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A55917 A commentary upon the divine Revelation of the apostle and evangelist, Iohn by David Pareus ... ; and specially some things upon the 20th chapter are observed by the same authour against the Millenaries ; translated out of the Latine into English, by Elias Arnold. Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Arnold, Elias. 1644 (1644) Wing P353; ESTC R14470 926,291 661

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into the sea of this world causeth the same tumultuously to rage against Christ Or into the sea that is among peoples nations princes kings inforcing them to shed much innocent blood and dissipate many Churches This interpretation I confesse in it self is pious and true but doth not as I judge agree with the purpose of this vision my reason is because the devil from the beginning hath been a murderer seeking to devour the Church in which respect there was no use that this thing should be represented unto Iohn in obscure types I therefore doe again with the Catholick glosse compare the sounding of the second trumpet with the opening of the second seal The interpretation of the Catholick Glosse and understand it of the cruel persecutions of Romane tyrants and the remnant of the Church which was preserved from utter destruction For as at the opening of the second seal went forth a red horse that is the Apostolical and following Church appeared red with the blood of the martyrs so there by the founding of the second trumpet is shewed unto Iohn 1. Whence this bloody condition of the Church arose 11. How great evils she should suffer thereby 111. Wherein she ought to be comforted For the first a great mountain burning with fire should be cast into the sea The Scripture familiarly by mountaines notes kingdomes kings and tyrants because of their highnes that is their power and pride as Zach. 4.7 the Prophet thus speaketh concerning the Persian kingdom Who art thou O great mountain before Zerubabel Let us therfore understand this great mountain to be some powerfull kingdom having other kingdoms in subjection as at that time the Romanes had He saw this mountain burning with fire that is their Emperours in wrath cruelly raging against Christian religion This mountain was cast into the sea Now what is the meaning hereof The sea is a gathering of many waters The waters are peoples Chap. 17. by the sea therefore I understand all nations in subjection to the Romane Empire and among which the Christian Churches were here and there dispersed This mountain was cast into the sea that is violently nished upon the world not indeed of unbeleevers but of true belevers that is the Christian Church when as the Romane Emperours as Domitian Trajan Severus Diocletian Maximianus and others imitaring the tyranny of Nero persecuted the saintes even untill Constantines time What followed hereupon The third part of the sea became blood that is as we heard before at the opening of the second seale the Church was made red with the blood of martyrs so here this mountaine with a fierie rage oppresseth many thousands of saintes 9 The third part of the creatures died These are the slaughters Martyrdoms of infinite Christians put to death by the Romane tyrants for the confession of the name of Christ And there is an allegorical analogie betweene the sea and creatures in it the Church and faithfull living in the same And the third part of the ships were destroyed by ships we understand the Churches with their pilots or teachers for by ships Churches are signified many wherof were then lost and destroyed with the Apostles Bishops their worthy teachers these I say were crushed through the weight of this great mountaine not indeed eternally but corporallie onely Now touching this we are to consult with the Ecclesiastical histories of the Churches persecutions of which we have spoken somewhat on Chap. 6. which wil serve for an excellent commentarie on this place Certainely the ship or Church at Rome was in a special manner made red with blood for all her bishops or teachers as it is recorded unto Melchiades suffered Martyrdome under those tyrants Thus therefore this trumpet allegorically explaineth the efficient cause of the second horses rednesse and further amplifies the grievous outragiousnesse thereof But what reason is there Why onely one third of the sea was made blood that the whole sea was not turned into blood and that all creatures ships died perished not but onely a third part I have shewed that this manner of speech is taken out of Ezech. 5.2 Now there the Prophet is commanded not onely to destroy one third part of his hair but the three thirds thereof thereby signifying a totall destruction But here the mountaine shall only make red one third part of the sea and kill the third part of creatures cause the third part of ships to perish which undoubtedly was for the comfort of Iohn and the faithful for however this mountaine were great and rushing with a mighty violence labours to fill all places with fire and blood yet should he be able to hurt but one third part of the Christian Church For two thirds shal bee preserved in safety And the truth hereof is confirmed by histories The fulfilling of this type for both in Rome and all other kingdomes the greater part of Christians were safely kept in the midst of the most dangerous cruel persecutions yea the blood of the martyrs was as it were the seed of the Church for the more Christians were put to death by tyrants the more their number increased in so much that many times even the executioners themselves beholding the confession courage constancie of martyrs became Christians and obtained the same crown of martyrdom with them Moreover it is for the Churches comfort that this burning mountain is cast into the sea for by water the fire is extinguished However therefore tyrants doe much rage for a time yet at length they shall perish the victory shall remain on the Churches side for by faith we overcome the world 1 Ioh. 5.5 The Catholick Glosse interprets this mountain not unfitly of the Romane Empire great indeed yet thrown into the sea which is much greater The sea swallowed up this great mountain and so consumeth and deitroyes the same By the sea he understandeth Christs kingdom of far greater power then the Romane signifying that the Romane tyranny should be swallowed up by Christs kingdome for however Christ seems to bee overcome in his afflicted members yet in truth he conquereth all his tyrannical adverlaries for the gates of hell shall not prevaile against the Church Matt. 16.18 Thus sad and joyfull things are here mixed together by which we see that the iteration of this vision touching the bloody condition of the Church is not in vain Moreover I understand the sounding of this trumpet to be from Domitians time under whom Iohn was banished untill Constantine who repressed the tyranny of his Copartners in the Empire and restored peace unto the Church about the yeere of our Lord 312. The sounding of the third trumpet 10 And the third Angel sounded there fell a great Star from heaven burning as it were a lampe and it fell upon the third part of the rivers and upon the fountaine of waters 11 And the name of the Starre is called Wormewood and the third part of the
of all such as desire to be saved nor unto the offence but admonition and amendment of such as wil not perish Neither am I the first who have thus expounded the Beast What speake I of my selfe Neither was the Apostle John the first who shewed Antichrist at Rome for before him Paul testified that the Son of perdition should sit in the Temple of God as God that is claim the principallity in the Church for even then the mysterie of iniquitie was a working except it had bin for that which did with-hold that is as Chrysostom Ambrose and Ierom interpret it the Romane Empire which first being translated from the mountains of Rome to some other place and weakned should as it were be abolished After both Irenaeus a most ancient Writer said that the numerall name of the Beast in all likelyhood should bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lateinos Lib. 5. c. 25 and as if he had bin a divine Prophet foretelling the apostacy of the Latin Church he expresly addeth these words But in this we wil not boast Gregory himselfe I. Romish Pope confidently affirmed that that Priest should be Antichrist Lib. 4. Epist 38. or Antichrists fore-runner who stiled himselfe UNIVERSAL pointing as with the finger at Boniface III. his Successour for saith he the king of pride is at hand and that which is not lawfull to be spoken an Army of Preists is prepared Neither will I now alledge any more reserving it till afterward in Chap. 13. Bellar. lib. 3. de P. R. cap. 21. who after the time of Gregory I. have demonstrated Rome to be the seat of Antichrist and the Pope with his double-sword Antichrist Wherfore it is said not of ignorance but malice that by us Protestants the Pope first began to be Antichrist De velandis virgin Good things scandalize no man unlesse an evil mind saith Tertulian But trueth is the best thing Therfore this truth that Antichrist doth now reigne at Rome can scandalize none but evil-minded men Wherefore thou O Pope hear this truth and repent Rev. 19.10 before the hand of the Heavenly Conquerour lay hold on thee and cast thee into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone Neither let Parasites deceive thee who from the Revelation promise unto thee the whole Empire of the World one while denying thou art a man another while they feine thee an halfe-god one while Gods Vice-gerent yea a God who paint out thy Church gloriously sitting on a throne I sit a Queene and am no Widow and shall see no sorrow treading under her feet the Protestant Hereticks with their Bibles Rev. 18.7 These cosen thee with vain words Hearken to Clemanges a man of ancient credit De corrupt Eccles Statu cap. 26. he sheweth what the Revelation promiseth thee What thinkest thou saith he of thy Prophesie to wit of Iohns Revelation dost not thou at least thinke that in some part it belongs unto thee Thou hast not so lost shame and sense to deny these things Therefore looke into it and read the condemnation of the great whore sitting upon many waters and there contemplate thy worthy acts and what shall befall thee Hath not the Apostle Paul sufficiently noted that thou art he that sittest in the temple of God as God why then shouldest thou not suspect all that thou dost and hast Thy two horns like the Lambs thy two keyes and the two swords in thy hand the Triple Crown on thy head the mysterie in thy forehead the Image which thou causest the inhabitants of the earth to worship killing them that refuse to do it the name and the number of thy name the Masse and Latine Leturgie the whorish woman sitting upon Seven Mountaines now oughtest thou not to suspect all these And ye O unwise Kings when will ye understand whom to serve and what ye should do when will God put it into your hearts to doe his will that is to make Rome the whorish woman desolate Oh serve the Lord with feare and trembling kisse the Son least he be angry and yee perish in the way let the Lambe conquer you not unto destruction like as the Beast overcommeth but unto conversion do it o kings speedily least it be too late For God will not be mocked He hath begun to put into the hearts of diverse good Kings to do this willingly He will also put into the hearts of others when it shall please him according to the oracle of the Angell Rev. 17.17 And already hath he perswaded the hearts of some Emperours deceased even in their agonie to approach before the Tribunall of God not by invocating of Mary but by imploring the divine mercy and so rendred their soules to God their Saviour not in confidence of the Churches treasure but the alone merits of Jesus Christ He put also into the heart of another great Zelot in his sicke bed to turne his face from the Priest chanting prayers to the Virgin Mary and promising him Salvation by his owne and the Saints merits thereby testifying that he desired to be raysed up by the intercession and merits of Christ They that cease to do thus shall not be partakers of Salvation They which do it seriously verily they are overcome by the Lambe unto their Salvation and they make the whore desolate late indeed yet not too late But let no man tempt God for ye know not how soone yee may be taken away While therfore it is time walke in the light least the darknesse come upon you Neither let flatterers deceive you who say that it seems harsh dishonourable and unbeseeming that so many Princes warre against the Lambe follow the Beast are Antichrists Vassals that the greatest part of the Empire consists of Antichrist who is to be cast into the Lake of Fire This is the deceitfull song of Sirenes To begin with the last particular How I pray shall the greatest part of the Empire consist of Antichrist if our trueth doth stand that the Pope is Antichrist unlesse either the Pope be said to be the greatest part of the Empire then which nothing is more false and opprobrious to the Empire or that these men do meerly triflle But will they deny them to be Kings touching whom the Revelation hath foretold such things Or wil they accuse the Revelation to cast dishonourable aspersions upon Kings They say that Pagan not Christian Kings are spoken of But this is neither agreeable to the Revelation nor to their owne fiction For the Kings who shall give their power to the Beast and fight against the Lambe shall be the same into whose hearts God will put it to hate the whore and make her desolate Now this argues that they shall not be Pagan but Christian Kings who before being deceived through ignorance shall sin in fact but at length being overcome by the Lamb that is brought to repentance they shall forsaking their error turne their hearts and power against the whore Neither can any man except
of Gods providence namely his vertue charity justice wisdom patience threatnings and wrath Which is a mysterie bringing along with it an inconvenience which he desireth to avoid for he makes question whither sound divinitie wil admit that grace and peace be asked from the seven vertues rather then from the seven created angels yea how grace and peace can be prayed for from menacings and wrath so he And from Jesus Christ In that he wisheth grace and peace from Christ in the the third and last place is neither against the former exposition nor any way derogateth from the dignity of Christ for as the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 doth not derogate from the order of the persons in the trinitie though he put Christ in the first place so here our Apostle for waighty causes sets downe the holy Ghost before Christ because he treateth of him not simply as being the son of God but also as he is the mediatour redeemer and revealer of this prophesie Notwithstanding great reason it is that he should pray for grace and peace from Christ Ephes 2.14 because it cometh by him Iohn 1.17 and he is our peace Who is the faithfull witnesse The following titles are so many reasons wherefore grace and peace is prayed for from Christ and they set forth as hath been shewed in the analysis both his threefold office with the benefit thereof as also declare his eternall Godhead The first title respects his propheticall office that faithfull witnesse which seemeth to be taken from Psal 89.38 witnesse because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of his father the testimonie that is the glad tydings of the redemption of man through his death and from heaven hath opened to us the true knowledge of God and way of salvation faithfull Because he not onely confirmed the heavenly truth by preaching by miracles meekly calling of sinners to repentance to the faith of the Gospel but also sealed the same by suffering on the crosse and by instituting the ministry he gave to the churches Apostles prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers who perpetually should be his witnesses Eph. 4.12 preach the Gospell to after ages for the perfecting of the saincts for the edifying of the body of Christ according to these scriptures Ioh. 17 6. I have manifested thy name to the men thou gavest me out of the world and 18 37. For this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnes unto the truth Io. 1.18 the son which is in the bosome of the father he hath revealed God unto us Who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession The father and holy Ghost are also said to be witnesses 1. Io. 5.7 Ioh. 5.37 there are three that bear record in heaven the father the word and the holy Ghost The father saith Christ himself hath borne witnes of me And of the holy Ghost he saith when the comforter is come c. He shall testifie of mee the Apostles are called witnesses Act. 1.18 And Antipas Rev 2.12 and two witnesses are mentioned called Martyrs for sheadding of their blood for the testimonie of Christ Revel 11.3 But Christ onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of prerogative is called that faithfull witnesse because he first brought with him the witnesse of the truth downe from heaven he first and he onely hath shead his blood for his owne testimonie whereas all other martyrs suffered not for their owne but for the testimonie of Jesus Christ Yea also the witnesse which the father and the holy Ghost gave of him was declared by himself and therefore Christ as by a speciall and proper right is called the faithfull witnes that is the true and constant revealer of the doctrine of our salvation whoever therefore hearkens not to him Deuteron 18.19 can not be saved but who so heareth him shall have life eternall This also confirmeth the authoritie of the revelation because it was revealed to John by Jesus Christ that faithfull witnesse who can notly nor deceive therefore this booke is trulie divine and we may safely trust and beleeve all things contained in it It serveth also to instruct us that if Christ onely be the true witnesse then those are not to be heard but avoyded as Liars which teach the Church such things as dissent from the testimonie of Christ It may also comfort us because Christ the faithfull witnesse will not forsake them who suffer for the cause of his truth but will at length reward them faithfully according to his promise The first begotten of the dead This title concernes Christ his priestly office who died for our sins and was raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 For the word dead shewes that he died and being the first begotten of the dead it teacheth us that he was raysed from the dead And the whole scripture testifies that the end and use of his death and resurrection was not a bare witnesse as Socinus blasphemeth but chiefly a propitiation to purge us from our sins and to justifie us before God Paul calleth him likewise the first begotten of the dead 1 Collo 1.18 1 Corinth 15.20 and sheweth that Christ is become the first fruits of them that sleep But how can Christ be the first fruits of the dead seeing the scriptures testifie that Elias and Elisha raysed up two persons from the dead before the time of Christs manifestation in the flesh Lazarus also with the widows son and Centurions servant were restored from death to life Answer First Christ is the first begotten or first fruites of the dead because he was the first that raysed up himself from the dead by his owne power whereas all before Christ were raysed not by their owne power but Christs alone Secondly Christ was raysed up to an immortall life not to dy any more but the other to an earthly life and became subject to death again He is said to be the first begotten or the first that did rise again Matt. 19.28 Act. 13.13 Rom. 1 4. because the resurrection is a kinde of new birth and so Christ calleth the last resurrection a regeneration And Paul applieth that in Psal 2. of the father eternally begetting the son to his resurrection from the dead and hence he is declared to be the eternall and omnipotent son of God This should greatly comfort us that though we are borne and brought forth in a corruptible condition yet when we rise again we shall be regenerated unto a state incorruptible even while we are in this life we are regenerated but it is spiritually onely and in part but when we shall by the spirit of God be restored to eternall life then we shall be regenerated both corporally and fully to wit when our mortall bodies shall be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ let us not fear therefore though we should suffer death for the testimony of Christ because he who is the first begotten of the dead
is alive for evermore hath the keyes of death hell the which cannot be applied neither to men nor Angels but onely to Christ The most of the description is taken out of Daniel chap. 7 10. Now whereas Christ standeth in the midst of the candlesticks is signified that he is alwaies present with his Church by his word spirit to govern direct keepe preserve the same according to the promise where two or three are gathered in my name Matth. 18.20 Matth. 28 20. Ioh. 14 18. I am in the midst of them And lo I am with you to the end of the world This is for our comfort wee may not thinke that wee are left of Christ while wee are here in this troublesome world for he hath promised that he will not leave us comfortlesse albeit wee see him not with our bodily eyes Therefore beeing assured of his goodnesse and power let us not regard the threatnings and cruelty of the adversaries It is also for our admonition if Christ bee with us let us then live holily justly and soberly in his sight least he being offended at our ungodly walking we provoke him thereby to wrath against us For as hee is present for the safety of the godly so also he will take vengeance on the wicked and on such as neglect their duty towards him hence it is that he comforteth some of those Churches in the midst of whom hee walketh others he reprooveth and threatneth to punish if that they repent not Their argument is foolish who hence maintain the Vbiquity of the humanity of Christ. Christ say they standeth in the midst of the seven candlesticks The humanity of Christ is the son of man therefore as man he is present in seven that is in all places I answer the assumption is false For the words son of man signify not the nature but person of Christ wee confesse and beleeve that the person of the son of man which is God is every where And in the midst of two or three yea seven and in all places to wit according to his divinity grace and power as Augustine speaketh though according to the flesh and the nature of a true body he be in heaven and there remaine untill from thence hee come to judgement as the scriptures testifie otherwise it would hence follow also that the humanity of Christ is Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending that is eternal because the son of man speaketh this of himself also Secondly though the assumption were granted yet it will not follow that the flesh of Christ is every where but onely in seven places and onely within and not without the Church which is contrarie to the opinion of the Vbiquitists themselves The contrarie followeth for hee was seene of John But what is infinite Theod. dial 2. and every where is not to be seene with corporall eyes as Theodore us witnesseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the incomprehensible nature is not to be seene In the last place no consequences contrary to the analogie of faith may be drawn from visions for so there would follow many absurd things as that the humanity of Christ should have in his bodily hand the seven angels and Churches and that a real sword should proceed out of his mouth and the whole description necessarily to be taken according to the letter The which if it were so then Christ should be no longer true man who tooke our flesh really of the virgin 1 Ioh. 5 2. Philip. 3 21. neither should he be our brother For wee know when he shall be revealed we shall bee like unto him but Christ at the day of judgement shall not appeare in such a manner neither shall we be thus like unto him so that no conclusions contrary to the doctrin of faith may be taken from allegories They are yet more foolish which under the pretence of this vision labour to maintain the images of Christ the saincts in temples against the expresse commandement of God as if the son of man appeared to the end to be painted and set up in such a forme in temples or thus painted to be sent unto the Churches and not rather to this end that by these his admirable attributes the divine authority of the following epistles might be confirmed as by and by will appeare Now let us consider the description First Iohn sheweth the garments and habit wherein Christ appeareth Secondly the admirable form of his body and members which plainly sheweth that the man Christ did not appeare really but typically and the whole serveth to make knowne to the Churches his dreadfull majestie and power Like to the son of man This is taken out of Dan. 7 13 where Daniel saw one like the son of man come with the clouds of heaven So saith Paul in his epistles that Christ was found in likenesse at a man Philip. 2 7 8. Rom 8 3. Made like 〈◊〉 men that hee wa● in the likenesse of sinfull flesh not that hee had onely the form of a true man as the Marcionites doe gather from this place But because nothing is more like to man then he that is a true man and the Apostle seemeth to give a reason of this maner of speech Heb. 2 14. where he saith that Christ himself likewise took part of the flesh and blood of the children And again vers 17. That in all things it behooved him to bee made like unto his brethren So then he was like to us in the truth of our nature Clothed with a garment downe to the foot as the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth compounded of m●● a foot and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to take or lift up by this kingly garment is shadowed out the royall majesty of Christ And girt about the paps with a golden girdle Though there is a mystery in all these things yet wee must not bee too carious in searching after the meaning of every thing therein interpreters are diversly minded about it For our part it is sufficient we know by what followeth that it is to set forth the majesty of Christ It was the maner of men in the casterne countries to gird up their garments being long that they might not bee hindred in their travaile or any other businesse so that Christs binding up of his garment with a girdle noteth his care and diligence to accomplish the work which his father gave him to doe In that it was a golden girdle is shewed his majesty Isay 11 4 of which the prophet Isay speaketh righteousnesse shall bee the girdle of his loynes and faithfulnesse the girdle of his reines Now in that Christ is girded about the paps not according to the ordinary Custom is manifested the love of Christ towards the Church because the heart which is the feat of love is between the brests Vers 14 His head and his haires were white like wool as white as snow So the haire of the
not when men are degenerated and forsake the truth The same may be said of the title of the Church which the Papists so much boast of we say they are the Church the Church we grant indeed they are so but not a Church of Christ but of Satan who worship not God but the divel in their Idols Now wheras Christ is said to know these things as it serves againe to confirme the tenth argument of his deity So to comfort those of Smyrna and all the godly in their affliction for it is as much as if he thus said Although I may seem to be afar of ignorant of your condition in that I take not away your poverty and punish the blasphemers yet nothing is hid from me but all things are naked and bare before mee he patient therefore until the time of your deliverance come And this may be added to Argum. 11. proving the Godhead of Christ namely his immensitie and providence 10 Feare none of those things which thou shalt suffer The other part of the narration is a praemonition of their troubles at hand for howsover they had already suffered much yet he foretelleth that they must indure greater things not in the least to disharten them but that they might prepare themselves before hand for the same For darts foreseen are the lesse hurtful as also least they should be secure and imagine that after their former sufferings they were to looke for no farther combats but on the contrarie to fore arm themselves for them None of those things Signifying that they were to expect not one but many forts of trialls for through many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdome of God one soit of affliction be nameth viz. that the divel should cast some of them into prison In this persecution he maketh Satan the Author who in hatred of Christ and mans salvation doth stir up the wicked to persecute the godly with reproches im●risonment yea and with fire and sword Shall cast some of you He shall not be able to bring all into his snare For I will cast a bridle upon him Which is for the great comfort of Gods people The Prison notes by a Synecdoche the adjuncts and consequences as namely torments banishments and martyrdoms With which not long after under the Emperors M. Aurelius Verus Antoninus and Commodus Satan most cruelly persecuted the Churches at which time also Polycarpus the Bishop laid downe his life for the testimonie of Christ Hence briefly we gather three things 1. In this we may behold the afflicted condition of the godly in this world all that wil live godly must prepare themselves for it but if it so be that we have a more peaceable portion let us account it as a great mercie of God enioy it with thanckfulnesse XIII Argum of Chr. denie for owne edification and the setting forth of the glorie of Christ 2. Again Christs Godhead is here confirmed in that he fore shewes the future sufferings of the saintes now certainly this knoweth no one but God onely So that this is the XIII argument of Christs deity 3. The divel is the author of all persecution as for tyrants and their executioners they are but his instruments Whose furie though God permit for a season yet will he not suffer his to be tempted above what they are able to bear but at last will cast the Divel with his instruments into the lake of fire and brimstone Revela 19.20 That ye may be tryed He ads a twofold consolation the one from the ende use of afflictions as being tryalls that our faith and constancie may be the more approved and we the patienter in our sufferings this end is generally propounded that so we knowing our selves to be tryed of God may approve our selves sincere and unblameable in his sight Be tryed viz. of God who both knoweth us and also his owne gifts and graces bestowed upon us Yet he tryeth us that thereby the faith of his saintes should be manifested both to them that are within and without the Church For to confesse Christ in times of prosperitie is not difficult but when troubles doe arise then is our sinceritie made manifest according to that in the philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is true vertue doth shine forth in adversity And howbeit the Divel is said to cast us into prison Yet it is God that tryeth us for Satan is Gods bayleffe or Serieant so that the action of God concurres with the work of Satan yea God and the Divel are said to doe one and the same thing but in a different maner and end For God doth it as using his right and power over us But Satan usurpinglie God doth it to try us and make us ap●●●ved the Divel to afflict and destroy us Howsoever therfore they doe the same thing yet is not their action all one for the worke of God is good but that of the Divel is most vile And ye shall have tribulation The other consolation is taken from the brevitie of the affliction being to continue but a few days In Cael. sub fine Now all things of short continuance though they be heavie yet ought to be tollerable faith Cicero Ten days Some take this properly for so many dayes Others prophetically for ten years in which the persecutions dured under the afore said Emperors Others referre it to the ten yeares persecution under Trajane which was the twelf persecution of the Christians To be short some take it indefinitely for many years affirming with Augustine Lib. 8. de doctrin Christ cap. 35. that sometime in scripture a certaine number is used for an uncertaine As we may se not onely in this place but also in Chapt. 11.12.13 but again others with Ribera suppose that a long time of persecution is hereby fignifyed because the number ten containes all other numbers as in Gene. 31.7 Laban changed Jacobs wages ten times for many times so 2. Sam. 19.43 Job 19.3 so Ribera But this were rather to terrifie then to comfort them by fore shewing so long during persecution Wherfore with Andreas I understand that by ten days in this place is meant the shortnes of their trouble which should soon passe away as a cloud for thus the scriptures encouraging us to constancie are wont to expresse our light afflictions which are for a moment 2. Cor. 4.17 Be faithfull unto the death The third part of the narration is an exhortation to constancy in the faith unto the death which is to be understood inclusively and not exclusively according to that in Heb. 12.4 Ye have not as yet resisted unto blood Wherfore we must not be afraid to lay downe our lives for Christs sake and to cleave unto the truth notwithstanding all the cruelty of Satan and his instruments but stand fast unto the shedding of the last drop of blood that so we may obtain the crown of eternal life For he that shall endure into the End
to them of the houshould of faith 3. his faith that is his sincere preaching of the truth received from the Apostles And lastly his patience in suffering of afflictions for the cause of Christ for this Church also if it be true which Epiphanius writes was persecuted by the Pagans Jewes and Cataphrygians notwithstanding this Bishop remained still constant in the truth And thy workes and the last The first and is declarative for chiefly thy workes the latter and seemeth not necessarie and the text may thus be read thy last workes are more then thy first as the vulgar Complutensis and Andreas read it It seemeth that the Pastor of this Church had with much courage lately undergone some great persecution for the which Christ here much commends him as adding this exellent work to his former or otherwise because in the general course of his life he daylie became more excellent for his latter workes were more that is more manifest proofes of his constancie and more worthie of praise then the first So that he is commended for his holie progresse in the duties of piety which is an example unto us that we also should labour to increase in the like workes of faith and love 20. But I have a few things against thee The second part is a reproofe of few things so the like in v. 14. not as if his evils were of no great corcernment but Christ like a good physitian lessens the disease that the patient may the sooner admit of the cure and not despaire of amendment His evil was in permitting the false prophetesse Jezabel to teach and seduce many to commit fornication and be present with idolaters at their worship and Idol feastings for it seemeth this woman was one of the Sect of Nicolaitans whose doctrine she maintained For these deceivers under pretext of libertie and Christian charitie taught that women were to be accounted common that it was lawful for them to communicate with the heathen in their services and feastings now howsoever these things were scandalous and dangerous yet of them thought indifferent and in the liberty of Christians and this verie practice some libertines at this day doe imitate This was a great neglect of zeale and courage in the Pastor in not seeking to redresse and free the Church of so pestilent an instrument but to suffer her amongst them to the destruction of many Shee is called Jezabel by a similitude as being equal in craft and malice to Jezabel the wife of Ahab for as this vilde woman by false witnesses caused Naboth uniustly to be put to death and cruelly oppressed many of Gods prophets so this lying Prophetesse boasting of divine revelations led aside many from the waye of God to her filthinesse and devilish worship of Idols Interpreters doe differ whither this was one woman or many and whither there were a whole Sect and nation of them Epiphanius as we have already shewed supposeth this to be spoken of Priscilla Maximilla and Quintilla false Prophetesses of Montunus who blasphomously boasting himself to be the comforter seduced these women to commit fornication with him and to Prophesie in his name But on the contrarie the text sheweth that it is spoken of Jezabel who at that time bore sway in the Church of Thyatira and not of any to come afterward neither is it likely that onely this Epistle should reprove vices to come when as all the other speak of things present Andreas understandeth it by a figurative speech as meant of the heresie of the Nicolaitans But wherfore should that sect be here darkned with such a kind of speech which twife before was manifestly named and treated of Alcasar coniectureth that by her the Iewish Synagogue is to be understood But there is no reason to transform the Iewes into the woman Iezabel who were before v. 9. comdemned by name and again in cha 3. v. 9. Besides the whole description tends to set forth in special some one particular wicked woman seing therfore there is no necessarie reason leading us to depart from the literal sence it is probable that this woman was verie famous in the city of Thyatira for her wealth authoritie and shew of pietie but in truth for her uncleannesse deceit and ungodlines was equal with Iezabel of old seducing many to forsake the truth and participate with her in horrible wickednes But touching this woman and her mentioned chap. 17. who is called a great citie there is no agreement betwixt them For there it is expressly said that by her is signified a great multitude yea Rome it self whereas here no such thing is intimated 21. And I gave her time This sheweth Christs patience and the obstinacie of this woman who made no use of his long sufferance in giving her time to repent Thus the wicked grow secure because of Gods forbearance and seeing Iudgment is not speedilie executed they rejoyce and thinke to go unpunished But what their reward shall bee is plain both from this place and Rom. 2.4.5 22. I will cast her The third part of the narration is a threatning of judgment which men by their inpenitencie bring upon themselves The punishment denounced is threefold 1. Against the woman herself 2. Against her lovers And 3. against her children Jezabel is threatned with a foule disease for so God commonly punisheth impure harlots to make them lothsome to others and publick exampels of dishonest courses Into a bed The antecedent is explained by the consequence Sick persons keep their bed the sence is the bed which she hitherto had abused to lasciviousnes luxurie and pleasure should be changed into languishing and sorrow But the Godly man the Lord wil strongthen him upon the bed of languishing Psal 41.3 make all his bed in his sicknesse And them that commit adulterie with her Her lovers shall also be punished eyther externally by the sword of the magistrate or some others or internally by torments of conscience But I rather take it to be meant of outward shame and punishment Vnlesse they repent Behold the mercie and patience of God he wil not destroy a most wretched harlot with her adulterers before he cal them to repentance being ready to forgive such as amend their wayes thus we see how repentance is the onely means to escape punishment Some times indeed the Lord inflicts temporall chastisement upon the repentant but the same is both mitigated and turned to their good besides none of them are eternallie punished 23. And kil her children with death He threatneth death to the children of this harlot which some take properly for such as were borne in fornication whom the Lord would suddenlie destroy by a heavie judgment that such an adulterous generation might not be spread among men Others take it metaphorically for her companions and lovers who defyled themselves with her I rather approve the former sence for otherwise the difference between the adulterers and their children would be taken away Hence we may learn 1.
Senens lib. 2. p. 87. and againe theirs by the Collossians The which place being doubtfully rendred in the Latine version hath occasioned some to thinke that Paul writ the Epistle which is now extant unto them of Laodicea but it is an Apocrypha writing compiled by som deceiver and taken from the Epistles to the Galatians Philippians and Colossians Theophilactus and some others understand it of the first Epistle to Timothie which was sent as they say to Laodicea a chiefe citie of Phrygia Pacatiana as the subscription also hath it But that cannot be for as it may be gathered from Coll. 2.2 Paul had never seen those of Laodicea Chrysostom therefore and others with more likelihood understand it of an Epistle which they of Laodicea wrot unto Paul in which without doubt they testified their faith and piety unto the Apostle Lib 5. cont Marc. Tertullian saith it was the opinion of Marcion that the Epistle to the Ephesians now extant was writen by Paul to them of Laodicea Now howsoever this Church in Iohns time was grievously corrupted yet questionlesse after this vehement reproofe which Iohn from Christ delivered unto them they repented of their evils For Eusibius commendeth this Church as flourishing in his time and mentioneth some of their Bishops and among others Anatolius a chiefe opposer of Paulus Samosatenus and after him one Stephanus who indeed in learning and eloquence was equall with the rest but not in vertue constancie for in the time of persecution he denyed the faith to the great scandal of the Church of Christ And hence it may probably be gathered that this Epistle to the Laodiceans wrought much good in them And also we are again here taught that pastors Churches may erre and fall away unlesse they be by the power of God preserved in the way of truth Now we come to the Epistle These things saith the Amen The preface as formerly proves the authority of the Epistle describing Christ the Author thereof by three glorious Epith●es namely that he is the Amen the true and faithfull witnesse and the beginning of the creation of God These things are taken from Chap. 1.5.6.7.8 Christ calleth himself the Amen from the Hebrew Aman veritie It is an affirmative particle and caries with it the nature of an oath confirming the truth and certainty of things it is in greeke nai yea in Latine certe profecto verely verely In this place it is put in stead of an adjective for him who is most true both in his promises and threatnings and is expounded by the following words the true and faithfull witnesse which we have spoken of on Chap. 1. v. 5. Christ therefore is the Amen the true and faithfull witnesse because as he is God so he is truth it self and the essentiall wisedome of the Father And as he is man he hath witnessed and brought forth the testimony of the gospell out of the bosome of his father and by divine miracles so confirmed the truth thereof as that none but with great impiety can question the same Now the reason why here he calleth himself thus seems to bee because he had to doe with hypocrites who beeing growen secure began to esteem of the faith of Christ as a thing indifferent that for the cause thereof they needed not to contend with the Pagans or suffer affliction for the same Now Christ to the end that he might more plainlie take them for their lukewarmenesse doth by these epithites declare his truth and faithfulnesse The reason wherefore Christ is called Amen is shewed by the Apostle 2 Cor. 1.19 where he saith that Jesus Christ preached among the Corinthians was not yea and nay that is variable and inconstant because in him all the promises of God even from the infancie of Church unto this day are Yea and Amen that is surely and certainely fulfilled unto the glory of God the Father The which as it the serves to refute their folly who eyther call in question or reject the faith of Christ as doe the Turks Jewes Epicures Hypocrites and others so it doth very much comfort and strengthen the faith of the godlie For seeing Christ is the Amen the faithfull and true witnesse he wil stand to his promises and never forsake them that trust in him Ioh. 14.18 Hebr. 13.15 according to that which is written I will not leave you Orphants I will not leave thee nor forsake thee c. The beginning of the creation of God As the two former titles declare the faithfulnesse of Christ so this shewes his excellencie and power Observe this ambiguous manner of speech The beginning of the creation of God this is ambiguously rendred For the word which is in the text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies not onely the beginning or original But also principallity and dominion Now in what sence soever it be taken it clearlie proveth the Godhead of Christ If we render it principallity that is prince of the creation or creatures it shewes that he is God If we render it the beginning of the creation it prooves the same thing For he as the Son did with the Father and holy Spirit Ioh. 1.3 give unto all creatures the beginning of their beeing for all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made Arius contendeth that the Son is onely the beginning of the creation that is the first creature But he falsely corrupteth the text For Christ is said to be the beginning not passively but actively as appeareth Chap. 1.8 where he is absolutely called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning and ending which can not be spoken of any creature Some interpret this of the new creation but that also doth no way derogate from his divinitie For a divine power is as much required to make a creature new as there was in the first creation So that these two interpretations are not to be separated but joyned togither Now Christ doth in this place call himself the beginning that these blinde and naked Laodiceans might the sooner returne unto him as to the fountaine of all good XXIII Argum. of Chr. deity This therfore is a XXIII argument proving the divinity of Christ our Lord. 15 I know thy workes that thou art neither cold The narration containes many particulars as reproofe commination confutation perswasion exhortation and promise unto v. 21. First in this verse he sharpely reproves the Laodiceans as not answering to the name by which they were called For Laodicea signifies as much as a people just sincere and wel reformed in manners faith and godlines being derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a people and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 just But thou saith Christ art neyther cold nor hote Interpreters are diversly minded about such as are said to be hot cold or lukewarine Alcasar brings in eleven opinions but he seeks a knot in a rush The thing it self plainely shewes that Christ by a proverbiall metaphor
persecutions yet the Gospell was spread with happie successe far and neere But I rather extend it to the whole time in which Christ by the successors of the Apostles namelie many syncere Bishops and faithfull teachers victoriously set up his kingdome throughout the whole Romane Empire not withstanding the tyrannie of persecutors the wickednesse of hereticks and Apostates untill by little and little the Church decayed in this her puritie And this I take containes the space of almost six hundred years The white horse therefore first comming out of the seales is the primitive Church white and bright in puritie of doctrine and discipline The Apostles were like horses running strongly and with great speed propagating the faith of Christ in the whole earth as their Acts and Epistles testifie after them God raised up Apostolicall men Bishops teachers and Fathers both Greek Latine who firmlie maintained propagated the purity of doctrine delivered unto them against tyrants apostates and hypocrites untill the time of Gregorie the first although even before his dayes the whitenesse of this horse was somwhat changed black spots began to appeare that is corruptions in doctrine discipline and worship The which Egesippus in Eusebius complaines of in these words Lib 3. hist cap. 32. that soon after the death of the Apostles and them which had received the word at their mouth the Church remained not long a pure and unspotted virgine notwitstanding the godly held the foundation of faith and salvation entire viz. Christ the head And he which sate on him This rider is Christ He that sate on the white horse is Christ Act. 9.15 see Chap. 19.11 This rider was caried to and fro in the ministerie of the Apostles and other faithfull pastors and teachers who suffered for the truth this metaphor Christ himselfe useth to Ananias concerning Paul he is a chosen vessell unto me to beare my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel On these Christ rode gloriously entring through their sincere preaching into the verie hart of the faithfull propagating and defending his owne kingdome according to that of the Psalmist And in thy comely honour prosper Psal 45.4 ride on word of truth and of meeknes of justice And he had a bow Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a bow arrowes and somtimes a quiver The word of God is Christ bow The Law and Gospell is Christ bow from whence he sends forth arrowes that is the efficacie of his spirit wounding the harts and minds of the Elect that he may heale and restore them to life but to terrifie and kill the wicked as it is in the same Psalm thy arrowes are sharp peoples shall fall under thee in the hart of the kings enemies And a crowne was given unto him to wit Christs crowne a regal crowne For he is a king crowned with glorie and honour at the right hand of God in the heavens or rather a crowne of triumph because it followeth And he went forth conquering and to conquer The doubling of the words notes his present and future victorie His victory By his death he overcame sin and by his resurrection death hell and satan yea the world also according as he saith in the Gospel be of good cheere Ioh. 16.33 I have overcome the world This is the first victorie with which he went forth conquering It is true indeed he was crucified as he was meere man but he lived againe and overcame by the power of his Godhead Now he went forth to overcome the world and the tyrants thereof diverse wayes His second victorie was in converting the gentiles by the preaching of the Apostles for in that he drew all nations and brought them unto the faith of the Gospel he conquered the world And tyrants in his Apostles confessours martyrs convincing them by the power of the truth For the death of the martyrs is Christs victory seeing in their blood the truth was sealed and the Church propagated The destruction of tyrants was Christs victorie As Julian the apostate blaspheming in his extreme madnesse confessed Thou hast overcome O Galilean Christ overcame when Nero Domitian Diocletian Trajan Maximinus Lycinius Valens and others who had put to death many thousands of Christians thinking thereby to take away the name of Christ were destroyed and brought to miserable perdition while Christ raigned and his Church increased Christ went forth as a conquerour when by the preaching of the Gospel the Idol gods of the gentiles were rejected their worship and temples abolished and overthrowen all men beeing drawen after Christ He overcame when the swarmes of hereticks as Valentinus Basilides Praxeas Manes Martion Photinus Samosatenus and other most bitter enemies of Christ were beaten downe overcome and destroyed by the sword of the spirit To be short Christ overcame when all the East and Westerne Churches were in danger to perish and come to nothing by the pestilent doctrine of Arius two sound ministers beeing then hardlie found in the whole Christian world no not in Rome except Paulinus Hilarius and Athanasius And indeed he that would understand the victories of Christ here intimated must have as in a table before his eyes the histories of the Apostles and the Churches after them written by Irenaeus Clemens Tertullian Eusebius Hierom Theodoret Socrates Sozomenus Evagrius Nicephorus and others for no better commentarie then their histories can be given upon the opening of the first seale And herein I thinke not to passe this by in silence we are more happie then Iohn himself for those events which he saw a far of in types we now by the helpe of former histories and our own experience doe clearely see them written out livelie expressed before our eyes And thus much concerning the first seale Now here perhaps a question will be moved seeing Christ is the Lamb opening the booke how also he can be sayd to goe forth out of the seale For the answere hereof we are to minde what I have already spoken viz. that oftentimes one and the same thing is represented in differing types in a diverse respect Now as Christ sits reignes gloriously with the Father and holy Spirit as God so he is the Lion of the tribe of Iudah beeing the offpring of Iudah according to the flesh He is the immaculate Lamb as he is man and as he was slaine and put to death for us He stands in the midst of the Throne as he is the mediatour he opens the booke and the seales as he is the chiefe Prophet and teacher of the Church the revealer and author of all heavenlie doctrine And to be short he also sits on the white horse as king and conquerour propagating his kingdome by the preaching of his word through the whole earth by which also he reigneth even unto this day in the midst of his enemies Psa 110.2 The opening of the second seale The red horse and his rider having a
of Christ should be so corrupted through the ambition Luxurie coveteousnes negligence slothfulnes of Bishops the antiēt faith so adulterated by hereticks as that nothing almost should remaine pure sound We know by wheat the elect are signifyed and by tares the reprobate as in Mat. 13.30 Wherfore by wheat in this place I understand either sincere teachers which should be rare precious or els the sound and orthodoxe doctrine concerning God Christ our saviour of which there should be as it were a famine in the earth Neverthelesse with this wheat God would feed his elect however it should be obtained by great difficulty labour yea barly bread should be very scarse that is the comforts of the Gospel not so fullie enjoyed as formerly Such is the darknes the effects thereof when the Church is burdened with the traditions of men This famine of true doctrine was verie great in the dayes of Constans and some Arian Emperours after him The time of the famine here spoken of when the pernicious and pestilent doctrine of Arius was received by all the East and Westerne Churches For after the Emperour Constans by sundrie councils and other meanes had endeavoured to establish Arianisme at last calling together all the Bishops both Arians and others namelie the Westerne unto Arminensis a city in Italie the Easterne unto Seleucia a citie in Isauria he would not admit them to depart till all had consented unto the prescript forme of the Arian heresie whereupon it happened that they being there retained seven whole months and wearied with delay some beeing overcome by intreaty others with threatnings at last they all yea Hosius also subscribed unto it and condemned the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 essence and coessential Hilarius banished out of France onely excepted who as a graine of wheat returning into France restored the puritie of the faith and brought most of the Bishops of Italie unto the right way of Christ as Sulpitius Severus recordeth speaking thus in the conclusion of his booke of this synod which consisted of 400 Bishops the councill held at Arminensis was dismissed whose beginning was good but in the end wickedlie concluded And see thou hurt not the oyle and wine Junius will have the words wine and oyle to cohere with the fore going sentence as if it ought thus to be read three measures of barlie for a peny and oyle and wine where he puts a colon or two points and he renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hurt not unjustly that is verie little wine and oyle shall be given for a denarius or ten pence thou shalt not deale unjustlie understand while thou metest out but a little for a great price But in this he seems to be to courious neyther can the former colon cohere with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a denarie or ten penie worth But hurt not the wine and oyle to wit the orthodoxe faith but some shall maintaine the same and the whole not be obscured by hereticall blacknesse And such were Athanasius and Hilarius in the time of the Arian heresie whom we before mentioned they are called wine and oyle from the effect because as wine cherisheth and oyle purifies so sound doctrine doth glad and cleanse the consciences This therefore is added as a word of comfort least the faithfull seeing heresies to get the upper hand should be discouraged For God will allwayes preserve some teachers of his truth that the elect may not be hurt by hereticks Ribera interprets this of their seven sacraments hence he promiseth the pope a great victorie against the Lutherans But as yet these things appertaine not to the times of Antichrist and vainly he seeks for a garland and comfort in the idle fictions of his own braine Alcasar comes nearer to the marke applying the oyle to the light and true knowledge of happinesse the wine to spirituall joy which the heavenlie voyce promiseth the elect not to be deprived of The opening of the fourth seale The pale horse and death sitting on him with hell following and killing the fourth part of the earth 7 And when he had opened the fourth seale I heard the voyce of the fourth beast say Come and see 8 And I looked and behold a pale horse his name that sate on him was death hell followed with him power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth to kill with sword with hunger and with death and with the beasts of the earth THE COMMENTARIE 7. ANd when he had opened the fourth seale I well approve of the observation of Andreas that the fourth beast hath the forme of a flying Eagle who now calleth Iohn to behold the events of the fourth seale For the Eagle with his quicksighted eyes having spied some things on high with great celeritie flyes thither to it Whereby is signified that the plagues here foretold come no otherwhere then from above For God beeing provoked to wrath and indignation doth justlie send them partlie to revenge the injuries don unto the saintes partlie to punish the wicked who repent not of their evils 8. And behold a pale horse The fourth seale beeing opened there comes forth now a pale horse whose rider is death and hell his follower or companion having power to kill the fourth part of the earth with sword famine pestilence and the beasts of the earth This horse in Gr. is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is of a greenish colour tending to palenesse such as is the colour of leaves in harvest time falling from trees for want of juyce Now interpreters are of diverse opinions what is the meaning of this pale horse and death his rider with hell following and what maner of plagues are shadowed out thereby Lyra supposeth Lyras interpretation that this horse is the people of Rome the rider Domitian named death because he most unjustlie murdered manie both senatours and people and himself afterwad by the Senate was also put to death for his crueltie the horse he understands to be pale because of pale death riding thereon Hell followed him that is he was immediately upon his death cast into hell fire Power was given him to kill the fourth part of the earth that is cruellie to persecute the Christians throughout the whole Romane Empire which was then streatched out over the foure parts of the world With the sword for therewith he killed manie With hunger starving them in his prisons And beasts of the earth because he caused manie to be cast before wilde beasts and torne in pieces And death noting thereby all kinde of punishments Andreas referrs it to the persecution of Maximianus Andreas his interpretation Riberas opinion in whose time as Eusebius writeth lib. 9. cap. 8. such a multitude of men were taken away by pestilence and famine as that the dead could hardlie be buried Ribera will have all to be applied unto the third
kings that we read of to be persecuted or to shun these tyrants Besides the following words hide us and fall upon us are not expressions of the godly groaning under the crosse but of the wicked dispairing for feare of wrath as the cause annexed shewes for the great day of his wrath is come which cannot be possiblie understood of the day of the Diocletian persecution Others therefore have thought that these things appertaine to the last times and the punishments of persecutours So Andreas The kings saith hee and all the princes rich men c. shall rather desire to be hid in mountaines rocks and caves then to feele the wrath and scourges of the Lambe which at Antichrisis comming shall overwhelme those miserable men Or certainely they shall thus greatly quake for feare of the judgements prepared for them after the resurrection of the flesh which never shall have an end Therefore this fourth Act of the vision concerning the final punishment of reprobates is briefly annexed to the matter going before and answereth successively to the third Act howbeit neyther this nor the third is yet fullie ended in this Chapter as before we noted For as the third Act hath two parts the first setting forth Antichrists tyranny over the Christian world in the three former verses the other his restraint and the sealing of the elect afterward described in Chap. 7. So likewise the fourth Act consists of two parts both full of joy and consolation to the Church the first whereof describeth the final and universal destruction of the wicked in the three last verses of Chap. 6. The second sets forth the happy condition which the saintes shall enjoy with the Lambe in heaven from v. 9. of Chap. 7. unto the end thereof Now we come to handle the punishment of the wicked the which here is but briefly touched but afterward more largely set forth in the following visions The generall doctrine is this that however the wicked for a while oppresse and afflict the Church yet they shall one day finallie perish their rage cruelty in seeking to destroy the godly shall turn to their utter overthrow ruin for ordinarily injury goes before destruction Now the reason hereof is because God is just will not suffer their crueltie to goe unpunished And also he is omnipotent and able easily to cast downe the kings of the earth which have risen up against him to bee short he is faithfull and true to performe the promised deliverance and glorie unto the saintes Now here is described 1. The condition of the adversaries 2. their trembling and despaire and thirdly the cause thereof And the kings And here is not so much copulative as continuative or adversative for then the kings or but the kings c. For it signifies the effect of this great Antichristian earthquake we have not in this place neyther Antichrist nor his false prophets and parasites by whose fraud he was advanced here named not as if they should go unpunished but because their destruction is purposely more manifestly described in the following history and especially in the fift and sixt visions by many fearfull expressions These here are named kings great men rich men tribunes and mightie men and all bondmen and freemen that is both high low all of the laicks as they call them of what degree soever who have been instruments eyther by their authority or wealth to advance Antichrist to that hight of tyrannie and cruelty or who for the establishing of his power have drawen the sword or been helpfull in making or kindling of the fires wherin the martyrs were burnt But this also is to be extended more largely unto al the enemies of the Church even from the beginning of the world Who these kings and great men are viz. as well such as persecuted the godlie under the law as Nimrod Pharaoh Saul Ahab Nebuchad-nezar Antiochus c. as those under the Gospel viz. Herod Nero Domitian Trajan Severus Decius Diocletian Julian Valens and whosoever else have bent their bow against Christ and insulted over his truth or at this day doe seek to uphold Antichrist But in the end an unhappy and lamentable destruction shall come upon them Before we come to treat of this great catastrophe I againe desire the reader not to thinke it strange that we expounded the mountains Ilands spoken of in v. 14. to be kings and nations though it seems that they are here onely expreslie named For before they were more obscurelie and restrainedly set forth by the names of mountaines Iland moved out of their place by Antichrist that is by him seduced shaken and subjugated but here in generall is prefigured the overthrow of all enemies eyther under or before Antichrists time This also by the way we may take notice of that Andreas understands by kings of the earth them whose power and studie onelie is in and about earthlie things as having nothing to doe with Christ heaven Chief captaines Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying captaines over thousands such as among the Romans had the chief charge over souldiers for in a Romane Legion which consisted of seven thousand and somtimes more there were ten bandes of souldiers whereof the first bande was the greater having 1105 footmen and 132 men of armes and properlie such as had charge over this bande were called chiliarchi collonels or chiefe captaines Vegetius lib. 2. de re milit cap. 2. 6. Every bondman and every freeman that is all other enemies of inferiour ranks who were strong to shead the blood of the saintes and to persecute blaspheme the Gospell now fearfull indeed shall be the end of every one of them as it followeth And hid themselves in the dens Wee read that the godlie in times of persecution often fled into mountaines woodes and deserts hidings themselves there for fear of tyrants as the historie of the Machabees and others witnesse But here not the godly under persecution but the persecutors themselves are spoken of as is plainly to be gathered by what followeth they hid themselves in dens that is they now shall doe that themselves which formerly they constrained the saintes to doe it signifies their extreem fear and perplexity as not knowing where to turn themselves for to finde any succour Now their kingdoms palaces fortresses and munitions of warre now their armies legions militarie bandes c. cannot helpe them but in vain doe they fly unto dens rocks which shall not be open to receive and hide them And therefore they shall despairinglie cry Ah fall on us and hide us The voyce of men without hope of mercy and salvation and wishing that which no wise man would desire to wit to be crushed under the mountaines and miserablie brought to nothing This is a proverbial description of the wicked despairing by which is intimated that such shall be the horrible appearance of things as that they shall an hundred times rather desire any cruel
afterward fell from the hight of the Catholick faith unto the herefie of Arianisme To him was given the key of the bottomlesse pit that is power to set up the Arian heresie by which meanes the Sun●● became dark for he denied Christs divinity By the are he understands the Church beeing enlightened by Christ as the aire takes its light from the visible sunne The Locusts are the Vandales Gothes who beeing infected with Arianisme much afflicted the Churches in the East c. The opinion of Rupertus I am ashamed to relate The strange opinion of Rupertus who applies this to the apostasie of the Israelites and to their punishment by the M●abitas Philistinas after the death of Iosuah Now we know that such things as were past are not here revealed unto John but that which should afterwards shortly come to passe Alcasare opinion is yet worse who will have this starre to be the Law of Moses Alcasars opinion the which saith hee as comming down from above so presseth men that thereby concupiscence and evill desires the which he makes to be the Locusts are accidentally wrought in their hearts Ad calcem tomi tertis in prima editione Bellarmine confesseth that he dares not rashly pronounce any thing concerning this dark prophesie And yet in the mean while in a long oration or rather a satyrical invective consisting almost of as many lies as words he most rashly pronounceth Luther to bee this starre The smoake ascending out of the pit to be the doctrine of Luther and that the innumerable multitude of these horrible Locusis doe most lively expresse his disciples But this whole fiction is so ridiculous as indeed Alcasar himself derides it I wonder saith hee that he did not also referre it to the fall of Judas But how should Luther a poore and obscure Augustine Monke bee this great starre he saith though he were poore yet hee became rich though at first he professed abstinencie from marriage yet afterward hee tooke a wife of a Monke became a states-man I answer by great falling starres none can properly bee signified but great and mighty praelates and therefore I wonder why be upbraideth Luther with his riches seeing he neyther had nor left any behinde him now although it be true he was poore but no worldlie politician onely aprofessour of divinitie yet indeed he had many rich adversaries and among the number Bellarmine himselfe was not the least who of a Monke became a mightie Politician famous Cardinal If Luther therefore fell from heaven because according to the Apostles Cannon he was married then Bellarmine may as well say that the Apostle in commanding a Bishop to be the husband but of one wife doth thereby throw down the starres from heaven But the very truth is Bellarmine by this his wantonnesse of wit indeavours to darken this vision that so he may preserve the Popes reputation as if by this falling star he were not typed out besides he would dissipate this hellish smoake if he could from popery least hee himself should be accounted as in truth he is a leading and chiefe locust among the rest These things I thought good to rehearse that I may not seem to despise the opinions of other interpreters and that the reader among the variety of expositors may take what he liketh best and the rather because this prophesie is somewhat darke notwithstanding if all things bee well considered it will easilie and undoubtedly appear that by the fal of this great starre nothing else is praefigured but the apostasie of the Romish Bishop who makes himself head of the Church together with his devised Hierarchie I will therefore not out of any sinister affection but truely as the things are according as the Lord hath made me to see now come to expound everie particular leaving it unto the judgement of the reader It is plaine that by starres in the Revelation are noted not Emperours or earthly kings but Bishops and teachers of Churches by great starres therefore are meant not the inferiour ministers or Bishops as they are called but prelates of higher note and ranke Now the reason of the analogie I have shewed on Chap. 1.20 Mat. 5.14 to wit because Bishops ought to shine like starres in sinceritie of doctrine and holinesse of life they ought I say to bee the light of the world And hence it is that with the Catholick Glosse Morelius Alphonsus Bullinger and other learned interpreters I understand this great starre fallen from heaven to signifie some chiefe and eminent Bishop By his fall from heaven into the earth is signified his apostasie from the heavenly truth unto earthly doctrines of humane traditions But who should this bee In the third trumpet the great star falling from heaven was the Bishop of Rome who beeing accounted by Constantine as a God on earth and enriched with wealth and power above measure began to swell with great pride whereupon the successours of Sylvester by meanes of the Emperours decree began to fall upon the third part of the rivers and fountaines of waters that is leaving the studie of heavenly things affected an earthly dominion and power over the Churches and Bishops of all Europe which hitherto was the third part of the world and by bringing in pernicious superstitions and worship of idols made the waters bitter to the destruction of the Eastern Churches Now this great starr fallen from heaven is not another but the verie same For it is to be observed that Iohn saith not as before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fell from heaven neyther saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and I saw to fall although the Latine version and Beza also so render it but he saith I saw the starre 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fallen or which did fall at the sounding of the third trumpet Now here he sees the adjuncts and effects of the same Star beeing far more grievous then before At first he saw it to fall upon the third part of the rivers and waters making them bitter with wormewood so as they became mortal to many Yet was not the same a total corruption and Apostasie But now he sees this starre fully fallen neither vanished away nor perished in the waters but sticking fast like filth unto the earth as doe slimy and thick vapours which fall from heaven He saw also the key of the bottomlesse pit given unto him to open therewithall the bottomlesse pit c. by which was represented unto Iohn a worse shape or condition of the Romish chaire The rising of the Romish Antichrist described viz. it s total apostasie and monstrous corruption By which it is plaine that in this place the rising of the great Romane Antichrist is described For to what other Ecclesiastical person I pray you can these things possibly be applied And indeed Gregorie makes him to bee the Antichrist who should affect the title of an universall priest the which thing Boniface the third did three
signes lying wonders in them that peerish The 2 Thes 2.9.10 explained that they should beleeve a ly because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved By which words the Apostle gives us to understand First that Antichrist shall establish his power by cunning and diabolicall deceit Secondly by his tyranny he shall oppresse the greater part of men in the Christian world as not beeing sealed Thirdly that Antichrists followers shall inevitably perish run into destruction Fourthly that their destruction shall be voluntarie and just because they cast off or receive not the love of the truth rather delighting in Popish dreames and Lyes Lastly that under Antichrist there shall be alwayes some sound teachers of the truth who shall suffer grievous contradiction as in Chap. 11.4 5. And it was given them that they should not kill The first limitation of the Locusts power we have heard here is added a SECOND that they should not kill men but torment them also a third limitation not allwayes but for five monthes Behold the wonderfull lenitie of God even in suffering the wicked limiting and moderating their plagues who deserve to be destroyed all at one instant The elect under Antichrists kingdom he altogether preserves from the mortall biting of these scorpions insomuch as wee doubt not but that there are still some godly groaning under his tyrannie in the heart of Popery as in Rome Italie Spaine c. The other idolatrous troop he will not suffer the Locusts suddenly to kill to the end they may have time to repent But onely to torment them that thereby they might be stirred up to seek remedie for their sowles Notwithstanding it seems that not so much a mitigation as an exasperation is signified by the foresaid limitation This torment notes the Ecclesiastical Locusts For it is far worse to bee tormented with a lingring disease then suddenly to perish neyther may we doubt but that by this kinde of hurting is designed not a civill but an Ecclesiastical kinde of Locusts because they shall not kill mens bodies as did the Vandales Gothes and other open tyrants but they shall torment mens soules and consciences torturing them continually as on a rack by their deceitfull doctrines of penance satisfactions purgatorie c. Now what I pray can be spoken more openly against the impostures of that false and Antichristian clergie by which indeed for the present they kill not the bodie but torment the wretched conscience by shewing them remission and explation of sin not in the faith of the Gospell in the mercies of God and in the blood of Christ but in the merits of good workes auricular confessions numbring of sins imposed penance poenal satisfactions going in pilgrimage to the sepulchre of our Lord S. Iames the ladie of Lauretta in travels by sea and land in fasting and abstinence in masses in almes and legasies building of Closters in Moncks coules in whippings in going barefoot lastlie in the Popes jubilees indulgences bought for mony Now what are all these things but the sinful devises of men altogether tending to the wounding of mens consciences and no way serving for the healing and helping of the same Isa 29.13 Mat. 15.9 For in vaine is the Lord worshipped with the doctrines of men This is the miserable rack of the conscience none greater then it nor more dangerous Let the historie of the Romish Church and Emperours be read and there it will appeare that many through the furie and rage of the Locusts have been so stirred up and brought to such madnesse as to quiet their consciences they have of their own accord layd down the government of the Empire and kingdomes put themselves into religious Covents or monasteries built Cloisters and Colledges for Monks with great liberallity thereby to redeeme soules have taken upon themselves religious orders for the expiation of sins have woren either dead or living the cowles or hoodes of begging Fryars but in all these things what could they find or hereby receive but a perpetual torture trouble of conscience a dreafull feare doubt of beeing deceived We need not therefore seek these Locusts among the Vandales Gothes Hunnes Saracens Mahumetans c. For these did promiscuously rage and tyrannise by fire sword against the persons both of the just unjust Besides it is verie cleare by the matter it selfe that Ecclesiastical religious deceivers are here meant who torment indeed continually the fearfull consciences of men with the terrours of hell purgatorie but send them not for releife to Christ by faith but to the Popes lawes that is in stead of Phisick administer poyson and precipitate their soules into the gulfe of finall desperation Moreover we are againe to take notice of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was given which I find to be twenty times repeated in this booke about Antichrists tyranny that so we may understand that he doth not thus rage by chance but as beeing Gods scourge to punish the ingratitude of the Christian world as also that he is bound limited by God and cannot goe bejond the same The which serves for our great comfort Five monthes This is the third limitation of their power serving also for our singular consolation Seeing God hath prefixed a certaine time to these Locusts bejond which they shall not longer rage torment Interpreters discourse diversly about these five monthes Some take it properly for five Aegyptian monthes or an hundred fifty dayes the time that the waters of the flood increased upon the face of the earth some take it for so many yeares Notwithstanding they are much troubled how so short a time should agree to the tyranny either of the Vandales Saracens or Popish clergie Bullingers exposition best agrees with the nature of the place viz. that the mitigation is taken from the age of Locusts which ordinarily is no more then five monthes making the sense to be thus that as the Locusts continew not hurting the whole yeere thorow but sing leap and feed upon the grasse scarsly during the five summer monthes that is from April unto September even so a certaine time is defined to Antichrists seducers after which they shall torment men no more But this seems not to agree with histories For the Pope hath now for a thousand yeeres more sent forth his Locusts to spoile the field of the Church neyther doth the end as yet appeare Yea he shall continue devouring untill he bee consumed by the brightnesse of Christs comming But this no way contradicts what we have before said for what are five monthes with the Lord seeing with him a thousand yeeres are as one day The time therefore of the Locusts is hereby designed not as if it should be no longer then an hundred and fifty dayes or yeeres but because it should be short a definite time being put for an indefinite And thus also Alcasar expounds it indefinitely although contrarie
For heaven is the throne of God wherefore they that sweare lift up their hands to heaven as calling upon God to bee a witnesse and judge of the truth Hence also comes the received custome amongs us to lift up the right hand and put forth the three first fingers in signe of the blessed trinity whom we call for a record upon our souls 6 And sware by Gr In him that liveth by two adjunctes he denotes the true God The first internall that liveth for ever and ever The other externall who created heaven earth sea and the things that are therein The former is a most proper note of the true God because he alone is of himself and shal be from eternitie unto all eternitie not receiving life from any but giving unto all life moving and beeing Hence with the Hebrewes the Lord is called Jehovah that is subsisting living of himself And by this Epithite generally in scripture he is distinguished from the false gods or idols of the Gentiles In him that is by him that liveth beeing an Hebraisme for they that take an oath are to sweare in that is by Jehovah as Jonathan said to David 1. Sam. 24.22 What it is to sweare by the living God sweare unto me in Jehovah Now to swear by Johovah or by the living God is to require and cal him who is the alone searcher of the hart to give testimony unto the truth and to punish him that sweareth in case he wittingly take his name in vaine Here then we see in the first place that an Oath is a kind of invocation upon God and therefore often in scripture swearing is put for invocating and so againe invocation for the other As Isa 19.18 The nations shall sweare by Iehovah It is lawfull for Christians to sweare in some cases that is shall call upon the true God and 2. Cor. 1.23 I call God saith Paul to record upon my soule so that an Oath is a kinde of worship and therfore lawfull and acceptable to God no way prohibited unto Christians as some phantasticall men have affirmed Secondly that no Oath is laflul except it bee taken in the name of God For hee alone knowes the hart and only i● able to reveale secrets to punish hidden perjurie to resolve doubtfull things confirme the whole truth for he is above all and in him alone in the last place all faith is setled Thirdly hence we see that to sweare by Angels It is a great wickednesse to sweare by the creature Saintes or any other creature is a horrible wickednesse both because they cannot search the hart reines in which regard they are vainly called upon as also because religious invocation is a worship onely proper to God cannot without sacriledge bee given unto any other They therefore who sweare by Mary the Saintes doe as much offend the Lord deceive themselves and others as SOCRATES who was wont to sweare by his dog or any stone whatsoever But here it may bee demanded if this Angel be Christ himself how then doth he sweare by him that liveth for ever For hereby it seems either that he is not Christ or els that Christ is not true God but inferiour unto him because he sweares by the living God as by one greater then himself To this I have given somewhat in answer before and sufficiently shewed that Christ is this Angel He sweareth by him that liveth for ever as hee is man and the mediatour so he acknowledgeth God to be above him according as he speaketh Io. 14.28 The Father is greater then I. Or els as he is God and then he sweareth by him who liveth for ever not as by a superiour or by another but by himself according to that in Heb. 6.13 because God could sweare by no greater he sware by himself But that Christ is he that liveth for ever appeares by his owne testimony Chap. 1.18 I live saith he was dead VIII Arg of Christs deity confirmed to wit as man and behold I live for ever and ever This therefore as we have before noted yeeldeth us a worthy argument to prove the deity of Christ Who created heaven By this other Epithite he also distinguisheth the true God from idols as beeing the onely creatour of all things in heaven in earth c. gave them I say at first a beeing of nothing the which was a worke of omnipotencie not to be effected by false gods or any creature Therefore the true God every-where in scripture as also in the common creed is celebrated as the creatour of all things Ier. 10.11 but the gods that have not made the heavens and the earth even they shall perish from the earth from under these heavens Neither doth this make any thing to the contrarie but that this Angel is Christ for he sweareth by the creatour of all things Ioh. 1.3 Heb. 1.2 that is by himself For by him all these things were made and without him was not any thing made that was made By whom also God the Father made the worlds This Epithite therefore doth also confirme the truth of Christs divinity That there should be time no longer Now followes what Christ sware and to what end Both which are to the same purpose for the latter adversitively expounds the former viz. that there should bee no more time but that the accomplishment of the mystery of God was at hand under the seventh trumpet The former is taken diverse wayes ANDREAS he sweareth there should bee no time after or in the world to come or not long after the sixt trumpet the latter part of whose opinion is agreable to the scope but not the former notwithstāding Ribera foolishly approves therof there shal be no time saith he because this variety of time as dayes nightes moneths yeeres shal be no more but an unchangable eternity shall follow in the dayes of the seventh Angel But what use was there to confirme that with an Oath which no man is ignorant of viz. that after the consummation of this world time shall be swallowed up by eternity Alcasar wresteth it unto the Iewes to whom there shal be no more time as beeing threatned of God to be forsaken But what need was there that Christ should signifie a thing by vision and Oath which long before was clearly declared Behold your house is left unto you desolate Matt. 23.28 BRIGHTMAN there shal be no more time that is no longer delay but a verie little time shal be remaining untill the consummation of the mysterie the which is agreable unto the scope of the place for Christ by a fift consolation would encourage the faithfull taken from the brevity of the time remaining least they beeing dishartned in regard of the long continued calamities of the six trumpets should be out of hope as if there should never be an end of their miseries but that Antichrists rage should allwayes continue in the world But
events of the Church For it was written within and without as we heard Chap. 1.7 and Ezech. 2.10 This little booke Christ both opened and held open teaching us that as Iohn so all the teachers of the word must ask of Christ and receive out of his hand the doctrine of salvation which they are to propound unto the Church but not from the hand of Satan or Antichrist Now he exhibiteth a booke open because the holy scriptures doe open and manifestly set forth the mysteries of our salvation Thus we see the decrees of the Romish Antichrist the traditions of Popes and Councils the humane Philosophie and subtilties of Sophisters are to be quite banished out of the Church It is expressely added Of the Angel that stood upon the earth and sea that we might confidently rest on the power of Christ and acknowledge him alone to be the revealer of the heavenly truth and so desire nothing as necessarie to salvation but what we take out of his hand 9. Take it and eat it up This is the other commandement Bookes of paper or parchment are not to be eaten properly as not beeing fit food for man but they are said to be eaten up metaphorically when they are so carefully read and throughly taken notice of that we are able promptly to rehearse and discourse of the contents thereof So a man is said to have devoured Virgil Cicero who is fullie acquainted with them and hath them as it were by heart So Cicero called M. Cato a devourer of bookes because he was an insatiable reader Thus as the Prophet in Ezech. 3. so John here is commanded to eat up the booke he received of Christ that is well to understand and as it were hide the same in the bowels of his heart that so he might deliver no other doctrine unto the Church but what hee had received from Christ Now whether this booke were eaten up trulie or in a vision onely makes little to the purpose the latter is most probable For all these things were don by a vision Here the ministers of the word are taught earnestly to devoure or eat up the doctrine of salvation divinely written received from Christ that is diligently to read understand search meditate as it were to turne it even into their verie moisture blood For such onely can faithfully instruct the Church in the knowledge of the truth who after this manner meditate in the law of the Lord day night On the contrary their sluggishnesse is condemned who though they love to be called Bishops Archbishops Patriarchs of the Church yet in the mean while are little or nothing acquainted with the scriptures of God And it shall make thy belly bitter He preadmonisheth Iohn of a double effect of the booke sweet in the mouth bitter in the belly Sweet things are delightfull to the palate bitter things provoke to vomit Hereby signifying that one effect thereof should be sweet the other troublesome the nature whereof is expounded in the following verse He fore shewes it should be sweet to stir him up the more earnestly to eat up the booke he tels him also that it should be bitter that he might not afterward bee offended thereat but know that this bitternesse should bee recompensed with much sweetnesse Then I tooke the booke He shewes his readinesse in eating the book for neither the difficulty of the command nor the bitternesse of the book dishartens him shewing us that we are readily to submitt unto the command of God not to be dismayed at any hardships or difficulties whatsoever Now he ate the booke not really but in vision onely as I said before signifying that he most readily accepted the worke imposed upon him of which it followeth And it was sweet in my mouth Here the foresaid effects follow This booke being eaten was sweet in the mouth and bitter in the belly the first signifies the sweetnesse of the word as Psal 119.103 How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then hony to my mouth Ierem. 15.16 Thy words were found I did eat them thy word was unto mee the joy rejoycing of myne heart This is the proper effect of the word it brings joy to the heart comfort to the conscience yea by how much faithfull teachers doe feel this sweetnesse by so much the more they preach the Gospell chearfully But the effect thereof is bitter by accident because the preaching of the word occasioneth most painefull grypings of the belly as the hatred of the world persecutions banishments martyrdomes This effect Christ foretold unto his disciples They shall put you out of their synagogues Ioh. 16.2 whosoever killeth you will thinke that he doth God service But what use was there to reveale this in a type unto John seeing it was long before plainely foretold in the written word It was altogether needfull considering that this bitternesse doth not properly denote the calamities already past under the four trumpets but to come in the end of the fift sixt under the kingdome of Antichrist the which we shall heare in the following Chapter namely the combats of the third Act of this Vision He foretold them therefore unto Iohn that he might not bee offended for he had already experience hereof beeing sent into exile by Domitian notwithstanding Christ doth not properly intend this here but praefigures in his person the future calamities of the witnesses of the truth 11. And hee said unto me To wit the former voyce from heaven Thou must againe prophesie This commandement is taken diversly Lyra thou must write downe more prophesies to wit those which follow in this booke But to write more things is not againe to prophesie c. Thomas Rupertus and some others understand it historically of Iohns beeing restored unto his Church as if he had said Thou must after the death of Domitian returne from Patmos the place of thy exile unto Ephesus and preach againe the Gospell or as if it were a promise of writing his Gospell after the Revelation The which Ribera refuteth This saith he I approve not of for to put prophesying in stead of preaching the Gospell is new which reason is not solid he adds another that seeing John was gifted with the fulnesse of the holy Ghost therefore he needed not to eat up the booke eyther for to preach or to write the Gospell wherefore he saith the sense is thus that although Iohn hitherto had prophesied many things concerning the last times notwithstanding there remained as yet many things of the same nature which he was to prophesie of against the gentiles c. The which is one with the opinion of Lyra which Alcasar also with his subtilties doth at last come unto But hee needed not to eat up the booke in this respect seeing before he had received a commandement to write the whole Revelation allthough I grant that Lyras opinion touching the promise of Iohns restitution is
mongrill as being Apostolicall in name but apostaticall in deed Like as a Libard and a Lion comming together engender an adulterate Leopard Page 119. he saith that the worshippers of the Beast worship the Divell in the Pope And againe That the Pope hath it from the Dragon that he is a sacrilegious and tyrannicall person wasting on himselfe and his creatures the goods of the poore and destroying men for his filthy dung sake And whereas he is the greatest hypocrite and calleth himself Apostolicall yet he despiseth Apostolicall conversation above all men living Ibidem Who was able to fight with the Beast or resist his will in regard of his twofold supreme power viz. Imperiall and Priestly which be pretendeth to have ever the Church Militant And page 120. It appeareth therefore when the Pope sitting in the Temple of God extols himselfe above all that is called God or is worshipped that he boasteth as if he were God and so consequently bewrayes himselfe to be that son of perdition who commonly is called Antichrist With many like places Franciscus Petrarcha a most eloquent Philologer of Italy in his time wrote such things Anno 1370. against the Pontificall sea as almost Luther never spake worse In his 15. Epistle lamenting the oppression of the Catholick Church That worthy Court saith he of Jesus Christ that excellent Tower of divine worship is now at length because of our sins being destitute of divine helpe become a den of cruell theeves And of the Popes tyranny I see indeed saith he afar off but not being able to hinder it I refuse to see nigh at hand It is a cruell and infamous guile by which this ecclesiasticall Dionysius vexeth and spoileth our Syracusaes And Epist 16. I speak not what I have heard but seen I know it by experience that there is no charity there no faith no piety no reverence or feare of God nothing that is holy just equall laudable or humane as for love shamefasinesse and purity it is banished thence Touching the truth indeed I am silent for what place is it where all things are so full of lies The aire earth houses townes sireets court-yards porches halls beds roofes of houses clefts of walls the secret and close roomes of houses and temples the seats of Judges and Popes yea in the last place the very mouthes of men their becks gestures voices and countenance And Epist 19. Behold now thou touchest with thy hands and seest with thine eyes what that last Babylon is viz. angry raging dishonest and terrible To which neither that Egyptian Babylon the worke of Cambyses nor the more ancient royall Assyrian Babylon built by Semiramis is equall c. Behold thou seest a people not onely adversary to Christ but that which is worse under Christs Ensigne rebelling against him and fighting for Satan c. For what else I pray you is daily practised by Christs enemies and the pharisees of our age doe they not buy and sell and make merchandise of Christ himselfe whose name notwithstanding they seem day and night to extoll with most high prayses whom they cloath with purple and gold whom they load with pretious stones salute and worship him I say they put to sale and make merchandise of here on earth and as if his eyes were covered and saw not they crown with the bryars of wicked treasures defile him with the spittle of a most impure mouth and inveigh against him with viperous hissings strike him with the dart of venemous actions what in them lies The Papists crucifie Christ doe again and again deridingly drag him as naked poore and scourged on mount Calvary and wickedly consent to naile him to the crosse And O shame O griefe O indignity even such the Romanists are at this day as it is reported Whereupon one merrily made these pithy verses Roma tibi fuerant servi domini dominorum Servorum servi nunc tibi sunt domini Once Lords of Lord O Rome thy servants were But servants now of servants thy Lords are Petrarcha goes on Epist 20. touching the Pontificall Babylon In the kingdom of covetousnesse nothing is counted as lost so that mony be safe there the hope of life to come is but a vaine fable and what is spoken of hell is all fabulous The resurrection also of the flesh the end of the world Christs comming to judgement are esteemed as fopperies c. O Babylon the worst of things situated on the fierce bancks of the river Rhone thou famous or rather infamous whore cōmitting fornication with the kings of the earth in very deed thou art the same whom the holy Evangelist saw in the spirit Thou art I say the same and no other sitting upon many waters c. The woman clothed with purple and scarlet and glittering with gold pearles and precious stones having a golden cup in thy hand full of the abomination and filthinesse of thy fornication Babylon knowest thou thy selfe Certainly that which followeth onely agrees to thee and not to any other BABYLON THE MOTHER OF FORNICATIONS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH Hear the rest And I saw a woman drunken with the blood of the Saints and the blood of the Martyrs of Iesus Why art thou silent Either shew some other that is drunken with this blood or else if thou canst deny that thou art not this drunken woman And Epist 21. against the Popes the Princes of darknesse Let the gods and goddesses nay rather the God of gods destroy them all both living and dead with their treasures and wicked works who being fatted with the blood of the heavenly Lamb doe spurne and rebell c. But why or to what end that we may see the good overwhelmed the wicked raysed up Eagles to creep and Asses to flie to see Foxes on chariots Kites on towers Doves on the dunghill Wolves at liberty Lambs in fetters to be short Christ banished ANTICHRIST to be Lord and Beelzebub judge c. These things wrote Petrarcha and more also Besides more then 230. yeeres agoe lived Michael Cesenas chiefe of the Minorite Friers The Pope Antichrist who openly accused the Pope to be ANICHRIST and called the Romish Sea the Babylonish harlot drunken with the blood of the Saints But for brevity sake I refer the Christian reader unto the Catalogue of witnesses of the truth where it is most clearly proved by innumerable witnesses of Christ Catal. testium verit Tom. 2. p. 79. before Luther was borne that the Pope of Rome was Antichrist Now let us consider the wisdome that is in the number of the Beast of which John cryes out Here is wisdome From the number laid down 666. he closely bids us to search our al the other mysteries for here we have the name of the Beast Latinos Romanus This name both the Greek and Hebrew number doth declare By the name also we have the Character for all that will buy and sell must professe the Latine service or Romane faith and be
will recall a man from his carnall security to the feare of God and working of righteousnesse except he have a heart of steele for as much as in the day of Gods judgement a most exact account of what hath been done in the flesh must be given by all the greatest Kings and Potentates not excepted When without any respect of persons they that have done well shall possesse life eternall They that have done ill shall be cast into everlasting fire The Angell therefore could not use a more forcible reason to deterre men from the contempt of God and his word To this purpose is that in Sirach Chap. 7.40 In all things that thou sayest or doest remember thy end and thou shalt not sin Now if any aske how this prophesie is true and accomplished seeing it is so long since John said 2 Pet. 3.9 Gods judgement was at hand Let him heare Peter answering the mockers of his time The Lord is not slacke concerning his promise as some count slacknesse but is long suffering towards us not willing that any should perish but that all should come unto repentance The Angell saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is come for shall certainly come by an usuall Enallage of the preterperfect tense instead of the future so a little after is fallen for shall certainely fal noting the immutability of the events decreed by God so formerly he often said he will come shortly that is sooner then we are aware of that the deepe fleepe of security might be driven out of us and lest with the wicked servant we should say Luke 12.45 My Lord deferreth his comming But rather let us consider seeing the Apostles did presage the day of judgement to be then at hand how much nearer is it now unto us after so many ages And worship him that made In the third member he recalls the world from popish idolatry unto the service of the true God alone whom he notes by a periphrasis from the worke of the creation of heaven and earth the sea and fountaines of waters The Old version ads and of all things that are in them which words are not in the Greeke but seem to be taken out of Psa 146.9 unto which place the spirit here alludeth The fountaines of waters are reckoned up among the chiefe works of God because the continuance of the fountaines is indeed a very wonderfull worke of the Lord concerning which Phylosophers have much disputed with great admiration Psal 104.10 114 8. And it is also celebrated in the Psalmes He sendeth the springs into the valleyes which run among the hills Which turneth the rock into a standing water the flint into a fountaine of waters Furthermore that religious worship is onely due to God both the Scripture and nature it selfe teacheth For God alone is omnipotent knowes all things and is present in all places He is able to heare and helpe all that call upon him wheresoever they be He alone is the Author of nature governour and Lord of the world wherefore all ought to depend upon him onely in him alone we must beleeve and put our considence Ier. 17.5 But cursed be the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme Hence faith and prayer are in Scripture coupled by an individuall tye as the cause and effect Rom. 10.14 Mat. 4.10 How shall they call on him in whom they have not beleeved Therefore it is an expresse commandement Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Now howsoever this be an undeniable and manifest truth yet the world forsaking the Lord followed and wondred after the Beast all I say both great and small bond and free worshipped the Beasts image kissed his feet and attributed divine honour unto him as though he were God on earth And this the worshippers of the Pope doe not denie according to that of the Poet before mentioned Ense potens gemino cujus vestigia adorant Caesar aurato vestiti murice Reges Nay all have not the priviledge to worship before the Beast and kisse his feet this onely is permitted to Kings and Emperours Others must be content devoutly to worship his image and call upon the Saints that are canonized by the Beast and adore his Crosses Crucifixes Altars set up by him in temples groves and highwaies c. From this beastly worship of idols the Angel here dehorteth the world as calling them to the worship of the true God Neither will he any whit esteeme their vaine pretenses That the Pope is not worshipped as God but as Gods and Christs Vicar for they falsely affirme him to be that which he is not That they call not on the Saints with a worship of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for this is a false distinction the religious worship both of Latreia and Douleia being in Scripture onely attributed to God and signifie both one thing That they worship not graven images but God in them this also is false for Images are no gods neither will God be worshipped in or by them Thou shalt not doe so unto the Lord thy God Deut. 12.31 Thus far of the everlasting Gospel published by the first Angel or reformer of Popery The summe of which is in these three things I. That God is to be feared and Antichristianisme to be repented of II. That glory is to be ascribed to God by beleeving in his sonne III. That God is to be worshipped by fleeing the Image of the Beast and performing obedience to God 8 And another Angel followed because the former Angell although he cryed with a great voice did little profit unto the inhabitants of the earth who were drowned with the wine of Babylonish whoredome for after Wickleffe Husse and Jerome of Prague were burnt the Papacy remained stil in its vigour furie Therefore another Angell followed who more forcibly assailing Antichrist weakened his kingdome in many Provinces And here againe by an Enallage One Angell is put for Angels for there shall be divers succeeding each other in divers places But One shall excell and continue the ministery of the former Angell who was a while interrupted Now this Angel if we looke into histories who can he be save Luther This second Angell is Luther who followed 130. yeeres after Wickleffe and 100. after Husse and Jerome he first began in Saxony by word and writing to thunder against the Popes Pardons publikely put to sale soon after against the whole Papacy anno 1517. To him was joyned Philip Melanchton as a most faithfull assistant and soone after many other excellent men who by little and little restored the everlasting Gospell in divers parts of Germany and expelled Popery About the same time Zwinglius and Oecolampadius began together to oppose Popery and 〈…〉 Gospell in Helvetia But let us heare what this Angell publisheth Babylon is fallen is fallen He threatens ruine to Babylon for her wicked fornication by which
wicked common-wealth of old Rome Now the truth is nothing can be more vainely spoken And I wonder that the Iesuite when he wrote these things had not considered that he himselfe lived in Spaine where the ancient Moores formerly inhabited IV. He addes from Chap. 16.19 That Great Babylon came in remembrance before God 18.5 Babylons sins have reached unto heaven and God hath remembred her iniquities Therefore saith he towards the end of the world her old sins which hitherto for religion sake seemed to be forgotten shall againe be remembred and punished because of the new and like transgressions added to the former But first not onely things done long agoe are said to come in remembrance before God but also such things as are newly done by an Anthropopatheia for so in Act. 10. The prayers and almes of Cornelius which he daily performed are said to come up for a memoriall before God Secondly albeit his glosse were granted yet there were no need that new Rome should be punished for the sinnes of the old for as much as Popish Rome for these thousand years and more hath abounded in all manner of villanies for which the Lord most justly may take vengeance on her Lastly he flees unto the Oracles of the Sybills But they speak nothing touching the Popes ejection or apostacy of the Romanes from the faith of Christ unto Heathenisme but only touching the destruction of Rome therein agreeing with the prophesie of this booke By all which things it appeareth that whatsoever the Iesuite alledgeth for the upholding of the credit of the Pope it is nothing but a frivolous dotage of a dreaming writer The summe of the place is this That Babylon here threatned with destruction is Rome not of the Pagans which ceased in Constantines time Nor new heathenish Rome the which as the Iesuite feineth shall thrust out the Pope But Popish Rome which a long while hath boasted her selfe to be the Mother of Churches and from whose breasts all the nations and kings of the earth have sucked their errours superstition and idolatry Thus our insoluble argument is no way weakned by the Iesuite but stands firme against the Romish Antichrist But now when we speak of Rome we understand not simply the walled city or palaces towers and stately walkes thereof but chiefly the Pope himselfe with his whole kingdom and power over the Westerne Churches of which afterward in Chap. 17.18 Now why is Rome named Babylon Why Rome is called Babylon lib. 2. cap. 3. hist The cause may be the likenesse that is between them of which OROSIUS Behold saith he the rising of Babylon and Rome is alike their power is alike their greatnesse times good things and also evill But I rather thinke the reason is their likenesse in tyrannny and destruction The old Babylon afflicted the ancient Church Rome the new Babylon hath oppressed the new Church The Old is fallen The New shall fall Babylon is fallen is fallen The doubling of the threatning denotes the certainty and hastning of the destruction Therefore also it is said in the preterperfect tense hath that is is fallen because it shall certainely and suddenly fall like as we say of a dying man that he is dead or the like Neither did the Angell prophesie vainely For even during the preaching of this Angell while Luther I say yet taught a great part of Babylon fell both in Saxony Germany and other neighbouring Countries But touching the destruction of Babylon it followes in Chap. 18. Alcasar againe by his consequence is forced to make blacke white applying the ruine of Babylon to the conversion of heathenish Rome to the faith of Christ making the sence of the words Babylon is fallen is fallen that is is converted to Christ Now who ever heard so great an absurdity The whole context and consent of all interpreters evinceth that the ruine of Babylon signifies not mercy but punishment And therefore so impudent a depravation of holy Scripture is to be rebuked Because she made all nations drinke This reason evidently refutes Alcasars absurdity The cause of Babylons destruction shall be her fornication by which she hath most foully defiled her selfe with the Kings and Inhabitants of the earth for she is the Mother of all whoredomes This fornication as before was shewed is idolatry by a propheticall and metaphorical phrase for idolaters like harlots do by spirituall uncleannes perfidiously violate their faith to God prostrate themselves before their Idols and run headlong into utter destruction as we have largely expounded in our Commentary on Hosea Chap. 1.2 Of the wine of her fornication For the Pope obtrudes his idols on all nations who therefore are said to drinke of the wine of his wrath because idolatry through the corruptnesse of mans nature is more pleasing to all then the true worship of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a figure when with a little change of a word the sence is wholly altered In the Greeke is an elegant * parenomasia in the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For as Antichrist gave all to drinke of the wine of his fornication so shall all drinke of the wine of Gods wrath because they suffered themselves universally to be drawne aside to the worship of Idols by the pretended authority of the Catholick Church Idolatry is compared to wine because by its sweetnesse and outward lustre it is pleasing unto the flesh and much desired Also from the effect for it makes idolaters madde furious and blinde like as wine takes away the sence of a drunkard The wine of wrath so named from the effect because it stirres up Gods wrath and drawes downe his judgements As also from the efficient cause because God in his anger doth justly inflict blindnesse on the worshippers of Antichrist according to that of Paul 2 Thes 2.11 For this cause God shall send them strong delusion that they should beleeve a lie that they might be damned who received not the truth It might seem the words here should thus be read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the wine of her fornication as in Chap. 17.2 The inhabitants of the earth are said to have been made drunke with the wine of her fornication c. because the wine of fornication is opposed to the wine of Gods wrath vers 10. The same shall drinke of the wine of the wrath of God But all copies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the wine of the wrath c. Not here onely but also in Chap. 16.19 18.23 The use of this preaching The use of this Angels preaching doth plainely respect both the godly and the wicked The godly are exhorted to the duty before published by the former Angell To feare God and not the Beast To give glory to God not to Antichrist And lastly to worship God the Creator of heaven and earth not the Beast or his Image Also in Chap. 18.4 he admonisheth all such as desire to be free of Babylons
Spirits Ribera understands them to be Three Devills whom they call familiar spirits such as Magicians send forth at their pleasure But they shall be men properly because they go speake and have to do with Kings in a civill way all which little suites with Devills Notwithstanding they are said to be spirits because by profession they shal be Spirituall Fathers And Three because there shall be many of them sufficient for to performe what they shall undertake for a threefold number denotes perfection as before in Chap. 11. the two witnesses were indefinitely put for a few yet sufficient for the Testimony of the truth Yet here it seemes they are said to be three rather then seven which number the Scripture more frequently useth because they shall be the choisest and subtlest out of the flockes of Locusts who ordinarily are not very many Notwithstanding they shall be of the true kind of the Locusts however they differ in forme and office Impure Spirits Not onely being of an impure originall but nature and manners also labouring to staine both divine and humane things even as the Locusts who came out of the filthy bottomlesse pit did defile all things with their venemous mouths and tailes Like to Frogs They shall not be Frogs nor in the forme of Frogs for so they should be unfit messengers to be sent to Kings but like to Frogs in filthinesse impudencie and loquacitie because like as Frogs with their continuall croaking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are most irkesome to our eares Aristoph in Ranis so these Emissaries of Antichrist living a most impure life within their Covents and being taught much to bable do fill the eares of Kings with their cries untill they induce them unto their holy Warre Neither are they much unlike to the Locusts for Locusts skip like Frogs besides they resemble the foure square heads of Frogs by their geometricall hoods 14. For they are the Spirits of Devills He further describes them by their nature and craft they are instructed in the Schoole not of the holy Ghost but of the evill one and therefore they shall have the nature and disposition of their master yet will some of them make a fairer shew and thereby prove more hurtfull and are the more carefully to be avoided Working miracles They shall gaine credit to their Ambassage not so much by words as by signes and miracles and thereby allure and deceive the Kings of the earth But by what signes and whose by lies and the efficacie of Satan from whom they originally proceed for the wonders they worke are delusions of Satan which are spoken of in 2. Thessa 2.9 Rev. 13.14 19.20 Which go forth unto the Kings of the earth Thirdly he declares their office they shall leave the function of teaching unto others of their order and shall be imployed in Warlike Messages Here Ribera erreth in thinking that these Kings are the same unto whom the way was prepared by the drying up of Euphrates for they were Kings of the East spoiling the beast But these are the Kings of the earth and of the whole world The former were against These shall be for Antichrist The Kings of the earth Thus he calleth as before the sworne Vassalls of the Beast and therefore they are said to be of the earth however by profession they would seeme to be Christians And of the whole world That is all Forraigne Kings whatsoever for at last the beast will labour to have the friendship and assistance of them all For in regard he shall see that they of his owne profession are more remisse and negligent then he would have them therefore by Ambassages he will stirre up Forraigne Princes and by all meanes labour to draw them on his side Now if thou demaund who these Legates are I answer Who these three spirits are that are sent forth howsoever undoubtedly they shall manifest themselves so much the more by how much Antichrists fighting against God shall appeare and the nearer we come to the day of Iudgement yet it seems not to be obscure in the least both by history and experience For it is plaine that the chiefe of these Messengers are the Legates a latere who are sent with full power unto the Kings of the earth to negociate for Babylon next to them are the Bishops who order and direct the affaires of the Court In the next place are the Monkes and Iesuites who insinuate themselves into the clossets of women dive into counsells and are Architects of dissention These as their own Epistles witnesse are daily sent as Legates to the kings of India America and Africa to bring them into the fellowship of this warre that is a preparing And now of late if I be not deceived they have made the king of Persia bounden to the Sea of Rome And indeed without the religious interposition of these men scarse any counsells of peace or warre can be handled in Court as experience teacheth Moreover this Type doth very fitly agree to Frogs They are Spirits viz. spirituall fathers but uncleane like Frogs Because saith my Anonymus they remain in the mire of riches prating and tatling against the truth of the Gospell Spirits of devills because saith the same Authour they are inspired by the Devill onely so to doe Working miracles or doing signes that is making shew of outward holinesse though in truth they be the greatest hypocrites having their affections set on the earth and wordly Pompe and therefore howsoever they be the truest Proctours of Antichrist yet being outwardly cloaked with so many signes of Sanctitie they captivate as it were all men so that they are esteemed of them more holy then the rest of men These things Anonymus but we are further to consider that by prodigious and false miracles they shall gaine credit to their Ambassage viz. such by which the beast himselfe is said to seduce the Inhabitants of the earth Chap. 13.14 Now it is notorious that there are none at this day in the world who arrogate to themselves the glory of working signes and miracles but the Popes Emissaries Thus we see who the Legates are and to whom they go forth To gather them to the Battell They will not professe to make warre against God for then they should never induce any but mad men unto it but pretend that it is a warre undertaken for Gods glory and against hereticks for the safetie of the Catholicke Church although in very deed it shall be against the God of Heaven they shall I say prepare a great Dyet to cut off at last all the heririckes in one battell and at once restore the affaires of the Romish Sea But O great folly for it shall not be the day of Hereticks but of God Namely Of God Almighty Whereby the faithfull should be stird up to consider the wonderfull judgements of God The Frogs indeed shall gather the Kings of the earth to Warre thereby to root out the Gospell of Almighty God
committed fornication with the whore Vntill the words of God that is his decree touching the rising of Antichrist revealed in the words of the Prophets and Apostles be fulfilled After the fullfilling whereof God put into their hearts to hate the Romish Strumpet that is detest Popish Idolatry embrace the Gospell of Christ forsake yea and oppose the Whore Why therefore should we wonder that so many great Emperours so many religious Kings of Germany France Spaine England c. have with such zeale defended Popish Idolatry the Romish Church and Antichrist the Pope almost these 800. years in defence of whose magnificence and glory they have made so great wars and shed so much Christian blood We hear that God did put it into their hearts that they should do so and not otherwise so that the Angell wills us to rise from the events and secondary means unto the secret yet just judgement of God Here againe we have cause greatly to admire that after so long fornication some of the Kings as of England Scotland Denmarke Sweethland Many powerfull Princes also of Germany Bohemia France Poland and Hungary having laid down their armes against the Lambe and embraced the heavenly Doctrine of salvation brought to light by the Two Witnesses in the ages of our predecessours do at this day hate the Romish Adultresse and make her naked We have cause I say to admire the Fact and extoll Gods judgement to Heaven Certainly the Kings did not repent either rashly or by their own understanding God put it into their hearts that they should repent of their whoredome hate the whore and make her desolate The LORD is to be intreated that he will put the same into the hearts of the rest of the KINGS that is to take knowledge shun and hate the Whore and to give their power no longer unto the Beast but unto the Lambe Some Textuall scruples do here offer themselves which I shall explain after I have opened what yet remains in the Text. 18 The woman which thou sawest is the City The Angell openeth the whole mysterie of the whore This woman is popish Rome see chap. 11.8 14.8 16.19 that we might not think the woman sitting upon the waters to be an Asian or Vtopian Nymph It is saith he that great City before he often calls it Babylon Now he sets it forth by a more remarkeable note Having dominion over the Kings of the Earth Now what is this Is it the whole multitude of ungodly men in the world as some of the fathers wanting the experience which we have now have thought Nay it is Rome yea Popish Rome For the Writers saith Ribera In cha 17 sec 20.22 who have otherwise interpreted it are forced by the truth it selfe to yeeld unto us that Rome is that whorish City to be destroyed and overthrowne Again The foregoing words God put it into their hearts belong to the desolation and burning of Rome for they shew the cause of so great desolation effected by them who rather were thought should have proved friends With this sense which is certainly true c. Thus we have the interpretation of one sworn Iesuite Let us hear another Lib. de P. R. cap. 2 Babylon saith BELLARMIN that great City standing on Seven Mountaines and having dominion over the Kings of the Earth is ROME Neither was there any other City which in Johns time had dominion over the Kings of the Earth then ROME and it is most notorious that ROME is built upon seven Mountaines Let us hear a third Vest pag. 817 This Verse saith ALCASAR causeth no small difficulty to them who expound it otherwise then of ANGIENT ROME But in our exposition nothing is more cleare What can we desire more The great City is Rome both because the same is built upon seven Mountaines As also because it onely in Iohns time had dominion over the Kings of the Earth But now perhaps it hath not yea but it hath For whatsoever it possesseth not by force Quicquid non possidet armis Relligione tenet it holds by Religion Wherefore the two latter Iesuites do in vain seek an evasion that not Popish but Heathenish Rome is this City for they are confuted by Ribera their own companion ingeniously confessing that Heathenish Rome long agoe burnt to ashes by the Gothes and Vandalls hath no place here but that it is Popish Rome that now is yet notwithstanding he saith that it is to be burnt before Antichrists comming which latter refutes the former It remains therefore that the whore sitting on the Beast is Papast Rome O Rome hearken to Clemanges De corrup Eccle statu Cap 26 What saith he dost thou thinke of thy Prophesie to wit of John in the Revelation Dost thou not beleeve that it belongs at least in some measure unto thee Thou hast not so lost shame and sense to deny these things Wherefore looke on it and read the damnation of the great whore sitting upon many Waters and there contemplate thy worthy actions and what shall befall thee Again therefore we gather this argument Babylon that Great City standing on seven Mountaines is the Seat of Antichrist Popish Rome is Babylon that Great City standing on seven hills Therefore Popish Rome is the Seat of Antichrist Furthermore He which ruleth in the Seat of Antichrist is Antichrist The Pope of Rome ruleth in Antichrists Seat Therefore the Pope of Rome is ANTICHRIST There remains three scruples to be discussed from ver 17. I. How God puts into the hearts of Kings that is worketh in the hearts of men without impeachment of their liberty II. Seeing God is said to put three things into the hearts of the Kings One in its owne nature good viz. The hatred of the Whore Two things in themselves evill viz. Their agreement with the Beast and fight with the Lambe Whither he puts this after the same manner into their hearts and whither it will not hence follow that hee is the Authour of sinne III. In granting which thing some maintaine that these Kings were not converted how then are they said in spoiling of the whore to doe the will of God seeing they were ignorant of it Neither spoiled they her so much out of affection to piety as of desire to the prey Now first how God workes in the hearts of men the liberty of their will remaining Of this Question both in the Hypothesis and in the Thesis the explication is the same being not a little difficult For if God workes in the hearts of men he seemeth to determinate or limit their wills to one thing Now if God limit the wil then man seems not to act freely seeing that is said to be free which is unlimited in respect of a thing Furthermore God seems to move and bend the wills of men according to his own will or pleasure But that which is moved and bent by anothers will seems not to act freely Now the Scripture on the
silence their blasphemous mouthes by confessing that the Lord in punishing of them is not tyrannicall in the least but a most righteous Iudge For it is just to give every one his own but in order of justice punishment for wickednesse is due to the ungodly When therefore God punisheth them his judgements are righteous And true that is certainely to be accomplished for though God doth a long while delay the punishments threatned against the wicked yet at length he truly executes the same So Psal 9 v. 9. Jehovah judgeth the world in righteousnesse he ministers judgement to the people in uprightnesse For he hath judged the great whore Specially they celebrate two examples of Gods righteousnesse as it were the neerest matter of their joy the condemnation of the great whore and the vindicating of the servants of God Both being manifestly worthy to be celebrated For that Great whore hath corrupted the earth by her fornication Now what is more agreeable to justice then that such a pest which hath defiled the inhabitants of the earth with her most filthy whoredome should be adjudged unto eternall damnation Moreover with her hand that is tyranically with fire and sword she hath oppressed killed the servants of God Now it is a righteous thing to avenge the innocent blood and such as are uniustly oppressed But God hath avenged the blood of his servants on the whore by rendring unto her such like punishments as she had before exercised For the destruction of the adversaries is the vindicating of the Saints Furthermore who this great whore is what her whoredoms what earth and how she hath corrupted the same need not on this place to be repeated Let us learne to acknowledge and celebrate Gods righteous judgements in destroying the adversaries And continuallie labour to walk with fear and trembling intreating the Lord that the like judgements fal not upon us 3. And again they said They conclude the thankesgiving by repeating the exhortation of Halleluiah to testifie the greatnesse of their joy They adde further And her smoake AND hath here an adversative sense as if he had said Yee praise God But the whore shall burne for ever and Ever Ribera interpreteth the smoake more coldly of the remembrance of the burning which saith he is alwaies to remaine and shall never be forgotten But they amplifie Gods judgement on the whore because the smoake of her burning and torment shall have no end but remaine for ever from Chap. 14. v. 11. And the smoak of their torment shall ascend up for ever and Ever signifying the everlasting torments that attend Antichrist and his followers in hell fire If perhaps the miserable Romanists by feare thereof might bee deterred from their Idolatrie Rose up for ever The present flame of her burning which they shall see with their eyes yeelds matter of joy Now the smoake ascendeth up Therefore Babylons condition is altogether deplorable 4 And the foure and twentie Elders The former Chore desisting another comes in singing that so God might be praised with a most sacred Symphonie of all the heavenly dwellers This was the company of Elders and Beasts often before mentioned Chap. 4.14 and Chap. 5.8 and Chap. 7. 11. and 11. 16. Here they serve as it were for a heavenly senate reverend in gravitie and majesty unto the former promiscuous multitude of the heavenly inhabitants whose joy and celebration of Gods judgements they approue of by their most grave acclamation closing up and as it were sealing the same in two words Amen Halleluiah as if they should say It is so as ye have before sung salvation and glory is truely due to our God His judgements are truely righteous Iust indeed is the condemnation of the whore and the vindicating of the innocent blood of the saints for Amen with the Hebrews is a particle confirming the truth and signifies Truely certainly God therefore is to be truely celebrated with praises Now who these Elders and Beasts are hath been largely declared on Chap. 4. and Chap. 5. The Elders represented the Company or Chore of Patriarchs and Prophets The Beasts the Apostles although as hath bin before shewed these may also be understood of the stationary Angels before the throne of God Whoever they bee certaine it is they are a more honourable company of the Church triumphant what the adoration of the heavenly inhabitants is For the Elders weare golden crownes on their heads and are clothed in white raiment holding harpes and golden vials in their hands c. And they sit upon foure and twenty thrones being as it were honorable administrators of the judgements and counsels of God But for reverence sake in this solemne assemblie they fall downe from their thrones on their faces before the feete of the divine Majesty casting off undoubtedly their crowns also as before Chap. 4.10 and religiously worship and adore God togither with the Beasts This adoration was an admiration of the powers of God a celebration of his judgments and workes a ready publishing of his mercies and lastly a testimony of their religious subjection In which they afford us an example of religious worship and thankesgiving For if the Saintes in heaven who are come to their journeyes end praise God incessantly how much more ought wee poore traveillers to worship the Lord without intermission Neither doe they adore one another but God sitting on the throne And therefore such as direct their worship unto others shall never come to this Chore of which thing the Angell will by and by instruct us 5 And a voyce came out of the throne Both companies had finished their Halleluiah notwithstanding the song of praises was not as yet ended Therefore another Chore is invited unto a new gratulation by another voyce A new voice out of the throne not of God sitting on the throne as before Chap. 14.13 A voyce from heaven and Chap. 16.17 A voyce out of the Temple The author of this voyce is not shewed being uncertaine yet we may easily gather that it was divine because it proceeds out of the throne yet not of God sitting but of the Lambe standing on the throne because he saith Praise our God Now Christ acknowledged God to be his and ours because he is the Lamb and Mediatour as if he should say The prayses of God touching his righteous judgements are not yet ended There remaine other works and benefits farre exceeding these judgements to be celebrated What these are the following Hymne shall teach us Now whom doth he invite All ye his servants The servants of God are all that are and shall be saved both Angels men For also the good Angels are preserved by grace in their integrity hence throughout the Scripturs they are named the servants of God as being spirits most ready to execute the ministries of God But as for men they are Gods servants both such who continually serve him with praises in heaven viz the saints triumphing with Christ as also who yet
to the Saints through the presence of the Lord. But more shal be said of this opinion in ver 5.6 These things therefore shall suffice touching the Termes of the thousand yeers It followeth III. What was the condition of the godly first on earth afterward in heaven in these thousand yeers The Explication of this Question is contained in Verses 4.5.6 which now we come to Treat of 4. And I saw Thrones Beza Then I saw but it is better copulatively And I saw for also I saw least these things should be thought to be done after Satans binding a thousand yeers For Iohn saw both Satan bound in the bottomlesse pit and thrones set in Heaven all at one time Augustin doth very well joyne these things to the former and observeth the scope although he vary in the explication of the Thrones When saith he he had said that the devill was to be bound a thousand yeers and afterward to be loosed a little season by and by by recapitulating what in these thousand yeers the Church did or was done in her And I saw saith hee Seats and them that sate upon them and judgement was given unto them we may not thinke this to be spoken of the last Judgement Thus far he saith well but he addeth But Seats or Thrones of the Officers by whom the Church is now governed In this he strayeth from the Scope for Iohn intended to speake not of the Hierarchy of the Church but of the lot of the godly what that was in the meane while both corporally on Earth and spiritually in Heaven And indeed as for the corporall condition of such as among the Gentiles had received the Faith he saw the same troublesome and bloody for he saith they were beheaded for the witnesse of Jesus that is both by Heathenish Tyrants and Hereticks in the first six hundred yeers of the thousand Secondly they were slain by the Beast because they would not worship him and his Image nor receive his Character This was the lot of the Godly upon Earth representing the first Act of this Vision But their spirituall condition he saw to be joyfull and royall because these slaine or beheaded however in the eyes of the ungodly thought to be miserable and that they perished yet sate on thrones lived and reigned with Christ those thousand yeers This was the lot of the Martyrs in Heaven exhibiting the second Act of this Vision If this sense and meaning of the fourth verse be well observed there will be little obscurity in the place otherwise most obscure For hence it appeareth as I said in the Preface that in this Verse is briefly contained the first Act of this Vision touching the calamities of the Church under the Romane Tyrants Hereticks and Antichrist beginning to rage as also the second Act touching the consolations of the Godly who in those thousand yeers shed their blood for the witnesse of the truth Iohn therefore expounded what he saw 1. Thrones 2. them that sate thereon 3. their state and condition I saw thrones Thrones or Seats are placed either for rest for judgement or the Kingdome Before in Chap. 4.4 he saw foure and twenty Thrones and so many Elders sitting on them that is resting from their labours as also adorned with judiciary and royall Dignity These thrones may bee understood as placed for all the said ends but properly for the Kingdome as is shewed in the end of the Verse And they sate upon them Kathizein is properly transitive to place or cause to sit Thuryd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 placing his Army Often also neutrally to sit Because an action may passe into the Actor himselfe or a man may place himselfe which is to sit This transition is expressed in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he placed himself in Hithpael that is sate down So the transitive signification remaineth whether it be rendred they sate or placed themselves upon them Iohn therefore saw thrones not empty but having Sitters on them But who were they by and by he names them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The soules of the slaine with the sword but first he shewes what honour was done unto them And judgement was given unto them This Judgement some understand actively of power given to judge the Adversaries Others passively of the judgement spoken unto them against the Adversaries But nothing of such a judgement doth appeare in the Text And Augustine in the fore-alleadged place hath rightly observed that here is not yet treated of the last Iudgement which shall at length bee described in the end of the Chapter I therefore take this Iudgement to bee the royall Dignity given unto them as in Psal 72.1 O God give thy Iudgements to the King because by and by it is referred to the Kingdome And they reigned with CHRIST And the soules Now he nameth those that he saw sitting on the Thrones the soules of them that were beheaded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And is referred to the Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I saw and declaratively to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sate as if he should say I saw soules sitting on the thrones as Brightman and Tossanus have well observed Now he makes two rankes of such as sate Martyrs and Confessours The Periphrasis of the Martyrs is the soules of them that were beheaded that is put to death any kind of way These again he destinguisheth by the times from the distinct cause of their Martyrdom for some were slaine for the witnesse of JESVS others for the Word of GOD. The witnesse of Iesus He meaneth the Gospell of Christ as in Chap. 19.10 for the cause whereof the Gentiles that were converted to the Faith seeing they professed and testified the same with great zeale were troubled and murthered by divers kinds of torments throughout the whole Romane Empire by cruell Tyrants in the first three hundred yeers Now he seeth the soules of these sitting upon Thrones not indeed on Earth but in Heaven neither as yet restored to their bodies as the Chiliasts would have it but without them otherwise he would not have said I saw the soules of them that were beheaded but rather I saw them that were beheaded the which Augustine in the said place hath rightly observed How Iohn could see the soules which are invisible neither are we to enquire how he saw these soules being invisible spirits for he saw them by the Spirit of his minde not with his bodily eyes Now these soules to adde this in a word for the greatest part are the same which Iohn saw under the Altar in the second Vision at the opening of the fift Seale who requiring avengement of their blood had white robes given them and were bid to rest untill c. Here therefore he seeth the same sitting or resting on Thrones Touching the other ranke of Martyrs he saith And for the word of God It is no Tautologie for the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is added to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That word
Notwithstanding all of them in some kinde resemble the violet Neither is the Amethyst much unlike the Iacinct as Plinie noteth The difference is this that the brightnesse of the Amethyst Lib. 37. c. 9 is mixt in the Iacinct It seems to take its name from the vertue thereof for Aristotle writeth that the Amethyst beeing laid to the navel first drawes the vapour of the wine to its selfe then dispels the same and so preserves him that weares it from drunkennesse Whence this Pearle is a Conservative of temperance being derived from the Privative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be drunk They ascribe it to Mathew the last Apostle They who desire to know more about these stones may consult with Artists and Naturalists as Plinie Isodore and in speciall Franciscus Rueus his Book touching pretious stones whence I have briefly taken most of these things It is enough for us to observe that by so many pretious stones then which nothing in the world is accounted more pretious is signified the excellency and firmnesse of the foundation of Salvation 1. Cor. 3.11 the which indeed is and for ever shal be but one onely viz. CHRIST IESVS But set forth under the names of the twelve Apostles because all of them laid the same fully by their preaching all of them I say adorning it by their excellent Faith admirable Charity unwearied Diligence unconquerable Constancy and at last gloriously confirmed the same with their blood laying downe their Lives for the Gospels sake 21. Ioh. 10.2.9 14.6 And the twelve gates Christ is the onely gate of Salvation who saith I am the doore by me if any man enter in he shall finde pasture I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth unto the Father but by mee Notwithstanding here are twelve gates according to the number of the twelve Tribes of Israel as in ver 12. or according to the number of the twelve Disciples of Christ as it seems to Andreas because by their ministerie we come to know the dore and way of Salvation so that they may not unfitly bee called by a Metonymia the twelve gates for the twelve Keepers of the Gates The worth of the gates is set forth by the excellency of the matter For all of them are of most pretious pearles The difference of gemms and pearles Gemmes and Pearles do differ For Gemmes are little pretious stones of divers colours growing in the earth and are reckoned among Metals called by the Germanes EDELGESTEIN Pearles also are little pretious stones white in splendor but growing in shelles They are sometimes called in Latine Vniones because two together are never found in one shell Lib. 9. c. 35 according to Plinie They seeme to signifie that the Teachers of Righteousnesse who have shewed the use of the Gates to bring many to Christ shall shine like unto glorious Pearles in the Heavenly Ierusalem Notwithstanding all these pearles shall receive their brightnesse and excellency from that one most pretious Pearle Mat. 13.48 which is Christ Iesus And the street of the Citie was pure Gold Hitherto of the externall structure and ornament of the Citie Now hee also will shew us the inward beauty thereof The street Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which denotes the publick wayes of the City BEZA renders it Market-place called in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a spacious place of the Citie commodios for publicke meetings and driving of trade His reason is because in Chap. 22.2 In mid'st of the street seems to be put for In the Market-place And because it is said in the singular Street whereas usually there are many streets in a Citie and but one Market-place The sense is the same for all the streets do lead to the Market The streets and Market-places of a Citie are faire if paved with flint tyles and smooth stones and yet by reason of continuall use they can never be free from durt But the street of this Citie is much more curious It is all gold and that most purely purged of all drosse cleare as glasse like unto the whole Citie ver 18. Now who should dare with defiled feet to tread upon a golden Pavement and a golden Street Therefore here is signified the inward cleannesse and unutterable brightnesse of the Citie together with the most pure and sweet habitation and conversation of the Caelestiall Citizens The Market or rather Court may also metonymically be taken for a civill Common wealth This is wholly of gold Therfore golden righteousnes shal have place among the Citizens But the gates of the new City in this life that is of the Church-Militant are not yet pure gold but carry much durt by which the feet of such as walke thereon are defiled and have need of continuall washing Also the Market or Court is not all gold but as yet subject to many strifes injuries and troubles So that this Golden-Citie cannot bee applied unto the Church-Militant 22 And I saw noe Temple in the same Two things are the principle Ornaments of a Citie The Court and Temple In the former judgement is administred In the Temple religious worship is performed The first he saith is of pure gold for in the new Heaven and in the new Earth shall dwell righteousnesse not in civill contracts or distribution of civill goods which then shall cease but because in the most sweet converse of the Saints unrighteousnesse shall have no place He saith not that he saw a Temple of gold in the Citie for had hee so said it had bin no great matter seeing Solomons Temple did glister with pure gold within by which splendor the magnificence of Christs spirituall Kingdome was figured out Therefore he saith I saw no temple therein whereby hee distinguisheth this Heavenly Citie from the Earthly Ierusalem in which there was a glorious Temple dedicated to Gods worship But in the Coelestiall Ierusalem Iohn saw no temple for here is no need of a place for Church gatherings preaching of the word administration of Sacraments Rites and outward excercises of Religion God is externally worshipped only in this life Ier. 31.34 because the Ecclesiasticall Ministerie shall be no more neither shall God be served with externall worship the which in this life he requires of us to the end he may be honoured of us and our weaknesse and piety sustained by these outward helps for then all rule authoritie and power both Ecclesiasticall and Politicall shall be abolished 1 Cor. 15.24 Then shall the Oracle of Jeremy be fullfilled And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for we shall all from the least unto the greatest bee fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God And therefore no use of a temple For the Lord God Least it should bee thought that this Citie should want so necessary an Ornament for what Citie can bee perfect without a temple and Gods
downe and beleeved because therefore the Holy Scripture is the principle of Christian beleefe with Christians it needs no proof but beliefe Secondly that the scripture is divine and these words of the Angell true and faithfull is beleeved either by divine or humane Faith That it may be beleeved by humane Faith it can bee made out by probable yea forcing Arguments as from the majesty of the matter and style from the consent of this Prophesie with other Propheticall Scriptures But especially from the truth of the Oracles which we know for the most part are fulfilled touching the woman in travell and fleeing into the Wildernesse also of the Beast deceiving the world of false miracles of the great whore making drunke the Kings of the Earth with the cup of her spirituall fornication c. For this is Bellarmines Argument in the foresaid place If the praedictions of Scripture touching future things are true as the event hath proved why should not the testimonies of things present be true And indeed this his saying is alwayes to be retorted against Popish Sophisters demaunding us How we know that the Scriptures are true and divine But that any man should beleeve this with divine Faith cannot possiblie bee effected by outward arguments unlesse God by his spirit doth inwardly perswade the heart For divine Faith is not wrought by humane Arguments but wrought in the heart by the testimony and power of God Lastly by such kinde of cavelling all Authority both of God and man is made a mocke of and all Faith both of God and men is taken away For thus Adam Abraham Moses and the Prophets who heard God to speake might have excepted Who knowes whither it be the voyce of God Thus the Apostles might have shifted off the authority of Christ and Ecclesiasticall men the authority of the Apostles And why then I pray may not we much more the Authority of the Pope Touching humane authorities of Histories and Writers what more easie then to object whence knowest thou that Cicero Aristotle Plinie or Livie wrote these things or ever had a being in nature Thus no Faith should be safe but a meer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or uncertainty shall reigne in divine and humane matters which Satan labours to effect by these his Instruments But we go forward And the Lord God of the Holy Prophets Hee confirmes the truth of the Prophesie from God the Author thereof the faithfullnesse and truth of whose words cannot be questioned The Copulative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And hath the force of the causal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because He calleth Christ the Revealer of this Prophesie the Lord God of the Prophets as appeareth by the following words sent his Angell for this Christ did as in ver 16. I Jesus have sent my Angell See also Chap. 1.1 XLV Argument of Christs Deity This Argument of Christs Deity is beyond all exception the which Eniedinus the Samosatenian of whom mention hath often above bin made durst not meddle with For if Christ be the Lord God of the Holy Prophets then verily he is the same true and eternall Iehovah with the Father who by his spirit stirred up the ancient Prophets Moses David Isaias Jeremy c. by revealing his Oracles unto them therefore he was yea he was the God of all the Prophets of Moses and Author of the Law These things considered who can imagine that CERINTHUS should write this which he beleeved not but opposed with all his might The difference of the reading is also to be noted which notwithstanding lessens not but confirmes the Argument Andreas and the Kings Copie for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the Holy Prophets read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the spirits of the Prophets and so the Old Latine Version hath it that is who of old inspired the Prophets that is Propheticall Revelations The sense comes all to one For therefore he is called the Lord God of the Prophets because by his divine power he moved them to Prophesie His Angell That is Mee For they are the words of the same Angell who hitherto did exhibit by Christs commandement divers Visions unto John That hee might shew to his servants These things have been expounded in the Preface whence they are taken And that in speciall how at the giving of the Revelation such things could be said shortly to come to passe which yet are not altogether fulfilled after so many ages In a diverse respect he saith they should shortly be done I. In respect of eternity unto which all times are but a moment which is short II. In respect of the beginning for the Prophesie began soone after it was revealed and yet is a fulfilling III. In regard of the security of men unto whom all these things have happened and yet daily do quickly that is suddenly and unawares Now thus the Scripture speaketh of all future things that they shall shortly bee done Luk. 12.45 2. Pet. 3.4 to stirre us up to watchfulnesse and care least with the wicked servant we should say My Lord delayeth his comming or with mockers where is the promise of his comming And therefore it followeth 7. Behold I come quickly It is the voyce of Christ the Lord God of the Prophets By this acclamation hee approveth the words of the Angell that the things revealed must shortly be done as if he should say Indeed they shall shortly be done for I come suddenly or I will come to wit unto judgement as in ver 12. For all these things must be done before I come but I will come shortly Therefore they must shortly be done They are no Prophesies which shal not begin to be fulfilled til after many ages even now they begin Therfore now even now there is need of comfort 1. Thes 5.3 or as before shortly that is sooner then men imagine For when they shall say peace and safety then sudden destruction shall come upon them This variation of persons belongs to the forme of dramaticall representations in which divers persons use to be brought in speaking Blessed is he that keepeth He commends the Prophesie from its profitablenesse Now not onely they doe keep the sayings of the Prophesie which diligently search out the accomplishment of them but they much more who conforme their Faith and Life according to the same who worship not the Beast and his Image who detest the whoredoms of the whore flee out of Babylon and lastly who in faith adhere to God and the Lambe This Argument wee have more largely treated of in the Preface Chap. 1.3 whence it is taken Now let it suffice to note that blessednesse in vaine is promised unto the Keepers of the Revelation if it could in no measure bee kept But surely it is not promised in vaine and therefore the Visions of this Booke are not so intricate but that by diligent meditation and observation we may in some measure finde out the understanding of them 8. And I John John also speakes
VI. excommunicated Ludovick IV. 130. The Colour of the Beast and the woman is one 411. Purple colour proper to the Romane court ibid. Communion of the Saints in heaven with us on earth 122. Comfort of the faithfull under Antichrist 121. Of the Saints under the Altar 106. Of the professours and Martyrs 355. Conquerers are such as keep faith and a good conscience 52. Consent of Interpreters about the last judgement 358. Condition of the Godly under Antichrist 134. 135. Constant profession of the truth the cause of Johns banishment 17. The Constestation or protestation in the last chapter of the Revelation belongs to the whole body of the Scripture 596. Conversion of the Iewes described 67 conversion of the adversaries is the worke of grace ibid. Conversion of many unto the faith 245. Conversion why commanded and attributed to us 82. Council of constance caused wickleffe to be digged out of his graue and burnt 241. Condemned Iohn Husse and I●rome of Prague to the fire 226. 241. Former councils for the most part condemned by the latter 273. Corporal resurrections in scripture 518. Corrupters of the trueth shal be grievouslie punished 50. Court within to be cast forth 214. Coveteousnesse in bishops abominable the root of all evill 33. Crowne crowne of life 41. promised not of merit but grace 42. It signifies life and eternal glory 72. A greater degree shall be given to such as have converted many 71. Crownes of gold why worne by the saints 90. Crown of life and righteousnesse ibid. Proposed unto all the faithfull 250. The crowne of Christ 108. Crowns of gold an ensigne of royall majesty 360. How far the crown may be taken from the elect and how it can not be taken 72. Cubit common and royall of what greatnesse 562. Cup of Gods wrath 352. Cyprians excellent simile declaring the word of God to be the onely rule of faith 57. D. THe Darkning of the sun 127. Death compared in scripture to sleep 56. Christs death a full satisfactorie price for sin 103. Death of the martyrs is Christ victorie 108. The first death why so called 519. 557. Death of the soule 519. The second death eternall 528. The dead shall all rise together 518. 519. To die in Christ 355. Dead faith uncapable to obtaine spirituall riches 77. Demonstration against Alcasars dream 481. The Description and nature of Locusts 175. Description of the new Ierusalem whither it agree to the church militant 549. The Desert or wildernesse is Rome and the Papacie 408. Description of the beast 290. denoteing the old Romane Empire 291. 292. Description of the heavenly Ierusalem 560. c. Description of the last Iudgement 488. Description of Gods maiesty and glory on the throne 87. Determination whither repugnant to the will 446. Dignitie proceeds not alwayes from vertue 59. Difficultie about the thousands years 506. Difference of a gemme and a pearl 566. Dionysius Alexandrinus refuted 18. Distribution of the second vision 84. The Dragon Beast and false Prophet authours of the Ambassage of the unclean spirits 394. Drying up of Euphrates 390. diverse opinions about it 391. Dutie of the Church and her officers to notorious sectaries 44. E. EArth Sea trees what they signifie 139. Earth swallowing down the flood of the Dragon 279. Earth-quakes proper and figurative 126. 127. A great earth-quake at the opening of the sixt seal 244. an earth-quake shaking the papacie after the councill of constance 245. Easterne people girded up their long garments in travelling 24. Eberhardus Salisburgensis invectives against the Pope 318. Effect of the word of God 207. Of the Gospel in the latter times 370. Egyptian Idolatry darkenesse and bondage 234. 235. The Elder comforting Iohn 99. The Emerauld a most pleasant gemme 87. 565. The End of Gods punishment 50. The Eight king not like unto the other 429. 430. Eniedinus the Samosatenian refuted 17. 21. 26 27. 28. 39. 50. 51. 437. 587. Who shall Enter into the Caelestial city 571. Ephesus the head citie of Ionia 21. Epiphanius refutes the Alogians 47. Epiphanius corrected touching Iohn 19. The Eternall Gospell cannot be suppressed 339. the Eternall Gospell of the Monster Cyrillus 340. Events contingent in themselves how changed 4. Event of the Gogish war 536 c. The Evils accompaning this life shall be no more in the life to come 553. Euphrates a great river 187. The Eyes of IEHOVAH signifie Angels 90. The eyes of the Lamb his all seeing providence ●00 Eye-salve what it is ●9● Ezechiels Prophesie of the measuring of the Spirituall Temple 212. His and Iohns Prophesie of Gog and Magog 535. F. FAlse distinctions of worship 484. 485 The Fable of Enoch and Elias refuted 226. the Fable of Antichrists foure yeares reigne refuted 231. 240. Fable of Maries assumption 256. The False Prophet 394. He and the two horned Beasts are the same 495. Famine thirst and heat what they note by a Synecdoche 149. Famine of Samaria 114. Mysticall famine when proclaimed ibid. The Fathers why they termed not the Pope Antichrist 167. The Father how he judgeth no man 7. 8. The Feare and amazement of the Churches adversaries 244. The fearing of Antichrist hath troubled the whole world The First Vision not universall 361. 362. it belongs unto the last times ibid. Its scope and use of comfort ibid. Free-will not simply denied but in respect of spirituall good 68. Diverse interpretations of the same 444. 445. Figs signifie carnall Bishops 129. Figure of he city just four-square 562. Finall punishment of the wicked 131. Fine linnen how clothing both for the Bride and the Whore 482. how it is righteousnesse ibid. Fire proceeding out of the mouth of the witnesses 228. The fire on which the Angel had power 362. Fiery eyes signifie heroicall motions 24. Fire from heaven consuming Gog and Magog 539. First death 42. 519. Why so called ibid. First resurrection is not corporall but spirituall 518. It is opposed unto the first death 519. It s profitablenesse and necessitie 526. Objections about the same cleared 518. 520. First trumpet answereth to the first seale 158. What is meant by the hayle fire and blood that fell at the sounding thereof ibid. First viall chieflie poured out upon Germanie 380. Fight of the woman when it began and how long it dured 277. Floud of waters what it is 277. Foxe his opinion about it 278. Forme or shape of the beasts diverse and why 92. Forgetfullnesse and memory how said to be in God 460. Foundation of the Church how but one and twelve 561. 562. Fountaines what they denote in the Revelation 163. the fountaines of Waters are to be reckoned among the chief works of God 342. The fountain of true joy is in the Lord 480. The Four Beasts whither they type out the four Evangelists 91. They represent the Apostolicall Church 92. Why they are full of eyes ibid. The Four and twenty Elders are the first Chore 89. The Four periods of the Church of the Gospel 365. The Four Angels