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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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it or amend the same The 2 is to eschew the evil and doe the good And 3 to manifest our repentance by workes of piety and love both to God and our neighbour From whence thou art fallen Hence it might seem to follow that the saintes may fall away wholy from grace and so perish eternally for if so holy a teacher fell from his first love why may we not then conclude the uncertainty of the grace of faith Whither the saintes may wholy fall away justification perseverance and salvation and why should we not doubt also of these things and stand in fear thereof I confesse had this Angel finally fallen away there had been just cause of such doubting For no man can assuredly beleeve the certainty of his faith and salvation who doubteth of the certainty of his perseverance The exposition of Ribera Alcasar in this place is sound namely that he had not altogether lost his love forasmuch as he indured so great things for the sake of Christ but that he lost much of his former zeal How farre forth the saintes may fall In this we agree with them For the saintes left to themselves will soon fall from their faith love perseverance and salvation if we onely have respect to secondary causes to wit the mutability of the will the weaknesse of man the scandals of the world and the subtilty and power of satan For how should we be able to withstand all these who are weak men and subject to the common frailties of others so long as we carrie about us this earthly tabernacle Rom. 11.10 Matth. 26 41. 1 Corinth 10 12. 1 Pet. 5 8. For what saith the scripture be not lift up but fear least thou also be cut of the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed least he fall for satan walking about as a roaring lion seeketh whom he may devour So that not onely the example of this pastor but also the manifold slips and complaintes of the saintes do witnesse that they may languish and fail in the act of faith charity greive the spirit of God to the present losse of a good conscience But if on the contrary we consider either the unchangeable counsell of God touching the salvation of the elect or the most effectuall intercession of Christ for their faith perseverance and salvation or lastly the power of God by which as the Apostle witnesseth the elect are kept unto the end 1 Pet. 1.5 then we may with the holy scriptures firmly conclude that the faithfull cannot wholy and finally fall from the habit and act of faith and love I say so to fall as to become Gods enemies 1 Ioh. 3 9. Matth. 24 24. and perish for ever because whosoever is born of God sinneth not to wit with his whole wil that unto death for his seed remaineth in him and he cannot sinne because he is borne of God for it is impossible the elect should be deceived to wit Ioh. 10 28 Luke 22 32. Se also Matth. 7 25. Psal 37 24. 1 Pet. 1 5 finally unto their damnation because no man can plucke Christs sheep out of his hand but he giveth unto them life eternall And therefore Christ said to Peter I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not And God promised to put his fear into their harts that they may not depart from him which is as Augustine interpreteth it that they might alwayes cleave unto him for they are as mount Sion which cannot be moved c. These and many other such places of scripture as they doe plainly overthrow that Pelagian error of the saintes aposiasie and the fear of being finally drawen away and doubting about grace and salvation decreed by the counsell of Trent so also they doe confirme in regard of the free purpose of God the certainety of our perseverance in grace unto the end howsoever I denie not but the elect many times by their sinnes disturbe their peace and assurance having their mindes troubled with manifold doubtings for as men we are subject to humane frailties and shall bee so long as we are here in this life So then we expound From whence thou art fallen to be as if he had said in what thou art gon back from thy former zeal in godlinesse fervencie and love and art become unlike to what thou wast before So then Christ commends the teacher of the Church of Ephesus for his constancy in the truth and hatred of heresie but reproveth him for his languishing coveteousnesse and ambition Hence we so that it is not sufficient to professe the truth unlesse it be done in obedience of faith and humility Or else I will come unto thee quickly This threatning is the fourth part of the narration being a most vehement exhortation and sheweth the pernicious effects of security and coveteousnesse Two things are threatned 1 I will come to thee quickly that is thou shalt suddenly be punished before thou art aware of it Thus impenitent persons provoke Christ the judge against themselves whose wrath they are not able to bear for he is a consuming fire Do we saith the Apostle provoke the Lord to jealousie are we stronger then he So that the first reason why we should repent is because of the power and justice of Christ and our owne weaknesse The second thing threatned is the removal of the candlesticke that is Christ would not onely thrust him out of his office but also remove the candlesticke that is the Church it self by the enemies thereof Andreas I will cast the Church into a troublesome and tempestuous condition which punishment ordinarily followes security and contempt of the word And indeed Christ did not in vain threaten this Church for afterward they not repenting he removed their candlesticke and overthrew them by barbarous nations Here commeth in a twofold question first how it can stand with equity that the whole Church should be dissipated for the sinnes of the teacher secondly how the removing of this candlesticke is threatned seeing the Church is built on the rock against which the gates of hell cannot prevaile and the Apostle calleth this very Church of Ephesus the house of the living God the pillar and ground of the truth ● Tim. 3 15. Ribera saith that the first is a difficult question Because Christ threatneth not the pastor but indeed the whole Church whereas it seems unreasonable that the whole should be punished for the impenitency of the teacher Hence he supposeth that the candlesticke in this place imports not the Church but the Episcopal function and dignity unto which he was advanced to be a light before the flook so that by the removing of the candlesticke he understandeth a removal of the Episc●pal honour and those things in which he was wont to excell as in the word and doctrine and sundry other vertues and gifts with which he was indued This interpretation is not altogether incongruous
however we need not alter the signification of the candlesticke forasmuch as it is not unusuall or contradictorie to divine justice that God should punish a whole congregation for the sinnes of a few yea for one particular person in the same as the Apostle sheweth 1 Cor. 5.6 11.30 And the reason hereof is because oftentimes the multitude followes the examples of their governors like priest like people as is the king such is the subject wherefore it is probable that the Church had lost her first love as well as her reachertand hence the threatning is directed against him as chiefe and against the congregation as being corrupted also To the second I answer by distinguishing the Church which is either particular or universal The universal is perpetual unshaken and built upon the rock But we beleeve otherwise of particular Churches which oftentimes the Lord for their security removeth by overthrowing whole cities countries as the Easterne Greek Churches of Asia and Africa doe plainly witnesse But although particular congregations are dissipated and the candlesticke removed either for publick or private sinnes so that where formerly the light of Gods word did shine there afterwards Paganisme or Antichristianisme doth reigne not withstanding the church it selfe is not alwaies removed for the abode of the Church is uncertaine Heb. 13.14 the Lord sometime causing the faithful to wander as strangers exiles from place to place not having a continued city in this world That which is spoken 1 Tim. 3.15 as it is most true of the universall Church so was it likewise true of these Ephesians yea of every particular congregation I say in right though not alwaies in fact for indeed every congregation ought to be a pillar and ground of truth though it be not so still in truth according to that of Mala. 2.7 The priests lips preserve knowledge that is they ought so to doe though they did it not therefore are reproved by the Prophet vers 8 But ye are departed out of the way c. so the Church is the pillar that is ought to be the pillar according to that in Tit. 1.6 Mat. 5.13 a Bishop is that is ought to be the husband of one wife Ye are the salt of the earth the light of the world viz. ye should be so c. Hence we first observe seeing the abode of the Church is uncertain we must not promise to our selves a continuance in one place in regard we are citizens of the Church For it is in the power of Christ to remove the candlesticks from one place to another and many times he doth so for the sinnes either of the teachers or of the whole congregation Now in this we must acknowledge our own faults as deserving it Psal 2● 1 yet ought we not to be altogether discouraged because the earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof For if the outward prosperity of the Church be disturbed and taken away yet our inward graces as faith and charity remaine for ever Let us therefore stedfastly persevere in our first faith and amend the evils whither in pastors or Church that so the candlesticke be not removed Secondly hence we learn that true repentance is the onely way and means to escape publick punishment and Church dissipation For Christ saith I will remove thee unlesse thou repent meaning if thou repent I will not remove thee Thirdly observe that in scripture the threatnings of punishment are still with a condition either expressed or understood viz. except men repent And therefore when the condition of repentance is declared and the punishment followes not there is no change at all in the decree of God Lastly hence we may learn how such as go astray are to be brotherly reproved and corrected for their evils and brought to true repentance the obstinate are to be terrified with threatnings and the repentant raised up with comfort the which Christ doth to this Church as knowing this to be a most effectuall means to bring them to amendment of life 6. But this thou hast that thou hatest The fift part of the narration containeth a further commendation of them for their hatred of the Nicolaitans and this he brings in after the reproofe and threatning as it were powring oyle into the wound and to draw them the sooner to repentance and to shew that they were not in a desperate condition Three things before he praysed in them here he addeth a fourth Thus we see none shall want praise with God for any thing that is prayse worthy now they are commended for their encouragement not as doing works of merit but as exercising the gifts and grace received of God in obedience unto him The deeds of the Nicolaitans In vers 15 their doctrine is mentioned Lib. 1 cap. 27. but not fully expressed what they taught Irenaeus writeth that they held it no sinne to commit fornication and eat things sacrificed to idols And most are of this opinion But in vers 14 it is said Act. 6 5. that this was the doctrine of Balaam and not of the Nicolaitans However it be it is certain they were a pernicious and most wicked sect both in life doctrine Lib. 3 hist cap. 2● Some will have Nicolas one of the seven deacons to be the author hereof Eusebius Epiphanius and Nicephorus do write of him that being accused as jealous of his wife who was very beautifull he forlooke her and left her as common to all But Clement Alexandrine as themselves testify doth commend this Nicolas for his piety and continency Heres 25. cap. 15. having daughters who remained virgins and a sonne which lived holily And therefore it is more probable that some other Nicolas was the author of this filthy sect and that these hereticks abused the name of this man as a cloake for their abominable wickednesse Of these men Augustine writeth largely in his booke of heresies A certaine writer hence gathereth Hoe in Apoc. seeing Christ calleth these men Nicolaitans after the name of the first author that he also may justly name such men Calvinists who have alvine for their author to the end his hearers may the more carefully avoid them Behold here a notable imitator of Christ But let him first prove that the doctrine which he falsly termeth Calvines hath its original from him or to be as this was of the Nicolaitans filthy impious and damnable Neither of which he shall ever be able to prove Wheras we might easily retort the very same fault upon himself For Christ calleth these sectaries Nicolaitans because they so named themselves the better to make way for their wicked errours like as in the Church of Corinth some said they were of Cephas some of Apollo and some of Paul very few being contented to be named after Christ For our parts we count it an evil to be named after Calvin and not rather Christians of Christ our Lord wheras this Clawback himself delighteth to be
he bee deprived of understanding deny that these things are couched in the Text. And if credit be given unto their fiction Ribera in Apoc. c. 12. Num. 11. c. 13. Num. 10. there shall at Antichrists comming be no more then ten Kings in the whole world signified by the hornes of the Beast and of these three being slaine seven shal fight for Antichrist Therfore either these shal be Christian Kings or else there shall then be no Christian Kings under the Sun the falsitie whereof the Revelation doth shew Chap. 21.24 Now tel me what harshnesse or dishonour is there in it that as Paul confesseth he was sometime a blasphemer a persecutor and injurious but ignorantly and so obtained mercy the ten Kings have given their power unto the Beast against the Lamb but of ignorance and being overcome by the Lambe have repented God putting it into their hearts to hate the whore Tell me I say should this be to the dishonour of Kings which is to their great glory to have sinned indeed through ignorance but repented through the mercy of God Or is not rather the fiction of these Prophets very reproachfull scandalous and fatall who say that toward Antichrists rising there shal be no where any Emperor or Romane Empire that there shal be no King in any place save those seven that remaine of the ten fighting for Antichrist And seeing they every hour expect their Antichrist to arise as they say out of the tribe of Dan what do they but threaten an utter destruction both to the Emperor Romane Empire and all Christian Kings For according unto these mens doctrine as then there shal bee no Emperor no Empire so neither King of France Spain England Poland Hungary c. or if there be any they shall be Antichrists Life-gard and vassals Now tell me who they are that cast reproaches upon Christian Kings set their Crownes awry and menace them with eternall damnation Wherefore blessed shall ye be if ye hear and keep the Commandements of this Prophesie that ye may have right to the tree of life and may enter through the gates into the City But he that wil hurt let him hurt still and he that is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still Amen Even so come Lord Iesus and sanctifie us in trueth Thy word is trueth Amen PROVERB 27.6 Better are the wounds of a friend then the deceitfull kisses of an enemy The Authours PREFACE UPON THE REVELATION OF THE APOSTLE AND EVAGELIST IOHN HAPPILY BEGVN AND PROPOVNDED VNTO HIS AVDITORY IN THE VNIVERSITY Ann. 1608. IF any of you my Hearers admire wherefore after the Exposition of Pauls Epistle unto the Hebrews I should passe by so many excellent Bookes of the New Testament and take in hand the Interpretation of the last viz. the Revelation the Authour and Canonicall authority whereof hath long since variously bin disputed of and which being replenished with great secrets types and darke sentences is scarcely intelligible unto any The Objections against the Revelation and though it be entitled a Revelation yet seemeth not in the least to be a Booke revealed but rather shut up and sealed which seemeth also to bee the reason that it is placed at the end of the New Testament from the interpretation whereof because of its obscurity not a few of the ablest Divines have hitherto abstained and lastly seeing it hath long since bin held that it doth contain some things contrary to Apostolicall Faith and favour the heresie of the Chiliasts If I say any man wondreth at this my purpose such a one I would have with me to acknowledge that these very objections besides other causes which now are not requisite to be related with which this most Heavenly Book is injuriously charged offereth occasion unto me to interpret the same that ye might understand that the Revelation of John is so farre from the guilt of these accusations which do not a little weaken the Canon of our Faith that we rather may say of it what Jerome most truly said of the Prophesie of Isaias Whatsoever is in Holy Writ whatsoever can bee uttered by the tongue or received by the senses of mortall man is contained in this Booke which least it might seeme to be spoken by me without ground Prooem in Isa I thought good to praemise a few things in way of Preface in which I will handle somethings more briefly by other Interpreters more largely handled and somethings properly belonging to our purpose I shall more diligently explicate CHAPTER I. Of the Authour of the Revelation WHo was the Authour of this Booke Lib. 7. hist c. 25. Haer. 51. would never in our times have beene questioned unlesse Eusebius and Epiphanius had left in writing that some of old time did scruple the thing For Eusebius recordeth that in his time it was diversly on both parts disputed touching the Revelation Afterward he saith there were some who supposed from the Bookes called De Repromissionibus of one DIONYSIUS an Alexandrine Bishop and also from one Caius an old Writer that the Revelation was not written by John the Apostle but forged by the Hereticke Cerinthus who feined an earthly Kingdome to Christ in which the Saints should have their fill of corporall pleasures a thousand yeeres into which sense some whom they called Chiliasts men in other respects of note in the Church drew the twentieth Chapter of the Revelation But other Divines and worthy Fathers have alwayes demonstrated that there is no such thing in that Chapter and we also will shew it on the place But so farre is it from trueth The Revelation not written by Cerinthus that the blasphemous Heretick Cerinthus could be the Author of this Booke as nothing is lesse credible or more unlikely For Cerinthus blasphemously maintained that Christ was not before Mary But the Revelation throughout teacheth and proveth the Eternall Deity of Christ by such evident Arguments against Cerinthus Ebion Photinus and such like enemies of Christ as almost no Scripture affirmeth the same more clearly However therefore it is no marveile Lib. 4. adversus Mar. that the Marcionites as Tertulian recordeth as also the Alogian and Tatian Heretickes as Epiphanius Augustine and Philastrius testifie did reject the Revelation as being contrary to their heresie Yet the Grecians of old had no reason neither to this day hath any man a just or probable cause Iohn the Apostle author of the Revelation to call into question the Authour or Canonicall Authority of this most Sacred Booke That John the Apostle whose Gospell and three Canonicall Epistles are extant is the Author may be proved by solid and undoubted reasons First the Title it selfe sheweth that he is the Author 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Revelation of John the Divine But thou wilt say it is not said John the Apostle or Evangelist Lib. 3. hist cap. 13.
venture or onely at the lust and will of the adversaries but by the ordering hand of God for the exercise of the Church neither yet should they be perpetuall or continue too long but at length bee changed with the heavenly glory of the Saints all the wicked being by the power of Christ the Conqueror cast into the lake of fire and brimstone for ever and ever This Booke also is doctrinall and hortatorie mixing here and there with oracles excellent doctrines exhortations and reproofes both particular unto the seven Churches of Asia which were committed to the care of John being banished into Patmos as also universall unto all Christians even untill this day for doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse These things suffice touching the generall Argument The upstart Interpreter of the Revelation before mentioned having thought upon a new Stratagem I know not whether to curry favour with the Pope Alcasar perverteth the argument or the more to harden him to his destruction doth hence forge to himself new Oracles touching the Church and the Monarchicall Empire of the Pope of Rome and with his Hypotheses doth wholly stray from the Scope of this Prophesie and to speake the truth doth foully deprave the Argument thereof His Hypotheses or Positions are principally four One general Three speciall Vestig nota 6. preoe The generall is of the Argument of the whole Revelation that it describes a two-fold warre of the Church one with the Synagogue the other with Paganisme and a two-fold victory and triumph over both adversaries But the former warre with the Synagogue was already fought before the Prophesie was revealed and the Synagogue with the Temple lay in ashes To what purpose then should this warre have been shewed unto John as being to come afterward Like as saith he things done are represented in a Comoedie As if forsooth Christ would represent unto John things done and not rather which were to come to passe afterward As for the latter warre with Paganisme although it was then on foot very hot already and was further to lie more heavy upon the Christians notwithstanding a more fierce conflict by farre with Antichrist was to befall them not to speake of the Gogish Warre by whom the Church as is praefigured in the Apocalyps should grievously be oppressed unto the very last times and against whom victory and triumph is promised unto the Saints the which all Interpreters the Papists not excepted do confesse Of his speciall hypotheses the first is that in the first eleven Chapters is represented the rejection of the Jewish Nation and the desolation of the City Jerusalem by the Romanes The SECOND That in the nine following Chapters is portended the Empire of the Romane Church over Rome and the whole world and the overthrow of Paganisme the which forsooth should bee that horrible judgement of the Great Whore and destruction of Babylon effected by Constantine the Great and his Successours The THIRD That in the two last Chapters under the Type of the Lambes Bride and the New Jerusalem is set forth the glorious and triumphant state of the Romane Church in Heaven But these most idle vanities will soon vanish away if thou doest but even put them to the Touch-stone that is the very Text of the Prophesie Vestig nota 14. prooem for Christ did reveale those things to Iohn which should shortly bee done Chap. 1.1 and afterward Chap. 4.1 whereas therefore the destruction of Ierusalem and rejection of the Iewes by Alcasars owne confession was fulfilled XXV yeeres before the Revelation was given Who then should believe that Christ would have revealed unto Iohn for a great mysterie a History so generally known under such obscure Types Iohns Revelation prophesieth of things present and to come And. in Apoc cap. 12. saith Andreas out of a Treatise of Methodius intitled SYMPOSIUM or Banket Therefore the first Hypothesis is undoubtedly false Neither is the second more true For the judgement of the Great Whore and the ruine of Babylon is represented not as a grace of conversion but as a punishment of whoredom to be inflicted on the kingdom seat of Antichrist in the last times Therefore to interpret this of the conversion of Rome and Paganisme unto the Faith of Christ which came to passe three hundred yeers after Christ under Constantine and his Successours is to make a mooke of reason The third is no better then the rest The Spouse of the Lambe and the New Jerusalem is the whole Church of Christ gloriously triumphing in Heaven from whom God hath wiped away all teares in which shall bee nothing that is defiled and abominable as shall be afterward shewed in its place but that the now Romane Apostaticall Church worshipper of Idols mother of fornications and driver not of Christs asse but of the Beast of Antichrist while she remains such on earth should also belong unto the Spouse of Christ in Heaven shall then be true when that of the Apostle is false Be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Idolaters 1. Cor. 6.9.15 nor Adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankinde nor thieves nor drunkards nor revilers nor blasphemers nor extortioners shall enherit the Kingdom of God Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot which shall be ad Calendas Graecas that is never But what need I trouble my self This new fiction of the Inquirer is abundantly refuted by the judgement of Ribera Bellarmine and other most acute Doctors of his owne order although scarcely there be any one of them whom he doth not most freely censure But of late a certaine learned and judicious Divine seemeth to have set forth in lively colours the argument of that painfull and most polished INQUIRY in an Epistle which I shall here annexe Vnto thy two Letters the Post hasting away thus in a few lines What was my opinion perhaps thy father hath heard long since what now it is I will not easily say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FOR I GROW OLD LEARNING MANY THINGS The Argument of Alcasars Vestigation or Inquirie Lately one Alcasar a Iesuite hath published an INQUIRY upon the Revelation in which he rejoyceth himself and gratulates the Pope of Rome affirming that the dedication of this Aenigma was of old made to the Romane Church touching the future principallity of this Church over all Churches and the majesty of the Pope which others should submissively worship and humbly adore so as he first hath out of the darkenesse of the Apocalyps shewed a light by which the old Prophesies hitherto by others not understood may be enlightned namely of the authority of the Romane Church over all others that she alone is the Spouse of Christ Cant. 6. Psal 45. at his right hand and married to the Lambe Chap. 21. Rev. 19. whose founders were Peter and Paul whom Isaias sets forth by a couple of horsemen one sitting on an Asse the
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
all times should continually read it for their comfort and instruction which also is the end and use of the whole scripture Rom 15 4. 2 Tim. 3.16 Vers 20. The mystery of the seven starres After that the Son of man had shewed who he was whom Iohn saw he comes to unfold the mystery of the starres and candlesticks viz. that the seven starres are the seven angels or ministers the seven candlesticks the seven churches of Asia to whom he was commanded to write vers 11. The mistery The vulgar hath it the sacrament of the starres that is the thing figured by them so again chap. 17.7 I will tell thee the sacrament of the woman but it is improperly used for the mysticallsfignification of the same Bishops So he caleth the starres because they ought to shine before others in purity of doctrine and integrity of life like unto starres shining in the firmament they are said to be angels because they are Gods messengers to the Churches and the Churches are compared to candlesticks because like as the candle or light is set up into the candlestike even so the Church ought to hold forth and preserve the shining light of true doctrine that all may behold it least being in darknesse they stumble and perish thorow their ignorance Hence we learn in the first place that the scripture best interpreteth it self for what was before more darkly spoken is now clearly unfolded So Christ opened the parables to his disciples Matth. 13 in like maner this vision which at first seemed obscure is now made plain by its own interpretation For albeit the scripture doth not make clear every thing that is darkely spoken not withstanding if we diligently observe it that of Austin will appeare most true that there is all most nothing abscure in scripture which is not in some other place plainly expounded Furthermore we are to take notice of these figurative and sacramental phrases The starres are Angels that is they signifie the Angels the candlestiks are the Churches Gen. 41 27. 1 Cor. 10 4. Cont. adim c. 12. that is they signifie the Churches according to that in Genesis the seven kine are seven years that is do signifie seven years And the rock was Christ for it signified Christ as Augustine expoundeth it For there is nothing more familiar in scripture then to name signes by the things which they signify which maner of speech is not darke but plaine in regard of the analogie betwixt the signe and the thing signified wherefore it was not obscure but familiar to the scripture that Christ called the bread which was broken at the institution of the supper his body which was crucifyed for us seeing it was a sacrament or holy signe of the same Hence Augustine opening the etymologie or signification of a sacrament applies it to the Lords supper saying that the Lord Iesus doubted not to say this is my body when he gave the signe onely thereof And this is so cleare a truth that even Aloasar a Iesuite confesseth it saying that in the phrase of scripture touching dark sentences and sacraments the word which is used is to be referred to the signification of it and that the bread and wine in the Eucharist which they call the species doth signify the body and blood of Christ because Christ saith this is my body c. Indeed he supposeth there are two sorts of signes some instituted onely for doctrin and signification as in parables and darke sentences the other such as really include and containe the things which they signifie as in baptisme and the supper in which saith he is truly and properly contained as the cleansing of the soule from sinne so the body and blood of Christ and he proveth it First because Christ instituted these signes to that end Secondly the Church so teacheth And lastly because it were an easy thing for any one to institute meere and naked signes wheras it is in the power of Christ alone to appoint such signes as are full of efficacy I answer first Alcasars arguments answered that in the institution either of baptisme or the Lords supper there is no mention made of any including of the things signified in the signes Secondly the primitive Church taught no such inclusion but the new popish Church in so teaching is departed from the institution and doctrin of the primitive times Lastly though it be true that the sacraments are not meere signes yet it followeth not that they are signes including the thing signified For there is in scripture another kinde of signes which as they are signes so they are seales confirming to the faithfull the grace of Christ signified by them For properly the sacraments are signes and seales of the promise of grace which no creature could institute or bring into the Church but God alone Another expositor denieth Hoe in the Revel chap. 1. that these are figurative speeches and why because saith he those candlesticks doe not signify but are really the Churches and the starres doe not denote but are in truth the angels But both is false first because then there should be no mystery in the candlesticks or starres Secondly if the candlesticks and starres were truly Churches and Angels then would not Christ have required Iohn to write his Epistles as being absent from them but he should have delivered his message unto them as there present with him in Patmos Thirdly because then the words the candlesticks are Churches the starres are Angels should be regular expressions But this he denies and truly For they are termes of disparity What then the metaphor saith he is in the subject which doth not import that the copulative IS should be taken for the word signifieth And though it were granted here yet would it not follow that the words of Christ at the institution of the supper were of the same significatiō because Christ did not expound to them a vision but institute asacrament Now howsoever both be true yet doth not this take away the metonymical expression for in typical Sacramental assertions the tipes signes are said to be the antitypes or things signified partly indeed by a metaphor because of the analogie or likenesse that is betwixt the signes the things themselves but chiefly by a metonymia Epist 23. ad Bonif. because of the sacramentall signification For as Augustine saith if sacraments had not some likenesse with the things they represent they should not at all be sacraments for in regard of that likenesse they have the name of the things themselves Therefore as in some sort the sacrament of the body of Christ is Christ the sacrament of the blood of Christ is Christs blood even so the sacrament of faith is faith Againe that is called the soule In Levit. lib. 3.4.5 Genes 41.26 1. Cor. 10.4 which signifies the soule for it is usuall that the thing signifying be called by the name of that which it doth signifie as it is written
by the word of God and manifested and repressed their lyes and deceit For now at this time there were many false teachers among the Churches of Asia as Ebion Cerinthus and others who though they boasted themselves to be Apostles yet in truth were the professed enemies of the Godhead of Christ corrupting true religion and perverting the faith of many Act. 20 29. of whom Paul had forewarned the elders of this Church For it is the duty of teachers to defende the purity of faith and strongly to oppose such devouring wolves so to follow the example of the Angel of this Church who for this cause is greatly commended by Christ our Lord. Vers 3. And hast borne and hast patience He setteth forth more clearly his patience pointing at some special kinde of affliction either imprisonmēt or stripes which he had manfully sustained Before Christ saith he could not beare and here saith he had borne but there is no contradiction for there he spake of his not suffering of impenitent sinners in the Church and here of his patient bearing of afflictions for the Gospels sake And for my names sake hast laboured The vulgar as likewise Montanus doe somewhat differ from these words but without all doubt this is the proper and naturall reading of the place agreeing with the greater and lesser copies of Robert Stephanus imprinted at Paris For it appeareth that his labour and unwearied indeavours in sparing no paines to preach and maintain the faith of Christ is again commended that all might imitate the like diligence and faithfulnes in teaching for in this Angel we may behold a true paterne of a faithfull Bishop But now who would not thinke hearing so great commendations from Christ himself that he had been perfect in every respect and worthy of deserved reward Iob. 15 15 but the following reproofe sheweth the contrary and indeed God the heavenly judge seeth not perfection in the very best of the saincts 4. 2 part of the narration But neverthelesse I have somewhat against thee In the second part of the narration he reproveth him because he had left his former love Ambrose thinketh that he is blamed for a generall remisnesse and omission of his former zeal and indeavour in holy duties For security sometimes doth lessen the zeale even of the Godly so that they have need to be stirred up and provoked to holy duties Andreas understandeth that he is in speciall rebuked for not shewing as he ought● his wonted love and charity to the poore And indeed it seemeth that he began by little and little to be covetous desiring to heap up wealth and so grew negligent of doing good to the strangers and poore brethren now covetousnes is the roote of all evill and most abominable in the teachers of the word for it is one of the principall vertues in a Bishop to be given to hospitality and to be a lover of it 1 Tim. 3.2 Tit. 1 8. And this seemeth to be the reason wherefore the cannon law allowed to Bishops one forth part of the Church revenues to the end they should be liberall the rest was given to the poore other uses It is probable therefore that this Angel otherwise an excellent teacher is here taxed for coveteousnes From whence we first observe that the godly faile in many things and have need to be stirred up by admonitions and reproose specially when either they grow cold in their good affections or are overcome with the cares of this present world and the desire of wealth and honour For the devil doth chiefly labour to ensnare all teachers by such baits and therefore they ought so much the more to take heed least hereby beeing overcome they become a scandall to the Church of God Observe secondly that ambition and coveteousnesse in ministers are the most lothsome vices that may be and therefore they ought to be the more carefull for to avoid the same We have an example of ambition in the disciples For when Christ spake to them of the crosse they were troubled about preeminency asking who of them should be the greatest Ciprian saith wittily that ambition doth sweetly sleepe in the bosome of the ministers of the Church And as for coveteousnes or desire of filthy lucre by how much it is detestable by so much the more it doth cleave and deeply roote it self in their harts hence it is that Creon in Sophocles saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is The whole priestly generation is given to coveteousnesse And certainly all the sacrilegious sale of holy things simony pride and luxurie which reigne in the Romish Church was ingendred by coveteousnes and at length by little and little overthrew the truth of Christian religion according to the Latine proverb Religion begate riches but the daughter deroured the mother For as Ierom wel observeth In vita Malchi after that the Christian Church had Emperors to be members thereof it increased indeed in power and riches but decreased in vertue and godlinesse giving us to understand that where coveteousnes and pride have gotten the upper hand there vertue and religion is cast off and oppressed Observe thirdly though Christ doth commend the excellent workes labour constancy of the Angel of this Church yet he was so farr from acknowledging any merit in him as that on the contrary he sharply reproves him for many grievous evils and threatneth to cast him off except be repent For Christ doth narrowly see and observe all our actions and strictly weigheth all our workes in the ballance Wherefore God forbid we should imagine to merit by any good we doe though indeed hypocrites commonly so thinke whereas the word of God doth testifie that all the workes even of the most holy men on earth are polluted with sinne and all our righteousnesses are as filthy ragges Isay 64.6 if God should enter into judgement with us Besides we can do nothing but what we are bound to doe for we are debrors to the law And therefore can not by our good works Ro. 8.12 to which we are debtors deserve any thing at the hands of God Observe in the last place that it is not enough to begin wel but if we looke for the recompence of reward we must persevere in wel doing unto the end For hypocrites at first seeme very zealous but afterward they grow luke warm and at last are altogether cold and so receive not the crowne of glory at the last day 5. Remember from whence thou art fallen This is the third part of the narration being matter full of reproofe First the teacher is exhorted to consider his fall Secondly to repent of his many evils Thirdly carefully to practise all his former holy workes of love and charity now neglected So that in this exhortation we have briefly the nature of true repentance propounded unto us First to take notice of the sinne committed A description of repentance for how else should we sorrow for
he not doe the like The Church preserved in the papacie though the Romish Papacie for a thousand yeares and upward hath been the throne of Satan and the seat of Antichrist and under the name of Christianitie abounds in all ungodlinesse idolatrie and barbarous crueltie against Christ They object that the Church of Pergamus was visible and separated from the Pagans But in the papacie it was not so I answere unlesse there had been in some sort a visible Church among the Papists the Romish Clergie had not been so renowned as they are for their killing and martyring of the saintes But be it granted were not the seven thousand in Israel who worshipped God a Church because they were not a visible congregation seperated from the Balaamites but for fear of persecution kept themselves close and were not known no not to Elias himself Even in those days Here he further amplifies their constancie by shewing the crueltie of the adversaries who continually drew forth the Christians to most cruel and barbarous torments as appeares by Antipas a faithfull martyr of Christ who undoubtedly not long before was put to death by those of Pergamus and so is named instead of many others who also suffered It is not certain by historie who he was Arethas supposeth that he was the teacher of this Church who in the days of Domitian for his constant profession of the truth was as some say put into a Brazen bul and by fyre tortured to death Andreas writeth that he had read sometime the hystory of his martyrdom But it is certain that Christ honoureth him with the title of his faithfull witnesse It is probable that this Epistle was directed to the successour of Antipas least he should be drawen aside from performing his charge for fear of the like punishment who as it seemeth was at this time in bonds and threatned to be tortured to the end he might denie Christ and therfore he is worthily commended for keeping the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gr. And is to be rendred even or also in those days which amplifies the former persecution during which time he remained constant although Antipas had already suffered death for it cohereth with the foregoing words hast not denyed even in those days wherin Antipas my faithful martyr to which we must ad who was or who denied me not for otherwise the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who would seem to be superfluous Where Satan dwelleth The fourth amplification is from the danger of the place or a further declaring of what was before spoken of Pergamus as if he should say Pergamus is not onely the seat of Satan in which he remaineth somtimes or for a season but it is his proper nest and where he continually inhabiteth for as Arethas witnesseth Pergamus was more given to Idolatrie then any other place in Asia Hel indeed properly is Satans dwelling place notwithstanding he also dwelleth and reighneth in the harts of the children of disobedience who by their filthie and abominable actions doe inslave themselves unto him Thus the hart of Judas was as a house for Satan after he was entred into him O what a miserable condition is it to live there where Satan dwelleth how hard a matter is it to worship Christ where the Divel ruleth Let us therefore intreat the lord to dwel in the midst of us and to make us the temples of his holy spirit that so Satan may not have any abode amongst us 14. But I have a few things against thee This second part of the narration is a reproofe of the Bishop of Pergamus And here again we are taught that the best in the Church are not without their faylings the which Christ seeth though men perceive them not neither are we here to expect a Church perfect and altogither free from errours and the mixture of evill men and good togither for which infirmities albeit the lord doth not condemne us but in mercie passeth them by notwithstanding he disaloweth and reproveth them and requireth an amendement thereof He calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a few things comparitively not as being few or smal in themselves but eyther as respecting the evils of ungodly men or in regard of his owne clemencie he accounting them but as few Thus the Lord lessens as it were our evils yet so not that we should flatter our selves in them but the rather amend them for a few evils are sooner reformed then many lesser vices are more easilie corrected then greater Now the evil for which they are blamed is their remisnes in not exercising Church discipline against such persons as were infected with the venemous doctrine of the Balaamites and Nicolaitans Now whether these were divers sects or but one it is not certaine The common opinion is that the Nicolaitans followed the wicked way of Balaam mentioned in Numb 22.23.24.25 permitting Christians to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication For that false prophet being hired by Balack king of Moab to curse the Israelites gave him counsel by his Moabitish woemen to entise them to worship Baal-peor or their God Priapus by which meanes it came to passe that the Israelites having so don fel to feastings and dancings with them and afterwards committing fornication drew upon themselves horrible plagues from the Lord. 15. So hast thou also them Because he had before reproved the Church of Ephesus for the deeds of the Nicolaitans therefore here he saith so hast thou also c. By which it appeareth that this sect whatever it were was crept into many Churches Hence we note two things concerning the dutie of Churches and their officers touching notorious-sectaries First that it is meet to call them by the name of their authors For Christ nameth the Nicolaitans after Nicolas to distinguish them from such as were sound in the faith This I speak of vile sectaries such as these were overthrowing the very foundation Yet it followes not that the Lutherans do wel to call themselves after Luther unlesse they would be accounted notorious sectaries rending Christ asunder as in 1. Cor. 1.10 of which thing se more v. 6. Secondly notorious sectaries ought to be seriously reproved by the Church convinced if it may be regained as for the obstinate they are not to be suffered but to be cast out of the Church otherwise we provoke the Lord to wrath against our selves But here behold the great ungodlines of the Romish Antichrist who to bring in his divelish doctrine of forbidding marriage accounts all such Bishops and Priests which do marrie guiltie of the haeresie of the Nicolaitans this he doth if we wil beleeve him to preserve the puritie of the Church See Sigon de regno Ital. lib. 8. 9. 16. Repent or otherwise The third part of the narration is an exhortation to repentance with a threatning of the obstinate unlesse they left their errour For it seemeth that the Nicolaitans were not secretly but openly retained in
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.
and is not communicable to any creature no not unto the Angels Which further confirmeth the X. and XVIII argument before mentioned Secondly we are taught that all who professe the truth and make a shew of holines are not truely faithful and regenerate persons but many of them are hypocrites and deceivers as being farre otherwise then they are accounted of for hypocrisie is an outward shew of inward holinesse or a profession of faith with the mouth beeing in the mean time destitute thereof in the heart And hence we may conclude that a bare profession argues not true faith as the patrones of hypocrites affirme whereby they oftentimes delude themselves others Act. 8.13 Simon Magus is said to beleeve Therfore say they some who professe have true faith may fall away and perish But this place shewes us that many are inwardly dead who outwardly seem to be alive being with Ananias the hie Priest whyted walls Act 23.3 Matt. 23.27 Mat. 8.22 1 Tim. 5.6 with the Pharises painted sepulchres spiritually dead as Christ spake to the yong man let the dead burie the dead And Paul speaketh of some wanton widowes who are dead while they live yea all men considered in their natural condition are dead in trespasses and sinnes To be short many have faith without love which is dead a faith which the Devils also have Thus we se in scripture how they are said not onely to be dead who are deprived of naturall life but also not beeing regenerated to a spirituall or who are sincere in appearance onely and not in truth Let us therfore take notice that all are not godly who seem so to be neyther shall all they who say Lord Lord enter into the kingdome of God for the Church consisteth of a mixture of saintes and hypocrites and this difference is not onely in the laitie but chiefly in the Clergie as they call it that is many who in sheeps cloathing seem to be true Pastors teachers are in truth but mercenarie wolves and howsoever these may deceive men yet Christ knowes them And therfore let not the Bishops of Antichrist thinke to blinde the eyes of Christ with their titles mitres and royal robes The consideration of this informeth us in the first place of the divers condition of the Church in this world For many are called to be members of the Church whereof some are good others bad some saintes others hypocrites like as the net takes in al manner of fishes But howsoever the faintes elected are not knowen of men yet God Christ doe discerne them For the Lord knoweth who are his Therefore let every one try and examine himself whether he be dead or alive for hypocrites deceive not God but man their owne soules Wherfore let us shun hypocrisie even as a pest remembring what Ambrose admonisheth not to rest contented with a bare name in the mean while to be greevously guilty or with the hight of honour while we abound in sins or with a profession of Godlinesse while our actions are devilish For otherwise we should onely have a name to live when in deed we are but dead Lastly observe that the efficacie of the ministry doth not depend upon the goodnes of the minister For God doth sometime vivifie and governe his Church by dead officers as we have here an example which serves to confute the Donalists and Popish Sophisters who maintaine that there was not any Church of the elect untill the time of Luther in the Papacie but themselves except we wil acknowledge their Bishops for other there were none to have been approved of by the Lord. 2. Bee watchfull The second part of the narration is an exhortation admonishing the Angel in Sardis of divers things to the end he might purge himself from the crime of hypocrisie and withal he is threatned to be punished except he doe repent First he is commanded to shake of that hypocritical drowsines into which he was fallen Be watchful that is stirre thy self up for he is not onely required to be more faithfull and careful over the Church then formerly he had been but also called upon as it were to live againe for so faith Christ but thou art dead Now death in scripture is frequently compared to a sleep so that this place and that of the Apostle speaking unto men fallen into a deep sleep of sin is of the like interpretation Ephe. 14 A wake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Not as if wee could of our selves arise from the death of sin for this is a worke of Grace but because the Lord by his precept powerfully worketh in us that which he requireth of us and by the operation of his owne spirit rayseth us up beeing asleep in sin unto newnes of life And strengthen the things Or rather strengthen the rest that is such dying members of the Church as are committed unto thy charge who because of thy negligence decay both in faith and holinesse For it is no wonder that a Church should fal into a deadnesse and securitie while the officers therof are asleep Christ therfore comm●ndeth him to strengthen them that is to labour by a holie life and doctrine to bring them againe into the way of life That are ready to dy in Gre. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that shall dy that is which are near unto death like as in Luk. 7.2 it is said of the centurions servant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he should dy that is was ready to dy So these here were near unto death though not altogither dead and therfore the Pastor is exhorted carefully and speedily to put to his helping hand for their recoverie This care the Apostle recommendeth unto all the faithful Rom. 14.2 namely to receive them that are weake in the faith And therfore it is a speciall dutie of the ministers of God who are spirituall physitians to applie to Christs weaklings the holesome medicines of Gods word 1 Tim. 2.9 for otherwise God saith unto them by the prophet forasmuch as ye have not strengthened the diseased Ezec. 34.4 nor healed that which was sick nor bound up that which was broken nor sought that which was lost c. Behold I am against the shepheards and I will require my flock at their hand and cause them to cease from feeding my flock Montanus reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which thou art ready to lose that is destroy by thy negligence which is a more heavie expression For I have not found thy workes perfect These words containe a reason wherfore God requires him to be watchfull But it may seem that this reproofe is not equal just 1 Cor. 13.9 considering that no mans workes on earth are perfect before God if he should enter into Iudgment with us for we know but in part we prophesie in part and there is not a just man on earth that doth good Eccle. 7.20 and
the publick abuses of the times even unto blood Moreover as this commendation was comfortable to the Godly so it did tend to the great shame of the Pastor Therfore least the faithful should have thought that Christ also was wroth with them they are by name to the others disgrace much commended for their constancie Now what is more dishonorable then that the disciples should in doctrine excel their teacher and the sheep the Pastor in sinceritie of life Names That is persons as Act. 1.15 there were a hundred and twentie names So Reve. 11.13 there were slaine 7000 names A few For manie are called but few are chosen almost in everie congregation We ought not therefore to be offended at the paucitie of the faithfull and the multitude of the ungodly The Papists indeed glory in their multitude and write volumes in praise of the largenes of the Romish Church upbraiding us because of our fewnesse but here we see how in Sardis there were many hypocrites a few names onely who were not defiled Here againe we have a cleare proofe of Christ divinitie in that he is said to know these few names in Sardis the truth is he knowes all the faithful and discerneth them from hypocrites 2. Tim. 2.19 which is a worke onely proper to God for the Lord knoweth who are his see arguments X. and XVIII Who have not defiled their garments Their constant sinceritie is set forth by this Metaphor and by Garments is meant thus much as their bodies were not polluted with the filthie manner and lusts of the Nicolaitans so neither were their soules stained with their impious doctrine Alike Metaphor the Apostle useth 1. Thessa 4.4 That every one should know how to posses his vessel that is his soule and bodie in sanctification and in honour not in the lust of concupiscence for this is the will of God He. 12.14 even your sanctification and without this no man shall see him Now Christ acknowledged them holy and undefiled not as if they were altogither unreprovable but because they persevered in faith and holinesse of life not withstanding the neglect of the Pastor and the manifold evil examples round about them And they shall walke with mee As hypocrites are threatned with punishment so the Godly are incouraged with promises of reward In white What may this bee by this Metaphor is signified a heavenlie triumph a kingdome and glorie to come It is taken from the state of kings the great honour given unto mightie conquerours With such royal apparell Herod was cloathed when he sate on his throne Act. 12.21 and God smote him dead for his pride So in scorne they clothed Christ the king of Glorie Lu. 23.11 It also was ancientlie a custome to cloath the Conquerours with a white garment To be short white garments for their brightnesse were signes of Glorie here then Metaphorically the glorie of the saintes is promised Thus it is said v. 5. He that overcommeth the same shal be cloathed in white raiment Rev. 7.11 White robes are given unto the elect standing before the throne and chap. 19.14 the armies of Christ are cloathed in fine linnen white and cleane But it may be said seeing their garments were now already pure undefiled 2. Cor. 5.2 therefore they needed not to be cloathed in white To this the Apostle answereth we groane earnestly desiring to be cloathed that we be not found naked For the puritie and righteousnesse of the saintes on earth can not abide the judgment of God therefore they must be cloathed with the perfect robes of absolute innocencie ere they can stand before his majestie With me They shal be partakers of my glorie If the raiment of Christ Mat. 17.2 on the mount was white as the light how much more doth he now shine beeing exalted Yet so wil he cloath the saintes for they shall shine as the sunne according to that proportion which is betwixt the head and the members And hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with me may also be translated after me as if he should say ye shal be cloathed in white next unto mee And they shal walke Beza translates it and therfore they shal walke which indeed expresseth the sence but not the words of the text For they are worthie To wit to walke with me in white the argument is taken from the equitie of it Thus doe the messengers of the Centurion beseech Christ to heal his servant because he was worthie Luk. 7.3 But this seemeth to establish the doctrine of merits for dignitie comes by vertue For if we shall walke in white because of our worthinesse then we deserve the same for our workes sake I answer the assumption is false for the scripture no where saith because of our worthines or workes but when soever it mentioneth the judgement of God we are said to receive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to workes but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of workes least we should conceive any opinion of meriting by them which Christ expresly denieth Luk. 17. v. 10. When ye have done all those things which are commanded you say we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our dutie to doe We therfore shal walke in white not because of our worthinesse but according to it for the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for doth not signifie any cause of merit but a qualitie agreeing with the justice of God that is shewing not why but who they are that shall walke with Christ according to that in Mat. 5.3 blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven c. as if he had said because unto such the kingdome of heaven is freely promised But againe though the assumption were granted yet would not the proposition be universally true For dignitie in its kinde doth not alwayes proceed from vertue but somtimes from dutie without vertue So Nero had honour and was worthie of honour in regard of dutie but not in regard of any vertue in him So in particular our worthinesse before God is not because of the worthinesse of our workes but of grace by which he maketh us worthy by calling justifying and glorifying of us As the Apostle plainly teacheth us 2. Thess 1.5 where after he had said that the tribulations of the Godly were a manifest token of the righteous judgement of God that they might be counted worthy of the kingdome of God least this should be misaplyed to a worthynesse of merit he prayeth v. 11. that God would count them worthy of this calling As none therfore deserve or are worthy to be called of God so neyther doth our worthinesse prove any thing for the doctrine of merit If they object from chap. 16.6 For they are worthy that as there the deserved cause of punishment is of themselves so here the meritorious cause of reward The consequence wil not follow from the rule of contraries for the comparisons are not alike
Because in order of justice al evil workes whatsoever deserve punishment for the soule that sinneth shall dy But good workes how great-soever beeing debts duties can-not merit at the hands of God 5. He that overcommeth the same shall be cloathed Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he but the old translator reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so shall he be cloathed The conclusion containes a promise with an Epiphonema as formerly The promise is extended not onely to those few in Sardis spoken of but to all who overcome the world Satan c. se chap. 2. v. 7.11.12.26 Thus by a threefold promise all are stirred up to hope for victorie the two former are metaphorically propounded the third properlie yet all seem to signifie one thing for what can be given to them that overcome more then the crowne of life eternal however in the reward promised we may note a certain gradation First He shall be cloathed with white raiments This by a metaphor signifies the heavenly glorie with which we shall be cloathed as with a royal garment What more I wil not blot out his name out of the booke of life This further notes the eternitie of glorie for not to have our names blotted out of the booke of life is to have them allwayes remaine therein that is to enioy eternal glorie What more I wil confesse his name A further degree promising to make knowen the constancie and faith of every one by name even before the throne of the blessed trinitie and in the presence of the holy Angels A glorie indeed surpassing mans opprehension For what is more honourable then when a general doth by name before the whole armie declare the valiant exploites of this or that souldiour But this Christ promiseth here to doe and in Mat. 10.32 Whosoever therfore shall confesse me before men him will I confesse also before my father which is in heaven but whosoever shall denie me before men him will I also denie before my father which is in heaven And before his Angels As beeing the most holie ministers of God and witnesses of our glorie Hence we note first that the saintes are said to have a two fould cloathing for as we heard before some in Sardis were commended for not defiling of their garments and yet promised besides to have other white garments given unto them the former are said to be ours not as proceeding from our selves but because we are enioyned to have them meaning both morall endowments of bodie and mind as also the grace of faith and love and other spiritual gifts which we must have and preserve cleane and undefiled 2. Cor. 5.3 that so we may be cloathed hereafter in white According to that of the Apostle If so be that being cloathed we shall not be found naked For no man shall be cloathed in white in the heavens who hath not been indued with faith and true repentance in this life Secondlie we are to take notice that in scripture God is said metaphorically to have a threefold booke The first is the booke of his providence which is the knowledge and counsel of God concerning the actions and events of all things first and last of this the prophet speaketh Psa 139.6.16 c. all things are written in thy booke The other is the booke of Gods universal judgment which is his knowledge concerning all those things which everie one hath don whither it be good or evil and to be judged accordingly in the last day as in cha 20.12 and the bookes were opened The third is the booke of life that is Gods praedestinating both of the elect and reprobates Ps 69.29 Isai 4.5 Dan. 12.2 Phili. 4.3 Reve. 18.8 17.8 22.19 the first are said to be written in this booke the other not but blotted out of this the scripture speakes in many places yet that in Rev. 20.12 then the bookes were opened may be understood of them all for in the same verse the booke of life is expresly mentioned Thus God is said to have bookes metaphoricallie Not as if eyther he hath or stood in need thereof for so it cannot bee but by an Anthropopatheia he speaketh to our capasitie For God doth all things without such help or meanes even by his eternal foreknowledge counsel government and judgment But thus men cannot doe for whatsoever is don in their counsels cities families contracts c. for memory sake is set down in writing that so as there is occasion they may looke it over and call to mind such things as they desire Now concerning the elect Luk. 10.20 two things here are spoken of them First that their names are written in the booke of life Phil. 4.3 or in heaven as Luk. 10.20 by which manner of speech we are taught that true beleevers doe not obtaine salvation by chance but were elected of God to life in Christ before the foundations of the world and known from them that perish Secondly their names are never blotted out of this booke as it is here testified J will not blot out his name out of the booke of life By which phrase is signifyed that the salvation of the Elect is certaine and sure and that they shall never perish according to the promise no man shall plucke my sheep of my hand It is impossible the elect should be seduced All which serves not for curiositie but for our comfort that we being certaine of our salvation might joyfullie persevere in weldoeing unto the end Of infidels and reprobates two things are also spoken First that their names are not written in the booke of life as appeares Rev. 13.8 Rev. 13.8 17.8 20.15 Secondly they are blotted out of the booke of life Ps 69.28 and cast into the lake of fire Let them be blotted out of the booke of the living and not be written with the righteous And whosoever was not found written in the booke of life was cast into the lake of fire by which is signified that they who are not predestinated shall certainlie perish But this seems to imply a contradiction as not to be written yet to be blotted out I answer that this is taken in a double sence 1 Eyther of such who in the Eternal counsell of God are thus written and so are never blotted out Or 2 according to the appearance and boasting of hypocrites For thus they are said to be blotted out that is declared never to have been written therein we see there are many hypocrites in the Church who are taken for a while to be the elect of God whereas in truth they are not Therfore when their hypocrisie is discovered and they justlie cast out of the church then they are said to be blotted out As Ambrose Augustine have wel observed Matt. 24.24 Io. 10.28 Not withstanding it followeth not that any of the Elect shal be blotted out For this is contrarie to that promise of God It is impossible the Elect should perish none
workes And this he doth to stirre them up to a cheerfull going foreward in wel dooing for the prayse of vertue increaseth it and honour provokes men to vertuous enterprises Ovid. li. 4. de pont As the Poet speaketh Secondly in special because he had kept his word and not denyed his name Thus as in the first he is commended for his sinceritie in doctrine so in the latter for his constant profession of the same before the adversarie These two things are required of all Christians but Especiallie of Gods ministers namely to keep the faith of Christ entire and not to corrupt the same by humane inventions and 2. not to forsake the profession thereof in any estate or condition Ro. 10.10 For with the hart man beleeveth unto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation But least this holie teacher should be lifted up to thinke he did these things by his owne strengeth Christ therfore ascribes both the first constitution of this Church as also the constancie of Pastor and people therin to his grace alone behold I have set before thee an open doore that is It is not by thy own power that the congregation over which thou art embraceth the truth taught by thee or that thou thy self standest fast in the faith against all the threats of the adversaries who dayly labour to shut this open doore for thou hast little strength that is little or no outward help and assistance but it is I who have set an open doore before thee It is I who have opened it by my own power and hence the enemies neither have nor ever shall be able to shut the same Thus we se that which before was indefinitely spoken of Christs shutting and opening is here in perticular applyed to the Philadelphians J have set before thee an open doore I am not ignorant how these words for thou hast a little strength may be taken in another sence And some indeed doe expound them adversitivelie as if they deserved the greater commendation for their constancie in their affliction seing they had but a little strength that is destitute of humane protection But then the causal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for should bee a reason of the latter that is wherfore he had kept the word which is repugnant to the scope of the commendation for it is manifestly a reason of the former namely wherfore Christ had opened a doore unto him which no man should bee able to shut Others again understand it as spoken for his comfort as if Christ had said I have gathered unto my self a Church in this citie in the midst of many adversaries over which I have appointed thee a Pastor and howsoever thou hast but a little strength to resist them notwithstanding I will so protect both thee and thy congregation as that no man shall bee able to shut that is to subvert the same or expell the faithfull out of this place Which interpretation I confesse containes much excellent comfort both for the Pastor and people but considering that the Epistle as yet treates not of consolations I therfore allow rather the first exposition Now touching this manner of speech An open doore by a Metaphor is signified an occasion offered of wel dooing that is an opportunitie of preaching and propagating the Gospel for as a man goes into the house the doore being opened even so when the Lord gives passage to the Gospel Churches are planted propagated according to that of the Apostle When I came to Troas to preach the Gospel 2 Cor. 2 12 a doore was opened to mee of the Lord and 1. Cor. 16.12 a great door and effectuall is opened to me c. Hence chiefly we are taught two things First this again proves the divinitie of Christ for whereas he both knoweth the workes of the faithful and openeth a doore to his Church as also restraines the power of the adversaries that notwithstanding all their malice and rage yet can they not shut the same it clearelie shewes that he is God onely wise and omnipotent And therfore as Christ our Lord by his mightie workes XXII Arg. of Chr. deity proved against the blasphemous Jewes that he was God Joh. 10.38 so are we bound from his powrful gathering and preserving of this Church to beleeve the same The cavill of some hereticks is of no waight who pretend that Christ doth these workes by a power communicated unto him of the father I answer he doth it by his divine and essentiall omnipotencie which he hath received from the father by eternall generation for whatsoever the father hath is Christs Ioh. 16.15 Io. 5.9 and whatsoever things hee doeth these also doth the son likewise Not as if the power of the Father were uncreated Christs created but both the Father and the Son worke by the same divine and uncreated power For the Son doeth all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alike with the Father Secondly as Christ of old opened a doore for the passage of the Gospel and no power of malice of men nor Devils could any way hinder the same so considering at this day that among so manie enemies a doore is opened unto the Churches in Germanie England Poland Hungarie c. we ought to acknowledge that this happeneth not by chance nor ascribe it to the industrie of teachers prudencie of politicians or the power of princes but unto the grace efficacie presence and power of Christ alone for certainly the strength of Christians hath been little or nothing to resist the tyrannical persecution cruell edicts and horrible torments by which Antichrist hath laboured but in vain utterlie to deface our Christian faith but by how much they have sought to presse it downe by so much like unto the palme tree it hath flourished more and more because Christ by his divine power having opened this doore Antichrist was not able to shut the same And indeed it is a thing admirable in our eyes that some few Monkes and despised teachers should by the contemptible preaching of the Gospel so shake the kingdome of the Beast howbeit supported with the aid and power of the kings and Emperors of the earth on all sides as that whole nations of the Christian world should turne from Antichrist to Christ our Lord. Now this beeing come to passe we may not thinke that either teachers kings or princes have opened the doore but because Christ powerfullie reigning at the right hand of God hath so effected the same as that none was able to hinder it Let us therfore bee truelie thankful unto Christ for so great a mercie and divine miracle humbly beseeching him to keep this doore still open unto us not suffering it to be shut for our unthankfulnes or his sheep to be scattered by the enemies but that hee graciously preserve his Churches by dwelling among them 9. And I wil make them of the Synagogue of Satan Gr. I give them The second part is a
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
the kingdome of God thereby be made conformable unto Christ Therefore the going forth of this red horse ought not to terrifie us For Gods counsell is grounded on causes both just good in consideration whereof we ought to remame constant unto the end Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine coepit Sanguine succrevit sanguine finis erit The Church in blood first founded was In blood beginne did shee It had her spreading forth in blood In blood her end shal be It was established I say in the blood of Christ It began increased in the blood of the martyrs And in their blood it shall continue unto the end Notwithstanding the end shal be the ruin and destruction of the adversaries For then shall cease the blood of martyrs when the blood of the wicked shall come forth of the wine-presse of the wrath of God unto the horses bridles by the space of a thousand six hundred furlongs Chap. 14.20 Secondlie though the divel his instruments mightilie labour to extinguish the Church yet no more can they doe then what is given them from above Thirdly let us not thinke it strange that God doth suffer tyrants thus miserably to afflict his Saintes for he doth it partly for their great good that they might not grow wanton but that their faith and prayer might be exercised under the crosse And partlie according to their just desert for if examination be made we shall find that for the most part as contentions coveteousnes and ambition among the officers so prophanenesse and securitie of the people drew downe common judgements upon themselves See Cyprian de lapsis Euseb lib. 5. hist cap. 2. The opening of the third seale The black horse having a ballance And proclaiming famine 5 And when he had opened the third seale I heard the third beast say Come see And I beheld and loe a blacke horse and hee that sate on him had a paire of ballances in his hand 6 And I heard a loud voyce in the midst of the foure beasts say A measure of wheat for a peny and three measures of barley for a peny and see thou hurt not the oyle and the wine THE COMMENTARIE ANd when he had opened the third seale First I will set downe the opinion of others and afterward my owne The third seale being opened Iohn is called upon by the third beast which had the forme of a man to behold the wonder Our attention is here againe stirred up by this creature as a third herald As for other mysteries in this I approve not A black horse comes forth with his rider holding a ballance Lyra will have this black horse to be the armie of the Romans with which Titus their captaine destroyed Jerusalem killing a multitude of the Iewes and carying the rest into captivitie in revenge of the death of Christ The ballance in his opinion doth note the just judgment of God The weighing of two pound of wheat and barlie sold for a pennie the meanesse of the Iewish captives who were sold for thirtie pence The wine and oyle which the rider is forbid to hurt are the Christians who before the siege left Ierusalem and went over Iordan to Pella there were preserved but this sence is to straight and agrees not with the scope of the historie for the matter here is not by types to cover former things but to reveal things to come Now we know Ierusalem was alreadie overthrowen which Iohn was not ignorant off being banished into Patmos by Domitian the brother of Titus Andreas and others understand here some notable dearth to be prefigured The opinion of Andreas because mention is made of a scale and wheat c. Some take it for the famine under Claudius which happened long before this revelation Besides famine and dearth doth no more belong to Christians who ought hereat lesse to be troubled then others then unto the adversaries whereas it is to be supposed that onely events proper to the Church were prefigured unto Iohn Wherefore Bede Tyconius and others understand more rightlie by the black horse hereticks by the rider the divel stirring them up to make black or darken the doctrine of the Church by the ballance the word of God which hereticks pretend to be on their side and with which they labour to beautify maintain and commend their errours to the end that people may the more readilie receive them which exposition Ribera also approves of for as the Apostles are the white horse because they preached the glad tidings of salvation so the blake horse notes hereticks maintainers of pernicious doctrines and preaching things corrupt and hurtfull I assent therefore to their opinion who thinke the state of hereticks is here shadowed out The black horse is the Church yet in some things the scope is to be applied otherwise For the same horse which first went forth white importing the puritie of the Apostolicall doctrine afterward was red of the bloodie condition of the Church under tyrants And now is blacke in regard of her afflicted condition by wicked hereticks who cloude the light of the truth with their blacke haeresies and bring in such a deformity upon the Church that shee who appeared white before is now blacke By him which sate on the horse I understand not the divel but Christ but after what manner he rides on hereticks we shall understand by and by Now this blacknes came upon the Church as diverse wayes so by certaine degrees even from the time of Iohn until Antichrist How this blacknesse befel the Church In the first two hundred yeares many hereticks made blacke the Christian Church by weakning the verie foundation of religion not indeed in respect of the elect who firmelie embraced the same but in respect of themselves and their followers Among whom was Cerinthus Ebion Valentine Marcion Basilides and many others whose madnesse was recorded and also refuted by Irenaus Epiphanius Augustine Thilastrius others These besides other foule errous blasphemously oppugned the mysterie of the blessed trinitie denying Christ to be God and man and the onely mediatour and saviour who although they professed themselves to be Christians and boasted of the title of the Church yet as much as in them lay overthrew all Christianity and thus by the meanes of these men the white horse was made black Againe in the two following ages diverse hereticks as Photinus Arius Eunomius Macedonins and others did exceedingly darken the doctrine of Christian religion and with their vile errours corrupted manie who otherwise were godly teachers Papias and Irenaeus were Chiliasts or Millenaries Tertullian a Montanist though these three lived in the former ages Origine maintained manie errours The heresie of the Arians beeing mightilie supported by Constans and Valens infected almost all the hast Westerne Bishops in so much that verie few held the whitnesse or puritie of the primitive faith For the principall fathers both Greeks and Latine as Ambrose
Austine Jerome and Chrysostome had suckt in some of their dregs mingling with the pure Apostolicall doctrine many errours touching matrimonie single life grace freewill praying to and for the dead purgatorie about fasts difference of me●ts c. with which things as with black spots the white horse of Christ was much stained To be short in the following two hundred yeares till the time of Gregorie the first the heresies of the Pelagians Nestorians and Eutichinians succeeded the Arrians which had before overspread the whole Church By little and little also the rites of the heathens crept in a new worship was devised by the Bishops with many beastlie vanities and superstitions Then began hot disputations and contentions about holy orders and seats of Bishops about the primacie of the chaire of Rome about righteousnes of workes merits and humane satisfactions and the like by which the doctrine of faith and free grace was much oppressed and a way made for Antichrist who shortlie after came into the temple of God when Boniface the third obtained the primacie and dominion over all other Churches from Phocas the usurper Thus we have heard how at length the white horse became black Vpon which notwithstanding Christ sate with his ballance that is How Christ sate on hereticks with his ballanct Lib. 2. de bapt cont don cap. 6. as I also assent too the holy scripture for as the ballance is the triall of a just or unjust weight so the holie scripture is the rule of doctrine whether true or false As Augustine wel noteth Let us bring saith hee not deceitfull ballances wherein we may put what and how we will saying according to our owne pleasure this is waightie this is light But let us bring the divine ballance out of the holie Scripture as out of Gods treasurie And put into it that which is waightie nay let not us put in any thing our selves but onely acknowledge what is put in by the Lord. But thou wilt say how doth Christ sit on hereticks doe these beare him up or doe they not rather denie him and cast him off I answere both is true Now these though in truth they denie him by their blasphemies yet Christ is said to ride on them with his ballance in a twofold way First in profession and appearance for the worst and grossest hereticks professed Christ and accounted themselves his Church And would pretend to weigh their errours in the ballance of the scripture but by them abused and miserablie depraved For the truth is most of them drew their heresies out of adulterat and apocrypha bookes corrupting some places of holie writ for a cloake unto the same but rejecting such canonical bookes as refuted their heresies And thus we see how in this respect Christ rides on hereticks But secondlie he doth it also by his providence because even in the greatest confusion of heresies he was not wanting unto his Church Neyther have or doe heresies at any time come rashlie or unawares but by Gods wise ordering hand for the triall of the Church For there must be heresies saith Paul that those which be approved may be made manifest And therfore he hath caused such heresies as sprung up to bee continually examined confuted by the ballance of his word as histories abundantly testifie 6. And I heard a voyce in the midst We have heard what he saw at the opening of the third seale he addes that he heard a voyce in midst of the beasts saying the old version hath it As the voyce of foure beasts saying But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as is not in the Greek neyther is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saying in the plural number but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the singular The voyce came forth out of the midst of the beasts as chap. 9.13 I heard a voyce from the foure hornes of the altar It is not said whose voice it was But without doubt it was the Lambs standing in the midst of the throne and foure beasts Chap. 5.6 He cryeth the price of food but whither at a deare or cheap rate it is uncertaine for the words following may be taken both wayes In that it is said A measure of wheat viz. shal be sould for a penny and three measures of barly for a penny that is shal be put into the ballance We will first consider the words afterward the sence A measure the Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was a measure of dry things containing a halfe peck or as some wil have it so much food as would suffice a man for the day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Suidas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Choenix is a measure of a dayes provision hence came the proverb of Pythagoras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to sit on the measure Choenix intimating though a man had gotten so much as was sufficient for the day yet should he not therfore give himselfe to idlenes but still goe forward in his labour calling A Choenix according to Bude containes two sextaries or foure pound a sextarie containes 24 ounces or two pound by which we see that the old interpreter did erre in rendring Choenix two pound wheras it cōtaines foure For a penny Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so called from the number beeing worth ten pence So much as was given for a dayes wages as appeares by the parable of the labourers in the vineyard Of wheat a more daintie and dearer corne then barly for that was for the poorer sort of men beasts other uses I doubt not but he alludes to the famine in Samaria which was besieged untill an asses head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver 2 Kin. 6.25 the fourth part of a cab of doves dung for five pieces of silver but soon after a measure of fine flour was sold for a shekel and two measures of barlie for a shekel Notwithstanding I take it that here not a cheapnesse but a dearth rather of food is foretold seeing the measure of a dayes allowance could hardly be obtained by a dayes wages which must needs cause scarsity both to man and beast But wherefore doth he prophesie of a famine under the black horse the same shadowing out as we have shewed the corrupt state of the Church under haereticks If we take it according to the letter it seems not to cohere For what need was there to foretell a dearth which we know comes ordinarily to passe Wherefore the prophesie seemes mystically to be understood He proclaimes a mysticall famine not a famine of bread but of the word of God threatned here to be sent upon the despisers therof according to that in the prophet they shall wander from sea to sea from the North even to the East and run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord but should not finde it Amos 8.11.12 Therefore in these words viz. by scarsitie of wheat barly the Church is threatned with a spirituall famine that is the Gospel
persecution under Trajan affirming that he and his instruments in putting to death the Christians by sword famine wilde beasts c. are this horse said to be pale frō the effect for he that is slaine lookes pale Death was the rider because they killed many thousands of Christians Hell followed not to devoure the saints beeing slaine but those that had killed them Howsoever they thought that none would take vengeance on thē for so great a wickednesse They killed foure parts of the earth for so the Latin version reads it that is in all places of the Empire or according as it is in the original a fourth part of the earth For if the multitude of Christians which were slaine should have been reckoned the number would have been no lesse then a fourth part of men then living in those provinces or else said to be a fourth part because the cities of their habitations wherein they were dispersed by reason of persecution were the fourth part of the earth that is of the Romane Empire But these interpretations cannot stand for undoubtedly the three foresaid persecutions were set forth under the red horse besides it is not likelie that John saw the bloody face of the Church after her blacknesse but in order of time it went before That which Ribera pretendeth is without all shew of reason as if by the red horse should be noted such persecutions as the Godlie suffered by their trecherous confederates But we know how under the Emperours they had neither polities weapons or confederates moreover he himselfe before interpreted the red horse to be persecutions under tyrants A certaine namelesse interpreter whom manie follow understands by the pale horse hypocrites and false brethren who disfigure their faces that they may appeare unto men to fast Matt. 6.16 These carie death that is bring death upon themselves and others by their hypocrisie and deceits Hell followes them that is the multitude of the damned who follow the divell They slay the fourth part of the earth that is very many by the sword of false accusation slaunder Hunger that is want of the word of God Beasts of the earth that is with brutist and unreasonable lusts lastlie with death that is with all sorts of mischievous practises I confesse there is something in what is here said however their applying it to hypocrites is too generall and obscure For indeed I verely beleeve besides the bloody persecutions of tyrants black blasphemies of hereticks there is here another evill of the Church shadowed out Therefore this pale horse in kinde is the same with the three former but of another colour for howbeit it signifies the same Christian Church yet is far otherwise to looke on then before as having now her white red black estate turned into a mortal palenesse beeing sick even unto death thorow the rising of Antichrist she was whole and sound in the white horse covered with the blood of martyrs in the red horse spread over with heresies in the black But now so infirme weak sicklie as that she hath death on her back and is neere to death and hell For a fourth part perisheth with the sword famine death or pestilence and beasts of the earth And these are the foure sore plagues wherewith the Lord threatned to punish Ierusalem for her apostacie Ezech. 14.21 To which place he here alludes by an allegorie signifying those pernicious doctrines of hereticks and hypocrites which tended to death and destruction and making way for Antichrist But whence came this deadlie disease and palenesse unto the Church When and how this palenesse befel the Church I answer it was by accident occasioned by Constantine that good Emperour his excessive bounty to Christian Bishops by which indeed he inriched but no way bettered the Church For as to much indulgence of parents spoiles the childe so this liberall Emperour was a meanes to draw Bishops to pride luxurie idlenesse security other vices For after he first had restored peace unto the Church and heaped up honour wealth upon Bishops but specially inlarged the jurisdiction of Rome presently followed such a declining corruption in doctrine discipline as infected the Church with a deadly poison brought upon her I say a spirituall sicknesse in so much as the pest of Antichrist began now to enter into her very heart and bowels And hence it is reported that a voyce from heaven was heard saying To day venome is powred foorth into the Church Sylvestri legenda In vita Malchi And Ierome even in his time complained that after princes became to be Christians the Church indeed was greater in power and riches but lesse in vertue The remote cause of this so great an evill considered in it selfe was the guile malice of that old serpent the devill who laboured to supplant the Church through the ease and pompe of Bishops beeing otherwise not able to overthrow it by the sword of tyrants but the neerest cause was the hypocrisie of superstitious monks with the pomp luxury avarice of ambitious prelates hereby making way for Antichrists oppression of the Church and truth Se Clemanges touching the corrupt state of the Church Cap. 3. The original of Monks was occasioned by the persecution of Decius The monks original for some then to avoyde his tyranny among whom was Paulus Thebaeus one Antonius fled into deserts where they indured a while the hardship of a solitary life this kinde of life by others was afterward imitated at length new orders and religions folishly devised wherein they boasted of perfection merits of supererogatiō Hereupon a great multitude of Moncks as a sinke of mischiefe overspread the Church by whom the truth of Christ under the pretence of holines was soon oppressed For now such as desired the pardon of sin and to obtaine eternal life were sent not unto Christ but unto Hermites to the dens of Monks And hence came this palenes mortal wound upon the Church hereby drawing more thousands of soules to death hel then eyther the foure sore plagues mentioned in Ezech 14. or the sword of tyrants or the black famine of haereticks or any other kinde of punishments wherewith Christians were brought unto their end Moreover the riot of Bishops and the clergie mightilie increased this pale disease for now infinite ceremonies and humane traditions are established as the worshipping of the dead images the observation of holy dayes orders rites and solemnities of pagans forged by the devill himself the names onelie altered were forciblie imposed upon the Church to the utter abolishing of the doctrine of free grace and the merits of Christ The summe of all is this the fourth seale being opened the Church appeared languishing with a deadlie palenesse for about three yeeres after the decease of Gregorie Boniface the third being created Pope sate on the chaire of universall pestilence began to establish monarchical tyrannie The II. Act of vision II.
mount Sion in Jerusalem shal be deliverance Andreas Caesariensis wel observeth on this place that the crosse and calamities under Antichrist seem to be foretold unto the Church to no other end but that the godly beeing praeadmonished long be forehand might be confirmed in the very time of these trials by Antichrist his ministers for evils foreseen and premeditated on are lesse offensive when they come upon us Thus we have heard whence these prodigious sights are taken what they signifie and wherefore they are foretold Now let us consider them one by one they are seven in number three whereof shall come to passe in the earth viz. The earthquake the trembling of the mountains and the removall of the Ilands Four shall happen in heaven viz. The darkning of the Sun the changing of the Moon into blood the fall of stars and the convolution of heavens The first is a great earthquake This is made by the winds getting into the hollow parts of the earth and violently breaking forth Hereupon the earth shaketh houses towers townes and cities are throwne downe to the ground all things are gashlie to behold Even so Antichrist puft up with base pride lead by an evill spirit hath shaken the Christian world overthrowen the ancient order and discipline of Christ by changing the forme thereof into his Ecclesiasticall Monarchie the which tooke its beginning from the time of Pope Sylvester I. For no sooner were the Romish Bishops by Constantine and the following Emperours raysed up with outward dignitie and riches but they hereupon swelling with ambition forthwith began to domineere and lord it over their brethren as the histories of Sozimus Zaelestinus Leo and others testifie notwithstanding this their great arrogancie was at first a little kept under as by the authoritie of Emperours so by the canon lawes as also the opposition of other Bishops as may be seen by the Acts of the sixt council of Carthage where the Pope of Rome assuming the name of universall unto his chaire by authority as he falsly affirmed of the Nicean council he was convicted of falshood and for that time repressed But after Gregorie this spirit of pride violentlie burst forth in Sabinian his successour and after him in Boniface III. who was as we said before openlie by Phocas declared universal Bishop that is Antichrist was now lifted up on his throne Then began all the bowels of the earth that is of the Christian world to be horribly shaken For now the whole clergie is brought under the yoke of the Pope who at length imposed the law of abstinence from marriage upon them Now the doctrine of the Church both concerning the worship of God as also the faith and free grace of Christ is so corrupted as nothing almost remained sound but the bare name Now the mountaines viz. Emperours Kings and Princes if at any time they displease the Pope are sore shaken yea troden under feet by their buls and excommunications Now the Ilands also that is whole nations escape not as we shall hear by and by It would bee tedious to repeat all the disturbances and grievous calamities which this Romane Antichrist hath brought and yet daily deviseth both against Church and common wealth By this earthquake Steeven the 11. through Pipin wroung the principallity of Ravenna with all Italie out of the hands of the Graecian Emperours from whom also Leo III. with the aid of Charles drew away the whole Empire of the West to settle it as some of them boast among the Germaines We need not insist upon histories seeing our owne daily experience doth sufficiently set forth the meaning of this commotion The Sun became black as sack cloth of hair This is the second wonder Christ the Sun of righteousnes shal be horriblie eclipsed that is the doctrine touching his offices and benefits darkned and utterlie defaced We heard before how the Church lost her whitnesse and became black in regard of the manie foule heresies of that time yet something still remained pure in her by reason of some sound teachers who firmlie maintained the truth of Christ But under Antichrist even the Sun is made black as sackcloth of hair that is most black and hurtfull Not that Christ in himself can so be made but because Antichrist by his profession both teacheth and maketh such a Christ It is thought that the haire of sackcloth here spoken of What this sackcloth of hair is is made of the black hair of goats or horses whereof in former time they made mourning garments as may be gathered from many places of scripture these garments did prick the flesh much paine those that ware them Hence the hypocriticall Monkes as Carthusians Cappuzins and other Antichristian frogs who glorie of perfection weare such garments for the beating down of their flesh but indeed hereby as by a true badge they testifie that they live under the darknesse of the Sun here spoken of But say they Christ the Sun of righteousnes is not darkned unto us How the Sun is obsctired in popery For the Pope professeth Christ to be God and man against all hereticks I answer If he should openly cast off the name of Christ then he could not have brought the Christian Church under his bondage neither suppresse the truth as now he doth But his comming as the Apostle witnesseth 2 Thess 2.10 is with all deceiveablenes of unrighteousnes in them that perish So that by the cunning pretence of Christian profession he hath fraudulentlie overthrowne the Church yea herein he hath mainly opposed Christ in that he was looked upon to be a preacher of his name Contra Auxentium lib. 2. cont legis advers cap. 12. as Hilarie and Austin write concerning him The profession of Christs person and of the trinitie was indeed the maske under which he deceived the Church for otherwise Christians would have shunned him as the devill But of what use I pray you is Christ without his offices benefits the which in popery are troden under foot what profiteth it to beleeve that the Turk is the Emperour of the East from whom unlesse it be by thy own deceit thou canst not exspect eyther good to thy self or others Yea say they Papists beleeve not on Christ as the onely mediatour we also professe Christ to be the mediatour redeemer and onely saviour by beleeving in whose merits we must be saved But we have often shewed that this their profession is nothing but as black sackcloth if they would but see it for if indeed they did beleeve Christ to be the onelie mediatour they would not then have made to themselvs so many thousands of mediatours as they have don For doe they not cry to S. Marie to S. Peter to S. Nicolas c. to pray for them If they did beleeve to be saved by the merits of Christ alone then they would not have forged the merits of saintes neither their owne works of Iustification or
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
waters became Wormewood and many men died of the waters because they were made bitter THE COMMENTARIE ANd the third Angel sounded Andrea● howbeit unfitly takes this falling starre to be Lucifer thrown down headlong out of heaven the Wormwood the torments of the wicked in hell Andreas opinion Lyra conceives it to be Pelagius the third Archeretick Lyraes interpretation who in the dayes of Arcadius Honorius denied original sin pleaded for free will and overthrew the grace of Christ He fell from heaven that is fell away from the Church militant And is called a great Starre because he was a learned and religious Monke Burning as it were a Lampe by shew of holines and learning deceiving many his name is Wormwood because contrarie to the sweet doctrine of true grace he taught that men by the meer help of natural faculties setting grace aside might bee converted and saved with which pestilent doctrine he made bitter and destroyed many Churches with their teachers Ribera desirous to be singular in interpreting the trumpets literally doth verie foolishly apply this to some fiery exhalation falling from heaven and takes all these signes historically Riberaes frivolous exposition But we know that such fierie mixtures doe often happen in the ayre Besides the name of this Starre and the making of the waters bitter doe sufficiently manifest that these things cannot bee properly or literally taken But Ribera perhaps durst not doe otherwise least he should have been forced to applie it to the apostasie of the Romish Antichrist All other interpreters for the most part understand this falling starre to be some certaine eminent heretike Diverse interpretations concerning this falling star one or more But they differ in the persons For some referre it to Simon Magus Others to Samosatenus Manichaeus Arius c. Others againe to Pelagius Novatus Montanus Manichaeus And some unto Origen Now howsoever all these differ and erre in the hypothesis or speciall application yet they all agree in the thesis or generall position neyther as I judge doe they herein erre from the scope For the third trumpes with its apparitions answereth to the third seal and black horse that went out at the opening thereof which signifies as we have before shewed the state of the Church spotted with black and foul heresies from the Apostles time unto the rising of Antichrist and howsoever the Church were thus defiled Christ with the ballance of his word was still present reproving condemning their haeresies by his faithfull teachers yet in the mean time a great famine of sound doctrine much afflicted the Christian world forasmuch as almost all Churches with their teachers were drawne aside to the pestilent errour of Arius Others referre this to Mahomet but they little observe the circumstances of the trumpet For Mahomet beeing a most wicked villaine cannot bee called a starre muchlesse a great starre shining like a Lampe neither fell hee from heaven that is the Church in which hee never was although I confesse hee hath occasioned much bitternes unto Christians My opinion therefore touching the third trumpet is that this great starre burning like a lampe falling from heaven and turning the third part of the waters into wormewood in a generall way denoteth all apostated Arch-hereticks spoken of Chap. 6. Who at the opening of the third seale for the space of six hundred yeeres after the time of the Apostles deformed the Church of Christ by their foul heresies and brought destruction upon the four corners of the earth by their blasphemies errours and tumults as we have before declared For it is plain that by starres the teachers of Churches are signifyed and by falling from heaven their apostasy from the true faith But specially by this starre and his fall from heaven is undoubtedly signifyed the apostasie of the Bishop of Rome not indeed that universall departure The apostafie of the Church of Rome which followed afterward at the full rising of Antichrist but that first defect which three hundred yeers before forcibly occasioned led the Churches both of the East and West by little and little to submit to Antichrist namely from the time of Constantine unto Phocas the intruder For the Bishops of Rome in regard of the great renowne and chiefe honour of that citie it being the seat of the Romane Empire were eminent lights among their fellow bishops hence the starre is called great burning like a torch or lampe Hee fell from heaven not at one instant but by degrees therefore it is said in the Preterimperfect tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee did fall Hee saw him here not quite fallen as in Chap. 9.1 but falling for as yet the Romane sea was onely declining or in the motion of its Apostasie Before Siluester thirtie and one Bishops of Rome for the most part like stars in the firmament brightly shined both in learning faith Pietie and constancie yea they all suffered Martyrdome under the Romane tyrants But after that Constantine had graunted peace unto Christians and enriched the Churches by his too much liberallity heaping wealth and honour exceedingly upon bishops then began this star swelling with pride and ambition like Lucifer to lift up himselfe above his fellow ministers to bee wholy given to voluptuousnesse to fill and burthen the Churches with Iewish and heathenish rites and ordinances so by forsaking the truth of the Gospell altogether to embrace humane traditions Sylyester was the first if histories may bee credited who gave himselfe wholy to the institution of their Masse-priests orders ornaments temples singing-men sacrifices sanctuaries vestments ointments surplises miters embroidered garments and the like Babylonish stuffe bringing all these idle rites into the Church under this pretence partly least Christian religion should seem inferiour in outward lustre and pompe to heathenisme partly that the Pagans by the likenesse of these rites with theirs might bee the more easily drawen to Christianity And this verie thing was afterward pretended by the following Bishops as Gregories Epistle to Serenus testifies Now this Silvester was he on whom Constantine as Platina recordeth in the life of this Bishop imposed an embroidered mitre beset with Gold and Pearles in stead of a Diadem And then this great starre began to fall from heaven unto the earth And upon the third part of the rivers that is as I understand on the Romane Bishops the successours of this Sylvester and others for rivers doe note the teachers of Churches by whom divine doctrines ought to flow and be derived unto others Of these the third part not all for many remained faithfull and sincere but a great number or the third part of them that lived in Europe leaving heaven gave themselves wholie to worldly cares pleasures pompe and foolish ceremonies defiling the Church with many abuses superstitions errours yea grosse heresies also For as Ierom and the Ecclesiasticall history both testifie Liberius was indeed a great starre beeing at the first a great opposer of
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
to be approved off yet the eating of the booke doth make nothing for it Andreas and they which follow him perceiving that here is spoken of prophesying to come in the last times have imagined much like to the disciples of old that Iohn is not dead to this day but yet liveth with Enoch Elias in paradise with whom after Antichrist is risen he shall come and prophesie against him Touching whose opinion so much indeed is true viz that here is treated of a future prophesying under Antichrist but the rest is false and refuted by Iohn himself Chap. 21.23 All the forenamed opinions therefore are to bee joyned together and then the meaning will appear to be thus that here is a confirmation of the Prophet that he should not because of his banishment desist from his office but goe on to prophesie and thus the commandement may include a promise of his restitution into his former place Yet the heavenly voyce is further to be applied namely to the prophesying which should be renewed against Antichrist in the last times So that Iohn is commanded to eat up the book againe to prophesie not so much in his owne as in the person of all those witnesses of the truth who lived neer the end of the fift and sixt trumpets the sence is therefore that when Antichrist hath long enough raged then prophesying shall againe be restored against him c. Now to prophesie againe To prophesie againe what it is is to bring to light purge reforme wholy to restore to its former brightnesse the doctrine of the Gospell filthily polluted mangled brought to nought by Antichrists Locusts Againe for although the Apostles Pastors Teachers sincere Bishops had formerly published preached the Gospell yet afterward prophesie was oppressed by Antichrist and therefore it was behovefull it should againe be restored by the faithfull preachers of the word This I say must be don for otherwise Antichrist would have thrust Christ quite out of his possession troaden his Church under foot Therefore for the truthes sake of these divine praedictions that the Church perish not but that Antichrists abominations be wholy rooted out it was needfull that prophesie should bee renewed The Thunders indeed uttered their voyces but they did little good therefore other witnesses must be raised up who shall more strongly strike at assault weaken Antichrists kingdome Thus it is manifest that here is promised a reformation of the Church about the last times which shal be expounded in the following Chapter under the two witnesses who shall againe prophesie against Antichrist Before many people and nations and tongues and kings The successe of prophesie renewed is set forth for hereby many peoples nations and kings who before worshipped the beast shall embrace the Gospell forsake Antichrist The which how far it hath and yet daylie is accomplished both in Germanie France England Poland Bohemia Hungary Denmarke Suetia c. all may clearly see who doe not malitiously shut their eyes Thus wee see that here is a preparation and transition unto the following measuring of the tempie of God The Argument Parts Analysis of CHAPTER XI NOw are described the new combats of the two witnesses prophesie ministerie with the beast their martyrdome and vindication also the triumph of Antichristians because they were killed their astonishment and ruin and at last the seventh trumpet sounding the songs of joy and triumph of the Church in heaven also the last judgement the abolition of Antichrists kingdome with the fretting and punishment of the wicked Who are these two witnesses what events they doe prefigure of whom is very obscure Interpreters indeed every one according to his understanding have learnedly thought upon severall opinions But I hardly find one who satisfies himself and the reader And perhaps all humane understanding doth here faile For mine owne part I willingly confesse that herein I stick come short The obscurity chiefly consists in the defining of the moneths dayes and moments of times the resolution whereof cannot fully be had but by the bright beames of divine revelation Yet notwithstanding I doubt not but by blessing of God the observation of our method will afford us some little light in this mysterie Hitherto the two former Acts of this Vision have been Parallels as answering each to other The first was the proposition of the Churches calamities under the sound of the six trumpets that is under the heathen tyrants hareticks Apollyon the king of Locusts and Mahumet Chap. 8. 9. The second is of the comforts of the afflicted Church under the said enemies Chap. 10. Now followes the third Act Chap. 11. unto ver 15. which is an amplification of the foresaid calamities describing the renewed combats of the Saintes with the Westerne Antichrist The Westerne Antichrist more hurtfull then the Easterne as beeing much more cruell and hurtfull unto the Church then the Easterne considering how the latter tyrannized by open force and warr killing onely the bodies of them who submitted not unto his yoake whereas the other tyrannizeth over the soules with all deceiveablenesse of unrighteousnesse lying signes moreover torments the consciences of them who enslave themselves unto him with torments far worse then any kinde of death as we have heard in Chap. 9. But chiefly it describeth the occasion and cause of those combats namely the purging of the Evangelical doctrine from Antichristian defilements with the reformation of the Church by the preaching of the two witnesses in the latter times of the fift and sixt trumpets as also the successe of the reformation and what should happen both to the witnesses and also to Antichrist Lastly the fourth Act is added by the sound of the last trumpet relating the happie change of all former calamities in the last judgement when as Christ the judge destroying the kingdomes of his adversaries will render a reward unto his servants and punishment unto the wicked Chap. XI from vers 15. unto the end This method beeing observed the reason is plaine why the last judgment is againe treated of in the end of this Chapter now without this we grope in darknesse many imaginarie things are in vain devised The parts therefore of the Chapter are two I. FIrst a prophesie of the reformation of the Church under Antichrist unto vers 15. II. The sounding of the last trumpet from vers 15. unto the end The former part hath a twofold oracle The first general commanding Iohn to measure the temple that is to purge the Church from the filth and corruptions of Antichrist vers 1. To leave out the inward court and shewes the cause thereof vers 2. The second speciall declaring the manner of the future reformation viz. by the ministerie of two witnesses consisting of four particulars I. A description of the witnesses 1. From the time of their prophesie from their habit v. 3. 2. From their dignitie esteem with God v.
under foot the two witnesses shall prophesie because during Antchrists reign Christ shall never want two witnesses least he might seem to be overcome and thrust out of his possession by Antichrist now without al doubt this is the safest opinion sufficeth for the consolation of the godlie If thou demand what is the reason of the change of moneths into dayes Why the moneths are changed into dayes We have nothing here to answer precisely except that the same time the same thing is set forth by diverse expressions as it is familiar with the prophets By two dreames God signified the same thing unto Pharaoh so generally throughout this whole prophesie the same events are prefigured by diverse types Notwithstanding it is not a misse to observe as some have done that the lesser number is attributed to the treading down to denote the shortnes of afflictions the greater to the witnesses to signifie the during and invincible power of the Gospel both which serve to comfort the godly Furthermore what we said before concerning the 42 moneths seems here againe to bee repeated of the 1260 dayes it may be to the end that the time both of the moneths and dayes might hereby be defined For why should the spirit of God rather attribute 42 moneths unto Antichrists treading down then 10 20 60 or 100 and why should 1260 dayes be rather appointed then more or lesse If therefore it might be lawfull to gesse at the termes of the moneths and yeeres from histories past and present then I should thinke that as Antichrist began to tread down the Church when Boniface the third was set on the Chaire of universal pestilence anno 606. and that the Church hath now from that time unto this been troden down 34 moneths and an half so the prophesie of the two witnesses against Antichrist hath continued 1036 dayes and so are not yet ended And as the Churches oppression was not all at one time or instant neyther was the sorest in the beginning but it increased by little little untill at length the holy citie was troden wholie under foot by Antichrist so the preaching of the two witnesses was not alwayes alike perspicuous powerful against him but manifested it self in severall ages by manifold martyrdoms untill at length the mysterie of iniquitie beeing unfolded it most manifestly brake forth in these latter ages For it appeareth by histories that the Bishops of France Germanie yea also of Italie but especially they of Ravenna Mediolanum and Aquileia did often times most stronglie oppose the successours of Pope Boniface As also Synods not a few have condemned the tryannie and idols of the Popes of Rome moreover among these witnesses were John Scottis Bertramus the Abbat Berengarius a priest Waldus in France Wickleffe in England as also Nicolaus Clemanges Marsilius of Patavia Besides many of the Emperours as Henry IV. V. Frederick I. II. Ludowick IV. c. have with all their might suppressed Popish tyrannie Now the reason why I reckon these Emperours among the witnesses I will shew in the following verse See also the Catalogue of witnesses published in two volummes who by prophesying have opposed the Romish Hierarchie A little before the Council of Constans anno 1409. the holy citie was most miserably troden down by Romish beasts Tom 11. concil Constant sess XL. art 67. at what time three Antipopes laid claime and by tyrannie possessed the Antichristian chaire viz. Gregorie XII Benedicte XIII Alexander V. after his death Iohn XXIII who denied that there was any hell or resurrection of the flesh At this time the Antichristian Church was a horrible three headed monster the which schisme dured above seventy yeeres Then Christ raised up two witnesses in Bohemia Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prage to prophesie against those Beasts Who beeing called appeared before the Councill Sigismund the Emperour having swoorn safe-conduct unto them and laid down their testimonie in the assemblie of the Locusts condemning the Antichristian tyrannie of Popes But the thing here foretold happened unto them The Beast overcame and slue them Husse was cruelly burnt anno 1415. 8 of the ides of Iulie Hierom anno 1416. 3 of the Calends of Iune Now however Iohn Husse taught publicklie at Prage in the beginning of the yeere 1400. not withstanding he begane first to maintaine the opinions of Wicleffe and opposed the Beast in the yeer 1412. from which time untill his martyrdom were precisely 42 moneths or 1260 dayes So that the Prophesie may seem to have been fulfilled according to the letter in these two witnesses Now Husse while he was in the fire foretold that the adversaries after an hundred yeeres should give an account to God and to him which also came to passe for an hundred yeeres after the Lord stirred up other couples of Prophets against the beast In Saxonie Luther and Melanchthon at Argentine Bu●●er and Cariton In Helvetia Zwinglius and Oecolampadius In France Farellus and Calvin who beeing divinely armed with the spirit and power of Elias be gane with the reed of the holie Scriptures to measure the temple reforme the Church purge the doctrine of the Gospell and cast out the court of priests these beeing dead the Lord raysed up other maintainers of the truth in diverse Kingdoms Provinces Commonwealthes Churches Academies of Europe who unto this day both by word and writing have stronglie opposed themselves against the Beast treading the holy citie under his foot Clothed in sackcloth The titles of the witnesses now follow about which we are in a generall way to observe that what ever of old was attributed in holie scripture as memorable excellent unto the Prophets chiefe servants of God that is here applied unto these not indeed in a litteral sense which in many things can not hold but by a certaine similitude They shal be clothed in sackcloth like unto the Prophet Daniel Chap. 9.13 Two Olive-trees before God as Zerubbabel Iehoshua Zach. 4.11 Fire shall proceed out of their mouth as out of the mouth of Ieremie Ier. 5.14 With it they shall devoure their enemies as Elias 2 King 1. They shall shut heaven that it raine not as the said Elias 1 King 17. They shall turn waters into blood and smite the earth with plagues as often as they will as Moses Aaron Exo. 4.5.6.7.8.9.10 By which we may more clearly perceive First Against the fabulous opinion of Enoch and Elias that the two witnesses are not rightly applied to Enoch Elias seeing nothing of Enoch is here referred unto them The miracles indeed of Elias are attributed unto them but not his alone so that if we should judge by the attributes one of them should no more be Elias then Moses Aaron Ieremie Daniel Zerubbabel or Iehoshua Secondly that two individuals are not onely noted but a few at severall times yet many successively who shall prophesie against the Beast For those prophets unto whom they are likened
remain after the witnesses are slain But according to their supposition the Beast shal be no more but killed after three yeeres an half Now we have shewed that the 1260 dayes of their prophesie is put indefinitely by an allusion unto the historie of Elias who by prayer shut heaven from raining for so many dayes Therfore also the end of their testimonie is to be taken indefinitely for the time appointed by God therein to fulfill their ministerie And so the sence seemes thus The Beast indeed shal raise up war so soon as they begin to prophesie yet he shal not overcome them before they have finished their testimonie according to the will of God The which serves for the great comfort of the witnesses For as the high-priests could not hurt Christ before his houre was come although they never ceased to lay wait for his life so likewise Antichrist shall not be able to overcome Christs witnesses before the course of their ministery be finished Therfore the words when they have finished are not to be referred to Antichrists rage against them spoken of in the first place but to the two latter hee shal overcome kill them For he shall alwayes war against the witnesses but shal not kill and overcome them before they have finished their testimony This also serves to prove that Antichrist shall have power indeed to kill overcome the witnesses but not their testimony in the least for it is said they shall accomplish their testimonie And therfore the preaching of the Gospel shal endure unto the end Thus we see who the Beast is what time is to bee understood It remaines now to be handled what manner of warre it is what the effect therof shal be Touching the war it is said He shall make war against them Before he had sufficiently declared what the witnesses should doe and effect against the Beast now on the contrarie he shewes what the Beast shall doe and effect against the witnesses for Antichrist will not sit still and suffer his kingdome to be destroyed but with all his power wil fight for the same And therefore as soon as the witnesses shal begin to prophesie against his kingdom he wil prepare himself to war against them and by how much their prophesie is powerfull by so much the warr shall be the greater But what manner of war and victorie shall this bee Rupertus saith such as is usually betwixt truth and falshood The war shal be both ecclesiasticall and civill and therefore such also shall the victorie be His Ecclesiastical war shal be three manner of wayes The manner of the beasts war against the witnesses First by the seditious sermons of the Locusts their venemous writings and sophistical disputations in the behalfe of Apollyon against the witnesses of Christ branding them for most pestilent hereticks They shall preach with great applause to the multitude that the Beast is head of the Church Christs Vicar and armed as with the key of Peter so with the sword of Paul and Caesar crying out with full mouths that his kingdom is the Catholick Church Secondly through the Councils of Locusts by whose decrees the Beast shall establish his kingdom and anathematize as heretical the truth of Christ For it is true Aene. Syl. in histor concil Basil pag. 79. as Julian the Cardinal freely wrote from the Council of Basil unto Pope Eugenius that by the meanes of Councils the libertie and power of Ecclesiastical persons hath alwayes been strengthened and augmented To be short by the bulles and excommunications of the Romish court by which he shall condemne Christes witnesses with their testimony for heresie and delivering them over to the secular power destroy them by fire and sword to wit as unworthy to breath or live in the world Moreover the beast will raise up civill warres and by his subtiltie cause the kingdomes and provinces of the Christian world to fight against the Gospell that so the witnesses of Christ may bee overcom and killed Therfore it followeth The beast shall overcome them and kill them The latter declares the former This very thing doth sufficientlie shew that these witnesses cannot be literallie taken for Enoch and Elias For what godly man will beleeve that those holy prophets whome the scriptures testifie to have been tranflated from death to life eternal should again return into the earth to be cruelly killed by Antichrist Furthermore the Beast shall kill the witnesses in the like manner he overcame them partly by ecclesiastical censure partly by the secular sword so then not by the goodnesse of his cause nor by the holie scriptures for by these the witnesses shall overcome and consume Antichrist but he shall overcome them by outward force and tyranny by the authority of Councils by thundring out his bulles by cruel warre and his hangmen Thus I say he warreth against the Saintes overcoms kills them not by arguments scriptures but by sword fire excommunications So also my Anonymus 260 yeers past wrot concerning the Popes victorie He shall overcome them in reputation of his friendes kill them some corporally eyther by burning or murdering them with the sword other kinds of death others civilly by adjudging them to perpetuall imprisonment against these whom he cannot torment in this manner he will at least thunder out his excommunications insomuch as they shall not be accounted otherwise then dead men in the Church so far as concerneth a spiritual life What would not this author have written had he seen the histories of our time the foregoing age when the Beast anathematized the two witnesses of England John Wickleffe that excellent teacher and opposer of Poperie and his protectour John Earl of Leicestre whose carkeise not long after being taken up out of the grave he caused to be burnt When he overcame burnt contrarie to the publick faith of the Empire the two witnesses of Bohemia John Husse and Ierom of Prage prophesying that the Ecclesiasticall court of priests should he cast forth When by the bloodie inquisition he delivered unto death many thousand martyrs in Italie Spain France England Belgia when he enwrapt almost all the provinces of Europe in cruell warres to suppresse the Gospell when at length in Germanie God restored the slaine witnesses unto life The Iesuites I doubt not may find this litle commentarie of Anonymus in their publick libraries speaking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 plainely impartially not respecting persons And thence let them judge whither the Pope of Rome were by us of late first accounted that Beast and Antichrist as Bellarmin falsly affirmeth Lib. 3. de P. R. cap. 21. And their carkeises The particle spirituallie here mentioned shewes that this also is not literallie to be understood as we shall further see by that which followes The cruelty therefore of the Beast against the witnesses falsly condemned for heresie is hereby noted forasmuch as they shall not be satiated by cursing and putting of
that unto us a certaine deliverance is here shewed but confusion to the adversaries Let us therfore patiently suffer his tyrannie for it shal neither dure long nor hinder our salvation For being overcome we conquer Euseb lib. 4. histor cap. 12. This caused Antoninus the Emperour to forbid the governours of Asia to draw the Christians before their tribunals and punish them because saith he by dying they overcome for they rather choose to die for Christ then to live After three dayes That is as Rupertus saith well After a little while although it seem long see v. 9. First the miraculous vivification glorification of the witnesses is described Secondly the effects following upon the enemies For the first The spirit of life That is their vital spirit by an Hebraisme or life that is the soule or ghost which they gave up at the hour of death is said to enter into them from God that is by a divine miracle and that they stood upon their feet which phrases seem to be taken out of Ezech. 37 and shew both Gods omnipotencie by which he restores the dead to life as oft as he pleaseth as also the immortalitie of the soule which though separated from the bodie yet is not killed by tyrants but doth live with God shal return from him into its own bodie againe Now to the sense The Papists take it for the miraculous restauration of the two witnesses Enoch and Elias from death to life after three dayes Papists opinion touching the vivification of the two witnesses And Ribera disputeth how the raising and glorification of the witnesses agrees with that of Hebr. 11. That without us they might not be consummated or perfected But their fabulous opinion touching Enoch Elias hath often been refuted the which is here also manifestlie contradicted in that the two witnesses are said to have tormented the inhabitants of the earth Now it is absurd to imagine that two poore prophets should torment all the tribes peoples nations and tongues of the whole earth in the space of three yeeres So that this dualitie of the witnesses so to speak cannot be restrained to two individuals or unto two precisely Now however the vivification of the witnesses shall literallie come to passe in the end of the world yet unto that the spirit here hath no respect at all But by this vivification is signified a perpetuall restoring of witnesses unto the Church militant viz that in stead of such whom Antichrist puts to death the Lord will raise up others to hold forth the testimonie of Christ and strongly oppose the Beasts kingdome For when Antichrist shal thinke that all Christs witnesses are suppressed then others restored to life shall renew againe the battle against him As therfore Elias is said to have lived againe in John Baptist not by a Pythagorean 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or transmigration of the sowle out of one bodie into another but in condition or nature of office because John came in the power and spirit of Elias preparing the way for Christ So the two witnesses As for example John Husse and Jerome of Prague being killed by the Beast they lived againe after three dayes an half in Luther Melanchthon others c. And to this purpose that of Husse being led to his martyrdom doth excellently serve At the end said he of an hundred yeeres which before God are scarsly three dayes yee shall answer to God and to mee He said also now indeed ye burn a Goose for Husse in the Bohemian tongue signifies a goose but out of his ashes shal arise a swanne which yee shall not be able to rost Foretelling that which afterward came to passe for just so many yeeres after Husse was burned Luther begane to oppose Popish pardons which was the beginning of reformation and bringing down of Popery This restoring of the witnesses to life serves for the consolation of the Church militant feeing there shall alwayes notwithstanding all Antichristian persecution be some faithfull professours of the truth who shall strongly fight for the glorie of Christ So then if Antichrist kill the two witnesses God will againe vivifie them and make them to stand upon their feet by raising up others in their place That which is added touching the Glorification of the witnesses serves also to comfort us For to whom Antichrist shall deny the fellowship of men to them God will vouchsafe a heavenly fellowship such as he shal exclude out of the world God wil receive them up into paradise they whom here he will not admit to be honourablie buried them God will crown with the glory of everlasting life This is that which followeth v. 12. 12. And they heard a great voyce from heaven saying unto them Come up hither And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud and their enemies beheld them 13. And the same houre was there a great eartquake and the tenth part of the citie fell and in the earthquake were slaine of men seven thousand and the remnant were afrighted and gave glory to the God of heaven 14. The second woe is past and behold the third woe commeth quickly 12. And they heard a great voyce Not the enemies but the witnesses restored to life heard this voyce This shall be Christs voyce who according to his promise will call his witnesses unto him into glorie It shal be Great because of the power thereof for it shal bring the witnesses to glorie and strike a terrour into the adversaries Come up hither To me into my glory that where I am yee may be also Ioh. 17.24 And they ascended up into heaven in a cloud After Christs example who ascending into heaven was taken up and received by a cloude 1 Thess 4.17 And often the cloudes are called Gods chariot Christ also shall return in a cloude to judgement And we shall be caught in the cloudes to meet the Lord in the aire Now to seek for other allegories in this cloude is needlesse Moreover this glorification of the Martyrs begins presently at their departure out of this life when their spirit goes unto the Lord but shall be comsummated in the last day the which was shadowed out before in Chap. 6. under the fift seale Moreover this also serves for the honour credit of the witnesses that the Lord will wonderfully preserve their doctrine though condemned by Antichrist as hereticall and propagate the same far and neere in spite of all adversarie power whatsoever Thus the world shall know that they were no deceivers but the true witnesses of Iesus Christ And therefore in this place the spirit doth animate the professours of the Gospel least being terrifyed by the tyrannie of Antichrist they should prophesie the more remissely If he labours to put them to death God wil restore them to life If he cast reproach on them in this world God will crown them with glorie in heaven For blessed are yee when men persecute you rejoyce for great is
and seven trumpets The fourth Vision followeth touching the Woman the Beasts The fourth Vision Touching the Woman in travaile and flying into the wildernes from the dragon and of the two Beasts c. THE PRAEFACE THey who thinke that in the prophesie of the Revelation a continued historie of the Church is linked together even from Christs first comming unto the second begin the same from this Chapter in which it seems the new birth of the Church is represented But at the verie first they run into a great inconvenience For they are forced to bring in such an hyperbaton and confused order of the history as cannot be defended For that which was first ought not to have been omitted til now but to have been described in the first place Wherefore their opinion is farr better who observe that in this booke the condition of the Church on earth is sundry times shewed unto Iohn in certaine distinct Visions as in the beginning we noted Neither is the iteration to be thought needlesse for however in the nature and kinde of the events most of the visions are alike yet in the species and indiviaduals they represent unto us histories much different in somuch that what is in the former was more darke obscure is in the later clearer fuller set down And hence by diligent comparing of the Visions each with other aman shall have a singular helpe to remove that obscurity which appeares in this prophesie After the three Visions therefore formerly expounded The first wherof specially concernes Christs walking in the midst of the candelsticks and his admonishing the teachers of the Churches in Asia touching their duty The other two generally respect the booke sealed with seven seales The summe of the fourth Vision and opened by the Lambe with the seven trumpets of the Angels Now the fourth is exhibited to Iohn touching the woman in travaile the dragon standing to devour her childe and persecuting her and of the two Beasts warring against the Saintes as also of the Lambe overcomming them and of the Angels preaching at the last harvest and vintage Chap. 12.13.14 In which types the future condition of the Church in this world is much more evidently shadowed out then before even from the first beginning thereof under Christ and the ministerie of the Apostles untill the end For the Church shall have to doe with the Dragon the Beasts be miserablie afflicted and tryed by them yet she sufficiently armed from heaven for so grievous combats at last shall gloriously triumph over all her adversaries This Vision is also universal manifestly consisting of four Acts The four Acts thereof like the two former general visions The first Act containes the proposition of the Churches calamities at her birth and growth under the Iewish and Romane tyrants persecuting the woman as also under hereticks labouring through the instinct of the Dragon to devoure her with the floodes of errours and heresies Chap. 12. It answereth to the four former seales of the second Vision and to the first four trumpets of the third Vision representing the historie of the Church for the space of 606 yeeres viz. from the birth of Christ untill the rising of Antichrist The second Act is opposed to the former containes comfort for the Church against the wrath of the Dragon and floodes of heresies sent forth against her because the childe of the Woman is caught up into heaven and Michael the Archangel fighteth for her against the Dragon The woman with Eagles wings is caried into the wildernes hiding herself from the sight of men The earth swalloweth up the Dragons vomit This Act is mingled with the former in the same Chapter it answereth to the fift seale of the second Vision and to the tenth chapter treating of the mighty Angel standing upon the earth and sea Vision the third The third Act hath two parts The first part is of the Antichristian persecution representing the amplification of the Churches calamities or the new and more grievous conflicts which shee sustained during her abode in the wildernes against Antichrist whose kingdome power crueltie and subtiltie is set forth under the image of Beasts Chap. 13. This part answereth to the sixt seale of Vision the second and to the fift trumpet of Vision the third The latter part is opposed to the former in way of a parallel beeing consolatory to the godly prefiguring Christs presence in his deserted Church and his preserving of the same against the Beasts as also the reformation that should be in the latter times through the Angels that is new teachers of truth and godlinesse who by their preaching should oppose the Babylonish Antichrist and bring men back againe into the right way of salvation chap. 14. unto ver 14. This part answereth to the former part of chap. 7. touching the 144000 that were sealed by the Angel in Vision second and to the former part of chapt 11. of the meting of the temple and prophesie of the two witnesses in Vision third And this whole Act appertaines unto the historie of the Church which now from Antichrists rising hath continued 1035 yeeres and shal perhaps remaine unto the end of the 1260 dayes or yet for the space of 225 yeeres but this is onely known unto the Lord. To be short the fourth Act from v. 14. unto the end of chap. 14. under the type of an Angel gathering in the harvest and vintage of the earth represents the last judgement in which the Church at length beeing freed from all trouble shal be blest with eternal glorie But Antichrist with all his followers cast into the lake of Gods eternal wrath This part answereth to the latter member of Chapter the seventh touching the melody of the Church triumphant in Vision second as also to the latter part of Chapter 11 concerning the joyfull song of the Elders in Vision third Thus we have the whole distribution of this Vision The Argument Parts and Analysis of CHAPTER XII THis Chapter in which as we have said is shadowed out the first and second Act of Vision fourth under the type of a woman in travel and a Dragon opposing of her and of Michael fighting for the woman against the Dragon doth represent the state of the Church even from her infancy with the changes of her after age for at the very first she was cruelly set upon by Satan yet powerfully defended from heaven by Christ so as neither the devils cruelty nor tyrants rage nor the deceits of wicked hereticks could overcome her although she were forced to flee into the wildernes and to withdraw herself from the sight of men The parts of the Chapter are two I. Two great signes are shewed unto Iohn in heaven of a woman in travel and a Dragon standing before her to devoure her child v. 1.2.3.4 II. The history and event of both these signes unto the end In the former part is described the first signe 1. From the
Testament is the multitude of them that professe the faith of Christ in every place In the former sense the Woman or Church is and alwayes shal be the onely spouse of Christ and never so degenerate as to become Antichrists strumpet neither did this Church appeare unto John 2 Tim. 2.19 for God knowes who are his But she appeared in the latter sense here indeed in this place like unto a chast matrone but in Chapter 17 as a great whore But how then is she the same I answer she is the same in name but not in deed in profession but not in faith in appearance but not in truth In the same sense that Ierusalem is called a holie city as in Psal 122.3 and a harlot as Isai 1.21 At the first in the Apostles time a while after the whole Christianity of the East and West was as a chast matrone clothed with faith holinesse as with the starres just so as she here appeared But after the decease of the Apostles and Apostolical men she keept not long the chastitie of an undefiled matron Lib. 3. hist cap. 32. as in Eusebius is testifyed by Egesippus a most ancient writer untill at length possessing the mountaines of Rome changing her starlike habit into scarlet she sate on the Beast and degenerated into a common strumpet as she appeared Chap. 17. Indeed the Romish parasites stronglie cry out to the contrary that the true Church of Christ such as was Rome according to the Apostles testimonie cannot fall away that the spouse of Christ cannot degenerate The which is true of the Church of the first borne the onely and true spouse of Christ but of every Church of the called or of every particular Church it is false as besides very manie testimonies the particular Churches of Corinth Galatia Ephesus Philippi c. confirme for howsoever every one of them of old was a true Apostolicall Church and spouse of Christ Yet at this day where are they or what manner of Churches are they become Now what wonder is it though the same hath happined to Rome although in a different condition but let us return to the text The woman therefore or Church appeares as a chast mother in heaven although she warreth here on earth Phil. 3.20 yet her conversation Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 administration is through faith with Christ in heaven Clothed with the sun For by faith and baptisme she puts on Christ the sun of righteousnes as a wedding garment Gal. 3.17 The brightnes of the sun is now indeed darkned with the cloudes of the infirmities and calamities unto which the Church is subject during her warfare in this life but at last this clothing of hers shall fullie shine as it is in Matt. 13.43 The righteous shall shine forth as the sun in the kingdome of the Father Ephes 5.27 and the Church shal be presented to Christ her husband glorious in the heavens and purged from every spot and wrinkle Having the moon under her feet This denotes the variable state of the Church in this world Heca lib. 4. c. 8. Aug. Epist 48. ad Vincent as also her high mindednesse For the Church saith AMBROSE hath her often defects and risings like the moon having not her own brightnes but borrowes her light from Christ as the moon doth from the sun So AVSTIN The Church is sometimes darkned and as it were clothed with the multitude of scandals sometimes she appeares quiet and free by the tranquillity of the time otherwhile shee is covered and troubled with the floods of tribulations and temptations In Psal 10 And againe The moon increasing decreasing signifies the Church because so far as the Church is spirituall she shineth but so far as she is carnal she is obscure As therefore the moon appeares in diverse formes in the firmament The condition of the Church is variable in this world so is the Churches condition diverse in this life sometimes shining in ful light otherwhile she is scarcely to be seen and sometimes not at all untill again her light break forth as out of darknes This serves for the confutation of that Popish fiction which is that the Church shall alwayes be as visible in the world as is the kingdome of Naples or the like Moreover in that the Woman hath the moon under her feet what is it but that she despiseth all sublunary earthlie things as vaine and perishing The moon under the feet of the woman seekes after possesseth in Christ the thinges that are above And a crown of twelve stars on her head This denotes the faith of the Apostolicall Church the profession whereof was as a crown unto her head For the Apostles being twelve in number did like bright shining stars spread forth the light of Gods truth over the world 1 Cor. 5.11 Ephes 2.10 For however Paul and Barnabas were afterward added unto them yet the number of 12 remained even after Iudas fell away These by their ministery did set a crown upon the Church by laying the foundation upon which she is builded Or in the head that is in the beginning of the Church they did shine like stars and principal members thereof And thus a certaine interpreter expounds it Others make the twelve stars to be the heads of the Creed because faith is the crown of the Church and in them are contained the cheife points of Christian religion Thus much of her clothing Hence we are to observe while the woman did shine clothed with the Sun The church hath changed her sun like clothing into purple had the Moon under her feet and a crown of stars on her head so long she remained the undefiled spouse of Christ but after she put on in stead of the Sun purple and scarlet then she left off from trampling the moon under her feet begane to follow after earthly things changed her crown of stars into a crown of gold pearls precious stones In a word then she played the harlot sate on the Beast and became the mother of fornications which things are afterward described in Chap. 17. Let the reader diligently compare the description And she being with child cryed Most Greek copies have it in the present tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cryeth so also Andreas and the greater lesser copies of Robert Stephanus But Montanus and the old version have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cryed and so Beza in his latter edition The sense is one But I rather take it in the present tense because the proprietie of the stile denotes the Evangelist John to be author of this booke unto whom this kind of Enallage or change of tenses is verie familiar both in his Gospel and Epistles For paine Our Wafer-worshippers cannot tell how to applie this to the Virgine mother for they hold that Marie was delivered without paine grounding this on another false opinion viz. that she was free from the stain
it up and how The particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as shewes that the waters and flood are allegorically to be understood Most understand this flood of waters to be the manifold and grievous afflictions and persecutions by which satan seekes in all times to oppresse the Church taking it to be an allusion to that complaint of the Church of old Psal 124.1.3 unlesse Jehovah had bin on our side now may Israel say Then the waters had overwhelmed us the stream had gon over our soul c. This I confesse is not amisse But it must bee more specially expounded now the Dragon persecuted the woman in her slight by a flood of waters and that also before the Beast ascended out of the sea of which it followeth Chap. 13. Foxe makes the flood to be those horrible edicts Fox his opinion proscripts and commands of Emperours especially of Maxentius and Maximinus which were every where published for the taking away of Christians from the earth But these things fel out before the former persecution neither did the woman take her flight under the perfecutions of the Romane Dragons Bullinger comprehends under it Bullingers interpretation all the Churches afflictions This flood saith he signifies that the Divell powred forth a sea of evils on the Church as sects dissensions tumults seditions and persecutions by which allmost the whole earth was over flowen And he applies these things to the verie time of the Apostles when satan stirred up every where the magistrates and priests against the Apostles and Apostolical trueth this is true indeed yet in my judgement but little agreeing to the sense of the present prophesie Brightman understanding by these waters Brightmans opimon peoples or nations as afterward in Chap. 17.15 interprets this other persecution of the irruptions of the Franci the Alemanni Burgonions Goths Vandals Hunni Treballi the Heruli the Lumbards and such other Northern nations who about the yeere 400 and thence forward rushed in the sluces being as it were taken away upon all Europe and Asia for to swallow up as with deepe gulfes the Christian Church Yet the earth that is the counterfaite and earthlie religion swallowed up the force of this flood because these barbarous nations by whom the Dragon thought to blot out the very name of Christ after they came into these countries more full of humanity they embraced the Christian religion which they saw amongst them though indeed it was most corrupt For all of them were either Arians or Nestorians or Eurychinians but yet changed not their life and Barbarous manners So the earth deluded the Dragons indeavour The which exposition seemes not in the least to be contrarie to histories and the order of this Vision Notwithstanding I should rather consent to them The waters cast out by the Dragon are heresies Ioh. 7.38 who applie this to the foul heresies scismes blasphemies and monstrous doctrines by which the Dragon attempted to drown the Woman while she fled even under Christian Emperours For as the doctrine of the Gospell proceeding out of the mouth of God is compared to streames of waters which none are able to resist as Christ saith he that beleeveth on me out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water So the heresies comming out of the Dragons mouth what are they but as a violent vomit or floods to swallow up the Church For even in Constantines time the Arian heresie and blasphemie against Christ violently burst forth like to a most swift stream and overflowed all the East and soon after the West also whereby the Church was allmost swallowed up in her flight After the Arian heresie against the son of God followed the Macedonian against the holy Ghost soon after that the Pelagian against the whole Gospell That also of Nestorius and Eutyches the Monothelists against the truth of Christs person the which mightily shooke the Church almost for the space of 300 yeers as the histories of Eusebius Socrates Theodoretus Zozomenus and Evagrius witnesse The Dragon by these floods thought to drown the woman in her flight but in vain as it followeth 16. But the earth helped the woman Some here by earth understand Churst in regard of his stabilitie and because the waters of the Dragon were swallowed up the darts and plots of the adversaries suppressed and the afflicted Church not utterly overthrown Others of earthly men by whom the Lord often wonderfully protects though they aime at other ends his Church and people as of old by the Philistines he delivered David from the hands of Saul by Lys●as he preserved Paul from the fury of the Iewes Brightman as I said before understands this of those Barbarous nations who comming on furiously to root out Christian religion yet preserved the same by embracing it though much corrupted There are som who interpret it of Councils which being gathered together out of all nations swallowed up the blasphemous floods of heresies by refuting them Thus the generall Council of Nice condemned the Arian heresie the Synod of Constantinopel the Macedonian and Eunomian that of Ephesus the Nestorian that of Chalcedon the Eu●ychinian But this sense seemes to be forced It is an allusion to the historie of Corah Dathan and Abiram whom the earth swallowed up alwe Numb 16.22 As therefore the earth did then help Moses Aaron against the seditious rebels miraculously opening her mouth and devouring them So the Lord no lesse miraculously helped the woman flying from the floods of most dangerous heresies so as she was not drowned by them that is he wonderfully swallowed up those false doctrines with the authors therof as if the earth had opened her mouth utterly devoured them we need not therefore subtilly dispute about the earth considering how the Lord continually dissipated al the heresies which during the space of 300 yeeres overflowed the Christian world caused the same I say to vanish away like smoak by the power of the holy scriptures and zeal of Orthodox teachers 17. And the Dragon was wroth The third assault of the Dragon not against the woman herself for her he lost as being out of his sight in the wildernesse but the rest of her seed whom he purposed to set upon by open warre This therfore is a preparation to the following third Act of the Beasts war with the Saints And so this third assault belongs to the Antichristian times which begane in the raigne of Phocas Boniface III. the first universal high-priest when the Church was now fled into the wildernesse and so none appeared any where but as a whorish woman The meaning of the verse we take to be thus The Dragon being angry that he could not by the flood of heresies drown the woman in her flight now despairing of further effecting any thing against her he stirres up a new warre against the rest of her seed by themeanes of the Beast as it followeth For that which here the Dragon is said to doe in the
the Beast he Anno 1371. thundred out the everlasting Gospel in England both in his Sermons and Writings against Antichrist Wickliffes doctrines against Antichrist Balae Cent. 6. c. 6. viz. That in Christs Church there ought not to be any supreme Bishop That the Pope is not the Vicar of Christ but Antichrist that is his priviledges bulls dispensations and indulgences were idle fruitlesse and wicked that ecclesiasticall officers ought not to have civill authority That the Pope and his Clergie had violently taken the Keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven and that neither themselves entred into the same nor suffered others to enter he disproved transsubstantiation Masses offices canonicall houres and other vaine bablings he disallowed the Chrisme in Baptisme and taught that the faithfull were to be baptized simply with water according to Christ example he condemned auricular confession as also the Popish doctrine of poenitence satisfaction and worship of relicks teaching that the Saints ought not to be called upon because they also are servants he utterly rejected the Romish rites new shadowes and traditions he denyed that it was lawfull for any to adde any thing in matters of religion which was not comprehended in holy writ or to make the same more difficult which he complained that the Pope had done He thought that the glorious temples and all the pompe and worship of the Papacy together with the diverse degrees of the Clergie ought to be taken away condemning the orders of Monkes as superstitious impious and very hurtfull to true religion and therefore ought speedily to be forsaken he maintained that the Lords supper ought to be administred in both kindes He wrote as Aeneas Sylvius witnesseth more then two hundred volumes most of them against the Papacy and the wicked life traditions and abuses of Monkes c. To Wickleffe were joyned many excellent instruments in England Richard Killington Robert Langland and others Many in Italy also as Dante 's Marsilius Patavinus Franciscus Petrarcha began to take notice of the Romish Antichrist Wickleffe also left many disciples behind him who after his death which was Anno 1387. manfully opposed Popery A while after the the two witnesses in Bohemia John Husse and Jerome of Prague began more forcibly to oppose Antichrist and plant the everlasting Gospell in the Churches of Bohemia which yet flourish and grow to this day About the same time Nicolaus de Clemangis a man as Trithemius witnesseth excelling in divine and morrall discipline in many Books opposed the Papacy Trithe de scriptor eccles but chiefly in his book of the corrupt state of the Church of yeerly pensions not to be paid to the Pope of the Simony of Praelates c. Adde to these all the witnesses of the truth which are recorded in the Catalogue of witnesses Tom. 2. lib. 19. Now let us consider the actions of this Angell He flyeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the middest of heaven Like to the Angell who Chap 8.13 proclaimed woe to the world but this here is more prosperous for he publisheth not woes but the everlasting Gospell Middest of heaven that is say some through the middest of the Church Others openly so as he might be seen and heard of al like as such things are conspicuous which appear in the middle of heaven For however the foresaid preachers remained in their places and Churches yet their doctrine and writings were spread through the whole Church Brightmans conjecture I dislike not that by this flying betwixt both is signified the imperfection of the doctrine first published by these teachers for however they saw and reproved the grosser sort of errours in Popery yet in many things they clave unto the dregs of earthly rudiments so as they could not with full flight soare up into the highest heaven for as a man being on a sudden brought forth into the light who along while was in darkenesse lookes upon all things with dazeling eyes so they who many ages together were kept in the darkenesse of Popery could not behold the light of the Gospell but with dimme eyes Having the everlasting Gospell The message or thing published by this Angell he sets forth by an excellent title calling it the everlasting Gospell by which is declared the authority effect and constancie thereof Antichrist indeed will condemne this his preaching and writings as haereticall and full of poyson and labour by the authority of Councils to represse and refute them not by arguments but by fire and sword So did he to Wickleffe whom first he greevously vexed by the Masters of Schooles and afterward thrusting him out of England into Bohemia though he were againe recalled by the King he miserably persecuted him untill his dying day Neverthelesse he went on constantly in teaching and writing And after his death the Councill of Constance caused his body to be taken out of the grave and together with his Writings to be consumed with fire The like they did to the two witnesses John Husse and Ierome of Prague condemning oppressing burning them as haereticks with their books and doctrines Now howsoever the Beast affrighted the world with this tyranny and kept the same a while under his yoke neverthelesse he gained nothing by it For there remained some remnants in England and Churches in Bohemia who constantly maintained the doctrine of those Martyrs untill this day The everlasting Gospell could not be suppressed For it was the Gospell brought by the Son of God out of the bosome of the everlasting Father to wit glad tidings of the remission of sin righteousnes and life eternall freely to be given through the faith of Christ The Gospell I say not of yesterdayes rising as Antichrist calumniates but everlasting revealed indeed from the begnining to the Fathers and Prophets but at length fully manifested and consummated by the Son of God and henceforward shall remaine eternally Whatsoever therefore the Beast and his sophisters indeavour and bable to the contrary yet they shall never be able to overthrow and suppresse the same To preach unto the inhabiants of the earth The effects and lawfull calling of these teachers is here maintained The lawful calling of Evangelicall teachers Gal. 1.7 touching which if Antichrist shall plausibly moue any question as from whom they received this new Gospell what Church before them held this faith by what miracles they can prove their calling c The holy Ghost answereth They have the everlasting Gospell The which is one onely received from Christ and the Apostles and of old abundantly confirmed by miracles so that there is no use of new And they have it to evangelize the same that is to declare and preach it to the inhabitants of the earth They have therefore a lawfull calling to teach in the Church To them that dwell on the earth Thus the followers and worshippers of the Beast the adversaries of Christ are continually called First then the difficulty of their charge is intimated they must have to doe with the
the Sea with many waves and confusions It is of glasse Why the sea is said to be glasse so said first because it is clear as glasse that is perspicuous and open to the eyes of God for God sees the secret counsells and hidden endeavours of the world and Antichrist secondly because it is bright like Chrystall for the pompe and lustre of the world bewitcheth Antichristians Thirdly because its weak and brickle as glasse for the world passeth away with the lust thereof The favour and prosperity of the world is glassie for when it most shineth it is then broken Lastly The sea for the most part is like glasse in colour hence the Poets call the Sea Mare vitreum undas vitreas the glassie Sea and glassie waves It is mingled with fire viz. of afflictions and calamities in which the godly also are often involved however they stand as conquerours upon this sea because they trample the world with the delights and baites thereof under feet neither are they of the world nor removed from their station by the fire of affliction but persist constantly in the faith unto the end This indeed the Saints triumphant have fully attained unto and we who are yet in the body in part for it is our duty also to stand on the sea that is to trample the world under our feet Or they stand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nigh or besides the sea because they are not part of the sea or world but separated and redeemed from the world as in Chap. 14. ver 4. And this sense I like best because by the following verse it appears here is an allusion to the red sea by which the Israelites standing saw the Egyptians drowned and rejoicing over their destruction sang songs of praises to God Having the harps of God By an hebraisme the harps of God are put for such as are rare and of a most sweet sound The harps of God for with the Hebrews whatsoever are said to be the things of God are excelling things worthy his high Majesty so the mountaines of God the Caedars of God the City of God that is very high and great It is opposed to the harpes of David and of other Saints by which they sometimes praised God These are infinitely sweeter in sound for these harpers sang a new song which none could learne but they that were marked with the seale of God unknown also to the former Saints viz. touching the weakning and ruine of Antichrists kingdome by these harpes that is by the preaching Prayers and sweet confessions of these Champions 3. And they sing for they sang viz. with their harpes together with their voyces like to joyfull harpers But what sing they The song of Moses the servant of God We have a twofold song of Moses One of thanksgiving which he sang with the Israelites by the red sea for the overthrow of Pharaoh and the Egyptians I will sing unto the Lord for he hath triumphed glorioussy the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea Exodus 15.1 The other of praises celebrating Gods wonderfull benefits unto the Israelites Deut. 32. Both may bee here understood but cheifly the former because of the similitude for as then the Israelites standing by the red sea sang with Moses their leader a triumphant song unto God for the drowning their adversaries under whose bondage they had a long time groaned so the saints being brought thorow the vast sea of this world do joyntly sing praises to God and blesse him for their deliverance from the most cruell bondage of Antichrist And hereby they intimate not obscurely that Pharaoh and the Egyptian servitude was a figure of the Churches bondage under Antichrist And the song of the Lambe that is praising the Lambe for his benefits bestowed on the Church Divers songs we have already heard In Chap. 4.11 The songs of the Revelation The elders sing to him that sate on the throne Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory Chap. 5.9 The Elders againe sing a new song to the Lambe Thou art worthy to take the Booke and to open the seales thereof for thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood and hast made us Kings and Priests to our God c. Vnto which song the Angells and all creatures do there by mutuall accord sing Amen Chap. 11.17 they likewise sing to God Wee give thee thankes Lord God Almighty c. A like song wee heard Chapter 2. ver 10. Now is come salvation and strength and the Kingdom of our God c. Againe in Chap. 14. the company of harpers sang a new song to the Lambe standing on Mount Sion This therefore is the song of the Lamb by which the triumphant Church or the heavenly companies celebrate the Lambes victory and their own over Antichrist Now this title affords a cleer argument to prove the divinity of the Lambe 34. Argument of Christs deity considering that to him this wonderfull worke of the conquest over the beast is attributed by the Saints But now let us hear the song It seemes to be collected out of divers places of the Psalmes and Prophets by which these divine singers commend unto us the authority and dignity of the Scriptures As from Psal 86.10 they publish the great and wonderfull workes of God Great because they fill heaven and earth Wonderfull because they are unsearchable and beyond humane reason such are the works of creation and the government of the world our redemption and preservation of the Church in this life from Psal 25.10 they celebrate the true righteous wayes of the Lord for all his paths are mercy and truth Gods wayes are his counsells and judgements about the Church and the enemies thereof And though he suffers the godly to be afflicted and fore troubled and the enemies to bear sway and flourish which indeed seems unjust to flesh and blood yet the wayes of Jehovah are righteous for he knowes wherefore he doth the same and the event shews that his wayes are all right and good for in the end he performes his promise to the Saints in preserving and delivering the Church and in punishing and destroying the adversaries by which he declareth that he is constant in his promises true and omnipotent in his threatning Lord Almighty King of Saints Thou onely art holy By these Epithites the Saints extoll God above all adversaries and stirre up their own confidence and joy for seeing he is omnipotent he can easily cast downe his enemies If King of Saints then he can strongly defend his holy Church If onely holy or most pure then he alone not the creatures is to be served and cleaved unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O King of Saints so all greek copies read it excepting Montanus who reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King of the Nations and also Andreas from Ierem. 10.7 Who would not fear thee O King of nations The old Latine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King of
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
demaunded he is present undoubtedly by Gods Commandement now to shew unto Iohn to whom before he had shewed horrible things things acceptable and pleasing Before he saw a most filthy Harlot the Beasts Whore now he sees a chast Spouse the Lambes Wife This Bride is the glorified Church Therefore he cals her the Lambes wife now deservedly brought and delivered unto the Heavenly Marriage Feast But how saith he I will shew thee Seeing Iohn saw her before ver 2. I answer he had seen her a far off being in the wildernesse But now he is invited to looke upon her more neer at hand Hitherto the occasion 10. And he carried me away in the spirit This is the third time that he was ravished in the Spirit First in the I le Patmos Chap. 1.9 which ecstasie or trance was without any locall translation Secondly when he was carried into the Wildernesse Chap. 17.3 Thirdly now beeing carried to a great mountaine In Chap. 12. v. 18. it is said he stood upon the sand of the Sea when he saw the Beast ascending out of the Sea But that place hath it ambiguously 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the first and third person neither is there any mention of an ecstasie But here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee carried mee saith he in the Spirit intimating a translation not corporall but visionall Thus much for the manner of the Vision He addes the place To a great and high Mountaine Some from this Mountain observe divers Allogories touching the greatnesse and height of things caelestiall and of the Church it selfe applying to this the promise of God Isa 2.2 In the last dayes the mountaine of the Lords House shall be established in the top of Mountaines and shall be exalted above the hils and all Nations shall flow unto it and many people shall goe and say come yee and let us goe up to the mountaine of Jehovah c. In which Oracle is contained the calling of all Nations unto the Church of the New Testament which of old was shadowed out by the Temple of mount Sion But the present place respects not at all the gathering of the Gentiles unto the Church but the glorified Church is exhibited to Iohn from this Mountaine Therefore I see no other use of this great and high Mountaine then that from it Iohn might the better view the Holy Citie and Bride of the Lambe And he shewed unto me a great Citie He had promised before to shew him the Bride the Lambes Wife For which he shewes him a Citie because the glorified Church is both the Lambes bride and the Citie of God A Bride because of her Spirituall Marriage with the Lambe and her Chastitie and Heavenly ornament with which shee shall shine for ever with Christ A Citie because of the most magnificent building comely order invincible strength and steadfastnesse by which she shall stand for ever against all the gates of Hell The Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here rather to be rendred by the latine word Vrbs then Civitas For Civitas commonly signifies the multitude and the priviledges of Citizens but Vrbs the building it selfe as the Wals Gates Streets Palaces Houses Temples c. He calleth it Great as before v. 2. viz. in largenesse ornament and glory for it is the great Citie of the Great God full of Citizens Holy in purity and heavenly cleannesse without all defilement and filthinesse The name thereof is Ierusalem that is where peace is seene from the Hebrew Jireh salem Lib. 7. de bello Iudaico cap. 18. that is to see peace of old it was the head Citie of Judea builded by King Melchisedec as Iosephus writeth and was the Court of David the Seat of the Temple and divine worship and a Type of the new Church and therefore the glorified Church retaines the same name because she shall see everlasting peace Comming downe from God out of heaven It did then indeed visionally descend that Iohn might see it But in truth the Church also descendeth from Heaven because hence it hath taken her originall See ver 2. as being founded in the eternall election and love of God and all the glory and happinesse she receiveth is from the grace of God 11. Having the glory of God Being to declare the most magnificent structure of this Citie he begins from the glory and light thereof For Cities take not the least commendation from the qualitie and heathfullnesse of the aire and pleasantnesse of the place This Citie for its aire and most healthfull situation hath the glory of God that is the majesty of that inaccessible light which God inhabiteth then which nothing can be thought on more excellent and glorious This glory is expounded ver 23. And her light The Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies properly not light but a lightsome body casting forth light from the same Two such great Lights God in the beginning set in the Firmament the Sunne and the Moone What this is he wil shew us in ver 23. Now he speakes of the qualitie thereof LIKE VNTO A STONE MOST PRETIOVS even like a lasper By which Allegory he intimates the unspeakable excellency of the light For a most pretious stone is incomparable most bright and most desirable Like a Jasper stone This is a most noble Gemme of it are divers sorts of excellent vertue Lib. 37. c. 9 and as Plinie writeth it is used in all the East for a preservative against the most pernicious poyson Like to Chrystall Then which nothing is more bright See before Chap. 4.3 or cleare striving as it were with the Sunne in brightnesse See above Chap. 4.6 It sheweth therefore that the light of this Citie is not onely healthfull dispelling all poysonous and hurtfull things but also most bright Why doth he not liken it to the Sunne This Citie shall have neither Sunne nor Moon but that which is clearer then the same Perhaps also because the heat of the Sun is troublesome the coldnesse of the Moone is usually hurtfull to the body but here shall bee nothing either troublesome or hurtfull 12. And had a wall Now he describes the parts of the Citie most obvious to the sight externall and internall Hee begins with the wall compassing the streets about for it is convenient that a Citie bee invironed and fortified with wals that the lives and estates of the Citizens may be preserved from the incursions of adversaries and wild Beasts For wals are called Mania a muniendo of fortifying These must be high thicke and strong Such was this wall great in thickenesse and very high as in ver 17. ANDREAS saith By this wall we may understand the hedge of Gods safeguard and protection Wherefore it signifies that the life and safety of the glorified Church is sure and in no danger of externall force or hurt because the wall of Gods omnipotencie defendeth and keepeth the Citie But it will not hence follow seeing the
us to cast that which is holy Of the rest whose portion shall bee in the Lake of Fire wee have treated on Chap. 21. ver 8. He expresly puts lyars both here and before in the last place understanding perjured double-hearted and deceitfull persons mockers of religion that we might understand that this kinde of men is most hurtfull to the Church and Common-wealth because by adulterating and falsifying all Divine and Humane Truths they with divelish craft overthrow and teach others to weaken all the sinewes of Ecclesiasticall and Politicall society Of this sortof men the Jesuites are the most emminent at this day in Schooles and Churches And the Machivellians in Courts Polities and Campes For RIBERA doth rightly observe that Christ in speciall mentioneth those vices which should most reigne in Antichrists time Now wee know that these evils are most rife in Popery See Chap. 21.8 16. I Jesus have sent my Angell Least it should be uncertaine what person it was that said Behold I come quickly I am Alpha and Omega he tels his name I Jesus and professeth himselfe to bee the Author of this Revelation and the more to commend the dignity thereof to our care and studie hee sheweth that for our sakes he imployed and sent his Angell to testifie the same unto us Wherfore let it not be irksome reverently to read continually to meditate and carefully to observe the same with all readinesse of mind Here therefore the Lord Jesus confirmeth what the Angell before said in ver 6. The Lord God of the holy Prophets sent his Angell as if he should say It is so I Iesus have sent my Angell XLVI Argument of Christs Deity Eph. 1.21 Phil. 2.9 Hebr. 2.9 Mat. 18.10 Act. 12.15 Heb. 1.14 hereby professing himselfe to be the Lord God of the holy Prophets What Hereticke dares gain-say this He also makes himselfe Lord of the Angels for saith he I have sent my Angell viz. as being my owne by subjection He is Lord of the Angels as God and as man he is lifted up above all power as Lord and head over all things The Angels also are said to be ours not by naturall subjection but voluntary service because they are sent by the Lord Jesus for our service and preservation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to testifie That is to reveal Before ver 6. and Chap. 1.1 he said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shew and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to signifie in the same sense Andreas refers this to the publishing of the Prophesie that Iohn might not keep it secret but make it knowne unto all To you This apostrophe is directed in the first place to the seven Angels of the seven Churches unto whom he before had sent seven Epistles as hee sheweth by the Addition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To you who are in or over the Churches But consequently also unto all the servants of Christ who are set over or are Members of the Churches that is unto all the Faithfull for this Prophesie was not revealed for them only who then were the servants of Christ but for us chiefly upon whom the ends of the world are come when the greater part of the Oracles was to be fulfilled 1. Cor. 10.11 First let us observe that seeing the Prophes●e is revealed by the Lord Iesus it was a great impiety for the Church of old to question the Trueth and Divine Authority thereof Secondly seeing the Lord Iesus sent his Angell therefore he is Lord of the Angels and true God because it is proper to God alone to have and send the Angels as his Ministers Thirdly seeing the Lord Iesus vouchsafed to reveal this Prophesie not onely to those Seven Churches but to all that should come after therefore it belongs unto the profit and salvation of all of us and all are seriously to meditate in the same I am the root and the off-spring of David These glorious Titles commend the majesty of the Author and of the Prophesie as also it confirmes our Faith Above cha 6 5. How Christ is the root of David Who is this Iesus The root and off-spring of David Before hee was called the root of David He confirmeth that he is the Messias promised to come of the seed of David For the root of David is the Son of David according to the flesh Rom. 1.4 Andreas thinkes he is the root of David according to his Divinity For the root beares the tree but Christ saith he not as man but as God upholdeth and saveth David But without doubt it belongs to the flesh which the Messias tooke of Marie the daughter of David It s true the root beareth the tree but this metaphor respects the originall So that Christ is the root of David sustaining David by his divinity and sprouting from David in his humanity Off-spring Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Genus or Familie of David out of which arose Joseph and Mary the Parents of our Lord Iesus Churist Luk. 1.27 The bright and morning star As the former Title confirmes the verity of Christs manhood so this the majesty of his Deity It signifies that most excellent light and glory whereby the Lord Iesus doth excell all men and Angels like as Lucifer or the Morning-Star excels all other Stars in brightnesse In Num. 24.17 Balaam prophesieth that a Star shall come out of Jacob. BRIGHT Most glorious in himselfe by his brightnes dispelling the darknesse and ignorance of our hearts and minds Morning Because saith Andreas How Christ is called the morning-Starre by his beames he not onely drives away the night or darknesse of this life but also in the morning light of the common Resurrection hee will exhibit himselfe to be seen of all the Saints Or because arising in our hearts he dispels the blindnesse of our mind as Lucifer exceeding other starres in clearnesse and rising before the Sunne shewing that by and by it will be day dispelleth the night-darknesse So Peter calleth Christ the Day-starre arising in our hearts 2. Pet. 1.19 when as hee enlightneth our hearts and mindes with the true knowledge and confidence of himselfe by the light of the divine Scriptures Aristotle to prove that justifice is the chiefe of vertues saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Neither Hesperus nor Lucifer that is the Evening or Morning Starre is not so admirable as knowing nothing more glorious whereunto to compare this excellent vertue Now Hesperus and Lucifer is the same Star first appearing after Sun-setting and first foretelling the rising of the Sunne in the Morning What Aristotle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ here calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the dawning or break of day in the same sense If then Aristotle doth rightly compare created righteousnesse unto the Morning Star with more right doth the Increated Righteousnesses viz. Christ the Son of God call himselfe the Morning-Star Hereby we understand the meaning of Christ in Chap. 2.28 To him that overcommeth
to the Churches for he is the author of al these Epistles and Iohn his penman or scribe Which further proveth the authority of this book for without doubt after Christ had made an end of revealing the mysteries of this booke unto Iohn he faithfully wrote to every one of the Churches according to the commandement of Christ These things saith he that holdeth The first Epistle hath three parts namely an inscription a narration and a conclusion In the inscription Christ is brought in speaking to the church of Ephesus by a description of his person taken from the foregoing vision which serveth both for the authority of the Epistle and to stirre them up unto attention The manner of the stile is propheticall For so usually the prophets in stirring up to attention bring God in speaking thus to the people thus saith Jehovah So Iohn these things saith hee that holdeth c. not simply these things saith Christ but these things saith he that holdeth the starres c. Thus by degrees two things are repeated which he saw before One of the starres another of the candlesticks Which holdeth the seven starres That is which holdeth the seven Pastors of the Churches in his right hand as chap. 1 vers 16. This as we have already shewed may be taken either in the better part that is of Christs loving and caring for his faithfull teachers his governing and preserving of them by the right hand of his power with precious promised rewards Or in a contrary sence it signifies that Christ detesteth and by his right hand suppresseth and rejecteth all slowbellies hirelings and wolves And so much here he threatneth to some of these teachers unlesse they did repent Who walketh in the midst of the candlesticks First he saw him standing but now walking in the midst of the candlesticks signifying hereby that Christ our Lord sitteth not still in the heavens but is present by his providence in the midst of the Church beholding all things proving our faith and obedience and recompencing the same with great rewards disliking our slothfulnesse and other corruptions punishing the ungratefull by taking away their talent from them and bestowing it on others Levit. 26 24. This walking therefore imports Christs gracious presence with his Church according to that promise I will walke among you and I wil be your God So Christ I will be with you at all times unto the end of the world This being so it is our duty to walk reverently in the sight of God and of Christ that so they not being offended may walke and abide with us Ioh. 14 23. according to the promise if a man love me he will keepe my words and my father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him 2. I know thy workes In the narration are five things First their great diligence and constancy is commended for Christ prayseth and rewardeth the labour and faith of his servants because he delighteth therein I know thy workes This he speaketh not onely to this Church but to the rest yea to Laodicea also Here I take workes indifferently to be either good or bad vertues or vices of which as nothing is hidde from him so nothing shall passe without reward or punishment For it is the part of him that is the admonisher and judge to pronounce sentence of nothing but what is well knowen unto him He taketh unto himselfe not onely the knowledge of what is outward but also a cleare and perfect sight of men and all their inward actions the which Iohn often in the Gospel ascribes unto Christ He knew all men Ioh. 2 24 25. Ioh. 21 17. and needed not that any should testify of man for he knew what was in man and so Peter said unto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee But who knoweth all things save God alone for he seeth all things searching the heart and reynes of man So that this is the tenth argument 10 Argument of Chr. deity to be added to the former proving the Godhead of Christ taken from his omniscience or knowledge of all things And thy labour patience The first copulative and is put for to wit thy labour and patience so the like in vers 9.13 18. Moreover he commendeth three sorts of vertues in this Bishop labour in doctrine constancy in suffering Zeale in discipline which vertues he doth in many words commend in this and the following verse by a contrary order First his labour that is his sincere and unwearied paines in preaching the word 1 Thes 5 12. 1 Tim. 5 17. For the scripture in many places cals the office of teaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a labour as being full of wearisomnesse and trouble This is the first and principall vertue and honour of a faithfull Bishop the which Christ attributeth to this teacher But what would Christ now say of the mitred Bishops of these dayes who neither know the word of God and for the most part regard it not But being idle and dumbe are unfit to preach and so spend their time either in warre sports or following of their filthy lusts The second is sufferante that is patience in induring and constancy in overcomming the dangers injuries and afflictions with which they were exercised both by the Iewes and Gentiles for the sake of Christ For the crosse is an inseparable companion of the Gospel 1 Corinth 1 18. and therefore is called the word of the crosse both because it sheweth us the way to salvation through the crosse esteemed foolishnes by the world As also because satan doth stirre up his instruments to hate persecute and put to death the constant professors and teachers thereof as being the greatest opposers of his kingdome All which things the Angel of this Church patiently induring Iam. 1 12. is for the same highly commended of Christ for blessed is the man that indureth tentations for when he is tried he shall receive the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him And canst not beare them which are evill The third vertue for which Christ prayseth him Matth. 18 17. 1 Cor. 5 5. Apolog. 2. Apolog. chap. 39. Treat 35. in Matth. Rom. 7. is his singular Zeal in observing Church discipline namely his strong opposing of such vices as violently brake in upon the congregation and his due administration of Church censures against scandalous persons casting them out of the communion of the Church as Christ commanded And indeed Church censures were in full force in the primitive time to the great good of the Church as Justin Tertullian Origen and others of the ancient writers testifie And hast tried them Now he repeateth and declareth the particulars shewing in the first place who those evill persons were and wherefore he could not beare with them But vehemently withstood the false Apostles seeking to creep into the Church examined their false doctrine
Epistle to the Bishop in Sardis 1. And unto the Angel of the Church in Sardis write these things saith he that hath the seven spirits of God and the seven starres I know thy workes that thou hast a name that thon livest and art dead 2. Be watchful and strengthen the things which remaine that are readie to dye for I have not found thy workes perfect before God 3. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent If therefore thou shalt not watch I will come on thee as a thiefe and thou shalt not know what hower I will come upon thee 4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments and they shall walke with mee in white for they are worthy 5. He that overcommeth the same shall be cloathed in white raiment and I will not blot out his name out of the booke of life but I will confesse his name before my father and before his Angels 6. He that hath an eare let him heare what the spirit saith unto the Churches THE COMMENTARIE VNnto the Angel of the Church in Sardis By the name Angel as we have formerlie shewed is noted the Pastor of the Church and not him onely but the rest of the officers yea and the whole Church for it seemeth they were all alike faulty according to that of Iesus the Sonne of Sirach As the judge of the people is himselfe so are his officers and what manner of man the ruler of the citie is such are all they that dwel therein Sirac 10.2 And therefore whatsoever is amisse in the people is imputed to the negligence of the Pastor and what is good in them to his prayse and commendation Some old writers affirme that Melito was Bishop in Sardis of whom Eusebius maketh mention lib. 4. hist cap. 26. But neyther the argument of the Epistle nor time when it was written doth agree hereunto For Melito is commended for his sanctitie martyrdome this teacher is accused of hypocrisie negligence Moreover Melito was Bishop of Sardis in the raigne of Antoninus Pius unto whom Iustine Martyr dedicated his second Apologie in behalf of the Christians This Anton raigned more then sixty yeeres after Domitian in whose time John being banished into Patmos wrote the Revelation Now it is not probable that Melito should so long continue pastor in Sardis although in al likelihood Polycarpus all this time was teacher in Smyrna see cha 2.8 Therfore howbeit it be uncercaine who he was not beeing named yet Christ sharply reprooves him for his hypocrisie and negligence Hence observe how vainly the Romish Parasites boast as if the Pope and his adherents can not erre in matters of faith seing two onelie of the seven teachers of Asia are commended for their sinceritie in life and doctrine the rest accused by Christ eyther of foule hypocrisie Hor in Epist quid concinua samos quid Craesi regia Sardis or of the haeresie of the Nicolaitans In Sardis The famous and sometime royal citie of Croesus seated as Plinie writeth on the side of the mountaine Tmolus of which I have before spoken but here again repeat it least some might be mistaken as those who thinke that the Synod called Sardicensis held in the eleventh yeare of Constantine was in this citie For Sardica was a towne in Illyria to which place came all the easterne westerne Bishops by the commandement of Constans Constantius Emperors But this Epistle was not written to the Angel in Sardica but in Sardis It consisteth of a preface a narration and a conclusion The preface by two epithites declareth the majestie of Christ the author of this epistle and his care for the Church he is said to have the seven spirits of God and the seven starres to wit in his right hand as in chap. 2.2 from whence it might seeme that the words the seven starres were taken and here misplaced but the consent of all copies is to be allowed By the starres the teachers are signifyed as chap. 1.20 But in the description of Christ cha 1.20 there is no mention made of the seven spirits therfore some have thought that they are the seven spirits mentioned cha 1.4 but seing these spirits are joyned with the seven starres that is the Bishops of the Churches I therfore judge that these seven spirits are Angels properlie so called because Christ imployeth them together with the ministers of the Churches for the welfare of them that are heires of salvation see cha 1.4 Neyther doth the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being put before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the seven spirits contradict this exposition for in cha 17.1 the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is also put before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I wil shew thee the Iudgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the whore of whom notwithstanding there was no mention before see our exposition on that place Thus we see that Christ hath the seven spirits of God in his hand that is all the Angels who readilie doe his commandements and judgements both in defending of the godly and punishing of the wicked he hath also in his hand the seven starres that is all the ministers officers of his Church that so through his grace they may shine like starres in sinceritie of life and puritie of doctrine before their flockes For as Christ is the author of the ministry so hath he given it unto the Church worketh so powerfully in by the same that hereby he both gathereth preserveth continually a Church among men according to that of Ioh. 15.6 I have ordained you that you should goe bring forth fruit that your fruit should remaine Now touching the ordaining governing of the starres whither it be taken properly or improperly XIX Arg. of Chr. deity it is onely the powerful worke of God And therfore these Epithites doe plainly yeild unto us a nynteenth argument to prove the deity and omnipotencie of Christ our Lord. J know thy workes The first part of the narration is a reproofe of the secret hypocrisie in the heart life of this teacher Thy works that is I see al the indeavours cariage both of thy private life publick ministry I know thy hidden hypocrisie for so he explaineth it thou hast a name that thou livest art dead that is thou art generally reputed to be a faithful godly teacher but thou art an hypocrite as beeing destitute of faith and true holines so dead that is as a painted sepulchre before the Lord guiltie of death although thou seemest to be alive holy before men Hence we learne three remarkeable pointes The first is an evident argument of Christs divinitie For if Christ so knowes all our workes as that he discerneth betwixt true godlines and hypocrisie the dead and living members of the Church true pastors and hypocrites then certainly he tryeth the heart of man which is onely proper to God