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A71123 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy by ... Mr. Richard Stock ... ; whereunto is added, An exercitation upon the same prophesie of Malachy, by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation vpon the prophecy of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing T1939; ESTC R7598 653,949 676

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table of the Lord is contemptible or as the Geneva Not to bee regarded As if it were no matter what brought and layd upon it The table of the Lord So hee calls The Altar because the sacrifice is as it were a feast to the Lord and for the Priests And so the Altar is expressely called Ezek. 41.22 The Altar was three Cubits and hee said unto mee This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Table that is before the Lord And no doubt The Lords Table may also bee called an Altar in that harmelesse sense in which the fathers used it before Transubstantiation was hatched or thought of Ioh. Alsted Paratitla Theol. in verbo Propositionis mensa observes that the Greekes use both names but not or the same table They have two tables one upon which the Bread and Wine stands before the consecration which they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Table and another to which the elements are carried from thence where they are also consecrated and that they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy Seate and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Altar But the fruitlesse Logomachy in this point which hath beene already hath beene but too much The table is put for the Altar a metaphor being like a Table the Lord being feasted at his Altar The Metaphor is cleare Esay 6 5.11 Yee are they that prepare a table for that troope 1 That make an Altar and sacrifice to good fortune as Mr. Selden interprets it in his learned booke De dis Syris Syntag. 1. cap. 1. pag. 4. Such is that of the Apostle when hee calleth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Ara which wee have not a fit english word for but wee usually though unfitly call the Altar of Divells The Table of Devills 1 Cor. 10.21 Ye say The Table is contemptible The Lxx. here have the same word againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But t is in the Hebr as ours have rendred it Contemptible Either 1. They saw the Sacrificing to be despised sleighted through such long dis-use by reason of the 70 yeares Captivity they had not recovered the fervour of former time to be so frequently before the Lord or 2. They look't scornefully on the meane building and ornaments of the Temple for it did not answer the glory of the former house So Tarnovius or 3. Because the Iewes were newly returned and were yet but poore and could not bring such rich oblations therefore the Priests grew cold and carelesse in attending on the altar or 4. Because they saw what was brought consumed with fire they thought any thing good enough for the fire good enough to be burnt The truth is The low and cheape opinion of Gods worship hath ever made a greater waste upon religion than an over-high and there is lesse danger though there be danger in superstition then in profanenesse Hence it was that the piety of ancient Christian times was so much in their reverent demeanour in Gods house though otherwise their devotion had much faeculentie and drosse ad mixt Among the many Canons to this purpose of other Churches and our owne every where obvious I cannot but here insert that every devout one which fell into my observation at the time of the collecting of these notes which Sir Hen. Spelman hath imparted to the world out of Bennet Colledge manuscript Non de bere ad ecclesiam c. We ordaine That men come not to the Church for any other cause then to praise God and to doe him service But Contendings a Pleadings and matters of arbitrement Tumults and Vaine talkings and all other like actions let them by no meanes be suffered in that holy place For there where Gods Name is called upon and Sacrifice offered unto God and where no doubt the Angels are frequent it is dangerous to doe or say any such thing as agrees not to that holy place For if the Lord cast those out of the Temple which bought or sold such victimes as were to be offered to himselfe ● how much more offended will he cast out them who pollute that place set apart for divine worship with vaine leasings mirthes and such like to●●● The place is Inter Capitula incertae editionis Cap. 10. In Concil Pam. brit pag. 591. Where you shall finde it both after the Latine and the Saxon Copy A devout Canon of that ancient but well nigh most corrupt age since Christ if it were made as Sr. H. Spelm. seemes to guesse by his placing it about An. Dom. 1050. And indeed all ages of the Church have beene tender in this point but ours But what a diseased mind is it to finde fault with the serving of God with comlinesse and honor and that it will not bee indured that wee should bee splendid at our owne tables and sordid at Gods as Bellarmin also complained even in that overdoting and superstitious Church Bellarm. in Gemitu Columbae of some prelats that they would provide rich wines for their owne tables and cared not what Tap-lash was served at Gods An instance that wee may easilyer complaine of then have remedied at least in our Country parish Churches This profanenesse is argued to be 1. against Gods Law 2. against the rule of common honesty and comelinesse vers 8. Verse 8 First against Gods law And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice or to sacrifice Is it not evill And if yee offer the lame and sicke is it not evill thus also the Lxx. and the Chald and Tremell reade it by an interrogation But Vatablus with the Tigurine on which hee noted as Cornel. a lap proem in min. proph pag. 6. affirmes which I have not seene but onely those notes of his which being taken from his mouth by Bertinus who succeeded him in his professor-ship at Paris were set out together with the Vulgar and Pagnin's version by Rob. Stephens An 1556. which I note here onely by the way and once for all and Pagn and Montan the French the English of Geneva and Iohn Tarnov who here and usually followes Luther they reade it affirmatively When ye offer the blind c. It is not evill The autorised Engl. before our last and Piscat supply it when yee offer the blind yee say it is not evill That is It is well enough though it be blind or lame It is not evill in your opinion who rather then you would lose any gaine say Melius est Il quam nil It is Lucas Osianders rime upon this place not mine better that which is ill and bad then nothing at all But the sense is much clearer in the interrogative Is it not evill That is It is evill And so it is the first argument against their profanenesse See the particulars explicated in the commentary The second is that it is Secondly Against the rule of cōmon honesty and comlines Offer it now unto thy governor or as the Geneva to thy Prince will hee bee pleased with it or as the Genev.
as hainous and displeasing unto God so as more hainous those which are against the main end of his calling wherein God hath placed him As the Minister must labour against ignorance idlenesse suffering his gifts to decay not increasing his talent and he must endeavour to search and beat out the simple and sincere sence of Gods word and will and impart it unto the people to bring them to life eternall for it is a hainous sin for him to be ignorant or to handle the word deceitfully or corruptly as Saint Paul speaks or to wrest the sense of it as Saint Peter speaks to their purposes And so as it is Isaiah the 3.12 They that lead thee cause thee to erre So the lawyer must not use unfaithfulnesse or cunning dealing he must search out the proper grounds of the law to direct his client to proceed warrantably to see his wrongs redressed or recover his right for for him to spend his time in devising quirks and distinctions which may serve to obscure the truth and make contentions and suits rather then end any or to delay his clients cause when he may well haste it and bring it to an issue and as many doe use their cunning to this purpose it is the greater sinne in them so a Physitian and a Surgion must imploy all his skill to cure for him to deferre and somtimes to help forwards and then pull backwards againe to make gaine of his patient and empty his purse and hurt his body is very hainous both of them worse then theeves by the high-way making Gods ordinance a cover for their theft not so punishable by humane laws but as culpable before God and shall as severely be punished So if a sonne omit the honour due to his father or a servant the feare due to his master is a greater sinne for others to doe it to the same men is not so hainous so t is the duty of a wife to be a helper that she must indeavour in all things For for her to be as Eve who was given as comfort to make Adams life more joyous for her to be a broker to bring death she that was taken from him as part to be shot at him as a dart to the wounding and murthering of his soule as Basill speaketh or for her who was taken out of his side to guard and hemme in his heart to be a ladder to the Devill to scale the heart of her husband as Gregory speaketh of Jobs wife was more hainous then when the Serpent and Devill did it who were professed enemyes and so now being directly against the end of her creation and calling and so of all they are thus to thinke of their sinnes and thus to avoyd them That despise my name The sinne they are accused of is contempt of his worship not the omitting of it or the nor doing of it at all but the doing of it corruptly carelessely and contemptuously The name of God signifies First himselfe Secondly his properties Thirdly his commands or his authority Fourthly his workes Fifthly his word and worship which is here meant and which they not only omitted which might be through ignorance or some forcible temptation but contemned or despised for many could not pretend ignorance and at this time there was no persecution to compell them to dishonour God but many did it out of a base conceit they had of Gods majesty thinking any kinde of service would serve the turne the word signifies to trample under feet as we doe vile things Math. 5.13 2 Kings 9.33 but did the Preists doe thus Ribera answereth things are oft said to be done which are intended to be done because nothing is wanting in them why it should not be done who have a will to have it done Doctrine Contempt of Gods name that is when men doe indeed the works of Gods worship and service but doe them negligently carelesly and contemptuously thinking if the deed be done it is enough but how for the manner it matters not greatly it is a grievous sinne Manifest that it is here made the grand sinne of this people and these Priests for which the burthen is threatned in the beginning and many particulary judgements afterwards This people did the work of the Lord brought their Sacrifices but they did it carelesly and contemptuously brought any thing as thinking it good enough This was one difference betwixt Abel and Cain though faith was the main yet how carefull the one was that thought the best was bad enough the other the worst would serve for he brought a Sacrifice Gen. 4.3 4. Hence are the qualities of the sacrifices described in the Law God requiring not only Sacrifices but such as were perfect without blemish Levit. 22.20 21 22 23. Deuter. 17.1 But why this but to shew how he requires the manner of doing aswell as the deed and that he cannot endure corruption here Hence Saul laboured to lessen the fault because they saved the chiefest for the Lord. 1 Sam. 15.15 Hence is that Malach. 1.14 which we shall see hereafter Reas 1 Because this argues a great contempt of God and as we may speake of his person for when any man is respected either for love or feare there the offices and duties that are performed about him are done neither negligently nor carelesly but with all diligence The Wife that loves her Husband the Child that honours his Father the servant that feares his Master doe their duties with all diligence and care Where the duties are done of course and coldly there is not the respect of the person that should be so it is in our carriage towards God Reas 2 Because it is grosse hypocrisie when men doe thus performe the act and yet their hearts and affections are farre remote and so are no living sacrifices but onely dead carkasses such as must needs stinke in the nosthrils of God yea and thus honouring him they doe dishonour him Isaiah 29.13 St. Salvian speaking of such as worship God corruptly saith Non tam inanis criminis fuisset ad Templum Domini non venire quàm sic venire quia Christianus qui ad Ecclesiam non venit negligentiae reus est qui autem venit sacrilegii minoris enim piaculi reus est si honor Deo non deferatur quam si irrogetur injuria ac per hoc quicunque ista fecerunt non dederunt honorem Deo sed derogaverunt De gubern Dei lib. 8. Vse 2 This being such a sinne argues the age we live in guilty of a great deale of sinne before the Almighty his worship is performed but yet contemned marvellously amongst us As they brought the sacrifices so doe we the workes but so corruptly and carelesly that he speaks to us Ministers and people Ye despise my Name The Word is preached and heard prayers are made Sacraments are delivered and received but alas so carelesly cursarily and customably that it is but the contempt of them and the contempt of God in
him faithfully The Prophet never forbade Naaman his service to his Master after he was become a Jew that is a servant of God He speakes to those who are free not to bind themselves to such 2 King 5.23 hereto may we apply that 1 Cor. 7.20 21 22. not to deny service but to alter the manner of service before for feare of Masters displeasure now for conscience of Gods command before their Masters onely now Christ in their Master Reas 1 Because as was noted in Children out of Chrysost it is due to their place not person as Non principi sed principatui so Non magistro sed magisterio The feare is due not to his person and so good or bad high or low gentle or churlish but to his place and authority as a master which he may be of what quality or condition soever he be and from them as servants whatsoever their persons and quality and gifts may be Reas 2 Particularly for such as are religious that they bring not dishonour upon Gods Name and Doctrine 1 Tim. 6.1 but may honour him Reas 3 For both because it shall be more respected of God the lesse it is deserved by any thing in thy master for then it is done of conscience and for God as a good worke ought to be Vse 1 This will condemne the Doctrine of the Church of Rome howsoever bragging it selfe to be Apostolicall yet holds it but few of the Apostles doctrines which it hath not either corrupted or taught something to the contrary And in this point most directly to Peter and Paul forbidding feare and faithfulnesse to be performed of servants to their masters and them who put them in trust Symacha saith Instit Cathol Tit. 46. sect 74. that all keepers of forts and all other vassals and slaves are freed from the oath of subjection to their Lord and Master he being an Heretick affirming that by it he is deprived of his civill power he hath over his servants the ground of the unfaithfulnesse of Sr. William Stanly in yeelding up Daventer an act approved and commended by Cardinall Allen how unlike are these spirits to the spirit of Saint Peter and Saint Paul who will have faithfulnesse to the good and bad to the Infidell aswell as the beleever shall not that be verified of them Math. 5.19 But they will say Heresie is a greater sinne then infidelity first I answer not as they make Heresie ut ante secondly be that true of August Sanata vulnere infidelitatis sed gravius percussa vulnere Idololatriae yet all Heresie is not Idolatrie neither can this if it be destroy the knot and bond of this duty which is not faith nor the foundation of divine religion but a politique title having force and strength from the law of nature which is not to be dissolved by Heresie not contrary to it And the Apostles reason will be here aswell as in Infidelity it will make the name of God and his doctrine ill spoken of But the truth is this is but a shift of theirs for they teach no faith to be kept with such and so no faithfulnesse with such as are heathen or Infidels If we may gather the lesse from the greater Vladislaus he was I take it the King of Hungary and Poland in a battaile against the Turkes Amurath the second of that name had the better hand so that the Turke offered to yeeld to any conditions whereupon Vladislaus and the Turke swore to Articles of Agreement but presently a Legate came frome the Pope and urged Vladislaus to set upon the Turke againe Eugenius 4. neere vanquished already telling him that the Pope had power to dispence with his Oath which he attempted though sore against his will Then the Turke cryed out O Crucifixe crucifixe vide gentem tuam perfidam Oh thou crucified thou crucified take notice of thy treacherous people And so bestirred himself that he overthrew Vladislaus which hath ever since turned to the greatest detriment of all Christendome out of this by proportion we may see it is but a colour of their distinction of Heresie and Infidelity Vse 2 To reprove all such servants as thinke they owe no feare nor duty or lesse feare and duty to their Masters because of some defects in them or some excellency in themselves if he be base borne and they of worshipfull Parents if he be irreligious and they have somewhat or more taste of piety if he be poore so when they came to him or impoverished after c. But they must know that none of these will dispense with omission of any duty Is he their Master If they give him not all respect they sinne against his place and dominion and so against God that hath given it him If God had allowed only rich men or religious men or good and courteous Men to be his Vicegerents in the family then it were somewhat but he hath given this to the rich and the poor alike he hath lightned both their eyes the good and the bad hath the seale of the Commission alike therefore they who doe not alike reverence their masters one as other are guilty of sinne before God and shall have no reward from God because he doth it not in conscience to Gods Commandement but for sinister respect for which they may receive their reward from men but a heavy one from God Vse 3 To perswade servants to feare and doe all duty to their Masters whatsoever they are one or other he that is well borne must forget his father and his fathers house and looke not upon his master whence he came but what he is he that is religious remember he must adorne his profession and looke not upon his master what he is of himselfe corrupt and prophane but what God hath made him his owne Vicegerent and his master and thinke what unworthinesse soever be in thy master yet that thou art most unworthy to doe him any disgrace or to deny him any duty Remember that what is due to him it is not to his person but place indeed not to him but God and to him in Gods stead and the more unworthy he is of any duty the more readily thou perform'st it the more reward thou shalt have from God yea for the present it is a speciall proofe of true grace in the heart For as it is Rom. 5.7 8. so every one will obey a great and a good master but that is true obedience when the master is neither great nor good or great and not good or good and not great for so have good servants and holy men done in times past unto their masters If I be a father where is my honour Here is the application of the former ground and rule to himselfe and them not speaking in generall but applying it particularly teaching in his example what is the best and most profitable kind of preaching when application is joyned with doctrine Vide Heb. 12.1 If I be a
be not affected with it to repentance Therefore should he labour to lay it to his heart and be humbled for it and reformed by it he should be occasioned by it to search his wayes and his conversation If it befall him for righteousnesse sake he hath wherein to rejoyce if for his infirmities and unjustly from those who reproach him yet he should see whether it is not justly from God or no for that may be justly from him which is unjustly from them But if indeed justly for his dissolute and loose life then is not to be expected any thing but the confusion and destruction of his person unlesse that make him to humble and reforme himselfe for when hard and bitter words prevail not then masters goe to beating and punishing with blowes So doth God VERS IV. And ye shall know that I have sent this commandement unto you that my covenant which I made with Levi might stand saith the Lord of Hostes ANd yee shall know The Prophet proceedeth to the causes of this condemnation These are three the first is because they had neglected their care of Gods worship not of any ignorance but against their knowledge for they knew that the dutie belonged to them and the commandment was to them For thus it is to be read For you know Doctrine 1 Their sinne is the greater and deserveth the more punishment who have the knowledge what they ought to do and yet follow their corrupt affections then theirs which know not Now the knowledge here spoken of is of two things of their dutie and what they ought to do and of their dignity and what God had bestowed upon them And both makes their sinne the greater because they have gone against their owne knowledge and Gods kindnesse That though God had bestowed great blessings upon them they had forgot it though they knew it and were unthankfull unto him Doctrine 2 Unthankfulnesse is a sinne when men do not answer Gods love as he hath had care and dealt liberally with them vide Chap. 1. verse 2. I send this commandment unto you that my covenant might stand They must performe that is their parts or else he would performe no covenant with them Doctrine 3 God will not neither is bound to performe covenant with man to give him any thing he hath promised whether spirituall or temporall of this life or that is to come unlesse he performe his covenant and conditions The covenant of God is either generall or speciall The generall either legall or Evangelicall All which requires the conditions to be performed on mans part if he would have God performe or else c. Levit. 18.5 Gal. 3.11 Mark 16.16 1 Sam. 2.30 2 Chron. 15.2 Reason 1 Because their not performing frees him from his promise and bindes him not to performe it to give such good things to such unworthy fedifragies covenant breakers not to give as it were the childrens bread to dogs Reason 2 When they performe he will because he is most faithfull that hath promised and can neither lye nor deceive he being true and Truth it selfe Object Rom. 3.3.4 For what though some did not beleeve shall their unbeliefe make the faith of God without effect God forbid yea let God be true and every man a lyer as it is written That thou mightest be justified in thy words and overcome when thou art judged Then will he performe when man doth not Answer That will not follow from this which is manifest thus The Apostle asketh the question Whereas many of the Jewes were unfaithfull and covenant breakers whether their infidelity should abrogate and make void the covenant of God that he should shew no fruit of it among them and as man should break his promise and performe to none that which was promised to all He answereth that cannot be but howsoever the greater part of them had broken covenant with whom he might justly breake and would yet his covenant should have his full force and efficacie though not in all yet in the Nation because there was ever some good men among that people who believed the promises and lived uncorruptly and holily therefore in them and to them should that be performed which was promised Shewing that the wickednesse of a multitude shall not make the promise of God void and of none effect but he will perform them to the beleevers and they who performe conditions though they be but a very few And so the place makes for the point not against it Object Many enjoy Gods blessings and never perform the condition but live wickedly and prophanely Answer They enjoy not the blessing of eternity neither ever shall and as for temporall things they may enjoy them but not any blessing by them it were better for them to be without them for they increase their sinne and are but fed and sustained by them for the slaughter as the damned are by Gods power to endure his wrath and punishment Vse 1 If in our observation we finde that many promises God hath made are not performed to our selves or others As there are many other things which may be answered for clearing and acquitting the truth and fidelity of God in this kinde especially in temporall things he gives spirituall an ounce of which is better then many a pound of the other And if he breaks not that promiseth silver and gives the greater summe in gold so not God If he promise deliverance and gives patience under the crosse which is better for the sufferer he still performes because such things had those exceptions And so in many other things but this especially when the good things promised are not performed the cause is in our selves and other men why they are not performed and not in God because we performe not conditions And this being makes us not him covenant-breakers who have made our selves uncapable and unworthy of his blessings and so have freed him from his promise by our breaking with him Now he that is freed cannot breake covenant though he do not the thing before covenanted Vse 2 To let us see the folly of those men who thinke to have Gods promises performed unto them and him to keep covenant with them and in many things make no doubt but he hath done and in future times assure themselves he will when they neither have done nor yet endevour to keep any covenant with him If the former be true do they not deceive themselves and are they not though how wise soever in other things yet in this stark fools For if he be a foole that because he hath the word or the bond of a good man one able and that never broke for the payment of a thousand pounds at such a time and such a place but upon condition he performe such a service or effect such a worke to lay his whole state and his whole condition upon that that it will be performed in the same time and place and yet he never go about to perform the
may see the truth and patience and piety of our most holy predecessors and when wee see them to provoke our selves to imitate them and to uphold our selves in right paths by them Heb. 12.1 But yee are gone out of the way They had erred from the truth and good wayes of their predecessors Doctrine The Rulers Governours and Ministers of the Church may erre both in matter of doctrine and of Gods worship Let us look into the booke of God and we shall finde this true not in some one or two but in the greatest part of them yea all for ought we know First these things were fore-told for though the people bragged Jer. 18.18 The Law should not perish from the Priest nor counsell from the wise God threatned the farre contrary Ezek. 7.26 and Micha 3.6 That the Sunne should go downe over the Priest And see the event of this Isa 56.10 Zephan 3.4 Jerem. 6.13 and 23.13 But this was in Israel onely yea see it in Judah Jerem 23.14.16 and not in Prophets onely but Priests 2 Chron. 36.14 Reason 1 Because their knowledge be it never so great is but in part and imperfect 1 Cor. 13.9 Now they who are ignorant in part Vulgare illud maxima pars eorum quae scimus minima pars eorum quae ignoramus may erre in some things Ignorantia erroris matter Bernard ad Cant. nisi ignorando errare non potest August Enchirid. Seeing all men are in part ignorant then they may erre yea the Priest Heb. 5.2 Reason 2 Because they are but in part sanctified and every man hath some part of the old man in him as Saint Paul 2 Cor. 11.5 who had gone as farre as any other confesseth of himselfe Philip. 3.12.13 Rom. 7.17.24 Therefore may they in part strive against their owne judgement and be drawne by temptation to defend errour Sometime against their owne conscience for though errour in judgement arise ever of ignorance yet errour in act as in teaching in defending and maintaining of error is joyned often with knowledge and ariseth not out of ignorance but want of grace and sanctification Reason 3 Because the promise of incessant assistance and infallible guidance was never made to any but to the Apostles because they were to plant Churches where there never had any been before and to establish a new forme of Church government and worship of God never used or heard of before therefore to them John 14.26 and 16.13 which was not a perfect and absolute illumination which the Apostle professeth he had not 1 Cor. 13.9 but an infallible suggestion of things as occasion required Which is understood not of things that were expedient for them to know as Christians nor as teachers which they had already but as Apostles 1. To be planters of new Churchs and new government Now that this was promised to them onely I prove for it is added he will shew you the things to come a priviledge that no Pope or Patriarch ever durst challenge and if not this will passe by vertue of that promise why the other when they are both in one and the same promise therefore it was to them alone yea not so much as the extraordinary Prophets of the old Testament had it either promised or performed as Greg. super 1 Reg. 3.8 observeth for they had not the Spirit extraordinarily alwayes infallibly guiding them save when they came with some speciall message from God which is manifest by the errour of Nathan when he was out of his message 2 Sam. 7.3 And of him that was deluded by the false Prophet after he had done his message to Ieroboam and made to transgresse the commandment of the Lord 1 King 13.2.18 and 19. which he would not have done if he had not been deceived for before he would not do it for all the Kings offer vers 7.8 and in Jer. cap. 42.4.7 Vse This serves to confute the doctrine of Popery who hold that the Church cannot erre nor a Councell which is the representative Church but they have brought it to a narrower scantling for the question is wholly about one for whatsoever they talke of Church or Councels it commeth in conclusion all home to the Pope he it is alone that cannot erre For the Church they grant that any particular Church in the world may erre save the Church of Rome that too if the Pope should translate his Sea from Rome as Peter did from Antioch thither Bell. de Pont. Rom. 4.4 For Councels that a generall Councel may erre if the Pope do not confirme it Ibid. 4.3 And è contra Idem de Conc. author 2.2.5 But if all be true that we have shewed he may erre But Bellar. de Pontif. Rom. 4.3 proveth he cannot for Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not and so for the Pope and so he cannot erre It is answered First that by faith is not heere meant an historicall faith but a justifying faith not a generall faith but a particular nor that by which we beleeve God but in God which fails not by errour so it be not fundamentall for so should we condemne all who ever have lived But when a man doth fall wholly from grace and ceaseth to be a member of Christ And that it is so appeares out of the drift and scope of our Saviour Christ for his drift was to arme and protect Peter against that triall and temptation that he then foretold him of not against errour in teaching the Church but against Apostasie in time of triall Therefore saith Theophilact in Lucam he sheweth him the particular temptation for our Saviour would not arme there where he was not to be hurt where there was no danger not put an helmet upon the head when the heart and breast was to be strucken And thus much Bellarmine confesseth when he makes Peters fall to be a matter of fact to cast utterly off his former profession and not of faith and therefore it was perseverance in the habit of justifying faith not infallibility in the matter of historicall faith that Christ prayed for which so differs that a man may have the one that is justifying faith and yet hold an errour not fundamentall to the death as Bellarmine contends for the Fathers divers of them And the other that is a right beliefe of the generall points of religion and yet not have justifying faith nor saving and sanctifying grace as Bellarmine contendeth the Pope cannot erre and yet confesseth he may want saving grace Secondly it is answered that that he prayed for here was a thing not proper to Peter but common to all the Apostles yea all the elect and if the gift and grace be common to all and conceived Joh. 17.9.10.20 by the same person in effect the same for all upon which ground the ancient Fathers apply this place to all the Apostles yea to all the elect and if to all then helps it them but a little The second proofe he cannot
erre is Matth. 16.18 The gates of hell shall not prevaile against the Church whence they first reason that the foundation and roofe of the Church cannot erre such as Peter and the Popes his successors I say nothing that it is not yet proved that the Pope is Peters successor nay it is manifest that he succeeded rather Simon Maguer then Simon Peter But I say that Peter is not the rocke In the words saith Augustine there is difference betwixt Petrus and Petra both in the Greeke and Latine Againe the rocke here is not Peter but Christ 1 Cor. 10.4 and 3.11 whereunto agrees the Fathers and their owne writers also late writers whereby all colour of argument taken from this place for the Pope is utterly quashed But grant that they begge then must it either be in regard of his person but but cannot be for the Church cannot be builded upon flesh and bloud Or in regard of some superioritie and place above the rest But as that cannot be proved so the contrary is manifest 2. Cor. 12.11 Or of his doctrine taught by him and of the faith of Christ confessed by him and so it is true Now this was common to him and all the rest For as Iohn is called a Pillar Gal. 2.9 so was Iames as well as Peter and all the rest as Revel 21.14 To which is that Ephes 2.20 with whom the Prophets are joyned because they writ the Scriptures which is indeed te foundation of our faith they being put for their writings Our of all which nothing will follow for the Pope or nothing in speciall manner I will trouble you with no other reasons onely I will shew you this chalenge is false because many of them have erred The first shall be Marcellus or Marcellinus who offered up sacrifice to Idols and by the Councell of Sessa was made to recant it The second Liberius whom Hierom and Athan sius affirme to have been an Arrian one that denied the Deity of Christ Thirdly Thirdly like to him was Felix who was an Arrian as the same Hierom writeth Innocent the first made both Baptisme and the Eucharist necessary to salvation of Infants Augustine lib. 1. contra Iulian. Pelagian cap. 2. The latter of these errours was condemned by the Councell of Trent Sessio 5. sub Pio quarto Canon 4. Fourthly Leo the first who died as Arrius did an Arrian Fifthly Siricius accounted Matrimony pollution Sixthly Vigilius accursed all who affirmed that there be two natures in Christ Seventhly Honorius the first which taught as Melchior Canus confesseth that Christ had not two wills or operations Eighthly In Concilio Romano Pope Stephen the sixt he abolished all the Acts of Formosus his predecessour and commanded all that had received Orders from him to be ordered againe and thought that the Sacrament depended upon the vertue of the Minister Ninthly in concilio Ravennae habito Iohn 9. disanulled all the Acts of Stephen and Sergius the third all that Formosus had done And so that which Iohn had done and approved the Acts of Stephen Some of these must needs erre Tenthly Gregory the seventh whom Cardinal Benno in his writing of him who lived at the same time makes an Heretick a Necromancer a seditious and a Simonist an adulterer not the worst Bishop but the worst of all men A right Hellebrand Eleventhly Celestinus the third allowed heresie to breake the bond of marriage and that a man might marry againe if his wife fell into heresie and è contra So Alphonsus de Castro Twelfthly Iohn 22. or 21. who held that the soules separated from the bodies saw not God nor rejoyced not with him before the day of judgement and was forced to recant it with sound of trumpet by the University of Paris for feare of losing his Popedome as Iohn Gerson writeth in his Sermon of Easter Thirteenthly Iohn 23. or 22. was accused in the Councell of Constance for denying eternall life and the resurrection of the body All which with many moe prove manifestly against them that the Pope can erre and hath erred and so may still Bellarmine I confesse hath a great many of shifts and evasions to cleare his holy Fathers but they are so light and foolish they are not worth the studying on for the most part Vse 2 This teacheth us how dangerous a thing ignorance is even in every Christian for if it be the cause of errour in the Ministers it will be in the people And if the Ministers all one and other are subject to errour if they erre and the people be without knowledge they will go after taking errour for truth because they are able to distinguish neither the one nor the other If it were infallible and certaine that their guides could not erre nor their Ministers be deceived it were no matter though they were never so ignorant but when it is most certaine that they are subject to it and their erring will not excuse the people though the other answer for their abusing and mis-leading of them their ignorance is very dangerous and that implicite faith Popery so much commends damnable And in them and others who would perswade the people they may be ignorant and a little or no knowledge is required of them it is suspitious as if they meant to make a prey of them to broach some errors among them For then saith Chrysostome theeves go to stealing when they have first put out the candle and then do men utter their bad wares when they have dim and false lights Vse 3 To perswade all men to labour for knowledge and to increase in the knowledge of the Word and Mysteries of salvation That they having the rule of truth and falshood the word of God may not be carried away with the errour of one or many be they never so great or learned Erre they may be they never so learned for they know but at the best in part and erre oftentimes they do because they are not wholly sanctified For as the greatest part of a Church is wholly unsanctified so the best are but in part sanctified and so are subject to partiality and errour yea may both erre and defend errour against their knowledge some violent temptation of pride pleasure and profit and such like carrying them thereunto seeing none now is incessantly guided and governed by the Spirit Then had they need of knowledge that they may try and discerne the spirits and doctrines and he that is not carelesse which end goes forwards not retchlesse for his soule whether it walke in the paths of truth or in the paths of errour will not be carelesse for it and to grow in knowledge But if they erre how not we Lookers on may see more then players We may allude to that Prov. 28.11 The rich man is wise in his owne conceit but the poore that hath understanding can try him And God often to the simple reveales things when hid from wise Matth. 11.25 to humble them
rejected and condemned afterwards and that very shortly Vse 1 This being a truth serves to confute all of the contrary minde as sometime was that Apostata Bernard Ochin who hath written certaine dialogues and laboured to establish this against the word of God Infinite it were to trouble you with all yet some The greatest is the examples of many of the holy Fathers as recorded in the Scripture who had many wives and are no where reproved I answer First it followes not Their reproofe is not set downe therefore it was not for seeing the Prophet Malachy reproves it why may it not be supposed others did so Besides many things were done that we never finde reproved which argues not the lawfulnesse of them The incest of Iacob and Lot Davids judgement against Mephibosheth and with Siba and such like Thirdly if it were not yet we live by precept not example Fourthly the multitude nor the greatnesse of offenders will excuse neither can antiquity prescribe against the word of God But as for the Fathers it is answered by the learned First that God remitted his law to them which appeares say they because he neither reproved it by his Prophets neither did he at the publishing of the Law expressely condemne it as he did some others as incest Levit. 19. before they thinke Iacobs marriage of two sisters was lawfull therefore he remitted his law yet so as they were not without all sinne in it For sinne they consider either as an aberration or turning aside from the perfect rule of God and so they sinned or else that which offends God so that it provokes him to punish and in this sense they sinned not God thus remitting the Law Others excuse the Fathers because they did it and God so permitted for the increase of the Church and not for any filthy unclean lust to satisfie it which was true in some though it hold not in others As Solomon and some others who cannot be excused of incontinencie Some excuse from some probable ignorance that either they knew not the Law or they thought not of it and so though not no sinne yet a lesse sinne Some the succeeding ages by their predecessors that though their examples make not sinne to be no sinne yet to be smaller sinnes to offend by their example who were otherwise good and holy men then when any thing is done with a wavering conscience and men are boldly the first that doe it for they are to be judged to sinne by error of judgement then perversity of affection Finally it is probable that God did winke at that in this people and their progenitours for the propagation of his people and to give passage to the fulfilling of his promise of the increasing of them and though God used that fact of the fathers well yet will it not follow that they sinned not when they turned aside from the word of God but if they sinned in it and so persevered and dyed impenitent what shall we thinke became of them It is probable they never repented either because they thought they sinned not or else because they well discerned not their sinne and yet might be pardoned it and were It is true to have Gods mercy for pardon requires repentance yet is it not necessary that every man should expressely repent himselfe of every particular sinne How many things are done which are not rightly done yet not done wickedly by us but in a conscience not well informed and so knew it not to be sinne And how many which are forgotten that they were done and yet by a mans generall humiliation for all his sinnes and craving pardon of unknowne sinnes Psal 19. pardon is obtained And those fathers often in their lives confessing themselves miserable sinners and humbling themselves no doubt that repentance and faith in Christ to come did save them But 2 Sam. 12.8 David had his masters wives It is answered by some that he did because God remitted his law to him But others it is never read that he took any one of them to wife neither is it said so but though the phrase into thy bosome is commonly understood of marriages yet it signifies there onely power and authority that is I have given thee all thy masters goods and have not excepted his wives that thou maist have them under thy power as other things Tremelius thus i. res personas etiam intimas charissimas eorum qui prius tui erant domini subjeci tibi But Deut. 25.5 the brother was to take the wife of his elder brother deceased It is answered by most that it was an extraordinary example and a speciall thing but no generall rule for else incest might be proved by it if it were generall Others answer that it must be taken and understood if he have not a wife before And so much they thinke those words carry if brethren dwell together And a reason of it is because it is not like that God would have a man to neglect his owne seed and his owne wife to raise up seed to others but onely he would have his brother substituted in his place I omit many more of no great weight though of some shew against all which the truth will stand and prevaile Vse 2 To perswade the men of our age against it for howsoever the forefathers escaped with it God either for the increase of the Church or by reason of their ignorance and rudenesse winked at it yet as in another case Acts 17.30 The time of this ignorance God regarded not but now he admonisheth all men every where to repent So may we say in this specially seeing Christ by himselfe and by others his Apostles hath declared us the law of the creation and brought it to the first institution he being as Revel 1. Alpha and Omega and as Hierom applies it to this when he found all things at his comming brought to Omega to an extremity and height he reduced them to Alpha to that which was in the beginning And if it were then granted to be no sinne yet will it be now They who excuse the fathers make as of man so of the world foure ages the childhood of it the youth the mans estate and the old age Now many things are fitting for children and may be tolerated in them which may not be in men of riper yeares as S. August saith in old time for men to goe with garments having long sleeves and skirts it was an argument of softnesse and wantonnesse But now if they should weare them with either they should be noted They say againe that that was the time of darkenesse ours of the light for though they were light in respect of the Gentiles they are darkenesse in comparison of us Now many things are tolerable in darkenesse which may not be borne withall in the light Then in this as in many other things we must not study what was done or borne withall but what is lawfull for us to doe and
the one they have none of the other for many seem marvelous carefull of the first Table and matter of religion they will heare the word they will be frequent in prayer they will not sweare an oath keep the Lords day hate Idolatry and such like but yet live in some breach of the second Table in hatred and malice lust or covetousnesse cruelty or oppression slandering and discontentment disobedience and disloyalty And these are religious hypocrites On the other side many there are who have care to deale justly to performe faithfullnesse to men are mercyfull liberall loving and kinde c. Yet care not or regard not the duties of religion Are swearers prophaners of the Lords day neglecters of the worship of God carelesse negligent drousie hearers and prayers have little hatred of Idolatry and lesse love of the truth And these are civill hypocrites Both these in the hypocrisie of their hearts perswade themselves that they are in the favour of God and shall escape the wrath of Christ when he shall come to judge either in this life or the life to come And these and none more lie censuring judging and condemning one another and remember not that the Judge standeth at the dore ready to judge and condemne them both seeing he commandeth both he will condemne for the neglect of either and the curse is to him that neglects religion and the first Table as well as the second and honesty Vse 3 To perswade these hypocrites to come out of their hypocrisie and both them and all others to take upon them the care of performing obedience to Christ in both be carefull of religion with honesty and of honesty with religion this must be done and the other must be lest undone Hast thou any knowledge of God any love of the truth any care of the Lords day any feare of his great name any love to heare or to pray See thou be carefull of justice chastity sobriety obedience fidelity and true love to men Or else for all that when thou thinkest to have Christ for thy Saviour thou shalt finde him but a swift witnesse and an irefull Judge against thee So on the contrary Many will easily grant me that if a man be never so religious so devout and carefull of the first Table yet if he be unjust an extortioner a murtherer and such like As they Acts 28.5 judged of St. Paul so the Lord will not suffer him to live but his judgements shall be upon him and condemnation in the life to come But if a man be just chast mercifull and such like though he know not religion be without the feare of God and care of his service though a swearer blasphemer a prophaner of the Lords day yet he may do well enough and no fear of perishing or judgement and so will they speake both in life and death which is all one as if they should thinke a man which is guilty of felony murder and such like must needs be judged by the law of the land but if not of these though he be a traytor to the Kings person yet is there no feare But if a traytor shall die though not guilty of felony and a felone though not culpable of treason by the justice of mans law much more they who shall separate these two Tables Therefore must we endeavour to be religiously honest and honestly religious to avoide the transgressions of both Tables and to do the duties of them lest if we separate these we lay our selves open to the judgements of God in this life and separate our selves from the comfortable and happy presence of the Lambe and him that sitteth upon the Throne Against the soothsayers The first particular whom he will judge and under this all of the like kinde Such Deuter. 18.10 11. Let none be found among you that maketh his sonne or daughter go through the fire or that useth witchcraft or a regarder of times or a marker of the flying of foules or a sorcerer or a charmer or that councelleth with spirits or a soothsayer or that asketh counsell at the dead Doctrine The Lord as he will judge and destroy all other Malefactors so will he soothsayers witches inchanters sorcerers Necromancers wizards and all such like so is affirmed here And if we loke to the old Testament and things that are past we shall finde it true Deuter. 18.12 For all that do such things are an abomination to the Lord and because of these abominations the Lord thy God doth cast them out before thee 2. Kings 17.17 18. And they made their sonnes and their daughters passe through the fire and used witch-craft and inchantments yea sold themselves to do evill in the sight of the Lord to anger him therefore the Lord was exceeding wroth with Israel and put them out of his sight and none was left but the tribe of Iudah onely Mich. 5.12 And will cut off thine Inchanters out of thine hand and thou shalt have no more soothsayers In the new Gal. 5.20 21. Revelat. 21.8 Sorcerers shall have their part in the Lake that burnes with fire and brimstone Reason 1 Because they are grosse Idolaters and the art they use is grosse Idolatry for here is ever either the expresse invocating and calling upon the Devil seeking from him knowledge of things secret and to come helpe in trouble deliverance from danger and such like proper unto God or else some secret and covert invocation on him as under the name of the dead or under some barbarous tearmes which have no signification or by some superstitions and arts of slight invented by him Which Tertul. l b. de anima calleth second Idolatry for as in the first he fained himselfe to be a God so here an Angel or one that is dead and such like in both he seeks to be worshipped when as then they are worshippers of the devill taking from the Lord that was his most gratefull and acceptable to him invocation and his worship and giving it to his most deadly and greatest enemy How should he put it up and not be revenged of such a generation Reason 2 Because they bewitch and deceive many and draw them into the same sins and so bring them to destruction as is said of Simon Magus Acts 8.9 When as therefore they so strive against the glory of God and salvation of others no marvell if the Lord will judge and destroy them Vse 1 To stir up the Magistrate to draw forth the sword of justice against these and to cut off all such workers of iniquity from the City of God for they ought to do as the Lord would and will do seeing they have the commandement for it Exod. 22.18 Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live Levit. 20.27 And if a man or woman have a spirit of divination or soothsaying in them they shall die the death they shall stone them to death their bloud shall be upon them So did Saul while he was assisted of
nothing too much for them so much the Prophet insinuates here and as much is manifest Ezek. 16.16.17.18.19 And thou didst take thy garments deckedst thine high places with divers colours plaiedst the harlot thereupon the like thing shall not come neither hath any done so thou hast also taken thy faire Iewels made of my gold and of my silver which I had given thee and madest to thy selfe images of men and diddest commit whoredome with them And tookest thy broidered garment and coveredst them and thou hast set mine oile and my perfume before them My meat also which I gave thee and fine flower oile and honey wherewith I fed thee thou hast even set it before them for a sweet savour Thus it was saith the Lord God Exod. 32.3 They brake off and gave away their golden ear rings to make an Idoll 2. Kings 16.3 and 17.17 They bestowed their children on Idols Judg. 17.3 The mother of Micha gave 200. shekels of silver to the founder to make a graven and molten Image Reason 1 Because this is a voluntary and free service of their own heads and inventions now we see in all things men spend more freely and more liberally upon their owne inventions then upon those things which they are tied unto Men bestow more upon their own children Reason 2 Because Idolatry an superstition is naturall and sencible agreeable to nature and sense and so more pleasant and delightfull on things that are delightfull and pleasant men bestow more time more tendance and more goods Reason 3 Because Idolatry is accounted adultery and Idol a harlot an Idolater an Adulterer passim in Scripturis Now as one saith non minor suspitionis quam libidinis impetus ad rapiendos homines Men are as mad upon an Idol as upon a harlot and as they will spend all to satisfie their lust so to follow their superstition Vse 1 This may serve to reject and justly the suite of our Papists for favour and forbearance upon this ground because of the great cost which their ancestors they say have bestowed upon this land in building of Schooles Colledges and Hospitalls and endowed them with rich possessions D Bishop prefat they must first presuppose and indeed prove that it is the truth which they professe and that theirs is the true religion else may any idolater in the world make the same reason for himselfe and so may an adulterer plead for favour because he hath been at such cost charges with his harlot and endowed her and hers with such great riches but if not the one why the other why might not the Canaanites by the same reason have pleaded for favour from the Israelites Deuter. 6.10.11 Yet it was not any motive to bring favour unto them nay for all that they were commanded to destroy them And can the Church have a better guide and Christian common-wealthes a better example But it may be that they suppose that this should prove that their superstition is true religion because they thus decked it bestowed infinite cost otherwise upon it By the same reason may any idolater in the world plead that it is the truth and the true worship of God seeing their bounty towards their false Gods hath beene equall in most things and superiour in divers to this of theirs yea by this reason might many a harlot plead against the lawfull and just wife that she was not so but her self because she lives in the house is maintained daintily gorgeously when the other is excluded and shut out in poverty and misery but if not this why that but in all this I grant them but that which may easily be proved to the contrary that our ancestors in the first institution of these things did not intend the Popish faith and religion Vse 2 Then is it not to be wondred at if we see the great liberality of our superstitious Papists towards their superstitions and idolatry for it hath beene so with all idolaters whatsoever and no reason but it should be so with this which is more naturall and fitting the humours and corruption of nature then any other superstition in the world And as some say of Manna that it fitted and was tastfull to every pallate according to the humour of it so may we more certainely say of this as hath beene divers times shewed that it is fitting to the ambitious covetous voluptuous licentious and every one of what affection soever is it any marvaile then though men be marveilous liberall when as every man that hath it cares not what he bestowes upon his humour besides their doctrine of merits hath brought them in no small gaine specially from men who lie a dying who to inrich them though they laboured all their life to inrich their wife and children yet care not how poore they leave them then because they are so taught that by such meanes they may redeeme their soule and satisfie for many things they else might suffer what will not a man give to save his life when he is upon the gallowes more in this Yet ye have spoyled me Their fact and offence in the relation and comparison which standes thus they that is idolaters will not spoyle but they will cleave fast unto their Gods and be very devout yet ye have not done so to me Doctrine Idolaters often cleave faster and are more devout to their Idols and their worship then they who professe the truth cleave or are devoted to the Lord. Vse It should teach us in that to imitate them lest they rise up in judgement and condemne us Let it be our resolution as it is in Mic. 4.5 For all people will walke every one in the name of his God and we will walke in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever Have ye Upon whom I have bestowed many and great things yet have ye spoiled me and so makes their sinne the greater Doctr. They who have received more from God then others if they contemne and injure him and take from him his due or any such like they offend more then the rest vide Cap. 1.12 but ye have polluted it Spoiled me They tooke away and with-held the maintainance of his Ministers who were the instruments and meanes of his worship therefore he accounts himselfe to be injured and spoiled Hence a generall doctrine Doctr. The injury contempt and abuse committed against the meanes of Gods worship is held to be done against God himselfe Thus God takes this done to his Ministers vide cap. 1.7 The table of the Lord is not to be regarded In tithes and offerings This is that wherein they had offended and God complaines he was spoiled because the portion of their goods which was due to him they had kept from his house and Ministers Doctrine It is a sacrilegious and impious thing for men to with-hold or withdraw the maintenance of the Ministers So much the Prophet affirmeth here so much all those places prove which command such
here out of their observation as a truth though it be evilly applied and used against God as Iobs friends wrested many generall things against him which were true in the generall but corrupted in the application Doctrine Oftentimes it falls out that wicked men do increase and grow great in the world by their wicked means and impious crafts which is not true onely because these have said it but that it is so shewed us by others Psal 73.12 Loe these are the wicked yet prosper they alway and increase in riches Job 21.7 Wherefore do the wicked wax old and grow in wealth Jer. 12.1.2 O Lord if I dispute with thee thou art righteous yet let me talke with thee of thy judgements Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper Why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse Thou hast planted them and they have taken roote they grow and bring forth fruit Thou art neer in their mouth and far from their reines Psal 17.14 Men of this world who have their portion in this life whose bellies thou fillest with thine hid treasure their children have enough and leave the rest of their substance for their children Reason 1 Because God doth use them to punish and correct his * Vtitur in salutem suorum irrationali insensibili c. Bern. de gr lib. arbit for the good safety of his people he useth the irrationall and insensible creature as a labouring beast or an instrument which when the worke is done is of no further use he useth the reasonable creature but ill affected as his rod of correction which when his son is beaten he throwes into the fire as an unprofitable twig and he useth good Angels and men as coadjutors and fellow souldiers whom when the victory is had he liberally rewards Now for this every one must have their proportionable strength and power and so the wicked therefore they grow Reason 2 Because by it many are and may be tried who live in the Church who not prospering by their piety and profession because of their hypocrisie in it when they see the prosperity of the wicked and see the afflictions and poverty of the Church will leave and forsake the society of it and joining themselves to the other accounting it to be the better Psal 73.10 And so they shew themselves and hereto I apply that Prov. 28.12 When the wicked come the man is tried Reason 3 Because his judgements and justice might be more eminent and perspicuous when he shall cast them downe that are aloft and were in the eies of men for their greatnesse and riches and glory For as in States though a thousand petty theeves be hanged yet nothing such notice is taken of the justice of the State as when one great offendor of some great note and eminence is executed and hath the censure of the law executed against him Vse 1 Do they not then deceive us or go about to doe it when they would perswade us there is the truth and there is piety in that company and society where is plenty and abundance and for that perswade us to turne in thither because waters in a full cup are wrung out unto us and separated from them many afflictions and many miseries and calamities as the Champions of the Church of Rome do with as good reason the people withstood Ieremie or would have perswaded him that the worship of the Queen of Heaven was rather the better then the worship of the King of Heaven and earth because they prospered for a while in outward things more in the one then the other Jer. 44.16.17 And so may any Idolaters perswade us Vse 2 To teach us not to wonder or be offended with the growing or increasing of the wicked specially if it come by wicked arts and impieties for it is no new thing nor strange to be wondered at nor much disadvantage to be offended with It is no new thing for all ages and places have their examples of it many Atheists Idolaters oppressors persecutors have grown to exceeding height of glory and outward eminency now as that which is hath been so that which hath been is no wonder to see it againe that men by flattery injustice oppression Idolatry and such like should be built up and build up their houses and families neither is there cause we should be offended for they build but to their destruction all shall be but a Babel As they say the Phenix builds her nest with hot spices neither is it our disadvantage that we should grieve though they be our rods for that were too childish to grieve to see willowes birch trees grow because rods are made of them when as it is not in them they hurt us but in our selves for if it were not our own sins they should not be our scourges as rods should never hurt children nor they find the smart of them that rebell not against their father and governours lesse should we so be offended that we should turne into them for that were as if a travailer should joine himselfe with a rout of theeves upon hope to keepe that he hath and incurre by that means the common justice of the land to lose all and life with it Vide August in Psal 91. Nullum mare tam profundum quam est Dei cogitatio ut mali floreant c. Consider that they must be scourges remember these are to trie forget not that they shall make his justice more eminent That as the state carries some to execution by posternes and by-gates and others through the market place So God some to hel and destruction by poverty others by plenty some by basenesse others by honour in the meane time they know they stand but upon slippery places And they that tempt God yea they are delivered Such as live wickedly and contemptuously against him escape his judgements and often are delivered when others fall in them Doctrine It oftentimes fals out with wicked men such as live in the contempt of God and provoke him every day not to be of a long punished and to escape when others are smitten so with these and Job 21.9 Hos 4.14 Psal 81.12 Jer. 10.25 He praieth as thinking it too too long that they escaped So Ioab and Shimei escaped in the plague Reason 1 Because the Lord is very slow to wrath both to execute and to exercise his displeasure the reason that Ionah gave why he went not to Nineveh fearing God would spare when he had spoken and so call his word into question Jonah 4.2 Reason 2 Because their iniquities are not yet full nor they grown ripe for the harvest that God might thrust in the sickle of his wrath Gen. 15.16 Vse 1 Not to thinke it strange if we see wicked men prophane men contemners of God his word and worship go on and enjoy prosperity and peace and no evill happen to them like as to other men but they escape when they fall but thinke then
it encreaseth sin b 147 Liberality of Idolaters b 213 214 Long life a blessing b 29 30 Love the causes of it b 77 Love of God to his Church a 19 M Magistrates when they neglect to punish God will do it b 94. How they are to give judgement b 185 186 how to be obeyed a 63 82 Maintenance of Ministers b 215 216 221 224 225 226 227 232 233. What it is b 216 218. How necessary b 227 228. A blessing to such as maintaine them b 231 232 Marriage how children to submit to their parents in it a 69 God is the witnesse of marriage b 115. The description of marriage b 121 122. The author of it b 132. The end of it b 133 Marriage with contrary religion b 90 91 92. Vnfaithfullnesse in marriage is sinne against God b 112 Married persons their duty b 120 Masse whether one may be present at it a 157 Meditation of the word b 7 Mercy of God only keeps off judgements b 203 204 Mighty men cannot withstand God b 273 Mincha what it signifies a 199 Ministers must put difference between godly and wicked a 129 130. They sinne if censure not the wicked a 132. Contempt of Gods Ministers and his worship goe together a 214. Best Ministers most contemned a 216 They must apply doctrine b 2 3 what their care must be concerning Gods worship b 8 9. A speciall Covenant is made with them b 24 25. They deliver whole truth b 39 they must not corrupt the word b 41 they must be holy b 42. They must preach so as to convert men b 45 they ought to be learned in the Scriptures b 48 It is a great corruption when they occasion men to sinne b 67 when they are contemned and hated justly b 70 71 what they are then to doe b 74 they are Gods Messengers b 166 to defraud them of their maintenance is sacriledge b 215 216 219 220 221 225. Ministery of man ordinarily used by God a 12 13. How to be esteemed a 13 14. None may take it upon him without a calling b 26. The efficacy of the Ministry b 291. N Nature teaches not to wrong any b 79. O Obedience due to God in all things b 4 5. How far due to parents a 62 63 64 66. How far due to Masters a 80 81 82. How far due to Magistrates a 63 82. Old men their duty b 30. Omission of duties b 208. 209. Oppression God not pleased with sacrifices of it a 222 224 225. Oppressors not heard of God b 110 Originall sin b 126 280. P Papists plea of bounty b 214 Parents to take care of childrens soules b 127 128. Passion a 25. Patience under affliction a 4 5. Patience in injuries b 108 109. Peace only to the upright b 45. People of God may be punished a 8 9 10. Their priviledges a 27. Person must be accepted before his praiers are a 189. Perfection whether in this life b 14. Perfididiousnesse a great sin b 82 83 Piety brings prosperity b 250. Plenty promised to the obedient b 31. promist to paiers of tithes b 231 232 233 Polygamie b 122 129 130. Popes may and have erred b 61 62 their Church robbing b 228. Portion how children to submit in that a 67. Poverty of Ministers b 226 227. Power of God a 37. Praise God to be praised for deliverances a 55. Praier not heard how great a judgement a 169 170. When the season of praier a 170. How we must pray a 172. What to pray for a 173. Praier to Saints departed a 175. Praiers of wicked not profitable a 178. Where to pray a 197 198. All need the praiers of others a 174. Praiers of Gods people accepted b 181 182. Preferring man before God how hainous a 160 163. Preist how the word used a 203. Professors their sin most hainous a 210. Prophanesse of heart how knowne a 145. Prophets 3. sorts a 12. Christ our prophet b 172 173 Prosperity b 158 159. Prosperity promist to piety b 250. No note of true Church b 241 242. Providence of God not to be questioned b 160. To deny it is pride against God b 244 245. Whence it is that men doubt of it b 247 248. Gods providence and protection a bond of service a 105. Publicke worship to be attended b 52 53. Punishment Gods owne people punisht a 8 wicked oft doe escape unpunished long b 256. Purgagatory b 178 179 235 R. Redemption of the elect b 277 Regenerate their workes holy a 205 Reigning sinne what b 278 Religion teaches to do no wrong b 80 81 Remembrance God remembers our waies b 262 Repentance onely removes judgements b 6 210 211 Reproofe a 133 134 Revenge the desire of it a 49 Reward to obedience b 33 Riches the way to attaine them b 32 234 whether fit for Ministers b 226 227 Wicked oft encrease in riches b 254 255 Righteousnesse cannot be without religion b 268 269 Righteousnesse inherent b 276 S. Sacraments their efficacy a 142 the Ministers of them b 28 Sacrifices of N. Test a 144 what Sacrifices required of Christians a 202 Sacriledge b 212 215 219 220 221 239 240 Sanctification of Gods elect b 275 276 Scoffing speeches whether lawfull a 167 Sencelessenesse under judgements a 3 4 Separation may not be from a Church for the abuses of it a 177 180 Servants their duty a 76 78 83 86 89 Service of God must be with best a 150 183 Sicke service a 159 T. Temple people not bound to it in prayer a 197 Tempting of God what b. 230 231 Tithes whether still in force b 216. 217. 218. Thoughts are known to God a 138 Toleration of Papists a 179 Truth all of it to be delivered b 39 V. Virginity how to be esteemed of b 136 Vowes to be observed a 234 235 Vsury b 85 W. Wages of hirelings not to be detained b 195 Wards the abuse b 198 199 Watchfulnesse required of us b 260 Widowes not to be opprest b 196 197 Wicked though flourish shall be destroyed b 272 273 Wife is husbands companion b 117 choice a of wife b 144 145 Witches not to be sought unto b 189 190 Word of God how to be preacht a 6 7. How to be heard a 7 must be applyed b 2 3. must be all delivered b 39. it must be heard publikely b 51 52. It must be sought after b 54 55 All things are good or evill as they are with or against the word b 84. Wicked not able to abide the preaching of it b 174 Workes no cause of justification a 189 Worship of God must be holy a 127 Where that is abused God is abused a 138 Worship of God removed for contempt a 229 Worship of God furthered by maintainance of Ministry b 227 228 Wrath of God a 44 45 Z. Zeale a 159 FINIS AN EXERCITATION VPON THE PROPHECIE OF MALACHY Wherein The Context is illustrate by a cleare Analyse The originall Text is examined Most translations extant are conferred The