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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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the end Isa 26.14 Both the master and the servant Both him that wakeneth and exciteth and him that is wakened and answereth the call meaning the whole house and family should be cut off God judgements against the wicked rest not in them onely Doctrine but also are extended to their families seed and posterity Isa 26.14 and destroyed all their memory Out of the Tabernacle of Iaakob That is take them out of the land of the living bringeth death upon them and putteth an end to their daies and letteth them be no longer among the living Though it may reach to their cutting off from heaven yea it containeth this whence It is a judgement to the wicked to be cut off eyther naturally or violently untimely or in his ripe age Doctrine Isaiah 26.14 and scattered them And him that offereth an offering Or him also that offered Though he offer noting the nature of men that when they are convinced of their sinnes they thinke to please God by outward things as sacrifices or fastings or outward hearing and multitude of prayers though they continue in their sinnes It is the nature and practice of carnall and naturall men Doctrine when the judgements of God are denounced against their sinnes and the wrath of God declared against them To take any course to free and deliver themselves from them and to appease his wrath rather then humble themselves and forsake their sinnes And sometimes by flying to humane helpes sometimes by religiousenesse as by offerings or fastings afflicting the body outward hearing and multitude of praying and such like It is manifest in these so in Saul 1 Sam. 15.14.15 And Hezekiah when he was led by nature and the common course of men 2 Kings 18.14 So in them Mich 6.6.7 and Isai 58.2.3 c. Because it is naturall unto them Reason they have it with other corruptions propagated from their first parents for thus Adam and Eve dealt with the Lord Gen. 3. To see the policy of Antichrist and the Church of Rome Vse who knowes not from how many things the Antichristian Church of Rome promiseth to her followers remission of sinne and so freedome from the judgements of God never once making mention of true repentance or forsaking of their sinne As the Sacrament of pennance almes-deeds forgiving of injuries and offences abundance of charity holy water sprinkled devout beating of the breast whipping of themselves pilgrimages all sorts of good workes And as the Rhemist in Math. 10. ver 12. Episcopall blessing for Christs death with them doth not take away daily sinnes but originall the sacrifice of the Masse doth that * Sicut cor Pus Domini semel oblatum est in cruce pro debita origi nali sic of fertur jugiter pro nostris quotidianis delictis in altari Thomas de sacra Altaris So as the body of our Lord was once offered upon the crosse for our originall debt so it is continually offered upon the altar for our daily sinnes And Catharinus in libro impresso Romae writeth * Christi passionem pro originali tantū●eccato satisfecisse actualibus baptis antecedentibus missam vero satisfacere pro peccatis baptismum primam justificationem sequentibus Catharinus in libro impresso Romae That Christs passion made satisfaction onely for originall and such sinnes as went before baptisme but the Masse satisfies for sinnes committed after baptisme and our first justification Finally to say nothing of their Jubile and their Ladies Psalter and her Pantofle and an hundred such things And him that offereth an offering Though he offer an offering and thinke thereby to escape and appease Gods wrath yet shall he not prevaile nor escape In vaine do men thinke to appease the wrath of God Doctrine and to escape his judgements when he is angry and threatneth by any outward means as offerings fastings prayers and such performance of parts of his worship they remaining impenitent in their sinnes and keeping them still So is it here and manifest in that Micha 6.6.7.8 and Isaiah 58. à 2. ad finem Psal 51.16.17 Because God is a Spirit Reason 1 and he will be worshipped in spirit and truth outward things onely cannot please him being different from his nature yea they that onely bring them worship him neither in Spirit nor truth but in body and outward things in hypocrisie and dissembling c. Because all offerings a man brings to God Reason 2 all outward service he performes to him is accepted not for it selfe but if it be it is for him or else rejected for him and not he for it for though men which are corrupt doe accept men for their gifts and disliking their persons yet feeling from their purses they will soone change their mindes and like of them whatsoever they disliked before shall be excused and lessened It is not so with God he accepts men not for their gifts but their gifts for them or else rejects them and their gifts Because they shew more contempt against the Lord Reason 3 then if they never sought him with any such meanes or came before him which is manifest thus A man hath offended his Prince for which he threatneth and menaceth him to execute or destroy him If he seek not to him at all by any outward means or come not to him when he is summoned it is but contumacy not contempt for he may doe it out of feare Now contempt and feare cannot stand together in one subject but if he come and seek him by outward things never shewing any sorrow for his offence make no promise of his amendment but thinke thus to stay justice it must needs be judged a grosse contempt And where once contempt appeareth there no reconcilement at all can be expected So in this By the former poynt wee saw the policy of Popery Vse 1 by this we may see the impiety of it By the former they please many by this they perish as many And herein appeares their grosse impiety that for their owne gaine they care not how many thousands they lose not that of purpose they would perish them but that else they cannot profit themselves for if rhey should not teach them that such things forespoken of would please the Lord and free them from his wrath they would be of a small account and lower price and so their gaine and wealth decay because they may say as Acts 19.25 Sirs ye know that by this craft we have our goods Their impiety then is this that they hold them in the error that these things will please God and will not till they perish by such a conceit like deceitfull and unfaithfull Lawyers who to get mony and gaine to themselves perswade their Clyents tearme after tearme till the day of hearing come that a plea they have drawne for them will hold good and then they confesse themselves to be in an error when sentence goes against them and they deprived of their heritage like unskilfull or unfaithfull
obeyes and doth service to his father or master and knowes it is not acceptable and yet if he be told what way he may take to have it accepted will not so in this if there be any desire to please him labor not so much to doe as how to doe or to know what you doe and this not onely by siting at Gamaliels feet and hearing the Ministers but by reading the Scriptures and word of God your selves diligently and painfully Col. 3.16 for the Apostle so perswades Let the word of Christ dwell in you plenteously in all wisdome teaching and admonishing your selves in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs singing with a grace in your hearts to the Lord not as Chrysost well saith that the word should be in you that is come as a stranger and stay for a night a season and gone againe but it must dwell in you and that not sparingly but copiously and abundantly Chrysost exhortation is not so necessary for these times and this audience to get them Bibles for they must have them in their hands and houses but to use their Bibles which most neglect Therefore as he de Lazaro Semper horter hortari non desinam ut non hic tantum attendat is iis quae dicuntur verum etiam cum domi fueritis assiduè divinarū scriptur arum lectioni vacetis Quod quidem iis qui priv atim mecum ingressi sunt non desisto inculcare Chrysost Hom. 3. I againe and againe exhort you not only here to attend to the things that are spoken but when you are at home to read the Scriptures carefully which I use to presse upon them that are about me If this may prevaile a little more may that of Moses Deuter. 6.6 7 8. and that of Christ John 5.39 and the former of S. Paul But alas how may that complaint of Chrysostome be applyed Homil. 13. in John Quinostrūquaeso repetit domi aliquid out Coristiana dignum opus aggreditur Quis Scripturarum sensus perserutatur Nemo sane sed alve●los talos frequenter invenimus libros quam rarissimos Chrysost Who is it that when he comes home doth any thing worthy of a Christian who is it that seekes the meaning of the Scripture None at all we may ordinarily finde you at Tables or Dice but very seldome at your Bibles Doth not he describe many of our Christians and their familes and so that being without knowledge all they doe is unacceptable Let us labor then for this knowledge and be not Idols in the Church who have eyes and see not so much knowledge is required as there is capablenese and meanes And if yee offer the lame Lame sacrifices forbidden signified the dislike that God had of such service as was done by halfes in body and not in minde è contra inhypocrisie for fashion and custome and such like Lame service which is done to God Dorct is unacceptable unto him whether it be done with the body without the heart or pretended to be done with the heart when the body goes another way when it is hypocriticall and dissembling or by parting or sharing with God it is abominable and not acceptable unto him therefore rejected he the lame sacrifices the ceremony leads to this substance the shaddow to this body 1 Kings 18.21 And Eliah came unto all the people and said how long halt yee between two opinions If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal be hee then goe after him And the people answered him not a word This God complained of Isaiah 29.13 Jer. 12.2 Ezek. 33.31 Act. 4.36 with 5.1 2. Math. 6.2 5. Because all and the whole is his Reas 1 both body and soule by his three-fold right of creation redemption and preservation or gubernation therefore he will have all or nothing can be accepted of him Because this is to make a false God of him Reas 2 for it is a position full of truth that a true God as hee will not be worshipped with fained and counterfeit worship so not with partiall worship but he will have all or none whereas false gods will be content so they may have but a share But the true God is like the true Mother 1 King 3.26 will not have it divided This condemneth all presenting of the body before an Idoll Vse 1 or in Idols service under pretence of keeping the heart to God whether it be done by feare fancy or for profit and gaine This is to offer up a lame sacrifice to God such as he abhorres it is without any president or precept in the Scriptures nay the Commandements precepts lawes admonitions judgments of the Law and Prophets of the Old and new Testament are all against it commanding to fly Idols and Idolatry The companions of Daniel chose rather to bee cast into the fiery fornace then to bow to the Kings Idol The mother in the Maccabees and her children embraced death rather then they would eare swines flesh contrary to the law of God Infinite are the Martyrs of all times who have couragiously embraced death before they would doe any such thing who had been all very unwise and fooles if this would have served and God would have accepted such lame sacrifice But for all this a man may goe to masse and such superstitions Object may he not No more to the one then to the other Answ for this is the greatest Idol in the world and for it more abominable Idolaters are the Papists then any other for never any worshipped the thing it selfe as they doe the breaden God and the crosse but they worshipped God at it and in it as their old distinction hath been But we goe to make us abhorre it Object when we see their follie and vanity This were as if a man should goe into a harlots house or stews Answ under pretence to see and to abhorre whom shall he make beleeve that is his end if it were apparent yet what madnesse were it for a man to lay himselfe open to bee taken with such a danger He presumes of his strength nay he provokes God to take his strength from him and to let him fall into it as in Peter This is not the way to abhorre it But as he that would abhorre uncleanenesse or drunkennesse must not take that course to go to stewes or to frequent tavernes for that is to make him more in love with them but must labor for a chaste and sober heart and that will make him abhorre it so here for a religious and holy heart for it is not the seeing of evill that makes men abhorre it but the seeing of good If men labor for true grace they shall easily abhore sinne and in this as in all others evill must not be done that good may come Nay though never so much good would ensue yet when God hath forbidden it when he dislikes it it must be avoyded This condemneth all prophane men who talke of serving God with
the Lord should translate his worship from the Jewes to the Gentiles and then should they bring holy offerings And this is after the comming of Christ who should take away the Ceremonies and abrogate the forme of the Jewish worship and bring in pure and spirituall sacrifices Now by this is noted the place that is through all the whole world Psal 113.3 The Lords Name is praised from the rising of the Sunne unto the going downe of the same Not that it should be at one time in all places of the world for that never was nor shall be but as among the Jewes so in the whole world before Christs comming the greater part of them were wicked Idolaters and prophane men Isaiah 17.6 and 6.13 but successively now in one place now in another it shall be spoken and preached in all the parts of the world before Christs second comming Matth. 26.13 Psal 2.8 Aske of me and I shall give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession My name shall be great Here is the ground of Gods worship The Name of God signitying diverse things in this place may be taken either for himselfe as a mans name is put for his person Acts 2.21 or for his excellency majesty and glory as Name for fame Exod. 34.5 6. Phil. 2.9 Gen. 11.4 Is great Not that God is great or lesse Magnum parvum sunt ex iis quae sunt ad aliquid Aristot but shewed or declared or acknowledged to be great as the word sanctified is used Math. 6.9 and the word justified Math. 11.19 Jam. 2.21 Among the Gentiles The persons by condition Gentiles or Nations taken sometime generally for a company of People consisting of many families gathered together Isaiah 1.4 Ioh. 11.52 Secondly more particularly for all people besides the Iewes all Infidels Gods people being taken from among them only Isaiah 49.6 And so it is amongst those who were not Gods people before amongst them whom the Iewes accounted fooles and did extreamely hate spoken as it were to provoke them to make more care of the worship of God according to the denouncing Deuter. 32.21 And in every place incense shal be offered unto me The matter of this offering or worship is first said to be incense by which is understood prayer invocation and thanksgiving as Psal 141.2 Let my Prayer be directed in thy sight as incense and the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice Revel 5.8 Secondly It is said to be an oblation or offering by which is not understood the Leviticall offering abrogated by Christ neither the sacrifice of Christ upon the crosse which none can offer but he and which only was to be performed and offered upon the crosse before the gate of Jerusalem nor the sacrifice of the Masse as shall after appeare but by this is understood a mans selfe every faithfull man with all that he hath for every one of Gods ought both to consecrate himselfe to the spirituall worship of God and as it were sacrifice himselfe and also offer up the sacrifice of prayer and praise and of repenting justice almes and other things pleasing to God Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.5 Heb. 13.15 16. Psal 4.6 and 5.19 And of this Irenaeus Tertullian and diverse other understand this place Pure not simply without spot Isaiah 64.6 but as the Church is called holy and without spot Cant. 6.9 first in regard the person offering it is in Christ and as his person hath his obedience and righteousnesse applyed and imputed to it so his obedience hath Christ to cover the wants of it Heb. 13.15 1 Pet. 2.5 Secondly In regard of inward sanctification the ground of it the party being regenarate by the worke of his spirit and so every action in him part holy and good and well pleasing to God as comming and proceeding from his Spirit though having a taste and sent of our infirmities as water passing by a Pipe or Chanell Rom. 8.26 and 15.16 Acts. 15.9 This though a threatning yet is according to that Deuter. 32.21 and so a kind of provocation to the Israelites provoking them from the example of the Gentiles with a holy emulation in piety and the worship of God The Iewes embraced not sincerely the worship of God but putting it as it were from them the Gentiles received it When one Church maketh not account of the truth and worship of God or doth reject it another shall embrace it Doctrine From the rising of the Sunne unto the going down of the same The Lord though he had shewed much mercy and goodnesse upon the Jewes he is not emptyed by it but hath the like in store for others the Gentiles The Lord is marvelous rich in mercy and liberall in giving his goodnesse to the sonnes of men neither weary in giving Doctr. nor ever wasted with giving manifest from this example and I am 1.5 If any of you lack wisdome let him aske of God which giveth to all men liberally and reproacheth no man and it shall be given him Rom. 10.12 for there is no difference betweene the Jew and the Grecian for he that is Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him he gives at all times Luke 22.12 his ability is great Ephe. 3.20 the effects prove it giving more then they aske to to Abraham for one sonne desired he gave a seed as the starres in the heavens To Isaac Gen. 25.21 22. to Jaacob Gen. 48.11 To Solomon Kings 3.11 Vberior est gloria quam precatio Ambrose in loc Because he is creator and Lord of all Reas 1 and by creation they are his sonnes he their father Therefore as a father he will provide for all his their portions as Abraham did Gen. 25.6 yea and such is his care that he cannot endure their want Now they are in themselves continually wanting though he give one thing they have need of another as a ship and a net that must still bee mending Because it is agreeable to his magnificency and greatnesse to deale thus liberally Reas 2 as it is agreeable and becommeth a Prince to deale according to his magnificence and greatnesse Because it might be manifest the things they receive come to them not for their deserts or the merit of their prayers Reas 3 or any things else but of his love and mercy when he dealeth so bountifully Vse 1 Prayers are not meritorious I am 1.5 Vse 2 If any want he himself is cause of it Ibidem to all men Vse 3 An encouragement to aske To learne to be liberall and not weary of well doing Vse 4 Gallat 6.9.10 From sunne rising to the sun setting in all places and nations is the worship and word of God propagated The Church under the times of the Gospell Doctrine and since Christ is not as it hath been limited to one Nation as to the Jewes Psal 147.19 20. Iohn 4.22 but those limits are plucked up and it is inlarged to all the Gentiles
he to hold them to himselfe they to draw them from the Gospell Because saith Chrys the people of Israel who were brought up in Aegypt had polluted themselves with Idolatry would have sacrifices ceremonies so that if they were not permitted unto them they were ready against to fall to Idolatry though God desired a people to worship him in spirit truth yet he granted them unto them dealing as a wise Physitian who having a patient sick of a feaver by reason of heat desiring earnestly cold water and unlesse it be given him he is ready to seek a halter to strangle himselfe or some waies to destroy himself there the Physitian compelled by necessity gives him a cup of water prepared by himselfe and commands him to drinke but forbids him to drinke of any other but that so God gave the Jewes goodly ceremonies but so as it was not lawfull for them to use any other And then were they grieved saith he when he shewed his wrath upon them for making a calfe of their ear-rings c. So in cunning and mischievous policy hath the Church of Rome when they saw how the nature of man was affected with holy things because of the outward meanes when simple and base because the Gospell is such they little regarded them but glorious things were those that affected them therefore have they fallen from the simplicity of the Gospell to that whorish Babylonish pride they are now in when it was with her as Boniface the Bishop and Martyr said to one that asked whether it was lawfull to administer the Sacrament in woodden cups he answered In times past they had golden Priests and woodden Chalices then would they bragge of nothing such a multitude as now when they have woodden Priests and golden Chalices since Pope Vrban hath made all the ministring attire golden and gay and so because they are led by their sences therefore they are violently carried after this superstition This teacheth us Vse 2 why in the Church the meanes of Gods worship his word and table are so little esteemed or regarded because men are so led by their sences and when the meanes are base and simple they thinke so of the worship it selfe as Hierome said putabant altari deesse religionis sanctimoniam quia deerat aedificationis ambitio they thought the Altar was not to be so religiously regarded because it was not richly bedecked and adorned such are they as give no respect to the word because the Minister is of no great respect but a meane plaine man who have not learned more to esteem the earthen vessels for the treasure but lesse to account of the treasure for the earthen vessels Hence many set light by the holy Table because they see nothing here but bare bread and wine very base and meane elements such as they use ordinarily to feed on else where and so as a foole or a naturall if he light on an obligation or a deed he maketh no more reckoning of it then of a piece of parchment a little wax because he understandeth not the contents and end of it So in these things not considering the end and use of them by whom they were appointed As there are some who overvalue these mysteries specially the Sacraments that tye the grace of God inseparably to them and make the opus operatum a matter of sufficient vertue that ascribe some divine power to the very outward elements and so bring a divine adoration of them that of holy mysteries make magicall miracles as the Church of Rome doth so againe are there many in the Church of England that undervalue them that make no other reckoning of them then as of ordinary elements and repaire unto them as to the bodily food because they are in nature and substance the same the Doctrine here being the ground of it they being so dull sighted they can look no further then that which is object to the sence of them they can see no end nor use of them more no secret grace nor vertue in them and that which is worse will not submit themselves to be taught or if taught not believe when oportet discentem credere To teach every one in these actions sursum corda habere Vse 3 and to lift the eyes of his minde upwards as with his bodily eyes he seeth the outward elements here so with the eye of faith to apprehend the matter of it that which these outward things represent to the minde The word of God for letters and syllables is but the same with other humane writings but it hath another manner of worke with it in regard of the spirit and grace of God accompanying it unto those that heare it with a sanctified eare As we see that ordinary water and aqua vitae in a viall or glasse look both alike but they differ much in work and effect because there is a kind of Spirit in the one which is not in the other so the Word and the Sacrament though the same in substance with ordinary Bread and Wine yet they have a farre divers worke and effect with them unto those who receive them with a holy heart and a faithfull in regard of Gods covenant whose seales they are in regard of the mercy of God of which they more assure us in regard of Christs Death that they represent unto us and put us in minde of and in regard of the grace of Gods Spirit that accompaineth them in those that so receive them for the effecting of these former matters VERSE VIII And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice it is not evill and if yee offer the lame and sicke it is not evill offer it now unto thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hostes ANd if you offer the blinde for sacrifice The Lord proceedeth to prove that they despise him and his table shewing how they have erred both against his law and the rule of honesty and comelinesse Levit. 22.21 22. And if you offer the blinde for sacrifice it is not evill These words are read of some by way of interrogation When yee offer the blinde is it not evill Now a negative interrogation ever affirmeth strongly q. d. it is very evill and yet yee doe it Hierom Junius others read these words by way of affirmation God continuing to tax their thoughts you think it not evill you think it is good enough for God you make it no fault and this is the common reading which is more agreable to the context but the matter is not great how we take it both tend to one end and one effect both a disliking disallowing of such sacrifice For the sacrifice here spoken of some understand it only of the sacrifice the Priests offered for themselves Levit. 4.3 Heb. 5.3 Others for the sacrifice the people brought which when they were burnt offerings which were all consumed upon the Altar the Priests nothing regarded but the
be not against them Because this is a speciall meanes Reas as to shew a mans deresting of such things so to draw them to the disliking of such things as they are affected with or dote upon such speeches often more prevaile then greater matters men being more impatient of ascoffe then many serious reproofes This refelleth their conceit who deny any use of these things Vse 1 they deny there are any such things in the Scripture they say they are lyes they say that the Apostle forbids them Object Ephe. 5.4 neither jesting I answer that there is an use of them and that in the Scripture as the former examples prove Answ Neither are they supposed unfitting the Majesty of the Scripture For though it be true that a man speakes one thing and thinkes another yet the manner of his words and speech doth bewray his minde and that indeed there is no contrariety for the hearer may easily discern his minde As in that of Michaiah 1 Kings 22.15 for verse 16. Ahab discerned well his meaning that he did but scoffe at him and his false Prophets so that he speakes as he thinkes not for the very words but for the matter of the words Neither makes the place in the Ephesians against this because it forbids scurrility when men scoffe and reproach others rashly when there can be no edifying of others or good to the party but their malice and disdaine shewed and as well the modest and temperate hearers as the sufferers are offended which is that which differeth farre from these things we can not bring these within compasse of a lye unlesse we make the Spirit of truth a lying Spirit And in these a man hath no intent to have his words otherwise taken then he meaneth them This warranteth the use of them Vse 2 as sometimes our men have done in deriding and scoffing at the folly of Papists at their Idols and Idolatrous service and foolish superstitions and ever are lawfull to be used when a man doth it not for revenge or to wreck his anger wrath upon some person that is his particular enemie but to reprove and condemn impious and idolatrous worship and such like Now for the matter and first for that which is general here in the whole God will not accept their prayers that is the thing threatened It is a heavy thing Doctr. and fearefull judgement that men should pray and not be heard that they make long prayers to God but he will be as though he heard not but reject their supplications and they be as men beating the ayre It is threatned here So Isaiah 1.15 And when you shall stretch out your hands I will hide mine eyes from you and though you make many prayers I will not heare for your hand are full of blood Proverb 1.28 Then shall they call on me but I will not answer they shall seeke me earely but they shall not finde mee Hosea 8.13 The contrary is promised as a blessing and performed as a blessing and acknowledged as a blessing Isaiah 30.19 Surely a people shall dwell in Lion and in Jerusalem thou shalt weep'no more he will certainly have mercy upon thee at the voyce of thy cry when hee speaketh he will answer thee 2 Chron 7.14 Psal 116.1 2. Because it is a manifest signe that the persons are out of favor and he is dispeased with them Reas 1 for the accepting of their prayer is a proofe of the acceptation of person because he first looks to the person In sacrificiis quae Abel Cain primi obtulerunt non munera corum Deus sed corda intuebatur ut ille placeret in munere qui placebat in corde Cypr. de Orat Dom. 11. then the prayer as first Abel was accepted then his sacrifice And what can bee more fearefull though it is not alwaies felt then to live out of favor with God If in the displeasure of a Prince there be danger more of Gods to carry Gods marke about with him as Cain that he is out of favor Because this is the meanes by which all blessings are obtained Reas 2 the key that opens and shuts Heaven Oratio justi clavis est coeli ascendit precatio descendit Dei miseratio Aug. ut nihil sanctū nisi illo sanctificante nihil potens nisi illo roborante Prayer the wall of the City Ita nihil faelix nihil anspicatum nisi illo prosper ante Cipr. as Elijah it opens the right hand of God for blessings shuts the left hand from cursings Now when a man can receive no blessing neither escape any curse hath no meanes for it because as good be without the meanes as when they are not regarded must it not be a heavy thing Many things befall many men without prayer if that be no prayer which is without understanding and affection yet are they but common blessings such as are common to them and other men yea creatures unreasonable and senselesse Because as one saith verè novit rectè vivere Reas 3 qui rectè novit orare so he can only live well who can pray well For as St. Augustine out of Saint Cyprian Quae implenda jubentur in lege in oratione poscenda sunt but if they can not or shall not be heard in praying where shall they have strength to performe This noteth the senselessenes of many men Vse 1 who though they pray often and prevaile seldome or never yet never mourne under it as under a judgement sorrow not much for it It may be they can mourne that they have not that they desire for want of the thing it self but not that their prayers are not heard It is that they grieve for because they receive not from God but never that their prayers are not received of God like him that puts up a Petition to the Prince and is little or not at all troubled that he reads it not but gives it over to another that will smother it but his griefe is that he relieves him not and this appeares because their hearts desire any meanes else though never so unlawfull to supply that they want and to give that which God will not grant and if the opportunity be offered they will not stick to use them as Saul did the witches things condemned by him before Secondly because if those meanes be of force and by them they prevaile their hearts are cheared up well enough little or not at all sorrowing that he heard them not not much caring though he did not Thirdly if they prevaile not by those meanes yet never will they returne again to God nor seeke from him if not the things yet patience and comfort in the want of them To teach the whole Church and particulars of it Vse 2 to groane under this as under a judgement of God that their prayers are not heard they aske and receive not they seeke and find not they knock and it is not opened unto them And yet they asked things
favour of God who can easily destroy them and the things they have or is beloved of them with a word with a blast If it be so in respect of men to live out of the favours of Kings and Princes who have their limited powers who are but men and have their breath in their nostrils as they have what is 〈◊〉 be out of Gods favour by whose breath they stand and live and w●●● with-drawing his breath they come to nothing If he be so able why doth he so suffer them It is from the abundance of his patience not w●●● of power which abused by them increaseth his wrath and their sinnes and will make that he will come the more suddenly and heavily upon them The heavier the weight is that is hung at the clock the wheels run swifter and the hammers strike sooner and smarter To teach every man to take heed how they offend or displease God as they love themselves or any thing they have Vse 3 seeing hee can so easily destroy both one and other Men are apt to make the power of great men either a bridle to restrain them from offending or a spurre to make them do the things they command even when they are unlawfull For who are we say they to withstand so great men Were their faith as good as their sense they might see there were cause to say so of God and would know it is a farre more fearefull thing to fall into the hands of God then into the hands of men And cast dung upon your faces The second particular in this verse for laying shame and ignominie upon them God makes men Ministers and others Doctrine 1 to be had in reproach because of their sinnes Even the dung These Priests had thought to have gotten love estimation and credit by bearing with the corruption of the people not reproving them for teir sacrifices they brought and their carelesnesse in Gods service but this God will turn to their shame When men think by unlawfull meanes to get credit Doctrine 2 honour and estimation among men the Lord he will turn it to their shame and reproach So here and so with them who built Babel Gen. 11.4 but it was their confusion To this we may apply that generall Psal 112.10 Hereto belong the examples of Haman Ester 6. and 7. And of Herod Acts 12.21 of Philat Joh. 10.12 From henceforth Pilate sought to loose him but the Jewes cried saying if thou deliver him thou art not Cesars friend for whosoever maketh himselfe a King speaketh against Cesar But see what Eusebius reports * Neque illud à nobis ignorari debet eum ipsum Pilatum qui servatoris neci interfuit in tantas calamitates incurrisse ut necessitate adductus sibi propria manu mortem consciscaret suorumque scelerum ipse vindex extiterit Eus hist l. 2. c. 7 We are not to be ignorant that the same Pilat who was interressed in our saviours death fell into so great calamities shortly after in the raigne of Caius that being driven by necessitie he slew himselfe with his own hand and became himselfe the revenger of his own wickednesse Because this wil manifest his power Reason 1 that he can beat them with their own weapons overthrow them by their own inventions Because he is zealous of his glory Reason 2 and to suffer this wo●●● obscure it It is against the honor of a Prince to let a subject grow by rebellion it argues either injustice or im●●●●encie This may shew the folly of those men Vse 1 whether they be private men or men in place Magistracie or Ministerie who thinke by unlawfull means to reconcile favour unto them to get a good name estimation or credit These men we may compare to him whom Hier. against Heloid speaks of out of the fable that when he could do no good to be famous for or so famous as he would he set Diana's Temple on fire and when none accused him for the sacriledge he went raving up down the streets himself crying that he kindled the fire And being demanded by the Ephesians why he did so Vt quia benè non poterā malè omnis bus innotescerem he answered Because I could not get fame by doing well I would get it by mischief But it was his shame ruine and so may these look for though they may prosper in it for a while as they in building of Babell yet shall they fall by it And that they would stop their mouthes withall will be the means to open them the wider specially if ever there fall a breach betwixt them they will shew them directly that they gained not by their courses and the contrary to that will follow which we read of David 2 Sam. 6.22 To teach every man to take heed how he seekes reputation and name by bad courses Vse 2 or by any the least unfaithfulnesse and sin Every man is desirous of a good name and it is more to be desired then silver and pretious things Prov. 22.1 If any man would have it let him labour for it by lawful means and by wel-doing If he seek it by forsaking his uprightnesse and sincerity of his place and profession I may say as 2 Kings 9.31 Had Zimri peace that slew his master So had such a one credit that left his honesty And God shall do to him as here is threatned A man may happily build up his house by oppression and usury and cruelty but in a few successions in a few years it comes to nothing holds not in the third heire A man may seek to rise like Haman and be aloft a while but he shall be cast downe A man may get a name a while but it will not last long partly because it is vana quia vani sunt filii hominum because it is not in himselfe but other * Merces congregatas in saccum pertusum ad thesaurum in alieno ere constitutum qua arcu non clauditur nec seras habet Bern. de adventu Domini Serm. 4. as wares put up in a broken bagge as a treasure laid up in anothers mouth not lockt in a chest nor made fast with barres as Bernard hath it And partly because God will cast dung into his face The best glory is for well doing that is in a mans selfe not in anothers power 2 Cor. 1.12 That is laid upon a good ground that is certaine and unmoveable It is from God and those who have his Spirit Vera gloria est à Spiritu veritatis True glory is from the Spirit of truth Dung in your faces The Lord had honoured these Priests very high they had dishonoured him he threatens marvellously and the more to disgrace and dishonour them The more God hath honoured and advanced men Doctrine either in Church or Common-wealth if they dishonour him he will dishonour them and lay the greater disgrace upon them So with these Priests none more honoured with God then they no
goe for currant servants will not abide with me if I instruct correct and restraine them as duty and reason requireth First see whether thou art not the cause why they are so untractable either not seeking by prayer a blessing upon thy government or dealing hardly and passionately in thy government as if thou hated them rather then loved good things or thy servants see thee doe contrary to that thou directs them for if none of these God will perswade them to be tractable and bend their hearts or else know that he would have thee purge thy house of them as David said and did his of his said lewd servants lest as God prospers a bad houshold for a good servant so he curse a good houshold for a bad servant Ministers excuses of the untractablenesse and unwillingnesse of their people which may happily come from their former negligence or indiscretion or if God doe not blesse his labours to them his reward shall be never a whit the lesse nor he lesse acceptable so he doe his duty Magistrates and Officers that they shall be accounted busie officious and pragmaticall and it may be when they are out of their office they shall have actions against them for this and that usage they may happily be justly so accounted because they follow and doe things in humour not in conscience If they doe not they neede not doubt of Gods protection and of good successe and should rather feare an action from God then men besides the losse of the good they may have by doing it But to all I say as she said to the Heathen King doe me justice or else cease to be my King So let them either doe the duties of their places or else never take them or speedily give them over and leave to be masters c. Or else they must know that if God will not justifie he will condemne The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and word of God and nothing but that and that wholly The Minister of God must deliver to his people Doctrine the law of truth and it onely onely the word of God and nothing else Rev. 2.7 heare what the spirit saith The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and nothing else but the truth and the whole truth all the truth not keeping any thing from them The Minister must deliver to his people the whole truth of God Doctrine all his will and counsell whatsoever he hath commanded and revealed Levit. 10.11 Deut. 5.27 Mat. 28.20 Acts 10.33 and 20.27.35 Because else he cannot be free from the blood of his flocke Reason 1 that is the perishing or slaughtering of them sanguinis i. caedis saith Chrysostome upon Acts 20.26 For if Paul be free from their blood and from their murther because as he said Acts 20.26.27 I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men For I have kept nothing backe but have shewed you all the counsell of God Then will this by the contrary follow Because else they should not be faithfull neither to him that sent them nor to them over whom they are set Reason 2 for what fidelity can there be when for their owne pleasures or respects they shall not deliver the whole he commanded and might be profitable to them 1 Cor. 4.2 And as for the rest it is required of the disposers that every one be found faithfull This will crosse their opinion who affirme many things in the word are unfit to be delivered and taught to the people Vse 1 and are ready to scandall and stumble at it when at any time they are But if the Minister must deliver the whole truth If Rom. 15.4 Whatsoever things are written aforetime are written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope If Deuter. 29.29 The secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever that we may doe all the words of this law Why should they not be taught It is certaine that many things ought to be spoken wisely discreetely in their fit and due times but yet all things must be delivered That which Hierom counselled Laeta for her daughter that the booke of Canticles she should read last of all the Scriptures when without danger she might lest in reading it in the first place she should be wounded when she was not able to discerne spirituall things and spirituall love under carnall words It may be a rule for all things of the like kind for as Hilar. Psa 134. As an unskilfull man comming into a field abounding with wholsome hearbs passes by all as of no more use then the grasse but a skilfull one otherwise So of the Scriptures * Vt imperitus in agrum salubribus herbis divitem venerit omnia inutilia promiscuè genita existimans praeteribit peritus contra Ita de Scripturis Hilar. Psal 134. And as Bernard Why may I not draw a sweet and wholesome repast of the Spirit out of the sterile and insipide letter as grain from out the huskes as the nut from out the shell as the marrow from out the bone And as Basil * Quidni dulce eruam ac salutare epulum spiritus de sterili insipidâ literâ tanquam granum de palea de testa nucleum de osse medullam Bernard in Cant. serm 73. All bread affoords nourishment for health but of no use oft-times to the sicke or queamish * Omnis panis nutrimentum affert ad salutem aegris autem saepè inutilis sic omnis Scriptura mundis munda Basil ad Chyl de solita vita so is the Scripture pure unto the pure And if any seeme unclean and uncomely it is to those that are such in themselves For other things that men thinke unfit to be taught because of the greatnesse of the mystery and the depth of them I say as to the former If Paul have written of election and reprobation and hath said All things that are written are profitable and are for learning in the same Epistle where he specially handles those things why should they not be taught but with wisedome in their place That which S. Chrysostome speaks in another case we may apply to this * Magister literarum puerulum de gremio matris acceptum ignarum omnium primis tantummodo imbuit elementis quem rursus alius magister accipiens perfectioribus instruit disciplinis Chryl Hom. 9. in Gen. A petty School-master that takes a young childe from his mothers lap ignorant yet of all things onely teacheth him his first letters whom another master takes and instructs after in higher learning so in the knowledge of the Scriptures For as all men cannot dive and fetch pretious stones from the deepe but he that is cunning and hath the Art of it so not all but the wise can either teach or conceive the
oftentimes blinded by one meanes or another they see not what is fit for them and if any thing dislike them not willing to take it to them then had they need of another This will convince of sinne all those who hold either in opinion or practice Vse 1 no such necessity of resorting to the publicke Congregations where the Law is to be had from the mouth of the Ministers for if it be a duty that they should then must it be a sinne to thinke they ought not and to withdraw themselves from it contemning the ministery of the Word being the ordinance of God by which he would teach them the Law Their pretences they hold forth in their defence are vaine First they can read at home and it may be better Sermons then he they should heare can preach any Let me grant them they can yet followes it not they will for he that accounts little of Gods publicke ordinance will hardly performe any such private dutie mans nature being more apt to publicke then private duties But say they can and will and doe it yet is it faultie because it is crosse to Gods commandment who could as well have commanded private at that time as publicke And though it be in it selfe good yet being out of it fit time it is evill It is good and lawfull for a man to follow his calling or to build Churches or to get in his harvest or to recreate himselfe in their times but to do these upon the Lords day is evill As in the body the bloud that is the continent of life is good so it be in the proper vessels the veines but if out it is hurtfull and breeds putrifactions and diseases And as all the members are good in their proper place but one in another is monstrous and hurtfull as the finger upon the hand and in the eye so it is of these things Againe what is this but to crosse the ordinance of God What is it else but to chalenge more wisedome to themselves then God hath who hath commanded it who hath given Pastors and Teachers to the Church who hath bid them preach in season and out of season Secondly they are begotten already therefore they need not heare Nay they are therefore not begotten because they think it needlesse For there cannot be life but ther ●eill be a desire of food They cannot be Gods but they have his Spirit and where his Spirit is there cannot be contempt of his ordinance but it argues they have not his Spirit nor are not begotten Thirdly you cannot prove we ought to heare so often Thou must learne and heare from him the whole Law of God which cannot be heard in a mans life in so seldome hearing as they can bee content onely to hear and much lesse learned If they must heare out of season then oftner then they would or do But shall I tell you the true cause of this refusall It is either pride of heart whereby they are puffed up with their owne knowledge and condition and thinke they know as much and need no more and are as the speech is as well as meat can make them which is plain hypocrisie or it is pride of state when they are puffed up with their wealth and state and thinke it enough for the poore to receive the Gospell and presse upon it It is not for their state and worship to be over attendant to strive and thirst after the Word they come more to honour the Word or to be well thought of by men then for any good they look to receive by it which is a spice of Atheisme or it is because of the guilt of their consciences who finde the galling of the Word who thinke if they should continually heare it they should have no quietnesse in themselves at all when they can hardly quiet themselves that heare so seldome which is carnall security or else he that hath them in a snare at his will is afraid to lose them And when he findes that one Sermon makes Agrippa almost a Christian he is afraid of a constant hearing lest they should become Christians altogether and he be cast out knowing the Preacher is the power of salvation To teach every one to make conscience of this duty Vse 2 to heare and receive the word of God at the mouth of his Ministers in the publicke assemblies it is the commandment of God he that maketh not conscience of this duty maketh not conscience of any For he that maketh no conscience of all knowne duties maketh none of any Therfore should we be glad with David to go into the house of God so shall we subscribe to the wisedome of God who hath so ordained and given men gifts not in vaine not for themselves when as little would save them but as teats to the mother and Art to the Bee to make hony c. so shall we be begotten of God to be sonnes or reformed of God to be holy sonnes or repaired by God who decay in minde as well as in body and had need of continuall instruction as of daily eating For our work is not like others saith Saint Chrysostome who finde it as they left it They should seek the Law This is the commandment touching the people that they must receive the Law from the Ministers mouth and not onely receive it but seeke or require it as it were exact it as men do for their due or as servants require their portion from the Steward when he was slack in giving The people must not onely heare and receive the word of God at the mouth of the Ministers Doctrine but they must seek it and require it seeke it with earnestnesse and servent desire So here and to the same purpose is that when the Spirit speakes of buying the truth Prov. 23.23 and Isaiah 55.1 And hence are the comparisons when it made as milke and men as new borne Babes 1 Pet. 2. when it is compared to gold Rev. 2.18 to a treasure and men to purchasers Matth. 13.44 to pearles and men to Merchants vers 45.46 Because it is that which will make men rich spiritually with riches of faith and pietie Reason 1 and such like which had will enrich men will they seek very earnestly Because here Christ Reason 2 and with him eternall life and all happinesse is to be found and no where else Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures for in them ye think to have eternall life and they are they which testifie of me Rom. 10.6.7.8 Hence Joh. 6.67.68 Jesus said to the twelve Will ye also go away Peter answered Lord to whom shall we goe Thou hast the words of eternall life Hence the Gospell is The grace of God bringing salvation Tit. 2.11 Because without this Reason 3 whatsoever a man hath else whatsoever state and condition he is in better or worse health or sicknesse c. he can use no state well for the blessings of God 1 Tim. 4.5 are sanctified by the Word
being put for their writings Out of all which nothing will follow for the Pope or nothing in speciall manner I will trouble you with no other reasons onely I will shew you this chalenge is false because many of them have erred The first shall be Marcellus or Marcellinus who offered up sacrifice to Idols and by the Councell of Sessa was made to recant it The second Liberius whom Hierom and Athanasius affirme to have been an Arrian one that denied the Deity of Christ Thirdly Thirdly like to him was Felix who was an Arrian as the same Hierom writeth Innocent the first made both Baptisme and the Eucharist necessary to salvation of infants Augustine lib. 1. contra Iulian. Peligian cap. 2. The latter of these errours was condemned by the Councell of Trent Sessio 5. sub Pio quarto Ca. non 4. Fourthly Leo the first who died as Arrius did an Arrian Fifthly Siricius accounted Matrimony pollution Sixthly Vigilius accursed all who affirmed that there be two natures in Christ Seventhly Honorius the first which taught as Melchior Canus confesseth that Christ had not two wills or operations Eighthly In Concilio Romano Pope Stephen the sixth he abolished all the Acts of Formosus his predecessour and commanded all that had received Orders from him to be ordered againe and thought that the Sacrament depended upon the vertue of the Minister Ninthly in concilio Ravennae habito Iohn 9. disanulled all the Acts of Stephen and Sergius the third all that Formosus had done And so that which Iohn had done and approved the Acts of Stephen Some of these must needs erre Tenthly Gregory the seventh whom Cardinal Benno in his writing of him who lived at the same time makes an Heretick a Necromancer a seditious and a Simonist an adulterer not the worst Bishop but the worst of all men A right Hellebrand Eleventhly Celestinus the third allowed heresie to breake the bond of marriage and that a man might marry againe if his wife fell into heresie and è contra So Alphonsus de Castro Twelfthly Iohn 22. or 21. who held that the soules separated from the bodies saw not God nor rejoyced not with him before the day of judgement and was forced to recant it with sound of trumpet by the University of Paris for feare of losing his Popedome as Iohn Gerson writeth in his Sermon of Easter Thirteenthly Iohn 23. or 22. was accused in the Councell of Constance for denying eternall life and the resurrection of the body All which with many moe prove manifestly against them that the Pope can erre and hath erred and so may still Bellarmine I confesse hath a great many of shifts and evasions to cleare his holy Fathers but they are so light and foolish they are not worth the studying on for the most part This teacheth us how dangerous a thing ignorance is Vse 2 even in every Christian for if it be the cause of errour in the Ministers it will be in the people And if the Ministers all one and other are subject to errour if they erre and the people be without knowledge they will go after taking errour for truth because they are able to distinguish neither the one nor the other If it were infallible and certaine that their guides could not erre nor their Ministers be deceived it were no matter though they were never so ignorant but when it is most certaine that they are subject to it and their erring will not excuse the people though the other answer for their abusing and mis-leading of them their ignorance is very dangerous and that implicite faith Popery so much commends damnable And in them and others who would perswade the people they may be ignorant and a little or no knowledge is required of them it is suspitious as if they meant to make a prey of them to broach some errors among them For then saith Chrysostome theeves go to stealing when they have first put out the candle and then do men utter their bad wares when they have dim and false lights To perswade all men to labour for knowledge Vse 3 and to increase in the knowledge of the Word and Mysteries of salvation That they having the rule of truth and falshood the word of God may not be carried away with the errour of one or many be they never so great or learned Erre they may be they never so learned for they know but at the best in part and erre oftentimes they do because they are not wholly sanctified For as the greatest part of a Church is wholly unsanctified so the best are but in part sanctified and so are subject to partiality and errour yea may both erre and defend errour against their knowledge some violent temptation of pride pleasure and profit and such like carrying them thereunto seeing none now is incessantly guided and governed by the Spirit Then had they need of knowledge that they may try and discerne the spirits and doctrines and he that is not carelesse which end goes forwards not retchlesse for his soule whether it walke in the paths of truth or in the paths of errour will not be carelesse for it and to grow in knowledge But if they erre how not we Lookers on may see more then players We may allude to that Prov. 28.11 The rich man is wise in his owne conceit but the poore that hath understanding can try him And God often to the simple reveales things when hid from wise Matth. 11.25 to humble them and know themselves but men It is a thing that cannot be denied because stories of all times do manifestly prove it that sometimes errours and heresies have so much prevailed that the most part of them who held and possessed great places of office and dignity in the Church of God either for feare flattery hope of gaine or honour or else mis-led through simplicitie or directly falling into errour and heresie and departed from the soundnesse of the faith so that the sincerity of religion was upholden and the truth defended and maintained onely by some few and they molested persecuted and traduced as turbulent and seditious persons enemies to the common peace of the Christian world To say nothing of the times of Christ and after him of the first Churches in the Acts. This was the state of the Christian world in the time of Athanasius when in the Councell of Seleucia and Ariminium the Nicence faith was condemned and all the Bishops of the whole world were carried from the soundnesse of the faith save Athanasius and some few Confessors banished with him So that Hieron contra Luciferam Ingemuit totius orbis miratus est factum se Arrianum So Hilarius contra Aux Episc Mill. complained that the Arrian faction had confounded all Paphnutius in the Councell of Nice for the marriage of Ministers was alone But yee are gone out of the way Though they succeeded them in their places yet not in their faith not in the truth of
doctrine There may be an ordinary and externall succession of place and person without succession of faith and truth of doctrine Doctrine Manifest here in these Priests who held the places and did ordinarily succeed the Priests who were specially approved of God yet did not succeed them in faith and in soundnesse of truth And as it was in the times before often a succession of the one without the other And this is first manifest by the former doctrine for when it often happened that all the ordinary Priests such as had the outward succession were in errour God exciting extraordinary Prophets to reprove them as Isaiah Ieremie c. It must needs be that there was a separation of these two In particular it is manifest in the time of Elijah 1 King 19.14 So when wicked Ahaz was King 2 King 16.11 Vriah the high Priest corrupting the worship In the Church of the Jewes in Christs time it was so for they condemning Christ and his followers as schismaticall Joh. 9.22 and 12.42 This is further proved Acts 20.29.30 These had their succession from the Apostles and held the same seats the same places which the Apostles held yet had snot the same truth and faith So out of the Ecclesiasticall stories it is manifest that the Arrian Bishops as Eusebius Nicomediens and Eustathius and others did derive their succession of place persons seats and Churches from the Apostles For they were called chosen and ordained after the custome of the Church and had no new but the lawfull calling So of the Donatists and Paulus Samosatenus in the Church of Antioch succeeded Peter as well as they did at Rome And the Greeke Church judged by the Papists schismaticall hath her personall succession not onely 1200. yeares as they confesse from Constantines time but long before from Andreas the Apostle as Nicephorus lib. 8. Chronol cap. 6. Because the grace of God Reason 1 and the truth is not hereditary that men should leave it at their pleasure to their heires and successors as they can their places and seats for John 3. as the winde so the Spirit blowes where it lists Not living men can make others whom they gladly would partakers of their faith and truth how should the dead and departed living men more likely Because as in a common wealth new Lords new lawes Reason 2 and succeeding men have different mindes affections wills desires ends c. and so change many things so it is in the Church And though they should leave them it as an inheritance yet we see children hold not their patrimony but many spend all so of this And as is said of Himeneus and Alexander that they made shipwrack of faith 1 Tim. 1.19.20 So of others Then falls to the ground the doctrine of Popery Vse 1 making this externall and personall succession a note of the Church and by it would prove theirs to be the true Church But if there may be such a succession without true faith and if true faith onely makes a true Church then can it be no true nor certaine note Besides it is not certaine nor expressed in the word of God that the Pope was Peters successor no not in place but to be proved onely by tradition and not to be deduced out of the Word as Bellarmine de Rom. Pont. lib. 2. cap. 12. confesseth And so the maine point whereon the government and Hierarchy of the Papacie dependeth hath no word in the Scriptures to prove it and so the whole is hanged upon the conjectures of men as upon a rotten threed For the Scripture not affirming it what assurance can there be for matter of faith the matter must needs be suspitious and doubtfull Againe even the histories which is their proofe are in such various opinions that a man can hardly tell whom to follow touching Peters comming to Rome and his immediate successors Some say he came to Rome in the first yeare of Claudius the Emperour some in the second some in the fourth some in the tenth and it may be that none of these is true sure it is all cannot be true For his successors Tertullian maketh Clement his next successor Optatus nameth Linus and then Clement Irenaeus maketh Linus then Cletus then Clement If they differ thus what certainty where should faith finde any sure ground If then the succession at best is questionable and doubtfull if it may be certaine and yet be dis-joyned from the succession of faith as it is most certainly in them and true faith onely makes a Church then can this be no true note of the Church To teach us not to be deceived with the glorious shew and great boast of such succession Vse 2 specially when there is an apparant digression from the faith or a probable doubt of corruption in it For what succession soever be it never so long or glorious as a greater could not be then these Priests and people could have objected unto the Prophet yet if it be without truth of doctrine and true faith which is the very soule of succession it is nothing else but a very dead carkasse whereas true faith without any such outward succession establisheth and maketh a Church And indeed one of the purest and most excellentest Churches was without such a succession For the Church of which Christ in his owne person was Authour and Master in which the Apostle was brought up instructed had no succession And yet none will or dare deny that it was the best and purest Church For whom succeeded Christ and his Apostles Did he succeed Aaron and the Leviticall Priesthood Did he elect his Apostles out of them Nothing lesse For he succeeded not Aaron but Melchisedech being a Priest after his order not the others and so the succession was interrupted for many hundred yeares and so may be still And on the contrary there may be succession and no true Church when the faith is corrupt and not sound which made the Fathers when they speake of succession not urge a naked and externall succession but a true succession and such as was joyned with the succession of faith and religion * Non sanctorum filii sunt qui tenent loca sanctorum sed qui exercent opera eorum S. Hierom. They are not the children of the Saints who hold their seats but who follow their workes * Nonex personis fidem sed ex side persones probari oportet Tertul. lib. de Prescr avers Haeret. We must not prove the faith from the persons but the persons from the faith So say we let them prove the persons from the faith and not faith from the persons They have not the inheritance of Peter who have not the faith of Peter All which shewes they would not have us to stand upon the succession of the place and person but the faith and doctrine * Non habent haereditatem Petri qui fidem Petri non habent Ambr. lib. 1. de poenit c. 6. This wil prove
not bee neglected Acts. 6.1 A place pertinently observed and used by the Widow of Iohn Knobbarus the Printer in her Epistle Dedicatory to the Bishop of Antwerp before the late Iesuite Bresserus his booke De Concscientia This care was continued by S. Paul 1. Tim. 5.3 and after by many Bishops a T is a Testimony of great honour and a character fit for a Bishop which Mathew of West minster gives to Gilbert Bishop of Chichester in K. Edward the firsts time that he was the Father of Orphans and the comforter of Widowes Yet at the last the Pontifician law grew streight and hard towards them wherein as Greg. Tholosan hath it Syntag. Iuris lib. 9. cap. 26. s 14. It was provided that the mony bequeathed for pious uses to the endowing and marrying of poore Women might in no case be bestowed upon Widowes marrying again though they were poore The fatherlesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an Orphan a Pupill destitute of father or helpe See it clearely Lament 5.3 Wee are Iethomim Orphans and without father The Lxx here and constantly translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but in one place namely Psal 82.3 they render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 poore The fatherlesse and the widow's are frequently joyned together in the same Texts and so they are in Gods care The ancient Church was tender of them thence it was that Brephotrophi as they were called were appointed for the charge of exposed infants whose fathers were not knowne and Orphanotrophi to see to the bringing up of other infants A practise worthily followed and imitated by the rare zeale and charity of our blessed King Edward the Sixth who upon occasion of the Bishop of Londons Sermon besides Bridewell and S. Thomas Hospitall disposed to other charitable uses was the glorious founder of Christs Hospitall for the reliefe of fatherlesse children It were easy to outvie the popish and to parallell the ancient times with examples of charity in this kind since the Reformation Among others that Honorable reverend Prelate D. Andrew's Lord Bishop of Winchester shines not more in his learned writings which yet make him famous in the gates then in his Legacies to the poore among which this was not the least commendable that he gave 5C 1 per Annum to the binding of poore Orphans to be apprentices A man deserving all the honor and right which those honorable and learned personages have done him who have gratified the English Church with the History of his life But I must take my selfe off from this argument remembring that these Excursions will haply be judged by some to bee too frequent and not proper for these short notes I confesse it yet who would not be large upon the least occasion given in the just commendations of those rare examples especially when so many on the contrary doe build up their estates and houses upon the ruines and distresses of Orphans and Pupills committed to their trust The sinne that is here threatned in the text and questionles a great sinne and provided against fully in the ancient law so that in the Institutions of Iustinian we have fourteen titles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lib. 1. Tit. 13 c. And Greg. Tholosan hath found enough to collect to make two bookes in his Syntagma lib. 12. and 13. with whom I leave the Reader Sixthly And against those that turne aside the stranger that is from his right as our last translation supplyes it even in the text The Geneva and Vulg. Against those that oppresse the stranger The Lxx. and the Chalde That pervert the judgement of the stranger See how it is exprest Exod. 23.6 Thou shalt wrest the judgement The stranger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is he that dwells where he was not borne or one that hath dwelt but a while where hee doth and so through want of friends and of acquaintance with the Law is more easy to bee wronged for whose defence therefore God provided by many Lawes See Exod. 22.21 and 23.9 Deut. 10.18.19 Levit. 19.33.34 Ierem 22.3 Ezek. 46.18 Zach. 7.10 Seventhly And against those that feare not me saith the Lord The particulars before mentioned are summed up in this which is the fountaine also and head of other sinnes and that against which the Lord will come neare in judgement As Primus in orbe deos fecit Timor and where the feare of God is it will command the heart and restraine from sinne so the little or no feare of God argues that men cherish little or no beliefe of God when according to the ingenious conceit of Nic. Caussin the Iesuite in his Table or picture of worldly policy Holy Court pt 2. The Statesman sect 2. In a Chamber hideously blacke the study of Lucifer the brave spirits of the time under the regency of Herod and Tiberius doe study to finde out the way How to believe in God no longer The truth is while most men instead of contending for the faith have but wrangled about the differences of Religions they are growne Irreligious and into a disposition unto Atheisme which how it may be discovered cured will bee worthy the labour of all such who are set over men for the cure of their soules Thus wee have seene the judgment threatned and against whom II. Verse 6 The certainty of the judgment verse 6. For I am the Lord I change not therefore yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed Or as the Vulg. and Montan. and the Geneva read it I change not And yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed It is the reason of what was before said and threatned you say I regard not to punish or reward but though I deferre a while yet I will come neare to judgement for I constantly love good and hate evill I change not So Cyril Theodor. Remig. Rupert Hugo Lyr. Vatabl c. For the latter clause of this 6th verse I shall with submission take leave to depart from our learned translators and reade not as they Therefore but as Montanus and as it is in the Hebrew And I change not And yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed And that is And yet Though I threatned you and change not yet my patience is such that yee are spared and not yet consumed But I leave this place to such as can better search the Prophets mind for here I confesse I doe take off my owne unskilfull pen without cleare satisfaction in my selfe about the coherence of this verse especially this latter clause with the verses precedent The Reader may finde it somewhat otherwise exprest in Tarnovius And thus much of the 5th Contestation VI. The sixth Contestation Sixthly Vers 7 he contests with them for their impenitence verse 7. That they had sinned and continued in sin and yet would not be convinced 1. That they had continued in sinning against Gods lawes Even from the dayes of your fathers ye have gone away from mine ordinances and have not kept them He exprobrates their old and