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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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said that Aarons rod was laide vp before the Testimony for a token and testimony against those rebellious companies Lastly Moses is said ver 9 to haue taken this rod from before the Lord or from his sight presence where we shewed it was laide vp but we neuer reade that Moses his rod wherby his calling was confirmed Pharaohs obstinacy was conuinced and the red Sea diuided was laid vp before the Testimony So then heere is a charge commandement that Aarons rod budding bearing blossomes shold be taken the people assembled and the Rocke onely to be spoken vnto before the Israelites a promise being added and againe repeated that waters should gush from thence in abundance whereof the whole Assembly should drinke and the plenty of it should flow euen to their beasts and cattell These are the Commandements of God let vs see their obedience with their failing halting in it For it is not perfect and entire wanting nothing as appeareth by the threatning presently denounced and by the punishment afterward inflicted Indeed they gathered together the people as God commanded but they spake not to the Rock as God willed thē they were charged to speak to the Rock only yet by impatiency doubting Wherein Moses and Aaron sinned agains God they spake not to the Rocke but complained against the people and smote the Rock once and againe not commanded So then they that hitherto shewed inuincible constancy in resisting the rage of the people and maintained zealously the glory of God beleeued faithfully his promises and stood as Rockes vnmoueable against all stormes that beate against them now faile in their faith and obedience both in speaking to the people and in striking of the Rocke For they aske whether they should bring vnto thē water out of the Rocke as if it were vnpossible for God to performe what he had promised to make good the word that was gone out of his owne mouth Again he lifted vp his hand and smote the Rocke twice through impatiency and distrust August lib. 16. Cont. Faust Manich. cap. 17 so that albeit he were a notable Prophet and holy man of God and that God gaue this witnesse of him Numb 12 3. that Hee was a meeke man aboue all the men that liued vpon the earth Psal 106 32. yet as the Psalmist teacheth they troubled him with their grudgings and vexed him with their murmurings that he spake vnaduisedly with his lips Col. 3 25. Acts 10 14. Ezek. 33 20. Rom. 2 6. Psal 62 12. Reuel 22 12. But God with whom is no respect of persons who iudgeth euery man according to his waies and works doth openly accuse conuince them of sinne complaineth that they had not glorified his great Name pronounceth decreeth the sentence of death against them that they should not enter into the Land of promise And lest this failing of Moses and fall of the people should be forgotten it is named the waters of Meribah or of strife contention Thus we see their doubting and disobedience is here reproued and threatened and afterward punished which is amplified by the reason because they were so farre from strengthening the people by confirming them in the truth of Gods promises and assuring them of the due accomplishment of them that themselues wauer doubt and dishonour God For as God is much honoured when hee is beleeued and we rest in his word as in a thing vnchangeable so he is greatly dishonored when his power is not acknowledged whē his promise is not beleeued and when his truth is not trusted of vs. Thus much of the meaning of the words as also of the order and circumstances of this history now let vs come to the doctrines that arise out of the same Ver. 1. The people abode at Kadesh and Miriam died there In this first verse where this murmuring for want of water is described by the time and place we see mention is made of the death and buriall of Miriam Micah 6 4. She was an excellent woman in the Church an holy Prophetesse Exo. 15 20 21 one that went before others in singing the praises of God after their deliuerance out of Egypt after their passing ouer the red sea and after the ouerthrow of Pharaoh his hoast yet is subiect to death as well as others Doctrine Death is common to all flesh From hence we learne that all flesh men and women high and low rich and poore godly and vngodly how great soeuer their gifts and graces be are subiect to death and mortality This appeareth Gen. 5. where in the catalogue of the fathers that liued before the flood it is said of them all they died Albeit God multiplied their daies many hundred yeares for the increase of mankinde the spreading abroad of the truth from generation to generation yet after many daies in the end al of them died So Psal 89 48. Heb. 9 27. Iob 17 13 14. ch 21 23 c. One dieth in his full strength being in all ease and prosperity another dieth in the bitternes of his soule and neuer eateth with pleasure they shall sleepe both in the dust and the wormes shall couer them And what shall I say more We acknowledge in words and see with our eies a decay and declining of of all things by experience All earthly things vnder the Sun that haue beginning Seneca de remed fortu●● both haue and hasten to their ending The grasse when it is growne is mowed the fruite when it is ripe is gathered the haruest when it is ready is reaped The trees that florish in the Spring and Sommer haue their declining Autumne and their decaying Winter The Moone set in the Heauen to rule the night hath her wane The Sunne which commeth foorth as a Bridegroome out of his chamber Psal 19 3. reioyceth like a mighty man to run his race yet hath his setting and descending the farther he goeth the more degrees he passeth the neerer hee is to the end of his course The reasons of this Doctrine are these First Reason 1 because all are dust the matter whereof wee are made is the dust of the earth therefore must returne to the dust out of which we are are taken All flesh is as grasse and the glory of man is as the flower of the field the grasse withereth and the flower fadeth falleth away The Sea neuer resteth nor standeth still but euer ebbeth or floweth so is it with the life of man it neuer standeth at one stay euery day cutteth off one part of our daies we are neerer to our end in the euening then in the morning according to the saying of Iob we are consumed from morning to euening we hasten vnto the graue as the Riuers are carryed into the Sea This is that reason which is vsed Gen. 3 19. In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou turne to the earth for out
and in the chapters following to the ende of the booke he setteth downe such thinges as fell out in the fortieth yeare The former part they cut into matters legall and historicall the legall are partly ciuill partly ecclesiasticall The ciuill things belonging to policy or the Common-wealth are of the numbring of the Israelites of the order of the Tents of the leprous and polluted to be cast out of the hoast of their going forward and of making the siluer Trumpets The Ecclesiasticall are touching the ministery of the Leuites and the office of the Priests touching their age fit for seruice touching the Nazarites the Passeouer the red Heiffer and the water of purification The matters historicall offer vnto our view the obedience of Moses the offerings of the Princes the murmuring of the people the calling of the Elders the sending out of the Spies the emulation of Miriam the sedition of Corah and the flourishing Rod of Aaron The latter part handling the actes of the last yeare is also partly historicall and partly legall The historicall is touching the sinne at the waters of strife touching the battelles and victories obtained against the Canaanites Moabites Midianites intending by their horrible curses and bannings of Balaam to destroy the Israelites touching a new numbring of the people touching the seuerall places of their abode and such such To the legall part wee may referre such things as are Ecclesiasticall as their feastes and solemne assemblies the vowes of men of wiues of widdowes and maids what shall stand and what not stand and likewise such as are ciuill as touching their inheritance and diuision of the Land of the Cities and Suburbs of the Leuites of the Cities of refuge and of inheritances not to passe from one Tribe to another Thus may the booke not vnfitly be diuided and handled but for the greater plainnesse perspicuity we will diuide it into three parts The first is the preparation of the people and a fit ordering of them to take their iourney at the Commandement of God in the first ten chapters The second part toucheth those memorable euents which happened vnto them in their iourney to the 26 chapter The last is of matters belonging to their entrance into their inheritance and of taking possession thereof from the 26 chapter to the end of the booke I am not ignorant that others frame vnto themselues another order Tostal in nitio Numer Lyra in Annot. and stand vpon another diuision but what method soeuer we follow we may easily feele the finger of God in it and out of this diuision let vs learne some good vses for our instruction Vse 1 First we see heere againe that which wee noted before that God alwayes vseth an excellent and exquisite order in the handling of his word though alwayes it be not discerned of vs. True it is he is more exact in some parts then in others and obserueth greater art in penning some parcels of the Scriptures then others as appeareth in the originall of diuers Psalmes and the Lamentations Psal 111. and 112 and 119. and Lament both to manifest their dignity and to strengthen mans memory but euery part of his word is full of diuine method to teach vs to acknowledge the worthinesse of the same For how should hee bee any way confused who ordereth all his workes aright in heauen and earth and therfore he is called the God of order Secondly we haue from hence a good direction Vse 2 for the Ministers of the word to follow this example For seeing God hath diuided his word into fit parts and ordered it to our capacity and vnderstanding it belongeth also vnto the Ministers to set their worke in good order for the greater good of the people committed vnto them Things that are distinctly handled Macrob. Saturn lib. 1 in praef Seneca Epist 8. are better and surer kept A Carpenter hauing prouided matter sufficient to build his house hauing framed his work he setteth euery part in his proper place The Minister is appointed to builde the Lordes house euery one his portion Cyprian de vmi Eccles and to square the rough and ragged stones that they may be fit for the building When they haue gotten together out of their treasure things both olde and new they must bring them forth as good stewards and set them in the best order they can This is it which the Apostle perswadeth vnto 2 Tim. 2. 2 Tim. 2 15 Study to shew thy selfe approued vnto God a workman that needeth not to be ashamed diuiding the word of truth declaring that it is not enough for them to teach the truth but they must teach it wisely orderly distinctly and discreetly Then shall they teach with comfort thē shall they see a greater blessing vpon their labors and then shall the people heare with reuerence attend with diligence and remember with carefulnesse the things they haue heard Thirdly seeing God hath disposed his word in an exact manner and ranged it into good Vse 3 order we must be carefull to know it and vnderstand it and where God vseth the greatest art we must vse the greatest care This duty hath many parts Duties to be practised in hearing the word and doth spread it selfe into sundry branches Now wee shall shew our selues to respect his word if first of all there be in vs a ready and willing minde to receiue it Euen as a man taketh willingly his friends gift and doth not turn away his face nor shut his hand when it is offered vnto him so must we bee ready and prepared to entertaine the Teachers of Gods word Secondly it is required of vs to shew labor diligence without wearinesse Euen as worldlings ceasse not to attaine the corruptible treasures of this world so must wee imply our industry and spare no paines taking to enioy the heauenly riches which far surpasse all earthly substance Thirdly we must attend and lissen with the eares of body and minde to that which wee heare as men begin to lift vp their eares whē they heare of some matter of profit Nothing can yeeld vs the like benefit and profite that the word doth all is but trash and trumpery in comparison of it Fourthly we must looke to our memories and hide his Commandements within vs. As then men lay vp their iewels and keepe them vnder locke and key lest they be lost and taken from them so must we heare with all ●ttention and not suffer the doctrine of the word to slip out of our minds but keepe his worde stedfastly and settle it firmely in our remembrance The fift meanes is to encline our hearts vnto the wisedome of his word Our religion must not be outward nor stand in ceremonies as the religion of hypocrites doth The ground that receiueth the seed sowne in it if it be out of heart it brings forth no fruit but if it be in good hart it bringeth forth fruit in abundance So is it
Angel of the Lord had guided them the Arke had gone before them and Manna from heauen had fedde them yet now all is forgotten they beleeue not in God but tempted and prouoked the holy one to anger And yet behold more prouocations then these in these chapters following where we shall see how they complaine and cry out through scarsity of water and through wearinesse of their life when they were stung with the fiery serpents But let vs consider the words of Scripture as they lie in order in this chapter 1 Then the children of Israel came with the whole Congregation into the desert of Zin in the first Moneth and the people abode at Kadesh and Miriam died there and was buried there 2 And there was not water for the Congregation and they assembled against Moses and against Aaron 3 And the people chid with Moses spake saying But would wee had perished when our brethren died before the Lord. 4 And wherefore haue yee caused the Congregation of the Lord to come into this wildernesse that we and our cattell should die there 5 And wherefore haue yee made vs to come vp from Egypt to bring vs into this miserable place No place for seede nor Figges nor Vines nor Pomgranates Neither is there any water to drinke 6 Then Moses and Aaron went from the face of the assembly vnto the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and fell vpon their faces and the glory of the LORD appeared vnto them 7 And the LORD spake vnto Moses saying 8 Take this Rodde and gather thou and thy brother Aaron this Congregation together Of this R● and the waters gushing out of it 〈◊〉 more bef●● in the next chapter that ye may speake vnto this Rocke before their eyes and it shall giue foorth his waters and thou shalt bring them waters out of this Rocke so thou shalt giue this Congregation and their Cattell drinke 9 Then Moses tooke that Rod from the presence of the Lord as he commanded him 10 And Moses and Aaron caused the Congregation to assemble together before that Rocke and he said vnto them Heare now O ye Rebelles shall we bring you waters out of this Rocke 11 Then Moses lift vp his hand and smote that Rocke with his Rod twice and much water gushed out so the Congregation and their Cattell dranke 12 Wherfore the Lord spake to Moses Aaron Because ye haue not beleeued in me to sanctifie me before the eies of the childrē of Israel therfore ye shal not bring this Congregatiō into the Land which I haue giuen them 13 These are the waters of strife where the children of Israel stroue against the Lord he sanctified himselfe among them In this Chapter we are to consider three seuerall things First the murmuring of the people secondly the purpose of the Israelites to passe toward Canaan by the borders of Edom. Thirdly the death of Aaron in the Mountaine in whose stead Eleazar his sonne succeedeth and for whom the people a long time lamenteth All these particulars are amplified in the beginning of the Chapter by the circumstances of time to wit the first moneth of the 40 yeare after their departure out of Egypt as appeareth chap. 33 38. and likewise of the place ●t 2 14. of Kadesh a City in the borders of Edom at which time also Miriam the sister of Aaron and of Moses died These circumstances being set downe the History of their murmuring followeth which we haue often before seene and considered declaring that whensoeuer wheresoeuer any aduersity happened by and by they became impatient vnthankfull and forgetfull of present mercies and fauours A like history to this we saw before Exod. 17. which is not the same recorded in this place but differing in time place as may appeare by collation conference of both the places Now let vs marke their behauiour in this want of water in the wildernesse First they wish they had died by the stroke of Gods hand with the seditious rout of rebels that cōspired against God whom notwithstanding they call their brethren Secondly they expostulate with Moses and Aaron that they had brought them out of Egypt into the wildernesse being barren without fruite miserable without haruest and dry without water Whereas they should comfort themselues in the former mercies of God rest in the experience of his power and remember his helpe euer ready in time of neede they rise vp against Moses and Aaron in shew but in deed against God whom they serued setting downe their present condition and comparing their abode in Egypt where they had tasted all miseries felt all oppressions and groned vnder the heauy burthens with their present estate to amplifie the woe and wretchednesse therof such is their blindnesse and vnthankfulnesse ●mb 12 3. But what doth Moses whose meeke and patient spirit they greeued and whose righteous soule they vexed frō day to day with their vngodly murmurings Hee doth not heere turne himselfe to them nor dealeth with them to reclaime them as he did chapter 16. but went with Aaron to God flying to the Tabernacle as to a Sanctuary throwing downe thēselues on their faces and comforting themselues in his power presence and protection who being alwaies neere to them that call vpon him shewed forth his glory and commanded them to take the Rodde and speake to the Rocke promising them water and assuring them of an happy issue of all their troubles necessities Now as God commandeth so Moses obeyeth and taketh the Rod. Here a question may be asked Question what Rod God meaneth and Moses taketh for we reade of two Rods famous among them and well knowne one the Rod of Moses that he vsed when he kept sheepe in the Land of Midian Exod. 4 2 3 7 8 19 14 1● and 17 5. Numb 17 8. Hebr. 7 4. whereby hee wrought afterward many myracles in Egypt and at the red Sea in the wildernesse the other the Rod of Aaron which did bud and beare blossomes to confirme the calling of Aaron and to declare that God had separated the Tribe of Leui to serue in the Tabernacle I answer Answer we are to vnderstand in this place rather the flourishing Rod of Aaron first because Moses made mention of this in the last place not long before to wit chap. 17 the other is not spoken off in this booke so that we are rather to referre it to Aarons Rod before specified then to the other not named Secondly this serued more fitly and fully to confirme their calling of rule and gouernement ouer the people which by these conspiratours was called into question As if they shold say Do you doubt of our calling aske by what authority we do these things Behold this rod do ye not know it this florishing rod shall conuince you and serue to beare witnesse against you Thirdly Moses and Aaron were fled into the Tabernacle verse 6 now chap. 17 10. it is
giue to these maintaine them both in idlenes wickednes As then we see vnto whō we ought not to giue so we must know to whom we ought to giue To whom we ●●ght to giue These are poore widdowes and fatherlesse children 1 Tim. 5 16 such as are poore strangers such day laborers as worke hard for their liuing all the week and yet cannot either thorough weaknesse of their body or greatnes of their charge get things necessary and sufficient for them and of these we shall alwaies haue with vs to the end of the world Mat. 62 11 Such also as are falne into decay by ineuitable losses 〈◊〉 15 11. Leu. 23 35. Lastly such as are weake and impotent whether through age or other blemish whether in their feete or in their hands or other parts that thereby though they bee willing yet they are not able to take paines for theyr liuing Acts 3.2 6. but amongst all these they are especially to bee respected that are of the houshold of faith Gal. 6 10. If we be careful and mindfull of these God will recompence vs againe and pay vs home seuenfolde into our bosomes whatsoeuer we haue giuen both in temporall spirituall and eternall blessings Lastly it is our duty to acknowledge Gods Vse 3 great mercy toward vs in the blessings of this life that hee hath giuen to vs that which hee hath denied to many others and when he giueth vnto vs a comfortable vse of these blessings wee must confesse we haue them not by our owne labor and industrie but by his speciall goodnes towards vs Psal 127 1 3. and therfore we ought to sanctifie our daily pains with daily prayer and begin and end our labors with remembring him that remembreth vs and so praise his goodnes that enableth vs to get goods and this shall make our labour sweet and pleasant and the yoake that lyeth in our neckes to be light and easie Againe as God giueth them so he giueth a blessing with them a blessing with a blessing that is bread and the nourishment of bread For a man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Deut. 8. Moreouer as he giueth outward blessings so he can take them away when it pleaseth him euen in a moment Iob 1 Luk 12. 22 And the Lord saide vnto Moses Get thee vp into this mount Abarim and see the land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel 13 And when thou hast seene it thou shalt bee gathered vnto thy people c. 14 For ye rebelled against my commandement c. Here followeth the second part of the chapt touching the successour of Moses in the gouernment of this great people wherein obserue the occasion the calling of Ioshua The occasion is double the death of Moses at hād his request to God to appoint a man to be set in his place Touching his death he is willed to go vp to mount Abarim and to behold the land that God had giuen to the Israelites for God had foreshewed that he should see the land with his eies though he did not tread on it with his feet when he had seene the land he should dy as Aaron his brother before him chap. 20 24 amplified by the cause they had not sanctified the name of the Lord at the Waters of Meribah of which we haue spoken before Touching the prayer and request of Moses he desireth of the Lord that he wold appoint a fit Ruler ouer his people to succeed him in this gouernment that might be able to beare this great burthen For hearing the vnchāgeable determination of God humbling himselfe vnder his correcting hand chastising his transgression he is not afraid of the sentence of death being at hand and seeing it before him neither doth he craue to haue the stroke thereof prolonged and delayed neither is he troubled with excessiue cares for himselfe and his children and posterity as the manner is of worldly minded men that mind nothing but the earth and earthly things when they must go out of the world shall haue their mouth full thereof but all his care was for the future benefite of the people to leaue them in good estate after his departure This should teach vs after his example to be readie to leaue the world whensoeuer God calleth vs not to stād in feare of death but to be willing to goe to God knowing the we shall go to an inheritance immortall that fadeth not 1 Pet. 1. and we must all likewise be carefull to leaue our houses places in good state when we are gone of which we haue spoken before chap. 20. Moses was the deere seruant of God yet sinning hee is punished The Lord himselfe receyued his soule and buried his body Deut 34 6 13. He was in high fauour with God liuing and dying an excellent Prophet to whom God spake face to face yet hee was not suffered to enter into the land of Promise Doctrine Many want the outward signes that are partakers of the truth of the Sacraments Wherby we see that many want the Sacraments that are partakers of the truth and substance of the Sacraments He entred into the heauenly Canaan that was not permitted to enter into the earthly Some are admitted vnto the outward signe that neuer receiue the thing signified so was Iudas to the Passeouer as well as Peter and the rest of the Apostles yet he was neuer partaker of the Lambe that taketh away the sins of the world Iohn 1 29. On the other side some take not the outward signe that neuerhelesse partake the inward grace The vses heereof are to teach vs that the outward Vse 1 and inward parts of the Sacraments are not necessarily ioyned together so that hee which partaketh the one should also partake the other and therfore the outward sign doth not simply conferre grace Secondly it condemneth the Church of Rome that holdeth that children dying without baptisme are not saued whereas saluation is not alwayes annexed to the signe so that though infants want the outward washing yet to them may belong the kingdom of heauen Mark 10 14. Lastly it serueth as a great comfort to such as desire to come to the Sacraments yet are hindred sometimes by sicknes and somtimes by other ineuitable occasions that procure their absence forasmuch as we see in this example of Moses that we may bee partakers of the truth of the signes and yet bee barred or banished from the signes themselues In such cases as these God accepteth the will for the deede 2 Cor. 8 12. Againe Doctrine Many are temporally punished that are not eternally condemned we learne by the examples of Moses and Aaron that were not suffered to enter into Canaan a figure of the heauenly Canaan this truth That many are temporally punished which are not eternally condemned Many are chastised in this life not onely with diseases and sicknesses but with death
withered and dry Wands and on euery rodde the name of the Prince of the Tribe being written and Aarons name on that of Leui it fell out that the Rod of Aaron receyued by the Omnipotent power of God a vegetable soule For being layde vp in the Tabernacle of the Congregation one onely night it had vpon it Buds Blossomes and ripe Almonds wherby the power of God was manifested the calling of Aaron confirmed the mouth of the Conspirators stopped the whole Congregation of Israel perswaded to rest themselues vpon the ordinance that God had appointed and setled among them It were almost endlesse to rehearse all the other murmurings against Moses and prouocations against God For when they came to the Mountaine Hor after the death of Aaron Numbers 33. verse 38 who dyed in the first day of the fifth moneth of the fortieth yeare after theyr departure out of Egypt all the people murmured most violently against Moses by reason of the scarsity of water when neyther the punishments by fire from heauen aboue them nor the opening of the earth vnder them nor and swallowing of them vp nor the often and sodaine Pestilences that seized vpon them nor any myracle formerly shewed among them neyther the loue or wrath of God could preuaile any longer with this stubborne and rebellious people then while their bellies were filled and their appetites satisfied Numb 20. but in stead of seeking for helpe and releefe at Gods hands in their necessity when they suffered hunger or thirst or any other want they repined and repented of their estate casting into his teeth who least of all deserued it all their misaduentures And albeit they were entred into the fortieth yeare wherein all trauailes troubles and miseries were to take end and that they were euen in sight of the land promised yet againe they tempted God as obstinately as in former times and neyther trusted his promises nor feared his iudgements nor regarded his miracles Neyther are we to thinke by way of Iustification of our selues or condemnation of Israel that wee are by nature better then they or they a worse people then our selues for it hath alwayes beene the disposition of the common sort to waxe weary of present things and to desire some change and alteration The multitude as Polybius doeth not vnfitly speake is like the sea where a small gale of winde causeth a great Tempest Cicer. pro domo sua ut Demost in orat de fa●s legat They are changeable and vnconstant and as variable in their opinions as the weather is And so often as I remember the dislike and discontent of this people with such Gouernors in the Church and Commonwealth as God had set ouer them who had they beene changed and others placed in their roome would haue liked them no better I cannot forget a memorable example that fell out among the Campanes in the City of Capua during the second Punicke Warre through a mutiny among the people against their Magistrates as Liuy reporteth Liuy decad 3. Lib. 3. when as the Commons abusing their liberty would needes depose the Senate to which they were maliciously affected and weary to be vnder their gouernment any longer and agreeed to put them to death Pacuuius Calauius the head Magistrate willing to saue them when they had passed sentence vpon one Senatour to haue him executed bad in his stead to choose a good Senator and a righteous At the first all were silent and as still as midnight for default of finding a better Afterward when some odde groome past all shame and reuerence seemed to nominate one to succeede by and by they grew to lowd words and great clamors while some sayde flatly they knew not the man others layde to his charge sundry lewd and naughty vices and others obiected against him basenesse and beggery or else some dishonest kinde of Trade and Occupation whereby he gate his liuing Thus fared they and much worse a great deale when a second or third Senator was named to bee substituted in the roome of others so as it was wel seene that the men bethought themselues better and repented of that they had done already considering how much they fayled and were to seeke when they should appoint another in his place c. And so at length they were content to keepe their olde Senators It is not therefore without cause Decad. 3. lib 4. that the same Historiographer describing the beast of many heads sayth well Haec natura multitud●nis est aut seruit humiliter aut superbè dominatur libertatem quae media est nec spernere modicè nec habere sciunt that is See the nature and disposition of the multitude eyther they serue basely or rule proudly Liberty that is the meane betweene them both they haue neither the skill to despise with reason nor the grace to entertaine in measure But to passe ouer these things and to see how Israel passed forward toward the Land of Canaan I cannot omit that Moses omitted nothing before his death that might serue for the good of the people and to shorten their iourney what he might and therefore sent Messengers vnto the Prince of Idumea Numb 20 17. praying him that he might passe with the hoasts of Israel through his Territory into the Land promised to their Fathers which bordered it For this was the nerest way of all other from the citty of Kadesh where Moses then encamped whereas otherwise taking his iourney by the Riuers of Zared Arnon and Iordan which afterward he was constrained to do hee might haue runne into many hazards in the passage of those Riuers with his great Army And albeit Moses vsed many strong and forcible reasons to perswade the Prince of Idumea remembring him that he was of the same race and family with Israel calling him by the amiable name of a Brother they being as sonnes of one Father to wit Isaac inferring thereby that he had more reason to fauor and respect them then he had to affect the Canaanites making a short repetition of Gods blessings bestowed vpon them as also of his purposes and promises concerning them in the time to come assuring him that he would no way offend him or his people neither yet wrong any by military insolency but would restraine his army within the boundes of the common and Kings highwayes paying money for whatsoeuer they vsed yea euen for the water which them selues or their Cattle should drinke Deut. 2 27 28 yet the King not trusting faire words knowing the strength of his owne country rampard with high and sharpe Mountaines and withal suspecting as a naturall wise man that so mighty an army of strangers consisting of more then sixe hundred thousand being once entred into the heart of his countrey it would rest in their owne wils to giue him law and to refuse directions from him and so bee at their owne discretion and disposition whether to abide there or to depart
vnderstand what the wil of God was they murmure not against it they enquire not the reason of it they stand not vpon their owne priuiledges there is no man thinketh better of himselfe then others nor offereth to breake the order transgresse the Law giuen vnto them But they did according to all that the Lord had commanded Moses Verse 34. The former point that concerneth the Commandement of God is double First it is set downe generally in the two first Verses what belongeth to all the Tribes indifferently namely that they must encampe euery one by the Ensigne of his Fathers house then particularly what concerneth the tribes in speciall in the residue of the chapter Verse 1 2. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Euery man of the children of Israel shal Campe c. Heere he beginneth to rehearse the order that was to bee obserued among them For there are two things which are most needfull in euerie thing that is done aright to wit number and order Wherefore after the description of their number he beginneth to direct them in the order which was to be kept among them We learne from Doctrine 1 hence to omit sundry impertinent collections and vnprofitable Allegations God delighteth to haue a comely order obserued in the Church Common-wealth which manie stand vpon seruing rather to please the eare then to profit the heart and to delight the outward man rather then to edifie the inwarde man I say we learne that God commandeth a comely order to bee obserued as well in the Church as the Commonwealth When Balaam the false Prophet mentioned hereafter in this booke sawe the Israelites thus ordered in their Tents as God appointeth in this place he was carried into an admiration of it Numb 24 5 6. How goodly are thy Tents O Iacob and thy habitations O Israel As the valleyes are they stretched foorth as Gardens by the Riuers side as the Aloe trees which the Lord hath planted as the Cedars beside the waters As if he should haue saide The Church of God consisting of this people is the verie picture and resemblance of most goodly order This speaketh the Prophet of the place that God had chosen to set his name in it Psal 122.3 4 5. Ierusalem is builded as a Citie that is compact together in it selfe whereunto the Tribes euen the Tribes of the Lord go vp according to the testimony to Israel to praise the Name of the Lord for there are Thrones set for iudgement euen the Thrones of the house of Dauid This Paul saw and obserued and commended in the Church of the Colossians Chapt. 2. verse 5. Though I he absent in the flesh yet am I vvith you in the Spirit reioycing and beholding your Order and your stedfast Faith in Christ These things to which we might adde and annexe sundry other testimonies are sufficient to shew vnto vs that God will haue all things in the Church and Commonwealth done in order The Reasons are euident For first God Reason 1 is the Author of order and not of confusion He appointeth in this Booke the order to bee obserued in their mansion in their peregrination in their possession of the Land The Apostle giueth vs this instruction touching God 1 Cor. 14 33 God is not the Authour of confusion but of peace as we see in all the Churches of the Saints Hence it is that we see an order in God himselfe euen in the holye and blessed Trinity though all the persons be coequall and coeternall yet there is an established order of the first person of the second person and of the third person not in regard of essence which is indiuisible yet for better order of teaching and instructing of vs to attaine to so much knowledge of his nature as the Scripture hath deliuered and we are able to conceiue Hence it is that the Father is first the Sonne is conceiued and deliuered in the next place and the holy Ghost proceeding from them both is expressed in the last place not thereby insinuating any inequality because none is in nature before or after other none is greater or lesse then other but onely intimating an order in existing or working as hee hath manifested himselfe in his worde vnto vs. As then God hath order in himselfe so he commandeth and commendeth an order to be vsed of vs. Secondly all wise men will order their affaires Reason 2 with wisedome and discretion and will dispose of them with seemlinesse comlinesse An expert Captaine that goeth against his enemies will keepe his Souldiours in good array whether he march or retire If he flye out of the fielde out of order one is readie to ouerthrow another and all are left to the mercy of his aduersarie Hence it is Veget. lib. 14 that they haue an eye to these things to the Sunne the Winde and the Dust that the Sunne be not in their faces that the Winde be not against them that the Dust bee not carried vppon them For the Sunne shining in their faces taketh away sight the Winde blowing contrary abateth their strength and the blow but helpeth the weapons of the enemy the Dust cast vppon them filleth and shutteth their eyes to their great hindrance A prouident house-keeper knoweth the necessitie commoditie and profite thereof in the administration of all his businesse and affayres Xenophon speaking of Socrates that nothing is so good as the right ordering of them The Philosophers in all their teaching shew vs this who haue broght the Arts and Sciences into Method and good order Common experience declareth that wee loue order when it is wanting wee doe wish and desire it when it is present we rest in it and at all times wee prayse and commend it Thirdly the Church is not a confused Reason 3 multitude shuffled and iumbled together where no man knoweth his place or his Office and one encroacheth vpon another but it is the house of the liuing God 1 Tim 3 15 the pillar and ground of truth Now in an house well ordered is to be seene the Maister as the Ruler the family subiect to his gouernment euery one imploying his proper gifts and no man vsurping the place and calling of another If this bee to bee seene in our priuate houses which haue a weaker foundation to beare them a lesse anker to holde them a feebler shore to vnderprop them and vnsurer means to containe and continue them how much more must we conceiue this of the Church of God Hebrewes 11. Esay 5 1. Ephes 5. which is the house that he hath builded the vineyard that his right hand hath planted the spouse of Christ which he hath loued the mountaine of the Lord which he hath prepared and the peculiar people which hee hath chosen Thus we see the doctrine sufficiently cleered and confirmed Let vs before we come to the vses diuert a little as it were out of the way and ordinary path to answer an obiection
for discouraging the people that brought little children vnto him who ought rather to haue encouraged them Or why doth Christ tell them they knew not of what spirit they were Ioshua had no euill meaning when hee aduised Moses to forbid those that prophesied in the host Numb 11 28. Peters meaning had no hurt in it when he would not permit Christ to wash his feet Iohn 13. Iohn 13 8. Yet doth Moses reprooue Ioshua as one carried away with the spirit of enuy and Christ telleth Peter that if he washed him not hee had no part in him So then we are to vnderstand that as there is a God and that God will be worshipped so he will be worshipped according to his owne word and will If we decline from his will expressed in his word we may well please our selues but we cannot please him we may thinke our selues wise but he holdeth vs for no better then fooles wee may for a time go on in our ignorant courses but hee will in the end cal vs to a reckoning for them and set all in order before vs to the confusion of our faces Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to study to acquaint our selues with the Scriptures and let vs reade them with all diligence The word is a Christian mans true and perfect guide and in all doubts it is his Counseller Let it not grieue vs to be ruled by it nor account it an heauy burden or an vneasie yoke to be held hard vnto it 2 Pet. 1 19. seeing it is so sure a way for vs to walke in Let vs take this to be our guide and wee shall neuer step one foot awry As the Teachers of the word are not to deliuer that which they neuer receiued of the Lord to his people so we must follow no more then is warranted vnto vs from thence it must be shewed vnto vs there before obedience be yeelded vnto it Hee hath prescribed in it a forme of seruing of him that onely he accepteth other he abhorreth and punisheth The examples of Nadab and Abihu mentioned in this place afterward againe in this booke do preach this doctrine vnto vs and cry out aloud as with a liuely voice that wee should take heed by their harmes In other things God is full of patience but in this he is full of wrath and his iealousie burneth as fire He hath authority ouer his house to appoint his owne worship and he cannot endure to haue it taken away from him by any man Wherefore it behoueth vs to search the Scriptures that wee may learne his will and we must suffer them to dwell plentifully in vs that we may obey his will First we must know it before wee can obey it if we decline and depart neuer so little from it our worke is out of square The Prophet reproueth Saul because he performed his will to halfes and saith vnto him Hath the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices as in obeying the voice of the Lord Behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken then the fat of Rams 1 Sam. 15. 1 Sam. 15 22. Hee commanded Ioshua Iosh 1 8. to haue the booke of the law continually before him and he pronounceth those blessed that delight in it and do meditate vpon it day and night Psal 1 2. Woe then vnto those that hide the booke of God from the people and take away the key of knowledge that they should haue no entrance into the kingdome of heauen These are they that are the murtherers of many thousand soules that might come to the knowledge of the truth if these false Prophets did not locke vp and keepe close the Scriptures from them and therefore they are guilty of shedding blood and bring a famine not of bread a thirst but not of water the people cannot heare the words of the Lord. They feed them with lying legends with deceitfull fables and with humane traditions which do no better then starue them and are not able to keepe life in them whiles in the meane season they hide the Scriptures in an vnknown tongue so that albeit they heare them yet they cannot profit by them Thus the blind leade the blind vntil both the leader and he that is ledde fall into the ditch And woe vnto those also that liue in the Sun-shine of the Gospel yet shut their eyes that they should not see They haue the light brought vnto them they need not say Who shall ascend into heauen Deut. 30 12 13 14. or who shall descend into the deepe to bring it vnto vs that we may heare it and do it Neither neede any say Who shall go ouer the sea for vs and bring it vnto vs that we may heare it and doe it But the word is very nigh vnto thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou maiest do it It is brought vnto our doores preached vpon the house tops that is it is set foorth openly it is published by authority it may bee professed with liberty of conscience and no man is endangered to lose life or limbe or to haue one haire of his head touched for it Such are the dayes wherein we liue that we may truely say with the Apostle If our Gospel be hidde it is hidde in them that are lost 2 Cor. 4 3 ● in whom the god of this world hath blinded the mindes of them which beleeue not lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the Image of God should shine vnto them As these men are ignorant so they are willingly ignorant they know nothing because they will not vnderstand They professe themselues to be Christians and yet they haue many of thē no more knowledge of Christ then Turks and Infidels What a lamentable thing is it that such as beare the Name of Christ should know nothing touching Christ It will bee thought strange that any such should bee found in such a flourishing Church as ours is where the Gospel is sincerely taught hath had a free passage so many yeares It is true indeed it may seeme very strange and yet alas it is too common Let the Ministers of the word take an account of those that come to receiue the Supper of the Lord what they haue learned let them make a through search and suruay how they haue profited and they shall finde that to bee true which I affirme Many know nothing at all what Christ did for them neither euer heard what hee should do for them his Name they confesse hath often come to their eares and they haue heard very many speake of him but they know not how or which way they should bee beholden to him or indebted vnto him for any thing or what he hath done for them Is it not possible that many of the Saracens or sauages should heare know more of Christ Iesus then these falsely called Christians As this is enough to breake the hearts of the
may be a candle and where there is a lampe there may be oyle in it and where there is a Church set vp it may beare in it a burning and shining light forasmuch as the doctrine that we deale withall doth teach vs that it is the ordinance of God that all places and persons wheresoeuer and whatsoeuer should be instructed We see this in the counsell that Christ giueth to his disciples Matth. 9.37 38. When he saw the people scattered abroad as sheep without a shepheard he said to his disciples The haruest truely is plenteous but the labourers are few pray ye therefore the Lord of the haruest that he will send forth labourers into his haruest It is our duty to pray for the preaching of the Gospel as it were the standard of God with all other ordinances of God whereby his kingdome may be erected and established in perfect beauty that it may be bright as the Sun faire as the Moone and terrible as an army with banners Thirdly our desire must be that the publishing of the Gospel may be blessed where God hath vouchsafed it for as the wanting of this comfortable meanes of saluation offereth much matter of mourning so the planting of it in any place ought to draw from vs many prayers for the more free passage and good successe of the word that God may more and more be glorified by it This we see in the blessing of Moses the man of God wherewith he blessed the tribe of Leui before his death Deut. 33.11 Blesse O Lord his substance and accept the worke of his hands smite through the loynes of them that rise against him and of them that hate him that they rise not againe Hath God then bestowed this blessing vpon any people Craue the continuance of it where it is once setled to the glory of God and the good of his people for this is the way that leadeth to the kingdome of immortality Heauen is as a Citie the Church is as the Suburbes that giueth passage or entrance into it and the word is the statute-law by which it is ruled and ordered The Prophet craueth oftentimes the blessing of God vpon his Church and his ordinances that are therein Psal 51.18 and 122.6 Fourthly we learne that it is required of vs to be thankefull to God and to praise his name when he hath been fauourable to Sion and builded the walles of Ierusalem and sent faithfull Pastors according to his heart that may feed his people with knowledge and vnderstanding Iere. 3.15 When he hath enlarged his Sanctuary and spread abroad his sauing health we ought to conceiue great ioy of heart and expresse our thankefulnesse by duties of obedience vnder the Ministery of the word For as the want thereof is a token of Gods great iudgement and displeasure so the enioying of the meanes is a testimony of his great goodnesse toward the people of those places and therefore it ought to draw from vs a subiection to his ordinance and an acknowledgement of his free fauour toward vs and a furtherance of vs in his feare and our faith Fiftly we must all labour in our seueral places and according to our seuerall callings to embrace the loue of Gods seruice and Sanctuary hungring after the saluation of our brethren One neighbour is to call another and one friend is to speake to another Esay 2.3 as if he inuited them as guests to a royall and sumptuous feast This we see in the Prophet Many Nations shall come and say Come and let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord and the house of the God of Iacob and he will teach vs of his waies and we will walke in his pathes c. Mich. 4.2 A farther practise of this we see in Christs disciples so soone as they had found Christ they guided others in the way Ioh. 1.45 and 28.29 and pointed him out with the finger that he might be knowen of their brethren If we lay all these things together and deeply consider with our selues in the meditation of our hearts of the estate of our present times in which we liue and compare them with the dayes of Christ our Sauiour it will cause vs to wish with the Prophet that our head were waters Ieremy 9 1. and our eyes a fountaine of teares that we might weep day and night for the slaine of the daughter of our people If Christ were now againe vpon the earth and should make a visitatiō of this kingdome as once he did of Galile he would alas haue iust cause to complaine of the estate of the Church among vs and to account of a great many Congregations as he did of them namely to be poore silly sheep scattered and wandring abroad without shepheards and therefore might as truly say of vs now as he did of them then The haruest is great but the labourers to gather the haruest are few c. There wanted not in those times store of Priests Scribes Pharisees but these were loiterers not labourers idle bellies not paineful teachers so there is plenty of Ministers in our times no place is empty no Church is voyde no assembly is destitute nay the number of them is in so great aboundance that many wander vp and downe the countrey as seruants without a master or trauellers without a dwelling ready to be hyred for a little if any Micah will giue them their dyet and ten shekels by the yeere and a suite of apparell Iudg. 17.10 being glad to serue for a peece of siluer and a morsell of bread as the Lord threatned the posterity of Eli 1 Sam. 2.36 But concerning faithfull sheepeheards and painefull Pastors that make conscience of their places and keepe their watch day and night in their watch tower to descry and discouer the approach of the enemy and to leade their sheep in the green Pastures of holines righteousnesse the number is small so that in many shires and countreyes scarse the twentieth parish is prouided of one that is able and willing to teach them In some places wee haue Non-residents that post ouer their charges to others in other we haue men of great gifts but of little grace to make conscience of their duty in many there is no ability or sufficiency to stand vp before the people and to diuide the word of trueth aright vnto them All these are as Caterpillars that deuoure the fatte of the land or as locusts and canker-wormes that take the spoyle of whatsoeuer they can lay hands vpon No maruell therefore if there dwell in the people such horrible and palpable darkenesse like that of Egypt so that the greater part of them may well bee likened and resembled to the horse and mule in whom there is no vnderstanding For where there are idle shepheards there are also idle hearers and where the blind leade the blind both fall into the ditch Matth. 15.14 Lastly this doctrine serueth as an instruction to all Magistrates as their places
Lord thy God is with thee whither soeuer thou goest Where he concludeth and assureth him thereby that God is with him because he is the Lord. Secondly the consideration of his presence Reason 2 must worke in vs obedience toward him because he hath graciously promised that he wil neuer faile nor forsake those which are his He will not leaue vs in the worke which wee vndertake but be with vs when we begin it and when we finish it This reason is giuen by Moses encouraging the people to fight the battels of God against the Nations whom hee hadde promised to deliuer into their hands Deut. 31 6. Feare not nor be afraid of them for the Lord thy God he it is that doth goe with thee he will not faile thee nor forsake thee Where he proueth the truth of his presence by the comfortable effect of it that he will deliuer them in time of need and will not leaue them as a prey in the hands of their enemies Vse 1 The vses are in the next place to be handled First we learne from hence for the encrease of our faith to conclude the happy and blessed estate of the faithfull that haue such a faithfull deliuerer and so sure a promise of deliuerance They are esteemed of the greatest part of this wretched world to be as men vnhappy and forlorne and so to be farre from true happinesse But seeing they haue his help ready at hand to keepe them from danger and to preserue them in danger beeing alwayes safe and sure vnder his protection who is as a shield round about vs it sheweth apparently and most certainely that they are a blessed people that are thus and may comfort themselues heerewith in the middest of all discomforts and discouragements that they shall meete withall This doth the Prophet Dauid declare Psal 40 1 2. He waited patiently vpon the Lord who brought him out of the horrible pit out of the miry clay and set his feet vpon the rock and ordered his goings Where we see that Gods gracious deliuerance and preseruation prouoked him to depend vpon him and to praise his Name whereupon he inferreth in the next words Blessed is that man that maketh the Lord his trust and respecteth not the proud nor such as turne aside to lies None therefore are comparable vnto them none are happy but they Vse 2 Secondly seeing wee haue Gods presence euer with vs to bee an instructer and admonisher of vs and as a guide and gouernor to vs in well-doing let vs be of a good comfort and cheerefull in all duties that God layeth vpon vs and requireth of vs. It cannot be denied but we haue many and sundry discouragements and pul-backes to hinder vs from the execution of all good duties both generall and particular in our callings but this consideration and meditation is able to ouerweigh them all This serueth as a wonderfull comfort to all sorts both to the Ministers and people and should neuer bee forgotten of vs. Touching the Ministers it is giuen by our Sauiour Mat. 28 20. Acts 18 9 10. Exod. 4 12. If his presence must be as a spurre vnto vs to quicken vs being dull and heauy and ready to draw backe let it put life into vs and cause vs to teach the people cheerefully to obserue whatsoeuer Christ hath commanded vs. What though we haue many crosses in our way and many enemies that set themselues against vs yet greater is he that is with vs then they that are against vs Satan cannot be so malicious to hurt vs as God is gracious to deliuer vs and his instruments shall not bee so strong to cast vs downe as the Lyon of the Tribe of Iuda shall bee victorious to hold vs vp and therefore let vs not feare them that can kill the body but him that is able to cast body soule into hell fire Touching the people it serueth also to comfort them and to worke in them perseuerance in their callings Let them boldly goe forward in hearing and professing his word forasmuch as his presence doth guide vs thereunto To this purpose doth Moses call Ioshua and say vnto him in the sight of all Israel Be strong and of a good courage Deut. 31 ● for thou must go with this people vnto the Land which the Lord hath sworne vnto their Fathers to giue them and thou shalt cause them to inherite it and the Lord he it is that doth goe before thee hee will be with thee hee will not faile thee c. Hauing therefore so sure a Rocke to rest vpon it is a signe of great weaknesse and infirmity or of want of faith to start aside from our holy profession and not to rest vpon him that hath giuen vs the promise of our deliuerance and the assurance of his presence Lastly seeing God is in the middest of vs Vse 3 to succour and saue vs and thereby to stirre vs vp vnto well-doing let vs open our eyes and behold the great workes that he hath done in the earth for his owne people Let vs not forget his mercies toward vs but keepe a register of them as the Prophet exhorteth Psalm 46 which is a Psalme of thanksgiuing which the Citizens of Ierusalem sung to God for the preseruation of Ierusalem against certaine terrible and troublesome enemies that did assault it ver 8 9. The Lord of hosts is with vs the God of Iacob is our refuge Come behold the workes of the Lord what desolations he hath done in the earth Where we may see that vpon this consideration that God was among them as in an high place wherunto they should resort he prouoketh them to a serious contemplation of such workes of mercy and iudgement as God had shewed in their defence against their enemies This vse concerneth no people vnder the heauens more then vs. Wee haue found and felt the gracious and glorious presence of God to be with vs and among vs. We haue had a wonderfull experience of wonderfull deliuerances against close and subtill and malicious enemies They haue opened their mouthes as the graue they haue stretched out their hands against vs and their feet haue bin swift to shed blood They haue prepared their fireworkes they haue diued downe to the nethermost hell to take counsell against vs and they haue sought to quench the light of Israel Destruction and calamity hath bene in their waies and the way of peace they haue not knowne so that except God had beene on our side they had swallowed vs vp quicke and the waters euen the swelling waters had gone ouer our soule But God hath broken their snare and quenched their fire he hath preserued Prince and people and deliuered his seruants that trusted in him and called vpon him As for his enemies and the enemies of his Church they haue beene consumed with the flame of that fire which themselues hadde kindled as they were burned that cast the three children into the Furnace Dan. 3 22. and as
names and not in the Name of God They cannot say Thus saith the Lord but this I say vnto you not heare ye the word of the Lord but heare ye my word not that which God commandeth to obserue that do ye but keepe my word ●h 15 3. the commandements of men the traditions of the Elders the superstitions of the Fathers and such like humane ordinances wherby they make the word of God of none effect This carrieth no authority to the consciences of the hearers but it is as a sword that is blunt whose edge is turned that it cannot cut or enter into the flesh The word thus deliuered can neuer open the corrupt heart of man or do any good vnto the conscience If then we do not teach the flocke of God both by sincerity of doctrine and by innocency of life we shew our selues to be messengers of Satan not the Ministers of God to be false Prophets not true Teachers We are ioynt labourers with God and therefore he will be sanctified in all that come neere vnto him He feedeth the flock by our hands he conuerteth the soules by our Ministery and he saueth the hearers by our preaching and therefore we must not cause our office to be hated and contemned but by all meanes maintaine the dignity and authority of it to the vttermost of our power It is not only the corrupt doctrine but the euill life of the Ministers that maketh their calling to be vile and void in the eyes of worldly men If the persons that preach it be prophane they reiect Ministers Doctrine and Calling they set al at nought and let all alone And this is the deepe pollicy and subtilty of Satan whē he dareth not openly oppose himselfe against the doctrine that is according to godlinesse nor encounter with the word of truth hand to hand he goeth to worke another way that he may cunningly vndermine it to which purpose he striueth to make it hatefull and contemptible by occasion of the Ministers and he duely obserueth their errors their faults and failings that with some colour he may cauill and so countenance his euill proceedings Christ our Lord and Sauiour did well and wisely foresee this and carefully did preuent this The treachery of Iudas was well knowne to the Iewes themselues hee betrayed his master forsooke the Apostles Mar. 26 27. ioyned with the Pharisies and in the end hanged himselfe This must needs bring a great scandall and much hinder the proceeding of the Gospel cause the Disciples to be euill spoken off and the truth it selfe to be reuiled Besides the Apostles might be afraid lest all their labour should be in vaine Wherefore to the end the Lord might adde strength courage vnto them and represse the slanders calumniations of the enemies of the Gospel and withall leaue a perpetuall direction vnto the whole Church that no man should refuse the purity of doctrine for the impurity of the liues of such as are the Teachers he vttereth and oftentimes repeateth this sentence Verily I say vnto you he that heareth you heareth mee Math. 10 40. Luke 10 16. Iohn 13 20. and he that heareth me heareth him that sent me he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me In these words he establisheth the authority of the Apostles doctrine and reprooueth all those that iudge of the doctrine by the Ministers and esteeme of the truth by the teachers For euen as Kings and Princes will not lose their right nor diminish the authority of their commandements albeit their Officers or Embassadors should exceed their calling and goe beyond the bounds of their commission in like sort whatsoeuer the Ministers of the Gospel shall be yet the word alwaies remaineth the same the promises and threatnings that are written in it shall be ratified by it we shall be iudged at the last day We must turne vnto it that shall not bow and bend to vs. For all flesh is as grasse and all the glory of man is as the flowre of grasse The grasse withereth and the flowre thereof falleth away but the word of the Lord endureth for euer 1 Pet. 1 24 25. To conclude therefore we must not cast our eyes so much vpon the Ministers that are the disposers of the mysteries of God as vppon the author of the Ministery which is the Lord himselfe neither be so carefull and attentiue to heare their voice as Christ himselfe speaking in them in whose Name they are Embassadors Doubtlesse they shall incurre the displeasure of God and receiue greeuous punishment whosoeuer are euilly affected to the Ministery of the word and their impiety shall detract and diminish nothing from the worthinesse of the doctrine it selfe which directeth vs to one God through our onely Mediatour Iesus Christ and teacheth vs to serue him with a true faith with a pure life with a loue vnfained Vse 4 Fourthly we ought from this ground of doctrine heere deliuered to giue them double honour and not withhold from them the wages of their worke and the recompence of their labours that is due vnto them but as euery labourer must haue his hire so ought the Ministers aboue the rest that labour in the word and doctrine to be maintained of the Church As the Church dependeth vpō them for their allowance so they depend vpon her for their maintenance Thus the Pastour and the people do feed one another as a flocke of sheepe nourisheth the Shepheard who eateth the milke of them cloatheth himselfe with the wool of them and againe the Shepheard coucheth them into greene pastures and leadeth them by the still waters The people feed him with the bread of this life he feedeth thē with the bread of euerlasting life They minister to him in carnall things he to them in spirituall things They cannot lacke him in regard of their soules hee cannot be without them in regard of his body Thus then they do feed one another or at least ought to do If he receiue food of them and giue none vnto them againe he robbeth them of their goods and murthereth their soules If they on the other side receiue food of him so that they be taught of him and yet make him not partaker of a part of their goods they robbe him and cause him to depart from them and so become murtherers of their owne soules as if they did lay violent hands vpon themselues or rather as if they did famish themselues by refusing bread prouided for them inasmuch as where vision ceaseth there people perish Prou. 29 18. Nay the Lord accounteth of this sinne in another kinde and nature he chargeth such Church-robbers to be robbers and spoilers of God no lesse then they that stand by the high way and take a purse I doubt not but very many will be ready to scorne this comparison say What Do you liken vs to theeues Do you make no better of vs We are true
regard of the vessell into which it was poured and partly in regard of the Tabernacle in which it was placed Touching this holy water we shall haue occasion to speake more in the 18. chap. of this booke and to declare how it was and is abused in the Church of Rome partly to driue away diuels and partly to wash away sinnes and therfore we will deferre the farther handling of it vntill we come to that place Thirdly the question may be asked why Question 3 these waters ate called bitter waters Was it because of the taste of them that they were like the waters of Marah so that the people could not drinke of them Exod. 15 23. or those naughty waters and vnwholesome which Elisha healed 2 Kings 2 22. I answer Answer they are not so called in regard of any property that was in them for they were as other waters but in regard of the effect because that when once they were drunke they brought to the womā that was polluted and defiled a curse and a cruell death and an extraordinary iudgement as it followeth heereafter For if she did vndergoe all these workes and proceeded in them vnto the end and then was found guilty it argued great impenitency and hardnes of heart and in a manner open apostacy and impiety not much inferiour to Atheisme as if there were no God at all or at least no God that was able to finde her out in her sinne and therefore her punishment was more strange and not according to the ordinary visitation of others so that the vnchast woman was made a wofull and miserable spectacle of Gods heauy wrath 〈◊〉 2 9. As the tree forbidden to Adam in the garden was called the tree of the knowledge of good and euill not as though it were endued with reason to know good and euill nor as though by eating of it it could giue to our first parents the vse of reason and freewill neither yet had it this name of the lying promise of getting knowledge whereby the old serpent deceiued the woman Gen 3.5 forasmuch as God called it so before the communication that passed betweene them but of the euent which God by giuing this name signified should follow if man did not abstaine from it for thereby he should know by wofull experience what great difference is betweene the good of obedience and the euill of disobedience and should proue to his great hurt and losse how great good he had forfeited and contrariwise how great euill hee had purchased and drawne not onely vpon himselfe but vpon his posterity insomuch that hee as it were from an high top or tower of happinesse had plunged himselfe into a deepe pit of all misery and wretchednesse Question 4 Fourthly wherefore is the Priest to take the holy water and put it into an earthen vessel and not of any other matter or mettall The answere ●●swer it because it did belong and was employed in bringing vncleannesse to light if any were committed not in any holy thing and therefore God would haue no monument to remaine of it but the remembrance to bee forgotten and put out of minde so that after the tryall made and the vse of it ended it was broken as we reade in cases much lesser as Leuit 6.28 and 11.33 and 15.12 The vessel wherin the sinne offering is sodden shall be broken but if it were sodden in a brazen pot it was onely scoured and rinsed in water If the earthen vessell touched any vncleane beast it was to be broken and if he touch it that hath any issue it must be broken Question 5 Fiftly why was the Priest to take of the dust that is in the floore of the Tabernacle and then put it into the water as if they made Lye ●●●wer Heere we are to consider two things the dust that was taken and the holy place from whence it was taken As it is dust of the feet it is base and vile as it was taken from the Tabernacle it was holy and pure both these were needfull in this businesse For the dust shewed the matter to be foule filthy and vncleane which was in question and controuersie and the place appointed had relation to the sacred action to wit an heauenly adiuration wherby the woman suspected was caused to sweare that so the issue and euent of the whole matter might be acknowledged and receiued as comming from Gods determination Sixtly why did the Priest vncouer the womans Question 6 head which seemeth to bee vnseemely and against the law of nature 1 Corinth 11. doing that vnto her which she might not doe vnto herselfe seeing the woman ought to haue a couering on her head in signe shee is vnder the power and protection of her husband and that it is a shame for her to be without this couering Answer The cause is not as many suppose to shame her and bring her to publike infamy and open reproach as if the band of marriage were broken but because shee standeth nowe vppon her purgation and commeth to be tryed whether shee be faulty or not whereas if that were true she should be condemned before she were conuicted and found guilty But the reasons were two especially first by this gesture the woman being to sweare and purge her selfe by oath was as it were for the time present freed from the subiection of her husband and the matter was as it were for a time helde in suspense whether she were his wife or not and she had the reines of authority put into her owne hands that shee might sweare to the ende that beeing cleered and acquitted shee might couer her head againe and so be restored vnto her husband that euer after he might be the veile of her eyes and the defence of her person from infamy and iniurie or if it fell out otherwise shee might vndergoe the punishment and reward of her offence and the iudgement of God For while shee was suspected it was very doubtful whether shee were her husbands or not Secondly by this and other ceremonies so solemnely acted it might bee perceiued with what minde with what boldnesse and with what constancy she entred into this action Hence came the prouerbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eras adag chil 3. cent 4. to doe any thing with bare heads that is openly without all shame Such as attempted any shamefull act were wont to couer their heads as we see in Thamar Genesis chapter 38. verse 14. Shee couered her selfe with a veile and wrapped her selfe and sate downe in Pethaenaim which is by the way to Timnah c. when she went about an vngodly and vncleane action those therefore that did not so were accounted impudent and past all shame Lastly wherefore was the woman to hold Question 7 the offering in her owne hands whilest the Priest did holde the water of bitternesse The reason is because both the woman and the Priest stood before the LORD Answer shee as the party accused hee as
as we haue noted in sundry particulars before We sinne against God because we resist and withstand his will whose pleasure it is that wee bring forth the fruites of sanctification wee pollute and prophane the holie ordinance of Matrimony wee make the members of Christ the members of an harlot and so seeke to draw as much as in vs lyeth our blessed Sauiour into a filthy fellowship of our sinne Down Lectur on Hos 4 2. we defile the Temples of the holie Ghost and turne them into stewes Against our neighbour because this sinne is not committed alone but we draw some other to be partakers with vs in the same wickednesse punishment we sin against the wife or husband of the married-party whom we wrong in the cheefest treasure possession that she or he hath we sinne against the fruite of our owne body whom we disgrace brand with a note of perpetuall infamy which for the most part proue a degenerate brood through want of good-education and especially thorough the secret iudgement of God we sin against our owne families which wee oftentimes ouer-turne by defiling of them turn our houses into stewes we sin against the Cities societies kingdomes where we abide because we defile the land and cause it to vomit out the inhabitants we sinne against the church of God both by hindering the propagation thereof Malach 2 ●5 which encreaseth by an holye seed and by causing it to be euill spoken of by others as if it wer a company of vnclean persons Against our selues because we make our bodies the instruments of sin and sathan we weaken them and make them subiect to diuers diseases and we plunge soules bodies into the pit of hell which burneth with fire and brimstone Such then as are adulterers do not goe into hell alone they carry other company with them If then the iudgements of pouerty beggery infamy infirmity folly and impenitency will not mooue vs to make conscience of this sin yet let this preuail with vs that thereby we destroy our owne soules and exclude our selues from his presence Let vs threfore be watchful ouer our own wayes let vs pull vp the roote of this sinne and all other of the same sort and mortifie the deedes of the flesh Col. 3 5. Let vs cut off all occasions that may draw vs to them as surfetting drunkennesse idlenesse wantonnesse prophane company and such like And aboue all these things let vs obserue these three things First let vs remember that as God is holie so he requireth an holy people to serue him It is his wil that we liue in sanctification so that without holinesse no man can see God or haue fellowship with him Heb. 12. Secondly we must learne to feare God in his word and mark the commandement that forbiddeth adulterie Nothing maketh vs to fall into sinne but the forgetting of the Law which saith thou shalt not sin This stayed vp Ioseph in a strong tentation which being yeelded vnto did set before him a faire shew and goodly traine of all pleasures profits honors but being withstood did threaten him with a multitude of miseries hatred pouerty sorow shame imprisonment destruction and death it selfe yet he eschewed the sin by this means Shal I do this Genesis ●5 3● and sin against God The word of God must be made our wisedome and direction our guide and our counsellor it is able to deliuer vs frō the stranger that flatteteth with her wordes This is it that Salomon setteth before vs My sonne keepe thy fathers commandements Prou. 6 ●● ● 23 24. and forsake not the law of thy mother binde them continually vpon thine heart and tie them about thy necke c. For the Commandement is a lamp and the Law is light c. to keepe thee from the euill woman from the flattery of the tongue of a strange woman He teacheth that the lips of a strange woman drop as an hony combe and that her mouth is smoother then oyle but her end is bitter as worme-wood and sharpe as a two-edged sword how then shall we bee deliuered from her if the word of truth bee not in our mouthes and that which is more in our hearts to rule and reforme vs and to order our pathes aright Such as are ignorant of the word are soonest ouer-taken and they that haue not the loue and power of it dwelling in them The foolish woman that sitteth at the doore of her house and calleth the passengers that goe right in their waies Prou. 4 ● maketh choyse of such as are simple and want vnderstanding to turne in vnto her Lastly let vs keepe inuiolable the Couenant of marriage made in the presence of God of Angels and of men let the married persons make one another the delight of their eyes and the ioy of their hearts and be carefull to performe the duties they owe one to another And as the vnlawful impure coniunction of man and woman is detested of God so is holy matrimony euer accepted of him and adorned with many blessings and crowned with a continual supply of the fruits of his loue and fauour The Prophet sayeth Blessed is euery one that feareth the Lord walketh in his waies 〈◊〉 28 1 2 for thou shalt eate the labour of thine hands happy shalt thou be and it shal be well with thee thy wife shall bee as a fruitfull Vine by the sides of thine house thy children like Oliue plants round about thy table behold that thus shal the man be blessed that feareth the Lord. Riches are the inheritance of parents but a prudent wife is a speciall gift of God and wee receiue her as at his hands The Apostle doth beautifie it with an honorable title when he calleth it honorable in all It is the spirit of error which calleth that vncleane which God hath sanctified Adultery is foule and vncleane but the marriage bed is vndefiled Damnable then is the decree of Pope Syricius that marriage it selfe is the pollution of the flesh that the married cannot please God Diuellish also is the law of forced chastity restraining some orders and degrees from it whereas to auoid fornication euery man is commāded to haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband 22 And when he hath made her to drinke the water then it shall come to passe that if she be defiled and haue done a trespasse against her husband that the water that causeth the curse shal enter into her and become bitter and her belly shall swell and her thigh shall rot and the woman shall bee a curse among her people 28 And if the womā be not defiled but be clean then she shal be free and shall conceiue seed Wee haue shewed already that in setting downe this law of triall Moses obserueth 3. things First the cause is propounded Secondly the question and controuersie is determined And lastly the euent of the whole is deliuered The two former haue bene
all parents to teach their children Eph. 6 4. of Masters to bring vp their seruants in the nurture and admonition of the Lord as Abraham and Cornelius did This is a notable meanes to keep to maintaine and to defend the truth As for those that will not teach the truth to thē that are in their houses they are the diuels Prophets who is the father of error ignorance Such fathers and such masters are the cheefe meanes of the decay and decreasing of religion piety faith and righteousnesse Secondly we maintaine the truth and make it knowne by open confession and profession thereof Euery man must opē his mouth in Gods cause when the gates of hell are opened against it and wee must earnestly stand for it and constantly beare witnesse vnto it whensoeuer it is oppugned and resisted The Apostle chargeth to Sanctifie the Lord God in our hearts be ready alwaies to giue an account and answer to euerie man that asketh vs a reason of the hope that is in vs 1 Peter 3 15. with meekenesse and feare Thus did the holie Martyrs at their death witnesse a good confession and thereby draw many to a loue and embracing of that truth for which they suffered If we be bold to confesse the Lord Iesus and his Gospell He will not be ashamed of vs in his kingdome but confesse vs before his father Mat. 10 32 33. Thirdly we must leade an holy and sanctified life and giue a good example vnto those among whom we liue An vnblameable and vnreprooueable conuersation is a great meanes to cause others to embrace godlinesse when we are carefull to adorne the Gospell of Christ with a good life whereas otherwise we cause the enemies of God to blaspheme the name of God and to speake euill of the truth Therefore the Apostle willeth vs to be blamelesse and harmlesse the sonnes of God Philip. 2 15. without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and peruerse nation among whom we must shine as lights in the world holding forth the word of life Lastly we must maintaine his truth by the armour of prayer desiring God to make an open way and free passage for his owne ordinance and also to send forth painfull plentifull Labourers into his haruest to gather his corne together and to withstand all false doctrines and heresies This doeth Christ command Math. 9.38 This doe the Apostles practise Actes 4 30. God hath in great mercie vouchsafed his word vnto vs it is our dutie to seeke to vphold and maintain it that so it may be continued vnto vs and our posterity for euer Let vs therefore practise these few points and be carefull to practise instruction confession and inuocation Thus we shall shew our loue to the truth a minde ready to receiue it a memory ready to retaine it and an heart ready to practise it 5 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 6 Take the Leuites from among the Children of Israel and cleanse them 7 And thus shalt thou do vnto them c. The second part of the Chapter followeth concerning the Leuites wherein obserue two things First the separation of them from the rest of the people secondly a limitation of time by the speciall commandement of God for the entering into their office Their separation or setting apart for the ministration in the Tabernacle offereth vnto vs the commādement of God and the obedience of Moses and Aaron and the whole congregation performed to the commandement of God Their separation is noted by many particular circumstances they must be clensed with water of purifying their garments must be washed their flesh must be shaued Verse 7. they must take one yong Bullocke for a meate offering and another for a sinne offering verse 8. And Aaron must offer them verse 12. the hands of the Elders must be imposed on them v. 9 10. and they must be offered before the Lord ver 11 13. Where we see that such as are appointed to handle the holy things of God must be washed and clensed with holy water It is very meete and conuenient that they should approach thereunto with pure hands euen in respect of outward cleannesse Exod. 25 31. But heereby is another thing meant Namely that the Ministers and generally al others that draw neere to God in performance of any dutie ●●●●rine must bee clensed and washed ●inisters 〈◊〉 other ●●aw 〈◊〉 to God 〈◊〉 ●e clen●● they must haue cleane hearts cleane affections cleane workes whensoeuer they come into his presence This was figured out to Moses Exod. 3. when hee was about to draw neere to see the burning bush the Lord saide Put off thy shoes for the ground wheron thou standest is holy groūd Salomon willeth vs to take heed to our foote when we enter into the house of God Eccl. 5 1. When we go about to pray we must lift vp pure and holy hands 1 Tim. 2 8. When wee come to the Sacraments we are willed to examine our selues and so eate of that bread drinke of that cup 1 Cor. 11 28. Whensoeuer we present our selues in the Congregation to heare the word we must lay apart all filthines and superfluity of naughtinesse and receyue with meeknesse the engrafted word which is able to saue our soules Iames 1 21. Wee must cast off all malice and all guile and hypocrisies enuies and euill speakings that so we may grow by the milke of the word 1 Pet. 2.1.2 This we ought to do the rather First because Reason 1 God is present euery where Mat. 18. His eye is vpon all his suppliants that pray vnto him vpon all his guests that come to the table vpon all men that heare his voice Mat. 22.11 He taketh a view and surueigh of such as preasse into his presence Zeph. 1 12. That he may giue to euerie man according to his works If we search not our hearts he wil search them if we iudge not our selues he will iudge vs 1 Cor. 11. His eie is vpon vs to approue of vs if we do well to reiect vs if we do euill as the examples of Caine and Abel shew Secondly without this inward sanctification all our exercises of Religion are reiected and therefore we are willed when we come before the Lord To wash vs and make vs cleane to put away the euill of our doings Esay 1 16. Vse 1 This reproueth all such as offer to perform diuine duties to almighty God without meditation or preparation such as rush violently into Gods presence without due reuerence and regard Math. 22. as he did that came to the feast without his wedding garment There was but one such guest yet the Lord soone espied him and called him out If there be but one such in an assembly he cannot escape the all-seeing eye of God who hath also a reuenging eye that cannot see his honor and glorie defaced Who wold presume or dare to come into the presence of an earthly Prince in an vnseemely
quickned and the vital spirits begin to work all the rest of the members reioyce So it should be with vs when it may be said This my brother was dead and is aliue againe hee was lost and is found it is meete we should make merry and be glad Luke 15.32 When the sheepe that went astray is brought home into the sheepefold why should we not reioyce there is ioy in the presence of the Angels of God in heauen ouer one sinner that repenteth verse 7.10 When the hand of the Lord was with the Apostles so that a great number beleeued and turned vnto him they were glad and exhorted them all that with purpose of heart they should cleaue vnto the Lord Act. 11.23 and 13.48 When therefore we see the Church grow in grace and increase in number and florish in peace we cannot but reioyce and be glad This is a notable signe and infallible token that we are fellow members of that body and that the word of God hath gotten roote in our hearts This vse is taught by the Prophet Psal 47.6 7 8 9. Sing praises to God sing praises sing prayses vnto our king sing praises for God is the king of all the earth and reigneth ouer the heathen c. The faithfull were wont to giue him thankes for the encrease of their priuate houses much more then ought we to doe it when the house of GOD encreaseth and his sauing health is made known more and more But of this doctrine see more chap. 23.10 CHAP. XI Ver. 1. AND when the people complained it displeased the Lord and the Lord heard it and his anger was kindled c. HEere beginneth the second part of the booke 〈◊〉 sec●nd 〈◊〉 of the ●●●ke according to the diuision obserued before wherein we are to consider the iournies of the children of Israel according vnto their particular murmurings against God Of this chapter there are two parts which are two of their murmurings both of them fell out in their twelfth remouing as appeareth in the 33 chapter afterward where their seuerall stations are particularly distinguished The first is in the three first verses opening vnto vs their sinne their chastisement and the euent thereof The cause of their murmuring and the words of these murmurers are not expressed but may in part be gathered from the end of the former chapter where it appeareth they departed from Mount Sinai three daies iourney without resting or intermission with all their luggage and portage as it were with bag and baggage they had rested long at the foot of the Mountaine now therefore it is tedious and toilsome vnto them to goe so long together so that they begin to fret and rage to murmure and complaine against Moses or rather against God himselfe The iudgement followeth the sinne and ouertaketh the sinner for God is offended at it and sent a fire from heauen which consumed the vttermost part of the Campe and no doubt burnt vp many of them in the same God hath all creatures in his owne hand sometimes he drowneth with water sometimes hee consumeth with fire somtimes he infecteth with the aire and sometimes swalloweth vp in the eatth neuer leaueth sinne and rebellion vnpunished so long as there is any creature in the world to arme against the sinner Lastly we haue the euent and issue of all the people cryed to Moses whom they contemned before and he vnto God who was intreated to spare them and a monument both of their sinne and of Gods iudgement is described by the place which is named Taberah that is a burning vpon this occasion First of all let vs consider their murmuring This is a greeuous sinne or rather an heape of many sinnes compacted together as pride disdaine vnthankfulnesse infidelity impatience forgetfulnesse tempting of God and a violent insurrection ioyned with fretting and chasing against him and many such like corruptions The doctrine Doctrine from this example is this that it is the property of carnall men Carnall men are ready to murmure against God vpon euery occasion whensoeuer any thing falleth not out according to their corrupt desire to murmure against God as Prou. 19 3. This was the common behauiour of the discontented Israelites while they wandred in the wildernesse and sometimes they wished they had died in Egypt rather thē they would any way be crossed in their humours Exod. 16 and 17 3. This male-contentednesse died not with Reason 1 them for first euery one would haue what him listeth and regardeth not what God appointeth and approueth Ier. 44 16 17 and 18 verse 12. Secondly euery man would haue present helpe in trouble he cannot abide quietly to be one moment vnder the Crosse and if it be not by and by remoued he sheweth the corruption that is in him We are like to him that hauing receiued a wound will be healed presently or else he will not be healed at all Thirdly they want faith and hope to beleeue in God and to waite vpon him Now faith is the substance of things hoped for the euidence of things not seene Heb. 11 1. And if wee hope for that which we see not we do with patience waite for it Rom. 8 25. Fourthly they deuise and inuent to themselues false causes of their crosses and neuer enter into their owne hearts to consider the true cause as Deut. 1 27. Ye murmured in your tents and said Because the Lord hated vs hee hath brought vs foorth out of the Land of Egypt to deliuer vs into the hand of the Amorites to destroy vs. They should haue accused themselues and not God they should haue confessed their owne sinnes not haue alledged the hatred of God which was to make that the cause which was not the cause and not to make that to be the cause which indeed was the true cause The vses This serueth iustly to reproue all Vse 1 such as mutter and murmure when they haue not their owne will like waiward children that will neuer be quiet but whē their mouths are ful How many are there that mislike their places and callings and fret against God if he do not please them in all things If they bee touched with pouerty famine sicknes losses or any kinde of aduersity they are offended and discontented with the Almighty If God send out any contagious sicknesse or blasting or mildew or foule weather c. how do we take on and vex our selues We are like the Israelites we breake out into impatiency we neuer thinke vpon our owne deseruings nor consider we haue deserued far greater plagues We may say as Moses doth The Lord heareth the murmurings of the people Exod. 16.12 Or rather these are like that prophane beast in the booke of the kings when in extremity of famine 2 King 6.33 he faid Behold this euill commeth of the Lord shall I attend on the Lord any longer Some there are that smell rankly of the smoke of the Romish religion who will seeme to cast
cut off the better it is with him for thereby his sinnes are fewer and his iudgement shall be easier It is not so with the godly man Againe the vnbeleeuer and polluted person poisoneth and infecteth all things that he medleth withall hee defileth the earth the aire the heauens the beasts the fruites and all creatures and persons that liue with them Leuitic 18 2. The land of Canaan was defiled by the inhabitants and it is saide that in the end it should spew them out Deut. 28 15 16 c. Hag. 2 14. Thirdly men are vnable of themselues to Vse 3 heare the word of saluation Ioh. 8 43. so that to beleeue and practise religion is not easie our naturall disposition is as contrary to it as fire and water Matth. 16 17. The carnall man seeth no more in the word of God then in the word of man nay his naturall reason will minister reason vnto him to thinke it is foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1 21. and to perswade him that he neede not to be so precise in the hearing of it nor be so curious in keeping of the Sabbath day Let vs therefore forsake this counseller it neuer speaketh good vnto vs but euill and crosseth the motions of the Spirit Fourthly the preaching of the word is a Vse 4 necessary meanes to bring vs to God and to worke in vs sauing faith and sanctified obedience Many men are by nature very wise deepe-sighted into matters of the world and can diue to the bottome of all humane knowledge neuerthelesse all this is weake and vnsufficient to bring vs to saluation as appeareth in the example of Achitophel Hee was a great politician his answers were as the Oracles of God 2 Sam. 16 23. yet was not all his wisedome able to guide and conduct him vnto heauen or heauenly things but hee ended his dayes in horror and despaire 2 Sa. 17 23. Therefore another meanes was needefull to bring vs to the knowledge of God and of our selues God hath left vnto vs his worde and would haue it preached and expounded in the Church that thereby we might bee saued as 1 Cor. 1 20 21. Where is the Scribe Where is the disputer of this world Hath not GOD made foolish the wisedome of this world For after that in the wisedome of God the world by wisedome knew not God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue Lastly we must learne to submit our wisedome Vse 5 and our willes our vnderstanding and counsell to the will and counsell of God after the example of Christ Math. 26 42. Not my will but thy will bee done Wee must craue of GOD to direct vs in his will and to teach vs his wayes Verse 23. The Lord said vnto Moses Is the Lords hand waxed short Heerein we haue the answer of God setting his Almighty power against the want of all meanes and as a sufficient remedy of all euills This teacheth that all things Doctrine Things vnpossible with men are possible with God euen aboue nature and reason and how vnlikely and vnpossible soeuer in the eies of man are possible with God and he can easily bring them to passe Esa 50.1 Gen. 18.14 Zach. 8.6 Ier. 32.27 Luke 1.37 Matt. 19.29 Reason 1 For why He is in heauen and there decreeeth and accomplisheth whatsoeuer hee will Psa 115.3 nothing can giue any impediment to his purposes Secondly he made all things of nothing in the beginning for the things which are seene were not made of things which doe appeare Heb. 11.3 hee also gouerneth them all as a Captaine doth his hoste or army Exod. 15.3 He dryeth vp the sea he maketh the floods a desert and clotheth the heauens with darkenesse Esay 50.2 Thirdly this is the nature and essence of God to be almighty take this from him and we deny him to be God and make him to be weake and impotent which can no way agree to him Vse 1 The vses Learne from hence not to tye God to the course of second causes he made the Sunne to stand still Iosh 10.13 hee made the fire ceasse to burne that it could not hurt them that were cast into it Dan. 3.25 Hebr 11.33 he stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Heb. 11.33 he made the yron to swimme which naturally sinketh to the bottome 2 King 6.6 hee made the waters stand still on an heape that they flowed not and his people passed through as on dry land Exod. 14.22 Iosh 3.17 Psal 114.5 It is he that worketh miracles and changeth the course of nature This sheweth the difference betweene God and all other creatures True it is they haue power but they are not able to worke miracles but by the power of him that ruleth the creatures Vse 2 Secondly doubt not of any of Gods promises Rom. 4.20 21 though they seeme neuer so vnlikely or vncertain Let vs not doubt of saluation nor despaire of the conuersion of any Rom. 11. but be assured that he is able to doe it This is a point which we ought to be well grounded in we haue vse of it in all estates and conditions of life especially in times of affliction and aduersity Doubt not of his fauour in prouiding for vs temporall things hee hath promised that hee will neuer leaue vs nor forsake vs neither in youth nor age neither in peace nor warre neither in plenty nor pouerty he is able to make good the words of his owne mouth hee is our helper and deliuerer Heb. 13. 5 6. Doubt not of his goodnes toward vs in spirituall things he is entred into couenant with vs that hee will write his lawes in our hearts and remember our sinnes and iniquities no more Ier. 31.33 34. This is our comfort that hee whom we serue is a God Almighty Thirdly we see that God can reuenge himselfe Vse 3 of all his enemies as also of the enemies of the Church Deut. 32.39 42. Let them therefore feare him Exod. 15.16 Heb. 10.31 euen him that is able to cast body and soule into hell fire I say vnto you feare him Matth. 10.28 they lie vnder his hand that can execute vengeance there is no power in any creature to rid himselfe from his power Fourthly be liberall to the poore 2 Cor. 9.7.8 Vse 4 God is able to make all grace abound toward vs. He is able to make vs abound and to preserue vs from want and therefore relying and grounding our selues vpon his power we should make others to abound giue cheerefully to our brethren that want and distribute to their necessities according as wee haue receiued Lastly we ought to study and endeuour to Vse be vpright in our liues and conuersations Gen. 17.1 2. Let vs humble our selues vnder the most mighty hand of God 1 Pet. 5.6 and quake at his iudgements as the childe vnder the rod Leuit. 10.3 Let vs repent vs of our euill wayes and serue him in newnesse of life Verse 24 25 26. And Moses went
argument of loue and charity greater loue then this can no man shew So saith Christ to Peter When thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren Luke 22 32. Iam. 5 19 20. Secondly this serueth to condemne the Vse 2 practise of many men in our times and to testifie that they are farre from God and can haue no assurance to themselues that they are his children and beare his image God is desirous to seeke out and to saue them that are lost Luke 13 1● like the good Shepheard that leaueth 99 in the wildernesse and this was the end of the comming of Christ But we are for the most part carelesse in this duty few do thinke it to belong vnto them Others are so farre from seeking to conuert that they rather seeke to subuert others and of these the number is farre greater then of the former who doe crosse by all meanes they can the purpose and desire of God He laboureth to saue and they to destroy he to build and they to pull downe he to plant and they to root vp hee to bring to heauen and they to hell These are of their father the diuell and his lustes they do they ioyne with him they labour for him they aduance and enlarge his kingdome and they seeke to bring moe vnto him This is a fearefull sinne which we must repent of or else we shall repent of it when it is too late Lastly this must teach euery one to haue a Vse 3 speciall care of his own saluation seeing God is so desirous of it For euery man should bee more carefull of his own good then another or of anothers It is so in the body it ought also to be so in the soule We cannot be more carefull of our owne saluation then God is therefore seeing he is so desirous of it let euery man labour to doe what in him lieth toward his conuersion that so God may accept of him But some will say Obiect It lieth not in my power to conuert my selfe I can do nothing vntill it please God to worke it I answer Answer doe that which is in thy power and God will giue a blessing It lieth in thy power to heare the word to reade the Scriptures and to attend to the Ministery of it Come diligently and constantly to the place of Gods worship God will worke in thee his grace to thy conuersion If thou do not neuer accuse God but the frowardnesse of thine owne will which failest in that which thou art enabled to do For if we say wee desire saluation and yet despise the meanes we deceiue our selues On the other side from hence ariseth matter of special comfort to euery one that truely endeuoreth his owne saluation and can make enquiry into his estate whether he be one of that number that shall be saued or not For although hee be clogged with many sinnes and daily addeth more vnto the burden yet let him not despaire nor thinke they shall hinder his saluation This is his comfort that with God all things are possible and when the desire and power of God go together how great soeuer his sinnes be he shall not neede to doubt of his saluation Let him looke vp to Christ his merits do surmount all our sinnes 4 And thou shalt lay them vp in the Tabernacle of the Congregation before the testimony where I will meete with you 5 And it shall come to passe that the mans rod whom I shall choose shall blossome and I wil make to cease from me the murmurings of the children of Israel whereby they murmure against you 6 And Moses spake vnto the children of Israel c. The Lord goeth forward to declare his wil to Moses and foretelleth his great and miraculous worke that in one day the rod should bring forth buds blossomes and fruites to stay the murmuring of the people All miracles serue to some good end and as a kinde of Sacraments do confirme some doctrine These rods were not greene and growing but were long since cut off from their trees and altogether withered ●●c Com. ●●b 17. and according to the opinion of some were such as the Princes for honors sake did carry when they executed iudgment Wherfore it was vnpossible according to the course of nature that any of them should bee fresh and flourish and bring forth fruite For as they were all of them laide vp together so they were all of them alike dead and without life and therefore whereas Aarons rod flourished and by flourishing the vigor of life appeared to be in it it manifested apparently the power of God and the Priesthood of Aaron If any obiect ●ection that the emulation and murmuring could not by this meanes bee taken away betweene the house of Aaron and the rest of the Leuites seeing his name onely was written vpon the rod and not the names of any of them 〈◊〉 I answer that seeing God shewed forth his power almighty in that rod which had the name of Aaron vpon it it was a plaine signe and infallible token that Aaron was chosen to the Priesthood and that al others were excluded from that dignity and so the people confesse in the end of the chapt Now whereas God in the flourishing of the rod saith that he would shew whom he had chosen hee declareth that in bestowing his giftes and benefits in the church hee doth not respect any mans merit but dealeth with euery one according to his owne good pleasure Aaron was not aduanced to the Priestly dignity by any vertue of his owne but meerely through the grace of God So are wee adopted and made heires of euerlasting life not through our own workes or merits but by Gods fauour seeing it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie Ro 9 16. Of this we haue spoken before chap. 2. v. 18.19 Touching this miracle which God purposeth and promiseth to worke in the sight of all Israel wee learne Doctrine That God hath from time to time wrought miracles against the course of nature for the good of his church God can work miracles aboue Nature when it pleaseth him Hee is not tied to the ordinary course of naturall things but he worketh extraordinarily so often as it pleaseth him All times and ages of the church witnesse this truth and testify the miraculous workes of his hand in the Sun in the Moone in the Aire in the Waters in the Fire in the Earth and in all creatures both high and low Thus he plagued the Egyptians Psal 105 27 29 30 32 34 c. Thus he dealt with his owne people when they came out of Egypt Psa 78 12 13 14.15 16. Leuit. 9.24 Ioshua 10 12 Iudg. 6 21 13 19. 1 Kings 18. In the New Testament we haue sundry miracles of Christ our Sauiour and the miracle of al miracles accomplished which was prophesied long before that a Virgin should conceiue and beare a sonne Esay
euer they were to displease their fathers as if the whole world were gouerned by witches O that these men would be as carefull to please God as fearefull to offend him as for witches they are more afraid of them thē hurt they are but the diuels instruments to deceiue the world the diuell hath vtterly blinded the eyes of these and of many others to make them beleeue that they do those things which they neuer do neither indeed can do The diuell himselfe is Gods seruant or rather slaue to do his will whether he will or no for he can do nothing but what the Lord willeth He ruleth all things by his prouidence the diuell cannot kil a flye except he haue liberty giuen vnto him But to returne to the former point that it is God onely that worketh myracles obserue with me that he worketh two waies somtime by himselfe alone God worketh myracles two waies and sometimes by some other creature By himselfe alone when he vseth no instrument at all as in the creation of the world making al things of nothing without helpe of Angel or other matter So he turned backe the shadow of the diall of Ahaz by himselfe alone and many other such like Againe when it pleaseth him he vseth means as in the myracles wrought in Egypt he did them by the hand of Moses and Aaron But heere we must take heed of two extremes and God is dishonoured by both of them First that we derogate nothing from the Maiesty of God albeit it please him to vse meanes in many of his myracles because he vseth thē freely not of necessity and he is as well able to worke without them as with them Secondly that we do not magnifie the creatures and instruments which the Lord vseth aboue that which is conuenient because that were to set them in the place of God who haue no more power then that which is giuen them from aboue Obiect But some may heere aske the question why doth God vse meanes in working of myracles Why did he vse the holy Prophets and Apostles and sometimes also such as haue no iustifying faith Mat. 7 22 23. as Iudas and others no doubt as he preached so he wrought myracles for he had the same commission with the rest Math 10 7 8. I answer Answer he vseth them not because he standeth in need of them or is tied vnto them but for these causes Why God vseth mean in working of myracles First to teach vs that he approueth the meanes whereby things are brought to passe and he sheweth by his owne example that we should make account of them so that if any neglect or contemne them he opposeth himselfe against the Lord. Secondly to support and vphold mans weaknesse who is not able to looke vpon his Maiesty when he worketh by himselfe as a weake eye cannot see things that are farre off except he put on his spectacles This is plaine in the example of the Israelites Exo. 19 18 19 when they heard the thunder and lightning and the sound of a Trumpet exceeding loud and the Mountaine smoaking they were so afraid that they desired the Lord to speake no more vnto them Exod. 20 19. but that Moses might speake vnto them and they would heare him Thirdly the Lord vseth meanes for the triall of our faith whether we will ascribe the work that is wrought onely to the worker thereof or to the meanes or partly to the one and partly to the other or as some doe all to the instrument and nothing to the principall In the myracles wrought by Christ himselfe wee see how diuersly men were affected for thogh they were effected by the finger of God yet the Pharisies blasphemed Math. 12 24. and said This fellow casteth out diuels by Beelzebub the Prince of the diuels This argueth great corruption of nature and want of faith Obiect And as we haue shewed why God vseth meanes so it may be asked what meanes God vseth in working myracles I answer Answer they are of diuers sorts First such as nay seeme to haue some force and power in them for the working of the myracle 2 King 20 1. When the waters of Marah were bitter that the people could not drinke of them the Lord shewed Moses a tree which when he had cast into the waters they became sweet Secondly Exo. 16 23 ● he vseth meanes that haue no appearance of any power or vse in the working of a myracle such was the touching of the hem of Chrsts garment which infinite numbers touched Math. 9.21 Luke 8 45. and yet receiued no vertue from thence Such was the lifting vp of the rod of Moses and the stretching out of his hand at the red sea Such was the striking of the Rocke with his staffe at the waters of strife Numb 20. which had no power to make the waters gush out Such was the handkerchieffe of Paul to cure diseases Acts 5 15 ● 19 12. Iosh 6 20 the shadow of Peter by which many were healed For these cures were wrought when the Apostles were absent and knew nothing of them but were busied in other more important workes of their callings Thirdly he vseth such meanes as seeme no way auaileable vnto the worke but rather quite contrary to hinder it as curing the blinde man He spat on the ground and made clay of the spittle and laid vpon his eies Iohn 9 6 11. which might seeme more auaileable to put out sight then to restore it to make a man blinde then to make him see Thus then wee see and learne to acknowledge that euery miracle is wrought by the sole and omnipotent power of God Lastly we learne heereby that we haue a Vse 4 most sure word of the Prophets and Apostles whereunto we must take heed as vnto a light that shineth in darke places We are not cunningly circumuented by deuised fables but we haue the whole doctrine of saluation deliuered in the Scriptures fully confirmed vnto vs. For to what end do all the extraordinary works of God done by the hands of the Prophets and Apostles serue but to make plaine the doctrine which is according to godlines and thereby to worke in our hearts faith and beleefe The myracles of Christ vnwritten Ioh. 10 30 ● therefore now vnknowne were not vnprofitable to be read vnworthy to be known neuerthelesse these were sufficient When Christ came into the world Esay 9 6. he was many waies wonderfull it is one of his names by which he was to be called he was wonderfull in his person wonderfull in his doctrine and wonderfull in his workes In his person Math. 1 23. Luke 1 35. because of the vnion of his two natures he was both God man In his doctrine the word preached by him because hee taught the way of God plainely Math. 22 1● cleerely and euidently nay as one that had authority for his word
abuses that publikely reigned The Psalmist exhorting Iudges to their dutie and reproouing euill in them saith How long will ye iudge vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Psal 82.2 The Apostle saith of himselfe Woe vnto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 he doth not say if I liue prophanely as also hee might haue done but he mentioneth the sinne of his proper calling as the greater euill The reasons follow First because God hath set men in seuerall places and callings and giuen them their limits and bounds that they should not passe If then they breake these bounds as the waters doe their bankes it must of necessity follow that they commit a farre greater sinne against God because they cast his cords from them and will not suffer themselues to be tyed with them as we might easily shew in the examples of Vzzah the Leuite 2 Sam. 6.7 and Vzziah the king 2 Chron. 26.19 Secondly from the proper workes of our callings we haue our name and denomination For as our calling is so we are esteemed as this man is said to bee a Minister that man a Magistrate another a master another a seruant and therefore those offences are the greatest which rush against our proper functions It is noted that when Ahab beganne to reigne he did euill in the sight of the Lord aboue all that were before him 1 King 19.30 and wherein did he euill or what is hee charged withall the holy Ghost might haue said because he shed much innocent blood but the euil wherewith he is charged is that he reared vp an altar for Baal in the house of Baal which he had built verse 32. and made a groue to prouoke the Lord God of Israel to anger The vses This teacheth that all sinnes are not equal Vse 1 and that the same sinnes in seuerall persons are not equall The persons make a great difference concerning the sinne forasmuch as the person is so the sinne is Ignorance is one and the same sinne in whomsoeuer it be whether in the Minister or in a priuate man but in respect of his office in the Minister more then in another If a theefe shall robbe a man by the high way side it is an offence but it is not accounted so great an offence because it is his practise But if a Iudge which should minister iustice indifferently to all and doth sit in iudgement vpon the common theefe if hee shal rob or spoile a man it is much the greater in regard of his place and office wherein God hath set him For he sinneth against his owne calling which he professeth wheras the theefe hath through custome made that his calling albeit a foule and faulty calling Secondly as we must auoide all sinne so especially Vse 2 those sinnes that are committed against our calling against the maine scope of our profession forasmuch as they are most hainous aboue all others and doe most dishonour God and deserue the greatest punishment Some men would account it a small offence for the Prophet that was sent out of Bethel to cry aloude against the altar to returne backe and to eate bread and drinke water in the house of the old Prophet but because hee sinned against his speciall calling 1 King 13.9.16 therefore he was deuoured of a Lyon If the Minister of the word shall be ignorant in the Scriptures and not able to instruct the people he shall be more punished then a priuate man because he ought especially both to haue and to teach knowledge It is more shame for a Lawyer that professeth the law to be ignorant in the Law then for another that is no way toward it It is a sinne in fathers that teach not their children and masters their seruants but more for the Ministers not to teach their people This made Christ our Sauiour pronounce an heauy sentence against the expounders of the Law Lu. 11.52 Woe vnto you ye Lawyers for ye haue taken away the key of knowledge ye enter not in your selues and them that were entring in ye hindred The woman was created and appointed of God to be an helper and comforter vnto her husband if then she shall greeue and vexe him Gen. 2.18 her sin is far the greater then if another do it because she sinneth against her calling and creation and is thereby made the lesse excusable as appeareth in Iobs wife whom hee doth more sharpely reprooue then he doth others chap. 2.10 and 19.17 The like we might say of all other callings of the Minister toward the people and the people toward their Minister Vse 3 Thirdly it teacheth vs the cause why many of Gods owne people are more sharpely punished in this life for the most part thē others and why they suffer more for lesse sinnes then the vngodly doe heere for farre greater because they sinne against their vocation and profession because they are partakers of the heauenly calling Heb. 3.1 Which words the Apostle vseth as a reason to perswade to be obedient vnto Christ and therefore their sinnes are greater then of others that neuer had that calling which know not what this heauenly calling meaneth Moses and Aaron for a little want of Sanctifying the Name of God and that but once at Meribah were notwithstanding punished with this that they should neuer enter into the land of Canaan whereas many a prophane and wretched man that sinned a thousand times more entred into it the reason is because they sinned against their calling vnto which God had called them So likewise for the children of God to prophane the Sabbath is a greater sinne and they may looke for a more fearefull punishment for the same in this life then the wicked shall haue because they sinne against their heauenly vocation And if they be not carefull to order their families aright to looke to their children and seruants that they serue the Lord they may expect greater iudgements from God then others that peraduenture are a thousand times worse and haue their houses more a thousand times vnreformed as we see in the example of Eli otherwise a good man for he his whole house were ouerturned and destroyed 1 Sam. 4.17 18 20. because God hath a purpose to condemne prophane persons vtterly in the life to come The like wee might say of Dauid hee committed adultery but once with Bathsheba the wife of Vriah yet did GOD threaten to raise vp euill out of his owne house so that he would take his wiues and giue them to his neighbour that should lie with them in the sight of the Sunne and not long after did his son commit incest with his daughter Thus did God seuerely punish his owne seruant whiles many vncleane persons liue in filthy adultery and daily embrace the bosome of a stranger who notwithstanding taste no such punishment their houses are safe from feare neither is the rod of God vpon them Iob 21.9 Seeing this is so we should not iudge hardly and vncharitably
answer Answ be it that they are greeuous yet do not say they are greater then can be forgiuen For that is a greater offence against God then the committing of those sinnes that lye so heauie vpon our consciences Hence it is that the Lord saith Though your sinnes be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow and though they bee red as Crimson they shal be as wooll Esay 1 18. Doth not he much abridge and cut short the Princes power and mercy that shall say hee can pardon onely lesser and smaller offences committed against him but cannot pardon Treason and rebellion And doth not he shrink vp the sinewes of Gods power that is infinit and accuse him of impotency and weaknesse that chargeth him not to bee able to forgiue such as are the greatest offenders against him Nay as the mercy of a Prince is most of all seene in sealing a pardon vnto such as haue prouoked him in the highest degree so is the grace and goodnesse of GOD especially manifested in forgiuing those that are sinners aboue others that so Where sinne aboundeth grace may abound much more Rom. 5 20. Againe as well we might say in a pride confidence of our owne works that our good deeds are greater then he can sufficiently reward as in despaire to pronounce that our euill deeds are greater then he can pardon because as his mercie is greater then al our good workes so his power is greater then all our euill workes Who did euer come vnto him to intreate fauour and forgiuenesse at his handes that went away vnpardoned Paul testifieth of himselfe that he was the cheefe of sinners 1. Tim. 1 15. and the least of the Saints Eph. 3 8. yet he obtained pardon And wherefore euen because this example of Gods mercy shewed him should bee an instruction vnto the Church of God for euer that he will deale in like manner with all other that truely repent how great soeuer their sinnes be 11 He that toucheth the dead body of a man shall be vncleane euen seauen dayes 12 He shall purifie himselfe therewith the third day and the seuenth day he shall be cleane but if he purifie not himselfe the third day then the seauenth day he shall not be cleane 13 Whosoeuer toucheth the corpes of any man that is dead and purgeth not himselfe defileth the Tabernacle of the Lord and that person shal be cut off from Israel because the sprinkling water was not sprinkled vpon him he shall be vncleane his vncleannesse shall remaine still vpon him 14 This is the Law When a man dieth in a tent all that come into the tent and all that is in the tent shall be vncleane seuen daies 15 And all the vessels that be open which haue no couering fastned vpon them shal be vncleane 16 Also whosoeuer toucheth one that is slaine with a sword c. 17 Therefore for an vncleane person they shall take of the burnt ashes of the same offering pure water c. 18 And a cleane person shall take hysop and dip it in the water and sprinkle it in the tent and vpon all the vessels c. 19 And the cleane person shall sprinkle vpon the vncleane the third day c. 20 But the man that is vnclean and purifieth not himselfe that person shall be cut off c. 21 And it shall be a perpetuall law vnto them that he that sprinkleth the water of separation c. We haue shewed before how God appointed a red heyfer to be offered and of the ashes thereof hallowed water to bee made wherewith to sprinkle those that are vncleane by touching a dead body or by comming neere any thing belonging to the dead The heathen themselues had certaine purging sacrifices certaine holy waters whereby they cleansed and purified sometimes their land forces and sometimes their sea-forces and sometimes their cattle But that which God prescribeth to his people in this place is of another sort and to another end Moses therefore declareth what persons and what things are to be clensed verses 11 14 15. the time when verse 12. the punnishment of him that omitteth this clensing ver 13 20. the maner how to clense with this water verses 18 19. and how long this Law shall continue verse 21. So then the point that commeth to be considered in this chap. is the water of separation and the vse therof among the people of God Doctrine The water o● separation what vse it hath to vs. This thogh it concerned the Israelites onely and was to remaine among them touching the practise as a perpetuall statute yet it had an end in him that brought an end to all types and figures and hee that was buried in the earth for our sinnes buried with him in the graue these ceremonies Neuerthelesse as we haue often noted before there do still remaine diuers and sundrie morall vses from hence for our further instruction which binde vs to the end of the world The vses First of all this serueth to reproue the Papists who haue patched vp their religion with sundry shewes of ceremonies partly Iewish and partly heathenish And from an imitation of this water of separation commanded in this place to be vsed in sprinkling of the vncleane their tents also and vessels they haue brought in their holy water sprinkle and maintaine their superstitious blessing with crosses and their hallowing of waxe palmes ashes ● de cul●t lib. ● 7. holy bread salt oyle and such like trash and trumpery beare men in hand that they haue power to driue away diseases and to cast out diuels These institutions are apish imitations of the Iewish rites a raising of them out of their graues where they lay buried and rotten long agoe and yet they seeke to quicken them and to put life into them againe Bellarmine handling this point at large deliuereth his opinion in two propositions the first that water oyle bread candles ashes palmes and such like are rightly blessed The second that they are rightly vsed to signifie and to worke supernaturall effects So then the question and controuersie arising between the Church of Rome and vs is this whether these creatures may be vsed not only to signifie but to work supernatural effects To proue this he alledgeth two testimonies out of this book ●b 5.17 the one out of the 5. cha touching the waters of iealousie that if they were drunken they brought to the adultresse certaine destruction for the water caused the curse to enter into her ●b 5.27 so that her belly did swell and her thigh rot The other out of this Chapter touching the waters of separation so called verse 9. and 13. because they were to be sprinkled with it who for some legall vncleannesse were separated from the holy Tabernacle and the company of others ●●cl annot ●nc lo● Piscat ●l in Nu●●9 9 The Iewes were not hereby washed from their wickednesse that were sprinckled with this water
but it was vsed to wash them from the pollutions of the Law when they had touched a dead corpes or such like But what is all this being granted to heale diseases or to driue away diuels according to their doctrine teaching that these sanctified creatures may be vsed to these purposes And if this holy water had any such secret force or inherent vertue what needed so great a multitude of poore impotent people blinde halt withered to wait for the moouing of the water of the poole of Bethesda at Ierusalem or he that had an infirmity thirty eight yeeres to lye languishing so long for want of one to put him into the poole whensoeuer the Angel went down to trouble the water Ioh. 5.2 3 4 Seeing both he and all the rest might haue bin healed so easily by euery Priest if the water of separation or the water of iealousie could haue helped them We reade of many possessed by diuels brought to Christ that he might cast them out of them Libr. chry Ioh. ● praelect could the Iewes themselues doe it by this sprinkling of water If they could not then is Bellarmine grosly deceiued and goeth about to deceiue his readers when he affirmeth that these are creatures which were indeed effectuall to worke some effects were also effectuall to worke these supernaturall effects to wit to driue away diuels and to heale diseases This had beene a ready way and a quicke dispatch if any thing could haue beene done by them When the disciples of Iohn came to Christ to know whether he were the promised Messiah or that they should looke for another he wished them to tell Iohn what they had seene and heard The blinde receiue their sight the lame walke the lepers are cleansed the deafe heare and the dead are raised vp Matth. 11.5 But if the common and ordinary vse of the waters of expiation and cleansing could haue effected these miraculous workes he would neuer haue gone about to prooue himselfe to be the Messiah by these arguments which should haue beene weake vncertaine and vntrue Nay doe the Iesuites thinke that the waters of iealousie haue now any force to try the adultresse that after she hath drunke thereof her belly should swell and her thigh should rot No doubtlesse and therefore if it retaine not the effect which it had at the first institution how shall wee thinke it can haue other and the same farre greater and stranger effects True it is when God appointeth the creatures to be vsed they haue oftentimes supernaturall effects as when Elisha by salt healed the vnwholesome waters 2 King 2.21 and did cleanse and cure the leaprosie of Naaman by his seuentimes washing in Iordan 2 King 5.14 when the Apostles and Elders did annoint the sicke with oyle Mar. 6.13 Iam. 5.14 and when Christ vsed spittle to heale the blinde man these we confesse were made signes of the power of God but the question is whether without any word or warrant from God wee may vse the creatures to such effects The waters which now we speake off haue approbation and allowance from the mouth of God and therefore no maruell if they be effectuall to the ends for which they were established In like manner the water in Baptisme we sanctifie the bread and wine in the Supper of the Lord we consecrate as signes and seales of the power of Christ assuring vs of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes See then how our aduersaries dally and delude the world to make them beleeue that we deny that any consecrated creatures may be vsed to worke supernaturall effects whereas they should ioyne issue with vs in this whether they be able to doe thus without the word of God but in this they are altogether silent and hold their peace as if they were stricken dumbe The Prophets and seruants of God vsed these things well but it followeth not hence that the Priests of Baal the Romish Priests may therefore vse them Plutar. conti septem sapient no more then wee conclude that because the shepheards may eate one of their sheepe therefore the Wolfe also may doe the like Or thus Ismael was circumcised at thirteene yeeres of age therefore his sonnes the Arabians and the Mahometans after his example might doe the like Or the woman of Samaria conclude Our fathers Iacob and his sonnes worshipped in this mountaine therefore we may sacrifice there also This kind of reasoning was the error of the disciples Eliah prayed that fire might come from heauen and consumed them that reproched him therefore we may vse such a prayer Luke 9. Thus did the Cerinthians Ebionites Ethiopians and other heretikes reason Christ was circumcised therefore wee also ought to be circumcised This is the conclusion of Bellarmine and of the Wolfe who gathered by the force of this reason that he might deuoure the sheepe as as well as the shepheards but the Wolfe was a theefe the sheepeheards did eate that which was their owne So saith the Cardinal Moses vsed water to supernaturall effects Elisha cured the waters with salt and the broth with meale cast into it 2 King 4.4 Therefore wee may vse holy water blessed after the Popish fashion both to cure diseases and to driue away diuels albeit the water were neuer instituted of God to any such vses and purposes For wee must consider there is great difference of times of places and of persons that which is lawfull at one time is vnlawfull at another that which is allowed in one is not to be allowed in another And that which is good done after one manner is euill being done in another Besides we are not left to our selues to deuise in Gods worship what we list Deut. 12.32 Luke 2.22 with Leuit. 12.8 1 Sam. 15.15 Gen. 22.16 compared with Ieremy chap. 19. verse 5. Lastly this practise giueth way and allowance to sorcerers enchanters charmers and coniurers to vse the word and creatures of God to their leud practises to cure diseases and such like whereas God hath appointed no such meanes to heale them Vse 2 Secondly from hence the Romanists go about to establish their vnsound distinction of sin into mortall veniall Some they say are so litle as that they deserue not eternal death but may be washed away with these holy waters that now wee speake off Doubtlesse these sinnes must be exceeding little or the force of these waters must bee exceeding great when men are sprinkled with them Whereas the Apostle is plaine speaking of this heifer and of this water Heb 9. that being bodily they can onely purifie the body but in no sort purge the conscience from dead workes True it is they say these sinnes doe somewhat offend God yet they adde facili negotio expiantur that is they are with little adoe easily purged and put away But we teach according to the Scriptures that all sinne in it owne nature euen anger and concupiscence which they call veniall is mortall True it is there is a difference
yea the least sinne lyeth vnder the curse and wrath of God Now they that are wretched and accursed are adiudged worthy of death by the sentence of Christ himselfe the Iudge of the world Matth. 25.41 and none can bee free from this curse of the Law but by the death of Christ Gal. 3.13 and hee dyed not onely for the greatest but for the least sinnes 1 Iohn chapter 1. verse 7. the least of them cost him dearely or else we must haue payed deare for them This point was expressed vnto vs before chapter 15. verse 30. for as the soule that committed ought presumptuously or with an high hand must bee cut off from his people so if ought bee done by any man through ignorance verse 24. a yong bullocke shall be offered for a burnt offering to be a sweete sauour vnto the Lord and thereby an attonement shall be made verse 25. Now by this offering of euery priuate man or of the whole Congregation they were taught that themselues had indeed deserued death and that they were deliuered by the sacrifice of Christ as the Lambe that taketh away the sinnes of the world represented by the blood of these sacrifices This is so plaine throughout the whole Law of Moses that the sinnes committed thorough errour and ignorance euen the least they could doe were neuer remitted and forgiuen vnto them but through the benefit of the Mediatour Christ Iesus who suffered death for them and therefore the smallest sinnes deserued death and made the committers guilty in the sight of God If any should answer vnto this that it doth not appeare that an offering was alwayes offered for the least sinnes of all because some were wont to be washed away with water let him know that by that washing and by that water the blood of Christ also was signified as well by the death of the sacrifices as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 9.10 11. and he ioyneth the blood and water together and with both the people were sprinkled verse 19. So then not onely they are pronounced accursed as some of the Iesuites cauill Durae contr ●●bitak p. 279. that commit most horrible sinnes as murther adultery and the like but he that continueth not in all or else we shall frustrate the whole discourse and disputation of the Apostle A Iesuiticall shift And therefore this is but a Popish shift to help at a dead lift For the Galatians might answer that they had all or the most part of them abstained from those heinous crimes and coulde not bee touched iustly with them and therefore they might haue iustification by the Law Against this iustification by the Law the Apostle doth purposely reason that none can be iustified by the Law because none can keep the Law and he is accursed that continueth not in all things Forasmuch therefore as all are pronounced to be cursed and execrable vnto God which commit the least and smallest sinne and that they are worthy of death that are cursed and execrable it followeth that euery transgression of the Law is worthy of death Obiect But Bellarmine obiecteth the saying of the Apostle Iames chap. 1.18 Sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death therfore vntill it be finished it doth not bring forth death Answer But he should conclude Sinne before it be perfected doth not deserue death for these are two seuerall points and both rest to be prooued First of all this is a weake collection Sinne once finished gendreth death therefore not finished it doth not gender death If a man should reason in this manner the reasonable creature is mortall therefore the creature except it haue reason is not mortall he should conclude fairely but falsely for the beasts and make them noble creatures Or thus All Princes though they be Gods deputies and vicegerents and susteine his person yet are mortall therefore men except they sustaine the person of God are not mortall These we see are weake consequences and yet they are altogether like to our aduersaries as shall appeare if wee consider the wordes and circumstances of the Apostle For his purpose is to describe the proceeding of sinne in vs and to declare that our sinnes are not to be imputed vnto God but to our selues to our concupiscence which seeketh occasions on euery side stirreth vp euill desires bringeth foorth actuall sinne and then sinne leadeth the way to death howbeit from hence we cannot gather that sinne bringeth not death vnto vs except it be finished But what shall we say of euill thoughts that neuer come into act As for example the Pharisees thought and taught that except a man did commit murther and by shedding blood did take away life he was not guilty of eternall death and except he committed adultery he sinned not against the Law But Christ himselfe sheweth that whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly is guilty of death and he also that looketh on a woman to lust after her Matt. 5.22.28 Neither of these commit the outward deed and yet because they haue giuen consent the Papists themselues hold that they are guilty of eterall death therefore a sinne committed in thought onely deserueth death albeit it be not finished in the worke euen by their owne confession and themselues being iudges It were endlesse to follow these fellowes and to trace them out in all their shifts they haue so many windings and turnings which argue a bad cause but one more I cannot passe ouer that Bellarmine will haue sinne finished to be nothing else but sinne consented vnto and that concupiscence shall not be sin except it bee consented vnto neither yet bee worthy of death But this is directly against the Apostle and against his owne doctours For the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle vseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ia. 1.18 signifieth to perfect fulfill by worke And so doth Thomas Aquinas vnderstand the same and others also Aquin. Comment in Iacob 1. Gagnae in Iacob 1. But to turne him out of these cauils we will for this time grant so much as he requireth what then will hee answere concerning originall sinne It is already defined in the Councell of Florence that they are worthy of eternall death that are onely guilty of originall sinne albeit they haue not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression Rom. 5.14 That is which neuer committed actuall sinne So then to reason in this sort Sin finished bringeth forth death therefore except it bee finished it bringeth not forth death is a false conclusion Consider this yet farther by another contrary saying of the same Apostle touching good deedes chap. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endureth tentation for when hee is tryed he shall receiue the crowne of life No man can reason from hence thus The man that endureth tentation when he is tried shal receiue the crowne of life therefore hee that is not tryed shall neuer receiue that crowne And yet this hath the same force and looketh the same way with
waies First by his merit because his death is the propitiation for our sins whereby the wrath of God is appeased and we are absolued Rom. 3 24 25. and 5 8. Eph. 1 6 7. 1 Tim. 2 6. He paid a great price for vs and thereby hath reconciled vs vnto his Father The other cleansing is made by sanctification of the Spirit regenerating our nature and mortifying sinne in our flesh by the power of his death and resurrection Rom. 6 6 7 8. 1 Iohn 1 7. Heb. 1 3. The heathen had their continuall purgations from offences by sacrifices and they had likewise their sprinklings washings with pure water but all these were impure and vnprofitable vnto them because they wanted the inward truth which was the life of them Hence it is that the Poet saith Ter pura socios circumluit vnda ● Aeneid Spargens rore leui et ramo foelicis oliuae Lustrauitaque viros And againe in another place ● Aeneid Donec me flumine viuo Abluero That is they washed themselues and sprinkled themselues and others with pure waters therby thought themselues cleansed But these actions were meere nullities like Pilates taking water and washing of his hands before them all saying I am innocent of the blood of this iust person see ye to it Mat. 27 24. but the blood of Christ did cleaue neerer vnto him then all the water in the sea could wash away or like the circumcision of the Edomites and other Nations they had the outward action but they wanted the inward signification In like manner the Papists haue their holy-water wherewith they sprinkle such as enter into their Churches and defend their practise from this place But this is as much as to abolish Iesus Christ and to bring vs backe againe to Moses it is no better then when we haue the pure fountaine to seeke the myery puddles of our owne inuentions and to digge to our selues cesternes that will hold no water For the Apostle maketh the Iewish purifyings to be a ceremoniall rudiment Heb. 9.19 where he ioyneth the blood of calues and goates with water and scarket wool and hyssope together wherewith the booke and the people were sprinkled Now if they will retaine this hallowed water ground it likewise from the wordes of Moses they must make it also of the same matter that this was made off to wit of the ashes of a red heifer and that heifer must be first burned and also vse the other actions and rites heere named and remembred But as they haue no commandement to make it so they haue no promise annexed vnto it To leaue them and to come vnto our selues though wee haue iustly abrogated the outward sprinkling with this holy water yet wee haue the true water and the true sprinkling First therefore we learne hereby that wee are by nature vncleane and impure from the which we cannot be freed by the strength of our nature but by the blood of Christ represented vnto vs in baptisme by which wee are washed This is no vaine figure but hath his force from the ordinance of God Rom. 6.3 Gal. 3.27 Againe this teacheth vs that wee ought to come vnto God into his presence with all purity and holinesse therefore it is said that God heareth not sinners such as haue sinne reigning in them but if any bee a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Ioh. 9.31 and we must lift vp pure hands 1 Tim. 2.8 Psal 26.6 and 134.2 The Prophet reproueth the Iewes that brought many oblations and offered vp many prayers but they were all reiected because their hands were full of blood Esay 1. And the Lord foreshewing the state of the Church in the time of the Gospel declareth that a pure offering should be offered vnto him Mal 1.11 Lastly we are all put in mind from hence to labour after true sanctification and holinesse of life that we may be cleane within and without We must not vainely boast of any inward purity when none appeareth outwardly for if wee cleanse that first which is within the outside will be cleane also neither should wee foolishly glory of that which is outward when there is none at all within for that is meere hypocrisie and dissimulation This also doeth the sprinkling of the water of separation signifie vnto vs as also in that they which medled with the burning of this red heifer were vncleane vntill the euen and must wash their garments before they come into the congregation verse 7.2 The Apostle setteth downe the trueth heereof 2. Corinthians Chap. 7. verse 1.2 Let vs cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God So that sinne is an vncleane thing like the dung of this heiffer which is commanded to be burned and consumed verse 5. and it maketh vs vncleane and loathsome vnto God Iames 1 21. Rom. 6 19. Reuel 3 18 and 22 11. We see therefore heereby what to iudge of those that liue and delight in their sinnes namely that they are as filthy and polluted persons euen as a man that hath a running sore or issue about him though he be neuer so richly apparelled and haue all the sweet sauours that may bee yet he still remaineth a polluted person so is it with a man that abideth in sinne though he abound neuer so much in riches and pleasures though he bee clad in purple and fare deliciously euery day yet he is filthy odious and abhominable in the sight of God of which we haue spoken before in the 5. chapter Againe this teacheth euery man to be carefull to auoid sinne as a leprosie because it is so foule and filthy and that which will pollute him if he suffer it to continue with him To conclude let euery one bee willing to suffer the word of exhortation and be content to vndergo a reproofe for his sinnes that it may be a sanctified meanes to bring him to be clensed from his filthinesse and so be made a fit vessell to be receiued of the Lord into euerlasting happinesse in his kingdome CHAP. XX. IN the former part of this Booke Moses hath set downe many murmurings of the Israelites against God and against Moses and Aaron the seruants of God through wearinesse of their iourneyes through loathing of Manna thorough the emulation of Miriam through the report of the Spies through the enuy of the Leuites through the indignation and discontentment of the people for Gods iudgements against the rebellious whereby it came to passe notwithstanding they were compassed about with manifold mercies of God as with a wall that they waxed impatient and fretting against God vnthankfull and forgetfull of his former benefits distrustfull disdaining the present blessings they enioyed His right hand had deliuered them out of Egypt his out-stretched arme had diuided the waters of the red Sea and set them on an heap the Cloud had shadowed them the Pillar of fire had conducted them the
the ordinance of God turned into an idoll Vse 4 Fourthly we learne from hence to strengthen our faith in the doctrine of the resurrection from the dead For buriall is a pledge of immortality a signe of the resurrection and as a glasse to behold the life to come and therefore the bodies of men are not contemptibly to be cast abroad but decently to be laide in the earth as the Corne is cast in the ground there rotteth groweth vp and beareth fruite We were not created of God to lie for euer in the graue and to end in corruption but our buriall preacheth to vs another life and sheweth that we shall bee restored into a new and better estate We are laid vp in the safe keeping of God vntill the day come that he shall raise the dead againe Let vs then stir vp our selues to vnderstand that we are not appointed to liue onely in this world but that there is another life prepared for vs. This the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 15 29. What shall they doe that are washed for dead If the dead rise not at all why are they then washed for dead It was an ancient custome both among Iewes Gentiles Acts 9 37. among Infidels and Christians to wash the bodies of the dead before they were buried by which all other ceremonies belonging thereunto as embalming mourning wrapping burying are signified as if he should say More hath beene spoken of this in ch 17. if there bee no resurrection why are the dead bodies costly annointed cleanly washed decently buried solemnly accompanied sorrowfully lamented for and carefully wrapped in Linnen Seeing then these rites commonly vsed shew that our bodies shall be renewed let vs labour to make them members of Christ and Temples of the holy Ghost Let vs abhorre all Atheists Epicures Libertines Acts 17 18. and such proud heretiques that mocke at all religion deny the faith of the resurrection which is the ground-worke and foundation of all our comfort Howsoeuer therefore the wicked heere flourish for a time and spread as the greene Bay-tree contrariwise the godly are destitute afflicted and tormented and accounted as sheepe to the slaughter yet it shall be well with them that feare the Lord Eccl. 8 12 ● and in the end he will reward the wicked according to their works 2 Thess 1 6. For it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you which are troubled rest when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels This is it which Abraham saith to the rich man Sonne remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is hee comforted and thou art tormented Ver. 2 3 4 5. And there was not water for the Congregation The people had bin brought out of the Land of Egypt out of the yoke of bondage and out of the furnace of iron Deut. 4 20. Ieremy 11 ● they had seene the great workes and wonders of God they had promised to yeeld faithfull obedience they had tasted of the bountifull hand of God they had tried his power and presence in bringing waters out of the dry Rocke they had obserued many thousands slaine for their rebellion in the wildernes yet behold their fresh vnthankfulnesse they cast out diuers reproches as it were so many darts and speares not against Moses but against God The Doctrine from hence is this that in all wants and dangers wee are ready to murmure and repine against God Doctrine In the least miserie we are readie to murmure An example heereof we haue Exod. 14 11 17 1 2. Whē the people were come out of Egypt and saw the red sea before them the hoast of Pharaoh behinde them the mountaines on each side of them and no meanes to escape they repine against Moses as if he had brought them out to die in the wildernesse Heereunto accordeth that which is recorded chapter 17 when they came where no water was they contended with Moses saying Giue vs water that wee may drinke Tempting God distrusting his prouidence murmuring against his seruants not looking for succour and successe from God The like example we see Rahel Gen. 30 1 2. when she saw her selfe barren bare no children she enuied her sister and saide to Iacob Giue me children or else I die She went not to God who onely is able to open the wombe as Iacob teacheth her Am I in Gods stead which hath with-holden from thee the fruite of the wombe but complaineth against her husband enuieth her sister manifesteth the corruption of her owne heart Therefore the Apostle exhorteth 1 Cor. 10 10. Neither murmure ye as some of thē also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer Reason 1 The reasons are first the bitter roote of infidelity For as the wickednes of man is great and al the imaginations of the thoughts of his heart are onely euill continually so the fountaine of all is an vnfaithfull heart to depart away from the liuing God and therefore the Apostle chargeth ● 3 12. that There be not in any of vs an euill heart and vnfaithfull Faith apprehending the mercies of God and applying the merites of Christ is the mother of all graces and the well spring of all obedience And if we were acquainted with our corruptions the force of tentations we would know the comfortable vse and the great necessity therof and magnifie it aboue all other graces The capitall sinne of vnbeleefe striketh at the very heart of God and what do we leaue vnto him if we deny his truth who is truth it selfe This reason is expresly set downe Psal 78 18 22. They tempted God in their harts in requiring meat for their lust because they beleeued not in God and trusted not in his helpe Reason 2 Againe present things for the most part are wearisome and loathsome vnto vs be they neuer so excellent This we see in our first parents What estate could be wished and desired more goodly more glorious more gracious thē their estate in the blessed time of their innocency resembling and representing most liuely the image of God in perfection of their Nature in excellency of their gifts and in preheminence of their place Yet they were not content with this condition they restrained not themselues within the bounds of their owne calling but presumed aboue that they ought to vnderstand and would bee as Gods knowing good and euill ●n 3 4. What is the cause of tumults and troubles in families in Churches in Commonwealths and in all Societies Surely euen this ●yd lib 1. Pelopon we loathe and like not the present estate of things but seek chāges alterations Vse 1 Let vs apply this point to our vses We are ready to accuse and condemne the Israelites to be a rebellious and stiffe-necked people euer tempting God prouoking the holy one to anger In like
rashly and rigorously censure others for falling into sin For seeing we haue all our frailties and infirmities and are not able to keepe our selues wholly from euil we are not headily to iudg of others lest thereby we hasten the greater condemnation vpon our selues This the Apostle Iames vrgeth Chap. 3.1 2. My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater iudgement for in many things we sinne all Let vs therefore consider our selues before we cast our eyes vpon other men for they are the most sharpe and seuere Iudges that forget their owne infirmities As we would bee dealt withall in meekenesse so must we deale with our brethren with all gentlenesse For howsoeuer they haue sinned nothing hath befallen them but that which is incident to the nature of man we may be ouertaken with the same sinne or with the like sinne or with a greater sinne The Apostle saith Brethren if a man be suddenly taken in any offence Gal. 6.1 ye which are spirituall restore such one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted There cannot be a more effectuall meanes to draw vs to deale mildly and mercifully with our brethren then the consideration of our selues There is no man among vs that dealeth truely with his own heart and entreth into the meditation of his owne frailty with his owne soule but he hath daily experience in himselfe how hardly sinne is subdued and mastered of vs how many sighes and gronings it requireth how many teares and prayers it costeth vs What striuing and strugling wee haue with it to keepe it vnder What battels and combats we haue with the flesh that lusteth against the spirit And yet notwithstanding our continuall watching wrastling labouring endeuouring and resisting it oftentimes breaketh from vs so that the knowledge of our owne weaknesse must teach vs to deale with all meekenesse and moderation with our brethren Verse 11. Moses smote that rocke and much water gushed out We haue heard before the people complaining and Moses praying now we shall see God helping and releeuing them notwithstanding their rebellion and vnthankfulnesse The Lord commanded Moses and Aaron to speake vnto the rocke without life without sense without reason to conuince those rebels ●y 1 2. and to shew that there was more vnderstanding in the dumbe and deafe creatures then in this company of conspirators For now the promise of God was performed aboue all naturall meanes True it is they were vnworthy of any mercy they deserued to perish in their thirst through want of water notwithstanding at the striking of the rocke with the rod he gaue vnto them their hearts desire This was the Lords doing it is maruellous in our eyes ● 10.3 4 This rocke was a figure of Christ as the Apostle teacheth Besides the striking of the rocke was a signe vnto them of the gushing out of the waters ●dg 14.14 When Samson propounded this as a darke riddle Out of the eater came meate and out of the strong came sweetnesse It was resolued thus What is sweeter then the hony and what is stronger then the Lyon But much more may we propound this miraculous worke of God Out of the hard rocke came softnesse out of the dry came moysture and out of the strong came weakenesse For what is harder dryer and stronger then the rock and what is softer and weaker then the water according to the common prouerbe As weake as water And yet the soft and moyst waters issued out of the dry and hard rocke suddenly aboundantly miraculously at the commandement of God This teacheth vs this doctrine ●trine 〈…〉 appoint 〈◊〉 and at al●owance that we liue by Gods appointment and in feeding and sustaining vs he is not tyed to outward ordinary meanes Whensoeuer we want meat drinke apparell and the necessary helpes of this present life God is able to prouide them and to nourish vs without naturall meanes when it pleaseth him This Moses teacheth at large Deut. 8.3 1. Hee humbled thee and made thee hungry and fed thee with Manna which thou knowest not neither did thy fathers know it that he might teach thee that man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth a man liue thy rayment waxed not olde vpon thee neither did thy foot swell these 40. yeres So we see he fed Eliah flying from Iezebel 1 King 19.8 who when he had eate and drunke he walked in the strength of that meat forty dayes and fortie nights vnto Horeb the mount of God The like we see in Moses when hee was in the mount with God Matth. 4.2 and the like we see in Christ our Sauiour when hee was in the wildernesse tempted of the diuell So then whatsoeuer the decree determination of God is whereby wee shall liue whether it bee by meanes or without meanes whether by wayes ordinary or extraordinary the same shall bee effectuall to mans preseruation The reasons follow First the infinite power Reason 1 of God which maketh weak things strong and things of no value that are despised to effect great things He is able to do and deale as he will His souldiers were flyes and lice against the Egyptians Exod. 8.24 1 Sam. 6.5 his armies were mice against the Philistims By such meanes he is able to worke his will to saue his people and to destroy his enemies This reason is vrged and pressed oftentimes as Gen. 18.14 1 Sam. 14.6 Zach. 8.6 Secondly hereby his honour and glory is Reason 2 better set foorth that no flesh should reioyce and trust in it selfe but in God Therefore he often worketh aboue reason and beyond nature that al the world may giue glory to him and magnifie his great Name This appeareth in the prayer of Hezekiah who desired the presence of God to be with thē that he might be glorified in their deliuerance 2 King 19.19 O Lord our God I beseech thee saue thou vs out of his hand that all the kingdomes of the earth may know that thou O Lord art onely God The vses follow First this teacheth vs in Vse 1 all wants and necessities to depend vpon God and neuer to vse vnlawfull meanes to come out of trouble and so sinne against God If God send the sword or famine or other iudgment to walke through the land as hee iustly may doe for our transgressions and rebellions we must learne contentation and patience in pouerty in sickenesse in misery and not to be swallowed vp with excessiue sorrow Our life standeth in the word and will of God who can manifest his power as wel without means as with meanes in our preseruation and therefore let vs not despaire or flie from him to any creature for releefe and succour 1 King 17.14 He can feed as well without bread as with bread who encreased the oyle in the poore widowes cruse and the handfull of meale in the
day What shall become of swearers blasphemers prophaners of the Sabbath whoremongers drunkards oppressers vnmercifull men and other like The Lord indeed will try the righteous in his furnace but the wicked and him that loueth iniquity doth his soule hate vpon the wicked he shall raine snares fire and brimstone 〈◊〉 5 5. and stormy tempest this is the portion of their cup. Indeed he lifteth vp his hād to strike the faithfull that are his friends 〈◊〉 ● ●4 but he will crush his aduersaries with a scepter of yron and breake them in pieces like a potters vessell Indeed he will iudge the iust man for his sinnes in this life 〈◊〉 ● 23 but he will wound the head of his enemies and the hairy pate of him that walketh in his sinnes Indeed the Lord will chastice his Church with the rods of men yet his louing kindnesse will he neuer take from them but he will correct his enemies with scourges of wyre and his little finger shall bee heauier on the reprobate then his loynes on his owne people Tremble at this all ye vngodly and know that assured iudgement is reserued for you at the great day of the Lords generall Assizes when ye must plead guilty or not guilty at his barre when the register booke of all your actions shal be brought forth and when you shal wish the mountaines to fall vpon you and couer you from the presence of him that sitteth vpon the throne Turne therefore vnto him returne I say betimes lest the Lord ouerturne you If his wrath be kindled yea but a little Psal 2.12 blessed are all they that trust in him This is the difference betweene a wise man and a foole Prou. 27.12 and 17 10. A wise man seeth the plague and hideth himselfe but a foole runneth on and is punished A reproofe entreth more into him that hath vnderstanding then an hundred stripes into a foole 14 Then Moses sent messengers from Kadesh vnto the king of Edom saying Thus saith thy brother Israel Thou knowest all the trouble that hath hapned vnto vs. 15 How our fathers went downe into Egypt a long time where the Egyptians handled vs euill and our fathers 16 But when we cryed vnto the Lord he heard our voyce and sent an Angel and hath brought vs out of Egypt and behold we are in Kadesh a city in thine vtmost border 17 I pray thee let vs passe through thy countrey wee will not goe through the fields nor the vineyards neither will we drinke the water of the wels we will goe by the kings way we wil walke we wil not turne either to the right hand or to the left vntill we haue passed thy border 18 And Edom answered him Thou shalt not passe by me lest I come out with the sword against thee 19 Then the children of Israel said vnto him We will go vpon the high way and if we shall drinke thy water I and my cattell I will then pay for it I will onely without any harme goe through on my feete 20 He answered againe Thou shalt not passe through then Edom came out against him with much people and with a mighty power 21 Thus Edom refused to giue Israel passage through his border wherefore Israel turned away from him Hitherto of the murmuring of the people pretended against Moses but indeed intended and practised against God Now followeth the second part of the Chapter touching Israels purpose to passe toward the land of Canaan by the countrey of the Edomites wherein consider two things First the solemne ambassage of Moses to the king of Edom. Secondly the shamefull and inhumane denyall of the Edomites Touching the first hauing walked vp and downe thirty eight yeeres and wandred in the wildernes from place to place forward and backeward from nation to nation from one kingdome to another people being now come neere to the land they request passage and safe conduct through the countrey of Edom vnder honest and equall conditions of abstaining from all iniuries and keeping the kings high way craue their friendship and fauour in respect of their neere kindred and aliance vnto them both of them descending of Isaac whose sonnes were Iacob called also Israel and Esau called also Edom. Besides they shew what trauels and troubles they had sustained what euils they had suffered what oppression they had endured of the cruell Egyptians appealing to their owne consciences touching the truth of these things whereof they could in no sort bee ignorant saying Thou knowest all the trouble that hath happened vnto vs. But because such as are themselues in prosperity sildome respect the miseries and distresses of others and the afflicted are for the most part destitute of all helpes and forsaken of all friends they put them in mind of the mercies of God assisting them in troubles hearing their prayers 1 Cor. 10 9. and sending his Angel that is Iesus Christ as it is expounded by the Apostle for their deliuerance out of Egypt And lest they should seeme to request and require much of others but promise nothing for themselues as those that lay heauy burthens and greeuous to bee borne vpon others but wil not touch them with their litle finger they couenant and condition with them on their parts to deale vprightly and iustly being as ready to abstaine from working iniury as to craue the duties of humanity So then to effect their purpose of passing thorough Edom and to perswade them to graunt their request they alleadge foure reasons First in respect of the person of the Edomites Secondly in respect of the person of the Israelites Thirdly in respect of the person of God Fourthly in respect of the manner of their passage perambulation through them Touching the Edomites they claime the kinred of consanguinity Touching themselues they pleade their own misery Touching God they publish and proclaime his mercy Touching their iourney and the maner of it they promise equity and honest dealing Thus they omit nothing that might serue to perswade the Edomites to pitty and to procure their owne safty Reason 1 The first reason drawne from the right of brotherhood is included in these words Thus saith thy brother Israel The Israelites came of Iacob who was also called Israel because hee had power with God Gen 25.25 Gen. 32.28 The Edomites came of Esau who was also named Edom both of the rednesse wherewith hee was borne and of the red pottage which he desired and preferred before the birthright These two therefore were naturall brethren begotten of the same father borne of the same mother lying at the same time in the same womb as if the Israelites should say May it please you to consider that wee are not aliants and strangers one to another we descend of two brethren Iacob and Esau you of one we of the other as two branches displaying themselues from one stocke we had one common father and mother Isaac and Rebeccha we are of one family and
Psal 80 5 where he complaineth that God had giuen them bread of teares and fed them with teares to drinke in great measure Thou hast made vs a reproch to our enemies thou hast brought a Vine out of Egypt thou hast cast out the Heathen and planted it yet the wilde Boare deuoureth it the beasts of the field eate it vp Vpon this consideration he sheweth his affection and oftentimes doubleth it Returne we beseech thee O God of hosts looke downe from heauen and visite this Vine The like care of redressing the distressed condition of the Church appeareth in Habakkuk for when God reuealed vnto him that for the wickednesse and iniquity the strife and contention of the people he would punish and visite them by the Chaldeans a Nation worser then themselues it cōstrained the Prophet to break out into an earnest prayer When I heard thy voice I trembled and was afraid Lord in wrath and in the middest of iudgement remember mercy Hab. 1 3 6 3 2. What should I adde more The booke of Lamentations sheweth that the horrible desolation of the Church did draw vp whole buckets of water and fountaines of teares frō the Prophet euen bowels of compassion and most earnest praier to God for the deliuery of his people being moued with a sensible feeling of the Churches distresses Lam. 1 and 2 and 3. And although this meditation alone be sufficient Reason 1 to enforce this affection of compassion yet it may be more earnestly considered and deepely enforced by sundry reasons For first nothing ought to be more precious and deare vnto vs then to see the florishing estate of the Church nothing ought to go nearer vnto our hearts and to make our eyes a fountaine of teares to weepe day and night then to behold the decayings and desolations of Sion This appeareth euidently vnto vs Psal 137 1 2 5 where the Prophet layeth downe the miserable estate of the Church vnder the Babilonians and the affection of the Church conceiued vpon that distresse We sate downe and wept when we remembred Sion we hanged our Harpes vpon the willowes in the midst therof if I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget to play If I do not remember thee let my tongue cleaue vnto the roofe of my mouth yea if I preferre not Ierusalem before my chiefe ioy Wherein ariseth this reason that howsoeuer many things are ministred to comfort the people of God as fauor friends honour glory pleasure and prosperity yet aboue all other ioy the peaceable and prosperous estate of the Church affecteth thē as that which sticketh neerest and cleaueth closest vnto them 1 Pet. 1 12. at the sight wherof the Angels take occasion to wonder at the mercies of God Contrariwise the troubles and tumults raised against the Church beginning to preuaile against it and threatning to make hauocke of it haue caused the greatest sorrow of all other incident to the sonnes of men We see a worthy and memorable example of this in the wife of Phinehas when the Philistims preuailed ouer the people of God many sorrowes fell vpon her one in the necke of another the taking of the Arke the fall of her father the death of her husband the slaughter of her brother the ouerthrow of the hoast the triumph of the enemy yet aboue all as if the rest were nothing the report of taking the Arke was as a sword to pierce through her soule and suffered her not to receiue any comfort in her trauaile but she named her childe Icabod that is no glory saying The glory is departed from Israel because the Arke of God was taken and because of her father in law and her husband She saide againe For the Arke of GOD is taken 1 Sam. 4 19 21 22. Whereby we see that howsoeuer we feele nothing but worldly losses being men of this world whose portion is in this life and are acquainted with nothing but worldly sorrowes which cause death chusing rather to leaue Christ then to lose our commodities to sell our birth-right then to want our pottage like prophane Esau or the swinish Gadarens yet she sealeth vp her sorrow in the name of her sonne and repeateth the departure of the glory from Israel as that which most of all doubled and increased her affliction If then all things in this life are not to bee compared and matched with the prosperous proceeding encrease of the Church in spirituall things if no earthly losse of things neerest and dearest vnto them do so far enter into them as the calamities and ruines of the Church maruaile not if the wants thereof go neere vnto the Church and stirre them vp to labour the redresse thereof in their best meditations Secondly the distresses of the Church set Reason 2 open a wide doore to faithlesse and prophane men to insult contumeliously and to triumph vaine-gloriously ouer the Church as though God had forsaken them left them as a prey in the iawes of the enemy whereby the truth is slandred the Name of God which ought to be precious vnto vs is blasphemed This appeareth Psalm 70 1 4 5 8 10. when the heathen rushed into the inheritance of God defiled the Temple and made Ierusalem an heap of stones that they were a reproch vnto their neighbours euen a scorne and derision to them that were round abound them The Prophet expressing his affection saith Lord how long wilt thou be angry for euer Shall thy iealousie burne like fire And thē he addeth this as a reason Wherfore should the heathen say where is their God Let him bee knowne among th● heathen in our sight by the vengeance of the blood of thy seruants that is shed So then as on the one side the florishing estate of the Church is that which giueth inward ioy and true comfort of heart aboue all other things to Gods seruants on the other side the distresses of the Church do set open a doore to faithlesse and rebellious men to take aduantage to reioyce ouer the Church and in the spirit of Ismael to scoffe at it with taunts more bitter then gall and wormewood it followeth that the troubles thereof must draw vs to pitty moue vs to prayer and incite vs to vse all good meanes to redresse them The vses follow First we must be greeued for the troubles of the Church as fellow-members Vse of the same body Can that be a true and liuely member that is not any way touched with a fellow-feeling of the rest of the members The Apostle teacheth 1 Corin. 12 25 That the members should haue the same care one for another therefore if one member suffer all suffer with it if one member be had in honour all the members reioyce with it Would wee then know whether we haue Christ for our head coupling vs together whether wee be members of Christ and haue him dwelling in vs by faith and whether we be made bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh
without which we haue no saluation we must examine our harts by this note that is found in all the members of the body one toward another If any member be hurt or endangered the rest are ready to helpe euery one according to his office the foote runneth for it the eie looketh vpon it the hand stretcheth out it selfe for the good thereof If it be so with vs in the dangers and desolations of the Church we haue comfort in our owne hearts we carry a witnesse about vs that we are liuely mēbers of Christ But if we haue no feeling no compassion no pitty toward them that suffer for Christs sake we are dead and rotten members we want life and quickening in Christ wee cannot assure our selues that as yet we are engrafted into his body Therefore the Apostle saith Gal. 6 2. Beare you one anothers burden and so fulfill the Law of Christ Againe Who is weake I am not weake Who is offended and I burne not 2 Cor. 11 29. And in another place Be of like affection one to another reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe Rom. 12 15 16. Hereunto the Apostle accordeth in the Epistle to the Hebrewes chap. 13 3. Remember them that are in bonds as though ye were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if we were also afflicted in the body teaching vs heereby that their condition must be as our owne condition and their trouble as our owne trouble So the Prophet vttereth his affection Lam. 2 11 13 20 that although he should bee preserued from the iudgement executed yet beholding Sion lying waste he cryeth out Mine eies gush out water for the destruction of the daughter of my people thy breach is great like the sea And afterward he stirreth vp his zeale Behold O Lord and consider to whom thou hast done thus Wherefore whensoeuer God offereth vs the sight of any chastisement vpon our brethren at home or the neighbour-Churches abroad we ought not to be as those that are dull sencelesse and past feeling but to haue a simpathy of their sorrowes and draw out the bowels of compassion toward them Vse 2 Secondly woe and woe againe to them that are secure that laugh when the Church weepeth that liue in brauery and excesse whē the Church putteth on sackecloth and ashes that fill and feast and fat themselues with all delicates when the Church fasteth that awake not out of their sleepe when the iudgements of God are heere vnto them This the Prophet reproueth Esay 22 12 13 14. In that day did the Lord of hoasts call vnto weeping mourning and to baldnes girding with sackcloth behold ioy gladnes slaying oxen killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine for to morrow wee shall die When we are once come to this carelesnesse and contempt of our brethrens condition the threatning denounced in these words following shall fall vpon vs Our iniquities shall not be purged from vs vntill we die A fearefull sentence of a greeuous iudgement to teach vs humility and to driue away all security Hereunto also cometh the saying of Amos chap. 6 1 2 3 4.5 6. Where we see he pronounceth the wofull estate and condition of those that liued without feare and regard of Gods iudgments neither remembred their brethren carried into captiuity and liuing in great aduersity We liue in the time of the distresses and wants of the Church This calleth vs to practise this duty of seeking the good of the Church and vsing all good meanes by supplication to God and by petition to men for the redresse thereof Especially let vs be mindfull in our prayers of the peace of Ierusalem Because of the house of the Lord our God 〈◊〉 ●2 6 9. 〈◊〉 ●8 This was the prayer of the Prophet Lord be fauourable to Sion for thy good pleasure build the wals of Ierusalem If then we would haue both the Common-wealth and our priuate wealth to florish we must tender the good and florishing estate of the Church we must be tender-hearted to procure the prosperous estate therof C●●rch ●ommon 〈…〉 For the Church and Common-wealth are as those twins which are said to weepe together and to laugh together they florish together they fade together they fall together So long as pure religion and preaching of the Gospel are maintained it cannot goe ill with the common-wealth they are as a brazen wal as a strong fortresse and bulwarke as a Castle of defence to keepe out all inuasion of enemies and crying in our streetes For the one addeth strength vnto the other whilest the Common-wealth fighteth against the visible enemies of the Church by counsell and authority August epist 1. poster the Church fighteth against the inuisible enemies of the Commonwealth by praier and supplication If then the Church be spoiled the publishing of the Gospel be hindred the Commonwealth cannot long goe free but the foundation thereof is dangerously shaken which hath no promise to be kept in good estate but as it is a Nurse to the Church and a Lanterne to hold the light of the word The like might be said of priuate families and of particular persons wee haue no assurance of the protection of God of the continuance of our estate in peace farther then wee promote his glory and giue entertainment to the Gospel We see in the second booke of the Chronicles ch 36 15. when the people of Israel came to this height of iniquity to mock the messengers misuse the seruants of God which he sent vnto them rising early Because he had compassion on his people and on his habitation then he brought vpon them the King of the Caldeans who slew their young men with the sword in the house of their Sanctuary spared neither yong men nor virgins ancient nor aged God gaue them all into his hand So Christ saith Mat. 23 37. O Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets stonest thē that are sent vnto thee how often would I haue gathered thy children together as the Hen gathereth her Chickens vnder her wings but yee would not Now what followeth this contempt of the word and neglect of the Gospel Behold your habitation shall be left vnto you desolate To conclude therefore let vs promote true religion and then we shall prosper and be safe otherwise we haue no promise of blessing Lastly this doctrine of pittying the Churches Vse 3 troubles serueth most fitly to condemne the contrary practise of those miserable and mercilesse men that are without all humanity naturall affection that are borne of wolues nourished of tygers and haue sucked y● milke of most sauage beasts or rather the poyson of aspes and vipers whose very bowels of mercy are the breathings out of cruelty as the wise man speaketh Prou 12 10. who are so farre from pittying the miseries of others and helping them in their distresses that they adde to the heape of their afflictions oppresse
had numbred the people after God sent him this word and offered him the choise of famine or sword or pestilence he saide I am in a wonderfull streight let vs now fall into the hād of the Lord for his mercies are great and let mee not fall into the hand of man Who had not rather receiue punishment at his fathers hands of whose loue he is assured then to bee punished with the strokes of an enemy that loueth him not but hateth him to the death Men are proud and cruell fierce ambitious but God is full of compassion and his mercy endureth for euer he knoweth whereof we were made Psal 103.14 Psalme 78 39 he remembreth that we are but dust hee considereth that we are mortall yea a winde that passeth and commeth not againe He will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that wee are able to beare Hitherto the Lord hath visited vs with his mercifull and gentle corrections famines sicknesses and strange diseases Let vs behold his gracious dealing toward vs and profit by these fatherly admonitions for if he should deliuer vs into the hands of barbarous and beastly enemies we should soone discerne the difference betweene the louing chasticements of a father and the bloody strokes of an enemy 22 Then they departed from Kadesh and the childrē of Israel euen al the congregation came vnto Mount Hor. 23 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor neere the border of the land of Edom saying 24 Aaron shall be gathered vnto his people for he shall not enter into the Land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel because yee rebelled against my commandements at the waters of strife 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and charge them to come vnto this Mount 26 And cause Aaron to strip off his garments and thou shalt put them vpon Eleazar his sonne then Aaron shall be gathered vnto his Fathers and shall dye there 27 And Moses did as the Lord had commanded for they went vp vnto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation 28 And Moses caused Aaron to strip off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son and Aaron dyed there in the toppe of the Mount So Moses and Eleazar came downe from off that Mount 29 And when all the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty dayes Hitherto of the Ambassage of Moses to the King of Edom These words containe the third and last part of the Chapter to wit the death of Aaron after the people were remooued from the borders of the Edomites For albeit the King did so vnkindly deny them any passage yet Moses and the Israelites doe not oppose themselues against them or attempt to breake through by force of Armes multitude of men and dint of sword but passe by their borders peaceably and fetch a compasse about their land True it is those enuious Edomites were worthy to perish and to be vtterly destroyed for their inhumanity yet because the time was not yet come wherein the Lord had prophesied and promised that the elder should serue the yonger Gen. 25 23. therefore the Israelites commit vengeance to the Lord to whom it belongeth Rom. 12 19. Now in these verses we see how God beginneth to execute the former threatning against Moses and Aaron For heere wee are to consider three things First the death of Aaron Secondly the succession of his sonne Thirdly the mourning of the people The father dieth the son succeedeth the people lamenteth the death of the high Priest If Aaron had dyed without any prediction and foretelling of his death all men might haue thought it had fallen out at aduentures and ascribed it wholy to the decaying of strength wasting of nature but being reuealed to Aaron himselfe and manifested to the whole Congregation both the time when and the place where he should die it appeareth that his daies were numbred and his yeeres limited which hee could not passe As then God had determined the death of Aaron and denounced his shutting out of the land of Canaan so that sentence is heere executed vpon him Deut. 34 4 5. the other concerning Moses is reserued vnto his time appointed of God In this place God commanded both of them what to doe euen to ascend vp to the Mountaine and sheweth that Aaron shall die there for his disobedience whose garments must be pulled off and put vpon Eleazar lest by touching of the dead the holy garments should be defiled After this commandement followeth their obedience agreeable to the same they come vp to the Mountain Aaron is stripped Eleazar is cloathed with them Aaron without feare of death or longer desire of life or prayer for life departeth in peace according to the word of God he is gathered to his Fathers Moses and Eleazar descend from the Mountaine Moses Eleazar and the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron We see heere according to the former threatning pronounced by the mouth of God verse 12. that Aaron cometh not into the land of Promise but dieth in Mount Hor. We learne heereby Doctri● God-thr●nings are 〈◊〉 comp●●●● that the threatnings of God are accomplished Howsoeuer his iudgments are many times deferred and his punnishments prolonged because hee is patient toward vs and would haue no man to perish but would haue all persons come vnto repentance yet in the end all his threatnings shall be verified and fulfilled in their times and seasons Consider this truth in our first parents Ge. 2 17. ● 3 7. God threatned them that if they did eate the forbidden fruite they should die the death we see the effect in them and all their posterity throughout al times and generations Behold other threatnings of God wee shall alwayes reade the execution after the denunciation So when God by the Ministery of Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Peter 2● had threatned to destroy the whole world if in an hundred and twenty yeeres they repented not wee see how he brought in the flood vpon the world of the vngodly swept them away from the face of the earth which they had corrupted with their cruell and vncleane conuersation This we see likewise taught vnto vs throughout the bookes of the holy history of Ioshua The man is cursed before the Lord Ioshua 6● that ryseth vp and buildeth the City Iericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his eldest sonne and in his yongest sonne shall he set vp the gates of it meaning therby that whosoeuer should attempt to builde this City he should pay for it deerely because what time hee layeth the foundation of the wals his eldest sonne shall dye and when hee setteth vp the gates and hath finished it his yongest sonne shall dye When this threatning seemed quite forgotten and consumed with the rust of time God doeth bring it to passe as we
77.20 Hee led his people like sheepe by the hand of Moses and Aaron So long therefore as we haue a voyce so long as we haue an heart to lift vp to God and can poure out the meditations therof before him we haur comfort and assurance to be helped When the poore infant is fallen into danger of fire or water or other misery if he can cry that the father may heare his voyce there is hope of safety and deliuerance So if wee can call vpon God the Father in Iesus Christ in our distresses our heauenly Father will not leaue vs nor forsake vs in our dangers Secondly albeit the faithfull fall into many Reason 2 afflictions and their enemies make long surrowes vpon their backs yet God will not alway suffer them to bee oppressed lest they should sinke deepe and shrinke downe vnder the burthen so turne from their obedience and forsake the faith which they haue professed according to the saying of the Prophet The rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous ●al 125.3 lest the righteous put forth their hand vnto wickednesse He knoweth whereof we are made he spareth vs in our infirmities hee will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our strength he seeth our weakenesse and how vnable wee are to resist and therefore he will not giue vs ouer to perish in our afflictions inasmuch as our light afflictions which are but for a moment Cor 4.17 cause vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory so that albeit the righteous fall seuen times yet he riseth againe as the wise man teacheth ●ou 24.16 Vse 1 To apply this vnto our selues wee learne first that the deuises and practises of enemies albeit they be neuer so secret or malicious are vaine and frustrate The people of God shall be preserued howsoeuer they bee euer plotting and banding themselues together as wee see in the dayes of the Apostle ●ct 4.27 Herod Pontius Pilate the Priests and people the Iewes and Gentiles conspired together yet wee shall alwayes haue assurance of safety and all shall worke for the best to them that feare God whose loue no powers no principalities no Potentates shall be able to remooue as the Prophet teacheth Reioice not against me O mine enemy ●c 7.8.10 though I fall I shall rise when I shall sit in darknesse the Lord will be a light vnto me then she that is mine enemie shall locke vpon it and shame shall couer her which said vnto mee Where is the Lord thy God mine eyes shall behold her now shall she be troden downe as the myre of the streets This serueth notably to daunt and dismay the wicked and vngodly who insult ouer the righteous and seeme wise in their owne eyes considering that The faithfull escapeth out of trouble ●rou 11.8 ●sa 8.9 10 and the wicked shall come in his stead This truth the Prophet Esay confesseth and confirmeth Chap. 8. Gather together on heapes O ye people and ye shall be broken in pieces take counsell together but it shall be brought to nought pronounce a decree yet it shall not stand for God is with vs. So then if the faithfull be not euer forsaken nor stand continually vnder the strokes of their enemies but God will put to his hand and his helpe to deliuer them we see that all their deuises and all their consultations against them and insultations ouer them shal be brought to nothing Vse 2 Againe it behooueth vs in all the time of our distresse to rely vpon him whatsoeuer tentations come though we should walke by the gates of the graue and passe by the gulfe of death Many indeed are our infirmities feares cares sorrowes and troubles yet in them all we must say with the Prophet ●al 42.5.11 ● 43.5 Why art thou cast downe O my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Waite on God for I will yet giue him thanks he is my present helpe and my God Let vs not therefore despaire in the day of trouble When the snares of death compasse vs and the griefes of the graue take hold vpon vs ●al 116.3 4. when we find trouble and sorrow to pursue vs and ouertake vs let vs call vpon the Name of the Lord to deliuer our soule who is mercifull and full of compassion Pro. 18.10 The Name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth vnto it and is exalted This is the surest and safest refuge of the godly against all troubles Lastly let all such learne as lie not vnder Vse 3 the crosse to commend the common cause of their brethren to God as if themselues were in affliction For wherefore doth God promise to free his from the oppression of the enemy and to restore them to the ioy of their saluation but to moue vs to this duty of praying for them pittying their distressed estate and seeking by all lawfull meanes the comfort and continuance of the Church This the Apostle setteth downe 2 Cor. 1.3 4. Where wee see he vrgeth the Church at Corinth to thinke of this point to be mindfull of the miseries of others and to comfort them that are in discomfort as God hath comforted vs. This is taught by Moses Thou shalt not doe iniury to a stranger Exod. 22.21 neither oppresse him for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt And heereunto the Apostle accordeth Heb. 13.3 Remember them that are in bonds as though ye were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if ye were also afflicted in the body Where he would haue vs so much to bee touched as if their misery were our owne This duty it is needfull to thinke vpon Wee know not what troubles may fall vpon our heads When wee take our selues to bee freest and farthest from all dangers then we may bee neerest vnto them and suddenly fal into them as a bird into the snare of the fowler Wherefore let vs remember them to God that suffer afflictions that so we may be deliuered if wee fall into any troubles But if we harden our hearts in the miseries of others and haue no feeling of their sorrowes others shall bee as vnmindfull of vs and vnmercifull vnto vs as we haue beene to them Matt. 7.2 For with what iudgement we iudge we shall be iudged and with what measure we meat it shall be measured to vs againe Nothing is more greeuous vnto a man then to be scorned in his misery and to be insulted vppon in the day of his calamity The affliction it selfe is bitter and yrkesome to the flesh but the derisions mockings of the enemy serue to double the crosse and to adde to the measure and manner of our misery If then we shall see with our eyes and heare with our eares the lamentable condition of the Church and laugh when the people of God weepe and lament the iustice of God shall ouertake vs and make vs a
mocke to our enemy 4 After they departed from mount Hor by the way of the red sea to compasse the land of Edom and the soule of the people was sore greeued because of the way 5 For the people spake against God and against Moses saying Wherefore haue ye brought vs out of Egypt to die in this wildernesse for heere is neither bread nor water c. 6 Wherefore the Lord sent fiery serpents c. 7 Then the people came to Moses and saide We haue sinned c. 8 And the Lord said vnto Moses Make thee a fiery serpent c. 9 So Moses made a serpent of Brasse c. Hitherto of the first part of the Chapter containing the encounter betweene the Canaanites and the Israelites now we come to the second part handling the eight and last murmuring of the people through wearinesse of their way and compasse they were compelled to fetch through the vnmercifulnesse of the Edomites wherby they offended God againe In this history we are to consider sundry circumstances setting downe their sinne who fal againe into their former faults and offences As the dog returneth to his vomite 2 Pet. 2.22 and the Sow vnto the wallowing in the myre First the place and occasion hereof is described Secondly the manner of their sinne Thirdly the matter and substance thereof wherein it consisteth is set downe Fourthly the punishment and iudgement of God inflicted vpon them for their sinne Lastly the euents and effects following the punishment First touching the circumstances of the place and occasion of the sinne obserue that the Israelites departing from Hor and crossed in their purpose weree constrained to trauell all along the coasts of Edom and to passe ouer a most perilous and dangerous desert as it is set forth Deut. 8.15 Where the hearts of the people failed and fainted where the fiery serpents stung and destroyed them and where thirst pined them away It was no small greefe and vexation vnto them hauing onely a short cut into Canaan by crossing ouer the countrey of the Edomites to wander vp and downe to trauerse the ragged rockes the high mountaines and the vaste wildernesse and thereupon they brake out through impatiency of spirit to murmure against Moses They thinke themselues in the high pride of their hauty hearts able to match and to meete with the king of Edom in the field to giue him battell and to worke their owne peace and passage by dint of the sword as they had ouerthrowne Harad a king of the Canaanites and destroyed his cities and therefore needed not to stand at the mercy and courtisie of others nor fetch such compasses as Moses made them to doe in the wildernesse Secondly the manner of their murmuring is remembred verse 5. where the hand of God being heauy vpon them in that great and terrible wildernesse they do not cry to him they doe not call to mind that blessed experience of his helping hand which they had found euer ready to succour and sustaine them Exo. 14.13 14 they consider not the reuenge and punishment that God from time to time had taken of their murmurings but they flye vpon him as a mad dog in the face of his master that feedeth and fostereth him that breedeth and bringeth him vp they reuile and raile vpon his seruant Moses Such is the slippery place of gouernement such is the nature of the multitude and such is the lot of Gods Ministers Thirdly the summe and substance of their mutiny and murmuring is two-fold First a very vehement expostulation with Moses for bringing them out of Egypt wherein they disgorge their malice with full or rather foule mouthes Exod. 14.11 As if he had aduisedly and purposely brought them into the wildernesse to destroy them Secondly obserue the reasons of that expostulation which are two first because at this present no bread no water no foode appeared vnto them who measured the strength of God by the length of their bellies now they account themselues ready to bee famished Which kind of death proceeding from hunger and famine of all other kinds that can be thought vpon is most wretched and miserable it hath driuen men and women to this exigent to eate their owne flesh Deu. 28.53 2 king 6.29 and the flesh of their children Secondly because they were weary of Manna which they call a light a sight or vile meate such as no reckoning or account was to be made thereof Wherein they slander God bring vp an euill name and report of his miraculous work and complaine of their necessity where no want was and of hunger where no hunger was and so their vnbridled tongues testifie their vnthankefull hearts saying That they were weary of their liues for this light meat which God notwithstanding had sent them from heauen Psal 78.25 and fed them with Angels foode in great aboundance verifying the saying of the Wiseman Prou 19.3 The foolishnesse of man perverteth his way and his heart fretteth against the Lord. The fourth point followeth namely the punishment which God inflicted without any communication had with Moses or denouncing of it before it fell as God had done before when he hid not from Moses what he was determined to doe before he hid it but presently punished them to shew the greeuousnesse of their sinne and the greatnesse of his wrath conceiued against them The punishment was Psal 140.3 That whereas they had sharpned their tongues like Serpents so as the poison of adders and astes was vnder their lippes he sent among them a kind of Scorpions and Serpents which with their biting infused their venome and poison which immediately being shed dispersed it selfe into all their body whereby they were inflamed with such extraordinary heate that they endured great drought and suffered a great thirst whereof they complained before They thought they complained of thirst iustly but now they feele it indeed to the full so that such are were stung with this venemous byting dyed the death The last circumstances to bee considered are the effects following For first the people in this great extremity and anguish of spirit come in haste to Moses against whom before they maliciously murmured to whom they confesse their offence ●n 5.16 that now began to lie sore vpon their conciences and desire earnestly his prayers that they might bee preserued and deliuered from the venemous bytings of those stinging serpents which Moses doth willingly faithfully performe being mindfull of his owne duty and vnmindfull of their wrongs Secondly the Lord hauing brought the people to a sight of their sinnes by a feeling of his iudgments that they humble themselues before him confesse their offences and call for mercy he heareth the prayer of Moses For the prayer of a faithfull man preuaileth much if it be feruent 〈◊〉 5.15 is reconciled vnto them and witnesseth the same by giuing them a true token and shewing the meanes and remedy of their present malady commanding a
the blinde so that he had ruinated himselfe his wife if the hand of God had not assisted and preuēted the mischiefe The like we see in Lot in a greater sinne Ge. 19 33 35. who being deliuered out of Sodome and growing secure fell twice into horrible incest with his owne daughters and yet recouered himselfe by vnfeigned repentance The like we see in Iohn Reuel 19 10. and 22 8. one of the twelue Apostles and the Disciple whom Iesus loued how he fell into idolatry and worshipped an Angell for which he was reproued of the Angell yet he failed the second time in giuing diuine worship to a creature which belongeth properly and peculiarly to the Lord the Creator Here then is comfort and consolation to all such as grone vnder the burden of sinne haue fallen through infirmity into the same sinnes let not such doubt of Gods mercy Who is much in sparing sinners and with whom is plentifull redemption Psal 130 7. Let them not feare the tentations of the diuell who goeth about like a roring Lyon seeking whom he may deuoure 1 Pet. 5 8 but assure themselues that albeit with Peter they fall often yet if with him they repent truely weepe bitterly for their sinnes the Lord is mercifull to forgiue them their sinnes Not that we should sinne proudly presumptuously stubbornely stifly and obstinately against him that grace may abound Romanes chapter 6 verse 1 but if we sinne thorough frailty he wil not shut vs frō his mercy The diuell will tempt often the world allure often the flesh entise often so we may fall often through the tentations of the diuell thorough the allurements of the world and thorough the entisements of the flesh If they did draw vs and prouoke vs to sinne but once we should fall but once but they are euer at our elbow to worke our ruine and forsake vs not for euer as the diuell departed from Christ onely for a season Luke 4 13. But the Lord knoweth whereof we are made He remembreth that we are but dust he considereth that wee are but flesh yea as a winde that passeth and cometh not againe Psal 103 14 and 78 39. So that albeit we be often ouercome by sin yet if we often repent and returne vnto him he is a Father that hath more then one blessing in store and a liberall giuer that reprocheth no man Iam. 1.5 and pardoneth those that haue often asked and begged pardon It followeth Here is neither bread nor water and our soule loatheth this light bread Heere is the sinne of this people after God had plentifully and aboundantly fed them to the full they waxe wanton and weary of this food they account their Manna a vile and contemptible meat albeit it were most precious and named therefore Psal 78 25. Doctrine Naturally we soone waxe wearie and wanton of Gods gifts Reuel 2 17. Angels food The doctrine from this corrupt practise is this that we waxe weary loathe and contemne Gods blessings which we seemed at the first with ioy and gladnesse to receiue We soone learne to contemne to make little and light account of spirituall and temporall blessings for this Manna was both We see this in our first parents they were compassed with the kindnesse of God and hedged about with his mercies yet were not long contented with them nor rested in them with thanksgiuing but lusted to taste of the tree of be knowledge of good and euill and would be as gods knowing good and euill Gen. 3 6. So Esau was the first borne he should haue delighted therein as in a pledge of Gods fauour and a mirrour of his great mercy Ge. 25 33.44 Heb. 12 16 17 yet he grew prophane and secure he sold the birthright and contemned the blessing This Salomon teacheth Prou. 27 7. The person that is full despiseth an hony-combe but vnto the hungry soule euery bitter thing is sweet The like we reade in Moses Deut. 32 15. Hee that should haue beene vpright when he waxed fat spurned with his heele thou art grosse thou art laden with fatnesse therefore he forsooke God that made him and regarded not the strong God of his saluation Thus we see how ready we are to despise Gods graces and so to come to the very top of iniquity Reason 1 The reasons follow to be considered First it is not much to be maruailed at that we wax weary of good things because we want the spirit of discerning and of iudgement to see into our owne selues Hence it is that we hold not on in a certaine and setled course the way of godlinesse which we are entred into We hault in our iourney and many waies trip before we come to the end thereof And the reason is because we weigh not heauenly things with the weights of the Sanctuary but put thē in the partiall and deceitfull ballances of our owne braines wherby we deceiue our selues rob God of his honor prize the best things at a vile rate as Christ was valued at thirty pence Zach. 11 22. This sencelesnesse sottishnesse Christ himselfe checked in the Israelites saying vnto thē when he was come neere to the City and beheld it with teares O Luke 19 4● if thou hadst euen knowne at the least in this day those things which belong vnto thy peace but now are they hid from thine eies Where there is this blindnesse of minde this security of heart this want of iudgement to discerne of their estate condition aright no maruaile if there be a loathing and leauing of good things as was among the Israelites in this place Secondly we are so besotted and bewitched Reason 2 with the glittering shew of this world and of the things in this world that we haue no leisure to minde the world to come and are so pampered vp with the peace and plenty and pleasures of the world that as resty horses we spurne against our Creator Deut. 32 1 as Moses complaineth and we heard before As we are of the earth by creation so we alway carry a lump of this earth about vs our hands are full of it our eyes looke vpon it our feete tread vpon it our senses are exercised with it our talke communication is vpon it our hearts are possessed with it ahd all our life long we dwell vpon it Seeing therefore this mould of earth earthly things hath taken such roote in vs no maruaile if we grow carnal and secure waxe wanton and weary of the word and of those waies that leade vnto life and saluation This doth our blessed Sauiour teach vs Mat. 13 22 in the Parable of the Sower He that receiued the seed among thornes is he that heareth the word but the cares of this world and the deceitfulnesse of riches choake the word and he is made vnfruitfull The vses heereof are first to shew vs the Vse 1 difference betweene the godly and vngodly For the godly do magnifie Gods
Thou art the Lord my God When Christ saith If thou beleeue al things are possible to him that beleeueth Mark 9 23 the beleeuer answereth Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe When God requireth to do his will the beleeuer saith to him againe Loe I come O my God I am content to do it yea thy law is within mine heart Hence we must all learne to abhor abiure the false faith of the false church of Rome which teacheth that to be true faith which generally beleeueth the word of God to be true This is the faith of the reprobates and thus the diuell and all damned spirits may be said to haue faith For euery article of the Creed teacheth vs to beleeue not onely generally that there is a God Iames 2 19 a Sauiour a Sanctifier a Church of God a Communion of Saints a forgiuenesse of sinnes a resurrection of the body to euerlasting life which the diuell and his angels knoweth confesseth and beleeueth but particularly that God the Father is our Father that Christ is our Sauiour that the holy Ghost is our Sanctifier that there is an holy Catholike Church and that we are true members of it that we haue our part and fellowship in the Communion of Saints that our sinnes are forgiuen vs and that we shall rise againe to glory and immortality Hence it is that we pray daily not onely for remission of sinnes to be giuen to the faithfull but for the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes Hence it is that in coming to the Lords Table we receiue Christ as the bread of life and the food of our soules There can be no eating and drinking but by a particular taking and receiuing so can there bee no beleeuing in Christ without a speciall receiuing apprehending of Christ according to the saying of Christ Iohn 6 56 He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him No man is fed by the meate that another man eateth so no man is iustified by the faith whereby another man beleeueth but the iust man liueth by his owne faith Hab. 2 4. For he is the bread of life that came downe from heauen He that cometh to him Iohn 6 35 shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth on him shall neuer thirst Let vs therefore labour for this speciall faith and affiance in the mercy of God and make particular application of the merits of Christ Let vs beleeue in him who is the true brazen serpent or rather the truth of the brazen serpent let vs make him to be our life who is of God made vnto vs to be wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. 10 And the Childrē of Israel departed thence and pitched in Oboth 11 And they departed from Oboth and pitched in the hilles of Abarim in the Wildernesse which is before Moab at the rising of the Sunne 12 They departed thence and pitched vpon the Riuer of Zared 13 Thence they departed and pitched on the other side of Arnon which is in the Wildernesse coming out of the Coast of the Amorites for Arnon is the border of Moab betweene the Moabites and the Amorites 14 Wherefore it is spoken in the booke of the battels of the Lord against Vaheb in the Land of Suph and against the Riuers of Arnon 15 And the streame of these Riuers which goeth downe to the dwelling of Ar lieth vpon the border of Moab 16 And from thence they remoued to Beer the same is that Well whereof the Lord said vnto Moses Assemble the people and I will giue them water 17 Then Israel sang this song Rise vp Well shout ye vnto it 18 O Well which the Princes digged the Nobles of the people digged it by the direction of the law-giuer with their staues And from the Wildernesse they went to Mattanah 19 And from Mattanah to Nahaliel and from Nahaliel to Bamoth 20 And from Bamoth to the Valley which is in the Land of the Moabites at the beginning of the Hilles and looketh toward the Wildernesse In this diuision is contained the third part of this Chapter describing the peregrinations and perambulations of the Israelites in what places they pitched their Tents till they came to the possession of the Amorites Touching these seuerall iournies some are barely and nakedly mentioned because no notable matter or extraordinary and memorable accident fell out therein other are passed ouer and not at all mentioned or remembred because the whole order of their trauelling in the Wildernesse is particularly recorded afterward Numbers chapter 33 how they remoued from place to place and after what manner But vpon some other of their remoouals Moses doeth somewhat more largely insist and as it were make a stay as in the setting downe of two points First rehearsing the boundes by which the Israelites passed into the Land of promise secondly describing the well which they digged for water Touching the first point they are said to haue pitched in Oboth then at the heapes of the hilles of Abarim situate right ouer against Moab then at the brooke Zared lastly at the borders of the Amorites neere to the Riuer Arnon Now because these were at the first the bounds and borders of the Moabites Moses sheweth how by conquest they were lost declaring both who lost them and likewise who wonne thē by the dint of the sword For he telleth vs by the Spirit of God that these places were once in the power possession and dominion of Vaheb who before managed the state and kingdome of the Moabites but Sihon thirsting with ambition to enlarge the boundes of his dominion set vpon Vaheb bad him battell and wonne these Coasts Countries from him Now to continue the memoriall remembrance heereof to posterity there was a publike register made hereof to posterity shewing that the name of those quarters was Suph ●●t 1 1. and declaring that Vaheb had bene the lawfull possessour of thē as Sihon was now the wrongfull vsurper Neuerthelesse as all things else are ouerswaied by an higher power so this battell was fought and directed by the prouidence of God that the Moabites for their horrible idolatry might be punished that Sihon prouoking Israel to battell might be repressed and that thereby an inheritance for the people of God might be prepared and obtained This is the cause why God drew out the swords of these Infidels one against another that the Moabites lost a part of their dominion and the Amorites enlarged their borders Thus the Israelites took nothing from the Moabites neither possessed any part that was in their present possession as Iephtah prescribeth in the booke of Iudges chap. 11 26. For when the King of the Amonites challenged Israel for encroching vpon his ancient dominion deteining part of his Country from him to wit from Arnon vnto Iabbock and Iordan after their departure out of Egypt and required of them to make present restitution Iephtah conuinceth them and disproueth this allegation
nine There are none found that returned to giue God praise saue this stranger that was a Samaritan Secondly seeing we must giue God thanks Vse 2 for benefits receiued of what sort soeuer they be then especially we must praise him for spirituall blessings that are of an higher nature belong to a better life This the Prophet Psa 103 1 3. thought vpon prouoking himselfe to praise the Lord preparing his hart with his tongue to extoll his mercies he beginneth with this Which forgiueth all thine iniquities healeth al thine infirmities For wel did he know that if a man enioyed the world at wil and yet wanted the perswasion of the pardon of his sins and reconciliation towards God it were nothing For what shall it profit a man if hee win the whole world and lose his owne soule c. Mat. 16 26. When Israel was oppressed in Egypt it was ioyfull tydings to heare of a deliuerer and they rendred praise to God for their deliuerance When they had bin carried to Babylon and accomplished the yeares of their bondage prophesied by Iere. 25 12. and the Lord brought again the captiuity of Sion they seemed at the first like them that dreame Ps 126 1 2. Then was their mouth filled with laughter their tongue with ioy then the heathen confessed The Lord had done great things for them Then the church sang The Lord hath done great things for vs wherof we reioyce Suppose the case stood with any of vs bodily as it standeth with al of vs spiritually without any supposition at all that we were taken by enemies bound in chains cast into prison sticking fast in the mire pinched with famine and wasted with despaire of euer comming out of such a dungeon that lying thus without helpe or hope a king shold come vnto vs smite off our fetters free vs out of prison pay our ransome and promote vs to honor in his kingdome would we not render vnto him al possible thanks depend on him all the daies of our life But we are deliuered from greater enemies and from greater dangers from sin hell death darknesse the diuell and damnation For as the diuell doth exceede all bodily enemies and hell fire infinitely surpasseth the pains of this life which endure but for a season so we must consider that our deliuerance being greater our Thankesgiuing must not be the lesse but our praise must bee answerable to his power who hath cut the cords of our enemies and restored vs into the glorious liberty of the sons of God Let vs acknowledge our selues tied to this duty to offer to him the offering sacrifice of praise for the spiritual blessings of our redemption and saluation for his word Gospel he hath not so dealt with euery nation people This is the onely recompence that we can make him to giue him all the glory How shal we requite his mercies Ezek. 16 4 5 6. who finding vs neither washed in water nor swadled in clouts nor pittyed of any but cast out in the open field to the contempt of our person and polluted in our own blood couered our filthinesse annointed vs with oyle cloathed vs with broidred worke girded vs with fine linnen decked vs with ornaments and entred into a couenant with vs to become his Shall wee come before him with burnt offerings and Calues of a yeere old Will the Lord be pleased praised with thousands of Rams and with ten thousand riuers of oyle All these be as nothing For all the beasts are his and the beastes on a thousand Mountaines yea all the world is his and whatsoeuer therein is Psal 50 10 14. The seruice sacrifice wherein he delighteth is an humble contrite and thankfull heart which is more acceptable to him then all sacrifices that haue hornes and hooues Offer therefore vnto him praise and pay thy vowes vnto the most High which thy lips haue promised in the presence of all his people Vse 3 Thirdly let vs acknowledge this truth that his name is most glorious and confesse the greatnesse of his name to be worthy of al glory Let vs not set vp our owne names nor sacrifice to our owne nets nor say wee haue escaped by our owne power but thorough the fauour and kindnesse of God as the Prophet teacheth Psalme 124 1. Let vs not claime the praise of God to our selues nor rob him of his honour but confesse that his mercy endureth for euer This vse the Prophet teacheth Psal 8 1 9 where setting downe many arguments of the praise of God which he sheweth in the earth he concludeth the maiesty of God to be worthy of all honor O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy name in all the world None can praise him aright except hee be touched with a feeling of Gods greatnesse goodnesse and maiesty euen as our prayers are colde when wee haue a small and slight feeling of sinne Vse 4 Lastly seeing praise and glory is due to God for his blessings it is our duty to pray for thē and to aske them at his hands When the Prophet Psal 50 15. had stirred the people vp to offer vnto God praise he addeth withall Call vpon him in the day of troble so will he deliuer thee and thou shalt glorify him For when wee come to him by praier and haue experience of his goodnes who deliuereth our soul from death our eies from teares and our feet from falling and are assured that our helpe commeth neyther from the East nor from the West nor frō the wildernesse that is from the North nor South inasmuch as Iudea was on both sides included and compassed with a Desert Psal 75 6. we are hereby prouoked and pricked forward to cast downe our selues and all our glory at his feet to magnifie his mercy to exalt his praise on high and to say with the Prophet Ps 115 1. Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy name giue the glory for thy louing mercy and for thy truths sake But if we trust in our owne strength and rest in our owne labours and think the good things we possesse be the works and fruits of our own hands not the blessings gifts of God we shal neuer giue him praise for them but set vp our selues in his stead to the dishonor of his name to the confusion of our owne faces and to the hindering of the course of his blessings toward vs. Let vs therfore confesse that euery good and perfect gift commeth downe from aboue from the father of lights and then wee shall render him the Calues of our lips Verse 18. O Well whom the Princes digged c. We haue already declared in the former doctrine that the people gaue thanks to God for sending them water miraculously and supplying their want in that necessity Here we see offred to our consideration who were the chiefe workemen and principall Labourers in digging the Well the Princes Heads of the people the
bound to reioyce and praise GOD for their Prince who is as the comfort and consolation of our life and the verie instrument of our peace wee are they Vnder his shadow wee liue and abide as in a place of rest and sleepe quietly in our beddes free from all feare and danger whatsoeuer This we see described in the peaceable and prosperous dayes of Salomon there is no crying and complaining in our streetes We are blessed with earthly blessings we are an astonishment and wonder to our neighbour Nations They haue all deeply drunke of the cup of Gods wrath that hath beene filled with full measure whiles we haue looked on and our soule hath escaped And aboue all the rest we haue all this time enioyed and do enioy the bright light of the glorious Gospel and haue beene most of vs borne vnder the profession thereof to the establishing and continuing of many millions of thousands in the coueuant of grace and eternall life when other haue beene kept in horrible darknes and damnable idolatry to the destruction of their soules We are therefore vnhappy wretches if among all the mercies of God vpon vs this be not remembred as one of the first and cheefest And let vs learne to haue in abhomination from the bottome of our hearts the bloody practises and desperate attempts of all cursed Shemeis ● 15 6 7. who open their mouthes against the Lord and against his annointed with horrible execrations I meane the Iesuites and Priests brethren in euill together with the rest of that damned crew and generation who in stead of prayer and thanksgiuing for our Soueraigne vse falshood practise treasons and deuise mischieuous conspiracies seeking the life of their gracious Prince and labouring to stop the breath of our nostrils ● 4 20. whereas he that curseth the King should dye the death The Prophet Ieremy speaking of the estate of the people after the death of Iosiah bringeth them in thus complaining The breath of our nostrils the annointed of the Lord was taken in their Nets of whom we said Vnder his shadow we shall bee preserued aliue among the heathen Whereby he meaneth that the office of the King as the Superiour Pet. 2 13 14 and of all Magistrates as Gouernours sent of him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that do well is to protect and preserue the people in peace and safety euen as the breath that we draw in at our nostrils giueth life and health to the body Wherefore it standeth vs that are Subiects vpon not onely to be obedient for conscience sake vnto all lawfull ordinances of Princes who are the Lords Lieutenants appointed of him ouer his people for their good ● 82 1 2. but to pray earnestly for them that they may further vs in piety keepe vs in honesty and maintaine vs in tranquility one with another piety in respect of God honesty in respect of our selues tranquility in respect of others This charge the Apostle giueth when Magistrates were Infidels and Heathen that the Church should pray vnto God for them how much more therefore doth it stand vs vpon to practise this duty when as our Magistrates are the children of God and pillars of the Church And thus much of the third part of this chapter 21 Then Israel sent Messengers vnto Sihon King of the Amorites saying 22 Let me goe through thy Land we will not turne aside into the Fields nor into the Vineyards neither will we drinke of the waters of the Welles We will goe by the Kings way vntill we be past thy Border 23 But Sihon gaue Israel no licence to passe through his Border and Sihon assembled all his people and went out against Israel into the Wildernesse and he came to Iaboz and fought against Israel 24 But Israel smote him with the edge of the sword and inherited his Land from Arnon vnto Iabbok euen vnto the children of Ammon for the Border of the children of Ammon was strong 25 And Israel tooke all those Cities therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages thereof 26 For Heshbon was the City it selfe of Sihon King of the Amorites who fought against the former King of the Moabites and tooke away all his Land out of his hand euen vnto Arnon 27 Wherefore they that speake in Prouerbs say Come to Heshbon let the City of Sihon be● built and repaired 28 For a fire is gone out of Heshbon and a flame from the City of Sihon and hath consumed Har of the Moabites and the inhabitants of the high places of Arnon 29 Woe be to thee Moab O people of Kemosh thou art vndone he hath deliuered his sons which escaped and his daughters into captiuity to Sihon the King of the Amorites 30 Their Empire also is lost from Heshbon vnto Dibon and we haue destroied them vnto Nophah which reacheth vnto Medeba 31 Thus Israel dwelt in the Land of the Ammorites In these words and those that follow to the ende of the Chapter is contained the last part of this Chapter to wit the subduing of two mighty enemies in two seuerall battels namely Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan The Amorites were a people that came of Ham the youngest sonne of Noah as appeareth Gen. 10 verses 6 15 16. For Ham begat Canaan who disclosed the nakednesse of his Grandfather and Canaan begat Emori of whom came the Amorites who inhabited the Land of Bashan Mount Gilead This History is more at large recorded Deuter. chapter 2 and 3. ●irst touching Sihon we must obserue two things the iust occasion and aduantage which he gaue to Israel to subdue him and take poss●ssion of his Land For the Lord had hardened his spirit and made his heart obstinate because he would deliuer him into the hands of the Israelites Deuteronomy chapter 2 verse 30. Then secondly the ouerthrowing of him the entring into his Country the possessing of his Citties Hitherto they had compassed the Land of Edom with great danger with much wearinesse and sundry tentations they come to the Land of the Amorites there the King withstandeth them and will giue them no passage but fiercely and furiously encountreth with them Touching the occasion whereby Israel was iustly moued compelled to enter fight with the Amorites it offereth two points to be considered First a friendly and louing request of Moses Secondly a currish and vnkinde deniall made by Sihon Concerning the petition of Moses obserue the Embassage which he sent together with the reasons containing both the ground of his reasonable demand shewing the equity of the petition and laying down most equall conditions of peace because he desired onely passage through his Land without spoyle of the Country in generall or dammage to any person in particular The refusall of the King followeth and albeit the Israelites freely and frankly professed that their purpose was to passe by all
for vs when we sleep he heareth when we are deafe he riseth vp for vs when we lie downe hee is a buckler about vs when we are assaulted he is the God of knowledge when wee are ignorant And if euer there were people vnder the heauen that hath experience of Gods watchfulnesse in this kinde it is this Nation of great Britaine O vnthankfulnes if we doe not acknowledge it O wretchednesse if we doe not euer remember it O wickednes if we do not teach it to our posterities For hath not God deliuered vs from the most cursed and execrable plot of desperate enemies that euer was contriued against the King the Queene the Prince and the rest of their progeny against the Lords the Commons the whole Church kingdome ●hen the fift 〈◊〉 No●●● An. 〈◊〉 5. determining suddainly to haue blowne vp the whole house of Parliament with gun-powder Now as this was an inuention bloody an intention barbarous and inhumane See Act. 〈…〉 3. so by what meanes were wee deliuered was it by our fasting and prayer was it by humbling our selues before our God and crying strongly in the eares of the Lord of hostes was it by our teares and weeping for our sins saying spare thy people O Lord and giue not thine inheritance into reproch that the Priests and Iesuites should rule ouer them Nay we vsed none of all these we suspected no danger we feared no enemies we dreamed of no diuelish deuices against the land so that to detect and disclose the fore-named cursed conspiracy was the Lords doing onely and it is marueilous in our eyes When an inuasion in the yeere 88. was intended by the supposed inuincible Armado glorying in their strength munition shippes preparations confederates it was indeed the Lords mercy toward vs to crosse and curse their attempt and to raise the windes and seas against them howbeit this was not without vsing of meanes as rigging of shippes arming of men mustering of souldiers yea it was not without sanctifying of fasts calling solemne assemblies and crying vnto the Lord. If then wee did sing songs of thanksgiuing for that deliuerance how should our hearts be kindled and inflamed with ioyfulnesse and with what praises should wee expresse our thankfulnes 〈…〉 but euen vow vnto the Lord our selues our soules and bodies to offer them vp a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto him For as many haue bene the practices of the malicious and bloody Papists yet this surmounteth them all so many haue bene the deliuerances of our Princes of our Rulers of our Magistrates of our Ministers of our people but this surmounteth and surpasseth them all Psal 95 1 2. Let vs therefore reioyce vnto the Lord let vs sing aloud to the rock of our saluation let vs come before his face with praise let vs sing loud vnto him with Psalmes for the Lord is a great God and a great King aboue all gods He sitteth in heauen and laugheth to scorne the deuices of the wicked He ruleth in earth and maketh all his enemies his footstoole Verse 28. Then the Lord opened the mouth of the Asse When Balaam had smitten his Asse three times that had saued his life it pleased God to worke a wonder to alter the course of nature to giue speech to the Asse to make her able to reproue her master God indeed could otherwise haue set his sin in order before him but a dumbe beast is teacher fit enough for the fals Prophet We see hereby Doctrine God oftentimes worketh aboue nature that God so often as it pleaseth him worketh aboue nature ordinary meanes Hereunto come al the miracles which God hath shewed from the beginning of the world He gaue vnto Abraham Sarah a son in their old age who quickneth the dead Rom. 4 17. and calleth those things which be not as though they were He stayed the course of the Sun diuided the red sea fed his people with Manna Heb. 11 33 34. stopped the mouthes of Lions quenched the violence of fire opened the earth to swallow his enemies brought water out of the hard rocke Hee sent signes and wonders in the land of Egypt vnto this day in Israel and among al men hath made him a name as appeareth this day Hee brought his people out of the hand of Pharaoh with signes with wonders with a strong hand with a stretched out arme and with a great terrour He gaue power to a virgin to conceiue beare a son that he might saue his people from their sins Ier 32.20 Math 1 21 23. The reasons remaine to be considered and Reason 1 handled to confirme vs farther First marke the nature of God he is great in counsell glorious in holines fearefull in praises mighty in his workes and in his enterprises Who made the heauen who framed the earth and laide the foundation thereof vpon the depth who brought light out of darknesse Is it not the Lord that doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen in earth in the depth and in all the world This the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 32. Ah Lord God behold thou hast made the heauen and the earth by thy great power Ier. 32.17 by thy stretched out arme and there is nothing hard vnto thee he maketh the barren fruitfull Psal 136.5 ● he brought all things out of nothing who onely doth great wonders for his mercy endureth for euer who by his wisedome made the heauens and hath stretched out the earth vpon the waters for his mercy endureth for euer Againe therby he maketh his name known Reason 2 and his power to bee acknowledged in the world This is declared by Nehemiah in the prayer of the Leuites chap. 9. Thou hast considered the afflictiō of our fathers in Egypt heard their cry by the red Sea and shewed tokens and wonders vpon Pharaoh and on all his seruants and on all the people of the land for thou knowest that they dealt proudly against them Neh. 9 9 10. therefore thou madest thee a Name as appeareth this day Wherefore to the end the power and presence of God may bee knowne both to the Church and the enemies of the Church hee breaketh and interrupteth the naturall order and course of things Heereupon it is that Ioshua calleth the children of Israel and telleth them that by the miracle of diuiding the waters of Iordan Iosh 3 10. they should know that the liuing GOD was among them and would cast out the Canaanites before them Vse 1 The vse of this doctrine may bee made in this manner First it serueth fitly to condemne all Atheists and earth-wormes that aduance nature to throw downe the power of God Indeed if GOD onely wrought by ordinary meanes and according to the strength of second causes some pretence might bee alleaged and some colour of reason produced to doubt of the diuine power But seeing GOD worketh not onely by nature and by meanes but sometimes aboue
vs aboue other nations The more he hath honoured and exalted vs aboue others the more vile and odious we shall become he will poure shame contempt vpon vs he will make vs a mirrour and example of his iudgements to others vnlesse we bring foorth fruites answerable to so great goodnesse Who so is wise-hearted let him consider these things Verses 22 23 24. God brought them out of Egypt their strength is as an Vnicorne for there is no sorcery against Iacob Hitherto wee haue spoken of the spirituall blessings bestowed vpon the Church to wit the forgiuenesse of their sinnes the presence of the Spirit and the vse of the word Now followeth another priuiledge being an effect of the former that nothing shall hurt them they may fall into many afflictions but none shal be able to destroy them He alludeth in this place to the practise of the Vnicorne purging and clensing the water with his horne against the poison of venomous beasts From hence we learne Doctrine No attempt● shall hurt th● Church that no meanes and attempts shall hurt or ouerthrow the Church Whatsoeuer the enemies of God and his people imagine what counsell soeuer they take what mischiefes they deuise God will make them frustrate and of none effect This truth appeareth by sundry examples in the word of God When the Church of God was in Egypt the Egyptians said Let vs work wisely with them lest they multiply they vexed them with bondage they destroyed their children they oppressed them with burthens they plagued them with taskemasters and euery way they encreased their miseries Ex. 1 2 3. yet after all these diuellish practises they preuayled nothing against them This appeareth likewise in the ambition and pride of Haman Ester 3. and 7 and 9. He thirsted after blood but the plot he had contriued was disappointed and he fel into the pit which hee had digged for another the snare was broken and the Church was deliuered Infinite are the examples that might be produced to this purpose of the Churches dangers and deliuerances The Prophet Dauid handleth this argument at large in sundry Psalmes In the 91. Psalme verses 3 4 5 c. he assureth those that trust in God that into whatsoeuer dangers they fall they shall neuer miscarry nor be dismayed in theyr afflictions Where the Prophet meaneth that howsoeuer these afflictions may come to the godly yet they shall not bee able to hurt or hinder their eternall peace with God but he will make them and all things besides to further theyr saluation This is it which the Apostle teacheth at large Rom. 8 35 37. Thus we see that no attempts can hurt the Church inasmuch as God taketh the wise in their craftinesse and scattereth the deuices of the wicked Iob 5.13 as he turned the wisedome of Ahithophel into foolishnesse The Reasons of this Doctrine seruing for confirmation of vs are direct euident For Reason first it is God that watcheth ouer his to deliuer and to preserue them from all the dangers that go ouer theyr heads We shall not neede to feare hauing so good a keeper being assured of right good keeping He will alwayes protect vs by his great power and infinit goodnesse This the Prophet handleth at large Psal 121 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. So Moses declaring the cause that Balaams curses coniurations did not preuaile but were turned into a blessing sayth It was because the Lord loued his people Deut. 23 5. No policies can preuaile where there is such a keeper who being on our side what skilleth it who bee set against vs Reason 2 Secondly hee hath appointed the Angels also to guard and defend them to pitch their Tents round about them to bee ministering spirits sent out for their good which alwayes behold the face of their Father which is in heauen God is the cheefe watchman whom nothing can escape the Angels are second watchmen vnder God whom God hath deputed to that office to serue the necessities of the Church This the Prophet Dauid that sweet singer of Israel setteth downe Psal 91 10 11 12. Where the prophet proueth that no crosse or calamity shall come neere them or their dwellings to hurt them because not onely God himselfe will care for their defence but appoint the holy Angels as his heauenly messengers to preserue them Not that the helpe of God is not sufficient or that we should put our trust in their helpe but to teach vs for our comfort that we haue God and all the hoast of heauen as an army ready mustered marshalled to succour and sustaine vs in all our dangers Now it remaineth to consider what Vses Vse 1 may be made of this Doctrine First we must confesse to our singular comfort that great is the power and goodnesse of God which can neuer faile or forsake those that are his No counsell or wisedome or policy can escape his knowledge or encounter with his power we see this notably in this example before our eyes This false Prophet Balaam was an enemy of God and of his people he had set both his heart to couet and his tongue to saie all his purpose was to curse the people hee leaueth nothing vnattempted to compasse and contriue his enterprize yet we see all is vanity and commeth in the end to nothing Great therfore is the power and might of God We heard in verse 19. that he was constrained to say That God is not like to mortall men therfore we ought to be ashamed to call the truth or power of God into question wherein there is neither want nor weaknes All the power that is in men and Angels is nothing to the infinite power of God Let vs therefore acknowledge and confesse this might and maiesty of God let vs in all our dangers and calamities reuerence it and rest in it Let vs not measure it by ordinary meanes but know that he is able to work as wel without means and against meanes as by meanes The faith of Abraham is commended by the Apostle Ro. 4 18. Heb. 11 That aboue hope he beleeued vnder hope and that God was able of the ashes of Isaac offered vp in sacrifice to raise him againe to life 〈◊〉 2. Secondly wee may in assurance of his fauour conclude the blessednesse of the people of God and their happy estate and condition yea we may truly say with the Psalmist Psal 144 15. Blessed are the people that are so yea blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. None are harder assaulted none are better protected Their confusion is sought but they stand in the strength of God This is a great blessing to be shaken and yet to abide firme in stormes and tempests Happy are they that haue so vigilant a watchman as the Lord is That City is safe that kingdome is sure that house is quyeted that soule is secured that hath such a keeper What City vpon the earth sauing the City of
but they haue the wil of God reuealed and the Lord speaking vnto them in his word This word they must teach nothing but this word and all that is reuealed for our saluation in this word A witnes that is broght in to giue euidence betweene man and man in any hard matter that riseth in iudgement betweene blood and blood Cicer. Epist famil lib. 5. betweene Plea Plea is sworne to speake the truth and all the truth and nothing but the truth So should it be with all Pastors and Teachers which are as the Lords witnesses they must deale fully and faithfully they must boldly speake that which God in his word hath reuealed publish vnto his people all that which he hath deliuered vnto them This is it which the Lord spake to Ieremy hanging backe when God called him excusing whē God separated him refusing when God had chosen him Say not I am a childe for thou shalt goe to all that I shall send thee and whatsoeuer I command thee shalt thou speake Ier. 1 7. 1 Kings 22 14. Likewise when our Sauiour sent out his Apostles into the world he charged them with this as a part of their commission Teach them to obserue all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you Math. 28 20. And the Apostle speaking of the Supper of the Lord saith I receiued of the Lord that which I also haue deliuered vnto you 1 Cor. 11 23. And afterward confirming the faith in the Corinthians in the article of the resurrection hee saith First of all I deliuered vnto you that which I receiued how that Christ died for our sinnes and rose againe according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15 3. Thus doth the Apostle clear himselfe being falsely charged by the Iewes I obtained helpe of God and continue vnto this day witnessing vnto small and great saying none other things then those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come Acts 26 22. Yea this was the vsuall manner of all the Prophets preaching vnto the people to come vnto them in the Name of God Heare ye the word of the Lord Thus saith the Lord. Reason 1 The Reasons for confirmation heereof follow to be marked of vs. First this appeareth from the sundry titles as names of their Office that are giuē vnto them in the Scriptures to put them in minde of the duties of their callings They are called Workemen because they should do the Lords businesse 2 Tim. 2 15. and finish the worke whereunto hee hath called and ordayned them They are called Builders because they should build vpon the foundat●●n Psal 118 ● The foundation is precious euen Iesus Christ who is pure and perfect gold and they must build vpon it gold siluer and precious stones not hay not stubble not timber lest they suffer losse when the fiery triall shall come Thus the Apostle speaketh 1 Cor. 3 12. According to the grace of God giuen to me as a skilfull Master-builder I haue laide the foundation and another buildeth thereon but let euery one take heed how he buildeth vpon it Sometimes they are called Pastors Shepheards Eph. 4 11. Ier. 3 15. because they shold make the Sheepe of Christ to rest in greene pasture and leade them by the still waters Sometimes they are called Messengers because they are Mal 2 7. 2 Cor. 5 20 or should be Gods mouth and messengers vnto the people and in stead of God himselfe to them Should not the Embassadour deliuer the message and al the message of his Lord and Master Dare hee chop and change dare he adde or alter dare he inuent deuise any thing of his owne No he will not depart or decline from his commission but faithfully dischargeth the trust reposed in him The Ministers are the messengers of God and Embassadours of Christ and therefore it is required of them that they be found faithfull in the execution of their office Hence it is that the Prophet saith The Priests lips should preserue knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts So the Apostle speaketh Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you through vs we pray you in Christs stead that ye be reconciled to God All which Titles do tye vp the Minister of God to deliuer onely the message of God and do not leaue him at liberty to teach what he list Secondly to the end the faith of the hearers Reason 2 may be certaine stayed vpon the power of God not vpon the wisedom of men which is but a broken Reede a weake Pillar and a rotten foundation to beare them vp This is the reason that the Apostle Paul vseth 1 Cor. 2 after he had shewed that he spake vnto thē the wisedome of God in a mystery euen the hid wisedome which God had determined before the world vnto our glory hee giueth this reason That your faith should not be in the wisedome of men but in the power of God 1 Cor. 2 5 7. God would not haue his people left in vncertainties nor fed with chaffe nor carried about with euery winde and weather of doctrine but builded vpon a sure Rocke stand vpon a certaine foundation But there is no sound feeding for the soule but by the word which is the power of God to saluation all other foode is as dust and drauery All the fine deuices of the wit deliuered in the perswasible words of mans wisedome that tickle the outward eares and delight carnall men sauoring wholly of the flesh and not of the Spirit are no better then huskes fitter to feed swine then to nourish the sonnes and daughters of God ●o eternall life The word of God is a sharpe two edged sword 〈◊〉 1 16. 〈◊〉 4 1● the word of man is as a leaden knife or a wooden dagger which may well threaten but cannot strike or if it strike it cannot enter The word of God is a consuming fire Ier. 5 14 and 23 29 like to God the author of it able to enflame mens hearts with a loue of God when it is beleeued the word of mā is as a painted fire which carrieth a shew but hath no substance or strength eyther to waste the stubble or to refine and purifie siluer or gold The word of God is the Lords Fan to winnow the people Math. 3 12 separating the bastardly brood of Abraham from the true sonnes venting the hypocrites from the beleeuers and scattering with the powerfull blast thereof the reprobates from the elect all other wayes means that are vsed are too weake feeble to work this separation of the chaffe from the wheat And therefore all such as are the Lords Fanners that would publish their doctrine not to please the eare but to open the doore of the conscience must vse no other instrument then this word of God which hath this force and effect Reason 3 Thirdly God will destroy those that doe
the most Highest Therefore he did not seeke a solitary place as hee was wont to worke his witchcrafts at which time he saw God met and preuented him but turneth his countenance at a sodaine toward the desart of Iordan Chap. 22 1. where the Israelites soiourned and pitched their Tents purposing presently to breake out into a cursing of them before the God of the Israelites should be aware of it supposing he would haue put no prophesie in his mouth before he should go to fet his wicked and wonted diuinations Thus he determined with himselfe to vtter the wicked imaginations of his own heart before God shold worke any impression in his minde or reueale his counsell vnto him But God which catcheth the wise in theyr owne craftinesse 1 Cor. 3 19 20 and knoweth that the thoughtes of the most wily are vaine represseth his diuellish purpose and doeth not onely bridle his tongue but inspireth him with his Spirit being as it were changed into another man that he should speake not his own deuices but the words of God So then God casting as it wer his hand vpon him taketh hold on him staying his intent and stopping his course two wayes the one outward the other inward The outward meanes vsed of God to hinder him was the beholding of the dwellings and lodgings of the Israelites distinguished according to their Tribes For when hee saw with his eyes their goodly and comely order whereby the presence of God amongst them was claerly manifested and theyr fayth in him was testified euery man encamping by his standard and vnder the Ensigne of his fathers house Numb 2 2. Numb 2 2. he was vpon that sight and situation of them withholden from proceeding in his curses and execrations The inward meanes was yet more forcible to stoppe the streame of the waters ready to ouerflow the people of God for the Spirit of God came sodainly vpon him that whereas he determined to serue the diuell and damned spirits he is constrayned against his will to serue the purpose and prouidence of God to speak what God would not what himselfe wished desired Thus we see that neither sathan nor his instruments can worke any hurt to the saluation of the people of God Rom. 16 20. but both they and all their endeuours come to nothing Hitherto of the preparation now we come to the prophesy which he vttereth by the Spirit of God In this we are to consider first the entrance into it then the prophesie it selfe In the entrance or beginning to procure attention and purchase credit to his words he setteth downe three things first the inscription and title of the prophesy wherin is a description of himselfe by his name and the name of his father For albeit Balaams name bee of no such waight and moment with vs that we shold for the persons sake giue credite to the prophesie or respect more who speaketh then what is spoken yet this simple plaine dealing professing his own name and confessing himselfe the vnwoorthy instrument of God serueth to adde some authority to the speech that followeth Secondly he stileth himselfe to be the man whose eies were opened wherby he teacheth that he would publish nothing of his owne inuention but that onely which he had receiued by diuine inspiration As if he should say Though Balaam be by nature as blind as a beetle in the matters of God and vnderstand nothing of heauenly things yet he hath receiued a spiritual and heauenly reuelation of the Spirit from aboue that of a blinde man whose eyes through couetousnes of mony and ignorance of God were closed vp he is become a seer to see for others not for himselfe nor his owne saluation Some reade the sentence thus that his eyes were shut vp but the other reading agreeth better to the circumstances of the text and the words folowing as euen Lyra himselfe confesseth that he was enlightned of God to see with the eyes of his mind more clearly then he could do with his bodily eyes Lyra in Numb cap. 24. inasmuch as the light of the mind is more plaine and perspicuous then the light of the body Thirdly he confesseth hee had heard the words of God Thus he speaketh after the manner of the true Prophets who were wont to beginne their prophesies with prefixing the name of God Thus saith the Lord Heare yee the word of the Lord to shew that they vttered not their owne inuentions but the Oracles of God Now as Balaams sight which is the sharpest quickest sence saw nothing before God opened his eyes so hee declareth he was dull and deafe of hearing before God had opened his eares to heare and deliuered his word vnto him Lastly he saith he had seen the vision of the Almighty rauished in mind but hauing his eyes vncouered whereby hee meaneth that being as it were in an extasy he was carried ●u● of himselfe The like is noted touching Saul ● Sam. ●9 he went to Naioth in Ramah and the Spirit of God came vpon him also and he went prophesying vntill he came thither Hereby Balaam sheweth two things first the author of the prophesie to wit the Almighty ascribing all to God challenging nothing to himselfe secondly the manner of his prophesie which was in a vision Ezek. 3 14 Dan. 8 27. and 10 8 which farre surpasseth the communication of Gods wil by dream albeit God be the author of both Thus hath God oftentimes made himself known among the Infidels both by visions and by dreames as to Abimelech Pharaoh Nebuchadnezar and others who may be sayd to haue the holy spirit but had not the spirit of holines for whersoeuer he worketh he is holy but he doth not alway work holines and sanctification which euermore accompany saluation What a 〈◊〉 is what a● the parts ends of it Now because it is said he fell into a trance it shall not be amisse to shew what a trance is what are the parts and ends of it being away and meanes which God hath vsed to reueale his will vnto men A trance is an extraordinary worke of the Spirit of God vpon the whole man casting the body and senses into a deepe sleep withdrawing the soule from the fellowship of the body to a fellowship with God for the better enlightning thereof It is I say an extraordinarie worke of the Spirit aboue the work of nature or constitution of the body or strength of the imagination whereby the whole man is for a time changed in body and mind the body the senses thereof both outward and inward cast into a deepe or dead sleepe made senselesse the soule withdrawne or separated from the communion and fellowship of the bodie to the fellowship of God for the better enlightning thereof to vnderstand the secrets counsels of God This is a trance or to be rauished in the Spirit which God vsed often to his Prophets It standeth in two parts or actions
his voyce Acts 9 4. saying to him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me His persecution was directly against the Saints but wee heare how the Lord acounteth that persecution to be against himselfe This is a singular encouragement to euery one of vs to loue the seruants of God from our hearts and to serue their necessities considering that it is as it were put vpon the Lords accounts and he will recompence it vnto our bosomes It is a great terror to al mercilesse malicious men for whatsoeuer mischiefe they worke against the godly it is done against Christ and they shall be arraigned as guilty of oppression and persecution against Christ Againe as this is an incouragement in well doing so it is a great comfort vnto vs in these fruites and works of mercy that God will remember them be mindfull of them and for them will assuredly helpe vs when wee are in distresse This the Prophet saith Blessed is hee that iudgeth wisely of the poore the Lord will deliuer him in the time of trouble Psal 41 1 2. So then when we haue bene seruiceable comfortable vnto others especially to the seruants of God there ariseth from hence a great comfort to our consciences an assurance of our eternall peace acception with God so that we may with boldnesse come to the throne of his grace pray vnto him for the graces of his Spirit Obadiah proueth that he seared the Lord in the truth of his spirit assureth his conscience thereof because hee had hid the Prophets of God in the persecution raised against them by Iezabel 1. King 18 12 13. Therefore when he feared that Eliah would procure vnto him the displeasure of Ahab and so bring vpon him a cruell death hee found comfort in the former fruites of mercy and said to the Prophet Was it not told my Lord what I did when Iezabel slew the Prophets of the Lord how I hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets by fifties in a caue and fed them with bread and water And now thou sayest goe tell thy Lord Behold Eliah is heere that hee may slay mee The like wee see in Nehemiah when hee had relieued the oppressed people and euery way sought rather the welfare of the Church then his owne commodity hee turneth himselfe to God and saith Neh. 5 19 13 14 22 31. Remember me O my God in goodnesse according to all that I haue done for this people Neh. 5 19. And chap. 13 14 22 31. Remember me O my God heerein and wipe not out my kindnesse that I haue shewed on the house of my God and the offices thereof He doth not heere glory in his owne merits nor putteth his trust in his good works for before he pleadeth mercy craueth pardon but desireth that God in goodnes would graciously reward the works which hee had done with a good conscience and is bolde to put him in minde of his promise who hath promised to repay whatsoeuer is done for the benefit and behoofe of his Saints A great comfort it is to be able in the simplicity of our hearts to speake thus How many are able in our dayes to say with Nehemiah Lord remember me according to all that I haue done for thy people For their owne conscience would by and by accuse them and cry out of the wrongs and iniuries they haue done vnto them how they haue hated them in their hearts smitten them with their hands wounded them with their tongues trampled vpon them with their feet and sold themselues to work mischiefe against them If they will not remember the seruants of God in kindnesse let them know God will remember their vnkindnesse and the children of God may pray vnto him not for desire of reuenge but for the aduancement of his glory to reward them according to their desarts as we see in Nehemiah Remember them O my God that defile the Priesthood Neh. 13 29. This must of necessity galle a mans conscience whē the terrors thereof shall accuse him for want of doing good seruice to the Church of God Iob 27.23 Iam. 2 15. yea for doing great wrongs and offering many indignities against the Church 10 Then Balak was very angry with Balaam and smote his hands together so Balak said vnto Balaam I sent for thee to curse mine enemies and behold thou hast blessed them vncessantly now three times 11 Therfore now flee vnto thy place I thoght surely I will promote thee vnto honour but loe the Lord hath kept thee backe from honour 12 Then Balaam answered Balak Told I not also thy Messengers which thou sentest vnto me saying 13 If Balak would giue mee his house full of siluer and gold I cannot passe the commandement of the Lord to do either good or bad of mine owne minde What the Lord shall command the same I shall speake 14 And now behold I goe vnto my people Come I will counsell thee such things as this people shall do to thy people in the latter dayes Hitherto we haue spoken of the preparation into the Prophesie and likewise of the Prophesie it selfe Now followeth the effect and euent thereof expressed partly in Balak the King and partly in Balaam the false Prophet Touching Balak Moses declareth that when he saw himselfe againe disappointed of his hope and expectation hee bursteth for anger and smiteth his hands together in token of the inward indignation of his heart For as the patient abiding of the righteous shall be gladnesse Prou. 10 28 so the hope of the wicked shall perish He is content to hearken vnto the Sorcerer so long as hee hopeth to heare pleasant and pleasing things of him but when he is deceiued he rayleth and rageth without measure Balaks anger against Balaam His indignation conceiued against him appeareth first by comparing his owne purpose with Balaams practise when he saith I sent for thee to curse mine enemies and behold thou hast not ceased to blesse them now three times It is no lesse absurd and iniurious in thee to blesse mine enemies thē if thou shouldest curse my friends for in that thou blesses them it is all one as if thou cursedst me If thou standest with them thou standest against me both of vs cannot stand together If they continue I fall Secondly he doth cashire him and cast him out of his fauour he withdraweth the present prepared for him and denyeth him the wages and stipend promised vnto him I saide Surely I will aduance thee to honour but the Lord hath kept thee backe from honour as if he should say Depart from me thou vnhappy Prophet vnhappy in thy Prophesie vnhappy in thy preferment vnhappy to me vnhappy to thy selfe I called thee not to blesse this people but to curse them I haue honoured thee among my Princes and would moreouer if that had bin too little haue done vnto thee and for thee greater things then these But seeing thou settest so light by my gifts goe thy wayes
deceiued and shal be disappointed of our hope Let vs not looke for any consolation from him but woe and confusion of faces This our Sauiour teacheth in the Gospel Iohn 3 19. This is the condemnation that light came into the world and men loued darknesse rather then that light because their deeds were euill It must needs be a strange darknesse that cannot be driuen away by the beames of this bright shining It must be a very grosse and wilfull blindnesse where the continuall light of the Gospel proceeding from the louing face of Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath wrought no knowledge nor profit in the wayes of godlinesse The Apostle in this respect saith If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4 3 4. in whom the god of this world hath blinded the minde that is of the Infidels that the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the Image of God should not shine vnto them Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath appeared and shined gloriously in this part of the earth and yet alasse how many are there starke blinde and willingly blinde euen vnder the ministry of the most painefull seruants of God that labor in the Lords vineyard and spend their strength to giue light to others If a man hearing the voyce of a trumpet yet will stop his eares or hauing the light of the day yet will shut fast his eyes this is a wilfull ignorance 2 Pet 3 5. and a presumptuous sin that shall encrease their iudgement and condemnation This doth our Sauiour teach Iohn 15 12. If I had not come and spoken vnto them they should not haue had sinne but now haue they no cloake for their sinne The Prophets prophesying of the times of the Gospel and of the people that should beleeue in Christ declare as we noted before that God would poure out his Spirit vpon all flesh Esay 11 9. 2 3. that all should bee taught of God that the earth should bee full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters do couer the sea What shall we say of these things The palpable ignorance and horrible blindnesse which is seene in the world sheweth plainly that we are not that people The Prophet telleth vs what readinesse and forwardnes should be in men to come into Gods house for encrease of knowledge to be instructed in his wil and to walke in his wayes that they should say one to another Vp let vs goe and pray before the Lord let vs seeke the Lord of Hoasts and I will goe also Zach. 8 21. We are farre from this zeale and from encouraging one another in good things and therefore the blessings of God do stand farre from vs also So then we see such as liue in ignorance and sinne are darknesse and haue no communion with Christ for what fellowship can there be betweene light and darknesse Vse 2 Secondly wee must all haue a speciall care that this Starre may rise in our hearts that the Sunne of righteousnesse may reioyce and refresh vs. Now the right way to haue him with a gracious aspect to shine vpon vs is for vs to regard and giue heed to the lesser lights the candle-lights or starre-lights which are fore-runners of this starre to wit the light of the Prophets of the Apostles and other seruants of God which are appointed to direct vs in the course of our life and to point out vnto vs this light So the Apostle saith Ye haue a sure word of the Prophets vnto which yee shall doe well to giue heed as vnto a light that shineth in darke places vntill the day dawne and the Day-starre arise in your hearts 2 Pet. 1 19. And our Sauiour calleth his Disciples the light of the world and a City set vpon an hill Iohn Baptist was a burning and a shining Candle Iohn 5 35. They that will not follow these lights nor seeke to be guided by these starres shall neuer feele the comfort of this Starre of Iacob So thē these places of the world where those lesser lights haue no entertainment or where by the malice of the people they are remoued or their lights put out are most wretched and miserable The people are said in the Prophet to haue walked in darknes Esay 9 2. Math. 4 13. and to haue dwelled in the land of the shadow of death before these lights shined on them So long as Israel was without a preaching Priesthood to deliuer vnto them the Law of God so long they were without God and his word 2 Chron. 15 3. So long as they wanted these Stewards of the Lords house to giue them their portion of meate in due season they endured a greeuous famine of the soule and perished for want of food It standeth vs therefore vpon to reioyce in these lights and to be glad when these starres begin to shine among vs they are the ioy and solace of the earth howsoeuer they be basely esteemed off in the world and reproched by them that loue darknesse more then light because their wayes are euill Iohn 3 20 21 for euery man that euill doth hateth the light neyther commeth to the light lest his deeds should be reproued but hee that doth trueth cometh to the light that his deeds might bee made manifest that they are wrought according to God The Galatians did so affect Paul that they would haue pulled out both their lights to wit their eyes to do him good Gal. 4 15. But the practise of our times and the lamentable experience of our dayes sheweth the contrary men seeke by all wayes and deuices they can to dim and darken these lights by greeuing and vexing them by disgracing and slandering them by molesting and troubling of them by discouraging and discountenancing of them that so they might hinder the building of the Lords house If these men were asked the question whether they would haue Christ shine in their hearts and arise as a bright starre to scatter the cloudy mistes of their vnbeleeuing minds no doubt they wold answer it is their desire and that they finde more vse of the light of Christ in their soules then of the shining of the Sunne in the Firmament and yet so long as they do not vse those meanes whereby the beames of this Starre of Iacob may shine vpon them they make it manifest they regard not the Starre it selfe And therefore let no man flatter himselfe that hee regardeth the Gospel or Christ the bringer of the glad tydings of saluation when they will not open their eares to the Gospel preached by such as Christ hath appointed ouer vs. Vse 3 Lastly we must take heed we be not deceiued in iudging of this light For many imagine they haue the light of this Sunne of righteousnes and of this starre of Iacob whē they haue but a false light True it is Christ is in himselfe of himselfe alwayes a light howsoeuer he be receiued albeit men shut
diuels Fish in the sea that is all soules in Purgatory Moreouer as this course of interpretation turneth the Scripture into Allegories so it ouerturneth the rules of Interpretation Saint Augustine in his famous bookes of Christian Doctrine handleth at large the manner how to expound the Scripture and what wayes are to be taken to find out the true meaning therof De doct chri lib. 1. 2 3 Hieron in Esai cap. 19 Where he teacheth that seeing the loue of God and of our neighbour is the end of the whole Scripture that must be a false interpretation which doth not build vp in this loue that we must expound the darke places by the plaine the fewer by the greater number that the study of artes knowledge of the toongs is necessary that we must expound Scripture by Scripture that wee must distinguish betweene precepts precepts betweene those that are giuen to all and those that were particularly directed to certaine persons that we must diligently marke all circumstances what goeth before and what followeth after that we must pray vnto him that is the Author of the Scriptures who onely is able to reueale the meaning of his owne word These rules are diligently to be considered of al those that come to expound the Scriptures As for hidden and secret sences we know them not we acknowledge them not we beleeue them not but leaue them to those that seeke an hidden diuinity and a secret religion deuised in their owne braines which will not abide the tryall of the light And thus much touching the true vnderstanding of this diuision and of ouerthrowing the false interpretation thereof now let vs come to the Doctrines that arise out of the same Verse 16. Againe the Lord spake vnto Moses saying c. We heard before the heauy wrath of God that fell vpon the Israelites the heads of thē were hanged the rest of the people were plagued with a sore plague there died in one day foure and twenty thousand But did the Midianites escape the hand of God that were the enticers of them who offered theyr daughters that they should commit fornication with them No they did not escape God giueth Moses charge to draw the sword against them and to destroy them Heere then we are to obserue the order which God obserueth in punishing The Midianites sinned first but the Israelites are first punished The Israelites sinned after the Midianites but the Midianites are punished after them From this course of Gods iudgements Doctrine God doth first chasten his owne people wee learne this Doctrine that God first chasteneth his owne people Howsoeuer he will not suffer the vngodly to escape nor to goe away without punishment but executeth his iust iudgments against them yet he will begin with his owne Church lay the rod vpon them in the first place He could if it had pleased him haue punished these Midianites first as the principal authors of all this mischiefe but he beginneth in iustice with his Church which were drawne to idolatry and adultery by them Thus the Lord dealt with Moses and Aaron when the people murmured through want of water repented of their going out of Egypt and rebelling against God assembling themselues in tumultuous manner against the seruants of GOD that had led them in the wildernesse and carried them in safety as vpon Eagles wings These were the first and chiefe in the offence yet because Moses and Aaron beleeued not the Lord to sanctifie him in the presence of the children of Israel they were first punished and not suffered to bring the congregation into the land which hee had giuen them Num. 20 12. This wee see further confirmed vnto vs in the latter end of the booke of Iob he had indeed offended God and spoken vnaduisedly with his lippes but his three friends had offended much more grossely then he for the wrath of God was kindled against them because they had not spoken of him the thing that is right like his seruant Iob Iob 42 7. Neuerthelesse Iob is rebuked first albeit he were the party that had lesse offended First God findeth fault with Iob and secondly hee findeth fault with his companions The holy history teacheth vs that Iehoshaphat ioyned in affinity with Ahab and went into the battell with him True it is he sinned grieuously in helping the wicked and louing them that hated the Lord for the which he is reproued of the Prophet yet many good things were found in him and he was righteous in respect of Ahab 2. Chron. 19 1 notwithstanding the wrath of the Lord began first to fal vpon him and he had perished in the fight being compassed by his enemies vnlesse hee had cryed vnto the Lord to helpe him who moued them to depart from him 2 Chron. 18.31 This is it which the Prophet Ieremy declareth at large shewing the order of the Lords proceeding in punishing such as sinne against him first he will rayse vp the Caldeans to chastice his Church and then the Caldeans themselues shall not escape I will send and take to me all the families of the North and I will bring them against this Land against the inhabitants therof and this whole land shall bee desolate and an astonishment and these nations shall serue the King of Babel seuenty yeeres when the seuenty yeares are accomplished c. Ier. 25 9 11 12. This is it which the Prophet complaineth of in the Psalme These are the wicked yet prosper they alwayes and encrease in riches Certainely I haue cleansed my heart in vaine washed mine hands in innocency c. Psal 73 12 13. And if we consider eyther the state of the Church generally or the condition of the members of the Church particularly we may in all times and ages see the truth of this doctrine and conclude with the Apostle Peter The time is come that iudgment must begin with the house of God 1. Pet. 4 17. Reason 1 The reasons will further open vnto vs the certainty of this truth and serue to cleare the iustice of God in obseruing this order For first as hee that honoureth the Lord shall bee honoured so they that despise the Lord shall be despised 2. Sam. 2 30. But none more dishonour GOD then his seruants offending against him whose sinnes presse him downe as the sheaues do a cart They open the mouthes of the vngodly to speake euil of God and his trueth If then Gods owne people the lot of his inheritance doe despise him and cause his Name to be blasphemed if they neglect his honour and turne his mercies vnto security and his grace into wantonnesse and so with a proud heart and an high hand set themselues against it can he beare it and wil hee not be reuenged on such a nation as this 1. Sam. 12.14 Rom. 2 24. There can be no greater despite done vnto a man then when his owne children rise against him and offer all villany vnto him So