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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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come out then they murmure against God despaire of his providence and are ready to exclaime against God This was the Israelites fault and thus often times they tempted God in the wildernesse If they wanted water to quench their thirst withall then they must needs dye God was not able to provide them water If they wanted bread So they did likewise and in a pelting chafe were ready to stone Moses and Aaron Then they would back againe to Aegypt then they wished themselves dead as if the same God that had miraculously beyond the expectation of men provided for them heretofore was not able to doe so still So when some told them of the walled townes that were in the land of Canaan of the mighty Gyants that were in the Country in comparison of whom they were but Grasse-hoppers then they brake forth into this exclamation God is not able to bring us into this land wee and our Children shall perish in this wildernesse They had seene with what a strong hand God had brought them out of Aegypt how miraculously he divided the red Sea that the waters stood as a wall on both sides till they safely passed over yet for all that when they were in any difficulty then God was no body of no power or willingnesse to doe for them This was a vile tempting of God which highly displeased him But there is no reason why we should thus tempt God casting off the hope and confidence we have in him He is subject to no changes yesterday and to day the same for ever Men may change but God changes not a man may be strong to day and weake to morrow whole to day and sick to morrow rich now and poore afterwards alive now and dead a while after a man may love us this houre and hate us the next as Amnon did his sister therefore we may make a question of the helpe of man But God is one and the same continually not a shadow of turning in him his arme is never shortned the welspring of his mercy and goodnesse is never dryed up Therefore in all distresses let us trust in him though all worldly meanes fayle us in sicknesse and health in poverty and wealth in death and life let him be our pillar to leane upon The Prince that would not believe the plenty that GOD had promised was troden to death 2 Reg. 7.17 and the carkasses of these men that thus tempted God fell in the wildernesse therefore let us beware of incredultie As Faith is the best vertue so infidelitie is the greatest vice CHRIST could doe nothing among his owne kinsfolke because of their unbeliefe Shall any thing bee impossible with God Indeed that which he wills not that he cannot doe it is his will that CHRIST in respect of his humanity should be in heaven till the day of judgement therefore he cannot doe this make his body to be here on the earth The Papists set Gods omnipotency on the tainters and stretch it too farre as some bad clothiers deale with cloath But if God have once given us his faithfull promise to doe this or that let us believe it though all the world say nay to it God had promised to bring them into the land of Canaan though there were never so many blockes in the way they should have depended on this promise So God hath promised us the kingdome of heaven feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome Luke 12.32 though now and then through weakenesse we fall into sinne though Satan and his instruments rage though we be sicke dye be buryed our bodyes consumed to dust and ashes yet let us certainely know wee shall have this kingdome This is amplified by an excellent meanes which they had to pull them out of this infidelity which was a continuall view and contemplation of the wonderfull workes of God although they saw my workes in the Hebr. they saw the Aegyptians drowned in the red Sea and themselves safely walking through it they saw the cloudy pillar conducting them day and night water gushing out of a stonie rocke Manna descending from heaven that the clothes on their backes and shooes on their feet did not waxe old many yeares together they might have felt with their hands the power and goodnesse of GOD protecting them yet they would not believe in him whereas the sight of Gods former workes should strengthen our faith in all future calamities That use did David make of the workes of GOD. The LORD delivered mee from the clawes of the Beare and pawes of the Lion therefore hee will deliver mee from this Philistim GOD was gracious to mee in such a sicknesse therefore hee will be in this GOD provided for mee when I was a child and could not shift for my selfe therefore hee will provide for me being a man growne GOD preserved mee in such a plague and pestilence therefore I will depend on him still when I was in such an extremity GOD helped me therefore he will helpe me still God delivered England in the yeare one thousand five hundred eightie eight therefore if England serve him hee will deliver it still When Queene Elizabeth the mirrour of the world was taken away we looked for a wofull day yet God gave us a joyfull day after it therefore alwayes let us trust to him let the sight of his wonderfull workes dayly before our eyes be as oyle to nourish the lampe of our faith that it never dye The last circumstance appertaining to this sinne is the time how long it continued they tempted and proved him 40. yeares though they saw his workes These words in the Hebr. are coupled with that which followeth 40. yeares was I grieved with that generation Yet there is no jarre betweene Paul and David for these two are convertible and depend the one on the other They be both true they tempted God 40. yeares and he was grieved with them 40. yeares If they tempted him 40. yeares then he must needs be grieved with them and if God was grieved with them 40. yeares then they tempted him so long so that the one cannot be separated from the other They dwelt in this sinne a long time and would not bee plucked out of it VERSE 10. THe punishment of the sinne Gods wrath was kindled against them In the end after hee had borne the burden of their sinnes many yeares together his wrath did breake out against them for it They were irksome and tedious to me I could beare them no longer after that I had striven with them fortie yeares when there was no remedy I cast them off God is grieved similitudinariè That rebellious that obstinate generation Hee was not grieved with their Children but with them The Children doe not smart for the fathers faults if they make not their fathers sins their own sinnes Their Children went into the land of Canaan though they did not Least it should seeme to be a griefe or anger without reason
speaking to them by his servant Moses Whereby wee are given to understand that one of the greatest things that provokes the wrath of God is the contempt of his Majesty in the preaching of the Word When they heard they provoked him to anger therefore take heede how yee heare if ye despise the messengers by whom God speaketh if ye regard not their word God will be mightily offended with you They made God bitter against them Furthermore whereas he saies some not all it teaches us that the word of God is never without some fruite some or other profit by it The thorny ground the stony the ground by the high way side received not the seed yet some good ground received it and brought forth fruit When the booke of the Law was read the hearts of all that heard it were not hardned Iosiahs heart melted at it The greatest part of the assembly at Athens the wise and learned Philosophers mocked at Saint Paul when he preached Christ and the resurrection yet some believed at his Sermon as Dionysius amongst the women to whom Saint Paul spake one Lydia believed Let this encourage us that be Christs Ambassadours our labour is not altogether fruitlesse we shall carry some sheaves or others into the barne of the Kingdome of heaven Though many in a towne where the word is preached provoke God to anger they heare and regard it not yet some there be in whom we may rejoyce and though there were none yet our reward is with God A fisherman is to bee commended for his painefulnesse in his calling though he get never a fish So God will reward us His Spirituall fishermen though we should not catch one fish in the net of the Gospell yet for the most part there be some in the worst towne that is that profit by the ministery of the Word these some though they be few shall be our crowne of rejoycing at the latter day Againe heere we see the estate of the Church militant the bad are alwayes mingled with the good Cockle and Corne in the field chaffe and wheat in the barne floore In this house there be earthen and golden vessels In the Church triumphant no uncleane thing all dogs enchanters c. stand without and are not admitted in but in the militant Church there be many dogs prophane persons as Esau was there is a Cain as well as an Abel a Saul as a David an Ishmael as an Isaac a Iudas as a Peter neither let us be discouraged at it It hath been so from the beginning and it shall be so till the day of judgment when Christ shall come to purge this floore of his Moses whom God used as his hand to carry them out of Aegypt God will not have those famous instruments to be buried in silence whom he hath used for our good the sword of the Lord and of Gideon S. Paul thankes Priscilla and Aquila and heere an honourable mention is made of Moses though he were dead long agoe We in England were lead out of the Spirituall Aegypt of blindnesse superstition and ignorance by Queene Elizabeth and other good Princes of worthy memory therefore let them bee remembred still with thankesgiving to GOD. VERSE 17. SEcond branch with whom he was grieved in the ninth verse the terme of forty yeares was annexed to their tempting of God heere the time that God was displeased with them But we have shewed that this is all one They with whom God was grieved are set forth 1. By their action 2. By their passion 1. By that which they did 2. By that which they suffered That persisted stubbornely in their sinnes and would not be reclaimed from them GOD is displeased with none but with them that sin against Him He strikes not as a blind man every one hand over head that comes under his reach all is fish that comes to his net he is angry with a godly man as well as with an ungodly man The Sodomites were destroyed but Lot was saved Sinne not and though thou dwellest amongst sinners yet GOD will not powre downe the Vialls of His wrath upon thee the soule that sinneth shall surely dye 2 By that which they suffered Whose members The parts put for the whole yet the word members is very emphaticall Come into a field where a sore battell hath beene fought and you shall finde heere a legge and there an arme one member in this place an other in that which is lamentable to behold So their members were scattered in the wildernsse some lay in this place some in that They fell some one way some another Some devoured by wild beasts some stung to death by Serpents some the earth swallowed up quicke some swept away with the pestilence They all fell in the wildernesse by one death or an other namely all the impenitent sinners It is to be restreined to them for Moses and Aaron and sundry others are to be exempted Gods wrath was not thus extreamely kindled against them All those that dwelt in their sinnes fell thus in the wildernesse The consideration of these temporall plagues inflicted on sinners should scare us from sin the water wherewith the old world was drowned the fire and brimstome that consumed the Sodomites the casting of Iezebel that filthy strumpet out of a window and the eating of her by dogs the hanging of Absalom by the haire of his head the fal of the tower of Siloam upon eighteen persons and the falling of the carkasses of the Israelites in the wildernesse Though we feare not hell because we see it not yet let us feare the arrowes of GODs wrath which he may shoot at us in this world and pierce us through If ye will not feare him because he can kill the soule which is the greatest yet feare him because he hath infinite wayes to destroy your bodies He can make the French Pox to eate up the body of an Whore-monger He can make the body of an ominous and malicious person to consume away to the very bones He can wash away the flesh of a drunkard He can give all our bodies if it please Him as foode to the foules of the ayre he can make them to lye rotting on the earth and not to have the honour of buriall as Iezabel and these in the wildernes but make us to be buried as an Asse is buried as it fell out to Iehojakim Therfore in respect of these bodily punishments at least let us feare God and take heed of displeasing him VERSE 18. THE third branch who they were that God by an oath excluded out of his rest he sayth not to whom spake he that would not be perswaded by all the heavenly Rhetorique he used but still persisted in their sins He doth not say them that heard him not they gave him not the hearing as we saw before but because they obeyed not they were shut out of his rest Obedience is better then Sacrifice Hearing is good to heare many Sermons is a