketh in darknesse Paul saith Hee deliuered to them what he had receiued c Hée condemned all voluntarie worship A learned Professor in Paris affirmeth boldly that mens praecepts turne people from the truth seduce the hearts of the simple therefore saith he God tyeth vs so strictly to his Word without adding or diminishing c. 2 But doth not a good intent and meaning preuaile with God albeit the thing be not expresly warranted Your selfe iudge by that which you sée here and in many other Scriptures making this the second of the two things I said were here to be obserued Had Nadab and Abihu the sonnes of Aaron héere any ill meaning towards God or did they of malicious purpose offend him and procure their owne destruction No you must néedes thinke their intent was good but because they swarued from the word that good intent serued not The words out of Deutro cited before are not you shall not do ill in your owne eyes but you shall not doe that which seemeth good good I say and I pray you marke it you shal not do that but shall kéepe you to my commandement Be it neuer so good then in my conceite that is be my meaning neuer so good it profiteth not neither shall excuse Gods destroying wrath more than it did here these sonnes of Aaron There is a way saith Salomon that seemeth good to a man and right but theyssues thereof are the wayes of death Such assuredly are all wil worships not grounded vpon the word but vpon mans will and good intent They shall excommunicate you saith our Sauiour Christ Yea the time shall come that whosoeuer killeth you will thinke that hee doth God good seruice What then shall his so thinking excuse his bloody murder Ioseph had no ill meaning when hée prayed his Father to change his hand and to lay his right hand vpon his elder sonnes head What ill meant Iosua when hée wished Moses to forbid those that prophecied Michas mother when according to her vow shée made her sonnes two Idoles Saul when he saued aliue the shéepe of the Amalekites c. Peter when he had Christ his Master to pitie himselfe The Disciples of Christ when they forbadde little Children to come vnto him when they would haue commanded that fire should come from Heauen c. Peters meaning had no hurt in it when he forbad Christ to wash his feete with a number like places in Scripture yet you know no good intent was accepted in these cases No more no more shall it euer be when it is not agréeing to the VVord which onely is a Christian man and womans true and perfect guide Let therefore these things take place with vs and neuer wrostle we against the Lord for he is too strong for vs. and his will must stand not ours O why should it grieue mée to be ruled by
whereby this Leprosie was discerned of the Priest you haue in the Text deepe spots greenish or reddish which séeme to belower than the wall Also how the Priest might not rashly condemne the house but must shut it vp a time and then loke vpon it again and yet we can hastily and rashly condemne our brethren our equals our betters that they are thus and so There was an easier clensing by scraping and changing the infected stones and a harder clensing by quite pulling it downe God gently dealeth with sinners if it may serue and quite ouer-throweth the incurable The expiation sheweth we ought to haue cleane houses and the Offering noteth from whom all health is euen from God CHAP. XV. SOme other vncleanes incident to man and woman is mentioned in this Chapter whereof modestly you may thinke as you read it Unto the 9. verse he speaketh of man and then verse 19. of the woman For vse vnto your selfe first consider by occasion of these things that originall corruption which is gotten into our nature by the fall of our first Parents through which we are most vncleane many wayes in the eyes of God The Lord hath a great care to worke this meditation in vs strongly when hée so amplifieth these natural vncleanesses in vs as that euery thing is made vncleane which toucheth him in that case Euery bed whereon hee lyeth euery thing whereon hee sitteth whosoeuer toucheth the bed shall wash his clothes c. He that sitteth vpon the seate where hee sate The saddle that hee rideth on yea the vessell that hee toucheth and so foorth So also of the woman in the latter part of the Chapter modestly read and be edified Thinke of the Scriptures that note this corruption in vs telling vs that all the imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts are onely euill continually That in vs that is in our flesh dwelleth no good thing For to will is present with some as with the Apostle that spake it and yet he found no meanes to performe that which is good For hee could not doe the good which he would but the euill that he would not that did hee And so foorth as followeth in that Chapter most notably That they which are in the flesh sauour the things of the flesh That the naturall man perceiueth not the things which are of God but they are foolishnesse to him c. Thinke what particular parts of vs are charged with this corruption sée if they be not the very chiefest as the vnderstanding the will the heart the eyes the eares and so foorth Be mooued with it and renouncing your selfe séeke for remedie where it onely is and not in your selfe Follow the Counsaile of the Apostle take his words as an explication of the end of this Ceremonie Namely that wée indeauour to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and Spirit and that wee finish our Sanctification in the feare of GOD. To this end the Lord hath ordained holy Matrimonie and taught that it is honourable among all men To this end hée hath forbidden all vncleane lusts and taught vs that Whoremongers and Adulterers hee will iudge For this is the Will of GOD saith the Apostle Euen your sanctification and that yee should abstaine from Fornication That euery one should know to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour And not in the lust of concupiscence as the Gentiles which know not God And blessed are the cleane in heart saith our Sauiour Christ for they shall see God Strengthen your selfe therefore in this holy course by these Scriptures and the like Consider often the Commandement of God in whose hand is death if you disobey Consider his nature that hée is puritie and cleanenes it selfe and as hée is our heauenly Father so should wée bée his children and seruants Consider how it is impossible to pray to him aright with an vncleane minde for any want wée haue Consider what hope wée can haue of eternall life if we loue vncleanenes when the Rule is thus Follow holinesse without which no man shall see the Lord. Consider the hurt of example The danger that groweth to a Common-wealth when for such filthinesse the Lord often ouer-throweth a whole state as the licentious life of one Paris did Troy And finally thinke what vgly diseases and maladies what rotting and burning what shame and confusion the Lord layeth euen in this life vpon vncleane persons besides the fearefull fall etern●ll that is assured afterward when this life is ended Meditate I say of these things and pray continually for grace and strength Say with the good old Father when any wicked motion péepeth vp O Lord helpe O Lord strengthen for I suffer violence and am assaulted c. 2 In the washing here mentioned and in the Atonement note the mercie of God towardes all miserable sinners and sée with comfort that although the fall of our first Parents hath thus blotted vs and spotted vs that indéede we are most vncleane yet ought wée not to despaire but take hold of him by a liuely Faith Who will not the death of a sinner but rather that hee should repent and liue disliking himselfe for his manifold sins and cleaning to his God for his manifold mercies And when you read thus often of water cleane not in the clement or creature of water but remember Saint Iohn that Iesus Christ came by water and blood and it is hee onely that washeth away our spots and saueth vs from our sinnes Water cannot do it nor any worke of ours but if wee wash our selues with snow water as Iob saith and purge our hands most cleane Yet shall he plunge vs in the pit and our owne clothes shall make vs filthy And by the Offering of the Turtles it was playnly figured that not in themselues but in some other they must bée made cleane from all their impurities I remember the Speach of a good Writer yet a Fryer and I pray you marke it There are some saith Hee That thinke themselues by and by made cleane if they shed a few teares and bewayle their sinnes Multiply their fasts and giue Almes c. But my Brethren although these bee good things yet they are not equiualent to our sinnes Thus breaketh trueth out of them that otherwise affected Rome Sée then how Poperie wrongeth the soules of men in sending them to the things that cannot helpe and drawing them deceitfull from the true and perfect sanctification and satisfaction of Christ Remember the words of One of theirs We runne with great boldnes to the Saintes that by their merites and prayers wee may come to immortalitie Come vnto her all ye that trauell and are heauie laden meaning the Virgin Marie and shee shall refresh and comfort your soules What is it to leaue the fountaines and springs of God and to digge vnto our selues Cisternes that can hold no water if
Samuel her sonne But in case a person thus vowed had a desire to be frée againe the Lord permitted that there might be a redemption made according to sexe and age with money And if the partie were so poore that such a rate could not be performed then was the Priest to nominate and appoint the quantitie or summe that should bée payd The proportions named in your Chapter héere are these Verse 3. A Male from 20. yeares to 60. was valued at 50. sicles that is 50. pounds Verse 4. A Female at 30. sicles that is 30. pounds after 5. shillings the ounce sterling Verse 5. From 5. yeares to 20. the Male at 20. sicles the Female at 10. Verse 6. From a Moneth to 5. yeares olde a Male at 5. sicles a Female at 3. Verse 7. From 60. yeares vpward a Male at 15. sicles a Female at 10. Verse 8. If any could not pay this then the Priest rated as I sayd Et hac redemptio fit vt quae morte propria non expletur saltem praetio vouentis deuotio compleatur And this redemption is made saith one that the deuotion which was not made by death at least might be made by the commutation which the Vower should giue 2 The second sort of things that might bée vowed were beastes Verse 9. where you sée if it were a Beast that lawfully might bée offered in sacrifice then was there no redemption allowed of it But if it were any vncleane beast of which men doe not offer a Sacrifice vnto the Lord then it might be redeemed and in case the partie would not redeeme it the Priest might sell it If there were a redemption made then was a fifth part more aboue the valuation to be giuen because it was a kinde of fault at least in shew to take that backe againe which was once giuen to God and to retayne to a priuate vse what was giuen to a religious and holy vse 3 The third sort were Houses Verse 14. when a man shall dedicate his House to bee holy vnto the Lord then the Priest shall value it whether it bee good or bad and as the Priest shall prise it so shall the value be Here also lay a redemption as you may sée in the next verse The fourth sort were fieldes whereof some were by inheritance some by purchase If the Field were inheritance then was there one maner of redemption Verse 16. c. if by purchase then an other verse 22. c. 4 Verse 26. Notwithstanding the first borne of the beasts because it is the Lords first borne none shal dedicate such bee it Bullocke or sheepe for it is the Lords c. You know the first borne were the Lords by an other Law and no redemption might be made of such but they must be left to the seruice of God as they were appoynted either to bée offered in Sacrifice or to be to the vse of the Priests c. 5 There were of Vowes againe two kindes one simple whereof you haue séene these perticulars an other which had an execration or curse ioyned to it if the thing vowed should be changed from the vse and end allotted whereof now your Chapter speaketh in the next place Verse 28 and 29. Notwithstanding nothing seperate from the common vse that a man doth seperate vnto the Lord of all that he hath whether it be man or beast or land of his inheritance may be sold nor redeemed for euery thing separate from the common vse is most holy vnto the Lord. Nothing separate from the common vse which shall be seperate from man shall be redeemed but dye the death Where you must vnderstand by seperate such a seperation or vow as is made with a curse if it be altered In which there was no redemption allowed or sale or alienation any way In this sort if men were vowed they must dye and not be spared But then not innocent men must be vowed but Malefactors that by euill doing deserued death Such were the men of Iericho Iosua 6. and Achan Iosua 7. the Amelakites 1. Sam. 15. and such others which made the sinne of Saul and the people very great when they spared Agag the King and the better sheepe and Oxen and the fatte beastes and the Lambes and all that was good would not destroy them And héere hence sprang that kinde of giuing things to the Church for the seruice of God that you sée in many old Charters in England with a grieuous curse vpon all those that should alter change those things from that vse wherein they shewed their earnest desire to haue things continue as they were giuen 6 Now if you aske why God ordayned these kinde of Vowes the answere is that he did it in two respects First that his people might not follow the fashion of the idolatrous heathens round about them who had their fashion of vowes wicked and sinfull but might be directed in a good sort séeing they would follow some sort Secondly that here-hence might spring some maynteinance for the Minister whereof in all things and by all meanes hee shewed his gracious care 7 They of the Romish Religion as from these Rites and customes of the olde Testament they haue borrowed many things so haue they vowing and many strange Vo 〈…〉 es haue they in vse and high regard They haue also redemptions of their Vowes namely Pardons and dispensations matters of no small profit to them But the Leuiticall Priest-hood béeing ended and all these Ceremonies Rites Customes and Lawes that were not Morall by the comming of the Lord Iesus the truth of all Figures and shadowes and man hauing no power of his owne head to erect and deuise any worship of GOD without his warrant in his Word easily may wée sée and all men with vs what ground their Vowes haue and how pleasing they are to GOD. Their owne Friendes and Fauorites doe say and write In malis promissis rescinde fidem in turpi voto muta decretum fouleVowe change thy determina●ion Quod i●cauté vouisti ne facias hastVowed accomplish not Et non erit hoc praeuaricatio sed temeritatis emendatio And this shall not bee any vnfit varying but a most fit reformation of rashnesse Melius est non vouere quam vouere id quod sibi is cui promittitur exolui nolit toVowe then to Vowe that which hee to whom the promise is made will not haue payde to him Virginitas carnis non seruatur mente corrupta intactis corporibus fugit castitas de moribus Virginitie of the flesh is not kept when the minde is corrupt Though the bodie bee neuer touched yet chastitie often flyeth from a man and womans manners With many such like sayings worthy noting 8 Yet let vs knowe that there are two sorts of Vowes Ciuill Vowes and Religious Vowes Ciuil Vowes are such as Men make to Men in honest lawfull and possible things binding themselues thereby to a
of gold that so it might shadow and shew that all though Christ should suffer die for sin yet he should himselfe haue no sinne but be pure as gold that is holy iust vnspotted the immaculate Lambe of God in whom there is no blemish of impuritie In all things saith the Apostle he was tempted in like sort yet without sinne 3 There were two Cherubims set vpon this Mercie seat in manner as you sée expressed in the picture of your Bible which Cherubims whatsoeuer Iosephus saith were in the most receiued opinion like Angels happely to shadow out the subiection of all Angels to Christ and their readie seruice at his commaundement for the Church and any particular member thereof For vnto which of the Angels saith the Apostle did God say at any time Thou art my Sonne this day begat I thee No it is said Let all the Angels of God woship him And of the Angels he saith He maketh the Spirits his messengers and his ministers a flame of fire Also to shew as they are obedient and seruiceable at all appointments so should we be remembring the incomprehensible goodnes of our God who among other his infinite fauours whereby he bindeth vs to his seruice hath made euen this one That these holy Angels also are our seruants by his appointment A mightie motiue to a good and thankfull minde to labour to become obedient and dutiful to such a Father to such a Creator to such a God Lastly to figure out that when we draw néere to the Propitiatorie a figure of Christ and are of God in his great mercie adopted in Christ for his sonnes we are called and as it were ioyned to the companie and societie of the Cherubims and holy Angels of God A comfort also for vs that come vnto him 4 The Cherubims stretch their wings on high couering the Mercie Seate with their winges so representing the maiestie of Christ who though he should humble himselfe to a verie low estate for mans good yet indéede was of that glorie and brightnesse in his Godhead as no flesh could be able to behold but must hide their eyes and acknowledge their infirmitie if but a small glimse thereof should be shewed them Figuring also the most comfortable protection of the Lord Iesus our Sauiour who spreadeth as it were his wings ouer his Church and euerie member of it to repulse any harme that might happen other than he will graciously turne to his glorie the Church or parties good which then indéed is no harme but a benefit rather although bitter to the flesh disgracefull in the world Thus spread he his winges ouer Iacob and saued him from Laban ouer Ioseph saued him from his brethren ouer Eliah saued him from Iesabell ouer Elisha 2. King 6 and thus euer as the Hen to her chickens so is the Lord our gracious God to all that truly feare him A maruellous swéet Meditation if you follow it 5 The faces of these Cherubims were one towards another and both of them toward the Mercie Seat so representing the consent of the Old and New Testament in both which there is but one truth and one doctrine the Olde hauing his face towards the New and the New also looking at the Olde For what is the Olde Testament but the newe obscure and what the new Testament but the Olde made plaine And both Olde and New looke vpon Christ the promised seed of the woman that should bruise the Serpents head They being saued in the olde Testament by beleeuing he should come and we being saued in the New by beléeuing he is come 6 And there saith God I will declare my selfe vnto thee and from aboue the Mercie Seat betweene the two Cherubims which are vpon the Arke of the Testimonie I will tell thee all things which I will giue thee in commaundement vnto the children of Israel Still note the excellencie of this figure of the Mercie Seat For as God before had spoken out of the bush Exod. 3. 4. vers and out of the cloud Numb 12. 5. vers so hereafter saith he I will speake to you from betwixt these Cherubims and so he did For in the Booke of Numbers you reade thus When Moses went into the Tabernacle of the congregation to speake with God he heard the voyce of one speaking vnto him from the Mercie Seat that was vpon the Arke of the Testimonie betweene the two Cherubims and he spake to him Whereupon the Prophet Esay saith God dwelleth betweene the Cherubims And Dauid in his Psalme also The Lord is King be the people neuer so impatient he sitteth between the Cherubims be the earth neuer so vnquiet And againe Heare O thou Shepeheard of Israel thou that leadest Ioseph like sheepe shew thy selfe also that sittest vpon the Cherubims And fitly did this resemble Christ by whom God afterward would speak vnto his Church whatsoeuer he would commaund As the Apostle writeth to the Hebrewes when he saith At sundrie times and in diuers manners God spake in the olde time to our Fathers by the Prophets but in these last daies he hath spoken to vs by his Sonne which still hee continueth and will vnto the end of the world though not by liuing voice and personall presence in earth as he did for a time How then Still looke vpon the figure Two Cherubims were vpon the Mercie seat representing as you haue heard the Two Testaments and from betweene those two Cherubims God spake so doth Christ still by the Two Testaments the olde and the new the lawe and the Gospell the Prophets and Apostles and so will he still speake to the end Other waies wee must not now expect Reuelations and dreames visions and miracles are ceased and if they will not heare Moses and the Prophets neither wil they beleeue if one should rise and come from the dead vnto them In Moses and the Prophets is the new Testament conteyned though obscurely as you haue heard and therefore still to these Cherubims resort if you meane to heare your God speake Huge is the heape therfore of their sinne that barre Gods people from this way and will make themselues to be Cherubims onely to be heard and beléeued shamefully affirming That the people are not to search the Scriptures but to receiue all things from their Teachers vpon their bare credit not reasoning not disputing not asking any Questions more than the horse asketh his maister why he turneth him this way or that but simply obeying Thus neuer dealt God with people since he gaue them his Scriptures you well know but as the other parts of their spirituall armour Helmet Breastplate and so forth so he bad them take their weapon without which what should armour do euen their sword which saith he is the word of God But truth séekes no darkenesse and lies loue no light Be you armed being warned and go you to the Cherubims where you