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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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spend our strength in vaine and for nothing yet our iudgement is with the Lord and our worke with our God Esay 49 4 5. In the meane season let our labour be answerable to the greatnesse of our calling that so we may be worthy of that honour Vse 4 Lastly seeing the function of the Ministery is of great excellency and dignity we must vnderstand that great gifts are required in the Ministers and they must in a good measure be qualified thereunto This vse doth the Apostle make 1 Tim. 3. The office of a Minister is a worthy worke therefore he ought to be of blamelesse conuersation and apt to giue instruction to the people He must shew both integrity of life and light of doctrine which is as the Vrim and Thummim that the Priest did beare on his brest-plate of iudgement Exod. 28 30. It is the best harmony that can be made when life and doctrine agree together otherwise we are as iarring cymbals Hence it is that the Prophet speaking of the Couenant of life and peace made with Leui Malac. 2 6 saith The law of truth was in his mouth and iniquity was not found in his lippes c. and he did turne many away from iniquity The Ministers are called by Christ both the light of the world and the salt of the earth In like manner Paul exhorteth the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28. Take heed vnto your selues and to all the flocke ouer the which the holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers 1 Tim 4 16. to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood They must take heed to themselues by liuing well and to the flocke by feeding well with wholesome food They must shew themselues patternes of good workes Titus 2 7 8. If the calling were meane meane gifts would serue to furnish them that are chosen and exalted to that calling but seeing it is great we ought to labour after great gifts and to be adorned with worthy graces They that watch ouer soules ought to haue a quicke and sharpe sight that they may descry the crafty wiles and guiles of Satan They ought to haue a wonderfull care of their duty that are to attend the flocke of God day and night and be able to teach all and to deale with all sorts of men as Math. 13 52. He must be a Scribe taught of God No young scholler a workman that needeth not to be ashamed who see and try his worke diuiding the word of truth aright They must be able to seeke out that which is lost able to strengthen the weake able to heale the sicke able to binde vp the broken No skill is sufficient for these works to be the Lords husbandmen to dresse and husband the Church that it become not an vnfruitfull and barren wildernesse No skill in vs is sufficient to make vs the light of the world Math. 5 the salt of the earth the builders of Christs body the coworkers of God 1 Corinth 3 19 the Embassadours of Christ 2 Corinth 5 20 the Stewards of the house Titus 1 7 the fathers of the Church 1 Corinth 4 15 the fishers of men Math. 4 19 the Ministers of the Spirit 2 Corinth 3 6 the builders of the Temple the Shepheards of the sheepe Eph. 4 11 the planters and waterers of the garden 1 Corinth 3 6 7 the watchmen of the City Ezek. 33 7. Heb. 13 17 the Trumpetters of the host and the stars of the firmament Reuel 1 20. Dan. 12 3. The City of God which is the Church is a more glorious and beautifull worke then is the fabrick or frame of the whole world besides On the other side see the misery of blinde guides and the mischiefe that commeth by dumbe dogs yea the desolation that cometh vpon the people that haue such Pastours or Shepheards they are altogether vnworthy of that calling No man will make him his horsekeeper that hath no knowledge nor skil in horsemanshippe nor any experience that way nor his Cooke that cannot tell how to dresse his meate nay not his swineheard that is no better then an Image or Idoll and cannot tell how to guide or gouerne them And yet behold the simplicity and sottishnesse of the world and wonder at it They regard not to commit the soules of men that are most precious to such as we wil not willingly commit an heard of bruite beasts to be kept Ezek 33 6. The watchman that is blinde and dumbe and the City that setteth vp such an one shall perish together and our Sauiour testifieth that if the blinde leade the blinde both shall fall into the ditch Mat. 15 14. Woe vnto such leaders woe vnto such as are thus led These make this a base calling as if Ieroboams Priests were fit enough that were taken from the lowest of the people CHAP. IIII. 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron saying 2. Take the summe of the sonnes of Kohath from among the sonnes of Leui after their families by the house of their fathers 3. From thirty yeares and vpward euen vntill fifty yeares old all that enter into the host to doe the worke in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 4. This shall be the seruice of the sonnes of Kohath in the Tabernacle of the Congregation about the most holy things IN this Chapter we haue an other numbring of the Leuites howbeit it is in another kinde then the former in the former chapter For in the third chapter the Tribe of Leui is numbred according to the persons but in this chapter it is numbred according to their office and Ministery so that there is a great difference betweene this and the other True it is Difference betweene the numbring in this chapter and the former in them both this Tribe is numbred but not this Tribe onely nor all the same persons nor yet to the same end We saw before a generall enumeration of the families of the Leuites as they succeeded in the roome of the first borne who had beene separated sanctified to the worship of God to the Ministery of the word to the seruice of the Church and to the spirituall gouernment of the people so that as well the first borne as they are numbred But in this chapter onely the Leuites are numbred not all nor any of the first borne who were now freed and exempted and fully discharged from that ministration Againe in the former chapter all the Leuites are numbred from a moneth old vpward but in this onely such as were fitted by their yeares to vndertake and execute the office of the Ministery which lawfull age is heere defined and determined to begin at thirty and to end at fifty yeares Lastly that numbring in the former chapter was to another end and purpose then this There they were all numbred frō one moneth that it might be knowne what ouerplus there was of the first borne but heere they are accounted from 30. yeares old to 50. that
and constant in his promise therefore he neuer deceiueth nor deludeth those that are his with vaine wordes whose truth reacheth vnto the clouds Reason 2 Secondly as he is true in nature so he is vnchangeable in will he is not like man that he should lye Man is subiect to vanity inconstancy as to speake and not to do it to promise and not to keepe it but it is not so with God who hath opened his mouth wil performe it This doth Iob plainly declare Chap. 23 13. Hee is in one minde and who can turne him Tea he doth what his minde desireth for he will performe that which is decreed of me and many such things are with him There is no variablenesse with him neither shadow of turning he remaineth the same euermore To this purpose Moses declareth that Balaam could not curse the people of God but was constrained against his will to blesse them Numb 23 19. because God is not as man that he should lye neither as the Son of man that he should repent Hath he sayde and shall he not do it Hath he spoken and shall he not accomplish it Thirdly hee is powerful and of himselfe Reason 3 able and sufficient to worke out his own wil so that nothing shall hinder him or delay the doing thereof when the time is come It falleth out oftentimes with man when hee hath promised to accomplish a worke that hee is not able to performe it either through weaknesse in himselfe or through the ouer-ruling power that is in another It is not so with God whatsoeuer he decreeth hee doeth whatsoeuer he willeth he worketh and performeth When after Gods gracious promise to giue flesh vnto his people in abundance Moses doubted therof in regard of the want of those meanes which he saw not and the multitude of the people which he saw the Lord said vnto him Is the Lords hand shortned Numb 11 23. Thou shalt now see whether my word shall come to passe vnto thee or not Seeing therefore God is true of his word vnchangeable in his will and powerfull in his workes wee may builde our faith vpon this trueth that his promises shall neuer faile any of his children Let vs now apply this doctrine to our selues Vse 1 First is this certaine that God will performe whatsoeuer he hath promised Then we may conclude this that whatsoeuer promises are not yet fulfilled shall in due time bee accomplished How many promises hath he already verified Could any power or strength of man preuaile against him to frustrate them and to make them of none effect Many there are that he hath made which are yet to come they also shall be made good for euen they are as easily brought to passe as the rest which wee see already performed We haue a prophesie promise of the calling of the Iewes that they shall be gathered into the Sheepfold of Christ and professe his name for God is able to graft them in againe Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom 11 23. I would not Brethren that ye should be ignorant of this secret lest ye should be arrogant in your selues that partly obstinacy is come to Israel vntill the fulnes of the Gentiles be come in See then hereby the prophesie inuerted Once it was as we heard before that God should perswade Iapheth to dwel in the tents of Sem but now the promise is that God will perswade Sem to dwell in the Tents of Iapheth As therefore the church of the Iews is brought in praying for the conuersion of the Gentiles so shold we by an holy emulation from them apply vnto them and for them theyr owne words Cant. 8 8. We haue a litle Sister and she hath no brests what shall we do for our Sister when she shall be spoken for The calling of the Gentiles once seemed as vnprobable and vnpossible yet did God take away all obstacles and stumbling-blockes and brought them vnto the faith by the power of his two-edged sword so we cannot doubt for faithfull is he that hath promised but in his good time he wil in mercy looke vpon the naturall branches and according to his ancient bountifulnesse graft them into their owne Oliue tree They are the first borne of God and as it were the elder Brethren of the house albeit they seeme disinherited for a season and cast out of the house yet God will admit them againe receiue them into the adoption of sonnes And our doctrine serueth vs as a prop and pillar to vnder-prop our faith touching this point Againe God hath promised that hee will free vs from all sinne and misery Reu. 7 16 15. that he will wipe away all teares from our eyes and make vs without spot and wrinkle so that wee shall hunger and thirst no more We see not this with our bodily eyes neither are wee made partakers of this promise For behold vnto this houre we both hunger and thirst 1 Cor. 4 11 12.13 and are naked and are buffeted and haue no certaine abiding place we are reuiled and yet we blesse wee are persecuted and suffer it we are euill spoken of and we pray we are made as the filth of the world the off-scouring of all things vnto this time This doctrine therefore serueth to vphold our faith in this point Thirdly God hath promised to raise vp our bodies that haue lien in the dust and are rotted in the earth by his almighty power who calleth things that are not as if they were True it is it goeth aboue naturall reason to conceiue vnderstand this truth Rom. 8 11. yet the Apostle saith If the Spirit of Christ that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies How soeuer then our bodies bee either burned or drowned or deuoured God will raise them for with him nothing is vnpossible We see what men are able to doe by Art and workemanship of ashes they are able to make costly and curious glasses by distillation they are able to extract the spirite and quintessence of sundry things out of one mettall it is not hard with them to draw another as Siluer out of Lead by melting and refining by sowing their corne that rotteth in the earth we see it hath a new body giuen it Therefore it is not impossible in it selfe Notwithstanding we see not this as yet performed the bodyes of the Saints remaine in the earth and see corruption This doctrine therefore serueth to vphold our faith in this point to make vs rest in hope that he will not alwayes leaue them in the graue nor suffer them to perish therein for euermore Lastly God hath foretold that there shall be an end of this world that the Lorde Iesus shall breake the heauens and come to iudge al flesh so that the dead shall rise and all shall stand before his iudgement seate to receyue according to their workes
Obiection that may arise from this doctrine For some man may obiect the world is full of mixtures and confusions so that all is vanity vnder the Sun Wee see good men to suffer euill and to be oppressed euery day on the other side euill men enioy the good of the Land haue al things that heart can wish or desire The godly are afflicted the vngodly are most respected and rewarded are not these great disorders I answer Answer first confusions as they are thus confused are not of God as they are out of order they proceed not from the God of order but from the Prince of darknesse that ruleth in the ayre and the author of confusion that gouerneth in the earth The proper cause of disorder is the Diuell who first disordered himselfe and kept not his first estate but left the heauens and habitation wherein hee was formed hee by deceiuing our first parents and tempting them to sinne brought vpon them and their posterity ruine and destruction So then such as are simply disorders were brought in by sinne and sinne by the Diuell Of this we spake before in the Preface Secondly we must vnderstand that there is order euen in disordered and distempered things the which albeit it do not appeare to vs by reason of the veile of corruption crept in that shutteth our eyes yet it is knowne to God to whose iudgement wee must submit our selues and to whose wisedome wee must subscribe of whom the wise man saith Hee hath made euery thing beautifull in his time Eccles 3 11 howsoeuer it seeme deformed to vs. Thus much of the obiection the vses follow Vse 1 First learne from hence to acknowledge an exquisite order in all Gods wordes and workes aboue and beneath in heauen earth and in all places If we do not alwaies see the same it is our weaknesse and want of sight and it should mooue vs to call vpon God to open our eyes to beholde the same and if we do see it yet to craue we may see it more and more to his glory and our comfort Let vs lift vp our eyes and behold the worke of creation he hath made all his creatures in a most pure and perfect order in number weight and measure Hee hath appointed the Sunne to rule the day and the Moone to rule the night The earth with all her furniture Trees Hearbes Plants Corne and Grasse for cattell and the vse of man The waters with all their store keepe their comely course and order He hath set them a bound which they shall not passe Psal 104 9 so that they shall not returne to couer the earth He hath diuided the parts of the yeare as winter and sommer heat and cold day and night which continue in a constant course according as they are disposed of him He hath assigned and appointed Kings and Princes Rulers and Magistrates to gouerne his people in all good and godly order We shall not need to wander farre off to learne this if we can come homeward and enter into our selues we shall finde sufficient testimonies to confirme this point in our soules and bodies For as we cannot be ignorant how in the frame of this Vniuerse the matter forme priuation simplicity mixture generation corruption action passion compounded of vnlike Elements of earth of water of the aire of fire is notwithstanding preserued by due and distinct proportion which the parts haue seuerally and as in the family the husband and wife the father and children the maister and seruants are knit together by the same reason of analogy so is it in this little world of man wee behold therein the foot-steps of this comely order in the soule minde vnderstanding memory heart reason speech and such like powers the like might be saide of the members of the body placed in a profitable and pleasant order manifestly declaring the wisedome of the Creator And as the admirable workes of God are seene in naturall and ciuill things so much more in spirituall and heauenly things If we enter into the consideration of the goodly and golden chaine of the causes of our saluation we shall see a notable order of them so linked and ioyned together that no confusion at all appeareth therein but all tend to the setting foorth of the glory of his great Name This the Apostle teacheth Rom. 8 30. Moreouer whom he predestinated those also he called and whom hee called Rom 8 30. them also hee iustified and whom hee iustified them hee also glorified This course is neuer broken off the linkes of this chaine can neuer be put asunder no man can make a diuorce and diuision betweene them This cōnexion of causes is to be looked into and wee must dligently marke the coherence of them We must not aime onely at the last in our desires as Balaam did but wee must learne to ioyne them together and then wee shall finde comfort in them And as there is a distinct order in our generation and regeneration so there is in our resurrection and glorification nay there is the perfection and consummation of all order To this purpose the same Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15 22 23. As in Adam all die euen so in Christ shall all be made aliue but euery man in his owne order the first fruites is Christ afterward they that are of Christ at his coming shall rise againe Albeit therefore the graue seeme to bury all things in confusion and the Chambers of death to be as a Land of darknesse ●b 10 21 22. where no order is yet the resurrection beeing as the shining of the day and the bringing of all things vnto light shall make manifest an heauenly order that God obserueth therein Likewise hee speaketh in the same chapter There is one glory of the Sunne cor 15 41 42 another glory of the Moone and another glory of the Stars for one Starre differeth from another in glory so also is the resurrection of the dead c. This order we must reuerence and acknowledge this wee must beleeue and hope for and this we shall haue a blessed experience of in our owne persons when this corruptible shall put on incorruption and this mortall bee cloathed with immortality But among all the works of God none doeth more aboundantly shew foorth the glory and maiesty of him that is the God of order then the word which he hath magnified aboue all other names The worke of creation setteth foorth the glory of the Creator inasmuch as the inuisible thinges of him that is Rom. 1 20. his eternall power and God-head are seene thereby but the power and wisedome and goodnesse and truth of God appeareth much more brightly in those sacred oracles broght vnto vs from his owne mouth True it is the manner of setting downe and placing the seuerall parts of Scripture as they stand in our printed bookes What order of the Scrip●ure is humane and what diuine is meerely humane and proceedeth from
Tribe Gen. 49 17. Dan shall be a serpent by the way an adder in the path that biteth the horse-heeles so that his rider shall fall backward which declareth that the power might of this Tribe should not be great but preuaile rather by fraud and deceit 〈◊〉 15 76.18 27. Thus Sampson preuailed against the Philistims and afterward they ouercame the City Laish ●●ctrine 7. ●●d often●●●es maketh ●ise of the ●●kest in●●●ments and burnt it with fire We learne from hence that it pleaseth God oftentimes to chuse and vse the weakest meanest men to bee instruments for the accomplishing of his greatest workes Hee maketh choice of inferiour things to performe his decrees and to do good to his Church and to serue him wheresoeuer hee purposeth to imploy them This appeareth cleerer then the Sun throughout the Scriptures in preferring the younger before the elder in the calling of many Iudges in the election of many Kings in the separating of many Prophets and in the ordaining of many Apostles who were of little reckoning and estimation before their honour and aduancement to verifie that which the Psalmist saith Psal 75 6 7. Promotion commeth neyther from the East nor from the West nor from the South but God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Saul was a seeker of his fathers asses and though hee found not them he found the kingdome Samuel being sent to annoint him 1 Sam. 10. Dauid was the youngest of his fathers house and the lowest among one of the lowest families left with the sheepe in the wildernesse according to that in the Psalme He chose Dauid his seruant and tooke him from the sheepe-folds ●●al 78 70 71 from following the Ewes great with young he brought him to feede Iacob his people and Israel his inheritance And as God chose him from feeding a flocke of sheep to feed a better flocke so he chose some of his Apostles from catching fish to catch foules Peter was a fisherman as before him Amos was an heard-man Thus did God throw downe the strong walles of Iericho not by might of men nor by munition of war but by Rams horns which were blowed by the Priests Iosh 6 20 In the creation he brought light out of darknesse the fowles out of the waters and all things out of nothing Gen. 1 3 20. Heb. 11 3. Christ wrought many of his cures in like manner in healing the blinde man for hee spate on the ground made clay of the spettle and then annointed the eyes of the blinde man with the clay then he had him wash in the poole of Siloam who by and by went his way washed and came seeing Iohn 9 6 7. Likewise in the worke of our redemption the truth of this is more apparant for he wrought by contraries bringing life out of death He came downe to the earth to lift vs vp into heauen Beza Confess chap. 3. art 29. Eph. 2 6. He suffered the punishments of our sinnes that he might make vs free from them Math. 11 28. 1 Pet. 2 24. He perfectly fulfilled all righteousnesse that he might couer our vnrighteousnesse Rom. 5 19. And to the end he might fully satisfie for our sinnes hee was made sinne that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Corin. 5 21. He was bound that we might be loosed hee was condemned that we might be acquitted he was crucified in his body that hee might nayle our sinnes to his Crosse and fasten them there for euer Col. 2 14. He tooke vpon him the curse due to vs that he might appease the wrath of his Father against vs Heb. 10 10. He dyed for vs that we might liue he was buried and laide in the graue that he might ouercome death in his owne cabin and denne Acts 2 24. Lastly he rose againe as a Captain and Conqueror from the dead and could not be holden of the sorrowes of death that wee should walke in newnesse of life Rom 6 4. All these examples of Saul of Dauid of Amos of Peter of Christ of the Patriarkes of the Prophets of the Iudges and of the Apostles serue to teach vs this truth that it is the manner of Gods dealing to make choise of small meanes to effect great matters and to single out weake instruments to worke out worthy enterprises Neither ought this to be maruelled at as Reason 1 strange in our eyes For if there were no other reason to induce vs to beleeue it the only will and good pleasure of God ought to be sufficient as being the highest mouing cause and indeed the cause of all causes His will is a law and who shall heerein controule him of errour or conuince him of folly or condemne him of vnsufficiency If he will let the full rich goe away empty who shall say vnto him Why dost thou so Or who can accuse him of rashnesse This is that which Christ our Sauiour setteth downe Luc. 10 21. In that houre Iesus reioyced in spirit and saide I thanke thee O Father Lord of heauen and earth that thou hast hidde these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes euen so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Where wee see he maketh the pleasure of God to be the stay of himselfe so it ought to be with vs if we once come to know what seemeth good in the eyes of God though we know no more though we can see no farther and though ten thousand reasons as a mighty army may seeme to encounter against it yet we must rest our selues vpon it as vpon a rocke and build our house vpon it as a foundation Reason 2 Secondly this serueth best to make manifest the glory of God when as great things are done by a weake hand Now the weaker the instruments are which he setteth on work the more euidently is his power seene and the better doth his praise appeare This gaue Dauid comfort and assurance being a stripling vnarmed and vntrained to the field to encounter hand to hand in a single combat with a mighty gyant he doubted not to ouercome him but was perswaded in his heart of his helpe that neuer forsaketh his that trust in him and call vpon him that he should smite him with his sling take his head from him with his sword and giue the carcasses of the hoste of the Philistims vnto the fowles of the ayre and to the wild beasts of the earth and he maketh this the reason of all That all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel 1 Sam. 17.46 1 Sam. 17.46 This also doth the Apostle inferre and inforce in another kind speaking of our saluation and redemption and of those that are counted worthy to be partakers of them 1 Cor. 1.26 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29 31. You know your calling how that not many wise men after the flesh nor many mighty nor many noble are called but
Lord brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you out of the house of bondmen from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt The like doth the blessed Virgin confesse Luke 1.48 Luke 1.48.49 and 2.8 ●oh 7.46 He hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden for beholde from henceforth all generations shal call me blessed for he that is mighty hath done to me great things and holy is his Name She was a poore despised handmaid in Israel yet chosen to be the mother of Christ The Apostles were many of them taken from base trades other from ignominious offices some were fishermen called as they were mending their nets Matthew was one of the Publicanes which were contemned of the people of Israel yet God made them master builders of his Church and appointed them to lay the foundation and so had the highest and chiefest place of honour and preferment to be made planters of Churches throughout the whole world God therfore vseth when it pleaseth him persons of inferiour place and condition to effect great and mighty things And why should it not be so forasmuch as Reason 1 all things are ruled and ordered by his prouidence he disposeth of them in his wisedome as seemeth good vnto himselfe for the pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world vpon them 1 Sam. 2.8 All the frame of heauen is whirled about the poles this is the order that God hath set and who is able to alter it whatsouer things come to passe in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath are all the workes of his hands he setteth vp and pulleth downe at his owne appointment and who shall be able to controll them Secondly in the choice of simple and vntoward Reason 2 meanes such as haue litle or no force in them his glory is most of all seene Now hee will maintaine his owne glory and will haue it acknowledged and magnified of his creatures and requireth that hee which glorieth should glory in him as 1 Cor. 1.29 hee will haue no flesh glory in his presence Iere. 9.23 neither the rich man in his riches nor the strong man in his strength nor the wise man in his wisedome but let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. So then he chuseth foolish things before the wise weake things to confound the mighty and base things of the world to bring to nought things that are because he hath respect to the manifestation and setting forth of his owne glory Thirdly we are not to maruell that God Reason 3 maketh such a choyce of his instruments which carnall men might account an euill and vngrounded choice because he respecteth the heart and not the outward appearance 2 Chr. 28.4 5. When Dauid the least and so the most vnlikely both in his fathers family and in the eyes of the iudgement of men was annointed to be king chosen as he followed the Ewes great with yong to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel the Lord said vnto Samuel Looke not on the countenance of the eldest nor on the height of his stature 1 Sam. 16.7 because I haue refused him for the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearan●● but the Lord looketh on the heart Thus then we may conclude that God raiseth vp weake instruments to honour him and employeth them to serue him in the workes to which it pleaseth him to fit them Let vs therefore make some vses of this Vse 1 Doctrine which serue vnto vs for great profit First of all it ministreth great comfort to such as are poore and of low degree for albeit men contemne them and disgrace them albeit they are ready to tread them vnder their feet and thrust them to the wall albeit they be hissed at in the streetes and oppressed by the mighty yet God vouchsafeth to respect them and in great mercy to looke vpon them This we see in our spirituall estate and condition What are we but a masse of sinne the children of wrath and condemnation yet God vouchsafeth to elect vs and call vs by his grace to the knowlege of his truth from our naturall life led in the time of our ignorance It was the mercy of God to call Dauid from the sheepefolds and from following the Ewes great with yong Psal 78. But it was a greater mercy to call vs from the greatest bondage and slauery that euer was bound faster then with chaines of yron which giueth vs no time to rest or breathe or feed or sleepe but setteth vpon vs continually day and night This thraldome is worse then that of Egypt it is endlesse intollerable deadly and without intermission What an honour and dignitie then doth God doe vnto vs who were strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in vs to deliuer vs from this captiuity and to bring vs into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Our perdition is of our selues Hos 13.9 but our saluation is of the Lord Reuel 7.10 He will not giue his glory to any other ● 42.8 and therefore let not vs ascribe it vnto our selues or to any creature but magnifie the goodnesse of the Creator who is blessed for euermore We are raised vp from the greatest misery to the greatest glory as the lowest ebbe hath the highest tide and therefore let vs shew all thankefulnesse and obedience vnto him ●●t 9.4 Before the children of Israel entred into the land of promise he gaue them warning and a watchword that they should not say in their hearts nor speake it with their mouthes that it was for their owne righteousnesse they were brought into Canaan and shall we thinke that we are deliuered from the slauery of sinne and Satan and made the freemen of Iesus Christ by our owne deserts and so giue the glory of our saluation to our selues Let this be farre from vs euen as farre as hee hath remooued our transgressions from vs. So then ●l 103.12 heere is matter of great comfort that our sins are forgiuen vs and though the remnants of them remaine in vs yet they haue receiued their deathes wound and shall in the end vtterly die in vs. And in the meane season while we beare about with vs the body of this sinne ●m 8.9 the Lord calleth vs spirituall and esteemeth vs according to his grace not according to our corruption If there be one sparke of grace and one drop of faith as a graine of mustard seede God acknowledgeth vs to be his ●mb 23.21 he seeth none iniquity in Iacob he beholdeth no transgression in Israel He that is euill can see nothing in Gods seruants but euill if sinne be in them Satan will charge them that sinne reigneth in them It is otherwise with God he iudgeth not of vs by the reliques of sinne but by the beginning of grace If we haue the first fruites of the new man in vs the remnants of
the first borne c. We see heere that the Leuites were substituted in the place of the first borne who did first of all execute the Ministers office The Lord if it had pleased him could haue serued the Church with them for euer but for the causes before rehearsed he exempted them from this seruice after that for a small time and a few yeeres he had tryed their obedience to his holy wil and commandement Now in their stead he taketh the Tribe of Leui to minister vnto him and for his Doctrine 1 people We learne hereby The office 〈◊〉 the Ministery is an high and worthy ca●ling that the office of the Ministery is a most worthy and excellent calling This is that which the Apostle saith writing to the Hebrewes chap. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron If then it be an honour to be called to this office it followeth to be an high and honourable calling Likewise writing to the Romanes and declaring that none can preach except they be sent hee addeth out of the Prophet How beautifull are the feete of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things Rom. 10.15 And instructing Timothy touching this office he saith This is a true saying If a man desire the office of a Byshop he desireth a worthy worke and afterward in the same Epistle cha 5.17 Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour specially they who labour in the word and doctrine Seeing then the Ministery is an honour as the Priesthood of Aaron was seeing the office is a worthy worke and seeing the feet of the Ministers that bring the word vnto vs are beautifull so that they are worthy not onely of single but of double honour it followeth that the calling is exalted aboue many others and ought to haue a reuerent and speciall account among vs. The trueth heereof will farther appeare Reason 1 vnto vs by the force of reasons as so many proppes to stay it vp First we must consider the title giuen vnto them of an Embassadour what greater honour then to be the Embassadour of a Prince The Minister is more he is the messenger of the Lord of hostes Mal 2.7 2 Cor. 5.20 and commeth from the King of kings and Lord of lordes He is in stead of Christ appointed and sent of him to reconcile men to himselfe and to saue them So then the Ministers supply the office and sustaine the person of the Sonne of God who is the word and wisedome of his Father Not that he would haue the Ministery of his word lesse esteemed then if he should speake from heauen with terrible signes of Thunder and lightning but that he might by this meanes teach in a more familiar manner and so make the better tryall of our obedience Therefore the Apostle saith He that knoweth God heareth vs Ioh. 4.6 he that is not of God heareth vs not hereby know we the spirit of trueth and the spirit of errour We must heare the word preached by man not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God Thess 2.13 and so set our selues in his presence Hence it is that he saith to the disciples whom he had sent out ●ct 10.33 He that heareth you ●●rk 10.16 heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me If then the Ministery be an embassage sent vnto vs from God whereby God after a sort sueth to vs for reconciliation it serueth to set forth vnto vs the honour of this calling Secondly the honour of the Ministery is to Reason 2 saue mens soules which of all workes is the highest the holyest the heauenlyest the greatest What other calling can compare with it in this respect Other professions and ordinances respect the good of this life as peace or health or wealth and such like but the end of the Ministery alone is the saluation of soules Paul willeth Timothy to take heed to himselfe and vnto doctrine adding this reason Tim. 4.16 ●biection for in doing this thou shalt saue both thy selfe and them that heare thee It will be obiected we are saued by Christ onely as I haue beene oftentimes answered we haue saluation by no other then by him ●nswer It is true indeed Christ hath performed so much as is sufficient for the saluation of all yet none are actually saued but they onely to whom the benefits and merites of the Messiah are communicated Now his merits are applyed two wayes by the Ministery of the word and by receiuing of the Sacraments for which cause the power of saluation is ascribed vnto them We doe not teach that men are saued by the preaching of the word to driue men from Christ thereby or to build our saluation vpon any other for we preach nothing we regard to know nothing but Christ and him crucified We goe not about to lay any other foundation but the question is of the meanes how we shall come to the sauing knowledge of Christ which is ordinarily done by the sound and sincere preaching of the Gospel so that this calling is a most excellent calling Reason 3 Thirdly this truth is farther confirmed and strengthened by the contrary in that without it ordinarily no man can attaine to saluation as may appeare by the meanes whereby it is effected and by the degrees whereby it is finished None shall be saued but such as are effectually called but what is the Church other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a company of men called and they are called by the Ministery of the Gospel made powerfull and effectuall by the Spirit of God Ye are called by our Gospel 2 Thes 2.14 to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Iesus Christ By it our mindes are enlightened to see our owne miseries and Gods infinite mercies and then by it Luk. 1.79 Act. 26.18 Esay 53.1 as by the strong arme of God we are drawne vnto him Againe none are saued but such as are iustified being acquitted from their sinnes and accepted in Christ as righteous and as heires of eternall life But we are iustified by faith and faith commeth by hearing the word of God Rom. 10.17 1 Cor. 3.5 so that the Preachers are the Ministers by whom we beleeue Lastly none are saued but such as are sanctified by the Spirit of regeneration and whosoeuer is in Christ is become a new creature 1 Pet. 1.23 but we are borne againe by the immortall seed which is the word of the eternall God so that we are begotten into him by the preaching of the word In this respect the Ministers are called spirituall fathers 1 Cor. 4.15 because they beget vs as children by the Gospel of Iesus Christ Thus then we see the worthinesse and excellency of this calling and what we are to esteem therof As then we heard
the reasons so let vs hearken Vse 1 to the vses First of all this ought to be a strong motiue vnto vs to mooue vs to desire this calling It is an encouragement vnto vs to enter into it a good warrant that it is lawfull to desire it Who doth not desire honour excellency in this world Saul being threatened to haue the kingdom rent from him desired that Samuel would honour him among the people God lifteth vp the heads of those that are fitted to this calling Iob 33. Obiect who are as one of a thousand But is it indeed lawfull will some say to affect this calling to desire the office of a Byshop may a man seeke and sue for it I answere Answer neither euery man nor all desire is warranted There are two sorts of men two sorts of desires Some men are fitted and some are vnfit There is a desire that is good and there is a desire that is euill according as the fountain is out of which they issue proceed The corrupt desire ariseth sometimes from ambition and sometimes frō couetousnes delighting to set out themselues or coueting to enrich themselues For some are possessed and puffed vp with the spirit of pride and vaine glory setting out thēselues with shewes of worldly wisedome and magnifying themselues and their gifts to tickle wanton and delicate eares others make the Ministery as their last shift and refuge when they haue made shipwracke of a good conscience and know not otherwise how to liue This is a wicked preposterous desire For as such as haue neither learning nor honesty neither are willing to labour for their liuing when they can no longer maintaine themselues their last remedy is to turne Ale-house-keepers and to set vp tipling houses so such as haue gottē a litle smattering knowledge as shreds or scraps gathered from other mens tables haue peraduenture baited their horses in the Vniuersitie though they be as farre from sound or setled skill in Diuinity as their horses when they know not which way to turne themselues to liue neither can shift any more their scandalous and lasciuious courses being descryed and perceiued of all men beginne to thinke of the Ministery and make that a meanes to maintaine them idlely loosely and wickedly This desire is sinfull and carnall woe vnto such as thus desire the calling woe vnto such as helpe them to it and as it were hold the stirrup vnto them while they mount vp into Moses chaire woe vnto them that suffer them to haue entrance and giue them easie passage to make houocke of the sheepe of Christ and woe vnto that people that haue such a plague sent in among them to destroy their soules But besides this there is an holy and godly desire comming from the true feare of God and the zeale of his glory when he giueth vnto a man this purpose and resolution to consecrate himselfe to the Ministery of the Church and to put in practise such gifts as are bestowed vpon him The former sort desire the honour not the worke the maintenance but not the paines Such as desire it to be reuerenced are ambitious such as affect it to be maintained are couetous They that are set in this calling ought to be reuerenced but they ought not to respect that as the ende of their entrance into it they ought to be maintained but that should not be their principall marke but Gods glory and the peoples good Blessed are they that haue this godly desire blessed be God that hath put it into their hearts and blessed are that people that haue such a conscionable Pastor set ouer them to reueale vnto them the counsels of God and the mysteries of saluation These men feeling the blessing of God vpon their studies and themselues in some good measure fitted and furnished for this function are willing to exercise their giftes and employ their talent which is indeed one part of their calling Hence it is that Paul saith Ro. 1.15.16 So much as in me is I am ready to preach the Gospel to you that are at Rome also for I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ for it is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth c. Hee acknowledgeth himselfe a debter vnto all men God is the creditor who hath giuen out his money to euery one of his seruants that they should gaine euery one to their master not to themselues the money committed is his gifts and graces that he hath distributed vnto them according to his owne pleasure so that we hauing receiued not onely to beleeue our selues but to teach faith vnto others ought to be ready willing prompt and prepared to employ such giftes as are bestowed vpon vs. Thus also doth the Apostle Peter teach the Elders 1 Pet. 5.2 to feede the flocke of God which is among them taking the ouersight therof not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde c. And in the old Testament the Prophet Esay when his tongue had beene touched with a coale from the Altar and that he had heard the voyce of the Lord saying Whom shall I send doth of his owne accord offer himselfe and his seruice Behold here I am send me Wherefore Esay 6.8 whomsoeuer the Lord God shal cal immediately by his Spirit and furnish with gifts requisite for a Minister he will also touch his heart with willingnesse and readinesse to employ those graces and to set them on worke he will giue him a desire to glorifie him in the seruice of the Church and to gaine soules to his Master Christ Secondly it reprooueth sundry abuses of Vse 2 such as transgresse against this truth and dash their foote against this doctrine as against a stone as if they meant violently to oppose themselues against it or knew not that therin they fight against God which may be reduced to three heads First such as abuse their persons and tread vpon them as their footstoole Secondly such as contemne the Ministery it selfe as base and vile Thirdly such as deny them any maintenance fit for their calling One sort are wretched and prophane another proud high-minded the third worldly and couetous Touching the first sort The first reproofe it is too common a practise in the world to scorne and scoffe at the Ministers of the Gospel which is as much as to make open profession to be voyde of all soundnesse and sincerity of religion For such as hate them and despise them because they are Ministers doe despise nay despite God himselfe and Christ our Sauiour as Luke 10.16 He that despiseth you despiseth me and hee that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Where Christ setteth downe this as a rule whereby euery man may examine his owne heart and make tryall of his religion and piety toward God euen by his affection and behauiour toward the Ministers of God It was neuer knowne since the world
and infirmities of the Ministers should not bring the holy ordinances of God into contempt Lastly this law seemeth to be restrained to such Leuites as bare the burden of the Tabernacle the Sanctuary all the instruments of it For God will haue no man to liue without a calling he aloweth idlenesse in no estate and condition What then did the Leuites What the Leuites did after 50. yeares of age They trained vp younger men they instructed them and were no doubt as the Ouerseers of the schooles of the Prophets in them were the younger sort brought vp and called the children of the Prophets Besides they preached to the people and taught the Law of the Lord which is no idle worke but a matter of great labour exceeding paines so that albeit they bare not material burdens which required strength of body yet they bare weightier burdens then those they had the charge of mens soules lying heauy vpon them which is able to presse downe the feete and to weary the shoulders of the strongest man Last of all no doubt they were present president at the oblations that were brought they offered sacrifices and burned incense vnto God in the Tabernacle so many of them as were of the number of the Priests as appeareth by the age of Aaron who ministred in the place of Gods seruice after the age of fifty It is noted of Zachary the Priest that he was an old man Luc. 1 7. he was well striken in yeares which cannot be supposed or imagined but he was aboue 50. yeares of age yet he ceassed not to execute the Priests office before God in the order of his course and burned incense in the Temple Nay the circumstances of the text in that place do rather guide vs and as it were leade vs by the hand to thinke that he was more then threescore peraduenture fourscore and it may be aboue otherwise there had beene no great barre and impediment on his behalfe but he might haue a childe wheras he obiecteth against the Angel not onely the age of his wife but also his owne age Whereby shall I know this Luc. 1 18. for I am an old man and my wife well striken in yeares So then all the Leuites being come to the age of fifty trained vp young men vnder them they were as tutors vnto them taught the people knowledge sitting in the chaire of Moses and the Priests offered sacrifice to God first in the Tabernacle and after in the Temple their time of vacation therefore was granted from such labours and seruice as required the strength of the body which Moses himselfe seemeth to point vnto afterward in this booke From the age of fifty yeares they shall cease waiting vpon the seruice thereof Num. 8 25 26 and shall serue no more but shall minister with their brethren in the Tabernacle of the Congregation to keepe the charge and shall do no seruice c. Verses 2 3. Take the summe of the sonnes of Kohath c from thirty yeares old and aboue c. See heere a different manner obserued in numbring of this Tribe from the former Before they were numbred at a moneth olde because then they were fit to be presented to God but yet not fit to execute the office of the Ministery or manage any businesse of charge and importance Now none are numbred vnder thirty because before they were not capable of this office Such as were to serue in the warres among the other Tribes were numbred at 20. yeares old but such as were to appeare before the Lord to doe the warfare of his seruice Numb 8 25. as the Scripture speaketh must be 30. yeares of age so that he requireth greater maturity in the gifts of the body and minde greater wisedome vnderstanding in such as minister in the Tabernacle then in such as pitch vp their Tents and go out with an army There is wonderfull skil required in leading an host of men against the enemy but to be a Captaine ouer the Lords people and to conduct them into the field against the spirituall enemies of our soules where the danger is greater is a matter of deeper knowledge pollicy experience and iudgement We learne from hence how the Doctrine 1 Ministers of the word ought to be qualified The Minis● of the wo●● must be man of grauity 〈◊〉 moderan●● their affe●●ons they must be men of grauity wisedome sobriety and moderation of all their affections For if this were required of those that serued in the Tabernacle and the Temple in the time of the old Testament that onely they of 30. yeares old and aboue euen vntill fifty should enter into that calling who then were in the prime and flower of their age and had the greatest gifts much more is it necessarily required of the Ministers of the Gospel that they be men of sobriety constancy staiednesse wisedome iudgement and diligence Such as were to builde the Tabernacle and to frame all the instruments of it and appurtenances vnto it were filled with the Spirit of God in wisedome and in vnderstanding Exod. 31 3. and in knowledge and in all manner of workmanship All such as had any hand in the erecting thereof were fitted to it for God did put wisedome in the hearts of all that were wise-hearted verse 6. that so they might make all that he had commanded them The building vp of Gods Church is a greater worke and therefore the workmen appointed to the edification of it must not haue lesser gifts or baser qualities Hence it is that the sons of Eli are noted to bee wicked men greeuous sinners that knew not the Lord 1 Sam 2 1●● because they bare themselues without sobriety temperance and discretion they were ful of lightnesse wantonnesse excesse and couetousnesse The sinnes of Ieroboam are set out that he made not choise of the Tribe of Leui 1 Kings 12 ● but took the scum of the people and the basest of them men of euill note Christ willeth his Disciples to be wise as serpents Math. 10. 1 Tim. ●● Titus 1 ● The Apostle Paul describing what the Ministers ought to be teacheth that they must be vnreproueable and blamelesse they must be wise iust patient temperate discreete not selfe willed not soone angry not giuen to fighting and brawling So that the Ministers set apart for the worke of the Ministery must not onely be apt to teach and able to diuide the word of truth aright but there is farther required of them that they be qualified with wisedome with knowledge with gifts of gouernment discretion in their calling and conuersation As this is plainely proued vnto vs by these consents so it may be strengthened by these Reason 1 few yet forcible reasons First because they haue oftentimes giuen vnto them in the scripture the name of Elders Many titles are giuen vnto them and euery one of them carrieth some instruction and admonition with it vnto
soules vnto God The Apostle hauing declared that he would not be negligent to put them in remembrance of the same things and that he thinketh it very meete to do so addeth this as a reason motiue to moue him which also ought to encourage vs Knowing that shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle 2 Pet. 1 14 1● euen as our Lord Iesus Christ hath shewed me Moreouer I will endeuour that you may be able after my decease to haue these things alwayes in remembrance And then indeed wee haue done our duty when wee haue taught the truth in this manner to our people not onely once and away as it were glancing at it but continually dwelling vpon it teaching them line vpon line and precept vpon precept like masters that teach young schollers to reade that must not content themselues once to tell them but must oftentimes put the same things into their mouthes and mindes or else they forget them straight-waies Let vs now make application of the Doctrine which is the life of instruction forasmuch Vse 1 as teaching without applying is as the body without the soule First of all we learne hereby that the perpetuity standing course of teaching is most needfull and necessary in euery Congregation It is the Ministers duty to sowe and to continue sowing to weed and to continue weeding to teach and to continue teaching to conuert and to continue conuerting to conuince and to continue conuincing to instruct and to continue instructing For as wee haue alwaies neede of meate and that as we eate so we must continue eating or else wee famish and perish so the Minister must feed and weed and watch ouer his people and abide continually in it without ceasing and intermission This is it the Apostle teacheth Timothy 1 Tim. chap. 4 verse 16. Take heed to thy selfe and vnto the doctrine continue therein for in doing this thou shalt saue both thy selfe and them that heare thee So then it is not enough to take heede vnto himselfe and his doctrine to liue well and to teach well but hee must continue in them both and not giue ouer It was well saide of the heathen man ●2 de It is no lesse vertue to keepe then to get to preserue then to obtaine Many know how to get but they know not the art how to saue that which they haue gotten and therefore it passeth away suddenly as grease that melteth before the Sunne If the husbandman should onely plant and neuer water he might looke for no fruite to come of his labour It is not enough for the watchman to haue discouered the enemy once or twice vnlesse hee descry him so ofter as hee maketh an approch so it can be no discharge to the spirituall watchman of soules to haue giuen warning by blowing the Trumpet vnlesse he doe it during the whole time of the warre which is perpetuall and continuall We can take no truce nor make no league with our spirituall enemies Our aduersary the diuell goeth about continually 〈◊〉 8. seeking whom he may deuoure Hence it is that Christ requireth of Peter not onely to feede but to feede againe and againe ●1 15. Feede feede feede according to the charge committed vnto him and Paul would haue Timothy be instant in season and out of season ●4 2. so that there is required diligence faithfulnesse painefulnesse and continuance in teaching It is worthy to bee well considered which the Lord saith in the Prophet Esay ch 62 6. I haue set watchmen vpon thy walles O Ierusalem which shall neuer hold their peace day nor night Wee know not at what time the Lord will call effectually and touch the harts of those that we teach He must first feed with milke before he giue them strong meate for euery one that vseth milke is vnskilful in the word of righteousnesse inasmuch as hee is a babe but strong meate belongeth to them that are of ful age euen those who by reason of vse haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill Hebr. 5 13 14. It is the Ministers duty to ring the alarme bell continually he hath some work alwaies to do to strengthen fortifie to comfort and raise vp to exhort and admonish to heale the sicke to bring home them that wander to encourage the weak to establish them that are strong and to answer doubts that arise among his people If it were possible to teach all truth particularly that is required of a Christian man yet we haue not then time to be idle and sit downe at our ease but euen then we must goe ouer the points againe that our people that haue learned them may learn them againe and if they know them they may yet know them better if they remember them that they may remember them better if they practise them that they may practise them better and better Yea if we be growne old in learning we must learne still for wee must liue and dye learning something Euery one both Minister people must be a scholler in the Schoole of Christ Timothy himselfe must giue attendance to reading ●m 4 13. to exhortation and to doctrine all men must stirre vp the giftes that are giuen vnto them 2 Tim. 1 6. which will soone decay without vse and diligence as the fire will goe out except the coales bee kindled and more wood added When Christ had distributed his talents among his seruants he said Occupie till I come Albeit then by the Ministry of the word we haue receiued to beleeue Luke 19 13. yet this must not abate our diligence in hearing but we ought as carefully to seeke the foode of our soules afterward as before forasmuch as without continuance of attendance to this ordinance it is vnpossible that any should be saued God not suffering the means of saluation appointed by him to bee neglected or contemned Secondly this reproueth sundry abuses Vse 2 both in the Ministers and in the people as first of all the nicenesse of many Teachers who because they would be singular and popular gaining to themselues many followers and seeking the praise of men more then the glory of God labour to bring new doctrines into the Church neuer heard off before not proportionable to the ancient faith of the Prophets and Apostles but of a new coyne and stampe These cannot abide to be beating vpon old points they thinke it a discredite and disgrace vnto them to treade in the beaten path troden by others that went before them they must euer bee seeking of vnknowne and vncouth waies this is their delight and in this they glory This hath bene the poisoned and pestilent humor of heretikes and of false teachers to draw away the minds of the simple and vnlearned from the ancient truth receiued from the Scriptures and to turne them out of the right course followed by all the faithfull Such were those false Apostles that troubled the faith of the Galatians and brought
a notable Epistle to this purpose written to a certaine Bishop called Auxilius August epist 75. in the behalfe of one Classicianus who being a young man for the offence of the master of the house excommunicated all the rest of his family and would not deliuer the Sacraments to his children and houshold whom he perswadeth to lay aside anger and to reuerse his sentence lest the man perish that is a friend the diuell reioyce in it that is an enemy In this case in a manner doe they offend who refuse to baptize the children of thē that are excommunicated such as are borne in fornication because their parents are impenitent as though the sonne should beare the iniquity of the father or the wife of the husband or the seruant of the master or he that is not yet born the iniquity of thē that are borne What hath the infant offended that is borne in the Church that he should not be baptized of the Church The Prophet saith The son shall not beare the iniquity of the father nor the father Ezek. 18 20. the iniquity of the son but the soule that sinneth it shall die This also is the resolutiō of Beza in one of his Epistles Beza epist 10. prouing that the children of the excommunicate may be baptized We conclude therefore that they onely which haue offended and remaine obstinate in their offences are to be excommunicated forasmuch as Christ neuer said if he heare not the Church let him and all that belong any way vnto him be as heathens and Publicanes but let him be vnto thee that is him only This serueth to cōdemne the horrible and abhominable tyranny of the Bishops of Rome who haue not onely raged vpon the bodies of the Saints but also exercised dominion ouer their consciences These are they that send out their curses and smite the cheefest Monarches of the world as it were with thunder lightning They pronounce sentence of excommunication for trifles and they absolue from it for trifles They excommunicate one for another and they absolue one for another They cast out of the Church those that do not belong to their iurisdiction for what haue they to doe with Princes When Princes are supposed to haue offended they curse condemne whole states and Kings as they haue serued heeretofore the Kings of this Land and lately thc State of Venice They haue interdicted whole Realmes they haue forbidden diuine seruice to be said and the Sacraments to be administred Fiftly we must learne from what things excommunicate persons are excluded that we may the better know how to behaue our selues toward them Christ saith let such be as heathens Publicanes that is abstaine from such false brethren and communicate not with thē either in matters of religion or in common conuersation But how far we must forbeare their company and conuersing with them we shall speake afterward The word excommunication and to excommunicate note out a cutting off frō the communion which Christ noteth by the branches that bring foorth no fruite Iohn 15 6. If a man abide not in me hee is cast foorth as a branch and is withered and men gather them and cast them into the fire and they are burned The Euangelists also call it to put out of the Synagogues Iohn 16 2. that is out of the fellowship of the faithfull met together in one place Hence it is also that they were said to be accursed being out of the Church as they are blessed that abide in the Church hauing a communion together in matters of religion and fellowship one with another Now we must vnderstand that there is a two-fold communion from whence an excommunicate person may be said to be excluded Communion is two-fold inward and outward the one is inward and spirituall the other outward and corporall The inward communion is that which euery faithfull one hath by faith and loue first with God and then with the Saints of God and therfore in the Creed it is called the Communion of Saints For all the Saints are ioyned together with Christ their head by the band of the Spirit among themselues and with the whole body of the Church 1 Cor. 10 16. The bread which we breake in the Supper of the Lord is it not the communion of the body of Christ saith Paul And the Apostle Iohn in his first Epistle That which we haue seene heard declare we vnto you 1 Ioh●● that ye also may haue fellowship with vs and truely our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Iesus Christ From this fellowship can none be excluded but by sin The Prophet saith Esay 5 ● your sinnes haue separated betweene mee and you And Iohn teacheth that if we walke in the light as he is in the light 1 Iohn 1 ● we haue fellowship one with an other and the blood of Iesus Christ his Son cleanseth vs from all sin And Paul in his Epistle to the Romanes sheweth particularly that there is nothing vnder heauen can separate vs from Christ and from the loue of God neither death Rom. 8.3 ● nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature among al which he doth not reckon sin and therefore it is sin alone which can separate any man frō the grace of God and from communion with him The excommunication of the Church can bar and shut out no man from this communion For if any man be truly engrafted into Christ endued with faith in Christ and repentance from dead workes beeing a member of his body in deed and in truth excommunication shal hurt him nothing at all in regard of that spirituall communion forasmuch as the sentence so giuen is void and frustrate and the doore is shut vp locked fast with a false key Such an excommunication is a blessing not a cursing Againe albeit a man iustly deserueth to bee excommunicated through his sin to be separated from God yet excommunication is not the first or cheefe cause of it but his owne sin and the continuance in it seeing it doth not seuer him from God but declareth him to bee seuered through his impenitency as the Priests vnder the law putting out the leprous did not defile them with the leprosie but pronounced them to be defiled as the Iudge giuing sentence vpon a malefactor doth not therby make him a malefactor for hee was so before but pronounce him to be so and as a theefe that is found guilty is not thereby made a theefe But here a question ariseth how can it be Obiect that any hauing a true fellowship with Christ can be separated from it through sin Can he that is a member of Christ be made no member All men are eyther reprobate or elect The reprobate are not neyther were neyther euer shall be partakers of this communion how then should they be
not Calfe or any Cattell should vndergo the punishment for sinne because the soule that sinned shall die the death Ezek. 18 verse 4. and the threatning must be true that because man sinned he should die Gen. 2. Thou shalt die the death So that it was necessary eyther that all man-kinde by reason of sinne must perish euerlastingly Heb. 9 15. or else Christ the Mediator of a better testament must become a surety for vs and satisfie the wrath of God kindled and conceiued against vs for sinne If any aske the question Question if the blood of Buls Goats could not take away sinne why did God command them to be offered and to what end were they appointed I answer Answer this was not done in vaine but to good purpose For albeit they could neuer take away sinne nor purge the conscience from dead workes yet they serued fitly to shadow out the death of Christ and to assure the heart that it is washed by the blood of the Messiah This was a notable comfort to the people of God from the beginning taught them to looke for redemption through him Obiection If it bee farther said that God speaketh euery where in the Law that the blood it selfe of Buls and Beasts clenseth and purgeth sinne as Leuit. 17 11. The life of the flesh is in the blood and I haue giuen it to you vpon the Altar to make an attonement for your soules for it is the blood that maketh an attonement for the soule I answer Answer that place speaketh not properly but sacramentally as in the new Testament he calleth in the institution of his last Supper Math. 26 26. the bread his body because it is a figure of it so in this place to the outward signe he giueth the name of the thing signified and to the type he ascribeth the proper effect of the blood of Christ which onely is the blood that is able to make attonement for our sinnes Otherwise those offerings of beasts should be called in vaine Heb. 9 24 10 1. the similitudes and shadowes of good things to come As for those heretikes that dreame that those oblations did really and indeed clense away the sinnes of the fathers not by their naturall operation but by the acceptation of God and therefore were not types of Christs sacrifice washing away sinne they are euidently conuinced by the places before alledged and throughout the Epistle to the Hebrewes Obiect If any aske how these can bee figures of Christ seeing GOD witnesseth in his word that he neuer required them When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Psal 40 7. Heb. 10 verses 5 6. If then God would haue none of them how could they be the figures and images of better things I answer Answer God may be said to allow them and yet to disallow them to reiect them and to regard them in diuers senses Hee willed them as he commandeth them and commendeth them as a sweet sauour vnto him performed in faith and as types referred to the comming of the Messiah and the time of reformation Heb. 9 10. On the other side he may be said to refuse and reiect them for these three causes First when the manner of doing is euill doing that which God requireth but doing it in a corrupt manner to wit without faith and obedience as the Prophets in euery place reprooue the sacrifices of hypocrites wicked persons as Esay 1 11 12. I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs who hath required this at your hand Your new Moones and your appointed feasts my soule hateth and the reason of this is rendered in the words following Verse 1● Your hands are full of blood Againe God would not that they should remaine continue for euer but that though they had place in the Church for a time they should ceasse at the coming of the Messiah Therfore Christ being come into the world and manifested in the flesh God willed thē no longer but would haue them abolished And this sense doth the Apostle principally intend in this place that the shadowes must giue place when the body it selfe was come in person Lastly it may after a sort be said that God neuer willed them that is approued allowed of thē as the principall part of Gods worship and as the very price of our redemption the ransome for our sins our reconciliation vnto God albeit he would haue them obserued of his people and vsed for a time as certaine rudiments rites to bring them to Christ to confirme their faith in him Let vs shut vp this with the comparison that the Apostle expresseth Heb. 9 13 14. If the blood of Buls and of Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience frō dead workes to serue the liuing God In these words he compareth the shadow the body the type the truth the ceremony and the substance together Doctrine Christ Iesus hath made a● attonement between G●● and vs by h●● blood Frō hence we learne this doctrine that the blood of Christ taketh away our sins reconcileth vs to God the Father Christ Iesus hath in the performance of his Priesthood freed and deliuered vs from the guilt punishment of our sins This appeareth euidently vnto vs by considering laying before vs the end the parts and fruite of his Priesthood The end of the Leuiticall Priest-hood and of this figured by it was to offer sacrifice for the ignorances Hebr. 9 ● that is for the sins of the people The distinct parts of it are two satisfaction and intercession His satisfaction consisteth partly in suffering and partly in obedience The second part of his Priesthood standeth in intercession in that he is become our perpetuall and perfect Aduocate that therby God might be appeased for them and we reconciled vnto him The fruite thereof is this that we are deliuered redeemed ransomed iustified and freed from the guilt of sin from the burden of ceremonies from the curse of the Law from the wrath of God and from feare of condemnation This truth is taught in many places Ioh 1 29. Iohn seeing Christ coming vnto him saith Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sin of the world And the same Apostle in his first Epistle chap. 2 ver 1 2. If any sinne we haue an Aduocate Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes the Apostle magnifying the mercy of God and setting out the merites of Christ he saith chap. 3 verse
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
dead are there and that her guests are in the depth of hell Such naughty women are called euery where in this booke strangers though they be too familiar and well known and thrust themselues into the company of others because they should be strangers vnto vs and not of our acquaintance There is nothing more common in them then to entice young men by wanton gestures lasciuous words and plausible perswasions to dalliance and delight It is a great fauour of God to be preserued from their baites and kept from their snares yea it is a farre greater mercy to be secured from harlots then to be kept from the pestilence they shew greater wisdome that shun and passe by their houses and company then they that forsake places persons that are infected with some dangerous and deadly disease Euery one is forward to beware hee come not neere any pest-house for feare of his life but if we assemble into harlots houses we run in danger of soule body It is an easie matter to fall into a pit where a man may be drowned but it is not so easie to get out of it The wanton woman is as a deepe ditch and a narrow pit and a dangerous hole whereinto a man may slip hastily at vnwares but he shall hardly come out from thence or deliuer himselfe without the speciall goodnesse of God pulling him as it were out of the fire and setting his feete in safety For as a theefe lurketh in a denne or wood to get a prey so doth she lye in waite and vseth baites to steale away the hearts of men and thereby preuaileth mightily with many in the world Among all dangers this is not the least that Salomon speaketh of ● 2 19. None that goe vnto her returne againe neither take they hold of the pathes of life These words do not absolutely deny repentance to them that are fallē or shut the gate of mercy against them that haue sinned but the meaning is that few yea very few escape destruction returne to saluation because they sildome repent It is a very rare thing to see a penitent adulterer they leaue the sinne when it leaueth them because they can follow it no longer but they do not repent of it they do not sorrow for it they do not flie from it Hence it is that you shall hear many old men whose strength is decaied whose bodies are withered whose feet are already entred in a manner into their graues laugh heartily at the remembrance of their tricks of youth and talke wantonly filthily of the prankes which they haue plaied so that from the abundance of the heart ●h 12 34. the mouth speaketh and their corrupt communication testifieth that they neuer soundly repented of their vncleannesse No maruaile therefore if the wise man peremptorily declare that few or none of those that are giuen ouer to this lewdnesse of life do come to repentance for albeit some few find grace yet in comparison of such as run on headlong liue securely to the end in their wickednes they may worthily be said to be none at all They are so blinded besotted that they cannot see their own filthines they are so dull and deafe that they cannot heare those that admonish them nay they hate those that reproue them The Apostle Paul exhorting the Corinthians to flye fornication ● 6 18. which was most common in those daies ●●es to a ●fornica and esteemed a slight or no sin at all vseth many notable reasons of great weight importance worthy to be considered of vs. One reason or motiue is this that our bodies are the Lords and must be seruiceable vnto him ● 6 13. The body is not for fornication but for the Lord. Wherfore hath he giuen to vs our body but that we should serue him in our body We are not to yeeld our members as instruments of vnrighteousnes vnto sin ●6 13. but we ought to yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and so make our members as instruments of righteousnes vnto him First therefore the Apostle reasoneth frō the end of our creation Secondly the Lord Iesus is ordained appointed to be the Redeemer Sauiour not only of the soule but also of the body therefore he saith the Lord for the body 1 Cor. 6 13. Fornication and sanctification cannot stand together but are contrary one to the other so that they cannot abide in one subiect Christ came into the world to this end that he might redeeme our bodies by his death out of the power of the diuell and sanctifie them by his Spirit If then we giue our selues as seruants to obey the lusts of the flesh wee make void the glorious worke of our redemption wherein mercy iustice and truth kissed one another For herein we see the truth of Gods promise accomplished Gen 3 15. that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpents head and the truth of his threatning fulfilled that man offending shold die the death Herein we may behold the wonderfull iustice of God that because man had sinned man must be punished for otherwise he had not bin a iust God Lastly hereby appeareth the vnspeakable mercy of God toward mankinde who albeit his iustice were such that rather then sin should goe vnpunished he would punish it in his Son 1 Pet. 2 24. Esay 53 12. who bare our sins in his body and made intercession for our transgressions yet found out a way how to redeeme vs when we cast our selues headlong into all misery and made our selues subiect to the greatest thraldome that euer was We are deliuered from the hands of our enemies sin the world and the diuell that we should be holy vnto him that hath called vs. The third motiue is drawne from the glorious resurrection of our bodies as the former was frō the gracious redemption of our bodies If we would haue them liue with him for euer that shall raise thē vp we must abstaine from filthy lusts which defile the body therfore the Apostle saith God hath both raised vp the Lord 1 Cor. 6 14. wil also raise vs vp by his own power The author of this great benefit and wonderfull worke is God which passeth and exceedeth mans reason Hence it is that he putteth vs in minde of his power because he is almighty If it were not vnpossible vnto him to create our bodies out of the dust of the earth why shall it not bee possible to raise them out of the dust againe Nay if he were able to make thē of that which was nothing inasmuch as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 11 3. that the things which are seene were not made of things which doe appeare how much more shall he bee able to giue to euery one his body which he had before Again he teacheth that God hath raised already the Lord Christ frō death to life therefore
this apparent that God will one way or other make the innocency of his people to be knowne Reason 1 The reasons of this doctrine will farther confirme vs in the truth of it whereof the first may be from the office of God who is the Iudge of all the world Surely the Lord will not peruert iudgement to doe vnrighteously neither will he take rewards nor subuert a man in his cause Hence it is that Abraham making intercession for the Sodomites that those Cities might be spared saith Gen. 18 25. Bee it farre from thee from doing this thing to slay the righteous with the wicked and that the righteous should be euen as the wicked be it farre from thee Shall not the Iudge of all the world do right And to that purpose reasoneth the Apostle Rom. 3.5 What shall wee say Is God vnrighteous which punisheth God forbid else how shall God iudge the world If then this title belong vnto him of right aboue all others then he will at last come foorth though he tarry long to pleade the cause of his seruants will bring their righteousnesse into the open light Secondly God is euermore an helper in Reason 2 time of need who albeit he suffer his seruants to be exercised and tried by slanders greeuous afflictions as we heard before concerning Ioseph yet he appeareth for their deliuerance and cleereth their names from reproch When they are in greatest danger then is hee neerest at hand and so giueth the issue with the tentation This doth the Prophet Dauid acknowledge Psalm 118.6 7. and 56 4 11. The Lord is on my side I will not feare what man can doe vnto mee the Lord taketh my part with them that helpe mee therefore shall I see my desire vpon them that hate mee And this doth the Apostle teach vs to apply to our selues because euery one may boldly say The Lord is my helper Heb. 13 6. and I will not feare what man can do vnto me If then he haue promised to take our part and to helpe vs in time of need when we are oppressed with the euill speeches of our enemies he will not be farre from vs but succor vs and sustaine vs that we shall not fall Thirdly we know well that howsoeuer Reason 3 many things are couered heere in darknesse partly through hypocrisie in some and partly through ignorance and weaknesse that is in all wee are not able to enter into the actions of men and diue downe so low as to see with what purpose they do them yet the time shall come when they shall be discouered and manifested This is the generall rule deliuered by Christ our Sauiour Luk. 12 verse 2. There is nothing couered that shall not be reuealed neither hid that shall not bee knowne This is true not onely touching the hypocrisie of the wicked but also touching the innocency of the righteous for all shall be knowne in the end when the secrets of all hearts shall bee discouered From hence wee haue offered to our wise Vse 1 considerations very many profitable vses whereof I will point out the principall First we are put in minde from hence to commit all our waies and workes to God and to depend vpon him to bring to light the truth of our hearts Let vs put our trust in him and delight our selues in the Lord. Let vs possesse our soules with patience when we are slandered and traduced and resigne vp our selues to him that ruleth all things Let vs cast our eyes vpon his prouidence who careth for vs and watcheth ouer vs. The children of God when they see the prosperity of the wicked and how all things in this world for the most part goe well with them are sore troubled they begin to wauer and sometimes to fret murmure as if there were no God to gouerne all things This made the Prophet Dauid to say Psal 73 12 13 14. Behold these are the vngodly who prosper in the world and encrease in riches verily I haue clensed mine heari in vaine washed mine hands in innocency for all the day long haue I beene plagued and chastened euery morning But God will not forget vs or forsake vs if we trust in him we shall not be deceiued So often as we haue euill rewarded vnto vs for good and are ouerladen with the slanders of the vngodly we are ready to fret and fume and to seeke reuenge against them we haue many doubts arise in vs as if it were lost labour to worship God sincerely and to deale with our brethren iustly It is not the pleasure of almighty God that our righteousnesse should alwayes lye hid in the darke and as it were creepe into corners forasmuch as he will make it shine as the Sunne and bring it into the open light This is the vse that the Prophet teacheth vs to make Psal 37 5 6. Commit thy way vnto the Lord trust also in him he shall bring it to passe and he shall bring foorth thy righteousnesse as the light and thy iudgement as the noone day Wherein he alludeth fitly vnto the night the darkenesse whereof the morning arising scattereth away Are we then hardly vsed are we shamefully intreated are we oppressed with slanderous things laid to our charge and doth God for a time hold his peace as if he heard them not or doth he shut his eyes as if hee saw them not Let vs not take it to heart or be discouraged this ought to trouble vs no more then when the darknesse of the night couereth the earth because we looke for the morning to appeare and the Sunne to shine When all things are darke that nothing can be discerned when we know not white from blacke nor chalke from cheese nor faire from foule we are not to be greeued or disquieted by it because we liue in expectation of the light which we know cannot be far Then we shall know one thing from another when all will shew themselues in their likenesse From this consideration we are admonished to cōmit our waies vnto the Lord who will make a notable issue of them by giuing iudgment on our side and deliuering of vs from the venime of the euill tongue He forbiddeth in the law Exod. 20 16. any to beare false witnesse in iudgment Now hee is a false witnesse that holdeth his peace when he may by his testimony releeue his brother iustifie his person cleere his good name or defend his goods or right his cause in any matter called into question as well as he that speaketh in a cause Exod. 23 2. to decline after many to wrest iudgement He hath made vs keepers of the credite one of another so that we may offend God and our neighbour as well by not speaking the truth as by speaking of an vntruth The law it selfe requireth such loue to be among vs that although we be not requested yet we should neuer be wanting to another but alwaies be willing and desirous to maintaine
of corruption His grace is the true riches and by it he hath abounded toward his church Hence it is that the Apostle writing to the Ephesians commendeth in many places of the Epistle the ouer-flowing grace of God and sheweth that hee is rich in mercy and aboundeth in kindnes chap. 1 7. chap. 2 4 7. hee setteth out his great loue wherewith he loueth vs the exceeding riches of his grace and his kindnesse toward vs through Iesus Christ And chap. 3 8. he calleth his grace toward vs vnsearchable riches He doth not keep vs to a diet as though he meant to pine vs or famish vs he doth not allow vs onely so much as serueth to keep vs in state and holde body and soule together but he dealeth bountifully towards vs maketh our cup to ouer flow If then he bee rich in mercy and goodnes and abundant in kindnesse if there bee in him exceeding riches vnsearchable riches riches of his grace and glorie it is not to be marueiled at that his childrē find him gracious toward them aboue all that the tongue can desire or the heart can think forasmuch as his mercy is ouer all his workes Reason 2 Secondly God is euermore better then his word and performeth more then hee promiseth He is not as man that he should lye nor as the sonne of man that he should deceiue al his promises are yea and Amen to the praise of his mercie He promiseth little and performeth much He is a Prince indeede that neuer falsified his worde neither could the vnbeleefe of some that did not beleeue make the saith of God without effect Rom. 3 3. he remaineth alwaies true and faithfull constant and sure If we obtaine not the promises the fault is not in the promise of God but in the infidelity of mā forasmuch as he neuer deludeth any nor dallieth with them whatsoeuer is gone out of his mouth hee meaneth it in good earnest The word of the Lord is right and all his workes are done in truth he will not suffer his faithfulnesse to faile Psal 33.4 and 89. Hee promiseth in the fift commandement to giue to inferiors that are obedient a long life yet sometimes they dye betimes and on the other side the stubborn and disobedient haue prospered in this world and liued long How then will some say is God as good as his word and how is he certaine of his promise Because albeit he take vs away yet hee performeth it by giuing much more then hee promised When Herod promised to his wanton Minion that danced before him Marke 6 ●● The one halfe of his kingdome it is certaine it had beene no breach of his promise if hee had resigned vp the whole kingdome into her hands So if God promise a prolonged life Exod 20 ●● and giue instead of it a perpetuall life heere is more then halfe in halfe gaines and aduantage as hee that promiseth tenne peeces of siluer and performeth twenty peeces of Gold or hee that promiseth a yard of cloath and giueth an ell of Veluet doeth not breake his promise or falsifie his word Thirdly as God is rich in grace so hee is Reason 3 infinite in power he is able to doe what hee will and more then he will Nothing is vnpossible vnto him he hath all creatures in his own hand to employ thē as it pleaseth him This is the reason vsed by the apostle Eph. 3 20. Vnto him that is able to do exceeding aboundantly aboue all that we aske or thinke according to the power that worketh in vs bee praise in the Church by Iesus Christ c. If then he be able to giue vs more then wee craue or desire wee are not to doubt of his doing of it and wee haue all of vs many notable experiences of it Let vs come to the Vses and marke them Vse 1 diligently First let vs not bee dismayed vnder the Crosse but assure our selues of a good end and of an happy issue It is the cup which we must all drinke of in one kinde or in another Let vs not sinke downe vnder it but lay holde on this principle and fasten our hearts vppon the doctrine with which wee deale as on an Anchor cast out of the ship to stay vs assuring our selues that God will bee gracious vnto vs his mercy shal superaboūd so that we shall bee more then Conquerors One affliction followeth another as one waue of the Sea rouleth after another as Psal 42. verse 7. One deepe calleth another deepe by the noise of thy water spouts all thy waues and thy flouds are gone ouer mee And in the 66. psalme the 10 11 12. vers Thou O God hast prooued vs thou hast tried vs as siluer is tryed thou hast brought vs into the net thou layedst affliction vpon our loines thou hast caused men to ride ouer our heads we went through fire and through water but thou broughtst vs out into a wealthy place Nothing therefore shal be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord who hath promised vs that he will not leaue vs nor forsake vs. This promise we are to lay hold vpon by faith that hee is able and willing to performe it and that he wil be better vnto vs then his word We cannot beleeue too much concerning God we neede not feare to hope too farre of his mercy True it is wee oftentimes presume too farre of the kindnesse of men and so are deceiued of our expectation we promise to our selues much when we goe away empty It is not so with God There is no sinne greater then infidelity when hee speaketh not to heare when hee promiseth not to beleeue which he suffereth not to go vnpunished If you call his worde into question which is passed out of his mouth you call his nature and being in question you 〈◊〉 in effect doubt whether he bee God or not yea whether there be a God or not The Prince that heard the word of the Lord sent in mercy during the famine in Israel and the siege of Samaria 2 King 7 1. ●ings 7 1. To morrow this time a Measure of fine floure shall be solde for a shekell and two measures of Barley for a shekell in the gate of Samaria did not beleeue it because such was their miserie that it seemed not onely strange but impossible vnto them that there should be such plenty and aboundance at a sodaine and no meanes appeare how or which way it should be done and therefore saide verse 2. Though the Lorde would make windowes in the heauen could this thing come to passe But what followed The Prophet denounced against him that hee should see the trueth of it with his eyes but he should not eate thereof and the Lord executed this sentence and let nothing of that which he had saide fall to the ground for the people trod vpon him in the gate hee hauing the ouer-sight of the businesse committed
voyde of piety and common reason to thinke he is ignorant of that we doe or carelesse of that we doe Shall we make him deafe and not to heare vs or blinde and not to see vs shall we dreame he is farre off from vs and knoweth vs not or otherwise busie and regardeth vs not shall we suppose that he which keepeth Israel doth either slumber or sleepe To say he is ignorant of our doings is to blaspheme his holy Name and to make him a silly and simple God To say he seeth them and would but cannot punish is to make him a weake and impotent God To say he can but will not punish is to make him an vniust God and one that fauoureth sinne To say he beholdeth all the wayes of the sonnes of men but that he careth not which end goe forward nor abaseth himselfe to consider the particular things that fall out in the world is with the Epicures Libertines to make him sit idle in heauen to suffer men on earth to doe all things and himselfe to doe nothing which cannot agree to God but are farre from his most wise most perfect most pure most powerfull most iust and righteous nature Let vs euermore walke as in his presence and set him before our eyes Let vs not make our selues Atheists either in deed or in word or in heart Some in their workes say there is no God some in words say there is no God and some say in their hearts there is no God Few dare affirme it or auouch it or maintain it with their tongues but there are many which are not farre from it in their hearts and they shall see it to be so if they would examine them aright Sometimes they are not ashamed to say there is no God sometimes they feare not to say God seeth vs not sometimes they sticke not to say he heareth vs not he forgetteth vs he regard sit not he turneth away his face he careth not what we doe he will not punish vs. Howsoeuer these speeches tending directly to the dishonour of God and reproach of his holy Name are not alwayes nor oftentimes vttered with the mouth yet they sticke in the mindes and dwell in the thoughts of prophane men wherby they strengthen themselues in euill and harden their hearts in wickednesse Such are they that say it is a vaine thing to serue God Mal 3.14 and it is no profit to keepe his ordinances Such are they that when they thinke or speake of the last iudgement say 2 Pet. 34 Where is the promise of his comming Such are they that say with the euill seruant in his heart My master delayeth his comming Matth 14. ●1 A master is often absent from his seruant and seeth not what he doth It is not so with God he beholdeth what wee doe on earth and his eyes are euermore vpon vs. He is included in no place he filleth heauen and earth He is not like the idols that neither see nor heare The author of light cannot be darke the fountaine and spring head cannot want water nor the fire be destitute of heate which maketh hote other things God is the author of life he is the fountaine of water springing vp in vs to euerlasting life Let this meditation be in vs and this cogitation be continually before vs that he is continually behind vs and before vs without vs and within vs on the right hand and on the left hand of vs. He is alwayes neere to vs and neuer farre from vs he is euermore in heauen and yet neuer absent from the earth Let vs then learne so often as we vse the benefite of our eyes and eare and both see and heare with them to consider concerning God the Creator and maker of them how sharply and cleerely he seeth and heareth who hath giuen vnto vs the force and faculty of seeing and hearing Do we thinke any euill in our minds and haue we deepe deuises in our hearts Why doe we not consider that we cannot hide our counsell from the Lord and that it is he which hath giuen vs vnderstanding Doe we speake with our lips foolish contentious filthy and vncleane words and suffer corrupt communication to proceed out of our mouthes which men doe heare and witnesse well that they do heare them sometimes by blushing sometimes by laughing sometimes by reproouing sometimes by hauing indignation at them Why do we not remember that if man heare vs and vnderstand vs how should not God much more heare vs for from whence hath he borrowed his eare to heare but from him Are we slandered and reuiled of any haue we reprochful words and false reports cast out against vs and doe we heare them repine at them and seeke to be reuenged of them Why doe we not thinke thus with our selues if we can heare and listen with our eares vnto them how are we so senselesse and slow to conceiue that God must needs heare much better much rather much farther then we are able Lastly Doe we commit any euill Doe we runne into sinne with violence and will not be stayed or stopped from it doe we shunne the sight of men because we know they haue eyes to see vs and to perceiue our doings Why then doe we not call to minde that if mortall man whose breath is in his nostrils and whose eyes are in his head can discerne sufficiently the workes of our hands how should wee bee so blockish or braine-sicke to imagine that God seeth not at all who hath giuen eyes to man and power to see Euery man that is well in his wits and hath his fiue senses about him must needs yeeld to this trueth which God hath sealed vp in nature and yet there are too many in all places that make no vse of it To conclude this doctrine and with the doctrine this chapter and with the chapter this booke let vs set downe this as a sure rule that then we doe know God aright when we haue learned to walke euermore as in his presence and in all our actions to haue him before our eyes who hath vs before his eyes and to looke vp vnto him who alwayes looketh downe vpon vs to whom therfore be praise in the Church throughout all generations Amen CHAP. VI. 1 ANd the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2 Speake vnto the children of Israel and say vnto them When either man or woman shal separate themselues to vow a vow of a Nazarite to separate themselues vnto the Lord 3 He shall separate himselfe from wine and strong drinke c. OF sanctification necessarily required in the Law wee haue spoken in the former Chapter In this Chapter Moses goeth forward to handle this point farther which is so necessary as that without it none can be the people of God Herein for order wee are to obserue two things first the voluntary sanctification vndertaken by priuate men that entred into the precise vow of the Nazarites who that they might more
and false measures to make triall of themselues of whom I may say as the Lord doth of Belshazzar Dan. 5 27. Thou art weighed in the ballances art found wanting for while they measure themselues with the mete-yard of others they keepe a false measure in their owne house which is an abhomination vnto the Lord Prou. 11 1 16 11. Euery one must weigh himselfe if he wold not be found too light with the weights of the Sanctuary and measure himselfe with the standard of the Scripture comparing his workes with the word of God and not with the life of other men then he shall be sure not to bee reprooued Euery Christian is like the Sunne that neuer standeth still but is euer in motion If our conuersation be in heauen we must be goers walkers runners goers in the right way walking toward our iournies end and running in a race that we may obtaine We must be as plants growing in the house of the Lord Psal 92 13. Such as are planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the house of our God There must be none of Gods seruants that must be idle and stand still doing nothing they must be labourers that looke to receiue their penny when the euening cometh Math. 20 verse 8. Hee that had receiued a talent and digged and hid it in the earth was accounted an euill and vnfaithfull seruant Math. 25 26. Who will entertaine a seruant to giue him meate drinke and wages that will do nothing but looke about him and neuer set his hands to worke and shall we think that God will receiue such seruants into his house as sit still and will doe him no seruice at all Shall we put our hands into our bosome and neuer pull them out againe to imploy them as we ought to do Let vs euermore bee doing somewhat that may please God blessed is that seruant whom his master when he commeth shall finde so dooing Thirdly such deserue to be reproued and Vse 3 to be ranged in the number of the former who hate and scorne those that go before them and beyond them in the duties of piety in gifts of knowledge and vnderstanding But we must take heed we do not oppose our selues against any worke of grace that is euident and eminent to be seene in any of Gods seruants For this is as much as to hate and scorne the word of God nay the Lord himselfe the Gospel of peace nay Christ Iesus the author and first Preacher of it It argueth a malicious heart against our brethren and that in the highest degree like Caine who hated his brother Gen. 4 ● Heb 11 4 because God accepted his offering Malice against any man is an euill roote that bringeth foorth bitter fruites to maligne any for his riches for his peace for his prosperity is very dangerous but to enuy him repine at him for heauenly riches for his soules health for the peace of a good conscience and for matters that concerne his euerlasting saluation in Gods Kingdome is a thousand times worse then the malice of Saul against Dauid or of Pharaoh against Moses and the Israelites True it is these sought their liues but such desperate malicious persons that enuy glory and immortality and heauen it selfe to others do seeke the life of their liues the other were guilty of the blood of their bodies whō they hated and persecuted but these are guilty of the blood of mens soules and their thirst cannot be quenched but by rasing them out of the booke of life These are stamped with the image of Satan the old deceiuer and the first enuious person that euer was who being fallen into condemnation himselfe enuied the standing of mankinde in the state of grace 〈◊〉 4 5. and therefore could not rest nor be quiet vntill he had plunged man into the same gulfe of condemnation So is it with these men they are backward in the feare of God themselues and they desire to haue all like them to be backeward as themselues Let vs take heed of such enuie let vs barre no man of Gods Kingdome Vse 4 Fourthly it is our dutie to proceed in sanctification and labour to bring foorth fruite euermore in old age Psal 92 15. Let vs leaue the principles of the doctrine of Christ go on vnto perfection not laying again the foundation Heb. 6.1 Let vs not thinke wee haue attained vnto perfectiō but forget that which is behinde and endeauour to that which is set before vs let vs presse toward the marke for the price of the high calling of GOD that so we may apprehend that for which we are apprehended of Christ Iesus Phil. 3.13.14 Let vs cleanse our selues from all filthynesse of the flesh and Spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7 1. True it is that albeit the good worke begun in vs be but as a sparke of fire kindled in wood or a yong plant newly grafted in the stocke or as a drop of raine fallen into the earth yet Christ Iesus doth accept of the truth sincerity of the new work wrought in vs be it neuer so small howbeit we must not euermore be as smoaking flax as bruised reeds and as new-set plants wee must not still be weaklings but as the graine of Mustard seede which is one of the least of the sorts of seedes but it groweth great and becommeth as a tree and the birds of the aire builde their nestes in it Math. 13 32. Or like vnto leauen which though it be small yet being hidden in three measures of Meale the whole is leauened verse 33. Therefore it behooueth vs as we haue receiued how wee ought to walke and to please God so to abound more and more 1 Thess 4 1. Notwithstanding we must take heed that we doe not glory in our owne strength as if we were able to do the will of God touching our sanctification of our selues without the helpe and assistance of the Spirit of God without which we can do nothing at all True it is the Apostle willeth vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling howbeit lest any should trust in himselfe as if hee were something or build vpon the freedome of his owne will he addeth in the next words It is God that worketh in vs the will and the deede of his good pleasure Philip. 2 12 13. It is a notable token of our continuance in good things and a comfort to our consciences that we shall perseuere vnto the end if we haue a care to goe forward and to make our good workes moe at the last then they were at the first Verse 2. The Princes of Israel Heads of the house of their Fathers offered Here we haue another circumstance to be considered to wit a description of the persons that offered they were the Princes and Rulers the heads of the people And albeit they onely are expressed yet they brought their offering in the name of
strong meate Heb. 5.12 being altogether babes and vnskilfull in the word of righteousnesse not hauing our senses exercised to be able to discerne between good and euill They therefore are in a wofull and wretched estate that haue long liued vnder the preaching of the word the meanes of regeneration in this life and of saluation in the life to come and yet are more ignorant faithlesse fruitlesse disobedient and prophane then such as haue had no such meanes nor liued where the sound of the Gospel hath beene so plentifully heard Hence it is that Christ denounceth fearefull woes against Bethsaida Corazin and Capernaum where he had preached many Sermons and wrought many miracles he threateneth to cast them downe to destruction and telleth them that it should be easier for Sodome and Gomorrha in the day of iudgement then for them Matth. 11.24 The Sodomites had an heauy punishment in this life to be destroyed with fire and brimstone from heauen and to taste of a more heauy iudgement of fire and brimstone that burneth in hell and yet those vnthankefull cities that brought not foorth the fruits of the Gospel shall haue sorer iudgment for their disobedience at the day of iudgement when the Iudge of all the world shall appeare to iudge the quicke and the dead If a man after he haue receiued some benefit from another shal presently fly in his face and offer him open wrong and iniury it is certaine that the iniury indignity is much more grieuous then if he had receiued no benefit of him at all so when a sinner hath receiued great and singular benefits from God his sinne is made the greater by offending him What blessing is greater then the word when the kingdome of heauen is offered and opened vnto vs and what sinne can be so great as to reiect it and to account our selues vnworthy of eternall life Let vs therfore take heed how we vse his gifts and endeuour to profit by the meanes that he affordeth vs for our saluation lest it goe worse with vs then with the Turks and Infidels For except our righteousnes exceed others certainely our punishment shall be greater then theirs and then it had bin better for vs that we had neuer heard the preaching of the Gospel then hauing heard it proudly and presumptuously to reiect it 18 On the second day Nethaniel the sonne of Zuar Prince of Issachar did offe● 19 He offered for his offering one siluer c. In these words as also before and in the words folowing we see what is offred to wit siluer and gold they spare nothing they are no niggards they bring the best things that they haue Neither doe they bring the best in a sparing maner but they deale bountifully and liberally The doctrine Doctrine offered the duty required from hence is this We must serue God with the chiefest and choisest things we haue We must seru the Lord with the best things wee haue and imploy the best things that are fit for his seruice and that in a large and liberall maner according to our seuerall places persons callings conditions and abilities We reade that to further the building and furnishing of the Tabernacle men and women as many as were willing-hearted brought bracelets earings rings Exod. 35.22 and tablets precious stones and iewels of gold euery man that offered did offer an offering of gold vnto the Lord no man came empty Verse 27. So did the Rulers Princes yea they were so forward that the workemen complained that the people brought too much for the seruice of the work which the Lord commanded them to make Exod. 36.5.25.1.2 How farre are we from this in our dayes may we say of our times The people bring much more then enough for the worke of the Lord Oh that we might come but one degree behind them that it might be said our people bring enough But we cannot truely testifie so much The Israelites thought they neuer brought enough we thinke we neuer bring too little They offred more thē they were cōmanded we bring no more then we are compelled constrained to bring They brought willingly we giue grudgingly They offered with a glad and cheereful heart we will do no more then Law vrgeth or not so much They brought of the best we think the worst good enough for God and his worship and his Ministers The Prophet Malachi cryeth out against this sinne chap. 1.14 Cursed be the deceiuer which hath in his flocke a male and voweth and sacrificeth vnto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great king saith the Lord of hostes and my Name is dreadfull among the heathen The Spirit of God commendeth Araunah for his forwardnes bountifulnes in Gods seruice 2 Sam. 24.22 Let the king take and offer what seemeth him good to the Lord behold heere are oxen for burnt sacrifice and threshing instruments of the oxen for wood all these as a king he gaue vnto the king This also appeareth notably in Salomon touching the building of the Temple 1 King 5.17 and 8.63 and 6.21 22. 2 Chro. 30.24 The king al Israel offered sacrifice with him 22000. oxen 122000. sheepe at the dedication of the house of the Lord. The like we see in Ezekiah and if we go no farther thē to Abel in the beginning of the world he shewed forth the practise of this duty for he brought of the firstlings of his flock Gen. 4.4 and of the fat therof vnto the Lord and if he had had a better thing to bring no doubt hee would haue brought it So that this hath bin the practise alwaies of the best sort to offer in the best manner the best they haue vnto the best that is to the Lord himselfe Reason 1 This they did that God might euermore dwel among them according to his promise Exod 25.3 4 6 8. A great iudgement it is to haue him leaue vs and depart from vs. Nothing driueth him away sooner and causeth him to deny his presence then our dealing deceitfully with him Secondly if we giue not to God of the best the worst sort shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne vs the very idolaters that worship the workes of their owne hands Rom. 1.25 and turne the trueth of God into a lie shall goe before vs into the kingdome of heauen they thinke nothing too much they are content to spoile themselues that they may adorne their idols Exod. 32.2 3. Exod. 32.2.3 The Israelites desiring to haue an image of God to goe before them were content to breake off the golden eare-rings which were in the eares of their wiues and of their sonnes and of their daughters So is it with the Papists they account nothing too deare and precious which they are not ready to bestow vpon their images and such like will-worship Thirdly no man should repine to giue vnto God his own the best things we haue whose are they by right but his
the children of Zebulun did offer 25 His offering was one siluer charger the weight whereof was an hundred and thirty shekels one siluer bolle of seuenty shekels c. Behold heere how the other Princes are not inferiour to the first that offered nor the other Tribes to the Tribe of Iudah Obserue heere that the spirit of God accounteth it not sufficient to set downe what was offered in generall neither in particular what Nahshon the sonne of Aminadab of the Tribe of Iudah offered the first day or what Nathaniel the son of Zuar Prince of Issachar offered the second day but he goeth forward to set downe the speciall offerings according to euery mans name and according to the day assigned vnto him Obiect It may be demaunded what was the cause why these offerings are thus particularly pointed out why are the same chargers the same bolles the same spoones so often repeated might not all these things heere mentioned haue beene more summarily concluded what need more words haue bene vsed when fewer would haue serued I answere Answer we must not account any thing idle friuolous fruitles or superfluous in holy Scripture The Lord knoweth best what is fittest to bee dilated largely and what to be comprehended shortly If there were no other reason then this so it pleased the Lord it ought to content vs and to make vs rest in it The like example we finde Psal 136.1 2 c. Where in euery verse and at the recitall of euery blessing this reason is repeated for his mercy endureth for euer Adde heereunto Reuel 7.5 6 c. where this is repeated according to the number of the Tribes that twelue thousand were sealed of them Hee might haue said briefly of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand but he repeateth the words twelue times so in this place the offerings are repeated twelue times particularly according to the number of the twelue Princes The reasons may be first to teach vs to be content to heare the same things though they be oftentimes repeated as Phil. 3.1 The Apostle saith It is not grieuous to me to write the same things often and for you it is safe Wee are ready to forget the best things and therefore must haue them continually sounding in our eares as many strokes giuen with a hammer to make vs heare Secondly that wee should apply these examples vnto our selues and if wee passe ouer one of them without regard yet we should take holde of the next Thirdly to teach vs that no man shall haue that forgotten to the vtmost of his praise who is any way forward in doing good because he will honor those that honor him but they that despise him shall be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 The doctrine Doctrine from this particular rehearsal and enumeration of the gifts of those Princes is this Euery good worke of gods children is knowne and shall be rewarded that all the good workes of Gods children done to the setting forth of his glory to the aduancement of his worship to the maintenance of true Religion or the good of his children shall be reckoned vp rewarded and come vp in account before him he taketh notice of them all and will neuer forget any one of them As their deeds are here registred in the booke of God so the doers of them are registred in the booke of life Matth 10.42 Our Sauiour teacheth that a cup of cold water shall not go vnrewarded that is giuen to drinke in the name of a disciple to one of these litle ones And afterward it is said Matth. 25.7 A certaine woman came vnto him hauing an alabaster boxe of ointmēt very precious and powred it on his head as he sate at table and because she had wrought a good worke vpon him verse 10. he sayth Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospel shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her verse 13. To this purpose speaketh the Angel that appeared to Cornelius Act. 10.4 Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp for a memoriall before God So then euery thing shall be remembred no one worke shall be forgotten Reason 1 For God is a righteous God giuing to euery one according to his workes Hee is the Iudge of the world Gen. 18. and cannot but iudge vprightly Hereupon the Apostle saith Heb. 6.10 God is not vnrighteous to forget your workes and labor of loue which ye haue shewed toward his Name in that yee haue minstred to the Saints and doe minister He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward for he will reward very bountifully euery good worke If we be not barren in good workes he will not bee behind with vs to recompence vs. Secondly how can they but come into an account seeing he accounteth them as done to himselfe Matth. 25.40 When any thing is giuen to the Saints it is esteemed as done to the Sonne himselfe and when it is bestowed vpon one of the least it is regarded as bestowed vpon the greatest and highest The seruant receiueth it but the Master will reward it Vse 1 Touching the Vses we may first conclude the happy estate and condition of them that leaue this world and depart this life in the true feare of God because we heare their workes shall be remembred and therefore the doings of his seruants be rewarded with eternall glory being done in the loue of God and of his trueth none of them are forgotten but they shall follow them nay goe with them and beare them company This we reade in the Reuelations of Iohn chap. 14.13 I heard a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Write blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the spirit that they rest from their labors and their works follow them to wit at their heels as the word importeth Death cannot cut them off though it be a cruell and mercilesse tyrant and hath as it were a sithe or sickle in his hand to cut downe such as come in his way yea though it cut off riches reuenewes honours pleasures dignities delights wife children houses lands and life it selfe according to the saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.7 We brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out with vs yet it cannot cut off good workes neither bereaue vs of the fruits of a liuely faith which are of such great force and efficacy that they are able to breake in sunder the chaines of death and the strength of the graue and cannot be holden in darknes and obliuion It were therefore a point of great wisedome and good policy so many as would willingly die the death of the righteous as Balaamites and all wicked men will seeme desirous to doe to prouide a goodly traine of good works which death cannot keepe backe they will presse so fast and knocke so hard at heauen
gates that the gates thereof shall open wide and our workes shall enter with vs because they cannot be forgotten but shal come vp into the presence of God Wee see how it fareth with Kings and Princes and great men of this world they haue great traines and troupes of seruants and a goodly retinue that follow their heeles in the streetes O how happy are they if at the howre of death and the great day of account when their honours and their pleasures their riches and their friends their seruants and retainers shal forsake them and all earthly profits shall faile them they haue as goodly a traine of good works to attend and waite vpon them They shall finde much more comfort and peace in these then in all their life they felt in all the other as the wise virgins found much contentment in that they had store of oyle for their lampes Secondly shall good works come into account Vse 2 with God and be remembred of him then on the other side we may conclude that euill workes shall also be remembred True it is we are ready to forget the euils that we commit but God wil neuer forget them no time shall weare them out they are euer fresh in his sight Hence it is that Nehemiah saith Neh. 13. ●● Remember them O my God because they haue defiled the Priesthood and the couenant of the Priesthood c. And Reuel 16.19 Great Babylon is come in remembrance before God to giue vnto her the cup of the wine of the fiercenesse of his wrath He will remember the sinnes of the wicked and his owne iudgements These though they be great in this world shall not haue their honours and dignities to follow them but their sinnes shall all follow them The swearer shal be sure to haue his oathes and his blasphemies laid before him the adulterer his vncleannesse the drunkard his intemperancy the contemner of God and of his word his prophannesse the couetous person his oppression they shall accompany them vnto iudgement euen vnto hell that there they may receiue the reward and wages that their workes haue deserued It were a great benefit to the vngodly if they might appeare before the iudgement seat of God without their euill deedes and that they could winde themselues out of the company of their sinnes which will be their strong accusers and giue in euidence against them but they cannot by any meanes for they follow them and pursue after them with a loude cry for vengeance and punishment and therefore woe and misery shall befall them that commit them Vse 3 Thirdly we must marke this point albeit good workes be so much regarded yet wee must take heed we giue not too much vnto them nor ascribe any merit to attaine eternall life by faith that it might bee of grace Rom. 4.16 it is the gift of God through Iesus Christ Rom. 6.23 If any of our works should merit then the works that are most glorious and eminent aboue others which the holy witnesses of the trueth of God wrought who did suffer for the Name of Christ and resisted the enemies euen vnto the blood should be meritorious But the Apostle denyeth this vertue to them Rom. 8.18 I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall bee reuealed in vs. If any workes might deserue saluation doubtlesse the workes of righteousnesse but it is the kindnesse and loue of God toward man that the Apostle magnifieth who saueth vs not by workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his owne mercy Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.8 9. So Paul preacheth Act. 13.48 39. that through Christ we haue remission of sinnes and that by him all that beleeue are iustified from all things from which they could not be iustified by the Law of Moses Againe the Lord Iesus himselfe teacheth vs that when we haue done all that possibly we can we must say we are vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 but he that is an vnprofitable seruant and doth onely what he ought to doe is not in any case of meriting He that will merit any thing at Gods hands must first giue him somewhat and so bind him as a debtor vnto him if no man can hinder him any thing of his owne who oweth all euen himselfe to God of whom he hath receiued all it is certaine that no man can merit any thing before him Rom. 11.35 Who hath first giuen vnto him and it shall be recompenced vnto him againe but no man can doe so verse 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for euer Amen Now where is no benefit there can be no merit because merit presupposeth a benefit receiued howbeit our well-doing extendeth not to God he can receiue no good turn at our hands 1 Cor. 4.7 Phil. 2.13 Eph. 2.10 When the husbandman bringeth to his Lord the fruit of his own ground he meriteth nothing because he giueth him of his owne Moreouer the Scripture teacheth vs that temporall benefites and deliuerances are not granted and bestowed vpon the faithfull for any desert of any their good deedes Dan. 9.18 much lesse therefore eternall life The Israelites had not the nations cast out before them nor themselues brought in to possesse the land for their owne righteousnesse 〈◊〉 9 5. or for the vprightnesse of their hearts but because he had chosen them set his loue toward them Let vs not therefore trust in our owne workes which when they are at the best are vnperfect and defiled but rather as the very enemies of the grace of God do admonish in regard of the vncertainty of our owne righteousnesse and the danger of vaineglory ●●●●r de iustif 〈◊〉 5. cap 7. let vs rest wholly as the safest way in the onely mercy of God If then this be the surest and safest way let vs all goe the safest way and leaue by-pathes and dangerous passages vnto others He that walketh safely walketh surely There is but onely one life and there is but one right way vnto life namely Christ Ioh. 14.6 The way by workes is a wrong way a false way he shall neuer come to his iourneyes end by the way of his works that is for the merit of his works because eternall life is neuer giuen for them There is no other name vnder heauen whereby we may be saued Act 4.14 Ephe. 4.5 then by the Name of Christ but if our works deserued lif● eternall there should be another name to saue vs because the merit of our work● is not the Name of Christ but setteth vp our selues in his place or at the least to ioyne a fellow and companion with him in the worke of our redemption This would minister occasion to vs to glory in our owne selues before the Lord as if wee were somewhat and could saue our selues but no man hath any thing wherein or whereof to boast himselfe Ro. 3.27 and
holy groūd Exod. 3.5 Iosh 5.15 This we shold al consider whē we meet together in one place and carefully remember that the place in which we assemble is holy ground and therefore we should take heed we doe not abuse it Obiect But is that ground wherupon Temples or Churches stand more holy then other I answer Answ no it is not in it self there is no more holinesse in it then in other but in respect of the assembly therein gathered together and of the exercises of religion therein performed it is for that present more holy and better to be accounted and esteemed then all other places and peeces of ground whatsoeuer This made the Prophet say Psal 84.10 A day in thy Courts is better then a thousand I had rather bee a doore-keeper in the house of my God then to dwell in the tents of wickednesse We see how carefull all men are whensoeuer they goe abroad and come into any publike place and presence of men to adorne the outward man decently lest being seene in an vnseemely manner they be condemned and despised especially if they be to appeare before some great person as we see in Ioseph Gen. 41.14 When they brought him before the presence of Pharaoh he shaued himselfe and hee changed his raiment and so came vnto him How much more then should wee looke to our selues to the inward man to the heart that we come not carelesly contemptuously before him that searcheth the hearts and reines If any aske how we may prepare our selues and behaue our selues Obiect that we may be accounted fit to come before Gods presence I answere Answer we must practise three duties first wee must embrace true godlinesse and righteousnesse and cast out of our hearts as filthinesse out of our houses all impiety and vnrighteousnesse The gates of Gods house into which hee will enter are the gates of righteousnes and none shall enter into them but the righteous Psal 118.16 Open to me the gates of righteousnesse I will goe into them and I will praise the Lord this gate is the Lords into which the righteous shal enter When Iacob went to Bethel to build for God an altar and to worship him first he clensed his house of idols and commanded his houshold to be cleane Gen. 35.2 ● therby shadowing out the purity of their harts To this purpose doth Dauid testifie Psal 26.6 that he would wash his hands in innocency and then afterward he would compasse his altar So then so often as we intend to come to the house of God we must rid our hearts of wickednesse as it were our ground of weedes and so sanctifie them that they may be fit vessels to receiue heauenly graces They that doe otherwise shall neuer reape any benefit by the holy assemblies of the Saints let them resort thither neuer so often Secondly we must not onely shunne and shake off things vngodly and vnlawfull in themselues but euen such things that in time and place may be followed and are commanded to be done of vs to wit the care of earthly things and thoughts vpon the matters of this world These haue their time but their time is out of time when the time serueth to serue the Lord and we are to sanctifie a Sabboth vnto him These indeed haue their place but they haue no place in the place of Gods worship and therefore must be displaced out of our hearts before we come to the house of God A vessell full of myre and puddle cannot receiue any sweet and wholesome liquor though ye powre it vpon it all the day long and if our minds and hearts be forestalled with the cares of this life and the cogitations of earthly things they are no way capable of heauenly things they are full fraught and stuffed already and so leaue no roome or receit for better things These are ranke thornes that choke the word Lastly we must consider that we haue to deale with God and not with man and be ready to receiue without contradiction or resisting without mincing and mangling whatsoeuer is deliuered vnto vs by the Ministers of God and from the warrant of Scriptures This must be the end that we aime at when we come into the Church Ant●m Fa●●● comment 〈◊〉 Eccle. 4. to heare the word of life to learne the way of saluation and to embrace the doctrine of trueth and saluation It was the manner of the Priestes and Leuites to interprete the Law and the Prophets were wont to preach their Sermons to the people gathered together in great multitudes in the Temple Ierem. chap. 7. verse 2. where Ieremy is commanded to stand in the gate of the Lords house 〈◊〉 2 7. and proclaime there this word Let vs therefore prepare our hearts to obedience by setting before vs the presence of God present by his word present by his grace present by his Sacraments present by all his ordinances and by his blessing vpon his ordinances Thus doth the Prophet prophesie that the people call one to another and say Come ye and let vs goe vp to the Mountaine of the Lord ●●y 1 3. to the house of the God of Iacob and he will teach vs he doth not say the Ministers but the Lord himselfe will teach vs his waies and we will walke in his paths A notable meanes to worke much good in vs and the cheefest way to touch our hearts with feare and reuerence knowing that we haue to do with Gods word nay with God himselfe Thus did Cornelius consider Acts 10 33. when he saide to Peter We are all heere present before GOD to heare all things that are commanded thee of God Let vs examine our selues by these few rules and by them we shall know whether we come aright or not to the house of God with due reuerence and preparation Let not the Minister sowe among thornes but grub them out of the ground of your hearts that so yee may bring foorth fruites with patience Secondly obserue from the law of contraries Vse 2 that Satan is present in all places of Idolatry wickednesse impiety and prophanenes For as God is present where he is worshipped so is the Prince of this world that ●u●eth in all the children of disobedience present also where he is serued Thus speaketh Christ our Sauiour to the Church of Pergamus Reuel 2 13. I know thy workes where thou dwellest euen where Satans throne is So then where vngodlinesse is set vp and maintained there is Satan present nay there he is president there is Satans seat and there he keepeth ●esidence O that all wicked and vngodly persons were throghly perswaded of the truth of this point and that they would diligently weigh with themselues that Satan is oftentimes neere thē euen at their elbowes when they thinke him to be farre from them and th●mselues out of gunshot as we vse to speake and free from all danger For if he will intrude himselfe and winde in himselfe among
mastery they wil hardly leaue their hold We shall finde it little better then to wash a Tile or brick and go about in a manner an vnpossible worke they are become a Cart-ropes which are not easily vntwisted Esay 5 18. Or as a threefold cable which is not quickly broken Eccles. 4 12. Cōsider the truth of this in these three things Drunkennesse whoredome and swearing what meanes soeuer are vsed to take these away they are vnprofitable the drunkard will follow it still Pro. 23 35. Such as comit whoredome sildome returne againe and take holde of the paths of life Prou. 2 19. when a man hath once accustomed himselfe to swearing he cannot but sweare at euery word he neuer feareth an oath Custome taketh away feare of sinning where no fear is to offend men are bold to sin when men are growne bold and past shame they haue no sense of sinne You shall heare them sweare ordinarily and horribly and yet they know not of it or at least neuer consider it Rom 2 4. Eph. 4 19. Vse 5 Lastly it behooueth vs to vse all the meanes we can to keepe vs from sinne as wee would do to keepe vs from the pestilence least wee grow secure and senslesse and think our selues in good case when we are neerest to destruction and farthest off from saluation ●nes sanc● or God 〈◊〉 vs 〈◊〉 The meanes which God sanctifieth as so many preseruatiues to worke in vs a conscience of sinne and to stay vs from falling into the same are many First the ministery of the word I range this in the first place both because of the power of it and because it giueth force vnto the rest God commandeth his Ministers to cry alowd and spare not to preach the doctrine of repentance and to tell the people their sinnes Pro. 1 20 21. and 9 2 33. Ephes 4 11 12. Thus hee sent Ionah to the Niniuites Ionah 3 4. Nathan to Dauid 2 Sam 12 1. and the prophets continually to the Israelites 2 Chronic. 36 14 15 Acts 2 37 38. Secondly the benefites and blessings of God which are many and great daily continuall vpon soule and body hee saueth and preserueth vs in him we liue and mooue who reneweth his mercies to vs euerie morning Psal 68 18 Lam 3 23. be daileth loadeth vs with benefits wonderfully Moses telleth the people that the Lord bestowed so many benefits vpon them that they should loue the Lord with all their hearts and with al their soule Deut. 10 12. That they should cleane vnto him and knit their hearts vnto him Iosh 23 8. and 24 14. 1 Kings 14.7 8. Paul beseecheth the Romanes by the mercies of God to offer vp their bodies as an holy sacrifice vnto God Rom. 12 1. God hath made vs to abound with this argument and hath often spoken vnto vs. Thirdly he hath bestowed vpon vs his own Sonne the greatest blessing in heauē or earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of vs Rom. 8 32 He spared not his owne Son but deliuered him vp for vs all Ioh. 3 16. He gaue his owne his onely Sonne for vs his enemies euen vnto the death that wee should be reconciled vnto him If the consideration of this and the earnest meditation in it will not mooue vs to repent of sin nothing in the world will put life into our hard hearts Fourthly the corrections and chastisements which are laide vpon vs Psal 89 31 32. Iob 33 16. The Lord openeth the eares of men euen by their corrections which he hath sealed so that we should humble our selues when we feel them Heb. 12 6 11. It is our duty therfore to mourn for sin betimes which wil bring with it comfort in the latter end Luk. 6 21. Blessed are yee that weepe for ye shall laugh This vse did Dauid make of them Psal 119 71. To this wee may ioyne the chastisements of God sent vpon others though we feele them not ourselues for if we see them or heare of them they should be as so many warning peeces to our selues to call vs to repentance Esay 26 9. Fiftly priuate admonitions and exhortations yea reproofes and threatnings of iudgement when the former will not serue Leu. 19 17. Prou. 9 8. Rebuke a wise man and hee will loue thee Math. 18 15. Iames 5 20. Thus he may be wonne by his brother Psal 141 5. Let vs not therefore refuse this meanes but make good vse of it Lastly the inward motions and inspirations of the holy Spirit which he stirreth vp in our hearts as it is saide of Dauid that God caused his owne heart to smite him 2 Sam. 24 10. and Psal 16 7. We haue all of vs at one time or other some good motions and desires put into our mindes let vs make much of them and entertaine them into our soules lest hee withdraw his Spirit from vs and giue vs ouer vnto our selues 40. And they rose vp early in the morning and gate them vp into the top of the Mountaine saying Loe we be heere and will goe vp vnto the place which the Lord hath promised for wee haue sinned 41. And Moses said Wherefore now doe you transgresse the commandement of the Lord but it shall not prosper 42. Goe not vp for the Lord is not among you c. Heere we haue the behauiour of this crooked and peruerse people hearing from the mouth of Moses the minde of God that they must go backe againe by the way of the red sea and shall wander vp and downe fourty yeares in the wildernesse for the false report which the spies had brought vp of the Land and for their own beleeuing of that report Now they will not obey but will needs goe forward though God had commanded them to retire and returne See heere the peruersenesse of our nature as if we had made a generall conspiracy neuer to obey him but to oppose against him whatsoeuer he say so we euermore striue against that we are forbidden They refused before to goe into the Land now they will needs in a Brauado proceede when they are forbidden When they should go forward thē they will go backward and make them a Captaine to conduct them into Egypt When they should go backward then they will goe forward though they perish for it This is our corrupt nature that which God willeth vs to do we will not do and that which he willeth vs not to do that we will do whereby we see that the lustes of the flesh are enmity against God Againe obserue that when God is not with a people they cannot prosper his presence is the cause of victory 2 Chron. 20 27. If he be gone from vs and goe not foorth with our armies we fall by the sword of the enemy wee cannot stand before them we go out one way and flie before them seuen waies Deut. 28 25. Moreouer we see in the example of this disobedience that God oftentimes punisheth one
workes Rom. chap. 2. verse 6. CHAP. XV. 1 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2 Speake vnto the children of Israel and say vnto them When ye be come into the land of your habitations which I giue vnto you 3 And will make an Offering by fire vnto the Lord a burnt Offering or a sacrifice in performing a vow or in a free-will Offering or in your solemne feasts c. 4 Then let him c. IN the latter end of the former chapter we saw the desperate folly of the people that albeit Moses made knowne vnto them the heauy displeasure of God that hee had left them to themselues and was no more among them after they had so often played and dallied with his mercifull sufferings yet they would needs amend their former disobedience by a second contempt making offer to enter into the land contrary to the direction of God and the aduice of Moses But what became of it The swords of the enemies which God had hitherto bended and rebated are left no lesse sharpe then death it selfe and are without mercie sheathed in their bowels For the Amalekites and Canaanites beeing ioyned together and watching their aduantage set vpon them put them to route and slaughtered the greatest part of them the Amalekites encoraging one another to bee reuenged of their former losse receiued at Rephidim Exod. 17. the Canaanites seeking to preuent their own displantation destruction threatned after which slaughter they followed their victory and pursued those broken and disbanded companies all the way of their flight euen vnto Hormah In this chapt we haue sundry ceremoniall precepts which seeme to be deliuered to them immediately after the former punishment executed vpon the offenders wherin God testifieth that albeit the Israelites had iustly deserued to haue finall destruction brought vpon them yet God would not vtterly depart from them and wholly leaue them to thēselues but continue his loue and fauor toward them and be reconciled vnto them smelling the sweete sauour of a sacrifice and verifying the saying of the Apostle ● 26 19. Ro. 3 3 4. Obserue here certain new additions propounded as appurtenances to the lawes before deliuered at large in the booke of Leuiticus These are foure in number ●ontents 〈◊〉 chapt first touching the sacrifices secondly touching the first fruites thirdly touching the clensing of sins that are committed lastly touching the fringes they are commāded to make all ceremoniall all temporall in regard of the letter but all significant in regard of the matter ●auses ●acrifices ●nstitu But before we come to handle these particulars it shall not be amisse briefly to shew the causes why these sacrifices were instituted in the old Testament First to maintain the publike assemblies of the faithfull and their meetings together to serue the Lord. For if euerie man were left to himself religion wold quickly decay or corrupt Secondly that they might be shadowes of good things to come and as it were pictures set before their eies to put them in mind of Christ and his sacrifice who is therfore fitly called the Lamb slaine frō the beginning of the world ●●b 10. de dei cap. 5. Reu. 13 8. Thirdly these sacrifices were also as the Sacraments of the church and visible signes of inuisible grace testimonies of Gods infallible promise made to the fathers touching saluation in the Messiah to come Fourthly they serued to be as an open confession of their faith what God they serued in whom they beleeued and that they hated and detested the vanity and idolatry of the Gentiles Fiftly they were also a testification of their thankfulnes for sundry benefits receiued that therby they might be taught to acknowledge from whence they came Lastly they serued for the maintenance of the Ministerie and consequently for the furtherance of the worship of God Deut. 18 3 4. 1 Cor. 9 13. These were the chiefe ends for which they were ordained Now let vs retu●n back to the particular handling of the matters contained in this chap. Speake vnto the children of Israel and say vnto them The first point is touching the sacrifices the summe whereof is to teach what oblations are to bee vsed in euery sacrifice how much wine how much oyle how much flower is to be taken and applied in euery special sacrifice The seuerall sorts of sacrifices are set downe in the booke of Leuiticus Doctrine but in what proportion these things should bee added Of the meate and drink Offering is not there described but heere it is declared in this place And these things thus performed according to the commandement of God hee is said to smel a sweet sauour This offereth diuers good vses vnto vs albeit the things them selues be ceased and abrogated Vse 1 The Vses First the offering is said to bee a sweet sauour or a sauour of rest often repeated verses 3 7 10 13 14 which God accepteth wherein he delighteth and whereby he is appeased such as he resteth in so ceaseth from his anger This is a borrowed speech taken from sweet odours and perfumes wherein hee which smelleth a sweet sauour resteth contenteth himselfe If any ask the question Obiect whether God smell any sauour or not I answer Answer this must be vnderstood figuratiuely or mystically For if we speak properly Gen. 8.21 Exod. 29 18. sauour smell is the obiect of the sense of smelling which agreeth to sensible creatures and not either to God who neither hath senses nor is sensible neither is a creature or to any spirit For as Christ saith A spirit hath not flesh nor bones Luke 24 39. so vnto the same agree neither senses nor sensible things And if it were true that God were affected with smels yet the fume and sauor that cometh from the burning of the flesh cannot it selfe be pleasant and delightfull to the senses but is rather noisome and vnsauoury and therefore some other thing must be meant by it How then cometh it to be a sweete sauour I answer two waies partly in regard of their willingnesse and obedience which God preferreth before all sacrifice that hath horne and hoofe Behold to obey is better then sacrifice 1 Sam. 15 22. and to hearken then the fat of Rams therfore where the external worke was separated from the inward deuotion obedience it was no sweet sauour but it was hatefull and abhominable to God partly also and principally because it was a type and figure of Christ who was indeede an offering and a sweet sauour to God Eph. 5.2 He is the truth of all sacrifices and his blood the accomplishment of all the blood shed in the sacrifices He hath performed all in his own person brought an end to them they are no longer to be continued he hath appeased the wrath of God he hath taken away our sins therby testified his abundant loue toward vs Iohn 15 3. for greater loue hath no man then this that
their sicknes trust in the Phisition as Asa did 1 Chro. 16 11 12. 1 Sam. 2.5 not in the liuing God who killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp againe hee maketh the wound and bindeth it vp he smiteth and his hands make whole he shall deliuer thee in sixe troubles and in the seuenth the euill shall not touch thee In time of warre and day of battell we trust in our strength armor men munition and defenced places and make them our God Nah. 3.8 ● whereas the Prophet teacheth that this is a cursed confidence and shall not leaue a blessing behind it Lastly we learne from hence not to reuenge Vse 4 our own causes quarels For if we be taught in this practise of Moses to go vnto God in all our wrongs who will iudge his people then we are not to render like for like or to requite euill for euill or to repay wrong for wrong taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke railing for railing but contrariwise blesse knowing that we are thereunto called that we should bee heires of blessing This vse is concluded Prou. 20.22 Say not thou I will recompence euill but waite vpon the Lord and he shall saue thee This is the direction of the Apostle Ro. 12.17.19 Recompence to no man euill for euill dearely beloued auenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine Psal 94.1 ● I will repay saith the Lord. Where we see God claymeth and challenge vengeance to himselfe and taketh it from vs so that such as seeke reuenge sit downe in the seat of God and as much as lyeth in thē wrest the scepter out of his hands taking vpon them the person of the accuser witnesse iudge and executioner contrary to all true forme of lawfull iudgement And albeit it bee hard and harsh for flesh and blood to put vp iniuries yet if we wil be the children of God we must haue more in vs then flesh and blood For they that are after the flesh Rom. 3.5 ● fauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit so then they that are in the flesh cannot please GOD. Wherefore when Zachariah the Priest a faithfull and fruitefull witnesse of God was vniustly and cruelly stoned to death he raged not he reuiled not he reuenged not but said The Lord see and require it When the Lord of life ●● 24.22 Christ Iesus was accused condemned and crucified the iust for the vniust he prayed for his enemies Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe ● 23 34. leauing vs an example that we should follow his steps When blessed Stephen who was full of the holy Ghost and saw the glory of God and Iesus standing at the right of God was cast out of the city and stoned with stones hee kneeled downe and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sinne to their charge ● 55.58 When the Archangel mentioned by the Apostle Iude saw that the diuell went about to corrupt the pure worship of God hee would not vse railing and reprochfull speaches ● ver 9. but desireth the Lord to rebuke him and repay him for his malice Seeing therefore this duty hath beene practised by Priest and people by men and Angels by the head and the members of his body let vs follow those things that concerne peace let vs be of a patient and meeke spirit which is much set by of God and let vs commit our causes to him that is the God of vengeance It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Verse 9 10. Then Moses tooke that rod c. Hitherto Moses Aaron haue behaued themselues vprightly in respect of God meekely in respect of themselues and patiently in regard of the people Now we shal see how they offend by transgressing the commandement of God by distrusting his word by raging against the whole assembly God chargeth them to speake to the rocke they spake vnto the people Againe as if it were vnlikely or vnpossible that the rock should yeeld water they smote it twise through impaciency vnbeeleefe Thus they that had beene the instruments of God in so many miracles that had seene him face to face as a man seeth his friend that had stood so often in the gap where the hand of God had made the breach that had diuided the red sea Moses I say and Aaron the Ministers of God the witnesses of his workes the pillars of the truth now begin to faile to faint and to fall down to shew vs and themselues the weakenesse that is in flesh and blood From hence we learne that many are the failings and fals of the children of God ●trine ● are the 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Howsoeuer the faithfull be borne againe and endued with the spirit of sanctification howsoeuer they desire to please God and endeuor to serue him with all the powers of soule and body yet they often stumble in their race thorough the burthen that presseth down and the sinne that cleaueth so fast vnto them This truth is confessed and confirmed by many testimonies Salomon in his worthy prayer at the dedication of the Temple acknowledgeth it 1 king 8.46 So Iob. 15.14 15. Likewise Prou. 20.9 And the Prophet Psal 14 2 3. All which testimonies doe plentifully teach this truth that howsoeuer through the grace of God giuen vnto them the faithful fight a good fight hauing faith and a good conscience yet all are sinners and no flesh is cleane and cleere from sin which Moses and Aaron here fal into The reasons of this doctrine are First because Reason 1 the Scripture hath concluded all vnder sinne Gal 3 2● Rom. 3.19 That euery mouth might bee stopped and all the world be subiect to the iudgment of God Al matter of glorying in our selues is taken from vs we are found guilty before God wee haue no excuse no defence no cloake for our selues to couer our sins there is no difference Wee haue all sinned and are depriued of the glory of God and euerlasting life so that all both Iewes and Gentiles are proued to be vnder sinne Secondly we see that death the wages of Reason 2 sinne hath raigned and doth raigne ouer all without difference yea it taketh hold euen on children that sinned not actually like the transgression of Adam If then old and yong taste of death all the posterity of Adam are corrupted in him when he wittingly and willingly wilfully sinned against God We flow from an vncleane fountaine we grow out of a bitter root we are as branches of the wilde vine Thus the Apostle reasoneth Death raigned frō Adam to Moses Rom. 5.14 euen ouer them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam which was the figure of him that was to come So then sinne and death goe together as mother and daughter
punishment lying euen at the doore Because ye sanctified not my Name before the children of Israel yee shall not bring this congregation into the land which I haue giuen them Hee doth not onely accuse and conuince them of sinne but amplifieth it by the effect that thereby hee was robbed of his glory and so excludeth them out of the land of promise We learne from hence that God chastiseth his owne children sinning against him ●trine chasti ●is owne ●on When his children forsake his lawes and walke not in his iudgements although he take not his louing kindnesse from them neither falsifie his trueth yet he will visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquities with strokes This we see throughly strengthened thoroughout the whole booke of the Iudges as chap. 4.1.2 When the people of Israel proceeded to doe euill in the sight of the Lord hee sold them into the hand of Iabin king of Canaan c. So when Ionah disobeyed the voyce of the Lord calling him to preach to Nineueh that great Citie and to cry against it for their wickednesse hee was cast into the Sea as an vnprofitable burthen of the ship ● 2 3 15 and swallowed of a Whale so that albeit he fled from the presence of the Lord yet his hand followed after him and ouertooke him When Dauid had trespassed in the matter of Vriah by adultery and murther though he were a man after Gods owne heart yet the Lord raised euill against him out of his house ●m 12.9 the sword of the enemy was shaken against him and his own wiues were defiled in the sight of the Sun ●b 12.10 When Miriam the sister of Moses withstood him in the pride of her heart through ambition and vaineglory albeit he accused her not but in meekenesse of spirit put vp the wrong being lowly in his owne eyes yet shee was striken with leprosie by the hand of God and shut for a season out of the hoast The like we might say of Salomon Asa Iehoshaphat Iosiah Hezekiah and many others all which seale vp this trueth to our hearts that GOD spareth not his owne people when they sinne against him Reason 1 The Reasons of this iust dealing of God are first to cleare his iudgement and iustice that we should know him to bee no respecter of persons but to hate sinne whensoeuer wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer he findeth it He is not a God that loueth wickednesse neither shall euill dwell with him for he hateth all them that worke iniquity This the Prophet Dauid acknowledgeth 51.4 Against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight that thou maiest be iust when thou speakest and pure when thou iudgest If then we breake his statutes and keepe not his commandements when he searcheth with lights and findeth out our sinnes we must giue glory to God and make confession vnto him wee must pronounce righteousnesse to belong vnto him and vnto our selues open shame yea if he should destroy vs we must acknowledge him to be holy in all his waies and iust in all his workes who giueth vs to eate the fruite of our owne labours As then he is iust and righteous so he must punish sinne in whomsoeuer he taketh it and as he denounceth sore iudgements and greeuous plagues of great continuance and long durance so he executeth thē to manifest the truth of his owne word and maketh good his owne threatnings gone out of his owne mouth Againe God chastiseth his owne children Reason 2 lest they sinning with the men of this world whose portion is in this life should be condemned with the world For as in punishing of vs he respecteth his own iustice so he doth it in respect of our owne good and the great profite which thereby is brought vnto vs. If we should alwaies enioy health wealth liberty peace plenty and other good blessings of God according to our hearts desire we would waxe fat and spurne with the heele Deut. 32.15 forsaking God that made vs refusing the strong God of our saluation ioyning hand in hand with wicked men reserued to destruction Wherefore affliction is as the messenger of God to call vs backe from sinne to weane vs from the world to kindle in vs a desire of the world to come This the Apostle aimeth at 1 Cor. 11 31 32. If we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged but when we are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord because we should not bee condemned with the world The vses of this Doctrine are many First Vse 1 consider with me the cause why they keep the word and turne vnto him with all their harts why they run not on in euill as the horse rusheth into the battell as the vngodly do the reason is God calleth them backe by his hand his afflictions are remembrances vnto them and his corrections are their instructions This the Prophet Dauid found true in his owne comfortable experience Psal 119 67 71. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes The Children of Israel liuing vnder the Iudges and sinning against God making a couenant with the inhabitants of the land Iudg. 2. and 4. Deu. 4.29.30 taking their daughters to be their wiues giuing their daughters to their sonnes seruing their idols forgetting the true God and doing worse then their fathers the Lord sold them into the hand of their enemies whom they serued then they lift vp their voyces and wept then they called and cryed vnto the Lord in their afflictions and he deliuered them out of their distresse The same we see in Manasseh who for his euils that he commited like the abominations of the heathen was carryed away captiue put in fetters 2 Chro. 33.2 11 12 13. and bound in chaines and when he was in tribulation hee prayed to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his father and prayed vnto him and God was intreated of him and heard his praier and brought him againe to Ierusalem into his kingdome Then Manasseh knew that the Lord was God But of this we shall speake more in the chapter following Vse 2 Secondly confesse from hence that great is the wrath and anger of God for sinne seeing he punisheth it so sharpely and seuerely in his children whom he hath engrauen as a Signet in the palme of his hand and whom he tendreth as the apple of his eye Marke how hee hath many times schooled his owne seruants offending When Miriam murmured against Moses and made other to murmure shee was striken by the hand of God with leprosie and albeit Moses made supplication for her yet the Lord answered Numb 12.10 13 14. If her father had spit in her face should she not haue beene ashamed seuen dayes Let her be shut out of the hoast seuen dayes and after she shall be
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
peace dwelled in our houses possessed our inheritances enioyed our lands and goods thus long but for the faithfull seruants of God who mind the peace of Sion Doubtlesse he would not spare the world one minute and moment of time but for the godly Hee would haue spared the cities of Sodome and Gomorrha 〈◊〉 18.32 if ten righteous persons had bin found in them For the faiths sake of Rahah who hid the spies and sent them out another way 〈◊〉 26. hee spared her kindred and her fathers house For the faith of Lot whose righteous soule was vexed day by day in seeing and hearing the vnclean conuersation of those sinfull men he would haue saued his sonnes in law 〈◊〉 12 that should haue married his daughters For Pauls sake a chosen vessel to beare the Name of God to the Gentiles he gaue freely those that sailed with him and saued their liues 〈◊〉 ●4 Thus wee see that for the godly he beareth with the vngodly but when they are safe and sealed in the forehead then iudgement shall come vpon the wicked Contrariwise a nation a cittie a towne an house and family is cursed for the society and company of the wicked The Israelites could not prosper at the siege of Ai so long as Achan was among them The Sea could not be calme the ship could not be safe the Marriners could not be at rest so long as vnrepentant and vnreformed Ionah was a burden vnto it for he said vnto them Take me and cast me into the Sea so shall the waues worke no more so troublesomely for I know that for my sake this great tempest is vpon you Wherefore it is a sweet and comfortable thing to bee in the number of the faithfull wee haue benefite by the prayers of the Church which pierce the eares of God and bring downe his blessings in great aboundance Verse 8. And the Lord said vnto Moses Make thee a fiery serpent We heard before how the people repented of their sinnes and how Moses prayed for pardon Now see how God remooueth his hand Psal 103.9 He will not alwaies chide nor keepe his anger for euer hee doth not deale with vs after our sinnes nor rewardeth vs according to our iniquities Indeed he sheweth oftentimes his seuere iudgments but so soone as the sinner is humbled hee receiueth him to mercy the sinne is pardoned and the punishment is remooued Doctrine God is merciful to greeuous sinners when they are penitent The doctrine from hence is this that God is mercifull to all penitent sinners Repentance once going before mercy followeth after albeit we sinne greeuously against him This the Prophet teacheth in the Name of God Esay 1.18 Ezek. 18.21 22 23. and 33.11 Dauid sinned exceedingly in numbring the people for which God sent a pestilence three dayes in Israel that many thousands dyed yet when his heart smote him that he said I haue sinned exceedingly 2 Sa. 24 17.18 1 Chr. 21.15 17. I haue done wickedly but these sheep what haue they done Let thine hand I pray thee bee against mee and against my fathers house and not on thy people for their destruction the Lord repented him of the euill and said to the Angel that destroyed It is enough let thine hand ceasse Let vs consider the reasons of Gods merciful Reason 1 dealing which are first the comfort and releefe of his people that none should to the end of the world despaire of obtaining of mercy For the mercy of God in Christ is aboue all his workes which he extendeth to thousands it is infinite without measure Hee pardoneth such offenders to make them examples to others of Gods great mercy hee receiueth them to fauour and remitteth their offences not onely to manifest his mercy to the offender himselfe but to teach others to resort and repaire vnto him for pardon and forgiuenesse When the Prophet testifieth that by acknowledging his sinne vnto God and confessing his wickednesse against himself he obtained the remission of his sinne and punishment of sinne he addeth immediately Therefore shall euery one that is godly Psal 32.5 6. make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou mayest bee found This is the reason that the Apostle toucheth 1 Tim. 1. teaching that he was receiued to mercy for this cause That Iesus Christ shold first shew on him all long suffering vnto the example of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life So then from these and such like examples of great sinners that haue obtained much mercy we likewise should be assured of the goodnesse of God for our saluation whensoeuer wee can bee brought to beleeue the Gospel repent from dead works Secondly the consideration of the nature Reason 2 of God ministreth a strong and inuincible reason to gaine our affections to yeeld to this truth For his mercy is aboundant and his goodnesse is infinite It surmounteth the reach and vnderstanding of all mortall men It passeth the highnesse of the heauens the depth of the earth the breadth of the Sea the power of the diuel the strength of the Law the measure of the whole world and nothing can be compared with the perfections of the Almighty Iob 11.7 8 9. Paul who before his conuersion to the faith which he sought to destroy was a blasphemer a Persecuter an oppresser maketh this the cause why he was receiued to mercy The grace of our Lord was exceeding aboundant with faith and loue 1 Tim. 1.14 which is in Christ Iesus that is giuing vnto me faith that chased away infidelity and loue that ouercame cruelty So the Lord maketh this the chiefe and principall cause why he spared that rebellious and idolatrous people The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slow to anger aboundant in goodnesse and truth forgiuing iniquity transgression and sinne Vse 1 The vses follow of this doctrine First we learne that there is no sinne that doth exceed the mercy of God None can say without iniury against his owne soule without reproach against God and giuing the lie to the glorious Maiestie of God My sinne is greater then can be forgiuen True it is there is an vnpardonable sinne Mat 12.31 that shall neuer bee forgiuen either in this world or in the world to come the blasphemy against the Spirit but that is because they cannot relent or repent that commit it they are so farre gone that they can neuer returne backe againe not because God is not able to forgiue it or that it doth exceed the mercies of God Seeing then vile sinners finde such infinite and vnspeakeable mercie let vs neuer despaire or doubt of his mercy fauor though we be suddenly ouertaken through infirmitie and fall into diuers and greeuous sinnes He hath mercy in store for such as haue beene exceeding sinners against him If they can repent of their sinnes his mercies are as great as himselfe Consider the examples of Peter that denyed
as false and vnreasonable declaring as the truth was that Israel took not away that land which they claimed as their owne but wonne it from the Amorites by the law of warre and Verse 20 by right of conquest who denying them passage and moreouer making assault vpon them constrained them to draw out their swords to defend themselues by occasion whereof they obtained victory through the helpe of God and possessed their Cities And as they tooke them by force of armes so they held thē Verse 26 by prescription of time three hundred yeares So that he declareth that if any had right to those Cities or could lay any iust claime or title vnto them it should be the Moabites who were the lawfull owners of them before Sihon had encroched vpon them and taken them away from the first inhabitants But the Moabites hauing once lost them in battell neuer asked Verse 25 them of the Israelites neither laid any claime vnto them therefore much lesse should the Amonites to whom they appertained not by any iust title neither belonged any way vnto them either as owners by law or conquerers by sword and therefore they had no cause to dispute what right Israel had vnto that Land which now they possessed The second point heere amplified and enlarged is touching the well which by a diuine reuelation to them they had digged For when they departed from the Riuer Arnon they came into a dry place where they wanted water such as the wildernesse affoordeth many where the streames are swallowed vp in the hot sandes but at the speciall commandement of God they were directed what to doe as Peter was where he should cast his Net Luke chapter 5 verse 4 they digged and found water in great abundance and therefore they praise God by an effectuall song of thanksgiuing amplified by many rhetoricall figures as goodly flouers or as precious iewels to beautifie and garnish the same withall For first they eloquently by an Apostrophe turne their speech to the Well it selfe though a dumbe and senslesse creature and speake vnto it as if it had eares to heare and vnderstanding to conceiue Rise vp O Well confessing thereby the great power of God who contrary to the nature of all heauy and weighty things made the water to ascend whose property is to descend and exhorting with many acclamations and loud out-cries one another to the worke Secondly they set downe who were the labourers and workmen about the Well together with the tooles and instruments wherwith they laboured to wit the Princes and Nobles directed by Moses by whose ministery they receiued the Law and holpen with their staues and such like instruments wherewith they laboured fit for that purpose And this is the third myracle which God wrought in giuing them waters First in Rephidim immediately after they had passed ouer the red Sea Exod. 17. The second in the desert of Zin whē they came to Kadesh as we shewed before in the former chapter The third is that recorded in this place in the desert of the Moabites Afterward Moses reckoneth vp other places by which they passed as Mattaanah Nahaliel Bamoth and so that Valley which is in the plaine of the Moabites In this History of the passage of the Israelites from place to place a question Question ariseth what is meant by the booke of the warres of the LORD mentioned in the fourteenth verse For where is it now extant or what is become of it From hence also from such like places many conclude that sundry bookes of Canonicall Scripture are lost I answer Answer the word Sepher is taken diuersly and doubtfully it signifieth any publishing or rehearsing whether it be written or vnwritten whether it be set downe by the pen or vttered by liuely voice as also the word Tradition is taken for that which is deliuered eyther by word of mouth or by course of writing So then we cannot necessarily conclude It is rehearsed therefore it is written Nor thus It is written Therefore it is an holy booke and put into the Canon of the Scripture Let these three things be cleered and decided that it was a booke that it was an holy booke and lastly that it was a Canonicall booke and then wee shall easily be satisfied But Moses speaketh barely of rehearsing the warres not of writing them as if he should say Whensoeuer the warres ordered and disposed by the prouidence of God shall be spoken off this warre also and worke of his shall bee remembred which he hath wisely wrought and accomplished for his people against Vaheb King of the Moabites giuing part of his Country to Sihon that so his owne people might recouer the same out of his hands againe and reteine it as a possession for themselues as Iephtah telleth the Ammonites Iudg. 11 23 24 that they had held it by prescription of a long time peaceably without any molestation from the Moabites or desire of re-entry But if this had bene penned in a booke and reserued to posterity no doubt Ieptah would haue produced it as a sure witnesse to cleere the whole matter and to put it out of all doubt Wherefore this truth must be holden of vs that no part of the Canonicall Scripture No canonical Scripture is lost inspired of God is lost and perished I meane such as was committed as the Lords treasure to the Church for the perpetuall instruction thereof in faith and obedience so that no one oracle or sentence of God can fall away True it is 2 King 22 8. 1 Mac. 1 19. these sacred bookes may sometimes bee neglected and carelesly kept of men they may be furiously burned and despitefully handled by cruell tyrants that seeke the ouerthrow of all piety and religion but they can neuer be finally lost and wholly extinguished As he that keepeth Israel cannot slumber or sleepe so he that keepeth the holy Scripture the glory of Israel cannot slumber nor sleepe For first of all who is the author and enditer of thē but God and will not he preserue his truth and keepe it for the good of his Church in all ages Shal we make him vnable or vnwilling to defend and continue them If vnable we make him a weake and impotent God if vnwilling we make him enuious and malicious both which are farre from the pure and perfect nature of God and cannot stand with his essence Secondly all the workes of God remaine for euer and euer and are done in truth and equity Take a perfect view of all creatures vnder the Sunne which are the workes of his hands though they may be abolished and rooted out in one place yet they continue in another If thou wouldst ascend into the heauens or goe downe into the deepe if thou wouldst take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vtmost parts of the sea which of all the Creatures are now missing What place is void empty What hath beene that is not now being and extant in
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
heerein a speciall worke of Gods prouidence preseruing his owne truth and reseruing it to all posterity Few are found in the world to affect or regard the pure and sincere word of God in comparison of the multitude that seeke after humane wisedome and labour to know the nature of ●irds of Beasts of Fishes of Trees and of earthly things which delight the outward senses and rauish the vnderstanding of naturall men yet see how those bookes of Salomon that handle meere matters of humane P●ilosophy which the wise men of the world hunt after are vtterly lost whereas the diuine bookes which he wrote by inspiration lesse regarded and more contemned are notwithstanding by the watchfull eye of God remaining and are reserued for the comfort of the Church for euer Lastly we reade of the Prophesie of Enoch Obiect 4 in the Epistle of Iude verse fourteenth who prophesied of the second comming of Christ in power and great glory with thousands of his Saints which Prophesie also seemeth to be among those bookes which are lost I answer Answer this could bee no Apochryphall Booke of holy Scripture for Moses was the first Penne-man or Scribe that wrote the holy Scripture whose fiue bookes are perfect and contained in them sufficient instruction for that CHVRCH whereas that Prophesie did not nor indeed could not Secondly it cannot appeare that this Prophesie was euer written Iude ver 14. It is said he prophesied foretolde the end of the world by the Spirit of God in that most corrupt age that hasted to destruction to the end that such as were ordained to eternall life might beleeue and the rest being hardened might bee made without excuse but it is no where said It was written It is said to bee a Prophesie but no word or mention is made of the writing of this Prophesie so that it seemeth the Apostle learned it by tradition from the father to the sonne as the Apostle Paul setteth downe the names of the sorcerers that withstood Moses and Aaron Neither let the Church of Rome lay the foundation of vnwritten traditions vppon this ground-worke seeing we deny not al vnwritten traditions conueied from hand to hand but only such as are made rules of Gods worship matters of faith and parts of religion necessary to saluation To conclude therefore seeing the prouidence of God the fidelity of the Church and diligence of the faithfull is so great that the whole body of the Canonicall Scripture hath beene kept entire and perfect without losse or lacke of any part or parcell of it of any booke or sentence we must detest the blasphemous shufflings shiftings of the Church of Rome that make the Scripture to be a maimed lame and vnperfect doctrine Censu Colon. dial 6. Concil Trident. sess 4. not containing all things necessary to faith and saluation whereas the Apostle teacheth that the whole Scripture inspired of God is able to make vs wise vnto saluation 2 Tim. 3 15 16 17 through the faith which is in Christ Iesus and is profitable to teach to conuince to correct to instruct in righteousnesse that the man of God may be absolute being made perfect vnto all good works Verses 10 11 12 13. And the Children of Israel departed thence and pitched in Oboth c. Here we haue painted and portraied out as in a Table certaine stations and iournies of the Israelites wherein wee may behold as in a glasse the prouidence of God protecting thē and the obedience of the people following him We see how they remoue from place to place in the wildernesse they are neuer long at one stay but either they went forward or backward as the sea continually ebbeth or floweth Now as the Land of Canaan was a figure of their rest in the kingdome of heauen so their wandring vp and downe in the wildernesse did figure and represent the condition of their life to bee vaine and transitory in this world Doctrine The faithfull are forreigners and strangers in this life We learne from hence the state of the faithfull what it is we are pilgrims and strangers in this life we are as guests lodging heere for a night but by and by we must depart and be dislodged we haue heere no continuing City This the faithfull haue in all ages confessed Iacob being brought into the presence of Pharaoh saith The whole time of my pilgrimage is an hundred and thirty yeares few and euill haue the daies of my life beene Gen. 47 9. But we may say the daies of our pilgrimage are threescore yeares and ten if haply we reach so farre to which not one amongst an hundred cometh few indeed and euill we may truely call them This Abraham pleadeth Gen. 23 4 Gen 15. ●3 wanting a place of buriall to interre his dead I am a stranger and a forreigner among you giue mee a possession of buriall with you Thus he confesseth it went with him in Canaan neither was his estate any better elsewhere This the Prophet Dauid acknowledgeth though a great King Psal 39 12. Heare my praier O Lord and hearken vnto my cry keepe not silence at my teares for I am a stranger with thee 1 Chr. 23 15 and a soiourner as all my fathers our daies are like a shadow vpon the earth and there is none abiding So then we see what our life and condition is wee are altogether vanity like grasse that soone withereth wee are as tenants at the will of the Lord our age is as nothing it passeth as a tale that is soone told it is as an hand-breath quickly measured surely euery man in his best estate is altogether lighter then vanity it selfe The reasons First all our daies are stinted Reason 1 and limitted as they are short and vaine so they are vncertaine and vnknowne The strongest natures and constitutions that seeme to be framed setled as a sure building to continue for many yeares yet are soone cut off are no more We see this confirmed by the daily experience of many examples as in Vzzah suddenly smitten 2 Sam. 6 7 in Iobs children quickly ouerwhelmed Iob 1 19 in Ananias and Sapphira presently destroyed Acts 5 5 10 in the rich man that had his soule in one night taken from him Luke 12 20 and in a continuall beholding the hand of God striking as pleaseth him If then vncertainty be an apparent argument of vanity we may conclude from hence our life to be vaine transitory inasmuch as God reuealeth not when or where or how we shall die and bee taken out of this life We know not when we shall die at euen or at midnight at the Cocke-crowing or in the dawning When we lie downe we know not whether we shall rise againe when we arise whether wee shall lie downe againe except we be laid in our graue and make our bed in the dust Moreouer we know not where we shall die at home or abroad When we go out of our houses wee know not
no gifte of perswading is read in any prophane author but the same is found in the Scripture as in a plentifull store-house yea with farre greater grace and excellency then any where else let vs acknowledge the maiesty of the word and reuerently esteeme of it aboue all other Writings Secondly seeing Poetry is a good gift to Vse 2 be reuerenced and receiued for the antiquitie and worthinesse it serueth to reprooue those that abuse this gift to the reproch of the Art it selfe and to the dishonor of the giuer And howsoeuer many among the Heathen excelled in this kinde and haue lighted a candle to others yet was this Art no where more disgraced and disgraded from the former glorie and ancient estimation thereof then amongst themselues For whereas Poetry at the first was vsed to expresse some memorable accident and record some great worke to posterity that it might bee better remembred and regarded they turned these vses into wrong ends changed the truth into horrible lies For ●e the works Homer Vir● O●d o●ers what are all the Poems of the Infidels vnbeleeuing Gentiles but a detestable mingling of histories with Fables of trueth with lies of deedes done with their owne dreames and inuentions And whereas of olde time there was no difference between a plaine story and an artificiall Poem but in the manner of penning and enditing the one being easie and euident the other curious and cunning more exquisite and laboured they haue set the one against the other and opposed them as contraries ● f●mil epi. ● lib. 1. Orator ●t de Art 〈◊〉 charging an historie to speake the truth all the trueth and nothing but the truth but discharging a Poeme of this burthen They require the foundation to be some deed done indeed and then build vpon it Fables and falshood so that the plaine song being a truth the descant shall be a lye Neither hath this Noble Science beene abused onely among the Gentiles but the remnants of it haue crept into the Schooles and defiled the pens of many Christians We must feek to restore its ancient honor and being a graue matrone wee must pull from her the Ornaments and deckings that do not become her Therefore let not yong men addicted to this Art abuse this gift but vse it to the praise of God and to the publishing of his works Let them in their Poems shew themselues Christians and manifest themselues to differ from the vnbeleeuing Gentiles that know not God Let all songs and Sonets of loue or rather Lusts all scurrilous iests and Satyricall Pamphlets be banished from vs which are not the fault● of Art but of the Artist not of Poetry but of the Poet not of the matter but of the man Let al inuocation of strange gods and heathenish inducing of many gods be odious to our eares speeches vsuall among many but not seasoned with salt as they ought to be Wee haue liberty enough to follow the verse without wandering into such licentiousnes wherunto the Apostle directeth vs Ephes 4 29. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouths but that which is good to the vse of edifying that it may minister grace vnto the hearers Lastly seeing the Art of Poetry is lawfull Vse 3 and lawdable let vs praise God and sing to him in spirituall songs penned by the Prophets and endited by the Spirit of GOD for the instruction and direction of the Church not onely in the booke of Psalmes but in other places of the Scripture And surely it were a worthy and profitable labour tending to the aduancing of the glory of God seruing for the comfort of the Church if all the songs of prayer and praises which are found in the Law and the Prophets were turned and tuned for the ordinary vse of our assemblyes and ioyned to the booke of Psalmes as the song of Moses of Miriam of Deborah of Esay of Hezekiah of Habakkuk of the Canticles and Lamentations together with some others in other places to bee found that wee might haue plentifull matter and perfect direction to lift vp our hearts and voices vnto God vpon all occasions that shall be offered vnto vs. Hereunto commeth the exhortation of the Apostle Paul Col. 3 16. Let the word of God dwell in you plentifully in all wisedome teaching and admonishing your owne selues in Psalmes Hymns and spirituall songs singing with a grace in your harts to the Lord. This duty of singing Psalmes is not proper to the Church and the publicke assemblies of the Church but an exercise of our Religion to be vsed publikely priuately whether we would giue thankes for some deliuerance or craue forgiuenesse of sinnes or desire restoring of health or craue the graces of Gods Spirit which wee want True it is there are many abuses of this part of Gods seruice as also in the rest yea euen in singing the Psalms of Dauid 1 Cor. 14 15 26. as vsing of an vnknowne tongue without vnderstanding the spending of too much time shutting out thereby the preaching of the word and hindering other exercises of our Religion as we see it vsuall in the Church of Rome where the chanting of their Mattins and Masses hath iustled out the publishing of the Doctrine of the Gospel making the deed done to be meritorious auaileable for the forgiuenesse of sinnes singing many sinfull and superstitious things touching the intercession of Saints and such trumpery bringing in their broken Musicke that nothing can be vnderstoode any more thē if it were in a strange tongue an vnknown language whereas al things should be done to edifying in the Church of God Notwithstanding all these abuses we must maintaine the right and holy vse of singing in the Church and in our houses which is an exercise excellent in it selfe acceptable to God profitable to our selues and those that heare vs. The Apostle exhorteth the Ephesians Not to be drunke with wine wherein is excesse but to be filled with the Spirit spe●king vnto themselues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs making melodie to the Lord in their hearts Ephe. 5 18 19. Likewise the Apostle Iames chap. 5 13. Is any among you afflicted Let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalmes This was the practise of Paul and Silas while they were in prison They praied at midnight and sing Psalmes vnto God Acts 16 25. Let vs follow these examples of godly men and take vp this exercise better then we haue done beeing a notable gift of God which duty albeit commanded by precept and commended by example is greatly decayed in all places and among all estates of men in stead whereof prophane songs and beastly Ballads are come in places filling and defiling all shops houses and meetings iustling out the other to the decay of Religion to the disgrace of the Psalmes to the corrupting of youth to the contempt of the word and to the dishonour of God They that spake in Prouerbs say
Come to Heshbon let the City of Sihon be built and repaired c. The end of this Song made of the people of GOD was to keepe a perpetuall memory of the victories that God gaue to the Israelites and to teach the posterity to come how they came to be owners and possessours of these Citiss We learne from hence That it is the duty of the faithfull to remember and publish the works of God Doctrine It is our duty to remember publish the great works of God whereof we are partakers or witnesses Whensoeuer GOD sheweth any of his works of mercy or iudgement toward our selues or others toward soule or body we must not hide them and bury them in forgetfulnesse but spread them abroad and make them knowne to others This appeareth in sundry places of the word of God The Prophet teacheth this duty Psalm 105 1 2. Praise the Lord call vpon his Name declare his workes among the people Sing vnto him sing praise vnto him and talke of all his wondrous works And Psal 107 8. Let them confesse before the Lord his louing kindnesse and his wonderfull works among the sonnes of men So likewise Psalm 111 2 3. The works of the Lord are great and ought to be sought of all them that loue them his worke is glorious and beautifull and his righteousnesse endureth for euer So Psal 66 16 5 he prouoketh all men to heare what God hath done for him Come and hearken all ye that feare God and I will tell you what he hath done to my soule and in the same Psalme he reproueth the dulnesse of men that are cold in the consideration of the works of God Come and behold the works of God he is terrible in his doing toward the sonnes of men When the Shepheards had found the word of the Angel true and seene the Babe laide in the Cratch Luke 2 1● They published abroad the thing that was told them of that childe to the great wondring of all those that heard it And when the man out of whom a legion of diuels was departed besought Christ that he might tarry with him Iesus sent him away saying Returne into thine owne house and shew what great things God hath done to thee so hee went his way and preached throughout all the Citty what great things Iesus had done vnto him When Paul and Barnabas returned to Antioch from whence they had beene commended to the grace of God to the worke which they had fulfilled hauing gathered together the Church They rehearsed all the things that God had done by them and how he had opened the doore of faith vnto the Gentiles Acts 14 27. The practise of this duty Christ commanded to the man that he had dispossessed Mark 5 19 20. Goe thy way home to thy friends shew thē what great things the Lord hath done vnto thee how he hath had compassion on thee so he departed and began to publish in Decapolis what great things Iesus had done vnto him and al men did maruaile All which precepts and examples teach vs that it is not enough to haue receiued Gods benefits and to be mindfull of them our selues but also we are bound to make others according to our places to profite thereby and to praise God for them agreeable to the words of Peter and Iohn to the councell Wee cannot but speak the things which we haue seene heard Acts 4 20. The Reasons of this Doctrine are diuers Reason 1 whether we consider God or our selues or the faithfull with whom we liue First in respect of God inasmuch as it standeth vs all vpō to set forth his glory with al our strength and might This is the chiefe and principall end that we must ayme at in all our waies to seeke to gaine glory to his great Name according to that generall precept of the Apostle Whether ye eate or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe do all to the glory of God So when God doth make knowne to vs the workes of his owne right hand this must be one motiue to stirre vs vp to spread them abroad that thereby his Name may be glorified and his sauing health published among all Nations Acts 11 1● as we see the practise in the Apostles Secondly in respect of our selues For this is a notable signe and token of a true and liuely faith that we beleeue the works of God and lay them vp deeply in our hearts when we hide them not vnder a bushell nor couer them in the ashes but lift vp our voice as a Trumpet to declare to others what our selues haue learned This the Prophet testifieth in his owne practise I will walke before the Lord in the Land of the liuing I beleeued and therefore did I speake Psalm 116 verses 9 10. This is not peculiar to the Prophet onely to testifie his faith by the words of his mouth but is made generall and common to others by the Apostle 〈◊〉 4 13. Because we haue the same spirit of Faith according as it is written I beleeued and therefore I haue spoken we also beleeue and therefore speak Such as do not beleeue the words and workes of God can neuer be fit instruments to giue notice of them to others but such as doe in heart beleeue them cannot but with the tongue confesse them thereby to assure their owne hearts and to confirme their owne faith more and more Reason 3 Thirdly we must haue respect to others For as Christ speaketh to Peter when thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren so when we beleeue the workes of God wee must labour to bring all other to a sound faith and right iudgement It is our duty to hunger and thirst after the saluation of others and being called to the profession we must toll the bell to others There is no man that hath bene truly acquainted with the workes of God and hath in conscience bene conuinced of the vndoubted truth thereof but ought to bee as a publike Cryer and as the Lordes Herald to blaze them and publish them abroad for the good of others This is the reason that mooued the Prophet Dauid to make such often so many protestations 〈◊〉 1 71 to speak of al his wondrous workes to tell his maruellous workes to publish the praises of the Lord his great power This is the reason that Peter immediately after his deliuerance out of prison came vnto Mary where many were gathered together in praier to intreat the Lord for the enlarging of his liberty saying vnto them Go shew these things vnto Iames and the rest of the Bretheren Acts 12 ●7 So then whether we do consider that it is required of vs to seeke the glorie of God to testify the assurance of our Faith or to win our brethren wee must acknowledge that it is a spe●iall duty laide vpon vs to publish the workes of God whereof any of vs be witnesses of the truth whereof we are conuinced Indeed Christ
compelled to giue testimony and witnesse to the truth of God the Lord as it were wringeth and wresteth it out of the mouths of those that be ignorant of him as we see how Balaam in this and the chapter following vttereth excellent and heauenly things albeit against his will of God of the enemies of God of the Church prospering and flourishing thorough his fauour yet he was lewd in life and prophane in heart louing neyther God nor his truth This we see in the Sorcerers in Egypt when they saw and felt the plague of Lice but could not with their enchantments bring foorth the like they confessed This is the finger of God Exod. 8 19. This appeareth farther in the history of Gideon when one of his enemies had told a dreame to his neighbour which hee had dreamed his fellow answered and saide This is nothing else saue the sword of Gideon the sonne of Ioash a man of Israel for into his hand hath God deliuered Midian and all the Hoast Iudg. 7 14. This likewise we see in the Centurion and souldiers that were with him watching Iesus Math. 27 54 when they saw the renting of the veyle the trembling of the earth the opening of the graues the cleauing of the stones and arising of the dead bodies they feared greatly saying Truely this was the Sonne of God Hereunto cometh the confession of Caiaphas an enemy to Christ and to the doctrine of saluation which he persecuted for hee vttered a Prophesie of the death and passion of Christ Ioh. 11 49 50 51 52. It was an extraordinary motion of God that guided his tongue to Prophesie of Christ So he spake afterward in thē that cryed out at his arraignement Mat. 27 25. His blood be vpon vs and vpon our children which was plentifully performed in its time and season The like we may obserue in Pilate when he was admonished by the Iewes to amend this title of Christ set on his Crosse Iesus of Nazareth the King of the Iewes Pilate answered What I haue written I haue written Iohn 19 22. wherein at vnawares hee is made after a sort a Preacher of the kingdome of Christ who gouerned his tongue as heere hee did the tongue of Balaam The Reasons remaine to bee considered Reason 1 First to leaue the wicked without excuse when they heare the truth For God neuer leaueth himselfe without witnesses no not among the Infidels as the Apostle declareth Acts 14 16 17. Now if the powring downe showers of raine sending the fruitfulnes of the earth feeding all creatures with bodily food be the Lords witnesses and testimonies of his power how much more is the word of God which is the sauour of life vnto life to all that beleeue Forseeing God opened the mouth of Caiaphas as we shewed before to vtter a Prophesie concerning Christ the obstinate incredulity of the Iewes was conuinced when both the cause and vertue of his death was vttered by their owne high-Priest albeit hee spake it in another meaning Secondly he speaketh often in wicked men to encrease their iudgement and bring vpon Reason 2 them the greater damnation If God had not reuealed his truth vnto them their punishment should bee the lesse This wee see set downe Luk. 12 47 48. This appeareth by the words of Christ to his Disciples Math. 7 23. Luke 13 25 26. Many will say to mee in that day Lord Lord haue we not by thy Name prophesied And by thy Name cast out diuels And by thy Name done many great works And then will I professe to them I neuer knew you depart from me yee that worke iniquity Thus Christ vpbraideth the Cities wherein most of his great works were done because they repented not and telleth them it shall be easier for Tyre and Sidon for Sodome and Gomorrha at the day of iudgement then for them Math. 11 22. Thirdly to strengthen confirme his childrē Reason 3 in the truth reuealed vnto them Great is theyr wauering and weaknesse when God maketh knowne his word vnto them sealeth it vnto them by his signes and sacraments they are full of doubting and theyr faith is mingled with infidelity as wee see in the example of Gideon Iudg 7 14. God appeared vnto him at the thressing-floore commanded him to goe in his might to saue Israel promised him the victory and strengthened him by the signes that he asked yet he remained fearefull faint-hearted after these so many meanes vsed to giue him courage confirmation Iudg. 7 10. Hence it is that God raised vp one in the hoast of his enemies and guided his tongue to be a Preacher and publisher of his truth telling this dreame of his to his fellow that loe a Cake of Barley-bread tumbled from aboue into the boast of Midian and came vnto a Tent and smote it that it fell and ouerturned it that the Tent fell downe which is expounded and interpreted to be the sword of Gideon Wherby we see that God opened the mouth and directed the tongue of this Idolater for the strengthening of Gideon and the furthering of him in his work Now let vs make vse of this Doctrine First Vse 1 behold heerein the greatnesse of his power Name causing his enemies to professe and acknowledge it We see how they resist rebell against God We see how they abide not to submit their necks to his obedience but cast away the cordes of discipline from them yet he ouer-ruleth them ordereth their tongues and disposeth the words of their mouth to his owne glory This is it which the Prophet declareth Psal 8 1 2. This also appeareth in the example of Saul and of the messengers that he sent to take Dauid For the Spirit of God fell vpon them and they prophesied therefore it was a Prouerb Is Saul also among the Prophets 1 Sā 10 11 and 19 24. This verifieth the saying of the wise man Prou. 16 1. The preparations of the heart are in man but the answer of the tongue is from the Lord that is howsoeuer a man many times m●streth an whole Army of thoghts in his minde as it were in battell array and concludeth with himselfe both what how to speake yet man is ruled by a superior power shal speake as God guideth his mouth not as himselfe purposeth and determineth Seeing therefore God frameth vnfit instruments to his owne purpose and maketh them serue for the aduancement of his owne glory we must conclude againe with the Prophet O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the world Secondly it is not hard with God to retaine Vse 2 and reserue a people to himselfe in all ages albeit there be neuer so many enemies albeit the Church bee not alwayes visible to the eye and kept in outward beauty He is not tyed to any Nation people or place Let vs neuer feare the decay or destruction of the Church he that did gaine it to himselfe will maintaine it against all the practises and
pollices of euill men so that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it This is it which Christ teacheth Mat. 3 8 9. He can draw the strong and flinty hearts of the aduersaries to bee his Church albeit all the Iewes were scattered destroyed God is not bound to continue his Church among thē and the priuiledges which in mercy he vouchsafed vnto them if hee remoue his standard and take away his Candlesticke and breake off the succession they boasted of he can call a people vnto himselfe whensoeuer he pleaseth As then we are not to feare the falling away of the Church so wee are not to presume of our selues because wee haue present testimonies of Gods fauour and visible markes of the Church amongst vs but labour to finde out our owne sinnes and turne vnto the Lord assuring our selues that euery Tree which bringeth not foorth good fruite is hewen downe and cast into the fire Lastly seeing prophane persons bee enforced Vse to speake the truth of God let vs know that it is our part who are enlightned with more knowledge and endued with better graces in a more willing and cheerefull sort then they do to testifie the praises of God for conscience sake with care and comfort not grudgingly nor vnwillingly nor enforced vnto it This the Prophet Malachi setteth downe ch 1 11. Where hee sheweth that the Gentiles knew the excellency of his Name and were not ignorant of his greatnesse and therefore if we be the true children of God our righteousnesse and obedience must exceed the righteousnesse and obedience of others For what a shame is it that strangers from the couenant should acknowledge him and those of his family and as it were his houshold seruants come behind them Let vs be like the Angels that be in heauen Mat. 6 10 who obey him readily willingly cheerefully perfectly If we obey him grudgingly and by constraint the reprobates yea the diuels do him as good seruice as we do They performe his secret will against their will Let vs accomplish his will reuealed in his word with the full desire of our hearts otherwise we shall neuer finde true comfort to our selues in that we do If wee would haue God to accept reward our seruice performed vnto him we must not doe it by constraint as Balaam did nor to halfes as Saul did 1 Sam. 15 21 22 23 nor to merit as the Pharisies did but in conscience of our duty as children to their fathers that we may receiue the inheritance of sonnes Verse 9 Loe the people dwell by themselues and shall not bee reckoned among the Nations Now we come to the Prophesie it selfe wherin he confesseth the blessed estate of the church so that nothing can make them miserable or separate them from the fauour of God This wee shall haue fitter occasion to shew afterward Heere let vs consider the reason whereon he groundeth the happines of the Church In the description of the Church he saith they are a people cleauing to God alone beleeuing in him and seuered from other Nations in religion and lawes ●●ctrine 〈◊〉 Church ●●elected 〈◊〉 any frō●e rest of ●he 〈◊〉 From hence we learne That the Church of God is an holy people called and gathered by the word to heare and obey God separated from the prophane of the world in life and conuersation This we see euidently when the posterity of Caine began to multiply and replenish the earth by many generations who were the malignant Church the true Church encreasing later began to diuide themselues from thē to restore the purity of Gods worship and to meet apart by themselues for the publike seruice of God which the Scripture meaneth when it saith 〈◊〉 4 25. Then men began to call vpon the Name of the Lord. The like we see afterward in Abraham whom the Lord called beyond the flood from seruing other Gods 〈◊〉 11 1 2. 〈◊〉 1● 2 3. 〈◊〉 23 7 8. to serue him purely apart from the superstitions of his forefathers This was figured in the vow of the Nazarites the intention whereof is expressed in the description of the ceremony of it To be separated to the Lord. Numb 6 2. Thus Moses describeth the common condition of al that people to be separated to the Lord as God himselfe giueth them to vnderstand I am the Lord your God which haue separated you from other people c. Leuit. 20 24 26. This is it which Christ our Sauiour saith to his Disciples That they are not of the world but he hath chosen them out of the world Iohn 15 19. Hereunto cometh the exhortation of Peter preaching repentance amendment of life to those that had crucified the Lord of glory With many other words he besought and exhorted thē saying Saue your selues from this froward generation Acts 2 ver 40 41. Hereunto cometh the practise of the Apostle Saint Paul Acts 19 9 when the aduersaries were conuinced and their hearts hardened they disobeying and speaking euill of the way of God before the multitude he departed from them and separated the Disciples and disputed dayly in the Schoole of one Tyrannus Reason 1 The Reasons hereof are these First there is an opposition betweene God the world The Gouernour thereof is Satan who is the Prince of this world 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 and hath set vp his throne in it it persecuted Christ and slew him Neyther do the children of God finde any better entertainment then Christ did as it hateth him so it hateth them Iohn 14 17 30. Againe The amity of this world is enmity with God the wisedome of this world is foolishnesse with God 2 Cor. 4 4. Iam. 4 4. And Christ testifieth That the works thereof are euill Iohn 7 7. Seeing then it is euill in respect of the gouernor which is Satan euil in respect of Christ whom it hated and persecuted euill in respect of the Spirit of truth whō it neyther seeth nor knoweth nor receiueth in respect of the Children of God whom it abhorreth euill in respect of the friendship thereof which is enmity euill in respect of the wisedome thereof which is folly and lastly euill in respect of the works thereof which are impiety howsoeuer the beauty of it be glorious and the shew gorgeous and glistering yet the Church is to come out of it is clean contrary vnto it For if the friendship of the world be the enmity of God then the friends of the world are the enemies of God And as there is an agreement betweene the diuell and the world so is there an vnion between God and his Church And as God and the world are opposed so are the Church and the world contrary one to another so that whilst wee are parts of this world wee cannot be members of his Church and when we are called out of the world we are gathered into the bosome of the Church Secondly God hath chosen the Church to Reason 2 himselfe before the foundation of
Epistle chapt 2. verse 4 of the sinnes of the Angelles of the olde world of the Sodomites and setteth down the wages thereof what it was the Angels were cast downe the olde world was drowned the Cities of Sodome and Gomorrha were burned See the miserable ends of Pharaoh of Ahitophel of Saul of Iudas of Herod and such others all the which are written for our instruction to teach vs that all euil works shall haue an end answerable to their euill The Reasons are plaine to assure the truth Reason 1 hereof For first it standeth with Gods iustice to recompence euill with euill True it is he is able by his infinite power to bring good out of euill and to turne the euill actions of men to serue his owne glory to further the good of his children as we see in the history of Ioseph who by the false treachery of his brethren was solde into Egypt to whom he said When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good that he might bring to passe as it is this day and saue much people aliue Gen. 50 20. So Iob being bereaued of his children 〈◊〉 1 21. and robbed of his Cattell confesseth that the Lord had giuen the Lord had taken away Likewise the Apostles speaking of the crucifying of Christ the Lord of glory declare that Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel 〈◊〉 4 27 28. had done no more then the counsell of God had determined before to be done Neuerthelesse it standeth with the rule of his iustice to crosse the attempts and endeuours of euill men and to set himselfe against them that set themselues against him So long therfore as God is so iust the vngodly must not looke for any good successe of euill enterprizes His blessing is vpon the lawfull labours of his children because he is mercifull his curse waiteth vpon the vnlawfull works of his enemies because he is iust It is his nature to bee iust hee cannot deny himselfe Reason 2 Secondly the Lord will make their wickednesse knowne and plucke off the vizard from their faces howsoeuer they thinke to proceed and promise to themselues an happy end This the Apostle teacheth 2 Tim. 3 8 9 where he sheweth that as Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses so do these also resist the truth men of corrupt mindes reprobate concerning the faith but they shall preuaile no longer for their madnesse shall be euident to all men as theirs also was Seeing therefore God is a iust God and will vncase the hypocrisie of euill men we are right well assured that euil inuentions shal come to nought and haue God to crosse them Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see from hence that sinne endeth not as it beginneth Euill men are sure to be destroyed and that God will call them to an account for those things which they haue done if not in this life yet assuredly in the life to come They dreame of God sitting ydle in heauen and seeing all things and regarding nothing but in the end they shall know that which now they will not know and feele that whereof now they haue no feeling And see heere how Satan bewitcheth the mindes of these men and blindeth their eyes that they cannot see sinne to bee sinne nor cast their eyes to behold the wages of sinne reserued for the committers of it Let all wicked men therefore looke for the heauy curse of God They blesse themselues but the curse of God is vpon them Deut. 32 41 and ready to ouertake them Woe therefore shall be vnto them though all the world should blesse them They can haue no assurance of any good successe nor looke for any blessing vpon the works of their hands Secondly be not offended when wicked Vse 2 men florish and prosper but consider their end and what the end of their hope is and we shal not be deceiued with their outward glory and present pompe of the world wherin they liue It is a great tentation to the faithfull to behold the prosperity of the wicked The Prophet Dauid declareth how his faith had long wrastled and struggled with this assault insomuch that his foote had well nigh slipped Ps 73 2. and his steps were almost gone when he saw how the vngodly florished and on the other side that he was daily punished and chastened euery morning This was it that troubled Iob Wherefore do the wicked liue and waxe olde and grow in wealth Iob 21.7 So the Prophet Ieremy maruaileth at the prosperity of the wicked O Lord if I dispute with thee thou art righteous yet let me talk with thee of thy iudgments Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper Why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse Ier. 12 1. So the Prophet Habbakkuk complaineth vnto God Hab 1.3 considering the great felicity of the wicked and the miserable oppression of the godly which oftentimes endure all kinde of cruelty and affliction and can see no end thereof But we must enter into the Sanctuary of God then we shal see the end which God in his iust iudgement hath appointed to wicked men when wee thought he had no care of their doings and that they were in the greatest safety and security we shall see he is holy in all his wayes true in all his words This is a great terror vnto wicked men to know that he will lay vpon them a fearefull end and on the other side it is a great comfort vnto the godly to consider that howsoeuer God beare a long time yet in the end his hand shall take hold on iudgment then hee shall execute vengeance on his enemies and reward them that hate him Lastly seeing all euill shall haue an euill Vse 3 end let vs haue no fellowship with euill men or euill actions vnlesse we will partake with them in the punishment It is our duty to forsake their company and to leaue our league with them lest we be taken in the net and be snared in their wayes This is the exhortation giuen to vs from heauen Come out of her my people that ye be not partaker of her sinnes Reuel 18 4 5. and that ye receiue not of her plagues Many haue sustained much danger endured much affliction by accompanying and conuersing with euill men Lot was neuer more greeued nor lesse secured then when he was euen in the very midst of Sodome He made choise to dwell there therby to enrich himselfe but he quickly repented him of his choise Gen. 14 12. He was taken prisoner by forreigne enemies and was in greatest danger by violence at his owne home Gen. 19.9 Yea so long as he liued in that place he seemed to liue in a little hell as the Apostle testifieth 2 Pet 2 7 8 that God deliuered iust Lot being vexed with the vncleanly conuersation of the wicked for he being righteous and dwelling amongst them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous soule from
brethren But they proceed by little and little from step to step and from one degree to another till they feare nothing and are ashamed of nothing Therefore in the example of one man heere set before our eies Moses declares to what impudency shamelesnesse they were come that they brought their harlots into the hoast to despite God to anger Moses to corrupt the people to pollute the worship that was set vp by the commandement of the Lord. For this man who is afterward named as if he had beene absolute in power as he was indeed resolute in will dissolute in his whole life brought his whorish woman in the sight of God in the sight of Moses in the sight of the congregation and in the sight of the Tabernacle to shew that he had filled vp the measure of his sinne Doctrine Euill men proceed by degrees from worse to worse The doctrine arising from hence is this that euill men doe not vsually make any stay in euill but proceede from degree to degree to worse worse The nature of sinne is to draw all such as delight in it and follow after it from one euill to another vntill in the end they become most corrupt and abhominable This is it which the Prophet Ieremy noteth in the people of his time when he sayth Were they ashamed when they committed abhomination Nay they were not ashamed no neither could they haue any shame therefore they shall fall among the slaine when I shall visit them they shall bee cast downe saith the Lord Ier. 6 15. The like we see in the 18. chap. following ver 11 12. Speake to the men of Iudah and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem saying Thus saith the Lord Behold I prepare a plague for you and purpose a thing against you returne you therefore euery one from his euill way and make your wayes your workes good But they said desperatly Surely we will walk after our own imaginations doe euery man after the stubburnes of his wicked hart The truth of this hath bin euidēt in al ages of the Church When the Lord was determined to bring an vniuersall flood vpon the face of the earth for the sinnes of man and had giuen them a time of repentance while his patience endured Gen. 6.12 They ceased not from sin neither repented of their wickednesse saying what haue I done Math. 24 38. But euery one turned to their race as the horse rusheth into the battell For in the time that was limited thē their sin increased our Sauior shewing how they were giuen ouer vnto all loosenesse vntill the flood came and swept them all away This the Prophet Dauid noteth if hee were the penner of that Psalme where hee obserueth the degrees and stayres by which men ascend to the heighth and top of sinne first they beginne to walke in the counsell of the wicked then they proceed to stand in the way of sinners lastly they come to sit downe in the seat of the scornefull Psal 1.1 And this we may further obserue in the faylings of the faithfull and in their fallings into sinne No man becommeth extreamely euil at a sudden nor desperately setled and obstinatly resolued to continue in sin in a moment but as he that will climbe vp to the top of an high tower doth ascend step by step and by little litle so he that maketh no conscience of any sinne but walketh in all prophanenesse with greedinesse commeth to that height by degrees one sinne drawing on another the lesser making way for the greater and the greater obtayning passage for the greatest of all Wee see it in Euah when she fell from God first Gen 3 6. she listned vnto Satan secondly shee made a light resistance to his tentation thirdly shee beganne to doubt waueringly of that which God had deliuered absolutely fourthly shee grew in concupiscence the eye liking the heart lusting and both of them desiring the forbidden fruite lastly she fell to flat apostacy infidelity and rebellion This likewise is set before vs in the example of Peter who getting into the high-Priests hall and thrusting himselfe into euill company hath left vs a strong proofe of his owne weakenesse and of his declining from euill to worse First hee answereth faintly and fearefully that he knew not the man Math. 26 70. A dangerous beginning When hee was further vrged and pressed to answere and that he saw his bare and cold denyall would not be accepted hee thought to goe one step farther hee denyed with an oath that he neuer knew him Yea when they were importunate vpon him and would not suffer him to be in rest he began to curse himselfe and thereby to cast himselfe into the depth of sin into the gates of hel and into the hands of Satan The Reasons follow First sin groweth Reason 1 in the heart as the childe doth in the wombe For as the infant hath his increasings and augmentations from a small beginning vntill hee come to the birth proceeding from one degree and age vnto another as Iob setteth foorth our first creation Thou hast powred me out as milke and turned mee into cruds like cheese thou hast clothed me with skinne and flesh and ioyned me with bones and sinnewes Iob 10 10 11 so is it with a sinner his beginnings are small but the further hee runneth the longer he continueth and the deeper hee plungeth himselfe in sinne the more corrupt and abhominable he becommeth As a spring that ariseth out of the earth is first little and shallow but the further it groweth the more ground it floweth and the more streames come into it the greater the riuer is or as a fire which at the first is a little sparke being nourished becommeth in short time a great flame so is it with sin it is little in growth weake in strength slender in appearance at the beginning but being cherrished and fostered in the soule of the sinner it multiplyeth exceedingly and bringeth foorth many children of the same nature whereof we may truely say Like mother like daughter This is that comparison which the Apostle Iames vseth to expresse the fruitfull nature of all the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse Euery man is tempted when hee is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and when sinne is finished it bringeth foorth death Iam. 1 15. VVhere the Apostle sheweth that first a man is tempted to euill then concupiscence conueyeth it after it is in trauaile and bringeth foorth and lastly it doth finish it as a perfect birth This comparison is also vsed by the Prophet Dauid Behold he shall trauaile with wickednesse for he hath conceiued mischiefe but he shall bring forth a lie Psal 7 14. Reason 2 Secondly the wrath of God falleth vpon such as make no conscience to fall into lesser sinnes hee giueth them ouer to a reprobate sence to a slumbring spirit and to hardnesse of heart that
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
blood haue they shed like water and there was none to bury them Psal 79 2 3 4 5. Neuerthelesse they shal not be able to separate them from God Rom. 8 35. If we be the children of God nothing shall bee able to hurt vs though death come vpon vs sodainly as it hath done vpon many it shall bring vs to God not diuide vs from his presence Wee do for the most part take vpon vs through a generall corruption to iudge those the most greeuous sinners that suffer the greatest sorrows as it appeareth by Iobs friends and Christs followers Luke 13. howbeit this is an opinion that must be reiected as full of error and empty of charity 15 And Moses spake vnto the Lord saying 16 Let the Lord the God of the spirites of all flesh set a man ouer the congregation 17 Which may goe out before them and which may go in before them and which may leade them out and which may bring them in that the Congregation of the Lord be not as sheepe which haue no sheepheard 18 And the Lord said to Ioshua c. 19 And set him before Eleazar c. Heere is offered vnto vs the second occasion of the election and inauguration of Ioshua to wit the prayer of Moses Wee must not thinke that hee vsed no more words then heere are expressed for this is onely the substance and cheefe effect of his prayer In it wee are to note first the preface or entrance into the same for no man ought rashly to enter vpon this holy worke but well aduised and throughly prepared Secondly the prayer it selfe The Preface containeth a description of God by his titles and effect giuing life and breath to all creatures for thorough him wee liue and mooue and haue our being Act 17.28 The prayer it selfe is that he would appoint a mā ouer the congregation to succeede him in the administration and gouernment of the Commonwealth considered farther by the ends that being endued with the Spirit of God he may be able to performe the duties of his calling and go before them by his example expressed by going in and out before them and by leading thē out and bringing them in as Salomon prayeth for wisedom and vnderstanding for the same purpose 2 Chron. 1 10. 1 Chro. 27 1. Secondly that the people may not be as sheepe without a sheepheard scattered vpon the mountains but may keepe together liue in order and society one with another to performe such mutuall duties as are required for this life the life to come Thus much of the occasions now we come to the calling of Ioshua and separating him to beare office among the people wherein wee must obserue the commandement of God the obedience of Moses The commādements of God are many Take him c lay thine hāds vpon him set him before Eleazar the Priest c. giue him charge c. and Eleazar must aske counsell of the Lord for him after the iudgement of Vrim and Thummim What the Vrim and Thummim were Exod. 28 30 What this Vrim and Thummim were is diuersly vnderstood it were endlesse and fruitlesse to rehearse the seuerall opinions of all neither is it easie to determine Some of the Hebrew Doctors thinke they were not the work of any Artificer but that they were a mystery deliuered to Moses from the mouth of God or they were the worke of God himselfe as the two Tables of the Law were and that when the Priest asked counsell of God by Vrim hee made answer by liuely voice 1 Sam. 30 8. The words are both plurall and the Septuagint doe translate them The manifestation and the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but properly they signifie the lights and the perfections and both of them were a figure of Christ who communicateth vnto vs from his father the true light and perfection being made our wisedome and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1.30 for in the heart of him beeing our great high Priest the true Aaron were the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure Ioh 3 34. Col. 2.3 Againe others thinke that as those words holinesse to the Lord were grauen on a plate and put on Aarons forhead so these words Vrim and Thummim were likewise grauen on a golden plate and put in the brest lap which was double for something to bee put therein Lastly others thinke they were no other then the precious stones spoken of Exod. 28 and that they put the Priest in mind of his office that hee must instruct the people both by the light of his doctrine and by the integrity of his life But whatsoeuer they were it is most certaine that the vse of them was to enquire of GOD and likewise to receiue an answer of his will as appeareth in this place and in sundry others Iudg. 1 1 20 18 28. 1 Sam. 23 9. 10 11 12. These were lost at the captiuity of Babylon and wanted at the peoples returne Ezr. 2 63. Neh. 6 65 neither do wee reade that euer God gaue answer by them any more thus much of these The obedience of Moses is set downe generally particularly he did as the Lord commanded hee tooke Ioshua and set him before Eleazar and put his hands vpon him gaue him a straight charge to execute his office faithfully in the gouernment of all the people committed vnto him Let the Lord the God of the spirits of al flesh This is the preface or preparatiue to the prayer The faithfull were alwayes wont to make some entrance or introduction into this holy exercise as it appeareth in the forme of prayer left to the church by Christ our Sauiour In these words Moses acknowledgeth the Lord to be the God of the spirits of all flesh as before chap. 16 22 whereby he meaneth Doctrine God is the creator of the soule that he is the Creator of our soules and hath giuen them vnto vs. The doctrine God is the Creator and maker of the soules of men and hath giuen vnto them not onely their bodyes but also their soules Gen. 2 7. Iob 27 3. Eccl. 12 7 c. And how can it be otherwise For first he it is that hath formed al things Reason 1 he is the creator of things visible and inuisible Col. 1 16 that are in heauen or in earth and without him was nothing made that was made Iohn 1 3. Secondly he is the father of our spirits so called of the Apostle Heb 12 9 if then he be the Father of them doubtles hee is the former of them It is confessed that God is the Creator of the soule neuerthelesse it will not follow from hence necessarily that it is created immediately or giuen immediatly by him as it is certaine it was at the first creation And albeit many places bee produced to proue an immediate creation yet the opinion is rather weakned by those testimonies from whence it is thought to be established as for example Eccl. 12 7 The
Priests seruant if he had called to minde that the sword was not put into his hands Math. 26 51. Let euery man labour to see what God hath called him vnto and looke to the things commanded vnto him priuate men may not take vpon them to reforme euery thing that is amisse hauing no authority thereunto and if they should come to suffer for such things they shall finde but little comfort in theyr sufferings because this is to suffer as euill doers albeit not for doing of euill Vse 3 Lastly if it be vnlawfull to do good sometimes when it is done vnlawfully then how much more is it vnlawfull to do that which in it selfe and in it owne nature is vnlawful And if God reiect the actions of men when they are done in an euill manner how much more doth hee abhorre the workes of carnall men when they are wicked vngodly in the very substance And if he accept not those actions which might be don wel if they were done by another how much lesse those that can be wel done by none Of which wee may say with Salomon Behold the righteous shall bee recompenced in the earth how much more the wicked and the sinner Prou. 11 31. If the faithfull offend in doing lawfull things much more doe the vngodly that neuer regard to doe any good And if they sinne against God that heare his word amisse how much more sinfull are they that will not heare it at all And if they prouoke the wrath of God that doe good in an euill manner much more doe they that sinne in an euill matter and most of all when the heart is euill also as Prou. 21 27 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked minde The faithfull haue many times a good intent when they thinke to doe God good seruice and yet are not accepted because they faile in the maner woe then to those whose very hearts are set vpon euill and haue no delight in that which is good at any time 30 Whoso killeth any person Deut. 17 6 19 15 Math 18 16 2 Cor. 13 1. Heb 10 28 1 Tim. 5.19 the murtherer shal be put to death by the mouth of witnesses but one witnesse shall not testifie against any person to cause him to die 31 Moreouer ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murtherer which is guilty of death but he shal be surely put to death 33 And yee shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the citty of his refuge that hee should come againe to dwell in the land vntill the death of the Priest 33 So yee shall not pollute the land wherein yee are for blood it defileth the land and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that shed it 34 Defile not therefore the land which ye shal inhabite wherein I dwel for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel The third and last part remaineth laying forth the office of the Iudges touching slaughter wherein obserue two things first the Law of putting the murtherer to death which must passe by the verdict of two or three witnesses verse 30. Secondly the Iudges are forbidden to take any satisfaction for the life of a murtherer because innocent blood shed defileth the Land yea in such an horrible manner and measure that all the water in the sea cannot wash it away for the Land cannot be clensed of the blood that is shedde but by the blood of him that shedde it And no maruaile seeing they might take no satisfaction for him that bad killed a man at vnawares to deliuer him from the city of his refuge before the death of the high Priest From these words we learne how heynous a sin murther is Againe that wilful murtherers are not to be spared the eie of the Magistrate must not pitty thē if they be desirous to reuenge the dishonour done vnto God or to clense their own Land or to saue their own liues But marke farther how GOD will haue such proceeded against they shall not dye by the mouth of one witnes he requireth in iudiciall courts that euery matter should be tryed by two or three witnesses that the guilty should not be acquited and that the innocent might not be condemned Doctrine God wil haue no innocent person put to death So then the point from hence is this that God will haue no innocent person put to death but that euery one should receiue according to his owne works Deut. 13 14 and 17 4 Thou shalt enquire and make search and aske diligently whether it be a truth and the thing certaine hee will haue no man condemned vpon accusations suspitions and presumptions Esay 5 13 Psal 37 6 Pro. 24 23. This was the sin of Saul who commanded to kill the Priests of the Lord 1 Sam. 22 16 as if they had conspired agaynst him Iob 29 16. Reason 1 The grounds are these first from the nature of God he is a iust and righteous God the Iudge of all the earth and hee respecteth no mans person therefore they that sit in his place and execute his iudgment and haue his Name communicated vnto them ought to deale vprightly Deuter. 1 16 17. Secondly wrong iudgement is abominable in the sight of God Pro. 17 15 whether it be to iustifie the wicked or to condemne the innocent Thirdly it kindleth the Lords wrath against the land when innocent blood is shedde Ier. 26 14 15 As for mee behold I am in your hand doe with me as seemeth good and meete vnto you but know ye for certaine that if ye put me to death yee shall surely bring innocent blood vpon your selues and vpon this citty and vpon the inhabitants thereof as 1 Kings 21 19. Vse 1 The vses follow First this serueth for instruction to all that are in authority to take heed to themselues that they walke with a right foot and turne neyther to the right hand nor to the left according as God requireth Leuit. 19 15 Thou shalt doe no vnrighteousnes in iudgment thou shalt not respect the person of the poore nor honour the person of the mighty but in righteousnesse shalt thou iudge thy neighbour Against this they offend many wayes when they giue false iudgment and cause the same to be executed when they deferre iudgment put it off as Felix did from day to day Acts 24 25 for while iudgment hangeth thus in suspense the iust is often taken for the vniust and contrarywise the vniust fot the iust lastly when the sentence rightly pronounced is delayed and sometimes not at all executed The Scripture expresseth the fault and the punishment by one and the same word Gen 4 7 13 Esay 24 20 1 Peter 2 24 to teach that they should be ioyned together and not seuered and that hee should be holden for innocent and vnblameable that hath no punishment inflicted