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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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opinion of their exceeding great knowledge and wonderfull gifts which no man seeth or can see in them but themselues that are deceiued by selfe-loue suppose they need not frequent the hearing of the word as if it were for nouices or ignorant persons only that know nothing Hence it is that they flattering themselues in an ouerweening perswasion of that which it is to bee feared is not in them say What can they teach vs that we knew not before Can they make vs goe from the many wiser then we came vnto them Or can they deuise any new points of religion or set vp new Articles to bee beleeued that wee neuer heard off before I answer we go not about to broach any new doctrine neither doe wee coyne any new counterfeit faith Gal. 1 8. If we or an Angell from heauen teach any otherwise then the Fathers beleeued from the beginning we are accursed We teach Iesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for euer Hebr. 13 8. The ende of the preaching of the word is not chiefely or principally to plant knowledge whereas these make it the onely end If a man had all knowledge and could speake with the tongues of men and Angels yet ought hee to come diligently into the house of God and to attend carefully to his word For albeit we haue knowledge for the time present yet wee may forget our knowledge so as that which we hold this day we may let slippe from vs to morrow And there is nothing which wee know but we may know it better and more fully and distinctly Besides the word serueth to kindle our zeale and to stirre vp our affections as it were to blow the coales by kindling the sparkes that the fire goe not out Lastly The third reproofe they are reproued that extoll to the skies the Kingdomes and Commonwealths of the heathen as the onely prosperous florishing and happy Nations which indeed excelled in outward glory and thereby dazeled the eyes of many yet indeed were no better then assemblies and companies of men destitute of religion and consequently of saluation Their peace and prosperity their wealth and dignity were all carnall and momentany rising out of the earth and sinking downe into the earth againe their praise also is of men It is the maintenance of true religion that maketh a people truely happy and the meanes of spreading abroad true religion is the ministery of the word there is no way to know it to practise it but by this Such as imbrace it are truely wise such as forsake it and reiect it haue no wisedome in them Ier. 8 9. No kingdome or State can flourish no Common-wealth can prosper no Prince no Potentate no people can bee wise or blessed in their gouernment but by honouring and obeying of Almighty God as he hath commanded Hence it is that Moses saith I haue taught you statutes and iudgements Deut 4 5 6. euen as the Lord my God hath commanded me c. Keepe them therefore and do them for this is your wisedome and your vnderstanding in the sight of the Nations which shall heare all these statutes and say Surely this great natiō is a wise vnderstanding people Likewise the Lord promiseth that this obedience to the precepts of God without adding or diminishing should make them blessed euery way in the fruite of their bodies of their fields of their cattell Deut. 28 3 4. and in euery thing that they put their hands vnto wh●ras if they did not keep the Law of the Lord their God his iudgments and statutes which he had commanded them he threatneth to bring all curses vpon them as famine and hunger nakednes and pouerty dissolution and captiuity vntill hee had cast them out of the Land which he had giuen vnto their fathers Deut. 28. All Cities Commonwealths are to be the hostes of the Church and dwelling places for the faithfull without giuing entertainment to the truth Gospell they are as Lanthornes without a light or as the Firmament without the Sunne There is no kingdome no towne no family no person that can attaine vnto happinsse and true blessednesse except they worship the Lord aright according to his word If we be with him he will be with vs he will honour those that honour him and despise those that despise him 1 Sam. 2 30. It is true religion that establisheth our seates and maketh them prosperous contrariwise impiety and superstition and false worship are the certaine ruine and destruction of the Nation that imbrace them But it will be obiected Obiection What say you of the kingdomes of the heathen Had they not large Dominions Were they not the Monarchies of the world did they not greatly prosper in this world I answer Answer it is true they wanted not outward peace honour dignity wealth pleasures dominions and largenesse of Empires howbeit the cause of their prosperity was not their idolatry and false worship this is to alledge a false cause in stead of a true forasmuch as their detestable abhominations and horrible prophanations of the seruice of God were the causes of their finall ouerthrow which neuer ceassed to call and cry for vengeance to God vntill he with his thunderbolts from heauen had striken them downe to the ground The true causes of the prosperity of Pagans and heathen are these The causes why heathen Common-wealths flourished Matth. 5 44 the first is the great mercy and goodnesse of God who doth good to the vnthankfull and vngodly hee letteth his raine to fall vpon the fields of the iust and vniust and causeth his Sun to shine vpon the godly and vngodly the Christian and the heathen And albeit he be prouoked euery day and therefore may iustly poure downe the full viols of his wrath indignation vpon the earth yet hee is a God of patience and long suffering waiting for the conuersion of men so that if they repent not both they are made without excuse and the iustice of God is cleered when hee iudgeth This is one cause why hee suffereth them to flourish Another is that he may giue thē the greater ouerthrow For the higher their heads and hornes are lifted vp the more is their fall when they go to ruine The greater their sin is the greater must their punishment be God hath made himselfe knowne among them and not left himselfe without witnesse Acts 14.17 in that he did good and gaue them raine from heauen fruitfull seasons filling their hearts with foode and gladnesse He gaue much vnto them and therefore required much of them againe Thirdly it was his pleasure to prouide for his Church that liued and soiourned among them that they might be as Innes to lodge them and as Cities of refuge to entertaine them whē they fled vnto them from the auenger of blood He gaue them peace that the Church also might enioy peace among them he made them to flourish that his people that liued with
they are redeemed by the blood of Christ and we are put in trust after a sort with the price therof We haue a great account to make in that day in the great day of the Lord let vs therefore stirre vp our selues to feede the flocke of God that dependeth vpon vs. And surely the cause of the ruine and desolation of many Churches is the negligence and idlenesse of the Pastors thereof Mat. 13 24 25 For while the Husbandmen sleepe the Enemie soweth tares among the wheate From hence it commeth that the people liue in ignorance lye in open sins and are carried away with euery blast of false doctrine whithersoeuer false Teachers will carry and conduct them This the Prophet Esay expresseth Chap. 56 9 10 11 12. All ye beasts of the field come to deuour euen all the beasts of the Forrest their watchmen are all blinde they haue no knowledge they are all dumbe dogs they cannot barke they lye and sleepe and delight in sleeping and these greedy dogs can neuer haue enough and these sheepheards cannot vnderstand for they all looke to their owne way euery one for his aduantage and for his owne purpose Where hee teacheth that the people are ready and ly open to be seduced by Atheists by Papists by Libertines by Familists by Anabaptists by Brownists wher there are blind guides and idol sheepheards euil beasts and slow bellies that feede themselues but feede not the flocke And hee noteth foure monstrous vices and capitall sinnes that poisoned the Church First albeit they were appointed watchmen yet they were blind their iudgment corrupted They were made Seers and yet did not see Lights and yet were in darknesse 1 Sam. 9 9. Teachers and yet were vnlearned Instructers of others and yet wanted knowledg themselues Matth. 6 23. If then the light be darkenesse how great is that darknes Secondly they were sluggish and slothfull dogs they cannot for drowsinesse and lazinesse open their eyes to see or their mouths to bark And when they are called vpon and spoken vnto saying How long wilt thou sleepe O sluggard When wilt thou arise out of thy sleepe They answer Yet a little sleepe a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleep Prou. 6 9 10. Thirdly they are greedy of their owne gaine couetous and giuen to filthy lucre being carried away by the deceite of Balaams wages Lastly they are giuen to belly-cheere and all riot Iude v. 12. They follow their pleasures and pampering of their bellies making them the god whom they serue and do not serue the Lord Iesus The Apostle said I seeke not yours but you 2 Cor. 12 14. but these might say otherwise of themselues I seeke not you but yours And are not such Pastors to be found among vs that through couetousnesse Epicurisme regard not the duties of their calling They ioyne liuing to liuing as those that ioyned house to house they liue at pleasure they eate they drinke they feast they say Esay 56 12. Come I will bring wine and we will fill our selues with strōg drinke and to morrow shall be as this day much more abundant Heereby they are made vnfit vnable to do the duties of their Calling so as like crammed dogs they lye bathing and beaking themselues by the fire and though neuer so much harme be done in Gods churcn they cannot be made to awake and bark in any season to warne the people and to fray away the Wolfe But if any goe about to raise and to rouze them vp out of their sleep they disquiet their consciences too much and trouble their patience so that they are ready to gnar yea they begin to snap and snatch at him with their teeth So that the best way is to follow the counsell of our Sauiour which he gaue cōcerning the Pharisies Mat. 15 14. Let them alone they be the blinde leaders of the blinde and if the blinde leade the blinde both shall fall into the ditch Seeing then such as teach not the people ouer whom the holy Ghost hath made thē Ouerseers can neuer soundly desire the after-good of them it behoueth such to labor with all their strength to builde vp the people in knowledge faith and obedience that so God may haue a people to serue him after their departure Lastly it standeth euery one vpon that hath Vse 3 the gouernement of others whether it bee in the Church or in the Common-wealth or in the priuate Family to looke to their charges that by their godly care and holy endeauour God may be worshipped serued after their departure This is to bee considered of Magistrates Ministers and Gouernours of houses The Magistrate ruling in the Commonwealth whether it bee the King as the superiour or whether it be other Gouernours as they that are sent of him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that doe well must prouide to the vtmost of his power for the godly and peaceable estate of the kingdom or incorporation where hee remaines by maintaining the Ministery by promoting Religion and by executing Iustice This Moses did as we saw before Deut. 31 2 6 7 8 he assembled the people he signified his departure hee encouraged them against their enemies took order for their welfare after his death by appointing Ioshua to succeede him and to bring the people into the land which the Lord had sworne vnto their Fathers Thus Ioshua dealt Ioshua 23 ● walking in the steps of Moses his master hee giueth the people charge to worship the true God to sticke fast vnto him with full purpose of heart to loue him to fear him to serue him in vprightnesse and in truth and to put away the gods which their fathers serued beyond the Riuer Thus did Dauid set his son vpon his throne before he dyed 1 Kings 2.2 3. and gaue him a great charge to maintain that Religion which he had established The dutie of all Ministers when they are dying and departing this life is to prouide as carefully as they can that the good worke begun by them may be furthered by their successors and that the trueth which they haue planted may not bee supplanted pulled vp by the rootes by such as shal enter into their labors It is not enough for them to labour in their own persons while they liue but to endeuour that others may succeed them in piety as well as in place in diligence as well as in office Thus dealt Christ our Sauior in calling his Apostles thus dealt the Apostle in ordaining elders in euery City 〈◊〉 1 5. and appointing Pastors and Teachers in seuerall places so soone as they had gained them to the faith Lastly it is the dutie of all Fathers and masters of families to prouide for the soules and saluation of all such as are vnder their iurisdiction and gouernment euen of such as are the meanest and lowest in the house to charge them to know the true
5 verses 28.29 They haue well saide all that they haue spoken they were ready to heare all and do all that Moses should speake vnto them But if we fall to stint the Spirit and teach the Lord to speake prescribing the Minister what he shall say and restraining our hearing what we will heare wee shall neuer heare fruitefully we shall neuer practise conscionably what we haue heard Thus much concerning the protestation of Balaam Verse 27. Balak saide vnto Balaam Come I pray thee I will bring thee vnto another place if so be it will please that God c. Heere is offered to our considerations the profession of Balaam Hee pretendeth Religion and the helpe of God and professeth to do all things in the Name of the true God yet was voyd of all Religion and sincere dealing and doth all things by the working of the diuell abusing the glorious and fearefull Name of God to malicious mischieuous purposes Doctrin● Many pr●fesse God that seru● the diue●● Hereby we learne that many in the world professe piety and godlinesse in the tongue that haue none in the heart They professe GOD outwardly but serue the diuell inwardly This appeareth in the Iewes who albeit they would not heare the preaching of the Prophets rebuking them in the Name of the Lord yet had oftentimes in their mouthes The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord this is the Temple of the Lord Ier. 7 4. Thus the Prophet Esay reproueth them in his time This people come neere vnto me with their mouth and honour me with their lips but haue remoued their heart farre from me and their feare toward mee was taught by the precept of men Esay chap. 29 13. So many that were professors and teachers of the truth as Christ testifieth yea workers of myracles and crying vnto him Lord Lord yet shal not be acknowledged of him as belonging to him The Samaritans called and accounted themselues the true worshippers Iohn 4 2 and pretended the tradition of their fathers and hated the Iewes as false worshippers yet themselues worshipped they knew not what All heretiques will boast they teach Gods truth all hypocrites will say they embrace the faith all carnall and loose professors will challenge sincerity all Papists will cry out they are the Church the successors of the Apostles and the true Catholiques yet are no true Church but in shew no true Catholiques but in name no true successors of the Apostles but in place In the dayes of Christ the Iewes gloried that they were the seede of Abraham Iohn 8 44 the sonnes of the Couenant the heyres of promise they pleaded they were the first borne of God yet he proueth to their faces that they were the very limbes of the diuell And the Church of Smyrna had such among thē as vaunted they were Iewes Reuel 2 9. that is the people of GOD but were in truth the Synagogue of Sathan All which examples conclude the certainty of the former doctrine and verifie the saying of Salomon Prou. 30. There is a generation that are pure in their owne eyes and yet are not washed from their filthinesse The truth heereof will farther and more Reason 1 fully appeare vnto vs if we enter into the consideration of the causes and reasons of it The first is pride selfe-loue which so ouercome their hearts and blinde their eyes that they cannot see their owne wickednesse and wretchednesse which are so hud-winked with palpable ignorance of God as that they cannot iudge of themselues and their owne misery as they should We see the coniunction of these in the King of Moab and his Chaplaine the false Prophet that albeit they pretend the holy Name of God yet through loue of themselues on the one side and ignorance of God on the other they cannot see that their whole proceeding is an vtter renouncing of God This reason the Prophet Dauid pointeth vnto when he saith The wicked hath made boast of his owne hearts desire and the couetous blesseth himselfe though hee contemneth the Lord for the wicked is so proud that he seeketh not for God hee is in prosperity God spareth him in mercy and hee imagineth presently that he is iust and holy pleasing God Psal 10 3 4. Reason 2 Secondly the heart of man is many times deceitfull He can speake with his tongue that which he meaneth not in his heart nor hath any sence or feeling of in his owne soule but beguileth with lying lips and a double toong Many are vnder their profession hypocrites and haue hypocriticall hollow hearts speaking that which they did not minde For the nature of an hypocrite is to appeare outwardly like a painted Toombe 〈◊〉 8. as if there were nothing in him but singlenesse and simplicity of heart and vntill his corruption breake out as filthy matter out of a sore which assuredly it will do at some time or other seeing there is nothing couered that shall not bee reuealed Luke 12 2. there is none more conformable then he in the outward exercises of the Word Prayer and the Sacraments They draw neere with their lips they listen with their eares they stretch foorth their hands thus they prepare and make ready their mouthes to pray their eares to heare their hands to receiue This appeareth in the proud Pharisie Luke chapter 18 verses 11 12. He came into the Temple to pray he thanked God for his blessings hee fasted twice in the weeke hee gaue tythe of all that he possessed yet he worshipped God in vaine and departed to his house without profit or comfort Now let vs handle the vses of this doctrine Vse 1 First wee learne heereby for our instruction that outward profession is not enough to assure vs of our saluation or to fit vs to Gods kingdome for the diuell might go as farre as the best of those that rest in the shew of godlinesse who can turne and transforme himselfe into an Angel of light 2 Corinth 11 verse 14. A wolfe may put on a sheepes skinne yea the Parrot and Ape can imitate and therefore trust not to thy faire shewes and externall appearance if thou proceed no further It is not sufficient for thee to be baptized to bee made partaker of the word of God of the Table of the Lord and such priuiledges of the Church this is to trust in lying words that shall not profite Ier. chap. 7 verse 4. The case and condition of many professors is no better then of the heathen Infidels as of the Turkes and Sarazins I meane of such as content themselues with the bare name or profession of Christianity and therein satisfie themselues nay it is a great deale worse as our Sauiour teacheth Math. chapter 11 verses 21 22 23. that Corazin Bethsaida and Capernaum shall be punished more seuerely then Tyre and Sidon then Sodome and Gomorrha What comfort in the things of this life can any man take to beare the name of land and another to
hath to the true mans purse Thou professest to shew friendship vnto him but art ready to cut his throat Thou speakest fairely but thou meanest fouly Wee must not suffer our tongues and hearts to wander so far asunder but remember that he which keepeth his mouth Prou 13.3 keepeth his life c. A little gotten with a good conscience shall bring a blessing with it vpon vs and our children The iust man walketh in his integrity his children are blessed after him Prou. 20.7 And howsoeuer many wil account this light gains which is so gotten yet in the end it shal make an heauy purse according to the true prouerbe As for all wicked and vnconscionable gaines they are accursed in vs and our posterities to whom we leaue them and by which we thinke to enrich them shal feele the smart of our sins This is the portion of a wicked man with God c. Iob 27.13 ● To draw to an end let vs set this downe as a rule that no man ought to sweare or ly for an aduantage neither shall our swearing and lying in the end turne to our aduantage but to our losse forasmuch as sin shall bring profit to no man It cannot profit a man to win the whole world and then to lose his owne soule Matth. 16.26 Such get a penny and forgoe a pound they gaine hell and lose heauen they make the diuell their friend and God their enemy If wee would thus reason with our selues and cast vp our accounts we should soon see little gotten by these sins that when we haue attained to the greatest wealth only godlines is the greatest gaines which shal neuer be taken from vs. Lastly it is our duty to be careful to vse an Vse 3 oath aright It is the great goodnesse of God toward vs that doth so farre honour vs and abase himselfe to giue vs leaue to take vp his Name and to be present at our controuersies being ready to determine of them We are vnworthy of this preheminence and therefore we ought to rectifie our iudgment and swear aright to the end we take not his Name in vain And that we may doe this we are to consider these few particulars 1 what an oth is 2. who is the author of it 3. what are the parts of an oth and wherof it consisteth 4. what is the forme therof 5. what is the end lastly what be the properties of it Of these in order as we set thē down Touching the first an oath may thus be described It is a solemne appealing to God What as 〈◊〉 is whereby we testifie that we speake the trueth It is a kind of inuocation of Gods Name though it be vsed vnto men or before men it is a referring of our selues to God and therfore Paul calleth God to record ●or 1.23 ●●m 3.35 We should cōsider therfore that we haue to do with him set him before our eyes for the farther prouoking of our selues to feare and reuerence the farther remouing from vs all falsehood vntruth Againe it is said that we by our oath do testifie that we speake and vtter the trueth with our tongues but it must be from the hart root This is the reason that oathes are in vse that the truth which otherwise lyeth hid may come to light This truth must be spoken not to halfes or to hurt by it but we must speake the truth plainely and sincerely in the simplicitie of our hearts without all glozing or dissembling through feare or flattery or fauour or profit or pleasing of men we must speake the whole trueth and nothing but the trueth ●●e author an oath The second point to bee considered in an oath is who is the author of it It is commanded of God by whom we are to sweare inasmuch as he alone is to be called vpon worshipped to whom we ascribe a knowledge of all things a searching of our hearts a presence in all places and infinite wisedome in ordering all things For an oath consisteth not of manifest matters whereof there is good euidence but of hidden and vncertaine things in which God onely can iudge whether men deceiue vs or not True it is if there were that perfection in vs euery way that ought to be there shold be no necessary vse of any oath with God or mā If there were no wauering in vs God needeth not to sweare if there were no forging in vs man needed not to sweare so that vnbeleefe and vntruth were the principall causes that brought it into practise The cause why God sweareth is for our profit He is truth it selfe ●umb 23.19 Sam. 15.29 Tim. 2.13 and cannot lie he cannot deceiue or repent or deny himselfe howbeit we are fraile weak creatures though God promise neuer so faithfully and giue vs his word neuer so certainly yet we are full of infidelity and doubting like to Thomas one of the twelue Apostles he had the word of God the promise of Christ the testimony of the disciples yet he would not beleeue 〈◊〉 20.25 except he might see in his hands the print of the nailes and put his finger into the print of the nailes and put his hand into his side It was not enough for him that he might be no longer faithlesse but faithfull to see his wounds with his eies but he must touch them and felt thē with his fingers and then he would beleeue Hence it is that God sweareth vnto vs for our better assurance that we should not doubt but haue sure consolation in his promise and confirmation in his truth Againe there should be little or no vse of an oath between party and party if there were that honesty fidelity among men that ought to haue been for if we were accustomed onely to speake the truth and that we hated lying as we doe the father of it what need we any oath or what should we do with swearing All men will seeme to hate the diuel the father of lies but all hate not his works They loue lies more then to speake the trueth and therefore an oath came in when the truth could not be found out with much difficulty and long examinations The third point is the parts of an oath The parts of an oath wherof it consisteth In euery oath passe these foure things confirmation inuocation confession obligation First there must be the confirmation of a truth that cannot else be known but by our oath Heb. 6.6.16 An oath for confirmation is among men an end of all strife An oath is not a customary thing or a matter wherin we may dally there must be somewhat that needeth to bee cōfirmed Where all things are apparent there is no place for this ordinance Secondly there is an inuocation of Gods Name who is witnes of the trueth and a iudge to be auenged of vs if we lie It is not enough for vs to vse an asseueration or to make
to the people of God and to prouide for them in their necessities and to deliuer them from the oppressions of the mighty in consideration whereof he is bold to intreate the Lord to thinke vpon him for good according to all that he had done for his people Neh. 5 19. So is it lawfull for vs to craue of God to be mindfull of vs in goodnesse according as we haue done to others and dealt toward them If we remember God we may be assured that he will remember vs. If we be carefull to heare his word he is carefull to heare our prayers according to his promise He will returne like for like care for care hearing for hearing and blessing for blessing If we be carefull to heare his voyce his eares are open to heare vs and if we blesse him he will blesse vs. And as he hath promised to heare them that heare him so hee hath threatned not to heare them that will not heare him Prou. 1 28 29. They shall call vpon me but I will not answer they shall seeke me early but they shall not finde me for that they hated knowledge and did not chuse the feare of the Lord. And to this purpose speaketh the Lord in the Prophets Micah 3 4. Zach. 7 13. They shall cry vnto the Lord but he will not heare them hee will euen hide his face from them at that time as they haue behaued themselues ill in their doings This is a greeuous threatning and full of all discomfort It is as it were the top of all misery to haue God stop his eares against vs. To liue in this sort is worse then a thousand deaths If a Subiect had a petition to put vp to the Prince and knew he would turne away his face from him how neare would it goe vnto him and how would he bee discouraged Or if a childe knew that whatsoeuer he asked of his father should be denied vnto him except he obeyed his father in that whereunto he exhorted him I suppose it would stirre vp the sonne to doe the will of his father In like manner it ought to be with euery one of vs. Seeing God hath bounded and limited his hearkning vnto our voyce when we speake vnto him with this condition that wee hearken vnto his voyce when he speaketh vnto vs it ought to moue vs to heare his word with feare reuerence and to expresse the power of it in obedience that so we may comfort our selues with assurance of Gods mercy toward vs in regard of our zeale and affection toward him Thirdly from hence we may learne to bee Vse 3 patient vnder the punishments that do befall vs. For seeing God will punish vs in the same manner that we offend when we feele perceiue that he meeteth with vs and hath found vs out and that we can no longer be hidden nor our actions from his eyes let vs stoope downe vnder his hand and hold our peace because he hath done it Let vs not fixe and fasten our eyes vpon the earth beneath nor dwell vpon the meditations of mens dealings toward vs but lift our hearts vnto God who alwaies punisheth vs iustly he being the righteous Iudge of all the world to whom is incident no vnrighteousnesse If we bee slandered and defamed by others let vs consider whether we haue not done the like to others and therefore the Lord recompenceth vs in the same kinde and as it were taketh our feet in the snare that we haue laid for others and casteth vs into the same pit which we digged for them as it fell out to Haman who was hanged vpon his owne gallowes so that as we haue wronged others it falleth out that we must receiue wrong from others This is the vse that Salomon pointeth out in the booke of Ecclesiastes Eccl. 7 21 ● Take no heed vnto all wordes that are spoken lest thou heare thy seruant curse thee for oftentimes also thine owne heart knoweth that thou thy selfe likewise hast cursed others Let vs therefore be patient in iniuries let vs not slander them that slander vs nor reuile them that reuile vs nor speake euill of them that speake euill of vs. Moses is commended that when Miriam and Aaron rose vp against him and moued sedition by reason of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married he possessed his soule with patience and bare all their reproches with meeknesse of spirit for hee was very meeke aboue all the men that were vpon the face of the earth Numb 12 3. Numb 1● 1 It is said of Saul being made King of Israel that when the children of Belial saide How shall this man saue vs and they despised him in their hearts he gaue them not taunt for taunt nor rebuke for rebuke hee commanded not the standers by to take away their liues albeit they deserued it and he had power in his hand to do it but he held his peace 1 Sam 10 1● and passed by their reproches as a blinde man that saw them not as a deafe man that heard them not and as a man without sense that felt them not When Shemei reproched Dauid and cursed him with an horrible curse Dauid with patience abstaineth and with perswasion refraineth others from reuenge that offered themselues to take off the head of that dead dogge so that he saide Let him alone 2 Sam. 16 ●2 it may bee that the Lord will locke vpon mine affliction and requite good for his cursing this day Hee could haue returned vpon him curse for curse nay wounds for words but he knew well enough and teacheth it to others in another place that hee which loueth cursing the same shall come vpon him Ps 10● 1● ● and hee that delighteth not in blessing it shall be farre from him because as he cloathed himselfe with cursing like as with his garment so it shall come into his bowels like water and like oyle into his bones It is well said of an heathen man Sent●● Feare none more then thine owne conscience This is the right and ready way to get a good name and to keepe it being gotten to iudge of others with right iudgement and christian equity carrying a charitable opinion of euery one thinking well of them speaking the best of them and couering the multitude of infirmities as Shem and Iaphet did the nakednesse of their father This is true charity indeed and heereby we may assure our owne hearts that wee loue not in word and tongue onely but in deed and truth The counsell of the Prophet is good wholesome to this purpose Psal 34.12 13 14 15. What man is hee that desireth life and loueth many daies that he may see good Keepe thy tongue from euill and thy lippes from speaking guile depart from euill and doe good seeke peace and pursue it The reason is because the eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto their cry whereas the face of the Lord
wholesome wine into an vnwholesome vessell it loseth his taste and becommeth not onely vnprofitable but hurtfull and bringeth much mischiefe and sometimes the vtter ruine not onely of the person that possesseth it but of the whole Church that is pestered with it yet not of it owne nature but by his corruption that doth abuse it Vse 3 Thirdly from hence ariseth comfort to men of meane gifts of small knowledge if they be painfull and conscionable True it is they must not be Ieroboams Priests that were neyther Leuites nor learned but taken from the basest of the people as vnsauory salt good for nothing howbeit if with their meane gifts they vse not meane diligence and so discharge a good conscience God accepteth and approueth of them yea he blesseth their labours worketh his great worke of regeneration by them sealeth vp thereby his fauour to their owne consciences We see this in Apollos mētioned in the Acts he was not altogether destitute of knowledge thogh he had but little knowing only the baptisme of Iohn ch 18 25. that is the doctrine of Iohn preaching repentance which he sealed vp by baptisme but his want of knowledge he did recompence with painfulnesse in his preaching for he was feruent in the Spirit and taught diligently the things of the Lord so that albeit he came far behind others in gifts of vnderstanding yet did he paralell or equall them and peraduenture goe before thē in feruency and faithfulnesse and in the effect of his Ministery for he was zealous of Gods glory eloquent in speech diligent in his place mighty in the Scriptures and confounded the Iewes that beleeued not in Christ But woe vnto them that haue neither knowledge nor zeale nor diligence nor conscience It is noted of the Angel that is of the Minister of the Church of Philadelphia Reuel 3 8. that hee had but a little strength a small measure of graces and gifts yet hee maintained the truth resolutely and brought much good to the Church of GOD by vsing them carefully for he did not onely keepe the word and confesse the Lord in time of trouble and persecution but conuerted many enemies that they came and worshipped before his feet Verse 19. Reu. 3 8 9 though he had little strength yet he had many children whom he conuerted to the faith For as the Apostle teacheth out of the Prophet that the desolate hath many moe children then she which hath an husband Esay 54 1. And as it often falleth out that a weak man begetteth many moe children then hee that is of greater strength so such as haue but weake gifts do notwithstanding bring many to God Let not therfore any be discouraged through the weaknesse of their gifts from doing their duty remembring the saying of Christ Mat. 13 12. Whosoeuer hath to him shall be giuen and he shall haue more abundance Vse 4 Fourthly this serueth to humble and abase such as haue the greatest gifts and are high Doctors of the Church that they should not stand ouermuch vpon the glory of their learning but craue with all humility the blessing of God and cast downe themselues and all their gifts at his footstoole of whom they receiued them that withal they may receiue cōfort in their Ministery from him Their labors are oftentimes lesse blessed because they stand so much vpon their schoole-learning termes tongues titles degrees and such like priuiledges that they oftentimes forget the principall part of their calling to do good to Gods people to know nothing among them but Christ him crucified 1 Cor. 2 2. Many there are that come farre behinde them in knowledge that go farre before them in conscience which are beneath them in learning but aboue them in labour and finde a greater blessing vpon their diligence For it oftentimes falleth out that such as are great Linguists and profound Clearks beare themselues so proud vpon their reputation that they neuer desire a blessing from God nor craue of him to sanctifie their gifts and therefore they oftentimes beate the aire neuer pierce the conscience of the hearers neither win any soules to God They speake in the entising words of mans wisedome vtter strange tongues to gaine admiration astonishment in the hearers but regard not the demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2 4. wheras others which preach in weaknesse and in feare in much trembling that the faith of the Church should not stand in the wisedome of men but in the power of God are made instruments of bringing a plentiful haruest to God Lastly let the people content themselues Vse 5 with such as God hath set ouer them though they be not most excellent in gifts and count it a blessing from God not refusing or disdaining to heare them and to depend vpon them as the Pastors that watch ouer their soules Heb. 13 1● They are oftentimes edified in their most holy faith profite in knowledge in repentance and in obedience vnder such a one more then vnder another For these doe much good in their places and turne many to righteousnesse The diet of Daniel and of his fellowes was no better then Water and Pulse yet with that they prospered better then they which had their portion from the Kings Table because they were dieted at Gods alowance and therefore it was ioyned with his blessing so are many fed with plaine yet with pure doctrine taken out of the holy fountains of the Scriptures whose soules do thriue prosper far better in knowledge in faith and in obedience then theirs that are fed after a more stately and costly manner with flowers of eloquence and ostentation of humane learning which puffeth vp but edifieth not The people that haue a painfull and conscionable Minister which bendeth all his gifts to edification that hee may profite with them and vseth them not to gaine glory to himselfe but to God are in far better case then such as haue a great Doctour a cunning linguist an excellent Artist a deepe Philosopher a subtill disputer an eloquent Oratour an acute Logitian or a profound schooleman wel seene in histories and well redde in Fathers and is withall without conscience and leaueth his flocke or if he bee among them hideth his gifts and burieth his talent or if he vse his gifts now and then bendeth them to vanity not to piety to ostentation not to edification or as many doe vse them against the truth not for the truth to destroy not to build to roote out not to plant Woe vnto that people that haue such a guide such a one can do no good vnto them whatsoeuer hee doth to himselfe 25 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 26 Thus speake vnto the Leuites and say vnto them when ye take of the children of Israel the tithes which I haue giuen you c. 27 And this your heaue offering c. 28 Thus you also shall offer c. 29 Out of all your gifts you shall
or not or another diuerse from it or whether any wise Athenian could precisely tell when and by what workman euery peece and parcell was patched and supplied vntill the old was wholly gone or when and at what time it ceased to bee that ship and became a new ship The Romane Religion is almost become like this shippe it hath bin patched and peeced at seuerall times by cunning workmen there is little or nothing remaining of the old ship wherein Peter fished I meane of that Church wherein they say Peter sate as Bishop one error succeeding another and one heresie making way for another vntill little faith truth is found among them Notwithstanding all the secret conueyances made in that Church it is not hard in very many particular points to shew the beginning proceeding and establishing of the same touching pardons and indulgences touching the Popes supremacy vsurped the Images of the Trinity and the beginning of Idoll worshippe touching the merit of workes forbidding of marriage The Masse one of the greatest Idols began not all at once but came to this height by degrees It were endlesse to name all that might be alledged and to shew how and by whom these points were resisted and the truth euermore defended Secondly this serueth to condemne the Vse 2 foolish practise of popish pilgrims who vndertake long and laborious iournies to Ierusalem and the land of Iudea or to this that Idoll and make it a meritorious worke to visite eyther the Sepulcher of our Lord or the Image of our Lady For albeit this Land haue bin heeretofore famous because the Law came from Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem E●●y 2 3 and because Christ himselfe liued and preached and wrought many miracles there and it be oftentimes called The holy Land yet the presence of Christ infused no holines into it more then into any other place And all the Papists in the world shall neuer be able to prooue that it is more meritorious to goe to Ierusalem in a pilgrims weed then to go to Antioch or Ephesus or Constantinople or any other City in the East or West or that it is more acceptable to God or auaileable to the soule to trauaile thither then for the English to go to London or the French to Paris The house where the King resideth all the while he is there is an honourable house and there the Court lyeth but when the king is once remoued out of the house it is afterward neuer a whit the more honourable for the kings beeing there before so is it in this case albeit Christ in his life time and the daies of his flesh did many great works and wonders in it yet being ascended and the Christian religion also remoued there remaineth no more holines in that place then in any other and therefore it is great vanity and idolatry for any people to practise such impiety These are like to the Pilgrims among the Turkes Sarazens The turkish Pilgrims that go yearely with great shew of deuotion to Meccha to visite the Sepulcher of Mahomet and account it a work very meritorious The Cittie 's Gilgal and Beth-el were sometimes famous and renowned Cities yet true religiō being once remoued the Prophet chargeth the people not to come at them and to haue nothing to doe with them Hos 4 15. Hence it is that Christ saith Iohn 4 23. The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth If then we may worship God with great benefit to our selues and as great glory to him in our owne Country I see no cause why we should resort to Ierusalem or go on pilgrimage to Rome or any other place forasmuch as we may lift vp pure hands euery where and be heard 1 Tim. 2 8. But thus these crafty workmen keepe the peoples heads busie with outward deuotions and shewes of holinesse that they may not espy their fraud and deceit in greater matters Lastly this teacheth all men how they may Vse 3 make themselues to bee of good name and their houses and habitations truely famous to wit by holinesse and true religion by faith repentance which are the ornaments of all Christians Thus shall the noble man make himselfe and his house truely noble If they worshippe God aright they shall haue true worship with God and man for he will honour them that honour him 1 Sam. chap. 2 verse 30 and without true religion the most noble blood is stayned and taynted and neuer restored since the treason and rebellion of Adam against God For that which maketh a man reprochfull or any place reprochfull is sinne and wickednesse which make our names rotte Prou 10 7. See then the difference betweene the iudgement of God and man Men do commonly magnifie Cities by the stately buildings goodly Monuments that are found in them but this is no true or well grounded fame the true praise and commendation of any City is the piety of the Citizens A well ordered Towne or City embracing zealously true religion The True praise commendation of a City and maintaining the worship of God in integrity drawing out the sword of iustice against vice and countenancing the faithfull in their godly courses is indeede a right famous and flourishing City Ierusalem the City of God and the praise of the world Psal 122 3 4 5. and 87 3 and 48 11 12 13 was neuer so famous for her buildings and stately Towers and outward magnificence as it was for the word and worship of God Wee see then heereby who they are that are the honor and ornament of Cities of Townes and of houses to wit such as honour God and are truely zealous and religious and likewise who are the shame and reproch the blot and blemish the dishonour and disgrace of them to wit such as are wicked and prophane Do we see a City or Towne or priuate house full of drunkards of blasphemers of light and lasciuious persons these are they that poure contempt vpon them and bring shame infamy vnto them Euery one therefore should be carefull to looke to their charges committed vnto them the Magistrate to gouerne the people the Minister to looke to the flock Ouer which the holy Ghost hath made him Ouerseer euery father and mother to haue an eye to their children and euery master and gouernor to looke to their seruants as their seuerall charges that their houses may not be houses of wickednes of riotousnes of deceit of cursing and euill speaking but rather the houses of God All men are ready to condemne the Ministers that are absent from their flockes and to call for residency at their hands but let these look also vpon themselues and consider the duties of their own callings Doubtlesse all Gouernors haue a certaine kinde of residency required at their hands All gouernors of houses haue a kinde of residency required at their hands and their presence is meete to be among them
And if we beleeue not yet abideth he faithful 2 Tim. 2 13. he cannot deny himselfe No greater comfort can be giuen no greater promise can be made then to assure vs of the pardon and forgiuenesse of our sinnes which make a separation between God and vs. To haue a feeling of this mercy is as sweet Incense vnto the soule and as precious balme vnto the heart Let vs therefore comfort our selues with this promise howsoeuer Satan sift vs and seek by all means to take from vs this peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding we must shroud our selues vnder the safety of his worde which abideth for euer and when we are tempted to doubt of his goodnesse in the remission of our sinnes let vs lay hold on the former promises and know that the heauens themselues shall fall and be moued out of their places before the truth of his word which is truth it selfe shall be diminished or disanulled Fourthly is God constant of his word and Vse 4 faithfull of his promise then it is required of vs to be like our heauenly Father in truth and faithfulnesse When God hath promised any blessing to his people he is true of his worde and bringeth it to passe The Lord sayde to them Iet 29 10 11. Dan 9 2. After seuenty yeares bee accomplished at Babel I wil visit you and performe my good promise toward you and cause you to returne to this place for I know the thoughts that I haue thoght toward you euen the thoughts of peace and not of trouble to giue you an end and your hope This did hee accomplish by the meanes of Cyrus whose spirit hee stirred vp to make a proclamation throughout his kingdome that whosoeuer would should goe vp to Ierusalem to builde it and inhabite there Now as God is faithfull in his word so let vs follow his example and make conscience of our words sayings that thereby we may assure our selues to bee the children of our heauenly Father Wee must therefore know that all iust couenants and contracts all promises bargaines must be perfourmed albeit they bee made to our hurt and hinderance and binde vs in conscience and duty by the Law of God man so farre forth as hee pleaseth to require them to whom they haue beene made The Prophet asking the question Who shall dwell in the Lords Tabernacle rest in his holy Hill maketh this answere Hee which sweareth to his hurt and changeth not Psalm 15 4. Iosh 9. This wee see in Ioshua toward the Gibeonites and in the booke of Iudges chapt 1. when the Spies saw a man come out of the City and said vnto him Shew vs we pray thee the way into the City and we will shew thee mercy Iudg. 1 24 25. when he had shewed them the way into the City they smote the City with the edge of the sword but they let the man all his houshold depart Hence wee should learne to be wary and watchfull in our promises considering as well whether wee be able to performe them as whether wee be willing and examining our hearts whether they be in our owne power nor not and whether if they be it be lawfull for vs to performe them For some things are lawfull in themselues to pay and perfourme which are in no sort in our power and other things may be in our power which are not lawfull to be done This fidelity in keeping promise is a weighty point of the Law Math. 23 Math. 23 23. Gal. 5 22. and a fruite of the Spirit and therefore it standeth vs vpon to make conscience thereof If any man were asked the question whether hee thinke it his duty to endeuour to be like God and to striue to resemble him as the childe resembleth his father he would be ready to answere It is his duty to do it and his comfort that it is so If then we acknowledge the necessity of it let vs follow him in constancy and true dealing studying to be perfect as our heauenly Father is perfect This is that vse which the Apostle vrgeth 2 Cor. 1. 2 Cor. 1 17 18 20. When I was thus minded did I vse lightnesse Or minde I those things which I minde according to the flesh that with me should be yea yea and nay nay Yea God is faithfull that our word toward you was not yea and nay for all the promises of God in Christ are yea and are in him Amen vnto the glory of God through vs. The Apostle in these wordes declareth that he was wrongfully slandered and vniustly charged with loosenesse and lightnesse of promise and vnconscionable breaking of his word inasmuch as he had alwaies before him the example of God whom he acknowledgeth to be faithfull in his words and promises This serueth to reproue those that will rashly promise any thing as Saul did to Dauid as Laban did to Iacob and then changed their minde as the weather-cocke doeth at euery blaste of winde These are like the reede that bendeth too and fro but it must not bee so with vs we must purpose and not alter we must promise and then perfourme carefully what we haue promised Lastly whensoeuer God hath made good Vse 5 the words of his mouth and accomplished his promises vnto vs which wee haue long looked for expected it is our duty to praise his name and to giue him the glory of the worke to whom alone it is due Hath he fed vs in time of famine and made vs to see Deut. 8 3. Mathew 4 4. that Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of his mouth Let vs not sacrifice vnto our net nor burne incense vnto our yarne but say with the Prophet Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs Psal 115 1. but vnto thy Name giue the glory for thy louing mercy and for thy truths sake This duty we see practised by King Salomon 1 Kings 8. 1 Kin. 8 15 20 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel who spake with his mouth vnto Dauid my father and hath with his hand fulfilled it the Lord hath made good his word that he spake and I am risen vp in the roome of Dauid my father and sit on the Throne of Israel as the Lord promised and haue built the house for the name of the Lord God of Israel A worthie patterne and president for vs to follow whensoeuer we taste of the grace and bountifulnes of God to offer vp vnto him a song and sacrifice of thanksgiuing And if wee must doe this for temporall blessings much more are we bound to do it for such as are spirituall If God haue for a season hidde his face from vs that we haue seene no light of his grace but all these things haue been couered with darknesse and discomfort as it were the Sunne in a Cloud if our sinnes as the waues of the sea haue gone ouer our head and beene a
Samaria were deuoured of Lyons he commanded that one of the Priests which had been brought from thence 2 Ki. 17 26 27. should be carried thether to teach them the manner of the God of the Country so that the superstitious King thought it his duty to see them instructed in the truth A notable example of a godly and religious care this way is in Iehosaphat who 2 Chron. 17 6 7 8 9 10. so soone as hee had taken away the high places and the groues out of Iudah hee sent out sundry of the Leuites that they should teach in the Cities and they taught in Iudah and had the booke of the Law of the LORD with them and went about throughout all the Cities of Iudah and taught the people This is the foundation and stay of all Kingdomes to giue entertainment to the word of God this maketh a wise King and a wise people So long as Magistrates countenance the truth and Preachers of it they secure theyr owne estates and are blessed of God which ought to bee an encouragement vnto them not to bee slacke or slothfull in spreading abroad the Gospell of Christ Lastly because it were troublesome and tedious to go about to rehearse all their duties we breefely number vp the rest It is their duty therefore to be good examples of piety and godlinesse of life to the people and to prouide for them al things necessary for the body to aske counsell of the mouth of the Lord in theyr weighty affaires that is the ministery of the word and to yeeld obedience vnto it to exhort their inferiors in time of publike calamities to earnest repentance and to expresse the same by prayer and fasting to know the cause throughly before they proceed to giue sentence to punish euill dooers and defend the innocent and to establish such positiue lawes as are necessary for the maintenance of order and decency in the Common-wealth Vse 4 Lastly seeing Magistrates are necessary for the Church and Common-wealth it putteth those that are vnder them in minde of theyr duties partly in regard of themselues partly in regard of the Magistrates and partly in respect of God Touching themselues they must know they be no burdens to the Common-wealth nor superfluous parts that may be spared they are as the head or heart of the body or as the eye in the head all depend vpon their welfare so all depend vpon the Kings and Princes welfare If he be vpholden the Common-wealth standeth if he be vnregarded the Common-wealth falleth He is as necessary as the Sunne in the Firmament yea as fire and water and breathing without which we cannot liue If we iudge otherwise of this ordinance of God we are deceiued wrong both them and our selues Againe we learne that their life and continuance is greatly to bee desired of Gods seruants It is the part and duty of all Subiects to craue their safety and protection that they may safe-guard and protect both Church and Common-wealth Yea Rulers themselues in regard of this end which ought daily to bee before their eies may desire of God to lengthen their daies and to continue their happy reigne that together with the Saints they may do seruice to God in his Church in this respect I say they may desire life not so much aiming at their owne priuate good for in that respect it were better to bee dissolued to be with the Lord as respecting the generall vtility of their people What greater glory what higher honour can they haue then this to be the stay and defence of the church that otherwise were like to decay and goe to ruine and to continue the seuerall parts of it in well-doing That good King Hezekiah foreseeing by the word of the Lord the miserable estate of the Church that should bee after his death and considering with great anguish of heart the wofull effects that were like to follow he turned himselfe in his bed to the wall and wept and was greeued to depart hence Esay 38 18 ● saying The graue cannot confesse thee death cannot praise thee they that go downe into the pit cannot hope for thy truth but the liuing the liuing he shall confesse thee as I do this day the father to the children shall declare thy truth He desired of God to liue and prayed vnto God to prolong his daies not to lift vp himselfe aboue his brethren not to glory in the smoke of lofty titles not to tyrannize ouer the people not to command the things that are vniust or to punish such as do not deserue it but to do good to the Church and to set foorth Gods praise Death indeede which bringeth the dissolution of nature is a welcome guest to them that are the Lords all the godly do make themselues ready to receiue him to meete and entertaine him and so Kings Princes among the rest howbeit in this respect that the Church may bee benefited by them it is no matter of impiety to desire a longer continuance among Gods people much more then is it the duty of such as are vnder them and gouerned by them to desire their continuance as the daies of heauen and as the course of the Sunne to bee Nurses to the godly This was wont to be a common salutation vsed of the people toward theyr Princes not onely of the Infidels but by the faithfull seruants of God Dan. 2 4 and 6 21 and 3 9 and 5 10. When the King came to visite Daniel being cast into the den of Lyons the Prophet so soone as hee heard him saide O King liue for euer that is GOD grant vnto thee a long life Last of all whensoeuer we haue a wise and worthy a godly and religious Prince giuen to vs it is our duty to be thankfull If the Lord grant vnto a Land a prudent and prouident Prince to reigne ouer thē whose heart is bent to seeke the Lord and to serue the GOD of his fathers the people that breathe vnder his shadow must praise the holy name of God It is their duty to pray that princes may be such and to commend them to God with all faithfulnesse For if they must pray for others much more for them When Salomon was annointed with oyle taken out of the Sanctuary they blew the Trumpet and all the people said God saue King Salomon 1 King 1 39 So the Apostle writing to Timothy exhorteth that first of all supplications prayers intercessions and giuing of thankes be made for all men For Kings and for all that are in authority 1 Tim. 2 1 2 3 that wee may leade a quiet and a peaceable life in all godlinesse and honesty for this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Sauiour Now as we are to pray for them so wee are to praise God for them wee are not to forget the least blessings nor to be vnmindfull of smaller benefits and therefore we are much more bound to be thankfull
the Lord Obiect Ephes 6. Ephe. 6.4 If any obiect against these commandements They will be vnruly and disordered albeit they be neuer so well brought vp and though their parents be very carefull they will be very carelesse and therefore they were as good holde their peace as to speake to them and not to be regarded Answer I answere so it is sometimes but alwayes it is not so Many that haue feared GOD with all their housholdes haue receiued much comfort by their children and seruants that haue had good instruction put into them as pure and wholesome liquour into a vessell and haue seene the fruite thereof to the vnspeakeable ioy of their hearts This we might shew at large in the reformed families of Abraham and Cornelius and sundry others As they planted and sowed good seede in the parts of their families as it were in a fruitfull field so they reaped a plentifull haruest Abraham had seruants that were also Gods seruants Gen 24.12 and 14.14 Act. 10.7 and prayed earnestly vnto him Cornelius had a souldier that waited vpon him that feared God yea all his band of Italian souldiers were Christian souldiers Againe we must trust GOD with the effect and successe of the education that we giue them He will worke thereby by his Spirit in all that belong vnto him as seemeth good to his heauenly wisedome If he doe not giue a blessing for causes vnknowne to vs but knowne to him let vs leaue Gods secret yet iust iudgments to himselfe The third particular branch is to pray to God for them to guide them in his wayes and to blesse them in his feare and to blesse our labours bestowed among them This wee see in Iob Iob 1.5 Chapter 1. toward his children When the dayes of their feasting were gone about he sent and sanctified them and rose vp early in the morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all for he said It may be that my sonnes haue sinned and cursed God in their hearts He was carefull for those which were committed vnto his charge and feared they might offend God in their meetings albeit hee knew no such euill by them The wise man saith Happy is the man● that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Prou. 28. Prou. 28.14 A like example wee haue in Dauid Psalme 72. where he prayeth for Salomon Giue the king thy iudgements O God and thy righteousnesse to the kings sonne hee shall iudge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poore with iudgement So then the faithfull are to entreate and craue from God the continuance of his couenant to their children and to begge from his handes an holy and sanctified seede We must not presume because we are faithfull and haue receiued to beleeue that therefore our seede must of necessity be so likewise for then we shall but deceiue our selues Let not vs therefore faile in crauing a blessing from God vpon our children if we desire to make them heires of blessing Fourthly it is required of vs to reioyce in the blessing of God vpon them and to giue him praise and glory when he vouchsafeth to shew mercy vpon them and vpon vs. If hee did leaue them in their sinnes and in that corruption which they receiued from vs Psal 51. as it were by inheritance we could not finde iust cause of complaint against him who is bound neither to vs nor to our children but forasmuch as he sheweth much mercy to our posteritie as he hath done vnto vs we haue matter of praise and thankesgiuing giuen vnto vs whereby also we shall procure their farther good It is noted of the Iailour Actes 16. Act. 16.34 that he reioyced that they of his houshold also beleeued in the Lord. He accounted it not sufficient for himselfe to beleeue nor reioyced onely in his owne saluation but forasmuch as God had vouchsafed greater mercy vnto him to call his family also to the faith this cheered his heart much more If we haue tasted of the like mercy let vs not be forgetfull of the like duty Lastly it belongeth vnto vs for the furtherance of their good to giue those all good encouragement in well doing that are conscionable in their duties to God and to vs we are bound to praise and commend them to comfort them to cheere them vp and to defend them against all malicious enemies that seeke to disgrace them The Apostle Paul willeth parents not to prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Coloss 3.21 It is a meanes to coole and quench zeale to finde discouragements in godly proceedings On the other side we ought to shew all dislike and hatred against euill and an angry countenance toward such as are vnreformed The Prophet touching the right ordering and good gouernment of his house declareth that hee would not know a wicken person and him that hath an high looke he will not suffer Psal 101.4.5 His eyes should be vpon the faithfull of the land that they may dwell with him hee that walketh in the perfect way hee shall serue him This is a good meanes to make both houses to prosper and kingdomes to flourish when the godly are aduanced and the euil doers are beaten down but when euil is set aloft and goeth vnchecked and vncontrolled and godlinesse is driuen to the wall it prognosticateth and foretelleth the ruine and vtter desolation of those societies albeit for a time they may continue When they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse Wee haue hitherto spoken of the destruction of Aarons sonnes before the face of their father now let vs see for what cause it was done The sinne of his sonnes is remembred to be this they offered strange fire that is such as was not appointed and commanded of the Lord they tooke not the fire from the altar to burne incense with all which came downe from heauen and was preserued by the diligence of the Priests vntill the captiuity of Babylon Now whereas the authour of the second booke of Macchabees telleth vs that whē their fathers were led into Persia the Priests that were then deuout tooke the fire of the altar priuily Macch. 1.19 and hid it in an hollow place of a pit without water where they kept it sure so that the place was vnknowne to all men hath no testimony of trueth out of the sacred Scriptures as we shal shew more in the 26. Chapter of this Booke of Numbers Moses maketh mention of this example of the sinne and punishment of Aarons sonnes to the end the Leuites should be more wise and wary in the execution of their office because God hereby sheweth that they shal neuer escape his hand that do not rightly discharge the duties committed vnto them For the examples of Gods iudgements vpon the corrupters and contemners of his worship must make vs more carefull and fearefull to offend Now whereas they are punished according to their
sentence of death gone out against vs Euen as the children of Israel had beene all the children of death as well as the first borne of Egypt had not God in great mercy and compassion spared them For albeit he deliuered Goshen where the Israelites were from the plagues that wasted and wearied the Egyptians was this thinke we because Israel deserued to be spared or because God could not in iustice comence any action against them No they had learned too much the manners of Egypt they beleeued not the word of the Lord for their deliuerance but murmured against the Ministers of God sent vnto them albeit they had seene his wonders and signes that were wrought among them Their first borne therefore had beene in no better case then the first borne of Egypt had not God beene mercifull vnto them and shewed pitty vpon them So then we are all put in mind of our naturall corruption by sin deriued from Adam in regard of which corruption which is spread as a foule and filthy leprosie ouer all the powers of the soule and parts of the body we are guilty both of temporall and eternall death vnlesse we haue redemption by Christ the promised Sauiour of the world We are by nature wretched and miserable sinners borne as it were out of due time and deserue the wages of sin that is death 1 Ioh. 1 8. Tit. 3.3 Rom 6.20 We our selues were in times past vnwise disobedient deceiued seruing diuers lusts and pleasures liuing in malice and enuie hatefull and hating one another There are many branches of this corruption and sundry points necessary to be knowne of vs concerning the same First we must acknowledge no difference between our selues and others Are we better or more excellent then they No in no wise We all lie vnder sinne and haue the seedes therof within vs. Rom. 3.9 and are ready to fall into all the most horrible sinnes can be named if we be not stayed by the hand of God Secondly we must looke into the Law of God as in a glasse that we may see our defects and deformities We are blinde and cannot see the Law is a true glasse and will shew vs our face truly it telleth what is amisse and flattereth no man for by the Law commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3.20 There cannot be the least spot but it will be made to appeare so that he which is ignorant of the Law knoweth not himselfe Thirdly we must confesse the loue of God to be great toward vs in freeing of vs from the bondage of sinne and setting vs at liberty to be the seruants of righteousnesse Thus doth the Apostle Rom. 7.24 25. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord c. Fourthly ' we must learne the vilenesse and greatnesse of our fall which Paul calleth the disobedience of one man containing all sinnes of what kinde and nature soeuer Adams sinne how great which may be considered in those few particulars First he regarded not the promise of God wherby he was willed to hope for euerlasting life so long as he cōtinued to eat the tree of life Secondly he despiseth the commandement of God restraining him from the forbidden fruite and maketh no account of it Thirdly hee breaketh out into horrible pride and ambition whereby he would be equall vnto God and seeke an estate higher then that wherin he had set him He was not content with his present condition albeit it were most excellent Fourthly he sheweth an vnfaithfull heart to depart away from the liuing God his creator so that he did not beleeue or not regard the threatning of God which was that when he sinned he should die he becommeth the most vnkinde and vnthankefull wretch that could be not considering what infinite benefites he had receiued for himselfe and his posterity and that he was to loose them and leaue them in such sort that they departed both from himselfe and from his posterity Lastly he brake out into foule and fearefull Apostacy from God to the diuell from his maker to the tempter giuing more credite to him that charged God with lying with enuy and with malice then to the Almighty of whose goodnesse he had so great experience Thus he preferred the father of lyes before the God of all truth So that in the first sinne of man August Enchir. ad Laurent ca. 46. we may discerne many sinnes if it bee deuided into his particular parts and considered seuerally as it ought to be of vs. The fift branch is that we must all of vs take notice of the fruits and effects of the former disobedience whereby the image of GOD after which we were created at the first is blotted out onely some few remnants remaining of it so that in stead of wisedome power trueth goodnesse holinesse and righteousnesse wherewith our first parents were clothed as with garments more precious then the carpets of Egypt and all the ornaments of gold and siluer wherein the Nobles of the earth are attyred he punished them with the contrary euills and pulling these from them and stripping them starke naked they appeared most deformed through blindnes weakenesse falsehood foolishnesse prophanenesse and vnrighteousnes which swarmed in them and all their children A cursed roote cursed fruite a wretched cause a wofull effect Hence it is that we are prone to fall into all euil and not able to thinke one good thought 1 Cor. 2.14 2 Cor. 3.5 we are borne dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephe. 2.1 Ier. 17.19 Iob 15.15 And yet this is not all our misery but it brought in as by a violent wind or a raging flood an heape of sicknesses diseases aches and a traine of ten thousand calamities that attend vpon our whole life vntill they bring vs into the chambers of death Lastly when we haue taken good notice of the former miseries and bondage vnder which we lie and thought well vpon them with due meditation they will driue vs out of the loue of our selues and make vs labour to be regenerated and borne againe by the spirit of God Ioh. 3.5 Ezek. 36. ● we must seeke to repaire the decayed image of God to be renewed in our mindes that we may be no longer the seruants of sin but of righteousnesse Our olde man must be crucified that the body of sinne may be destroyed Rom. 6.5 Let it not therefore reigne in our mortall body that we should obey it in the lustes therof neither let vs yeeld our members as instruments of vnrighteousnes but yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and our members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto God Againe What we are by grace as the figure of the first borne expresseth the natural condition of all mankind deseruing to be destroyed so it setteth foorth the prerogatiue of the faithfull and sheweth what we are by grace For as Christ being
the first borne among many brethren Rom. 8.29 is the Priest of his Church because he offered vp himself to his Father as a perfect sacrifice to satisfie his wrath for our sinnes and maketh intercession for vs and the king of his Church because he hath authority in heauen in earth so he maketh vs kings and Priests vnto God his Father Reuel 1.6 and 5.10 Priests that we should make knowne his wil call vpon his Name in spirit and truth and offer vp our selues to him a spirituall sacrifice and kings that we should conquer sinne Satan and the world through faith in Christ for this is our victory euen our faith 1 Ioh. 5.4 that ouercommeth all these enemies We haue also the adoption of sonnes and we are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people that we should shew forth the praises of him who hath called vs out of darknesse into his maruellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 Thirdly this layeth before vs the dignity Vse 3 of Christ Iesus our Sauiour touching whom we learne that he is in deed and in trueth the first borne of God by whom we are deliuered from the wrath of God and redeemed from hell and destruction forasmuch as he was consecrate vnto God and made a sacrifice of attonement for vs who by sinne were become his enemies as we noted before Now hee is the first borne in these foure respects first How Christ is the first borne according to his diuine nature being begotten of the Father before all creatures after an vnspeakeable manner being of the same substance with him and is therfore called the first borne of euery creature Coloss 1. verse 15. Rom. 8. verse 29. He is the eternall sonne of God being borne of him before any creature was created Whereby wee learne against the blasphemous opinion of the Arrians that he is true GOD not a made or a created God but being God from all eternity Secondly according to his humane nature euen as he tooke vpon him our flesh and was borne of the virgine Mary so hee was also her first borne Matthew 1. verse 25. Luke 2. verse 15. Not that the blessed Virgine had other after him but because she had none before him For he is in Scripture called the first borne that first openeth the matrice whether other be borne after or not Thirdly he is called by this title because he was the first that arose out of the graue made a way for vs vnto euerlasting life because it was vnpossible that hee should be holden of the sorrowes of death And therefore hee is said by the Apostle to be before all things the beginning and the first borne from the dead Col. 1 18. This is a notable comfort vnto vs that forasmuch as our elder Brother Christ Iesus arose from the dead to the euerlasting possession of eternall glory in heauen it followeth that we also shall rise againe and not for euer lye in the graue and then be partakers with him of that blessed inheritance prepared for vs from the beginning of the world Hee is gone before to prepare vs a place and when he commeth againe we shall enter into that blessed estate and condition euery one according to the measure of the grace and guift of Christ Psal 45 7. For as Christ was annointed with the oyle of gladnesse aboue his fellowes so he was rewarded with the possession of glory aboue his brethren and highly exalted farre aboue all principalities and powers who ascended aboue all heauens that hee might fill all things Eph. 4 10. Neither let any obiect that some did rise againe before him for they arose againe to this present life and dyed againe but he arose againe to die no more death had no more dominion ouer him but to take possession of the kingdome of heauen and therefore it followeth in the next words that in all things he might haue the preheminence Lastly as the first borne was set apart and then sacrificed vnto GOD I meane the first borne among the beasts that were killed so Christ was separated from sinners Heb. 7 26. as the vnspotted Lambe of God holy and acceptable and then made a perfect oblation of himselfe not for himselfe but for the sinnes of his people Heb. 7 27. He must be holy both in his conception and life that he might be a mercifull and faithfull high-Priest and make reconciliation for vs. For he that must be a Mediatour betweene God and vs and restore vs into his fauour must of necessity be himselfe in the fauour of God and neuer haue offended him Neither could he haue accesse to the Throne of God who is most holy to make intercession for vs vnlesse he had beene holy harmelesse vndefiled and made higher then the heauens Hence also we haue vnspeakeable comfort we are assured that the wrath of God is pacified the curse of the Law is cancelled and all our sinnes are purged and done away Who is it now that shall be able to lay any thing to our charge Rom. 8 33. or to the charge of any of the elect It is God that iustifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe who is euen at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for vs. There is nothing then that shall be able to separate vs from this loue of Christ neither tribulation nor distresse neither persecution nor famine nor nakednesse nor perill nor sword neyther life nor death forasmuch as in all these we are more then Conquerors through him that loued vs. Lastly seeing God separated the first borne Vse 4 or eldest of the family from the rest of his brethren as also he did the Leuites from the other Tribes to serue him it teacheth that all the faithfull ought to be separated from the company of wicked men and to abhor them as a sinke of all filthinesse and annoyance that we may more freely and faithfully serue the Lord as the Prophet saith Psal 119. Psal 119 115. Away from me ye wicked and I will keepe the Commandements of my God Thus we see the Church of God to be described to be an holy people elected out of the rest of the world Numb 23.9 They shall dwell alone and shall not be reckoned among the Nations God reuealeth his will to them he gouerneth them he protecteth them he careth and prouideth for them no lesse then parents for their first borne Hence it is that he willeth Moses to goe to Pharaoh and to say vnto him Israel is my sonne euen my first borne let him goe that he may serue me and if thou refuse to let him goe Behold I will slay thy sonne euen thy first borne Exod. 4. Exod. 4 22 23 The like we reade in the Prophesie of Ieremy chap. 31 9. I am a father to Israel and Ephraim is my first borne He hath a greater care of them then of all other nations and people
into that Church another Gospel euen a new Gospel Gal. 1 6. Such are they in these daies that hammer cockle and darnell vpon the anuill of their owne braines broaching strange positions long since buried raking them out of the graues or ashes of Pelagians and other forlorne heretikes These glory in their owne wits and account themselues happy that they can maintaine new assertions trouble the peace of the Church with them Secondly they are reprooued that scorne to take this course which Christ and his Apostles tooke to deliuer precept vpon precept heere a little and there a little They thinke it no way agreeable to their learning and high places to insist vpon one thing and to beate vpon the same matter who are like vnto a master that is greedy to teach his scholler faster then he can learne But hauing taken vpon vs the charge of soules wee must submit our selues to the slowe and slender capacities of the people and make it our chiefe end to profite thē And touching the people themselues it brandeth those with a note of fickle and itching eared hearers that loathing the olde wholesome doctrine of saluation turne their eares from the ancient truth and being like the Athenians mentioned in the Acts Acts 17 21. doe hunt after nouelties and onely doe like new doctrines new teachers new matters that they neuer heard off before lusting after change of diet like to their wicked fore-fathers that loathed the heauenly Manna wherof they had often tasted as a light meat they must haue variety and be fed with quailes to fill their delicate and dainty stomackes There is little hope to do any great good vpō these nice and new fangled hearers that are ouergone and ouergrowne with a dangerous disease Of such the Apostle hath foretold 2 Tim. 4 3 4. The time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine but after their owne lusts shall they heape to themselues Teachers hauing itching eares and they shall turne away their eares from the truth shall be turned vnto fables Such were some of the Galatians who were bewitched by false teachers that they should not obey the truth before whose eyes Iesus Christ had bin euidently set forth and crucified among them Gal. 3 1. Many such are in our daies in towne and city that surfet through plenty and wax wanton through abundance of Gods blessings Were not he an vnwise man that would leaue his old Physition to whom he hath bin long accustomed and who knoweth by long experience the state of his body and foolishly long after others that neither hee knoweth them nor they know him So is it exceeding folly to loathe the knowne Physition of thy soule that knoweth the state and condition of thy soule and consequently is most likely to do thee most good and to haunt after new teachers that may feede thee with winde in stead of sound and wholesome nourishment or at least though he teach soundly yet cannot speake so powerfully and apply his word so profitably and know thy necessity so fitly as thine ordinary teacher that hath the ouersight and charge of thy soule Vse 3 Lastly this admonisheth all hearers to bee content to be ordered in this manner and not to thinke amisse of their Ministers for deliuering vnto them knowne truthes which they haue read and heard learned and known long before For it is the old commandement the common and ancient faith which they must teach and teach againe which are the true Pastors He that bringeth in another Gospel then that which hath beene already receiued if it were an Angel from heauen let him be accursed Gal. 1 8. Wherefore whosoeuer findeth fault with them for these repetitions reprooueth Christ himselfe and checketh the holy ordinance of God These are they that while they would be thought wise become fooles they will take a course by themselues set Christ and his Apostles to schoole to learne as if the blinde should teach them that can see to hit the marke For if wee will consider the matter and iudge it aright the truth is more fit to be remembred and recommended to thē that do already know it then to those that are ignorant of it This is the duty whereunto Iohn doth prepare his hearers in his first Epistle 1 Iohn ● 21. chapt 2. Brethren I write no new commandement vnto you but an old commandement which ye haue heard from the beginning I write vnto you babes because ye haue knowne the Father I write vnto you fathers because yee haue knowne him that is from the beginning I haue not written vnto you because ye know not the truth c. We that are in the number of Gods people must learne to know our owne good and heare greedily diligently the same things which we haue heard and learned as they that haue eaten hungerly of one dish of meate to day come to it without any loathing the next day againe But some will say Obiecti●● what neede haue we to heare the same things as coleworts twice sodden especially considering there is such variety and diuersity of matter for the Minister to insist vpon I answer Answer there are many causes to beare out this practise as wee noted before For who knoweth any thing as hee ought to know And who practiseth any duty as he ought to practise Who hateth any vice so fully and perfectly as he ought to hate it or is so armed and strengthned against the assaults and temptations thereof as is required Who is so fenced against errors and heresies but he may daily fortifie himselfe better and scoure vp his rusty armour Or who remembreth any thing so well as hee should and is not prone to forget what he hath once knowne and learned It may be we haue receiued to beleeue and obtaine Christ to repent and fight against sinne howbeit our knowledge our faith our obedience are imperfect our combates with Satan are mingled with much weaknesse and oftentimes wee are constrained to take the foile so that it is necessary that we should bee continually put in remembrance of these things The Apostle writeth to the Philippians Phil 3 1. that it greeued him not to write the same things there is more cause to speak the same things then to write them because the things spoken passe away and are soone forgotten whereas the things written remaine and continue Where are they then and how great is their ignorance shall I say or folly that when they heare one doctrine twice or peraduenture thrice doe repine and disdaine at it and thinke it not worthy to bee spoken and commended vnto them againe or themselues too worthy to heare of it againe but if it fall out to bee deliuered the second time by a meaner Minister then it was before inferiour in degrees or weaker in gifts then they abhorre it so much the more and cry out aloud that they are shamefully abused They reply Can he say
may receiue to vs his righteousnesse We remaine foule and filthy in Gods sight vntill we be cloathed with the glorious robes of his righteousnesse Last of all it is our duty to forsake our sinnes and to walke in the statutes of God This is the exhortation of the Prophet Esay 1.16 17. Wash you make you cleane put away the euill of your doings from before mine eyes cease to doe euill learne to doe well To this purpose speaketh Ezekiel chap. 20. ver 18 19. Walke ye not in the statutes of your fathers neither obserue their iudgements nor defile your selues with their idols I am the Lord your God walke in my statutes and keepe my iudgements and doe them We are then washed from our sinnes when we haue learned to walke in the wayes of God If we doe not bring forth the fruits of obedience we lie wallowing in the mire of our sinnes and God will finde vs out There is no hiding of our filthinesse from him his eyes see the sonnes of men and ponder his pathes That they defile not their campes in the middest whereof I dwell We haue spoken already of the first reason drawne from the effect of sin it defileth our persons our actions and our places The second reason is taken from the consideration of Gods presence From which reason hee reasoneth thus I dwell among you Therefore yee must bee an holy people and hate all vncleannesse and vnholinesse and do that good which I command you ●ct But heere some will say how is God saide to dwell among his people The heauen is his Throne and the earth his footstoole he dwelleth not in Temples made with hands forasmuch as the heauens of heauens cannot containe him that filleth with his presence and power both heauen and earth Doth he not dwell also among the vngodly and infidels that know him not Or can any hide himselfe in secret places ●er that he shall not see him I answer this phrase is a borrowed speech from the sonnes of men whereby is vnderstood that God is conuersant with vs doth keepe his mansion in our hearts ruling in vs by his Spirit and by his Word Euen as a master of a family ruleth and guideth his house wherein he dwelleth so doth God rule vs ouerrule vs and taketh vp his rest and residence among vs determining to continue with vs. He is present among the vngodly by his power but not by his grace they cannot hide their faces from him but he hideth his fauour from them So then this manner of speech importeth these three things ●w God ●elleth a●ng his ●●●ple First it sheweth the effect and efficacy of his presence wherby he possesseth gouerneth the faithfull which are as his Temple to dwell in hauing dominion ouer them enlightning them to know and guiding thē to practise his will made knowne vnto them Secondly it signifieth that his presence is perpetuall and permanent and continuall for when a man meaneth to inhabite in any place it is a signe he doth not determine to flit away as a bird that wandreth from her nest but to abide there without departing away He is not as a guest that lodgeth with his friend for a day or two nor as a stranger that taketh vp his Inne for a night or two nor as a soiourner that meaneth to remoue when his terme is out but as an owner and possessor that meaneth to set downe his rest and not to leaue that place as Iohn 14 16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter that he may abide with you for euer euen the Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall bee in you Thirdly it noteth the manner of his presence not by the infinitenesse of power as he is present with all his creatures to sustaine them and vphold them but by his grace and gracious effects vniting vs to Christ regenerating vs to bee liuely members of his body crying in our hearts Abba Father and witnessing thereby our adoption Rom. 8 9. Yee are not in the flesh but in the Spirit if so bee that the Spirit of God dwell in you Christ is also said to dwell in our hearts by faith Eph. 3 17. Now let vs examine the reason included in these words in the middest whereof I dwell and consider the strength and power of it how hee prouoketh them to study to bee an holy people separate from all pollutions and prouocations of sinne by the assurance of his gracious presence We learne from hence that the consideration of Gods presence and helpe that euer goeth Doctrine 1 with his children Gods presence and help must prouoke vs to weldoing must prouoke them to weldoing His presence ought to moue vs to all good duties This point is taught in many places of the word of God as Numb 35 34. Defile not the Land which ye shall inhabite wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel Where we see he reasoneth thus I dwell among the Israelites therfore they must take heed they defile not the Land Thus also he speaketh in Deuteronomy chap. 23 14. The Lord thy God walketh in the middest of thy camp to deliuer thee and to giue vp thine enemies before thee therefore shall thy Campe be holy that he see no vncleane thing in thee and turne away from thee Heere he moueth them to holinesse toward him because of his continuall presence with them Thus doth the Lord speake to Salomon concerning the house which hee was building If thou wilt walke in my statutes 1 Kin. 6 12 13 and execute my iudgements and keepe all my commandements to walke in them then will I performe my word with thee which I spake vnto Dauid thy Father and I will dwell among the children of Israel and will not forsake my people Israel So the Prophet Esay reasoneth chap. 52 11 12. Depart ye depart ye goe ye out from thence touch no vncleane thing goe ye out of the middest of her be ye cleane that beare the vessels of the Lord for ye shall not goe out with haste nor goe by flight for the Lord will goe before you and the God of Israel will be your reward In all which places the presence of God that is most holy is brought in vrging vs to the duties of holinesse of life The reasons are very plaine to prooue the same First because God is the Lord hee is of Reason 1 absolute power to command and rule ouer al and therefore hee beeing the Lord God his presence with vs must prouoke vs to watch ouer all our waies and to walke in feare and trembling before him This reason is expressed in the first chapter of the booke of Ioshua verse 9 where the Lord saith vnto him Bee strong and of a good courage be not afraid neyther be thou dismayed for the
a solemne protestation there must be a lifting vp of the heart to God and an appealing to his diuine Maiesty as the men of God were alwayes wont to do as wee noted before Thirdly there should be confession that God punisheth periury either expressed or implyed either openly or secretly For there is a secret kind of acknowledgment in euery oath of Gods purpose power ready to chastise and correct all such as dishonor God and prophane the seate of iudgement Fourthly an obligation professing and protesting that we are willing to vndergoe the punishment at Gods hand if we performe not the condition It is very fit and expedient that all such as are to take an oath diligently consider and remember these particular parts that they haue them not onely before their eyes but ingrauen in their hearts to keepe them from all falsehood The fourth thing is the forme of an oath The forme of an oath which is described by the Prophet Ieremy Iere. 4.2 Thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in trueth c. Behold here the maner that is to be obserued in our swearing it must be performed truely discreetly righteously Truly lest we make God a lyar iustly lest we commit impiety in iudgment lest we be rash and heady with ought not to be in so weighty a matter Truth ought to be the ground of al our speeches The Apostle saith Cast off lying Ephe. 4.25 and speak euery man truth vnto his neighbour for we are members one of another howbeit then especially when we take the God of all trueth to witnes we should be carefull to speake nothing but the simple words of truth without all mixture or errour or falshood As God is the God of trueth so ought we to be like vnto him if we would haue him to be our Father or assure our selues to be his children We cānot swear lawfully except we swear truly therfore we must be sure before we sweare that we sweare nothing but the trueth For we come not into the presence of God and before the deputy of God which is the Magistrate to deliuer our owne foolish opinions drowsie dreames priuate thoughts or vncertain matters such as we conceiue but what we know and are throughly perswaded off Trueth and knowledge are vnseparable companions Againe he that sweareth lawfully should sweare in iudgement When we are called before a iudge to testifie the trueth or are to witnesse in any other lawfull cause which can by no other means be found out but by an oth we must deale in such matters soberly we are to sweare with good discretion and aduisement not lightly not rashly not hastily not headily but with diligent tryal and due consideration of euery particular which wee are to testifie Lastly our oath must be taken in righteousnesse and be agreeable to right and equity and equity iustice which serue to giue to euery man his owne and to God also his due Thus we see wherein the life and as it were the soule of an oath consisteth which reproueth the common abuses of those that are sworne men Our oath must not be an hired oath nor we hired men to sweare whatsoeuer others will haue vs for that were as much as to sell our soules t● Satan for mony If we would haue peace and comfort to our selues we must not take an oath for feare or fauour or friendship or flattery to doe our friends a pleasure and our enemies a displeasure but in a godly zeale of the vprightnesse of the cause and an earnest desire that Gods Name may be glorified in the manifestation of the Truth Let vs also learne to detest the corrupt practise of al double-hearted Papists who haue learned the doctrine of Equiuocations that sweare one thing and thinke another These men are content to say any thing because they haue their mentall reseruations that they keep to themselues like vnto Hushai who pretended friendship vnto Absalom and to ioyne with him against Dauid Whō the Lord and this people 2 Sam. 16.18 and all the men of Israel shall chuse his wil I be and with him will I dwell pretending this to Absalom but intending it to Dauid he maketh shew to speake it of one but vnderstandeth it of another This legierdemaine he hath bequeathed to his disciples the Iesuites who are growne much more cunning crafty then their master These are they that dissemble with God and man and haue one heart for the Prince another for the Pope who is the greatest enemy the Princes haue Against these and others that take the Name of God in vaine we are taught heere how to sweare which euery one doth not know few practise aright these rules We must not be ignorant that it ought to be done in truth such loue to God our neighbour should b● in vs that we are to deale without colouring of matters without hypocrisie without forging so that truth should preuaile and haue the vpper hand Secondly in iudgement for feare of rashnesse We must not deale rashly but discreetly not foolishly but wisely and when necessity requireth and vrgeth an oath of vs. An oath is as a medicine No man taketh physicke for wantonnesse being not wel aduised but vpon necessity either to preuent or to preserue or to restore So no man vseth an oath for delight or pleasure but sometimes to preuent a mischief sometimes to preserue from wrong sometimes to restore a mā to his right And this is to swear in iudgment Lastly it must be done in righteousnesse to wit for the good profit of our neighbor For when we are called to an oath that which we promise or vndertake must be honest and righteous that we doe not sinne in swearing which were to heape one sinne vpon another as we see in Herod the king who Mar. 6.21 because hee had promised with an oath sent and beheaded Iohn in prison and in the enemies of Paul Acts 23.12 who bound themselues with a vow that they would eate nothing vntill they had killed Paul The fift point in an oath The ends of an oath is the end wherefore it was ordained one end was in respect of God the other in respect of men In respect of God the end is his owne glory who made al things for the magnifying of his Name and the manifestation of his glory This we ought to ayme at in al things Whether ye eat or drinke 1 Cor. 10. or whatsoeuer ye doe do all to the glory of God Secondly in respect of our selues to confirme some truth and decide some controuersie as when our name or goods or life are in question To come to particulars the ends of a lawfull oath are these foure Foure ends of a lawfull 〈◊〉 first alleageance and obedience to Princes as we see in the elders of Gilead who intreating Iphtah to be their captaine to fight their battels against the Ammonites sware vnto him that he should be
and it is very needfull he should doe so that in all things they should be thankefull 1 Thess 5 19. This is the cause why the Israelites were forwarned to take heed to themselues euen before they entred into the land of promise Deut. 6 10 11 12. and should possesse great goodly Cities which they neuer builded houses full of all manner of furniture and garnishings and ornaments which they neuer stored vineyards Oliue trees which they neuer planted Welles of water which they neuer digged and fieldes of Corne which they neuer sowed then they ought neerely and narrowly to looke vnto themselues And why then rather then at another time Because riches and pleasures abundance and ease would be such baits that they should then be in greatest dangers more then when they liued in the wildernesse to bee drawne by them to forget Gods mercies by which they were deliuered out of many miseries They thought they should then bee safe enough if once they were come to set foote in the land howbeit Moses telleth them that then remained the greatest danger of all They must stand in feare lest they be choaked with these thornes lest they bee entangled in these snares lest they suffer ship-wracke at these rockes lest they be ouercome with these tentations lest they be drowned in these deepe waters Luk. 8.14 1 Tim. 6 9. This is the corruption of our nature and the poison of sin it turneth good into euill as an euill stomacke doth the daintiest and best meates Wee doe commonly abhorre him and speake all maner of euill of him 〈◊〉 vnthank●●● person i●●●monly ●●●orred who hauing receyued manie benefits and good turnes forgetteth his Patron and benefactor when once he is aduanced and promoted to honour like Pharaohs Butler who hauing receiued good from Ioseph forgate him when he was restored vnto his office and deliuered the cup into the kings hand againe albeit Ioseph had said vnto him Gen. 40 14. Thinke on me when it shall bee well with thee and shew kindnesse I pray thee vnto mee and make mention of me vnto Pharaoh and bring me out of this house An vnthankful person euen vnto men is iustly abhorred how much more then vnto God the most bountifull Patrone Common experience teacheth that commonly men are much worse for Gods benefits ●●n are com●●nly the ●●rse ●or gods ●●●efits and grow more prophane and presumptuous in sinning against him through the plenty and abundance of earthly blessings Dauid we know was none of the worst men but one of the best according to Gods owne heart yet hee saieth of himselfe while he enioyed the world at wil I saide in my prosperity I shall neuer be moued Psa 30 6 And in another place It is good for mee that I haue beene afflicted that I might learne thy statutes Before I was afflicted I went astray but now haue I kept thy word Psal 119 67 71. And therefore his benefites did him not so much good as his chastisements they did not further his saluation so much as his corrections Ieremy speaketh of the church vnder the name of Ephraim 〈◊〉 31 18. that it was as an vntamed Calfe till God chastened it Manasses learned more at Babylon then at Ierusalem as he lay in prison then as he sate vpon his throne for in peace prosperity hee fell to Idolatry to sorcerie to cruelty and to all kinde of impiety but when he was carried away captiue he besought the Lord his God who neuer thought he stood in need of him before Chron. 33 ● 13. He humbled himself greatly before the Lord God of his father who despised him before in the pride of his heart and hee prayed vnto God earnestly who neuer prayed vnto him before The blessings of God indeede ought to vnite vs more closely and conscionably vnto him howbeit it is a rare thing to finde that benefits knit our hearts more neerely vnto GOD. Shew me that man among a thousand that can truly say A rare thing to finde that man who is brought nerer to God by his benefites the benefites of God haue made him sounder in the faith and better in his obedience vntil he haue bene taught and trained vp in the schoole of affliction and tried in the furnace of aduersity God hath two school-houses in which he doth instruct his schollers the first is the school of prosperity there he speaketh to vs but we are deafe and cannot heare there he teacheth but we are dull and cannot learne We are non-proficients thogh we tarry long in this schoole not through anie default either in the master or in the lesson or in the schoole but through defect in the scholler onely He is constrained therefore to put vs into his other schoole this is the schoole of affliction many profit here that could not profit before For the heart of man is naturally puffed vp with prosperity so that it cannot work in him the performance of greater dutie and sounder obedience as it ought to do Ther are ten lepers in the Gospel clensed of a foule and filthy disease but when once they saw they were cured recouered they forgat who had clensed them how they were clensed of what they were clensed and wherefore they were clensed only one of them was found to return and giue God thanks Luke 17 15. When Christ had found the impotent man that had lien 38. yeeres at the poole of Bethesda he saw it was needful to put him in minde to take heed he sin no more lest a worse thing come vpon him Iohn 5 14. for he knew he was ready to forget what he had bin how great things he had done for him and to please himself in the present condition wherein hee was made whole therfore would haue him consider what he might be in time to come and feare a future relaps into the same nay into greater euils He to whom 10000. talents were remitted shewed not mercy again for the mercie that he had receiued this was all the fruite of his thankfulnes that he yeelded Hee caught his fellow-seruant by the throat Math. 18 18. who owed him onely an hundred pence bidding him presently to tender paiment Iehoash the King of Iudah was preserued by Iehoiada and set in the kingdome that had bin vsurped by the tirany of Athalia and through the massacre of the blood-royall yet this was all the thankfulnes that he shewed for the Fathers kindnes 2 Chro. 24 22 he slew his son because he reproued their Idolatry and Apostacy and so he remembred not the benefite of life kingdom and education that he had receiued without which he had not liued nor reignd nor receiued the knowledge of the truth Seeing then we are so prone of our selues to forget what the Lord hath done for vs and to returne him the praise we must be watchful ouer our corruptions remembring what God hath done for vs. Secondly it reproueth all
all parents to teach their children Eph. 6 4. of Masters to bring vp their seruants in the nurture and admonition of the Lord as Abraham and Cornelius did This is a notable meanes to keep to maintaine and to defend the truth As for those that will not teach the truth to thē that are in their houses they are the diuels Prophets who is the father of error ignorance Such fathers and such masters are the cheefe meanes of the decay and decreasing of religion piety faith and righteousnesse Secondly we maintaine the truth and make it knowne by open confession and profession thereof Euery man must opē his mouth in Gods cause when the gates of hell are opened against it and wee must earnestly stand for it and constantly beare witnesse vnto it whensoeuer it is oppugned and resisted The Apostle chargeth to Sanctifie the Lord God in our hearts be ready alwaies to giue an account and answer to euerie man that asketh vs a reason of the hope that is in vs 1 Peter 3 15. with meekenesse and feare Thus did the holie Martyrs at their death witnesse a good confession and thereby draw many to a loue and embracing of that truth for which they suffered If we be bold to confesse the Lord Iesus and his Gospell He will not be ashamed of vs in his kingdome but confesse vs before his father Mat. 10 32 33. Thirdly we must leade an holy and sanctified life and giue a good example vnto those among whom we liue An vnblameable and vnreprooueable conuersation is a great meanes to cause others to embrace godlinesse when we are carefull to adorne the Gospell of Christ with a good life whereas otherwise we cause the enemies of God to blaspheme the name of God and to speake euill of the truth Therefore the Apostle willeth vs to be blamelesse and harmlesse the sonnes of God Philip. 2 15. without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and peruerse nation among whom we must shine as lights in the world holding forth the word of life Lastly we must maintaine his truth by the armour of prayer desiring God to make an open way and free passage for his owne ordinance and also to send forth painfull plentifull Labourers into his haruest to gather his corne together and to withstand all false doctrines and heresies This doeth Christ command Math. 9.38 This doe the Apostles practise Actes 4 30. God hath in great mercie vouchsafed his word vnto vs it is our dutie to seeke to vphold and maintain it that so it may be continued vnto vs and our posterity for euer Let vs therefore practise these few points and be carefull to practise instruction confession and inuocation Thus we shall shew our loue to the truth a minde ready to receiue it a memory ready to retaine it and an heart ready to practise it 5 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 6 Take the Leuites from among the Children of Israel and cleanse them 7 And thus shalt thou do vnto them c. The second part of the Chapter followeth concerning the Leuites wherein obserue two things First the separation of them from the rest of the people secondly a limitation of time by the speciall commandement of God for the entering into their office Their separation or setting apart for the ministration in the Tabernacle offereth vnto vs the commādement of God and the obedience of Moses and Aaron and the whole congregation performed to the commandement of God Their separation is noted by many particular circumstances they must be clensed with water of purifying their garments must be washed their flesh must be shaued Verse 7. they must take one yong Bullocke for a meate offering and another for a sinne offering verse 8. And Aaron must offer them verse 12. the hands of the Elders must be imposed on them v. 9 10. and they must be offered before the Lord ver 11 13. Where we see that such as are appointed to handle the holy things of God must be washed and clensed with holy water It is very meete and conuenient that they should approach thereunto with pure hands euen in respect of outward cleannesse Exod. 25 31. But heereby is another thing meant Namely that the Ministers and generally al others that draw neere to God in performance of any dutie ●●●●rine must bee clensed and washed ●inisters 〈◊〉 other ●●aw 〈◊〉 to God 〈◊〉 ●e clen●● they must haue cleane hearts cleane affections cleane workes whensoeuer they come into his presence This was figured out to Moses Exod. 3. when hee was about to draw neere to see the burning bush the Lord saide Put off thy shoes for the ground wheron thou standest is holy groūd Salomon willeth vs to take heed to our foote when we enter into the house of God Eccl. 5 1. When we go about to pray we must lift vp pure and holy hands 1 Tim. 2 8. When wee come to the Sacraments we are willed to examine our selues and so eate of that bread drinke of that cup 1 Cor. 11 28. Whensoeuer we present our selues in the Congregation to heare the word we must lay apart all filthines and superfluity of naughtinesse and receyue with meeknesse the engrafted word which is able to saue our soules Iames 1 21. Wee must cast off all malice and all guile and hypocrisies enuies and euill speakings that so we may grow by the milke of the word 1 Pet. 2.1.2 This we ought to do the rather First because Reason 1 God is present euery where Mat. 18. His eye is vpon all his suppliants that pray vnto him vpon all his guests that come to the table vpon all men that heare his voice Mat. 22.11 He taketh a view and surueigh of such as preasse into his presence Zeph. 1 12. That he may giue to euerie man according to his works If we search not our hearts he wil search them if we iudge not our selues he will iudge vs 1 Cor. 11. His eie is vpon vs to approue of vs if we do well to reiect vs if we do euill as the examples of Caine and Abel shew Secondly without this inward sanctification all our exercises of Religion are reiected and therefore we are willed when we come before the Lord To wash vs and make vs cleane to put away the euill of our doings Esay 1 16. Vse 1 This reproueth all such as offer to perform diuine duties to almighty God without meditation or preparation such as rush violently into Gods presence without due reuerence and regard Math. 22. as he did that came to the feast without his wedding garment There was but one such guest yet the Lord soone espied him and called him out If there be but one such in an assembly he cannot escape the all-seeing eye of God who hath also a reuenging eye that cannot see his honor and glorie defaced Who wold presume or dare to come into the presence of an earthly Prince in an vnseemely
fall into the nets be caught in the snares which they lay for vs. Seeing then this is so necessary we learne Vse 1 that a wise and vnderstanding heart is a great blessing of God Indeed a simple minde and a single heart is good in godlinesse that so wee may be innocent as Doues Mat. 10 16. Neuerthelesse we must be wise also as Serpents So force and strength are great gifts howbeit the greatest ornament that GOD giueth which as salt seasoneth euery action is when he giueth a wise and vnderstanding heart so as he enableth vs to preuent euils and to disappoint our enemies as Christ promiseth Luke 21 14. and therefore Gods children haue asked this aboue other 1 Kin. 3 9. Vse 2 Secondly be wise in our generation that they goe not beyond vs. It is most true that he which maketh himselfe a body of Christal that all men may looke through him and discerne all the parts of his disposition doeth withall make himselfe a tame asse and thereby teacheth others either how to ride him or how to driue him But wise men though they haue single hearts in all that which is iust and honest yet they are like coffers with double bottomes which when others looke into beeing opened they see not all that they hold on the sodaine and at once For we haue enemies though they often make faire weather toward vs yet are full of subtilty and pollicy they are we see in their generation wiser then the children of light Luk. 16 8 They are euer watchfull dealing by meanes whether iust or vniust lawfull or vnlawfull and malice against Gods seruants carrieth them so farre that they make conscience of nothing so they may betray thē We may say of such as Paul doeth of Elimas the sorcerer Acts 13 10. O full of all subtilty all mischiefe thou childe of the diuell thou enemy of all righteousnesse wilt thou not ceasse to peruert the right waies of the Lord Especially let vs labour in things of the best nature to prouide things needfull to saluation The vniust steward is commended by his Lord for proceeding preparing wisely for himselfe If then there be any true wisedome in vs let vs prouide things honest heauenly in the sight of God for in vaine is he wise that is not wise toward God and for himselfe Lastly seeke to feare God for that is the Vse 3 beginning of wisedome Psal 111 10. Prou 1 7 and 9 10. and let vs haue his word dwelling in vs plentifully powerfully The word is the wisedome of God and it should be our wisedome because it is able to teach vs wisedome Psal 119 98 99. It is able to make vs wiser then our teachers then our enemies thē the ancient If this be not in vs to guide vs we shall vse vngodly and vnlawfull shifts wicked deuises and leud inuentions These cannot prosper long with vs for God will catch the crafty in their owne craft 1 Cor. 3 18 19 20. 26. And they went and came to Moses and to Aaron and to all the Congregation of the children of Israel vnto the wildernesse of Paran to Kadesh and brought backe word vnto them vnto all the Congregation and shewed them the fruite of the Land 27. And they told him and said We came vnto the Land whither thou sentest vs and surely it floweth with milke and hony and this is the fruite of it 28. Neuerthelesse the people bee strong that dwell in the Land and the Cities are walled and very great and moreouer wee saw the children of Anak there c. The second part of the chapter is the returne and report of the spies Albeit they went to search out the weaknesse of the land yet hauing warrant from Moses nay from God they prosper and his hand was with them in their going and in their returning Touching the report they make and the account they giue of their trauaile and perambulation it is double first to Moses and then to the people To Moses they dare not plainely deliuer the poison of their hearts For howsoeuer this report may seeme at the first The rep● 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 to be the generall speech of all the twelue yet by the words following both in this and the next chapt it will plainely appeare to be the report only of ten of them Caleb and Ioshua being excepted who spake better things and conuinced them For the other ten they vnder glorious and goodly words coloured and couered the wicked purpose and pretence of their prophane hearts thinking to corrupt the people with the leauen of their owne rebellion to turne them away from attempting to conquer the Land and to bring them to despaire of possessing the same Wherefore though they do not openly professedly disswade them yet they speake lies through hypocrisie they doe not deale faithfully and sincerely but hauing two tongues in their heads intended to stirre vp the people to mutiny and murmuring against Moses by laying before them the difficulty nay the impossibility of the enterprise Thus then we see they performe their Embassage subtilly not sincerely fraudulently not faithfully for they praise the Land with a loud voice but their hearts are hollow and they speake the truth to deceiue Their praise is short but the doubts that they cast into the mindes of the people are many The doctrine Wicked men do oftentimes then speak fairest Doctri●● Wicked 〈◊〉 speake f● 〈…〉 when th● meane 〈…〉 2 Sam 2● when they intend the greatest mischiefe and cloke their euill hearts with soft words Ezr. 4 2. Ps 12 2 they speake with a double hart So did Cain Gen. 4 8 so did Ioab 2 Sam. 3 17. For first they haue beene brought vp in the schoole of a very cunning master Satan Reason can transforme himselfe into an Angel of light as when he came to our first parents he wholly pretended their good and made himselfe carefull to aduance them to a better estate Gen. 3 4. 2 Cor 11 3. Secondly thereby they know they shall insinuate themselues more closely and deceiue more easily Open enemies are better preuented Ps 55 12. false brethren hardly discerned this is the way to catch the simple and vnwary in their snares Math. 22 16. Vse 1 Learne from hence a property of mans hart that it is very deceitfull Ier. 17 9 10. It is the nature of wicked men to suppresse the euill which they purpose vntill they can see their fit times according to the saying of the Prophet They will deceiue euery one his neighbour and will not speake the truth they haue taught their tongue to speake lies and weary themselues to commit iniquity Ier. 9 5. Herod pretended loue outwardly to the new borne King of the Iewes that he also would come worship him Mat. 2 8. but indeed he purposed in his heart to kill him albeit the wise men perceiued it not Thus do men dig deepe to hide their counsels and weaue the spiders
confirme our word by testimony from himselfe in his mercies toward them that beleeue in his iudgments vpon the wicked that resist and in preseruing vs because wee haue beene faithful in doing the message for which we are sent Ezek. 33.32.33 Matth. 10.19 20 22 26 28 29 30. It is also a comfort to all such as doe heare aright such as bring foorth the fruit of the Gospel doe not onely receiue the Gospel but they receiue God himselfe 12 And Moses sent to call Dathan and Abiram the sonnes of Eliab which said We will not come vp 13 Is it a small thing that thou hast brought vs vp out of a land that floweth with milke and hony to kill vs in the wildernesse except thou make thy selfe altogether a Prince ouer vs 14 Moreouer thou hast not brought vs into a land c. Moses hauing spoken to Korah the principall conspiratour that first began to roule this stone and nothing at al preuailed against him doth not giue ouer Ier. 5.4 5. but tryeth if any of the rest had any more sparke of grace or feare of God in them But the farther he proceedeth the lesse hope he findeth For Dathan and Abiram refuse to come vnto him Before this they assembled themselues tumultuously before they were called but now being lawfully called they will not assemble Nay they open their mouthes to accuse him of cruelty and treachery both of them heinous crimes but both of them falsely ascribed vnto him Of cruelty as if he purposed to kill them in the wildernesse of treachery as if hee had brought them from a land flowing with milke and hony but had brought them to possesse no land Thus they preferre Egypt before Canaan the place from which they were gone before the place to which they were going And yet this is not the depth of their impiety 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 doe mocke 〈◊〉 and him for I take this answer of theirs to bee a very mocke and scoffe cast out partly against Moses and partly against God which will appeare if we compare the words of Moses to Korah with this answer For Moses had said Seemeth it but a small thing to you to seeke the Priesthood also they borrow his own words and cast them in his owne face Is it a small thing that thou hast brought vs into the wildernesse to kill vs As if they had said Thou tellest vs that it is a great mattter to vsurpe the Priesthood but why dost thou not consider that it is also a farre greater matter to kill so great a multitude And whereas God so often promised to giue to Israel a land flowing with milke and hony they turne it into a iest and tell Moses that Egypt was that fruitfull land as for other land they could see none for their feet to rest vpon ●●●trine ●i●ate ●ers reuile ●aile at 〈◊〉 that re●e them We learne hereby that they which are hardned in sinne and resolued not to giue ouer doe not onely stoppe their eares against all reproofe which notwithstanding is a great sinne but reuile raile vpon and despise such as tell them the trueth and lay before them their faults though they be the Ministers of God that doe it This wee saw before verse 3. in Korah and his company They gathered themselues against Moses and against Aaron and said vnto them Ye take too much vppon you 1 King 18.17 and 21.20 and 22.8 Ierem. 15.10 and 18.18 and 44.16 17. Actes 17.18 Reason 1 The reasons first because as no bitter things are pleasant to the sicke man who would euer haue his humour serued so no reproofes are pleasant to the sinner 1 King 22.7 Euery sinner is as a sicke man and euery reproofe is as a bitter ingredient nothing pleasing to the taste A wicked man desireth to heare nothing but pleasing things to giue a reproofe vnto him is no better welcome vnto him then if you gaue him gall and vineger to drinke Reason 2 Secondly they are fallen into a sweet sleep of sinne and cannot abide to be awaked or any way disturbed and disquieted They loue to goe to hell with ease they would not bee troubled in their iourney But the reproofes of the Minister doe crosse them and therefore they speake all manner of euill against him Vse 1 This sheweth the miserable condition of such as iustifie themselues in their sinnes who being conuicted of a great height of iniquity and impiety doe cast the Ministers reproofe as dung into his face and defend whatsoeuer themselues haue committed A sicke man that is so farre from taking the potion giuen him by the counsell of a learned Physitian that in stead of taking it he doth cast it in the Physitians face may well be thought to be in a desperate condition and must needs perish so it is with men spiritually sicke with sinne euen heart-sicke who are so farre from receiuing a rebuke at the hand of the Minister that they will be impatient toward him and returne rebuke for rebuke vnto his face nay storme and raile at him with opprobrious and contumelious termes it argueth they are forlorne men and in a pitifull and desperate estate It were infinite to speake of all sorts that are possessed with a spirit of contradiction to gainesay the trueth Some find fault because we reprooue such sinnes as are not found in the place where we preach others because by reprouing sinners we would seeme to make the world beleeue that they are more sinfull then other people and thereby make them odious to others Others accuse vs that we reprooue sin out of hatred and malice not out of loue malice to their person not hatred of the sinne But the Minister is to reprooue any sinne that is in the land besides how know they it is not in that place And if it be not we know not how soone it may be We must learne to detest all sinne but how shall wee detest that which we know not and if wee doe know it no man knoweth it so well but hee may know it better and no man detesteth it so much but he may learne to detest it more The assaults of Satan and tentations to sinne come suddenly if we be not forewarned we may be surprised suddenly Againe the reproouing of sin in one place is not the clearing of another or in one person is not the iustifying of another Lastly to accuse the Ministers of reproouing through malice proceedeth in themselues from want of charity 1 King 22.8 Ahab accused Micaiah of hatred because he neuer prophesied good vnto him but euill but indeed the hatred was in himselfe as also he charged Eliah to be the man that troubled Israel whereas indeed it was he and his fathers house 1 Kin. 18.17 18. we are thought to be their enemies for no other cause but because we tell them the trueth Gal. 4.16 Vse 2 Secondly beholde from hence the cause why the Minister of the Gospell is so ordinarily hated of the
7. verse 14. Math. 1. verse 23. Luk. 1 31. The Reasons follow First that so he might Reason 1 worke faith in them that otherwise would not beleeue Thus doth God take away all excuse when he worketh aboue nature as Exod. 4 1. When Moses was sent to the Israelites in Egypt to tell them of their deliuerance that God had heard their grones and sighes had seene al their troubles and miseries he alledged that the people wold not beleeue him nor hearken vnto his voice and therefore did the Lord inable him to turne his rod into a serpent the serpent into his rodde that so they might beleeue that the Lord God of their fathers had appeared vnto him Exod. 4 5. Againe he is willed to put his hand into his bosome and when he pulled it out it was leprous as snow verse 6. and putting his hand into his bosome againe when he pulled it out Behold it was turned again as his other flesh verse 7. Whereupon the Lord saith If they will not beleeue thee nor hearken to the voice of the first signe they wil beleeue the voice of the latter signe verse 8. And if they would not beleeue either the one or the other hee is yet willed to take the water of the Riuer and to poure it vpon the dry land and the water should become blood vpon the dry land Secondly God getteth glory hereby among Reason 2 his children his praise is by it set forth when by nothing else Wee are mooued at strange things Iohn 11 15 45. and taught to beleeue Lazarus was raised from the dead who had lyen in the graue foure dayes ver 39. to shew forth Gods glory verse 40. Math. 9 8. Luke 13 13. and 23 47. So that miracles serue to worke faith in vs and to gaine glory to God The Vses First consider from hence the greatnes and Vse 1 power of God who is to bee compared vnto him Esay 44 24. and 45 5. None of all the creatures be they neuer so excellent in strēgth and glorious in power can do such things therefore nothing can be matched with him let him therefore be preferred aboue all This is the vse vrged by Moses in his song of thāksgiuing after their passing ouer the red sea Exod 15 10 11. and Psal 77.12 13 14. He is the onely author of miracles hee it is onely that properly doth them and no other For a miracle is a worke wrought aboue the strength of nature as we shall shew more largely afterward But no creature can worke aboue the course of nature he onely that is the author of nature must do it Obiect But it may bee obiected that some of the Prophets did raise the dead as Eliah 1 Kin. 17 21 22. and Elisha 2 King 4 34 35. made Iron to swim being an heauy thing to ascend vpward 2 Kings 6 6. commanded fire to come from heauen being a light thing to descend downward 2 Kin. 1 10. healed many incureable diseases 2 Kings 5 10. and wrought many great workes Heb. 11 33 34 35. So did the Apostles raise the dead cleanse the Leapers restore sight to the blind healed the sick cast out diuels and this was their office calling to which they were appointed Math. 10 8. Answer Acts 5 15. 19 12. I answer the gift which they had was the faith of miracles And this was done in this manner God reuealed vnto them by his Spirit that he would worke such and such a miracle when they prayed thereupon either by commanding the euill spirit to depart in the name of Christ or by imposition of hands in other workes they wrought the same They hauing this knowledge by reuelation of the purpose of God beleeued the same and were as the mouth of God and the hand of God being his messengers to signifie what he would do Marke 11 22 23. Heb. 11 33 34. They then had no power of their own it was the diuine power onely that wrought them Obiect But some will say that the diuels can work miracles contrary to nature and therefore it is not proper to God Answer I answer hee can worke wonders but not miracles For though euery miracle be a wonder yet euery wonder is not a miracle He can do things extraordinary or otherwise then the common course of nature but he cannot worke aboue or against nature Thus he caused fire to fall from heauen the winds to blow downe dwelling houses as we see in the history of Iob. Hee also caused blisters and vlcers to arise in his body and without question they were true vlcers as the Scriptures plainly setteth downe and Iob truly felt Iob 2 7 8. Howbeit this he did no otherwise but by the force of nature for he cannot make raine or thunder or lightning or winde or storme or tempest this is the worke of God and commeth from his hand Gen. 7 4. Deut. 11 14. 28 12. 1 Sam. 12 17 18. 1 Kin. 8 35 36. God only sendeth the raine the diuel cannot make it and 17 14. 18 1. 2 Kin. 3 17. Iob 5 10. and 28 26. and 37 23 45. Psalme 105 32. 107 25. 135 7. 147 8. 148 7 8. Ier. 5 24. 10 13. 51 16. Zach. 10 1. Acts 14 17. Iames 5 18. The deuill cannot make the matther whereof the rain is ingendred They then are deceiued that thinke the deuill is able to make raine or haile or snow or vapor or the least flye that flyeth in the aire or the smallest worme that creepeth in the earth Neuerthelesse when the matter of stormes tempests is prepared of God he can gather it and hasten it and make it more terrible and carrie it from place to place from country to country For as hee can assume a body but not make a body so he can vse the winde but not create the winde If stormes and windes might bee raised and framed by the power of satan they might be said to execute his word he might be said to be the father of the raine So then briefly it is safest to hold this as a trueth that God caused the fire but satan brought it vpon Iobs flocke God caused the winde but satan draue it vpon the foure corners of the house For when once they are raised satan hath power by Gods permission to carry and transport them from Region to Region so that when naturally they blow one way he can besides nature turne them another way neuerthelesse he is not able to send winds or raise tempests where none are It may be further said Obiection that the sorcerers of Egypt did bring forth Frogs and turne water into blood and rods into serpents and such like Ex. 7 11 22. 8 7. I answer Answ it may be satan did fetch these frogs and serpents from other places and conuey them in a moment into the presence of Pharaoh and of his Princes for the effecting whereof more
said that Aarons rod was laide vp before the Testimony for a token and testimony against those rebellious companies Lastly Moses is said ver 9 to haue taken this rod from before the Lord or from his sight presence where we shewed it was laide vp but we neuer reade that Moses his rod wherby his calling was confirmed Pharaohs obstinacy was conuinced and the red Sea diuided was laid vp before the Testimony So then heere is a charge commandement that Aarons rod budding bearing blossomes shold be taken the people assembled and the Rocke onely to be spoken vnto before the Israelites a promise being added and againe repeated that waters should gush from thence in abundance whereof the whole Assembly should drinke and the plenty of it should flow euen to their beasts and cattell These are the Commandements of God let vs see their obedience with their failing halting in it For it is not perfect and entire wanting nothing as appeareth by the threatning presently denounced and by the punishment afterward inflicted Indeed they gathered together the people as God commanded but they spake not to the Rock as God willed thē they were charged to speak to the Rock only yet by impatiency doubting Wherein Moses and Aaron sinned agains God they spake not to the Rocke but complained against the people and smote the Rock once and againe not commanded So then they that hitherto shewed inuincible constancy in resisting the rage of the people and maintained zealously the glory of God beleeued faithfully his promises and stood as Rockes vnmoueable against all stormes that beate against them now faile in their faith and obedience both in speaking to the people and in striking of the Rocke For they aske whether they should bring vnto thē water out of the Rocke as if it were vnpossible for God to performe what he had promised to make good the word that was gone out of his owne mouth Again he lifted vp his hand and smote the Rocke twice through impatiency and distrust August lib. 16. Cont. Faust Manich. cap. 17 so that albeit he were a notable Prophet and holy man of God and that God gaue this witnesse of him Numb 12 3. that Hee was a meeke man aboue all the men that liued vpon the earth Psal 106 32. yet as the Psalmist teacheth they troubled him with their grudgings and vexed him with their murmurings that he spake vnaduisedly with his lips Col. 3 25. Acts 10 14. Ezek. 33 20. Rom. 2 6. Psal 62 12. Reuel 22 12. But God with whom is no respect of persons who iudgeth euery man according to his waies and works doth openly accuse conuince them of sinne complaineth that they had not glorified his great Name pronounceth decreeth the sentence of death against them that they should not enter into the Land of promise And lest this failing of Moses and fall of the people should be forgotten it is named the waters of Meribah or of strife contention Thus we see their doubting and disobedience is here reproued and threatened and afterward punished which is amplified by the reason because they were so farre from strengthening the people by confirming them in the truth of Gods promises and assuring them of the due accomplishment of them that themselues wauer doubt and dishonour God For as God is much honoured when hee is beleeued and we rest in his word as in a thing vnchangeable so he is greatly dishonored when his power is not acknowledged whē his promise is not beleeued and when his truth is not trusted of vs. Thus much of the meaning of the words as also of the order and circumstances of this history now let vs come to the doctrines that arise out of the same Ver. 1. The people abode at Kadesh and Miriam died there In this first verse where this murmuring for want of water is described by the time and place we see mention is made of the death and buriall of Miriam Micah 6 4. She was an excellent woman in the Church an holy Prophetesse Exo. 15 20 21 one that went before others in singing the praises of God after their deliuerance out of Egypt after their passing ouer the red sea and after the ouerthrow of Pharaoh his hoast yet is subiect to death as well as others Doctrine Death is common to all flesh From hence we learne that all flesh men and women high and low rich and poore godly and vngodly how great soeuer their gifts and graces be are subiect to death and mortality This appeareth Gen. 5. where in the catalogue of the fathers that liued before the flood it is said of them all they died Albeit God multiplied their daies many hundred yeares for the increase of mankinde the spreading abroad of the truth from generation to generation yet after many daies in the end al of them died So Psal 89 48. Heb. 9 27. Iob 17 13 14. ch 21 23 c. One dieth in his full strength being in all ease and prosperity another dieth in the bitternes of his soule and neuer eateth with pleasure they shall sleepe both in the dust and the wormes shall couer them And what shall I say more We acknowledge in words and see with our eies a decay and declining of of all things by experience All earthly things vnder the Sun that haue beginning Seneca de remed fortu●● both haue and hasten to their ending The grasse when it is growne is mowed the fruite when it is ripe is gathered the haruest when it is ready is reaped The trees that florish in the Spring and Sommer haue their declining Autumne and their decaying Winter The Moone set in the Heauen to rule the night hath her wane The Sunne which commeth foorth as a Bridegroome out of his chamber Psal 19 3. reioyceth like a mighty man to run his race yet hath his setting and descending the farther he goeth the more degrees he passeth the neerer hee is to the end of his course The reasons of this Doctrine are these First Reason 1 because all are dust the matter whereof wee are made is the dust of the earth therefore must returne to the dust out of which we are are taken All flesh is as grasse and the glory of man is as the flower of the field the grasse withereth and the flower fadeth falleth away The Sea neuer resteth nor standeth still but euer ebbeth or floweth so is it with the life of man it neuer standeth at one stay euery day cutteth off one part of our daies we are neerer to our end in the euening then in the morning according to the saying of Iob we are consumed from morning to euening we hasten vnto the graue as the Riuers are carryed into the Sea This is that reason which is vsed Gen. 3 19. In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou turne to the earth for out
we may be assured he will deliuer our soules from death Psal 33 19. Rom. 6 ●2 Luke 12 32. preserue vs in famine For if hee spared not his owne Sonne but hath giuen him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Feare not therefore the want of outward things which perish with their vse for it is your Fathers pleasure to giue vnto you a kingdome If he haue promised to giue vnto vs the greater nay the greatest blessings that can be rehearsed or remēbred we may ground our selues on this assured truth that he wil not leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord is my deliuerer I will not feare what man can do vnto me Indeed the iudgement practise of carnall men is otherwise who esteeme earthly things aboue heauenly and preferre their Swine before Christ-like Esau Matthew 8 Heb. 12 16 who prized one messe of pottage aboue the birthright If these men bee a little pained and pinched with famine and suffer a little want of food that they haue not their necessities supplied their bodies cloathed their bellies filled they cry out aloud in the anguish of their spirit What shall we eate What shall we drinke How shall wee liue How shall we maintaine sustaine our selues and our families But alasse though their soules be hunger-bitten and hungerstarued ready to pine and consume away throgh want of spirituall food they are neuer greeued or vexed it troubleth them not at al. Let vs learn better things let vs value spirituall things at the highest rate and set them in the cheefest place If thus we set as our honorable friends all heauenly things in the cheefest place and turne all transitory things with shame into the lowest roome and ranke as saucie aspiring guests vsurping climbing aboue their betters we shall beare all earthly losses and troubles with patience and stay our selues from murmuring at the feeling of them Ver. 6. Then Moses and Aaron went from the face c. We heard before the complaint of the people now let vs see the behauiour of Moses Aaron They do not rage nor reuile thē they do not fret and fume against thē or aske the life of their enemies but possesse their soules with patience and declining the violent rage of the people as a beast with many heads they goe to the Tabernacle declare their causes and cases before the Lord. From this their distresse we learne this truth that in all wrongs iniuries offered vnto vs we must seeke helpe and comfort of God Doctrin● In all wr● and iniuri we must 〈◊〉 to God I say it is the duty of all the seruants of God when they are wronged and oppressed when they are euilly entreated and spitefully handled at the hands of sinfull men to vnlade disburden all their cares into the bosome of God depending for counsell and comfort vpon him alone In the performance of this duty the holy seruants of God haue gone before vs. Reade the booke of the Psalmes as a plentifull store-house and schoole-house to teach this truth as Psal 3 1 2. and 7 1 2. where we see that in his troubles he had recourse to God who smiteth his enemies on the cheeke-bone and breaketh the teeth of the wicked but was a sure Buckler to him not such as men hold vp that can defend one part and in one place onely but a buckler to safegard him round about before and behind And being greeuously accused of some heynous crime by some of Sauls retinue ● 14.10 he flyeth to God he trusteth in him who preserueth the vpright in heart So when Iob had his camels and cattell taken away by the enemies he did not through the greatnes of his affliction and greefe of mind rebell against God but said Naked came I out of my mothers wombe ● 13 17. and naked shall I returne thither the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken it ●●g 19.3 blessed be the Name of the Lord. The like appeareth in Hezekiah when Ierusalem was besieged This is a day of tribulation and of rebuke and blasphemy for the children are come to the birth and there is no strength to bring forth Now therefore O Lord our God I beseeeh thee saue vs out of his hand that all the kingdomes of the earth may know that thou O Lord art onely God All which examples teach vs that when we suffer wrongs or fall into any wrongs or fall into any dangers wee must haue recourse to God and craue of him that the malice of the wicked may come to an end Reason 1 The reasons of this doctrine are first the gracious promise of God who hath mercifully promised to heare and to helpe vs in all our troubles This the Prophet teacheth Call vppon me in the day of trouble ● 50.15 ●h 5.14 15 I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me And the Apostle Iohn This is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs and if we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we haue the petitions that wee haue desired of him Let vs not doubt and wauer like a waue of the Sea tossed to and fro by the violence of the winds but by faith beleeue that God will grant our requests which wee make according to his will and word Seeing therefore he is willing to heare and able to helpe and promiseth to grant our requests our duty is to come when he calleth to aske seeing hee giueth and to knocke seeing he openeth the gates that leadeth vnto his treasures Some put their trust in chariots some in horses and some in Princes but we must remember the Name of the Lord our God who neuer faileth and breaketh promise with these that depend vpon him that feare and trust in his mercy Reason 2 Secondly as he is our helper who deliuereth our soule from death our eies from teares and our feet from falling so whither shall wee turne our selues to find comfort and consolation besides in him When God denyeth to send succour who shall saue When hee refuseth to helpe who shal deliuer When he shutteth who can open If wee looke to men or Angels to heauen or earth to the liuing or the dead we shall be deceiued and deluded The Prophet saith Psal 62.8 9. Trust in him alway ye people poure out your harts before him for God is our hope aboue all yet the children of men are vanity the chiefe men are lies to lay them vpon a ballance they are altogether lighter then vanity Vse 1 Let vs now come vnto the vses First from hence we gather that such is Gods great goodnes to his children that he neuer leaueth them without comfort For if he require of vs to repaire to him in our troubles surely he will not send vs away empty nor cause vs to depart
them with an heauier burthen and thrust them quite downe that are ready euen to fall This the Prophet condemneth Psal 69 26 27. This is a note of extreme hatred and malice and yet how many are there among vs that liue in the bosome of the Church who make the miseries of others as a game and pastime to refresh themselues reuiling reproching with most bitter taunts and tearmes of infamy such as lie vnder the crosse as those passengers that mocked Christ hanging on the Crosse Let all such remember the wise counsell of the wise man in sundry places of the Prouerbes chap. 11 8. 24 16 17 18. Where he sheweth that howsoeuer the faithfull may fall into many aduersities yet their aduersaries are not to triumph ouer thē and tread them vnder their feet as dung of the earth no nor shew signes of mirth gladnes in their affliction lest the Lord who pondreth the spirits lay the same affliction vpon them So then to reioyce at the misery of another that he may haue sorrow vpon sorrow is the ready way to bring misery and draw Gods plagues vpon our selues and therefore if at any time we see them sinke downe in affliction as vnder a burden it is our parts not onely to pitty them but to comfort and releeue them who are commanded to raise vp the Asse of our enemy that is fallen downe as we see in the law of Moses Thou knowest our trouble how our fathers went downe into Egypt Hitherto we haue handled the strength of the reason now let vs consider the truth of the words which set foorth the miseries and afflictions of the Church of God Doctrine Many are the afflictions laid vpon the Church by the enemies thereof From hence we learne that the afflictions of the church are many the troubles that it endureth at the hands of euill men are very great True it is the people of God are endued with the first fruites of the Spirit and are reserued vnto a kingdome yet if wee will liue with him we must first die with him if we will reigne with him we must first suffer with him if we will haue him wipe away all our teares in heauen wee must first shed them on earth This is expresly taught Psal 34 19. So the Apostle Iames chap. 1 2. 1 Cor. 4 9. 2 Cor. 11 23 24 25 26. This was the estate of the whole Church of the Hebrewes described Heb. 11 35 36 37 38. This we might farther consider in the examples of the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac Iacob Iob Ioseph Dauid Ieremy and sundry others whose liues are a plentifull store-house to testifie this truth that the people of God doe many times endure manifold afflictions from euill men The reasons are euident First the enemies Reason 1 of the Church know not the Father neither Iesus Christ his Sonne They haue nothing to stop and to stay their fury and violence being stirred vp by their owne malice and set on fire of hell This is it we reade Ioh. 16 2 3. They shall excommunicate you yea the time shall come that whosoeuer killeth you will thinke that hee doth God seruice and these things will they doe because they haue not knowne the Father nor mee For whatsoeuer their pretence be yet their rage against the seruants of God proceedeth from their ignorance of God 1 Cor. 2 8. and instigation of the diuell who beareth all the sway in their harts Therefore Christ saith Reuel 2 10. Behold it shall come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried Howsoeuer thē they beare themselues oftentimes in hand that they do well yet whensoeuer they take crafty counsell against the innocent the suggestion is of the diuell when they giue their tongues to lying and cursed speaking they are thrust forward by the father of lies when their hearts are inflamed with malice the diuell is as the bellowes to blow the coales Finally whensoeuer they worke iniuriously against the Saints of God hee is the master of the mischiefe and of him in the end they shall receiue their wages Againe the delight of Gods people is to Reason 2 follow goodnesse Now so long as the diuell is in the world and his instruments stirred vp by him that walke after the vanities of their own minde and the corruptions of their own hart so long they will alwayes malice and abhorre the seruants of God wherein it seemeth to them strange that wee run not with them into the same excesse of riot therfore speake they euill of vs which shall giue accounts to him that is ready to iudge the quicke and dead 1 Pet. 4 4 5. The Spirit of God teacheth this from the beginning I will put enmity betweene thee and the woman and betweene thy seede and her seed he shall breake thy head and thou shalt bruise his heele Where we see there is and there must be alwayes a perpetuall opposition and enmity betweene beleeuers and hypocrites betweene the godly the vngodly The world hateth them that are chosen out of the world Iohn 15 19. Thus it was in Abrahams family which was the Church of God where he that was borne after the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit euen so it is now Gal. 4 29. Heereunto Salomon had respect when he saide A wicked man is abhomination to the iust and he that is vpright in his way is abhomination to the wicked Prou. 29 27. The vses now to bee considered are these First wee must learne heereby that afflictions Vse 1 are not simply euill neither shall they be able to separate vs from God as we see Rom. 8.35 28 38 39. Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ Shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill or sword as it is written for thy sake are we killed all day long we are counted as sheepe for the slaughter Neuerthelesse in all these things we are more then conquerers through him that loued vs. Where we see that seeing it is the lot of the righteous to suffer persecution he concludeth it shall neuer be able to separate vs frō the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. For God giueth to all those that are his a sanctified vse of the Crosse who disposeth all things to worke the best to them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose This is the vnspeakable mercy of God Iob 33 1● 16 17. that maketh not onely the Ministery of the word the vse of the sacraments the grace of prayer and such like exercises of our holy religion turne to our good but blesseth the bitter cup of the greatest afflictions that is offered vs to drinke to be vnto vs the medicine of the soule the triall of faith the mortifying of corruption the schoole house of humility the preaching of repentance the renouncing of the world the taming of the flesh and
kept with such as they call and account Heretikes Thus then we see that the greatest hatred hath risen euermore from difference and diuersity in religion This appeareth in Cain and Abel in Isaac and Ismael in Iacob and Esau in the Israelites the Egyptians in Dauid and Saul in Christ and the Pharisies in Paul and the Iewes in the heathen and Gods people in the beleeuers infidels There is no fellowship betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse 2 Cor. 6 ●4● no communion between light and darkenesse no concord betweene Christ and Beliall and therefore a confused mixture between the religion of Antichrist the Gospel of Christ hath an impossibility of any agreement Sleid C●●● lib. 17. tou●ing Alph● and Diaz● This is also manifest in all histories of the Church from the beginning These things being thus considered and thought vpon we cānot think it strange that the Church lyeth vnder the crosse and groaneth vnder the heauie burthen of it So soone as H●man was aduanced by by the Church mourned and sighed This the wise man teacheth Prouerb 28 28 and 29 2. When the wicked rise vp men hide themselues but when they perish the righteous increase Let vs then acknowledge that the Church is subiect to many sorrowes and much affliction as a campe besieged of enemies as a ship tossed of the winds as Corne ground in the mill as a vineyard eaten with beasts as a building beat vpon with stormes and as a flocke dayly in danger and assaulted with Wolues whilst the enemies clap their hands and stamp with their feet and reioyce in hart with all their despight against the Church of God as the Prophet confessed Psal 79 1 2 3 4. O God the Heathen are come into thine inheritance thine holy Temple haue they defiled and made Ierusalem an heape of stones We are a reproach to our neighbours euen a scorne and derision to them that are round about vs. The first vse is 2 Ioh. 3 1● that which the Apostle Iohn directly concludeth from this doctrine hauing produced the example of Cain who slew his own brother gathereth this consideration from thence Maruell not my Brethren though this world hate you Secondly we learne from hence a point of Vse 2 wisedome and godly policy to look to our selues that we do not rely vpon them lest they beguile vs and betray vs. There is no truth in them and therefore no trust is to bee giuen to them Matth. 2 ● Herod made a shew of loue reuerence to Christ he would needs loue and worship him but his meaning was he would come kill him Beware thou be not seduced and entrapped by such secret enemies which pretend piety but vse treachery see thou do not relie vpon them commit not thy selfe vnto them They cannot loue thee that doe not loue the Lord neither can they be faithful to thee that are vnfaithfull to God They will close and gloze with thee til thou be come within their danger Gen. 4 ● as Cain spake kindly to Abel til he was in the field then he rose vp and slew him or as Ioab whose words were smoother then oyle and softer then butter 2 Sam. 20 9. Art thou in peace my Brother But he smote him that hee dyed shedding the blood of battell in the dayes of peace These men haue the voice of Iacob but the rough hands of Esau they haue the words of a brother but the hearts of an enemy they salute with a kisse but persecute with the sword For deceitfull amity is double enmity and fained friendship is a double mischeefe The Fisher baiteth his hooks when he would catch the fish F●●f●ls ●●●it vo ●d●● de●●ps the Fowler singeth sweetly when he would deceiue the bird the Hunter hideth his nets warily wisely when he mindeth to take his prey We haue oftentimes to do with such cunning Fishers mighty Hunters Wherefore there is great cause to looke to our selues for when they cannot preuaile with the Lions paw they put on the Foxes skin and go to worke with craft and wilines Yea the Church of God from time to time hath sustained greater hurt by their owne simplicity then by the enemies cruelty and by their owne lightnesse of beleefe then by the sharpnesse of their sword When they pretend the greatest curtesie thē they intend the greatest villany When they offer treaties of peace leagues of marriage and such like confederacies then the hook is baiting the snare is laying the net is spreading before the eies of all that hath wings that they may effect their treasons and conspiracies And this is it which one of the heads of their Church once saide 〈◊〉 ce●● 8. If the keyes of Peter could not preuaile they would take vp and draw out the sword of Paul Thus like false Prophets and false brethren they come in sheepes cloathing ●th 7 15. but inwardly they are rauening Wolues It remaineth therefore that we stand vpon our guard and watch ouer our selues that wee be not intrapped by their subtilties Vpon this ground our Sauiour warneth vs to be wary Matth. 10 16. Behold I send you as sheepe in the midst of wolues be therfore wise as Serpents and innocent as Doues where we are taught that we must all bee armed with wisedom and simplicity against our enemies Two needfull graces to be sought after as in all ages so especially in these dangerous times wherein we liue Let vs labour to haue true policy and true simplicity let both these bee found in vs that they may accompany alwaies each other and neuer bee separated the one from the other For policy without simplicity is deceiueable craftinesse and simplicity without policy is deceyued sottishnesse Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to pray earnestly vnto God not to deliuer vs into their hands whose rage and malice knoweth no end or measure Indeed our sinnes haue deserued this scourge but let vs rather desire him to correct vs by his owne hand 〈◊〉 1● 23. 〈◊〉 33.14 for he is gracious and merciful He desireth not the death of a sinner but that hee may turne vnto him and liue This made the people of God from time to time rather then they would fall into the hands of cruell enemies to bee willing and ready to receiue any punishment at Gods hand This we see Iudg. 10 15. when the Israelites had forsaken the Lord and his worship hee complaineth against them saying Did not I deliuer you out of the hands of the Egyptians Ammorites c. yet ye haue forsaken me and serued other Gods that ye haue chosen let them saue you in the time of your tribulation then they cryed in their danger Wee haue sinned O Lord do thou vnto vs whatsoeuer pleaseth thee onely we pray thee to deliuer vs this day from the Ammonites This we see yet more euidently in the example of Dauid 2 Sam. 24 13 14. when in the pride and presumption of his hart he
sicknesse is from God the manner of it the measure of it the time of it the matter of it is of God which giueth good assurance and affiance that God will be mercifull and gracious vnto vs seeing he striketh vs that is our Father and in the stroke be it neuer so sharp he cannot forget his former compassions but he will make all things fall out to further our saluation neither will hee lay more stripes and strokes vpon vs thē we shall be able to beare He will make a way for vs to escape 1 Cor. 10 13. Psal 56 8. Psal 11 3. Cant. 2 6. he will make our bed in all our sicknesse hee putteth our teares in his bottell his left hand is vnder our head and his right hand doth embrace vs. Let vs comfort one another in these things Vse 3 Thirdly it standeth vs vpon whensoeuer his hand is vpon vs to seeke to him for health that smiteth and no man healeth that maketh the wound and no man restoreth We are directed by this consideration to whom to seek for our recouery to wit first to the hand that striketh and next to goe to mans helpe which is his ordinance We must not first seeke to the Physition as Asa did 2 Chron. 16 13 but first be reconciled to God the chiefe Physition of soule and body and pray vnto him in our trouble as Hezekiah did Esay 38 2. Let vs neuer looke that any means be they neuer so excellent shall profite vs and prosper with vs vntill we be at peace with God and haue renewed our repentance from dead works for our daily sinnes This the Apostle sheweth Iam. 5 13. Is any among you afflicted let him pray This condemneth those that seeke to witches and wizards and forget the God of their saluation 1 Sam. 2 6. who killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp againe Let vs thereby be put in mind of our death which is Gods messenger and serieant to arest vs and to bring vs into his presence Let vs euer prepare our selues to depart in peace cOnsidering that as the home of death shall take vs so the day of iudgement shall finde vs. Here we repent or else we repent neuer Chrys ho● de Lazaro Basil de moral 1. Reg. 2. Here is time of changing and turning but after this life there is no more place of repentance but an horrible expectation and fearefull looking for of iudgement which shall deuoure the aduersaries The Scripture teacheth that Caine that euill man was of euil one and slew his brother wee may multiply thousands of yeares since he vttered that fearefull and comfortlesse speech Gen. 4 13. My sinne is greater then ca be pardoned my punishment is greater then can bee suffered yet when Christ shall breake the heauens and come to iudge the quicke and dead hee shall appeare no otherwise at the last day thē as he was taken out of this life The like wee might say of Esau of Saul of Iudas and of others who ended their daies in desperation as they died so they shall be iudged abide for euer after iudgement As they turned not to God their Creator while they liued so they shall receiue no ease or alteration in their estate when they are once departed and haue receiued iudgement of whom we may say as Christ once spake of Iudas It had beene good for these men if they had neuer beene borne Mat. 26 24. For not to bee is ten thousand times better then euer to be in a liuing death in cōtinuall horrour and desperation where their worme dieth not the fire neuer goeth out Mark 9 4● This was the vse that Hezekiah made of his sicknes Es 38 10 11 I said in the cutting off of my daies I shall goe to the gates of the graue I am depriued of the residue of my yeares I saide I shall not see the Lord euen the Lord in the Land of the liuing I shall see man no more among the Inhabitants of the world Wherefore in sicknesse we are taught to seeke health of God and to bee put in minde of our mortality Lastly when God hath shewed mercy vpon Vse 4 vs in our deliuerance let vs spend the residue of our daies in a godly conuersation It is a common and ordinary matter to make solemne promises and protestations to becOme new men if we recouer Many do then lament the former errors and ignorances of their life but when they haue obtained mercy at the hands of God when they haue found a blessing and beene restored they become as leud and prophane as they were before And this moued Christ our Sauiour to exhort the impotent man to sinne no more lest a more greeuous iudgement were brought vpon him Ioh. 5 14. We see how Hezekiah being healed the third day after he went vp to the house of the Lord to praise him 2 King 20 ● Esay 38 18 to speake of his goodnesse who had seene his teares heard his praiers and who had remoued his afflictions The graue cannot confesse thee death cannot praise thee they that goe downe into the pit cannot hope for thy truth but the liuing the liuing hee shall confesse thee as I do this day the father to the children shall declare thy truth This duty is required of vs al when we are deliuered from our sicknesse or sorrow from trouble calamity to be thankfull to God and mindfull of his mercy Let euery one examine his owne heart how he hath practised this duty what vse he hath made of his affliction There is none of vs but hath a blessed experience of Gods goodnesse toward him hee hath oftentimes preserued vs from dangers restored vs from sicknesse deliuered vs from diseases freed vs from troubles happy are we if thereby we haue profited vnto amendment of life and in the study of godlinesse and be carefull that we fall not backe againe into our former offences We must not be like to Pharaoh who returned to his vomit and the hardnesse of his heart ● 7.13 14. after hee was freed from the plagues of God lest with him we be destroyed by the iust hand of God The Lord sent fiery serpents among the people which stung the people so that many of them died God might haue destroyed these euer-murmuring Israelites by the Canaanites or Edomites their aduersaries hee hath men and Angels at his booke and commandement to afflict them and ouerthrow them but he sendeth stinging serpents which tormented thē and a multitude of venomous beasts vpon thē that they might know that where with a man sinneth by the same also he shall be punished as we shewed before The Doctrine from hence is that GOD hath all creatures in his owne hand ●ctrine ●d hath all ●atures euē●●malest to ●ploy in his ●uce which ●ing ●ent do ●euaile and he armeth them at his owne pleasure to execute his will and being so imploied they
head A man will bee willing to receiue a blow on another part to saue the principall it is that which Satan alledged to God Iob 2 4. Skin for skin all that euer a man hath will hee giue for his life So it standeth vs vpon to desire indeed the good of the least and lowest member in the Church of God but our cheefest and greatest endeuour should be for men in highest calling who are set in slippery places compassed with many dangers enuironed with many tentations beguiled oftentimes by flatterers led away by false informers so that the higher they are exalted the greater is their downefall When they stand vpright they stand not alone whē they fall they fall not alone When a mighty Oake that seemed deepe rooted in the earth falleth downe it casteth downe with it the lesser Trees and lower shrubs that grow neere vnto it As wee haue light or darknesse from the Sun so we haue vice or vertue from such as are superiours For all inferiours commonly follow the example and tread the steps of such as are in higher places 〈…〉 This the wise man noteth in his Prouerbs ch 29.12 of a Prince that hearkeneth to lies all his seruants are wicked This the Prophet toucheth ●k 16 44. Behold all that vse Prouerbs shall vse this Prouerb against thee saying As the mother so is he● daughter Wherefore it behooueth vs to remember our Princes and men of great callings in our prayers as we see Moses is ready to pray for Pharaoh as Darius King of Persia willeth the Iewes to pray for the Kings life and for his sonnes Ezra 6 10 according as the Prophet also prayeth Giue thy iudgements O God to the King and thy righteousnes to the Kings sonne Psal 72 1. Thus then it appeareth to be a principall duty to poure out our prayers and supplications for our Magistrates Ouer-seers that watch for our soules and to fall downe vpon our knees for Prince and Country The Apostles command it and the faithfull practise it toward Infidels and wicked Kings that professed not the faith nor beleeued the truth how much more carefull then ought we to be to perform all christian duties to christian Princes that are members of the same body that are the breath of our nostrils that are nursing fathers and nursing mothers to the Church that are shepheards of the people of God to feed and gouerne them that are chosen instruments to bestow their power and authority for the preseruation of the sheepe of Christ and are firme pillars to beare vp the truth vpon their shoulders Vse 2 Secondly it followeth that we are to do it much more for our selues For how can we be truely affected to pray for others and be inwardly touched with their wants when wee haue no feeling of our owne We shall heare many oftentimes very liberall and lauish in offering their prayers as if they did set them out to sale or to be hyred saying I will pray for you who notwithstanding sildome pray for themselues And what are the prayers of blind and ignorant men but rehearsing the Commandements saying ouer the Creed a pattering of the Lords Prayer without vnderstanding Besides prayer is a mutuall duty to be practised one toward another as we performe the same for our brethren so doe the brethren for vs and therefore we are no more endebted to other for this benefit then others for the benefit they receiue of vs. Let vs therefore learne from hence that if wee must pray for our friends and families and other members of Christ we must learne especially to pray for our selues and by our selues We can neuer of conscience pray with others vnlesse we sometimes separate our selues from them enter into our Chamber shut our doore and pray alone vnto our Father which is in secret That our Father which seeth in secret may reward vs openly Mat. 6 5 6. For he that neuer prayed solitary neuer prayed truely He that neuer sequestreth himselfe from the company of others to humble his soule before God neuer knew what true prayer meant but doth all in hypocrisie for fashion sake and to be seene of men and therefore they haue their reward accordingly It is a note of hypocrisie neuer to pray but in company and therefore whosoeuer alwayes and onely prayeth with others is an hypocrite Hence it is that the faithfull haue vsed daily priuate prayer It is noted of Isaac that he went frō the presence of others to poure out his meditations before rhe Lord. We see it in Dauid in sundry Psalmes yea in Christ himselfe though he were Lord of life and heire of all things so that this is a sound and infallible rule in our holy and christian religion that what man soeuer neuer prayed alone neuer prayed aright Thus then we see how it standeth vs all vpon in regard of this generall duty to bee performed to others to be principally mindfull of our selues that from a sight of our own sins from a feeling of our owne wants from a desire of Gods graces wee may haue a due respect and regard of our brethren For all our loue shewed to our neighbour is as a streame issuing from the fountaine of loue toward our selues and the rule to square out the loue of our brethren is the true measure of it to our selues by due and right proportion Let vs therefore be diligent our selues in prayer and poure out our meditations before the Lord. It is made a note of a wicked man not to pray by the Prophet Psalm 14 verses 1 4. The foole hath saide in his heart there is no God they haue corrupted and done an abhominable work there is none that doth good they call not vpon the Lord. It behoueth vs therefore to craue of GOD the grace of prayer to the ende wee may pray aright as wee ought to pray that so we may learne to pray for others This we see practised by the Apostle Paul who hauing exhorted the Church of Ephesus to put on the whole armour of God and to pray alwayes with all manner prayer and supplication in the spirit for all Saints he annexeth hereunto immediately Ephe. 6 18 19 and for me that vtterance may bee giuen vnto me that I may open my mouth boldly as I ought to speake and himselfe beggeth the grace of God to come vpon them So writing to the Thessalonians 1 Thess 5 27 25.28 and exhorting them to pray continually and namely for the preachers of the Gospel himselfe giueth an example beginneth the worke and first prayeth for them that the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ may be with them Vse 3 Thirdly it behooueth vs all in our wants and necessities to craue the prayers of the Church which auaile much with God if they be feruent He hath promised to heare his seruants that call vpon him Iam. 5 14. Matth. 18 20. He hath promised That wheresoeuer two or three are gathered together in his Name
brazen serpent was a figure of Christ crucified and hanging on the crosse who is made of the Father to bee a Sauiour vnto vs. This Christ himselfe testifieth Ioh. 3.14 15. As Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the Sonne of man bee lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life Heereunto likewise hee alludeth Chap. 8.28 29. Then Iesus said vnto them When ye haue lift vp the Sonne of man then shall ye know that I am he and that I doe nothing of my selfe as my Father hath taught me so I speak these things In both these places our Sauiour hath respect and reference to the brazen serpent in the wildernesse shewing that as it was erected to heale the body so must Christ bee crucified to cure the soule therefore this serpent set vp was a type of his death Caluin in I●han ●ap 3 2● 14. And howsoeuer some of reuerent account in the Church doe vnderstand this lifting vp of the preaching of the Gospel which is as a banner displayed that all men may behold him and esteeme the referring of it to the Crosse neither to bee pertinent to the matter nor to agree in the text yet if we compare the former places phrases with another like Testimony of Iohn chap. 12.32 33. the true interpretation of the words will easily and euidently appeare where Christ speaketh thus to the Pharisees Now is the iudgment of this world now shall the Prince of this world be cast out and I if I were lift vp from the earth will draw all men vnto me Heere by lifting vp Calu. in Iob. 〈◊〉 ver 28. we must necessarily vnderstand the death of Christ vpon the Crosse on which he was lifted vp on high and seene a farre off as the Euangelist himselfe expoundeth it in the verse following saying Now this said he signifying what death hee should die The reasons of this similitude shadowing Reason 1 out the manner of Christs death are very euident and apparent For first as the brazen serpent in the wildernesse had the shew and shape of a serpent but within there was no venemous or deadly thing as the true fiery serpents had so Christ tooke vpon him the shape of a seruant he was made like vnto men he was sent of God in the similitude of sinfull flesh and was counted among the wicked Rom ● 3 Mark 15. ● Esay 53 1● yet he was pure and voyde of sinne neither could be charged of his enemies with any sin so that this is no vnpropper or far-fet similitude but fit and naturall Secondly euen as the brazen serpent was Reason lift vp on high vpon a pole appointed for that purpose so was Christ first lift vp vpon the wood of the Crosse and was after exalted by the Gospel and set in the sight of all as the Prophet Esay teacheth Esay 11.10 12. And as the brazen serpent before it could be a type of healing must be aduanced and lifted vp so before Christ Iesus could be a Sauiour of his people to saue them from their sinnes he must be fastened vpon the Crosse 〈◊〉 14 15 he must haue his hands his feet pierced that he might spoyle the principalities and make a shew of them openly with triumph As therefore it was not sufficient once to make the brazen serpent and so to looke vpon it but it must as well be mounted as at the first made so it was not enough to bring vs to life and saluation for Christ to be conceiued by the holy Ghost and borne of the virgin Mary vnlesse he also suffer death for our sinnes and so beare our sinnes in his body on the tree Thirdly as the Israelites which obeyed the Reason 3 commandement of God embraced his promise beleeued his word and so beheld the brazen serpent standing on the pole were healed of the deadly bitings of these fiery serpents so all men who are moued with the commandement of God embracing the promise do behold Christ hanging on the tree of the crosse with the eyes of faith 〈◊〉 3.16 are cured of the sting of that old serpent the diuell and recouer of that mortall wound being freed from death and restored into the glorious liberty of the sons of God A serpent did hurt a serpent did heale the Israelites Man did destroy vs man did restore vs. 〈◊〉 5.19 The first Adam did draw into condemnation the second Adam draweth vnto saluation The brazen serpent albeit it were lift vp neuer so high and mounted into the open ayre profited none but such as stedfastly beheld it and looked vpon it so Christ crucified profiteth none but such as beleeue in him by faith Many beheld him with the bodily eyes that reaped no benefit by him they heard him with their outward eares and handled with their hands that word of life yet it auailed them nothing to know him after the flesh 〈◊〉 5.16 neither furthered them in their saluation Reason 4 Fourthly as it seemed to humane wisdom a most foolish and ridiculous thing to be healed by the bare and onely sight of a brazen serpent so to all naturall wise men of the world it seemeth as vnlikely and vnreasonable that any shold be saued by faith in Christ crucified ●r 1.23 as the Apostle sheweth We preach Christ crucified vnto the Iewes euen a stumbling blocke and vnto the Grecians foolishnesse onely to them that are saued Christ is the power of God and the wisedome of God So then it is cleere and euident that the serpent set vp vpon the pole signifieth Christ hanging on the Crosse Vse 1 The vses of this type and similitude are many directing vs to sundry points of religion As what sin is whence it came what it worketh and bringeth forth likewise what the force of the Law and Gospel it who Christ is how we must vse and apply him to haue comfort and saluation in him First seeing the serpent was a signe and signification of Christ we learne that Christ was preached and published in the time of the law albeit darkely and obscurely For as there is but one saluation so there is but one way to attaine vnto it to wit faith in Christ The faith of the fathers is one and the same with the faith of the children There was neuer any man saued without the knowledge of IESVS CHRIST neyther is at this day saued neither shall be hereafter to the end of the world This the Apostle teacheth to the Hebrewes Heb. 13.8 Iesus Christ yesterday and to day the same also is for euer And to this truth Iohn giueth witnesse All that dwell vpon the earth shall worship the Beast Reuel 13.8 whose names are not written in the booke of life of that Lambe which was slaine from the beginning of the world Albeit he were manifested in the flesh and crucified on the Crosse in the last age of the world when the fulnes of time was
the world This is it which the Prophet teacheth Psal 111. The works of his hands are established for euer and euer and are done in truth and equity If then all his works abide and continue from the glorious Creatures in the heauens to the silly worme creeping in the earth much more the holy Scripture must abide without decaying or diminishing as the durable Cedar without rotting and consuming which is not onely his handy-worke but a masterworke chiefe aboue all others as the Diamond among pearles of great price And if the least and lowest creature in the world hath beene in his kinde continued hitherto and shall be continued to the end by the mighty hand of God vpholding and supporting all things that he hath made much lesse shall the Scripture perish and fall away which bringeth greater glory to God and greater gaine to his people Thirdly the Scripture was written for these ends and purposes for instruction and admonition for teaching and confutation for comfort and consolation that so the man of God may be absolute 1 Tim. 3 16 17. Neither was God deceiued in his purpose and intent so that it must remaine continue being written for those endes and vses But what errour can be conuinced what comfort can be receiued what vice can bee corrected what truth can be published what grace can be commended to the Church out of those books which are supposed to be lost Let vs not therefore doubt of Gods prouidence and so shake the faith of the Church thereby Fourthly we see the old Testament hath reserued entirely the Genealogies of the fathers which are not absolutely necessary to faith and saluation as also the whole body of the ceremonies set downe in Leuiticus and other places of the Law which notwithstanding were shadowes of things to come why then should we not presume that the same his prouidence hath also watched ouer other books which more properly belong to our practise and times and so more fitly might informe vs against ignorance teach vs in our religion warne vs in dangers and comfort vs in afflictions And if we haue no word missing or sentence wanting in such bookes as are left to the Church that there should need a void roome or a desunt nonnulla or an Asteriscus and some little starre to giue warning of some defect as we see it is in many prophane writings Dionys Hal● car●as Plut● Tu●● Po●●●●●pian L●●● and other● and those of the best note how should we be induced to beleeue that whole volumes of the old and new Testament are vtterly lost neuer to be repaired Lastly let vs heare the testimony of the Scripture it selfe obserue what it can say and doth witnesse for it selfe Moses an old and ancient witnesse teacheth Deut. 29 29 that secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things reuealed belong vnto vs and to our children for euer that we may do all the words of this Law But how do they belong vnto vs that are not reserued for vs Or how shall our children be directed by them that cannot be found in their daies or in the daies of their fathers before them Or how shall either father or sonne doe that which they cannot know Heereunto Dauid accordeth Psal 119 152. I haue knowne long since by thy testimonies that thou hast established them for euer And our Sauiour giueth his holy consent vnto this heauenly truth saying Truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iote or one title of the Law shall not escape till all things be fulfilled Mat. 5 18 and 24 35. So then we must hold the durablenesse and continuance of the Scripture in the Church which is the pillar of truth that it cannot faile or fall away as is prooued at large in the answer to the Preface of the Rhemish Testament But before we proceed to the Doctrines of this diuision it shall not bee amisse to answer the obiections that are raised and mooued against this point touching the perpetuity of the whole Scripture and of euery part of it First wee finde often mention made of the bookes of the Chronicles of the Kings of Iudah and Israel ●ect 1. ●ngs 14 19 ●5 7 11 Iosh 10 3 ●am 1 18. of the booke of the iust such like which are lost If then these be lost and by no meanes to be found how shall we truly say that the whole Scripture doeth continue I answer ●sw these bookes were neuer Canonicall Scriptures but ciuill stories and chronicles of the Commonwealth matters not of the Church whereunto the Reader is directed if he be desirous to reade and know the History more at large whereas the Prophets doe onely touch so much as serued for the edification of the Church and the building of it in faith toward God For as all ciuill Nations haue the Chronicles of their fore-fathers and auncestors actes Ester chap. 6 verse 1. Ezra 4 verses 15 19 so had the Iewes their ciuill Histories such were those wee now speake of which were good and profitable bookes of men but were neuer committed or commended to the care of the Church to be preserued and maintained ●ect 2. Againe we reade in sundry places of the bookes of Nathan and Gad the words of Samuel the works of Ahia of Shemaia of Isaiah and other Prophets which likewise seeme to be lost as well as the other wee named before I answer ●er they seeme so to such as do not duely consider of them which indeed are not lost but contained in the olde Testament in the bookes of Samuel and of the Kings which were not written by any one Prophet but by diuers Prophets at diuers times euen in the seuerall ages wherein they prophesied albeit their seuerall names bee not to euery part expressed as appeareth 2 Chron. chapter 26 verse 22 where the Spirit of God testifieth that Esaiah wrote the actes of Vzziah first and last meaning that he wrote them in the second booke of the Kings and in his Prophesies and not pointing out any book which now is lost both the former bookes remaining as a treasure to the Church As then we confesse these bookes mentioned in this obiection to bee of another nature then those expressed in the former so they haue beene preserued and euer shall bee preserued in the Church and be as it were laide vp in the Arke thereof Thirdly it may bee obiected that many Obiect 3 worthy bookes of Salomon are lost which hee wrote I answer Answ his workes are of two sorts first sundry bookes of Humanity and of Philosophy naturall and morall secondly bookes of Diuinity written as he was moued and inspired by the Spirit of God The first sort of humane and earthly things which the Church might best spare without perill or impeachment of faith haue long since failed as it is thought in the captiuity the rest which are parts of the Canonicall Scriptures do abide And marke
him and asketh him what the men were that came to him not that God was ignorant and needed to be taught or in structed what those persons were but to draw from him a voluntary confession of the matter which being truely opened and declared God forbiddeth him to go to the Moabites because they had a mischieuous purpose and to curse the Israelites because they were a blessed people Whē he perceiued to his great griefe that God had concluded and determined to continue his mercy and blessings vpon his people which no deuice of man could diminish no works of the diuell could abolish the morning being come he returned an answer to the messengers and sent them backe without their long-hoped desire excusing himselfe that he could not goe with them as himselfe desired and as they had deserued at his hands and hauing his minde wholly fixed on his reward he saith Ioseph 〈◊〉 lib. 4 cap 6. Returne backe to your Lord as for me I desired nothing more then to accompany you but the Lord hath stopped and restrained my purpose and will not suffer me to go with you or to helpe you Wherein obserue how this couetous hyreling false Prophet being willing to vndertake the worke because of the wages and to promise his best helpe that he might finger the hyre behaueth himselfe fraudently and vnfaithfully as hyrelings do mincing the matter and reuealing one part but concealing another part of the reuelation giuen him of God For whereas God had said Thou shalt not goe thou shalt not curse the people because they are a blessed people denying vnto him as well his purpose of going as his promise of cursing he declareth the former but dissembleth the latter he sheweth to the Princes and Gouernors that GOD restrained him from going but hideth this that the same GOD had forbidden him to curse the people together with the reason of it That they are blessed lest the messengers should be offended and his expected hyre denyed deteyned This is the summe and substance of this diuision But before we enter into the handling of the Doctrines offered heerein to our considerations to the end we may cleerely see into the meaning of the whole history it shall not be amisse for vs to answer certaine doubts and difficulties that arise as well from the purpose of Balak as from the person of Balaam Some of reuerent account in the Church Caluin 〈◊〉 in 4 ●ib 〈◊〉 interpret this history otherwise then can stand with the circumstances of the Text and the proportion of faith in other Scriptures For they suppose that Balak sought helpe of the true God reuerenced his Prophet and had the seed of religion remaining in his heart If this were so why doth he not himselfe fly to God by prayer And why doth he not stirre vp his people to prayer Why do they not all as one man ioyne in supplications and intercessions to be helped of God Why did he require Balaam to come with cursings and bannings against Israel if there were any sparke of true piety left in his heart Againe it is imagined that Balaam was a Prophet of God and endued with the spirit of Prophesie to whom GOD vsed oftentimes and ordinarily to appeare so do make him as it were a meane betweene the true Prophets and the false Prophets therby God making himselfe knowne among the Infidels and neuer leauing himselfe without witnesse Such were the Sybils thought to be liuing among the Gentiles and giuing testimony to the truth of God But we know no such meane betweene true and false Prophets ●●swer For whosoeuer is not a true Prophet is a false Prophet and whosoeuer is a false Prophet cannot be a true Prophet of God He that is of God is a true Prophet he that is of the diuell is a false Prophet Neither doth the deliuery and vtterance of some truth make a true Prophet for then the diuell should be a true Prophet who sometime speaketh the trueth albeit to a sinister end For he confessed the Messiah to be the Sonne of God ●arke 1 24. thereby to darken the Doctrine of Christ and to discredite the power of the Gospel raising a suspition that he hath some familiarity friendship with Christ by drawing men to doubt of the truth of our redemption inasmuch as the diuell is a lyar from the beginning 〈◊〉 8 44. the father of lying And touching the Sybils they carry not any certaine credit and authority being all or the most part forged foysted in 〈◊〉 13 2 to win credite to the word of God which needeth not the lyes of any to vphold the truth and authority thereof For they are brought in speaking more clearely and euidently more plainly and particularly of Christ and his kingdome then any of the Patriarkes or Prophets then Moses or any that liued after him Esay is worthily accounted to bee an Euangelicall Prophet prophesying distinctly and determinately of the passion sufferings of Christ yet it is as nothing in comparison of that the Sybils expresse 〈◊〉 S●billine 〈◊〉 ●●nter●●ffe I●●a ●sa●o Ex● 〈…〉 11. touching the name and nature of Christ touching his originall off-spring touching his death and resurrection touching Antichrist and other enemies of the Church Now shall we thinke that God would reueale more to them then to his owne Prophets and the sonnes of the Prophets to such as liued out of the Church more then to all that were brought vp in the Church and sucked the sincere milke of the Scriptures and had the most sureword of the Prophets 〈◊〉 1● to the which they did take heede as to a light that shineth in a darke place Besides we cannot hold this Balaam for any true Prophet but for a false Prophet 〈…〉 such as Simon the Sorcerer mentioned in the Acts Notwithstanding all the goodly glozes that he maketh to winne himselfe credite and estimation whereof wee shall speake more afterward Furthermore others thinke that Balaam meant his own false gods when he saith Tarry heere this night Obiect and I will giue you an answer as the Lord shall say vnto me And againe Returne into your Land for the Lord hath refused to giue me leaue to goe with you but that he was preuented of his purpose by the true God appearing vnto him But this coniecture is ouerthrowne by the expresse words in this place For the word is Iehouah Answer a name alwayes in Scripture giuen to the true God onely and neuer applyed to any false gods yea the true God was knowne by his name among the Gentiles and by it was discerned distinguished from the Idols of the Nations which indeed are no Gods Now that we may attaine to the true meaning of this Scripture and resolue of the right interpretation thereof I will set downe certaine rules and conclusions which concerne the matter in question which being fully determined and throughly descided the truth will euidently appeare
chapter of Deuteronomy And his very drift and purpose was to curse that is to bewitch them and so to weaken them with his enchantments that they might be a cursed and detested a loathsome and forlorne people So it is noted that when the Embassadors came first vnto him to acquaint him with the purpose of Balak they had the reward of the soothsaying in their hands Numb 22 7. Yea when the Lord opened the mouth of Balaam to vtter his will against his owne will the truth hath this wretch vpon the racke he confesseth that all his sorcery and soothsaying could not preuaile against Gods people saying There is no sorcery against Iacob nor soothsaying against Israel Numb 23 23. This also sundry of the Fathers affirme that he was famous in art-magicke Aug Ser● 〈◊〉 de 〈◊〉 and mighty in working by hurtfull charmes and therby grew in great estimation among all the people of the East This likewise is the iudgment of Origen Gregory Nissen Basil and others reputing him as a Prophet of the diuell thinking he had bene oftentimes hyred for like purposes perswading themselues he had made many like experiments of his science in former times Lastly the manner of his whole proceeding ●m 24 1. in going to fetch diuinations and answers from the diuell and in preparing seuen Altars seuen Bullocks seuen Rams seuen sacrifices is altogether correspondent and answerable to the ancient Discipline of the Magitians ●natur hist 〈◊〉 8. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 Chil. 1. 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 Echog 8. who ascribed a certaine kinde of heauenly force and vertue vnto vneuen numbers as appeareth by the Poet Numero Deus impare gaudet that is A mystery diuine it is that God Delighted is in numbers that are odde This deuise proceeded at the first from the Pythagoreans ●●an in lib. 4 ●ap cap. 14. 〈◊〉 lib. 14 ●●ph 〈◊〉 in lib. 〈◊〉 who made all things to be the resemblance similitude of numbers whom Aristotle and Galen in many places laughed to scorne Wherefore seeing we haue sufficiently proued by testimony of the Scripture and authority of the ancient Fathers that Balaam was no better then a Witch Sorcerer therfore he dealeth in all his actions according to the learning of the Augures and soothsaying which we will vnfold for our better vnderstāding of this History in the last conclusion Hitherto we haue spoken of the person of Balaam and haue discouered his wicked life his wretched idolatry his execrable sorcery we haue made it plaine that both Balak the King and Balaam the false Prophet were of the vnbeleeuing Gentiles without hope in God without beleefe in Christ without taste of religion without sparke or spice of godlinesse so that in the next place wee will lay downe certaine rules of the base or bastard religion of these Nations and vpon those cōclusions as vpon a sure and certaine foundation wee will build the interpretation of this place 〈◊〉 fourth ●●clusion Therefore the fourth conclusion shall be that the Gentiles had and held many gods onely the people of Israel beleeued and worshipped one God to whom Moses said Heare O Israel the Lord our God is Lord onely Deut 6 4. When Salomon by marrying strange wiues embraced also a strange religion it is noted that his wiues turned his heart after other gods So that he followed Ashtaroth the god of the Zidonians Milcom the abhomination of the Ammonites and Chemosh the Idoll of the Moabites 1 Kings 11 4 5. This the Apostle Paul plainly teacheth 1 Cor 8 4 5 6. We know that an Idoll is nothing in the world and that there is none other God but one For though there be that are called gods whether in heauen or in earth as there bee many gods and many lords yet vnto vs there is but one God which is that Father of whom are all things and we by him Where we see the true religiō touching one God is opposed against the superstition of the Infidels touching the plurality and multitude of gods Thus then we see that in the corrupt opinion of corrupt men they had many gods some worshipping the Sunne the Moone the Starres some the Angels others Iupiter Mars Mercury Diana and many such of like sort For being left to the vanity of their owne minde they gaue diuine worship wheresoeuer any diuine gift appeared in any creature And so while they professed themselues to be wise they became fooles They turned the truth of God into a ly Rom. 1 22 25 28. worshipt the creature insted of the Creator which is blessed for euer so God gaue them vp to their hearts lusts and deliuered them vp into a reprobate mind to do those things which are not conuenient The fift conclusion The fift conclusion is that as they beleeued many gods so they imagined that euery people had his protecting god to be their patron and protection to store them with blessings and to preserue them from their enemies In each Towne and City one was chosen to bee the Deus tutelaris that is the Patron of the place for euery house is a little City or rather euery City a great house Viues his annot on August de Ciuit. Dei lib. 1. cap. 3. When he was well pleased then they prospered when he was angry they were ouercome destroied Macrob. Saturn lib. 3. cap 9. Herodian lib. 8. as is testified by sundry writers of good credit Thus do the Papists at this day For as they call vpon sundry Saints for sundry purposes vpon some for the plague vpon others for the safe deliuerance of women vpon others for the tempests on the sea vpon others to obtaine faire weather and haue a seuerall Saint for euery season so they account them their Patrons and call them by the name of their protecting gods Pa●l Ioui hist lib. 24. as appeareth by Paulus Iouius one of their owne writers of histories Thus wee see that the idolatry of our time is indeed and in truth the same with the ancient idolatry of the heathen so that albeit the names of the Idols bee changed yet the nature of the idolatry is still retained Now the truth of our conclusion is euidently collected gathered out of the Scriptures Hereunto commeth the reason produced by Iephtah to auow the lawfulnes of inheriting the Cities of the Amorites which Israel had conquered by the sword held by prescription for three hundred yeeres Iudg. 11 24. Wouldest not thou possesse that which Chemosh thy god giueth thee to possesse So whomsoeuer the Lord our God driueth out before vs them will we possesse This also appeareth in the description of the wickednesse of Ahaz 2 Chron. 28 23. In the time of his tribulation did hee yet trespasse more against the Lord for he sacrificed vnto the gods of Damascus which he falsly supposed had plagued him and he said Because the gods of the Kings of Aram helped them I will sacrifice vnto them and
not much more will hee teach them his wayes that feare him reueale his secrets to the humble-minded Psal 25 9 12.14 Let vs exercise our selues in the diligent reading hearing and conferring of his word let vs earnestly desire to profite and grow forward in the knowledge and vnderstanding of the truth from time to time according to the meanes affoorded vnto vs. We liue in the cleare light of the Gospel and in the golden dayes of Gods grace times that our fore-fathers neuer saw let vs not therefore shut our eyes against the truth that shineth in our hearts or at the least not stop our eares against the sound of the word that pierceth our eares We haue a gracious promise made vnto vs that God will giue a blessing vnto such as seeke him hee will be knowne of those that seeke to know him he will open to those that knocke for him This is the maine cause of all ignorance that we desire not knowledge It is a grieuous sin to be destitute of knowledge but it is more fearefull to haue no desire of knowledge Ignorance is the root of all impiety of infidelity of idolatry of superstition of presumption of disobedience of contempt of the word and worship of God as the Apostle rehearsing the corrupt fruites of darknes the throat an open sepulchre the mouth full of cursing the feet swift to shed blood destruction and calamity in their wayes maketh this the the cause of all The way of peace they haue not knowne Rom 3.17 So the Lord Psal 95 10 doth render this as the reason why his people erred because they had not knowne his wayes This caused the Iewes to crucifie the Lord of life and to deliuer him into the hands of sinners For if they had knowne the wisedome of God they would not haue crucified the Lord of glory 1. Cor. 2 8 according to the words of Peter preaching repentance vnto them Now brethren I know that through ignorance ye did it as did also your gouernours Act. 3.17 And as it is the root of all impiety against God and vnrighteousnesse of men so it is the cause of all iudgements and punishments The Prophet Hosea threatning Gods plagues in a fearefull hand to fall vpon the people maketh this one cause There was no knowledge of God in the land Hos 4 1 2. So at the last day when the Lord Iesus shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead He will come in flaming fire to render vengeance to those that doe not know him 1. Thes 1 8. These things being rightly and wisely considered should teach all of vs to seeke after knowledge as for siluer and search for vnderstanding as for precious stones assuring our selues that God will neuer be wanting to helpe such as hunger and thirst after righteousnesse who is neere to al those that call vpon him euen to all that call vpon him in truth Vse 3 Lastly we see his mercy is greater vnto vs then to the fathers before The Lord Iesus hath brought the doctrine of the Gospel from the bosome of his Father Acknowledge then with thankfulnesse the preferment of these latter times and let vs not seeke after dreams and visions which are abolished but hauing the sure word of the Prophets and Apostles rest in the reuealed will of God Moses had a preheminence aboue the Prophets to whom God spake not by dreames or visions but face to face as is declared Numb 12 6 7 8. I will be knowne to the Prophets by vision by dreame my seruant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all mine house vnto him wil I speake mouth to mouth and not in darke words As Moses was preferred before the other Prophets so haue we a singular priuiledge aboue the Patriarkes Prophets that haue gone before vs who wanted the light that we enioy as the Writer of the Hebrewes doth testifie declaring that the glory of our time is greater in which GOD hath vouchsafed to speake vnto vs by his own sonne At sundry times and in diuers manners God spake in olde time to our fathers by the Prophets in these last daies he hath spoken vnto vs by his Son Heb. 1 1 2. So then the condition of Christians vnder the Gospel is better then of the Israelites vnder the Law in respect of the manifestation and reuelation of Gods truth The Israelites had God reuealed by the Prophets but we haue him taught by the Son himselfe who is counted worthy of more glory then Moses Heb. 3 3.4 inasmuch as hee which hath builded the house hath more honour then the house and he that is Lord ouer it hath more honour then he that is a seruant in it Hereupon Christ calleth and accounteth the Disciples blessed Because they saw with their eyes and heard with their eares those things which many Prophets and righteous men desired to see and heare and yet could not Mat. 13 17. Let vs therefore walke worthy of this great grace and mercy let vs embrace and professe the doctrine of Christ with all zeale and as wee haue receiued greater fauour let vs bring foorth greater obedience Let vs magnifie the preaching of the Gospel whereby Christ Iesus is described in our sight as it were crucified among vs which hee hath made the strength of his arme and his great power to saue those that do beleeue to which he hath giuen such effectuall grace that it worketh more mightily then all miracles and pierceth deeper into the heart of man then all visions and reuelations yea Though one should arise from the dead to speake vnto vs Luk. 16 31. Let vs now looke for no miracles nor depend vpon strange wonders the doctrine of Christ is ●ufficiently strengthned confirmed so that no doubt of any part therof is to close vp our owne eyes that the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the Image of GOD should not shine vpon vs. 2 Cor. 4 3● If the Gospel be yet hid it is hid to thē that are lost To conclude let vs all know that God hauing brought vs into these last times requireth of vs greater knowledge faith zeale obedience and greater fruites of repentance Heb. 2 1 ● For if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and euery transgression and disobedience receiued a iust recompence of reward how shall wee escape if we neglect so great saluatiō which at the first began to be preached by the Lord and afterward was confirmed vnto vs by them that heard him Wherefore we ought diligently to giue heed vnto the things which we haue heard lest at any time we runne out Verse 5. How goodly are thy Tents O Iacob and thy Tabernacles O Israel as the valleyes that are stretched out c. Hitherto we haue spoken of the preparation and entrance into this third Prophesie Now we come to the summe and substance of it vttered by way of an admiration or exclamation the diligent consideration of the florishing estate
their eyes and will not see his brightnesse yet remaineth he the light of the world For the Sun shineth in the firmament howsoeuer some are blinde and cannot see and others might see yet make themselues blinde Therefore the Prophet I say saith chap. 60.1 2 19. Arise O Ierusalem be bright for thy light is come and the glory of the Lord is risen vpon thee thou shalt haue no more Sunne to shine by day neither shall the brightnesse of the Moone shine vnto thee for the Lord shall bee thine euerlasting light and the daies of thy sorrow shall be ended When the Sun which is called the eye of the world and is the light of the day riseth vpon vs and commeth toward vs it doth quicken and reioyce vs it causeth life fruite to appeare in those creatures which seemed to be dead dry before so if this Day-starre do truely rise vp in our hearts it will not onely enlighten our vnderstanding but so heate our frozen and dead hearts as that it will put the life of righteousnesse into vs and make vs walke as children of light that need not be ashamed who mark theyr steps and behold theyr wayes Therfore the Apostle speaketh to euery one of vs that considering the season it is now time that we shold arise from sleepe for now is our saluation nearer then when we beleeued it the night is past the day is at hand let vs therefore cast away the works of darknesse and let vs put on the armour of light walking honestly as in the day not in gluttony and drunkennesse not in chambering and wantonnesse not in strife and enuying Rom. 13 11 12. We haue heere a notable direction how to know whether this starre be risen vpon vs or not If he haue wrought these effects fruites in vs if by the bright beames of his Spirit sweet influence of his grace he hath cast out of our mindes the darke clouds of ignorance and blindnesse and caused vs to see what the acceptable will of God is if he haue sanctified vs by the holy Ghost whereby the kingdome of sinne is euery day more and more suppressed and we reformed according to the Image of God to serue him in holinesse true righteousnesse if these things be in some measure in vs we may be well assured that this starre of Iacob hath shined vpon vs. But if these things be not wrought and effected in vs but that wee remaine still in our sinnes and ignorances we haue no part in Christ we haue no portion in this Sunne of righteousnesse He hath neuer entred into our hearts his beames of grace and mercy haue neuer shined vpon vs we are still holden vnder the dominion of darknesse and in the condemnation of him who is the Prince of darknesse to wit the diuell Therefore the Apostle exhorteth all of vs Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light walke circumspectly not as fooles bu● as wise redeeming the time because the daies are euill Ephes chapt 5 verse 14. And the same Apostle in another place saith If any man bee in Christ hee is a new creature 2 Cor. 5 17. If yee haue heard him and haue beene taught by him cast off the olde man which is corrupt and put on the new man which after God is created vnto righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph 4 21 22. Let vs all remember this truth and no more deceiue our owne soules in perswading our selues to be in Christ when as yet we neuer tasted of his Spirit nor were made partakers of his heauenly graces Verse 20. And when he looked on Amalek he vttered his Parable and saide Amalek was the first of the Nations c. Hitherto wee haue spoken of the Prophesie of Balaam against the Moabites now followeth his prophesie against the Amalekites in these words which is the fift in number and the second among them that concerne the heathen that were not of Israel wherein we haue already seene in what sence the Amalekites are called the first of the Nations not that simply they were first of all people for they came of Esau as Moses witnesseth Gen. 36 16 but because they were the first that fought against Israel after they were come out of the Land of Egypt therfore shold be themselues destroyed In setting downe this practise of the Amalekites Doctrine Warres are of great antiquity we finde it warranted that warres in the world haue beene ancient among men To gather armies and to muster men to battaile is no new deuice but an old and ancient practise among the sonnes of men In the tenth chapter of the booke of Genesis verse 9 Nimrod began to be mighty vpon the earth and is saide to be a mighty hunter before the Lord the beginning of his kingdome was Babel And in the 14 chap. we haue mention of two armies one raised by Chedor-laomer and his confederates the other by the Kings of Sodome and Gomorrha these rebelling the other punishing their rebellion betweene whom was a cruell battel fought This we see in the sonnes of Iacob raising a force against the Sheehemites Gen. 34 25. vnder the conduct of Simeon Leui who were the firebrands of warre and the trumpets of sedition they came vpon them on a sodaine and slew all the maies among them and after this violence offered vnto their persons they spoiled the City We shall not need to stand further vpon this point the books of Ioshua of Iudges the books of the Kings and of the Chronicles together with lamentable experience of all ages and times confirme this to haue beene a common practise among men of olde to raise warre one against another and to try their causes and quarrels by the dint of the sword The Reasons heereof are not hard to finde Reason 1 For first howsoeuer men are carried headlong with rage and reuenge one against another yet the diuell is the bellowes to kindle the coales who was a murtherer and a man-slayer from the beginning as our Sauiour speaketh vnto the Iewes Iohn 8 44. Yee are of your father the diuell and the lustes of your father ye will do he hath bene a murtherer from the beginning and abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him This he declareth to the Church of the Smyrnians That it should come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of them into prison Reu. 2 10 and afterward chap. 12 17 it is saide The dragon was wrath with the woman went and made war with the remnant of her seed which keepe the Commandements of God This is it that Michaiah spake to Ahab Who shall entice Ahab that he may goe and fall at Ramoth Gilead Then there came foorth a spirit and stood before the Lord and saide I will entice him 1 Kings 22 20. Seeing then the diuell is the stirrer of diuision and the kindler of contention between man and man
it may be smothered with the cloudy mystes and darknesse of the night yet it shall preuaile and breake foorth as the light in the open sight of all men that haue spirituall eyes to looke vppon it Seeing therefore the truth of God shining brightly hath alwayes beene resisted and that the true Prophets of God haue beene withstood so as they could neuer serue God quietly through the malice of Satan who continually goeth about to stop the course of sound doctrine let vs not be offended with false opinions it hath beene so from the beginning and will continue so vnto the ending of the world but rather labour to haue our hearts established in the truth that we be not carried about with euery blast as the waues of the sea and try all things holding fast that which is good 1 Thess 5 21. We must not refuse and reiect the truth of God because the father of lyes seeketh to hinder the free passage of it by broaching lyes among the people It is an euident signe that the truth is among vs because Satan sweateth so much against it and laboureth to poyson it with his owne inuentions Vse 2 Secondly seeing false Teachers are thrust vpon the Church to draw it into errour and falshoods this sheweth the great necessity of the Ministery of the word not onely to ingender true knowledge of repentance and obedience to God but also to continue men in the faith and to prepare them against heresies and false opinions And surely the mercy of God heerein is great vnto vs in commanding the sanctification of the Sabbath a duty so much neglected of master and seruant wherby we are charged to rest from our labours to assemble together in one place and to attend vpon the Ministery of the word For how many among our selues and elsewhere do neuer so much as thinke of God or of religion doe neuer heare of the danger of sinne of the necessity of grace of the reformation of theyr life but on the Lords day If there were not a set day appointed for these purposes and a solemne time of assembling our selues determined the greatest sort would become as rude and vnreformed as the Barbarians or the wilde Irish If then we would bee directed in the truth and supported from falling into errour we must submit our selues vnto the Ministery of the word Mal. chap. 2 verse 7. and be content to be guided by the ordinance of God This is it which our Sauiour speaketh reprouing the Sadduces who denyed the resurrection Are ye not therefore deceiued because ye know not the Scripture nor the power of God Mark chapter 12 verse 24. It is dangerous to rest where there is no bread to sustaine the body and to preserue life It is dangerous to dwell in a City assaulted by enemies hauing no watchman to giue warning of theyr approaching It is dangerous to haue a flocke of sheepe compassed about with wolues hauing no Shepheard to attend vpon them and to looke vnto them But of all dangers it is the greatest to liue where the bread of Gods word is not broken where the sound of Gods siluer Trumpet is not heard and where Gods flocke is not ledde in greene pastures The word is a Pearle of all Pearles which a wise Merchant would purchase at a great price rather then liue without it Where the preaching of the word ceaseth the people perish Prou. chapter 29 18. Where the blinde leade the blinde both fall into the ditch Matthew chap. 15 verse 14. Where the watchman bloweth not the Trumpet and the people is not warned Ezek. chap. 33 verse 6 both the Watchman and the people are taken away in theyr sinnes Where the Salt of Gods word doth not season the people with holy and wholesome doctrine Math. chapter 5 verse 13 they rot and putrifie in their corruptions As then we would be free from errour and not be carried away with false doctrine so it is required of vs to be careful in vsing the meanes that may bring vs to the truth and keepe vs from the pathes of falsehood And it shall be a vaine thing for any man to imagine himselfe to be able or likely to keepe himselfe pure and vndefiled from errour and heresie so long as wee despise the ordinary way that is allotted and appointed to preserue vs from falling into false opinions Thirdly seeing it is a note of a false teacher Vse 3 to lay stumbling blockes before men and to draw them to euill and entice them to wickednesse by this rule it will euidently appeare that Popish Religion is a most wicked Religion and the Teachers thereof false Prophets The Religion maintained in the church of Rome established in the Trent-councell defended by the sworne vassals of the Pope hath cancelled and disanulled the whole Law of God The church of Rome ●pealeth the whole Mo● Law of bo● Tables it hath abrogated and repealed eyther directly or indirectly eyther expressely or by consequent eyther plainly or in effect all the commandements of the Morall Law which God hath left to be a rule of righteousnesse to remaine in full strength power and vertue for euer This will easily appeare vnto vs if wee enter into the particular consideration of both the Tables The first Commandement chargeth vs to haue and to holde the true God onely for our God and to cleaue vnto him with full purpose of heart But the Church of Rome resteth not in this one GOD they teach vs to make and acknowledge more Gods They make the Pope to be God which title both in plaine words is ascribed and in power attributed vnto him For touching the name wher by he is named the Canonists call him Our Lord God the Pope Others cal him The supreme God on earth a visible God the spouse of the Church 〈◊〉 dedicat 〈◊〉 ●●incip 〈◊〉 praef de 〈◊〉 Rom. the corner-stone of the Church the head of the Church the Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah the light of the world the King of Kings the prince of the Church Againe they aduance the Saints departed into the honor of gods praying vnto them and making them to hear our prayers to know our hearts to vnderstand our thoughts and to merit for vs at the hands of God which none can do but the Son of God They do notoriously make the blessed Virgin the mother of Christ 〈◊〉 ●●cio beat 〈◊〉 to be as a god in expresse words call her a goddesse yea they do in effect equall her with Christ and ascribe as much to her as vnto him As Christ is called our Lord so they call her our Lady hee our King she our Queene he our Mediator she our mediatresse he like vs in all things sinne onely excepted so she deuoid of sinne he the onely meanes whereby we must be saued she our life our ioy our hope our help our comfort our stay in troubles Lastly to fill vp the measure of their sinne they make the
thus regard the people and happy are the people that haue such magistrates The blessing of such as are ready to perish shall come vpon the heads of such magistrates and the loynes of the distressed shall call for and bring downe mercy vpon them theirs that thus doe shew mercy Let all that haue the calling of Iob and sit in the gate and in the place of iustice and iudgment bee like vnto him and let them not feare the faces of men but be bold in the cause of the poore or rather in the cause of God And let mee say to them as God doth to Ioshua Be strong and of a good courage be not afraid neyther be dismayed for the Lord your God is with you whithersoeuer you goe Iosh 1 9. Hence it is that the Scripture teacheth how such as are set ouer the people should be qualified and with what vertues they ought to be adorned Exod. 18 21 first they must be such as feare God this is the beginning and fountaine of all other graces where this is once rooted and grounded in the heart it is as a banke that keepeth out all euill and maketh them not to feare the faces of men wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer it is not yet planted there is roome for a legion of all impieties to enter as Abraham sheweth Gen. 20 11 The feare of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my wiues sake Secondly they must bee men of truth wherein they resemble the God of truth the contrary will transforme them into the image of Satan who was a lyar from the beginning and the father thereof Ioh. 8.44 This should bee the end of all their hearing and determining this is the marke they ought to shoot at that truth may be brought to light which is sought to be couered and smothered in darknes Euery false sentence in iudgement is an open and publike lye and turneth the seate of iustice into a sinke of iniquity and ouerturneth the ordinance of God Thirdly they must be men hating couetousnesse for the desire of money is the root of all euill and a bribe blindeth the eyes of the wise and casteth dust or rather dung in their faces that they cannot iudge righteously betweene a man and his brother nor pronounce sentence without partiality But they ought to haue cleane hands and a pure heart that they may doe no vnrighteousnesse in iudgment forasmuch as they must not respect the person of the poore nor honour the person of the mighty Leuit. 19 15. Psal 82 3 4. 2 Chron 19 6.7 These things must be learned and practised of them Thirdly from this ground we may be assured Vse 3 that it is not in it selfe vnlawfull to goe to Law and to sue euen a brother if iust cause require if hee may bee accounted a brother that giueth iust cause of prosecuting the Law against him I say it is in it selfe lawfull because the best things may bee abused and corrupted and lawfull things may be peruerted if they be vsed vnlawfully To try our right is a right thing and to vse the Law is nothing else but to appeale to the magistrate and to appeale to the magistrate is to seeke helpe of God Obiect It will be obiected that Paul reproueth the Corinthians in that a brother goeth to Law with a brother 1 Cor. 6 6 and againe I speake it to your shame is it so that there is not a wise man among you no not one that shall bee able to iudge betweene his brethren Answ verse 5. I answere hee reproueth not the thing it selfe but the corrupt affection and practice of those that vsed or rather abused the Lawes whose sinne was hereby also aggrauated that they did it before the infidels who thereby tooke occasion to mocke at Christ and to contemne the Christian Religion to see the professors therof to bee giuen so eagerly to prosecute their profits that for euery toy and trifle yea for the wagging of a straw would trouble the courts and seates of iudgment This doth discouer a contentious spirit and a minde altogether giuen to cauil and contend a custome too common in many howbeit nothing beseeming the Christian Faith and holy Religion which they seeme to embrace Againe it argueth an heart set vpon reuenge which ought to bee farre from all the faithfull who ought rather to be ready to forgiue as they haue receiued forgiuenesse Obiection Secondly it may be obiected that Christ saith Math. 5 40. If any man will sue thee at the Law and take away thy coate let him haue thy cloake also Answ I answere as before hee onely condemneth the vsuall dealing of men where they go to Law and sue one another in splene and desire of reuenge for trifles and things of no value and besides he speaketh comparatiuely rather then we should seek a priuate reuenge we should be ready to suffer a new wrong and be furnished with patience as with armour of proofe not onely to be stripped of one garment but to endure the losse of other temporall goods To conclude therefore we must be assured that as it is lawfull to seeke helpe of the magistrate so it is lawfull to seeke the benefit of the Law prouided that we vse it lawfully 〈◊〉 the Law 〈◊〉 be vsed ●●●fully To this end we must know how the Law may bee vsed lawfully First wee must not vse it of pleasure or wantonnesse or of custome as the manner of many is who are neuer well but when they are in Law but we must vse it sparingly as we vse Physicke not as meat and drinke No man will vse Physicke euery day but he keepeth a better dyet It is meat and drinke to some to goe to Law and they are neuer quiet till they haue quenched their thirst by vndoing others and themselues Secondly it must be vsed vppon necessity when the case cannot otherwise be decided They say commonly a bad end is better then the Law If then wee may end our controuersies without troubling the magistrat we ought not to refuse that means Thirdly we must not propound to our selues as the end of our suites to be reuenged of our neighbour for then we shall neuer carry vpright hearts in that which we doe Fourthly wee must not goe to Law for trifles the matters must be of moment and importance for which we contend Fiftly our end must not be to vndoe one another but to obtaine our owne right Lastly we must not be giuen to strife and contention and in an humour seeke occasions to begin and breed quarrels 1 Cor. 3 3. Phil. 2.2 It must bee our wisedome to cut off occasions from them that seeke after them and to stope the flood-gates where the waters seeke their passage For when contention is once raised it is not easily stopped and therefore ere it bee begunne let vs preuent it Lastly from hence all persons haue direction Vse 4 what to do that liue vnder the gouernment of
bound her soule 7 And her husband heard it and held his peace in the day when he heard it then her vowes shall stand c. Now Moses intreateth of such vowes as were made by those that are vnder the authority of others as children vnder their parents concerning which the father hath authority to disanull them Hereby the power of all parents is so magnified and aduanced that a vow made immediatly to God is frustrate there is a meere nullity of it except they confirme it They haue power to make it good and they haue power to make it voide Doctrine Great is the iurisdiction authority of parents ouer their children Heereby wee learne that great is the authority and iurisdiction of parents ouer their children by the Law of God and Nature The very heathen haue this truth shining in their hearts that parents are to be honoured and that their authority should be inuiolable Exod. 20 12. Eph. 6 1 2. Ierem. 35 6 7 8 c. Gen. 27 8 43. and 28. 2. When the father sayth Goe the child goeth when he sayth Arise he ariseth when he sayth Come he commeth Christ our Sauiour giueth testimony of his perfect obedience whom all both men and Angels stand bound to worship and to whom euery knee must bow of things in heauen of things in earth and of things vnder the earth Philip. 2 yet hee was subiect to his parents and went with them Luke 2.51 1. King 2.19 The reasons are euident Reason 1 First the precept of honouring parents hath the first place in the second Table and is set before all other so that next vnto GOD we are bound to reuerence them to whom we are most bound and it is the foundation and band of obedience to all the rest of the commandements that follow For if men doe not stand in awe of the Magistrate the father of the Common-wealth and the Captaine of the people all the other would soone be violated 2 Kings 20 5. Againe the Apostle teacheth that this is the first Commandement with promise Eph. 6 2 it hath a speciall promised annexed of long life Thirdly children receiue great and manifold blessings from the hands of theyr parents and gouernours and likewise are freed from many euils and dangers that otherwise they might fall into Fourthly patents giue life and breath and beeing after a sort vnto them for children receiue all these from thē Fiftly parents are honoured by sundry titles and names the which are giuen to God himselfe Matth. 23.9 One is your father which is in heauen therefore call no man your father vpon earth Obiect 1 Touching this impregnable and inuincible truth sundry questions may be asked and diuers doubts to be remooued As first seeing their authority is so great why doeth our Sauiour speake of hating father and mother as Luke 14 26 If any man come to me and do not hate his father and mother he cannot be my disciple Answ I answer Christ speaketh in that place comparatiuely that is wee must not regard them in respect of himselfe whom wee ought to loue aboue all and so it is expounded Mathew 10 37 Hee that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthy of me To loue our parents next after GOD is piety but to loue them more then God is impiety Wee hate them therefore when we loue them lesse then God in comparison of whom we should hate our liues Obiect 2 Secondly Christ forbiddeth vs to call any man father as we haue heard before Matth. 23. Answ I answere Christ condemneth not the name or appellation giuen to men simply for then he should be contrary to himselfe where he alloweth the title to earthly fathers Math. 7 9. Marke 7 11 and the Apostle should bee contrary to his master 1 Cor. 4 15. Therefore he meaneth that no man is or can be our Father as God is to wit that we should trust in them and make them the authors of our life and the giuers of all good things that come vnto vs. Obiect 3 Thirdly what if our parents be euil persons and vngodly ought we then to obey them yeelde vnto their authority who are by their wickednesse vnworthy thereof Answ I answer It skilleth not whether they bee good or euill touching our obedience For euill parents are our parents and euill Magistrates are Magistrates and euill Ministers are Ministers Seruants are commanded to bee subiect to theyr masters not onely vnto them that are good and gentle but to them that are froward 1 Peter 2 18 so ought children to yeeld obedience vnto their fathers though they be euill Hence it is that God saith generally in the Law Honour thy father and mother not honor them when they are good onely But it will be farther obiected What if they Obiect 4 be excommunicate persons may they then be obeyed or should children then do any dutie to their parents and is not that to set light by that censure I answer Answer Excommunication rightly vsed is indeede the most greeuous iudgement that can bee inflicted in this life both in respect of the soule and of the bodie and is as it were the messenger of death It is a great punishment to be banished from a well ordered City much more to be thrust out of the Church which is the Common-wealth of God and of his Son Christ Dauid did greatly lament his estate and condition when hee wanted the holy assemblies of the faithfull among the Infidels and could not come into the presence of God with his people and did thinke himself driuen away from abiding in the inheritance of the Lord 1 Sam. 26 19. Who would not tremble and be afraid to bee deliuered vp vnto Satan 1 Cor. 5 6. the enemie of God The children of Israel were deliuered ouer to Nebucadnezzar and other wicked tyrants to be afflicted and they bewailed exceedingly such bodily captiuity Psalme 137 1 2 how much more fearful then ought the excōmunicate person to esteeme it to be deliuered vp not to wicked and vngodly men but to satan himselfe The prince that ruleth in the hart of the children of disobedience Notwithstanding all fellowshippe and familiarity with them is not denyed to vs. It is lawfull for the family to conuerse with the gouernors of the family though they be excommunicate persons The wife may not deny due beneuolence nor the childe dutifull obedience if he bid them go they must goe or to come they must come neither are they by such behauiour culpeable or guilty of their sinne of which we see more before chap. 5. Fourthly if the sonne be a Magistrate Obiect 5 the father a priuate man it may bee demanded whether he be to yeeld obedience to his father I answer Answ though the father must obey the sonne as hee is a Magistrate yet in another respect the sonne must obey the father as he is the father so that neytner is the sonne to bee depriued of the honour and
owne sins against the fruite of your owne bodies but turne ro God betimes that he may turne vnto you He is faithfull in his word Whatsoeuer he hath threatned it is surer then the heauens it must certainly come to passe If you prouoke him by your sins he wil prouoke you to your faces with his iudgements vnto the vtter confusion of your selues of your posterity after you for euer Vse 3 Lastly this doctrine also belongeth to children putteth them in mind of sundry duties to be performed by them which may bee reduced to these branches First they must not imitate their fathers sins secondly they must pray to God not to remember their fathers iniquities thirdly they must be careful to look to their children that they leade an holy sanctified life that so they may call in Gods iudgements which otherwise hee might iustly bring on them Touching the first they must not follow their fathers in that which is euill The first duty of children All inferiors are ready to walke in the steps of their superiors and for the most part thinke themselues discharged from all crime or punishment if they be like to them no other then they haue bin before them The prophet requireth this duty of the people Psal 78 8. The Apostle willeth the church to follow him so far as he followed Christ 1 Cor. 11 1. So is it required of children to follow their fathers but no farther then they followe the trueth This many among the Turks and Infidels may pleade for themselues and alledge that they worship God as their forefathers did for many generations The 2. duty of children yet this shal not serue their turnes The 2. duty is to pray to God not to remember the iniquities of their forefathers as iustly he might do to the confusion of their posterity For why doth he not leaue them to walke in their waies but that he is mercifull Hence it is that the Lord saith Esay 65 6 7. Behold it is written before me I will recompence euen recompence into their bosome your iniquities Ioh. Wiga●di explic in Esay the iniquities of your fathers togither c. God punisheth the sinnes of the fathers in their posterity and thereore do punishments fall vppon the posterity by reason of the sins of the ancestors This doth Daniel in his prayer acknowledge Let thine anger and thy fury be turned away from thy City Ierusalem thy holy mountaine because for our sinnes and for the iniquities of our fathers c. chap. 9 16 and therefore in the confession of sinnes that hee made before verse 8. he sayth O Lord to vs belongeth confusion of face to our Kings to our Princes and to our Princes and to our Fathers because wee haue sinned against thee So Ezra 9 7. Neh. 9 34. Ier. 32 18. Lam. 5 7. Exod. 20 5. When diuers generations continue in one sinne successiuely the Lord vseth ordinarily to punish the latter more seuerely then the former that thereby the sons might be prouoked to feare to do the like when they see the sins of their fathers Ezek 18 14 and the longer his patience is abused the greater sin is committed The 3. dutie of children the greater vengeance is deserued Thirdly all children must be carefull of their posterity and leade an vnblameable sanctified life that so God may giue them the grace of his Spirit not leaue them to themselues to walke in the euil wayes of their fathers that haue gone before them 16 And they came neere vnto him and saide We will build sheepfolds here for our Cattle Cities for our little ones 17 But we our selues wil go ready armed before the children of Israel c. 18 We will not returne vnto our houses c. 19 For we will not inherit with them on yonder side Iordan or forward because our inheritance is fallen to vs on this side c. The Tribes being reproued do answer for themselues expounding their meaning or at lest propounding equal conditions that they will go vp armed before their brethren and that they will not returne till all their bretheren were possessed of their inheritance that they wold claime no inheritance beyond Iordan but rest in that already purchased The Israelites would haue bin much weakened if these had staid behind Therfore they do here promise that they wil go formost of all Wee saw before that it is God only that giueth the victory yet we see the meanes are not neglected Howsoeuer therefore wee ought not to put our trust confidence in the meanes yet wee must carefully vse the same that so wee may be able to performe those things which the law of God and our calling require of vs. Againe in their disclaiming inheritance beyond Iordan we learne that euery one should be contented with that estate that God hath allotted vnto him whatsoeuer it be Moreouer we see how these two Tribes offer themselues to be companions with their brethren in passing ouer Iordan and in conquering the land Doctrine We must haue a fellow feeling of others miseries in taking such part as they did This teacheth That it is the duty of all Gods Children to haue a fellow-feeling and compassion of the miseries afflictions of their brethren 2 Sam. 11 11. Heb. 13 3. 1 Cor. 12 26. Rom. 12.15 When Abraham heard that Lot was taken prisoner he armed his seruants sought to recouer him out of the handes of the enemies Gen. 14 14. Moses also chose to suffer aduersity with the people of God to leaue all his preferment in Pharaohs Court Heb. 11 he would not enioy the pleasures of sin when the church endured the misery of aduersity Reason 1 The grounds follow First wee ought to haue brotherly loue in vs not onely loue but brotherly loue this wil worke in vs a pittifull heart toward those that are afflicted The Apostle Iohn professeth himselfe a cōpanion with the Church in tribulation in the kingdom and patience of Christ he was greeued for their greef the bowels of compassion were mooued in him for their afflictions Re. 1 9. And the writer to the Hebrews saith Let brotherly loue continue Heb. 13 1. Secondly this dutie performed leaueth a blessing behind it God hath rewarded it for therby some haue entertained Angels vnawares Heb. 13 2 and he will reward it alwaies Thirdly Christ accounteth this as done to himselfe when his children are refreshed he is refreshed when they are cloathed or fed or visited or comforted he is cloathed fed and visited comforted Math. 25 35. Fourthly we are members one of another as we are ioyned vnto Christ as members to the head are mystically made one with him so all the faithfull are fellow-members of the same body In the members of the body if a thorn run into the foot the head stoopeth to it the eies look vpon it the fingers pull it out the eare wil heare
or are in our mindes as when they are releeued and helped out of theyr misery For as we remember God when we serue him so we remember the needy when we succour them It is noted of Saul and al Israel that they went to releeue Iabesh Gilead when it was beleagred by Nahash the Ammonite who would make a couenant with them vpon no other condition but that he might thrust out all their right eyes and lay it for a reproch vpon all Israel 1 Sam. 11 1 2. So did Dauid and his men goe to releeue Keilah spoyled and oppressed by the Philistims chap. 23 5. The booke of the Iudges is full of this argument they thought it theyr duty to releeue the enthralled estate poore condition of the Church lying vnder the hard yoke and heauy seruitude of the Moabites the Canaanites the Midianites the Ammonites the Philistims and sundry others So that all Gods seruants although themselues were free from trouble yet must they put too theyr hands and set too theyr shoulders and employ all theyr strength as farre as God enableth them to deliuer the Church from trouble and to procure the present benefite and good estate thereof Wee shewed before in this chapter that we must haue some compassion and a fellow-feeling of the miseries and afflictions of Gods people this doctrine goeth farther and pierceth deeper and teacheth that we must put foorth our selues to maintaine the publike cause of the afflicted church and procure the peace thereof Reason 1 And so much the rather wee ought to doe this because of the wicked mindes and wretched endes that the vngodly set before theyr eyes For what is it I pray you that the enemy the common aduersary and oppressour of the Church looketh after and layeth before him Is it the persons of them that they seeke to spoyle or is it to take away theyr goods and substance from them or any other thing that might bee deare vnto them in earthly things All these indeed are sought after but are these the chiefe marke and scope that they ayme after or would these taken away cōtent them No no they shoote at a farther thing to deface the seruice and worshippe of God and to blaspheme his glorious Name being themselues the children of darknes and not able to beare the light of the truth they oppose themselues against the same The Citties and Altars of our GOD ought to bee of greatest account and in highest price more deare to vs then thousands of gold and siluer for which we must be content to leaue father and mother wife and children that we may with freedome of conscience enioy professe the truth This meditation was it that moued Ioab when he went out with a strong hand saw the enemies gathered together to roote out the Church out of the Land and the truth out of the Church to fight against them 2. Sam. 10 12. Be of good courage and let vs play the men for our people and for the Cities of our God and the Lord doe that which seemeth him good whe●e hee sheweth that the chiefe motiue to waxe strong and valiant in battell was to maintaine the Cities and seruice of God Seco●●●y this hath promise of a great blessing Reason 2 and a good yssue it is no vaine or fruitelesse thing whereunto we are moued Many men are discomfited and quite out of heart because they see no blessing annexed But howsoeuer the persecuter and oppressor for a time preuayleth and entreth into the houses and habitations of God yet theyr destruction sleepeth not God hath reserued them as the chaffe before the winde and as the stubble before the fire Resting therefore on the gracious promises of God and knowing that Heauen and earth shall perish Math. 5 17. but no one iote shal passe or faile from his word beeing assured that the couenant that he hath made is surer then the couenant of the day and the night of the Sun and of the Moone wee must arme our selues with this assured perswasion that the destruction of the enemy is determined as Esay 16 3 4. speaking to Moab he saith Take counsell execute iudgement c then he addeth the reason for the extortioner is at an ende the spoiler ceaseth the oppressours are consumed out of the Land Esay 16 3 4. Wherefore albeit the enemies of God and his people seeme long to florish to glory in theyr wickednesse and to insult ouer the godly that are vnder the crosse yet they shall not escape the wrath and vengeance of God so that none should be ashamed to thrust thēselues into danger to maintaine the common cause of the Church The vses follow First this putteth vs in Vse 1 minde of the estate of the faithfull which oftentimes endure more trouble in this world both inwardly outwardly then any other as were easie to be shewed and proued by the examples of Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph Iob Ieremy Dauid and Christ himselfe the perfect patterne of suffering affliction It was no otherwise with his Apostles also and experience teacheth vs that the church in this world fareth no better as it complaineth Lamen 1 12. Is it nothing to you all yee that passe by Behold and see if there bee any sorrow like vnto my sorrow which is done vnto me wherwith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his anger Thus it pleaseth the Lord to weane them from the loue of the world because he loueth them would haue them long after heauen and heauenly things We are oftentimes so peruerse and vntoward that we must be put into the fire that we may be refined and reformed and must endure many greeuous corrections that we may bee framed to delight in spirituall things Besides Satan and his instruments do hate vs and labour continually to seeke our destruction and therefore let vs neuer promise to our selues worldly peace and prosperity neyther be offended at the great afflictions which we heare to come vpon the godly but rather prepare our selues to looke for one trouble to come vpon the necke of another whiles we liue vpon the earth Vse 2 Secondly conclude from hence the fearefull wofull miserable estate of the church when all the friends and comforters of it are gone when they that should be the shield and shelter of it do flye backe and dare not shew theyr faces as often it falleth out then onely faith for the present and hope for the time to come must hold vp our heads that we sinke not into the bottome of despayre This is it which the Prophet saith I looked and there was none to helpe and I wondred that there was none to vphold therefore mine owne arme brought saluation to me c. And I will tread downe the people in mine anger and make them drunke in my fury c. Esay 63 5 6. When Haman the aduersary of the Iewes whose malice was hereditary vnto him and deriued from his fathers had plotted the ruine
Exod. 20 7 and therefore the errour of the Romanists is blasphemous who lay this iniustice vpon God that he forgiueth the faithfull theyr offences but retayneth the punishment All men doe very willingly confesse that it is a very haynous crime to condemne the iust man but they doe not in like manner and with like zeale abhorre from iustifying the vngodly but the Spirit of God testifyeth that they are both abhominable in his sight he abhorreth the one no lesse then the other Why the guilty ought not to bee spated and so it ought to bee with those that sit in place of iudgment otherwise they transgresse the Law of God which commandeth that his blood should be vpon his owne head Againe such persons are for the most part made worse and worse and are neuer brought to repentance as experience commonly teacheth Besides by this sparing and winking at euill the godly are often grieued and sometimes are emboldened to euill Lastly other wicked men by their example are encouraged and theyr hearts are hardned Hence it is that Salomon sayth Prou. 24 24 Hee that saith vnto the wicked Thou art righteous him shal the people curse nations shall abhorre him This equity doth Moses also propound in the Law If there bee a controuersie betweene men and they come vnto iudgement that the Iudges may iudge them then they shal iustifie the righteous and condemne the wicked Deut. 25 2. But it will be said Obiect that the Scripture teacheth that God iustifieth the vngodly Rom. 4 5 and therefore hee that executeth iudgement may do the like also I answere first Answ that is lawfull for God to do which is not lawfull for man Againe God in iustifying the vngodly of vnrighteous maketh him righteous and by paying a deare price for him cleanseth and washeth away his impiety and giueth vnto him another minde then he had before which no mortall man is able to do and therefore it is vnreasonable to pretend the example of God or to alledge it to iustifie themselues when they iustifie the vngodly This corruption must needes be euill because it proceedeth from euill fountaines for iudgment is stayed or peruerted eyther through feare or couetousnesse or hope or hatred or fauour or malice or letters or such like affections which blinde the eyes and stoppe the eares and peruert the wise 2 Chron. 19 6 7. But in the meane season they displease the Lord and by winking at the wicked they make thēselues abominable to the chiefe Iudge of heauen and earth before whom they must come to be iudged and in sparing of greeuous transgressours which ought to be punished they make themselues accessaries to theyr transgressiōs many times like Saul Ahab Pilate they beare a part of the punishment Secondly this admonisheth all Iurers that Vse 2 they take great heed whom they acquit and whom they condemne If they condemne the innocent theyr blood will be required at their hands And if they iustifie any that are guilty of blood which is a crying sinne or other haynous enormities labour the rest of their fellowes companions to ioyne with them they are brethren in euill and stayne the iudgment seat with vnrighteous proceeding which is worse then if they should cast dust and doung in the Iudges face These doe often forget that they are sworne men and giue theyr verdict vpon theyr oth for if they did they would not so lightly set theyr soules to sale These for the most part thinke themselues excused by the Iudge and hang more vpon his mouth then hold themselues to the matter Such persons ought not to be simple men but such as should be able to iudge and to discerne betweene right and wrong Vse 3 Lastly let vs come to witnesses which are other parties in the matter of iudgment and are especially aymed at in this place it directeth and informeth them to know what they do and where they stand Let them take heed what they depose lest by forswearing themselues they renounce the liuing God and bring damnation vpon theyr soules A man would thinke that an oth were such a weight and burden vpon the conscience that no man would dare to steppe forth and lay his hand vpon the booke and afterward sell himselfe to the diuell There is nothing so vile wretched but some will bee found as vile to set it on foot If Ahab be sicke for Naboths vineyard Iezabel can quickly by her letters procure two false varlets and vnthrifts in Samaria to beare false witnesse against him 1 Kings 21 10. So when the malice and enuy of the Pharisees grew to be extreme against Christ and that they feared the fall of theyr kingdome though he were innocency it selfe yet there were found false witnesses to condemne the innocent Math. 26 60 61. Hence it is that the Ecclesiasticall Lawes haue not hand ouer head admitted all without difference and discretion to be brought and allowed as witnesses but haue set downe seuen iust considerations of exceptions against witnesses in this manner Aetas conditio sexus discretio fama Fortuna fides The first point to be respected in witnesses is that they be of age for such as are infants children or yonglings know not the depth of the cause nor the validity of an oth nor the distinction of matters whereupon they are to be produced and therefore they may stand by while the iury is impanelled And to these we may ioyne the old doting age which decayeth in vnderstanding no lesse then it doth in strength of body Secondly the condition of the persons whether they be bond or free The tenant for his land-lord the seruant for his Master the father and sonne one for another are worthily esteemed to be partiall witnesses Thirdly the sexe whether it be man or woman for a womans testimony wanteth much of the weight of the other because many of them are partiall and passionate light creatures if it be opposed against the testimony of a wise and considerate man They are soone ledde aside by affection by pitty or fauor and therefore neuer any of them were admitted to sit in place of iudgement where the Iudge should know neyther father nor mother Fourthly discretion for idiots and lunatike persons or mad men would prooue but mad witnesses to be admitted in tryals of truth who cannot discerne aright of themselues and of theyr owne estate For how should they be able to diue into the causes of other men that haue not the vse of reason or vnderstanding Fiftly fame is not to be contemned in this case for they should bee men of good report and credit in the places of theyr abode not common swearers not lyers not drunkards and ruffians for such as sweare commonly make no more conscience of an oth taken before a Iudge then of an oth sitting vpon theyr ale-bench and such as are tainted and stayned with the reproch of many euils will easily bee drawne to adde one sin of periury