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

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Virgins thinke to carry away all the praise As CHRIST was borne of a Virgin so of a Wife too feare not to take to thee Mary thy Wife Mariage serveth more for the propagation of the Church then Virginity doth God is glorified by marryed folke as by Virgins as in Abraham and Sarah Isaac and Rebeccah Zachary and Elizabeth with sundry others 3. Children are the inheritance of the Lord and the fruit of the womb is his reward When Sarah was a young woman in the floure of her age the mirrour of beauty a passing fayre and beautifull woman full of bloud then she had no Child when she is old and past child-bearing then she hath a Child these be the Children said Iacob to Esau which God of his grace hath given me We adscribe the fruits of trees to God and shall we not adscribe the fruits of our bodies to him whensoever we have Children in our young age or old age let us praise God for them VERSE 12. THe event which is amplified by the naughtinesse of the roote and the innumerable branches that sprang from it In regard of her faith and her Husbands together Of one sprang many of one Abraham for it is of the masculine gender by his copulation with Sarah Gorr ab uno that is utero 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And what was that one a dead one too Why he was now but an hundred yeares old Methusalem begat Lamech when hee was one hundred eightie seven yeeres old But they were of greater strength before the floud then after 2. Abraham sundry yeeres after this begate Children then why should this be counted a wonder he was lively afterwards and was he dead now those he begate of Keturah which was a yong woman 2. Even the power to beget them was of God too not of nature in himselfe he was a dead stocke The multitude of the branches is set forth by two similitudes Abraham had two kindes of Children the one after the flesh the other after the spirit By the starres as some will have it are meant the godly whose conversation is in heaven as the Starres bee in heaven and they shine by their vertues like starres Vnder the sand of the Sea is comprehended the carnall progeny of Abraham propter instabilitatem numerositatem ponderositatem infructuositatem they are light and inconstant as the sand is But that is too nise Generally the similitude is to bee extended to the whole race of Abraham his seed is compared to them both for number Some Mathematicians have taken on them to set downe the just number of the stars they are but one thousand and twelve in all They are beyond their bookes too presumptuous to goe beyond their limits God can number them all and call them by their name but to us they are innumerable as the sand of the Sea is and so were they that came of Abraham By the lippe of the Sea the shoare is as the lippe of the Sea the extremity of the Sea as the lippe is of the mouth and as the lippe keepes things within the mouth so doth the shoare keepe in the Sea Multitude of Children a populous posterity is the blessing of God 2 Sam. 19.17 Iud. 12.9 Psal. 128.3 Children are compared to arrowes blessed is the man that hath his quiver full of them A full quiver of these shafts is the gift of God Let us not take too much thought for providing for them he that feedeth the young Ravens will feede our Children if we trust in him Philip asked where shall we have meat for so great a multitude Let not us say so hee that sendeth mouthes will send meat if by faith we depend on him 2. We must not tye God to the course of nature Of Abraham and Sarah that were dead came as many as the starres and the sand Of a company of dead bones stood up an exceeding great armie When GOD had foretold of a plenty there was a Prince which tooke exception against it if God would make windowes in heaven could this come to passe he was troden under mens feete for it Let us not object against Gods power Let us not call Gods power into question pinion his armes shut him into prison Let us not say God can doe this or that hee doth whatsoever hee will in heaven c. LORD if thou wilt thou canst make mee cleane Hee cannot doe those things that imply a weakenesse a contrariety to himselfe for that were to deny himselfe but whatsoever imports a power and is agreeable to his blessed will that he can doe Shall any thing bee impossible with GOD it was not possible by the course of nature that Abraham and Sarah at this age should have a Child yet they had one and of that one Child came a great people There is no possibility in nature that the dead should rise againe yet God can effect it Let us keepe no Sophismes or Problems against Gods power but in all things though it seeme impossible to the world let us depend on him by a true and lively faith Now to the things recorded of Abraham after hee had a Childe The one is common to others together with him the other proper to himselfe alone That which was common is his perseverance in faith to the end That which is proper to him is the offering of his Sonne In the former 1. A narration of their perseverance Verse 13. 2. A confirmation of it The narration is first set downe then amplified VERSE 13. HEE doth not speake it of Abraham alone he dyed in the faith then he should have made an iteration of it in all the rest wherefore for the avoyding of it he affirmes it generally of them all Viz. Abraham Isack Iacob Sarah mentioned before and all the godly too that sprung of them before the possession of the land of Canaan Hee doth not say these lived in faith a great while but dyed in faith they carryed their faith with them to the grave According to faith that is that faith whereby they had committed themselves wholly to God and by vertue wherof they depended on him or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is amplified by certaine effects negative affirmative internall eternall 1. They had not the promises yet believed them They received with gladnesse the promises made to them they had the pronuntiation the delivery of the promises but they had not received the accomplishment of them The promises that is res promissas Not the earthly things promised to them but they received the kingdome of heaven hee useth the plurall number because one and the same thing was often promised to them Gorrhan expounds it They received them not plenè perfectè because though they had requiem in limbo yet as yet they had not gloriam in coelo but that is a devise not easily to bee made good The land of Canaan was promised to them yet they had not received
contemned the word at length will be contemned That for the writer now to the persons to whom he writeth the mother and her children Origen speakes somewhat contemptibly of women When Christ came into the coasts of Tyrus and Sidon Behold a woman Mat. 15.22 Mira res Evangelista a strange thing O Evangelist Behold a woman that is the authour of transgression the mother of sinne the weapon of the Devill the cause of our expulsion out of Paradise I but Christ honoured women in lying in the wombe of a woman he appeared first to women after his resurrection and made them Apostolos apostolorum Apostles to preach his resurrection to the Apostles Paul preached to women There have beene women of speciall note Sarah the Mother of the faithfull Hester the nurse and preserver of the faithfull women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance among whom was Ioanna the wife of Chuza Herods steward Theano Crotoniatis was a Philosopher and a Poet too Pythagoras learned his naturall Philosophie of his sister Themistocleas Ignatius wrote to two women the blessed Virgin Mary Maria Cassabolita Cyrillus Alexandrinus Basil Chrystome Ambrose Augustine Fulgentius Bernard wrote to women Hierome wrote to many to Salvina to Faria to Agoruchia to Celantia Asella Marcellina most of his workes he dedicated to Eustochiam a noble and worthy Virgin S. Paul wrote to Apphia and S. Iohn heere to a woman The mother is first severally by her selfe described then both of them joyntly together by his singular love to them all Shee is set forth 1. By her internall and spirituall estate she was elect 2. By her externall and worldly estate she was a Lady Some of the Popish interpreters will have her name to bee elect to the Lady Elect. 1. That is a saucie transposing of the Greeke words it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Lady Elect but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Elect Lady 2. As S. Iohn doth not set downe his owne name no more doth he hers 3. The same title is given to her sister verse ult and no likelyhood that two sisters should have one and the same name there was not so great a penurie of names Elect is nomen appellativum non proprium a noune appellative not a proper name First she was a Lady a Widdow by all probabilitie else S. Iohn would have made some mention of her husband She was magna nobilis domina a great and a Noble Lady sayes Lyra shee had an ample familie she was an entertainer of the Preachers and professors of the Christian faith Catharinus supposeth she had a Iurisdiction she was a Lady of some Towns Mannours and Lordships The unlearned Anabaptists use that place as an hammer to beate downe all the seats of superiority In Christ neither bond nor free Iew nor Grecian Male nor female we are all one in Christ Iesus True indeed we are all one in Christo but not in Mundo as S Augustine doth well distinguish in Christ there is no difference but in the world there is Men and women are to be respected according to those places of honour whereunto God hath advanced them in the world whether they be Kings or Queenes Lords or Ladyes Christ makes an honourable mention of the Queene of Shebah S. Luke dedicates his Gospell and the history of the Acts to Noble Theophilus To the most noble governour Felix saies Claudius Lysias Most Noble Festus sayes S. Paul heere S. Iohn gives the vertuous woman the title of a Lady whom God hath honoured let us honour too It is he that setteth up and pulleth downe according to his heavenly pleasure otherwise we shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against God as G●maleel speaketh Yea though the persons bee bad yet the places are to be respected and they in regard of their places But this was a good an holy and religious Lady an elect Lady most interpret a select Lady egregia an egregious Lady a grege segregata separated from the common sort a famous and illustrious Lady But I see no reason why it may not be expounded according to the native signification of the word it is well translated in the English The elect Lady Elect in Gods eternall Counsell as S. Peter called the strangers dispersed through Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Bythinia Asia Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father S. Paul salutes Rufus that was elect and chosen of the Lord Rom. 16.13 He speakes of Clement and other his fellow-labourers that their names were written in the booke of life Philip. 4.3 She had learned Christ as the truth is in Iesus she had a lively faith in Christ she had a demonstration of her faith by good workes by them she made her calling and election sure therefore he pronounceth her to be one of Gods elect we must judge of the salvation of others by their love and charity It becommeth us saith S. Paul so to judge of you all he was farre more charitable than they that judge none shall be saved unlesse they be of their owne stampe and goe to such a Lecture and Sermons as they doe Now he writes not to her alone but to her children too To the Elect Lady and her Children by nature and by grace too as Aquinas speaketh children both men and women but the women were Virgins sayes Lorinus because they were at home with her so were the men-children too As he made great account of the mother so of the children too the proverbe is love me and love my dogge much more love me and my children we will pray for the Kings life and for his sonnes say they So S. Iohn heere salutes the mother and the children too Vpon this he makes a testification of his love to them which is first averred in respect of himselfe 2. amplified in regard of others 3. Illustrated by the procreant cause of love in them all verse 2. Touching himselfe he pronounceth with an ardent affection whom I love in the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the which men or women I love how in truth for in the Greeke it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an article in the truth but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in truth that is truely unfeignedly Let love be without dissimulation There is too much dissembled love in the world Love one another saith Saint Peter with a pure heart unfeignedly A kisse is a token of love For the which cause it was an use in the Primitive Church for Christians to kisse at the celebration of the Supper saith Saint Chrysostome But as he complaines many doth it with the lippes onely ac si in scenares ageretur as if they were on a stage Valentine being an Arrian kissed Ambrose but he reproved him for it Quid oscularis eum quem non agnoveris Why dost thou kisse him whom thou carest not for Greete one another with an holy kisse
reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift first seeke the kingdome of God GOD should bee first served yet he will have his owne service to stay till thou beest reconciled to thy brother If I speake with the tongues of men and Angels if I come to Church heare never so many Sermons receive never so many Communions talke never so gloriously of Religion and dwell in hatred be not reconciled I am as a sounding brasse and as a tinckling Cymbal 3. Wee can have no assurance of our reconciliation to God without it Matth. 18. ult As the King dealt with his servant So God will cast you into the prison of hell for ever This should make us all to quake 4. We have no certaintie of our lives This night may our soules be taken from us Iovinian the Emperour supped plentifully went to bedde merrily yet was taken up dead in the morning And if death take us before we take one another by the hand as a token of hearty reconciliation what shall become of us Wee should not suffer the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath Iohannes Eleemosynarius Arch-Bishop of Alexandria being angrie in the day with Nicetus a Senator towards night sends this message to him Sol est in occasu vir maximè honorande My honourable brother the Sunne is a setting let there be a setting of our anger too if we do it not within the compasse of a day and a night yet let us doe it within the compasse of our lives let not our anger be like the fire of the Temple that went not out day nor night Let us not say with Ionah I doe well to be angry to the death let our anger bee aculeus apis not aculeus serpentis the sting of a Bee that is soone gone not the sting of a Serpent that tarries long and it may be proves lethall Let us receive one another in all brotherly love and kindnesse as Saint Paul entreateth PHILEMON to receive Onesimus But who is Onesimus that PHILEMON should receive him Pauls owne bowels he doth not say my owne eyes though they be precious to us and we use to terme our deere friends Ocelli mei not my own hands which minister to my necessities my own feete which carry mee from place to place but my owne bowels our internall and vitall parts the longues the liver especially the heart the seat of love and affection Whom I doe most tenderly affect teneritudinem rarissimi amoris declarat he poynts out hereby the tendernesse of a most rare love As Saint Paul sayes of the Philippians I desire you all in the bowells of IESUS CHRIST 1. In an heartie love in CHRIST IESUS One Christian should be exceeding deere to another 1. It is a token of election As the elect of God put on the bowels of mercie Without these bowels no assurance of salvation 2. The affinitie betweene Christians require it We have one Father which is GOD one Mother the Church we are of one house the household of faith one Elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdome of heaven 3. We are all bought with one and the same deare price the invaluable bloud of CHRIST therefore wee should bee deare one to another 3. Every one is tender over his bowels our brethren are our bowels he that toucheth them toucheth our owne bowells Oh that we did so esteeme and commiserate one another When the child was to be divided by Salomons sword the bowels of the true mother yerned within her So should our bowels doe if we see any hurt towards our brethren VERSE 13. IN the next place he unfolds the reason of his sending 1. Negativè not as if he had not beene usefull to him In that respect he would willingly have reteined him still that he might have ministred to him in the bonds of the Gospell There bee the bonds of impietie such were Zedekiah his bonds and there bee the bonds of piety Such were St. Pauls bonds not for any sinne of his but for the Gospell which were famous throughout all the judgement hall and in all other places That in thy stead he might doe it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for thee in this hee supplies thy roome and discharges thy office The Gospell is the common cause that concernes us all if any suffer for it we are all bound from the highest to the lowest to assist them with our purses our prayers and personall presence too if conveniently it may be yea though we be never so great personages It is like that obadiah himselfe hid the Prophets in Caves from the rage of Iesabel though peradventure he might send the bread and water by his servants Our SAVIOUR himselfe washed his Disciples feet Saint Cyprian writes to the Priests and Deacons to provide all things necessary for them that were in prison wishing that he himselfe were present with them Promptus lubens readily and willingly hee would performe Cuncta dilectionis obsequia all obsequious duties of love unto them Helena the mother of Constantine being at Hierusalem served in meate her selfe to the Virgins that were there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Placilla the Wife of Theodosius the Emperour in propria persona pauperibus ministravit ministred to the poore in her owne person and PHILEMON himselfe should have ministred unto Saint Paul The Angels minister to us yea when we be in prison as to Saint Peter and shall we scorne be we never so wealthie worshipfull honourable to minister to them that be in bonds for the Gospell Let us count it an honour to us In ministring to them we minister to CHRIST and he will reward it at the latter day Mistake me not I pleade not for them that are buffeted for their faults nor doe I reckon them to be in bonds for the Gospel who worthily suffer for their folly VERSE 14. WE have had the negative cause of his sending not because Saint Paul had no use of him but because he would not keepe him without his good will without thy minde thy sentence thy judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would I doe nothing In hoc negotio in this businesse otherwise in every thing he would not tye himselfe to Philemons minde Servants must not be detained without their Masters liking Eustathius Byshop of Armenia was deposed from his byshop-ricke quia servos praetextu pietatis heris abstulerat because under a colour of piety he had taken servants from their Masters Therfore the Papists themselves will not permit servants to take upon them a religious course of life to vow chastity without the consent of their masters yet children may invitis parentibus whether their parents will or no so as they be of age a man 14. a woman 12. and that their Parents need not their helpe A strange thing that servants may not but Children may But servants may not Bellar. Reason is without reason because
sin as we have but the greatest of all is his owne goodnesse and mercy Isai. 9.6 Iohn 3.16 Both had sinned Angels and men Why was Christ made a man to dye for men and not an Angell to redeeme Angels from everlasting death because it was his owne good will and pleasure his singular love to mankinde Let us therefore magnifie him for it from generation to generation Some as Augustine observeth tooke occasion from hence to be proud and insolent See Christ tooke on him our nature not the Angels therefore we are exalted above Angels we have just cause to thinke highly of our selves As if a sick man should boast the Physitian came to my house not to my neighbours therefore I am a better man than my neighbour the reason why Christ tooke on him thy nature not the Angels was because thou wert sick of sin so were not the good Angels Neverthelesse it is a preferment to us that Christ should assume our nature to his our corruptible nature to his incorruptible as if a King should take the patcht cloake of a beggar and annex it to his royall cloake decked with Pearles and precious Stones Now as Christ hath honoured our nature in becomming man so let not us men dishonour our owne nature by drunkennesse uncleannesse covetousnesse nor by wrangling and contending one with another Christ hath graced our nature let not us disgrace it VERSE 17. WHereupon he returnes to his conclusion which he would have to be infixed in our memories I will declare thy name to my brethren which he could not doe unlesse hee were a man as his brethren are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debuit he ought because it was his fathers will and his owne will too necessitate non coactione In all things appertaining to the substance not to the corruption of our nature He was like unto us in all things sin only excepted He was like to us in all the faculties and members of soule and body He had the same affections that we have yet unstained with sin We are sorrowfull so was He My soule is heavie to the death We are joyfull so was He Luke 10.21 In that houre Iesus rejoyced in spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are zealous so was He the zeale of thy house hath eaten me up We are hungry so was hee Marke 3.5 Wee wonder at all things so did He. We are afraid of death so was He My soule is heavie to the death Come to the Body We are little ones grow in stature so Christ Luke 2. ult We are hungry thirsty sleepy so was He He slept in a Ship Mat. 8.24 not in a Church We are weary so was he He rested himselfe on Iacobs-Well Iohn 4 6. We dye so He died also As He is like to us so let us be like him in meekenesse patience charity in praying for our enemies Brethren All are his brethren quoad naturam the faithfull quoad gratiam Iohn 20.17 He will not be ashamed to call us Brethren at the day of judgement Mat. 25.40 and shall not we call one another brother The King and Subjects are brethren the Ministers and their People rich and poore are brethren and let us not be snapping and snarling one at another but live lovingly together as brethren Both members are unfolded in the words following that is he was a faithfull High Priest Appertaining to God In divine not in humane matters The High Priest made an attonement for the people Levit. 16. So did Christ for his people GOD and man were fallen out Christ made us friends God was displeased with us he pacified his wrath towards us which the Father by an audible voice witnessed from heaven Matth. 3.17 This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased How by the bloud of his Crosse which was Gods bloud Acts 20.28 We were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.18 19. In many things we offend all who then can be saved our sins for number exceed the sands of the Sea the least sin is sufficient to throw us into hell without Christ. But by Christ we are reconciled to his Father and have peace with him Col. 1.20 Luke 2.14 Rom. 5.1 Oh I have sinned but 1 Iohn 2.2 Christ is the propitiation for our sins Worthy then is the Lamb the Lord Iesus to receive all glory Men at Christ-masse use to take a greater liberty to sin to quaffe swill and carowse to open the floud-gates of all impiety but the consideration of Christs comming into the world should be a bridle to restraine us from sin Christ came now to make a reconciliation for our sins and shall we plunge our selves deeper into the Sea of sin God forbid The love of Christ should constraine us to forsake sin it should not make us wallow in the filthy puddle and sinke of sin Wilt thou make much of the knife that cut thy Fathers throat David though he longed for the water of the Well of Bethlehem yet when it was brought to him by three of his Worthies he refused to drinke of it saying Is not this the bloud of the men that went in jeopardie of their lives 2 Sam. 23.17 Sin cost the bloud of Christ let us not then drinke iniquity like water VERSE 18. HEE prosecuteth the former branch touching mercy As CHRIST was like to us in nature so hee was tempted as we are Saepius ipse miser miseris succurrere disce Art thou tempted whether thou art the child of GOD or not A shrowd temptation wherewith the best men and women are shaken So was CHRIST If thou beest the Sonne of God the Devill calls it into question and would have had CHRIST to doubt of it Art thou tempted with povertie with want of things necessarie for this life So Was Christ from his Cradle to his grave he was borne in a stable laid in a cratch had not an hole to hide his head in he had no money in his purse but was faine to send to the Sea for some he kept his Passeover in an other mans chamber was buryed in an other mans grave Art thou tempted with malevolent tongues with some that are ever rayling on thee So was Christ hee was termed a Wine bibber a glutton c. Art thou tempted with sicknesse the toothach the headach the cholike the gout c. We never read that Christ was sicke because he had no sinne in him yet being clothed with our nature hee knowes what belongs to paine and will succour us in all our distresses Art thou persecuted Herod sought his life as soone as he was borne A rich man that hath a good fire continually in his house a table furnished with all delicates that lyes soft on a bed of dowlne he cannot so well pitty a poore man as one poore man may doe another CHRIST being rich would become poore he would bee a man
and the continuance in it Here are many excellent instructions Love is laborious If thou lovest a man thou wilt labour for him thou wilt runne and ride for him thou wilt relieve him in his wants according to that ability wherewith God hath blessed thee Love not in word and tongue only 1 Ioh. 3.18 I will not give any thing for such love as hath nothing but words Shew mee thy love by thy deeds and labour Art thou ready to doe what thou canst for thy brother art thou willing to part with thy mony thy meat and drinke for the relieving of him then thou lovest him hic labor hoc opus est this is the true labour of love indeed doest thou visit him if he be in prison for righteousnesse sake doest thou goe to him and comfort him if he be sicke never prate of love unlesse I may see the labour of thy love Iacob loved Rachel therefore he laboured for her For the glorifying of his name Here we have the end of a good worke which makes it a good work indeed when it is done for the name of Christ. The Pharisees gave almes yet because it was to procure a name to themselves it was not a good worke they have their reward amongst men they shall have none at the hands of God If thou givest to the poore because the statute compells thee or because thou shalt be hardly thought of if thou givest not or that thou mayest bee counted a liberall man and that the world may talke of thee and commend thee it looseth the title of a good worke whatsoever we doe let us doe all to the glory of God and he will recompense us Why what was this work of theirs they ministred to the Saints One speciall good worke is to minister to the Saints There were certaine women that ministred to Christ of their owne substance the woman of Shunem ministred to Elisha prepared a chamber and other necessaries for him Onesiphorus ministred to St. Paul which oft refreshed him and was not ashamed of his chaine Dorcas ministred to the poore widdowes in clothing them Doe good unto all especially to them who are of the household of faith If any Saints are in want minister to them In this sence we must all be Ministers this is a glorious service a worthy ministration in ministring to them wee minister to Christ in as much as yee have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren yee have done it unto mee and let it not grieve us to minister to Christ which hath ministred his own bloud to us The times are hard wherein we live all victualls are at an high rate many poore Saints fare hardly lye hardly goe hardly let us open the bowels of compassion and minister to them This worke above all others shall be recompensed at the day of Iudgement when I was hungry yee fed mee c. Therefore let us occupy our selves in this ministration But what doe they content themselves with their former ministring doe they set downe their staffe there No and yet Minister It is not sufficient to doe well for a time but we must continue in well doing Many soothe up themselves in their former good workes they vaunt of them such and such a thing did I. O how bountifull were we to our Preachers How kind have we beene to them O I but are you kinde still have yee ministred and yet do yee minister have yee beene zealous and yet are yee zealous have yee beene diligent hearers of the Word and yet are yee diligent have yee beene liberall to the poore and yet are yee liberall That is a worthie commendation then are yee good Christians indeed In earthly blessings wee cannot away with was or had hath any great list to bragge I was Rich I had land I had my health wee had rather say an hundred times I am rich I have my health I was good is not so much but I am yet good I am more and more good that is an excellent thing Yet there bee many that have beene good in the praeterperfecttence that are not in the present They were sober they would looke at no Ale-house but now they are common drunkards they were chaste but now are adulterers they were wont to keepe their Church well they would never misse a Sermon but now come seldome to Church every trifle will keepe them from a Sermon they were liberall but now are covetous that is a miserable thing a dolefull tune Let us so behave our selves that it may be affirmed of us we are yet good yet zealous yet religious and let not this yet be given over so long as we live This is an excellent place as any in all the bible to encourage us to good workes God will never forget them As hee puts our teares into his bottle so he puts our good workes into his booke and keepes a register of them all Men may forget the good turnes to them they wryte their injuries in steele and their benefits in water many will not acknowledge them that have beene their benefactors Pharaohs butler quickly forgate Ioseph though he foretold him of his delivery Men are forgetfull but God is not hee neither forgets us nor our workes Can a woman forget her sucking Child that shee should not have compassion on the Sonne of her wombe yea they may forget yet I will not forget thee God remembred the prayer and teares of Hezekiah 2 Reg. 20.5 The almes deeds of Cornelius went up into remembrance before God Acts 10.4 God remembers our prayers our fastings our joyfull hearing of his Word he remembers what money we have given to the poore the Cloath wherewith we have clothed them the kindnesse we have shewed to his Ministers if wee have given but a cup of cold water hee remembers it and will reward it Mat. 10.42 This should make us all zealous of good workes Now a dayes by our preaching faith in CHRIST we have through the corruption of the people preached good workes out of the Church the people nourish this conceit in their hearts we cannot merit heaven by our workes therefore it is not a pins matter though wee doe none I but God will not forget your good workes he will reward them both in this life and in the life to come he will give heaven to your workes as they are the fruits of faith though he give it not for the worthinesse and dignity of your workes therefore be full of them Good workes are not the meritorious causes of heaven yet they are the way to heaven and yee cannot goe to heaven but by the way of good workes therefore make your calling and election sure by them Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Your houses and land silver and gold tarry behind when yee bee dead but your workes follow you God will not forget them but
in token of that his voluntary service But hee could not have his eares prepared for the doing of the will of his Father unlesse he had a body Therefore the Seventie to make it more cleere sayes a body hast thou prepared for me wherein I should doe thee service and suffer for mankinde And because all the Sacrifices in the Law could not take away sin therefore was this body of Christ prepared by the Lord that should be sacrificed for the sins of the world No other sacrifice was able to make satisfaction to Gods justice for the sins of men Verse 10. There is joy when any man child commeth into the world but much more have we all cause to skip for joy at Christ's comming into the world Vnto us a child is given to us a Sonne is borne behold I bring you tidings of great joy sayd the Angel to the Shepheards when Christ came into the world The Angels sung at his comming which needed not to be redeemed by him and shall not we men sing for his comming for whose redemption he came into the world it had beene better for us we had never set a foot into the world if he had not come into the world Therefore let us praise God all the dayes of our life for his comming into the world When he commeth into the world that was the maker of the world For by him all things were made nay that which is more when hee commeth into the world that was the Saviour and redeemer of the world that reconciled the world to God and yet found no kind entertainment in the world he was rayled at spitted on buffetted whipped crucified he came into the world but the world received him not And shal we that be Christians imagine to find any kindnes in the world it hated the Head and wil it love the members no we must look to have a step-mother of the world as Christ had we must looke for crosses and afflictions in the world as he had As Christ came into the world so in the time appointed by the Father he went out of the world again and so must we There is a time to be borne and a time to dye as we came into the world so we must go out of the world Where we came we may know but where we shall go out we cannot tel Let us glorifie Christ while we be here that at our departure out of the world we may live with him in eternall glory He saith not so soone as he came into the world when he lay in the cratch but he said in the time of his humiliation in the world And how came he into the world after a base and ignominious manner borne of a poore woman affianced to a Carpenter that was brought to bed in a stable in the Inne where hee was laid in a Manger wrapped up in meane swadling clouts This was the manner of his first comming contemptible in the eyes of the world But his second comming shal be most glorious when he shall come in the clouds with all his holy Angels attending on him Now he came as a Lamb to be killed therefore he came meanely then he shall come as a Lion and a King to reigne for ever Therfore that shall be a glorious comming it shall be terrible to the wicked but most comfortable to us that be the wife of the Lord Iesus A true body made of a Woman the fruit of her Wombe as ours is not an aerie or phantasticall body as some Heretickes dreamed A body in all substantiall things like to ours differing only in one accidentall thing and that is sinne him that knew no sinne did God make sinne for us God ordained him a soule too The deity did not supply the office of his soule as Apollinaris did imagine he had a true soule too as we have wherein he suffered for our sakes my soule is heavy to the death But because the body is conspicuous so is not the soule and because he was to dye in his body he could not dye in respect of his soule therefore the spirit of God nameth that God hath ordained a body for every man but a more speciall and excellent body for our Saviour Christ a body conceived not by the conjunction of a man and a woman but extraordinarily by the Holy Ghost that being a most pure and sacred body not infected with the least spot and contagion of sinne it might be a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the world Ours are most wretched and sinfull bodies that because they are poysoned with sin must one day see corruption and bee consumed to dust and ashes Lazarus body did stincke when it lay foure dayes in the earth Ours in regard of sin are stincking bodies but Christ's was a most glorious body and for that cause saw no corruption Absalom had a beautifull body yet a wretched body Saul had a comely body yet a miserable body The body of the fairest Lady on earth is a vile body only Christ's was a glorious body The Martyrs bodies that were burnt for the profession of the Gospell were in some respect to be honoured because they were the Temples of the Holy Ghost and sealed up the truth of the Gospell with their bloud yet all their bodies joyned together nor the bodies of all the holy men in the world could make satisfaction for one sinne therefore God ordained Christ a body for this purpose to be offered up for the sins of us all As for our bodies let us labour to offer them up as a lively sacrifice to God in all obedience to him in this life that Christ may change them and make them like his glorious body in the life to come VERSE 6. THe reason why thou hast prepared this body for me is because in burnt offerings and sinne offerings thou hadst no pleasure These would not content thee therefore I come with my body into the world Supply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here he reckons up two other sacrifices used in the Law which God likewise rejected Loa shealta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sense is all one VERSE 7. FReely of mine owne accord as 1 Reg. 22.21 Isai. 6.8 as an obedient child sayes to his father loe I come father if it be to preferment a man will say loe I come but if it be to the Gallowes for another who will say loe I come Why because in the beginning of thy booke that mooved him to it that the things written of him might be performed Hebr. Bimgillath in volumine in the scrowle For the Bible with the Iewes as it is at this day was wrapped up in a scrowle not printed as it is among us Megillath of Galal volvere The Seventie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath bred diversity of interpretations Some referre it to the beginning of the Psalmes Psalm 1.2 whereas that is spoken of all the godly others to the first verse in all the Bible In the
the ground VERSE 10. WHat mooved him to content himselfe with so meane a dwelling they made not so much reckoning of their habitation in this world as of that in the world to come therefore they did not greatly care how they dwelt here As for the land of Canaan though it were a pleasant Country flowing with milke and hony yet they knew they were not to continue in it long this made them to looke up to the heavenly Canaan whereof the earthly was but a type and figure Erecto capite his eye was also to that quasi accepturus Here hee had a Tent but there hee looked for a City 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for that City which alone deserves the name of a City it excells all earthly Cities in two respects In regard of the foundation and the founder thereof The Tents wherein they dwelt had no foundation they were fastned with nayles to posts and stakes set in the ground but this City hath a foundation earthly houses have but one foundation and subject to earth-quakes stormes tempests inundations and other casualities this hath many foundations Apoc. 21.14 and nothing can shake those foundations The Tower of Siloam it is like had a good foundation yet it fell the Abbies and Monasteries had sure foundations yet they are fallen the pallaces of Kings Noblemen and Gentlemen have strong foundations yet they shall all fall but the heavenly Hierusalem shall never fall Aholiab and Bezaleel made the Tabernacle Hyram the Temple Carpenters and Masons set up these Citties but God Himselfe is the maker and builder of this City These Cities may be overthrowne by waters the Sea may come in tumbling and sweepe them away these Townes and Citties may be consumed with fire there bee burnings almost every day these may be sacked with the enemy and made even with the ground as Hierusalem and the Temple are which were the wonder of the world wee may bee driven by famine and pestilence out of those townes and Cities howsoever they stand a while and we in them the time shall come when the earth with all the goodly buildings that be on it shall be burnt with fire Therefore let us use these Citties as we used them not let our hearts and affections bee in this City whose maker and builder is God We have not here an abiding City London is no abiding City Yorke Norwich no Towne is an abiding Towne Death will give us a remove out of all Townes but in this City wee shall abide for ever and reigne with CHRIST for evermore therefore let us all long for it He doth not say that he believed there was such a City but hee looked for it Iud. 5.28 We looke out of our windowes on sights in the streets Gardens Orchards c. but not out of the windowes of our hearts for this City Hee that lookes shortly for a new Coate will not bee much in love with his old for a faire house will not care for a cottage Wee looke after our wooll and cloath houses and lands c. Let us looke dayly for CHRIST 's comming that will put us in possession of this City As Saint Peter said unadvisedly of the Mount let us say likewise of this City it is good for us to bee here VERSE 11. WE have had the things which he did severally by himselfe now of him joyntly with his Wife because he toucheth a thing which he could not doe without his Wife Of whom he entreateth 1. Severally by herselfe then joyntly together with others Also together with her Husband The Faith of them both concurred in this Lyra shewes himselfe delirantem senem in avouching that Sarah had no faith in this he interprets it thus through faith that is of Abraham Sarah also received power but by it is meant her owne faith 1. Certaine facts of hers which she did by faith 2. The event that issued on them 1. A narration of facts 2. An illustration of them by the cause thereof The facts are two Conception and Procreation 1. She received strength to conceive seed to receive and retaine the seed that came from Abraham It might be translated to the emission of seede to the dejection of seede For the childe is framed of the seed of them both though Aristotle be of another opinion mater à materia quia ministrat materiam procreandae proli as the father doth Whereupon Christ is termed the fruit of the Virgins wombe She was now by the course of nature past conceiving of seed being ninety yeeres old a woman as Plinie observeth for the most part is past child bearing at fiftie then how could a woman conceive ●t ninetie not by nature but by the grace and power of God therfore it is said through faith she received strength to doe it 2. She brought forth a Child when there were two obstacles in the way barrennesse and old age The one is to be repeated out of Genesis God had shut up her wombe the other is here expressed Besides the season of age it was now no seasonable time for a woman of ninety yeeres to have a child yet by faith she had one And why what was the cause of it because she judged him faithfull c. this Lyra referres to Abraham because he judged as for Sarah she laughed at it and Abraham thought it an incredible thing yet it may be adscribed to Sarah her selfe as for Abraham he is not mentioned at all in this verse Some affirme that that laughter of Sarahs did issue ab admiratione non à dubitatione as Abrahams did Abraham laughed admiring not doubting of Gods promise so did Sarah yet the laughter of Sarahs must needs be condemned 1. She opposes two impediments to the promise which Abraham doth not 2. Shee is reproved by God for laughing who tells her that it issued from infidelity 3. Shee her selfe covers it with a lye which she would not have done if it had not beene an evill laughter How then is it true that Shee judged him faithfull who had promised At the first she doubted and derided it but afterwards being reprehended by GOD better instructed by her husband and pondering in her mind that it was GOD Almighty which had spoken it she believed it and judged him faithfull He that hath promised me a child is able to fulfill his promise faithfull to performe that which he hath promised therfore though I be barren and old too I shall have a child Gen. 21.6 7. 1. Women as yee see may have faith they may believe in Christ be members of his body and heyres of the kingdom of heaven The woman was the first in the transgression yet she shall be saved though it be a kinde of purgatory by the bearing of Children 2. God is pleased with marryed folke he that liveth in the flesh cannot please God that is as Pope Siricius expounds it in mariage Abraham and Sarah were marryed folke yet they pleased God Let not
what Country man he was he answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mundanus The whole world is my Country all Countries are alike to me Yet in truth wee have no Country in the world England is not our Country Heaven properly to speake is our Country as Christ sayes call no man father here on earth so call no Country your Country on the earth Now heaven is our Country so we must seeke it it is worth the seeking and we cannot have it without seeking seeke the kingdom of God We must seeke it by prayer reading of Scripture hearing of Sermons by godly and fervent desire of the heart by heavenly meditations Our whole life ought to be a continuall seeking of heaven but alas we seeke for silver and gold Sheep and Oxen houses and lands and let heaven goe we are like Aesops dogge that snatched at the shadow and lost the substance We seeke more for shadowes then for the substance all the weeke long we are seeking of the world and scant on the Lords Day no day in the weeke doe we seeke heaven VERSE 15. THis is illustrated 1. By a declaration of the Country which they sought 2. By the fruit and reward of their seeking Object They professed themselves strangers because they were out of their soile the land of Chaldea Sol. That cannot be the Country which they had longed after for if their minde had run on that they had opportunity and time enough to returne in they had leysure but they would not take it 1. He shewes what Country it was not which they sought VERSE 16. 2. WHat it was which is first described comparatively then plainly pointed out with the finger The reward 1. A favour or prerogative in this life 2. In eternall happinesse in the life to come Exod. 3.15 he is the God of the whole world in generall he is the God of the wicked for temporall blessings of the faithfull for spirituall and eternall He that is the God of the whole world is now the God of three men Chrys. It is a glory to servants to have a denomination from their Lords and Masters I am servant to such a Noble man but it is no honour for a Lord to say I am the master of such a poore man such a beggarly fellow is my servant yet God glorieth of us that hee is our God Master and Father He makes this a piece of his style as if a puissant Prince would be called the King of Pigmies He hath prepared Hebr. 13.14 Ioh. 14.2 They doe not merit it GOD in mercy prepares it for them When Vide Matth. 25.34 God prepares many excellent things for us in this world but none comparable to this He prepared the world as an house furnished for man at the first We can but prepare temporall houses for our Children Some by this City understand the Church which though it bee on the earth is called heavenly because her chiefest part Christ her head is in heaven and her conversation is in heaven Hyperius But they were in the lap of the Church already within the walls of that City they needed not to seeke that which they had Heaven then is better than earth it is better by many degrees Men chuse that which they thinke to be best we choose earth rather than heaven therefore in our opinion that is the better What fooles what dolts be we men are ready to change for the better who would not change a beggars cottage for a Kings Pallace a patcht Cloak for a Princes robe We say heaven is the better yet we are loath to change our dwelling on earth for it by our good wills we would tarry here still We say heaven is a better country then this but we would faine continue in the earth still Many a Child is ashamed of his Father when hee comes to great honour We were base and ignominious wretches yet God was not ashamed of us If a great man have a kinswoman that is poore yet if a faire and beautifull woman haply he will not be ashamed of her We are all fowle and black by reason of sin yet God is not ashamed of us and shall we one of another A King is not ashamed of a beggar and shall one beggar be ashamed of another Shall one earthen Pot though it be a little guilt and tipt with silver be ashamed of another earthen Pot Though thou beest a rich man and hast more silver and gold than thy brother yet be not ashamed of him thou art earth as well as he yee are Pots of one Potter Constantine was not ashamed of the Bishops the Angels are not ashamed of us they acknowledge themselves to be our fellowes and brethren and shall we be ashamed one of another Though he be never so poore a man if he believe in Christ be not ashamed of him 2. As God is not ashamed of us so let us not be ashamed of him though Christ be afflicted here on earth yet let us not be ashamed of him and his Gospell for if we be he will be ashamed of us when he commeth with his holy Angels How doth it appeare he is not ashamed of us because he disdaineth not to be called our God He doth not say to be called their Lord and Master but God I thank my God that we read often This comprehendeth all good things for this life and that to come happy are the people that be in such a case blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. The Lions shall be hungerbit but they that have God for their Lord shal want nothing that is good This may strengthen us against poverty sicknes and all calamities against sin Satan and death it selfe Will any child feare want that hath a rich and loving father our God our Father is rich heaven and earth are his he is most loving he tenders us as the apple of his eye therefore wee can want nothing that is good The Lord is our God our shield Protectour and defender therefore let us feare nothing If God be on our side who can be against us Nay this may comfort us against death it selfe From this one word our Saviour proves the resurrection he is not the God of the dead but of the living for all live to him Though we dye God is our God he will raise us up againe at the latter day and translate us into his kingdome This may be a pillar of comfort for us to leane upon that God is our God By what token doth he shew himselfe to be our God because he hath prepared a City God is an excellent preparer Hee prepared the world as an house well furnished against the comming of man into it he prepared a Table for the Israelites in the wildernesse he gave them water out of a stony rocke and Manna from heaven he prepared a kingdome for Hester when she was a poore banished maide hee prepared a Whale for Ionah when he was cast into the
imprisonment till yron entred into his soule hee tryed Iob with the losse of seven thousand Sheepe three thousand Camels five hundred yoke of Oxen and she Asses he tryed him with the death of seven Sonnes and three daughters at a clap after a fearefull manner the house fell on them as they were banquetting and they were crushed in pieces he tryed him with boyles in his body from the Crowne of his head to the sole of his foote The arrowes of the Almighty stucke in his soule he tryed him to the full Others have had their severall tryalls but Iob had all tryalls yet he stood immoveable in them all he tryed Lazarus with extreame poverty hee desired crumbs and could not get them hee tryes some women with churlish Husbands as he did Abigail he tryes some with froward Wives as he did Iob he tryes some with stubborne and disobedient Children that make them weary of their lives as he did Isaac and Rebeccah with Esau he tryes some by taking away their Children one after another on whom their greatest delight was fixed he tryes by taking away our goods by fire water thievs gatherings for fire almost every weeke hee tryes some by tedious sicknesses and diseases that continue long together a wearisome tryall hee tryes us by malevolent tongues that cast aspersions upon our names He corrects every Child So he tryes every Child GOD hath many wayes to try us that the tryall of our faith being more pure than gold may be more illustrious in this world and we made more fit for the celestiall Hierusalem in the world to come Let us entreat him to strengthen us by his holy Spirit in all tryalls As hee seemes to cast us downe with one hand so let us be suiters to him to uphold us with the other that we may stand stedfast and immoveable in all tryalls and temptations to his glory and the salvation of us all Let that suffice for the author of the worke Now to the exequution of it Where 1. A bare narration of the worke then an amplification of it Offered up Isaac Nay bate me an ace of that Offerre caepit or offerre voluit Voluntate he did it though non re intentionaliter though non actualiter He pretermitted nothing on his part for the offering of him up therfore God accepted of it as if it had beene done Gen. 22.16 he extolls it to the skies There be Martyrs desiderio facto Origen was a Martyr in desire when he was a Child If his mother had not kept away his Cloathes hee had gone to bee burnt with his father So Abraham Conatu desiderio offered up Isaac David built the Temple in will and desire hee made a great preparation for it three thousand Talents of gold seven thousand Talents of fine silver 1 Chron. 29.4 So Abraham made all ready for the offering of his Sonne The wood was ready the fire was ready the Altar was ready the knife in his hand was ready to cut his throat which hee would have done if GOD by his voice from heaven had not stayed him therefore he might well be said to offer him up There is an amplification of it ex parte patris on the Fathers behalfe and ex parte pueri on the Childs behalfe Not only he that begat Isaac but that had received the promises concerning Isaac that in him all the Nations of the earth should he blessed he had not only heard of these promises but received them into his brest and bosome locked them up as precious Iewels in the closet of his heart there keeping and nourishing them yet he that had received the promises must kill him that was the foundation of the promises a great shaking of his faith 2. Ex parte pueri not a servant but a Sonne Not an adopted Sonne but begotten of him the fruit of his body and his owne bowels Not one of many but all that he had begotten in lawfull Matrimony and to whom alone the promises were tyed Ishmael was his begotten Sonne too but he was begotten of his maid Isaac was his only begotten Sonne of his Wife in lawfull marriage 2. He was his only begotten Sonne ratione promissi the promise was made to Isaac and to no other quantùm ad istam conditionem hee was anigenitus Lyra. VERSE 18. THat which hee said of the promises he confirmes by Scripture To the which Abraham his father it was said of him Gen. 21.12 This hee heard not from others but with his owne eares and that from the mouth of God that cannot lye The promised Messiah shall come of Isaac yet hee must bee offered up Then what shall become of his seed and the salvation of the world God here seemes to bee at variance with himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith warres with faith one Commandement warres with another and the Commandement warres with the promise as Saint Chrysostome well observeth That promise was that in Isaac should his seed be called and that the Saviour of the world should come of Isaac yet now Isaac must be slaine before he had any seed A strange tryall Againe the Law of nature written in Abrahams heart said love thy Child preserve thy Child especially such a rare Sonne as this is rarely borne and endewed with rare qualities This Commandement crosses that and saies kill the Child What a contrariety was this how did this perplex Abraham and cast him into the bryars but faith did reconcile all and all these obstacles set aside hee offered him up A most worthy and unmatchable example The like is not to bee found againe in the whole world As Ioel saith of the Grasse-hoppers and Caterpillers in his time hearken ô yee elders heare all ye inhabitants of the land whether hath such a thing beene done in your dayes or in the dayes of your fathers so may we say of this hearken all yee that live on the face of the earth though yee be as old as Methusalem whether hath such a thing as this beene done in your dayes for a Father to offer up his only Sonne at the commandement of GOD Manasses caused his Sons and his Daughters to passe through the fire to his Idols so did other Idolaters but they offered them up to devills not to God contrary to the will of God in a blind superstition at the instigation of the Devill that was a murderer from the beginning and delights in bloud but Abraham did it in a pure devotion to testifie his obedience and love to God at the commandement and provocation of God to glorifie him withall Those Idolaters it may bee were not present at the offering of their Children or at least they offered them by others Abraham with his owne hands offered him himselfe Wee reade of a Woman in the Maccabees that saw seven of her sonnes cruelly tormented before her eyes because they would not eat swines flesh yet she was not the tormentour of them herselfe Mauritius that good yet unfortunate Emperour
of Canaan as if he had beene present at the distribution of it Gen. 48.22 Shechem a portion or the name of a City called Sichem which fell to the tribe of Ephraim Ios. 13. The seventie translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that select and famous Sichem Iishtaku Gnal Rosh Hammittah an open jarre the latter being a staffe to beate the former out of doores How agreeth this with the Hebrew it is one and the same word with a little alteration the diversity may arise on the affinity of the vowels Mittah a bed Matteh a rod and both may be true Hee worshipped upon the beds head and he worshipped on the top of his staffe too Inclining upon his pillow towards the bed head being weake and aged he held his staffe in his hand too and leaning on it he worshipped God He did worship towards the bed head because being bed-red he could no other than lye on his pillow Vpon which way soever it stood on the beds head or on the top of his staffe both may stand together 2. This was before the other Gen. 47. ult the blessing Gen. 48. It is very like he leaned often on his staffe and worshipped God not only after Iosephs promise but also when he had blessed all his Sonnes when he pluckt up his feete into the bed he might leane on his staffe and worship Or it may be an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is frequent in the Bible Worshipped He praised God for this and all other his mercies hee prayed for their speedy deliverance out of Aegypt that they might be planted in the promised land 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he blessed them with a singular blessing Ephraim with one Manasseh with another Super utrumque proprium benedictionem fudit posuit minorem ante majorem Haymo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As the Apostle leaveth the Hebrew and followes the seventie So the Papists may leave the Hebrew and the Greeke and follow the vulgar translation 1. That is not of as great authority as the Seventy 2. When the Seventie differ in sense from the Hebrew the Apostles follow it not The Iesuites he worshipped the end of his staffe that is the top of Iosephs Scepter reverencing the authority he had in Aegypt So that was fulfilled the Sunne the Moone eleven Starres did obeysance to Ioseph Hyperius addeth that in Ioseph a type of Christ he worshipped Christ. 1. Ioseph was most loved of them all 2. He was stript of his Coate 3. Sold into Aegypt 4. Cast into Prison 5. Advanced to great honour So was CHRIST 1. Ioseph being but Viceroy had no Scepter Gen. 41.40 2. Hee should rather have reverenced his Sonnes authoritie at his first comming then at his last departure out of the world 3. Rather publikely than in a private house 4. That had beene no great testimony of faith for even unbeleevers honour the Magistracy 5. The preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not admit that interpretation hee worshipped upon the top of his rod not the top of his rod. 6. This makes nothing for religious worshipping of Images or God at or before the crucifix and Images The occasion of blessing them was ministred by Iosephs bringing of them to him Genesis 48. ver 1. hee having intelligence of his Fathers sicknesse repaires presently to him with his two Sons that they might bee partakers of their Grandfathers blessing they were borne of the daughter of Potipherah Prince of On a woman that was a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and not in the Calendar of GODS people they had been nourished in Aegypt where the worship of the true God was in a manner abolished Therefore he is desirous that Iacob a famous Patriarke a man deepe in GODS bookes might blesse them ere hee dyed for his blessing was GODS blessing Ioseph being ruler of the land of Aegypt no doubt had purchased great lands and Lord-ships for them hee was like to leave them money enough that they should want no earthly blessing yet because all these were not worth a straw without the blessing of God hee is most carefull to procure this to them which they were to receive from the mouth and hands of Iacob Fathers are carefull enough to provide outward things for their Children to lay up bagges of Gold and Silver for them to leave them houses and lands Sheepe and Oxen and such like but as for GODS blessing that is the least thing they take thought for This is to build without a foundation for the blessing of God is all in all Therefore above all things procure that to your Children Why doth not the Holy Ghost rather say by faith he blessed his owne Sonnes 1. Because this is greater By the eye of faith hee did not onely foresee what should happen to his owne Children but also to the Children of his Child 2. They being his owne immediate seed were engraffed into Israel already There might be some question of Iosephs Sons because they were the seed of a strange woman therefore it is said that Iacob by faith blessed them and by vertue of this blessing inserted them into the stocke of Israel 2. Here we learne that honour and preferments come neither from the East nor from the West but from GOD. Hee sets up one and pulls downe another Ephraim was the younger yet here in Iacobs blessing as it were by Gods owne hand he is advanced above Manasseh Ioseph himselfe was one of the youngest of all his brethren hated of them cast into a pit sold to the Madianites throwne into prison where hee lay till the yron entred into his soule who would have thought that this abject this poore prisoner should be ruler of all Aegypt yet so it came to passe Saul seeking his Fathers Asses lighted on a kingdome which he never sought for David was taken from following the sheepe great with young and made ruler of Israel Hester a poore banished maide fatherlesse and motherlesse became a Queene this is the Lords doing and it ought to be mervailous in our eyes It hath a double use 1. It must pull downe the Peacocks feathers of all them that be mounted aloft not to be proud of those high places whereunto they are exalted It was not chance and fortune that set them in the throne of dignity it was not simply their owne witt and wisedome their great variety of learning their policie and forecast paines and diligence the favour of their friends that promoted them but the good will and pleasure of GOD Almighty What hast thou beest thou never so great which thou hast not received Therefore swell not in pride in respect of the gift but thanke the giver of it 2. This must represse the envy of inferiours Is another man aloft and art thou beneath digitus Dei est Is thy younger brother in a more worshipfull and honourable place then thou as Ephraim got the start of Manasseh is
mother only is mentioned Exod. 2.2 shee did it with the consent of her husband Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because his Grandfather was alive then and had an hand in the businesse their names we have Exod. 6.20 Amram and Iochabed Brought up in the Citty who goe not much abroad to be scorched of the Sun Act. 7.20 divinitus venustus by the disposition of God Nineveh a City Gedolah laelohim 2 Cor. 10.4 But are they so highly to bee extolled for that is it a worke of faith to respect beauty A naturall man might have done that His beauty was one motive but not all faith was the greatest He was by the gift of God of extraordinary beauty In the which by faith they saw an expresse Image of God that hee was like to prove some rare and notable instrument Hyperius affirmeth that as Simeon Luk. 2. by the revelation of the spirit knew CHRIST to bee the Messiah so his Parents by his beauty that he should be the deliverer of the people but there is no certainty of that they did not sticke in the outward baauty that was as Gods hand to lead them to higher matters they did it not in a naturall affection Others loved their Children and had fayre Children Simiae suum pulchrum but by faith Decree or ordinance The King ordained on paine of death The King had given a streight charge that the Male Children should be drowned but they looked to the King of Kings that was able to preserve them from his fury Though it were the hazzard not of their goods alone but lives too they looked to Gods promises that they should multiply that out of Israel should come a deliverer and the Messiah too therefore they will not drowne their Male-child They did not so feare it as that it should hold them from the preservation of their Child Three moneths not three dayes or three weekes yet at three moneths end they commit him to the water then their faith began to stagger Some thinke they did it in faith too being assured that God would deliver him Exod. 2.4 If he had beene in danger they would have taken him home againe They were the first and all that wee read of that kept their Children against the Kings decree That they hid him three moneths was commendable All that whyle they were in feare and hazarded their lives but that at the three moneths end they expose their Child to the wide world that argues a weakenesse in them yet this weake action this weake faith of theirs is registred to their commendation God alloweth and commendeth a weake faith he doth not quench the smoaking flaxe nor bruise the broken reed he chides Peter for his weake faith ô thou of little faith but he doth not cast him away for it Though a Child be weake yet the Father loves it so doth our heavenly Father us though he find weakenesses in our best actions There was a weakenesse in the Mid-Wives when they preserved the Children with a lye there was a weakenesse in Abraham when hee thought he could not be safe unlesse he dissembled there was weaknesse in the Parents of Moses in thrusting their Child at length out of doores there is weakenesse in our praying hearing of Sermons in our giving to the poore and maintenance of the word preached in our preserving of our Children in dangers and calamities yet if these things bee done in sincerity though there be weakenesses in them they are accepted at the hands of God in Christ. Let that encourage us in all good actions though they be stained with some imbecillities 2. Beauty is a precious pearle a picture of the heavenly Appelles a singular ornament wherewith God hath graced his Children Ioseph was a fayre person and well favoured Gen. 39.6 David 1 Sam. 16.12 Daniel and his fellowes The base fare they had could not impaire their beauty This the LORD in wisedome hath used for the preservation and advancement of his Children Moses beauty was a load-stone to draw the favour of Pharaohs daughter to him It was as a stirrope for Hester to mount up to a Kingdome yet for all that let us not dote too much upon externall beauty 1. Though some of GODS Children have it yet all have it not it is not proprium quarto modo Ebedmeleck the blacke-more was no fayre man neither be they all the Children of GOD that have it Absalom was a beautifull man not a blemish in his whole body yet a wicked man who by all probability never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven and many a filthy strumpet is fayrer than an honest woman 2. It is a transitory gift here to day gone to morrow beauty is a goodly flower yet there be many wormes to consume it sicknesse griefe old age c. Let us chiefely desire that beauty that lasteth for ever 3. Let us consider there is a double beauty the one outward the other inward the one proper to Gods elect the other common to the reprobate together with them The Kings daughter is glorious within Psal. 45.13 It is the inward beauty of the heart that is acceptable to God Let us all pray to God for that to bestow it on us that is better then the beauty of all Ladies in the world this is the true beauty Prov. 31.30 3. It is spoken comparatively not simply they did not so feare the Kings commandement that they should banish the commandement of the King of Kings out of their minde The King said drowne the child God said save the child from drowning What are not Kings to be feared have I not said yee are Gods a King is a certaine God on the earth therefore to be feared and reverenced he carrieth not the sword in vaine sayes the Apostle Balaams Asse feared when he saw the Angels sword and shall not we feare that glittering sword of authority in the hand of Kings and Princes they are rather to be condemned then commended for not fearing the Kings Commandement The answer is easy Wee must distinguish betweene the authority and the commandement of a King There is no power but it is of God but there may be a commandement which is not of God Feare the power the throne the dignity the authority of a King the office of a King but feare not every commandement of a King if wee be sure they are against plaine Scripture In doubtfull things we must believe that our Governours are wiser than our selves VERSE 24. BEfore we have spoken of his Parents faith now let us speak of his owne faith In Moses there are three notable things which are as shrill trumpets to sound forth his faith 1. A voluntary crosse undertaken by him 24.25 26. 2. A necessary crosse imposed on him 27. 3. An institution of a perpetuall Sacrament among the Iewes 28. In the voluntary Crosse 1. A fact committed by him 2. The causes of it which are three election 25. judgement 26. faith The fact was a refusall
them safely away againe This was specimen fidei if she had not beleeved GOD and his promises shee would never have done it All this while she hazarded her owne life if her house had beene searched and the Spies found with her it had cost her her head she had beene drawne hanged and quartered for a traitor yet knowing they were Gods people and that God had delivered the Citie into their hands though it were with danger of life they should be her ghests and she would keepe them this was actus fidei it could be no other My life said S. Paul is not deere to me so as I may fulfill my course with joy So said Rahab My life is not deere to me so as I may fulfill the will of God They that have a true faith indeed will venter even their lives in Gods causes It is like as she was an harlot so she was an Inkeeper too Peradventure some signe hung at her doore which made the Spies to take that house but undoubtedly God by the secret finger of his providence directed them to this Harlots house for the saving of her body and soule too When she hath once taken the charge of them she discharges the duty of a good Inkeeper no hurt shall come to her Ghests yet in some Innes in England many a one have had their throats cut even with the consent of the Host and Hostesse Vile beasts farre unlike to Rahab But is this such a worthy act such a notable worke to bee so highly extolled by the pen of the Holy Ghost It was stained with two foule blots with treason and a lye 1. Iericho was her native Citie the mother in whose lap she had sitten quietly many yeeres together and doth she now betray it into the hands of the enemie now fie upon her Traitor It is a bad bird that defiles her owne nest it is an ungracious bird that destroyes her owne nest But the answer is easie In this Rahab shewed her selfe faithfull to God rather than unfaithful to her Countrey Al the Countreys in the world are his The Devill said All these are mine but he lied God may truly say of all the Kingdomes of the Earth All these are Mine I give them to whom I will Now Rahab knew that God had given Iericho to the Israelites Therefore she joynes with God in introducing them into the Land Where did God ever say that he hath given England into the Popes hand Therfore some of our English Iesuites are most unnaturall and divelish to goe about to betray it into his hands Rahab shall be rejoycing in heaven when they without repentance are howling in hell The other blot wherewith this fact was stained was a lye That is apparant it cannot be denied it cannot be coloured shee said they were gone and wished them to pursue after them when they were on the roofe of her house covered with the stalkes of flax Origen said we may used a lye Tanquam medicamento condimento But this we will not defend wee will seeke no cloake for it Wee will not say it was a profitable lye therefore warantable for wee may not doe ill that good may come of it Yet we will distinguish betweene the fact and the blemish of the fact It may be a good Horse though he stumble now and then it may be a good garden though there be some weeds in it she may be a faire Woman though she have a wart and that in her face too so it may be a good worke though it be defiled with the spot of some weaknesse and infirmities This is enough to prove that Rahab was not justified in the sight of GOD by this worke because some pitch of impiety did cleave unto it yet for all that the worke was good and well pleasing to GOD. If God should accept of none of his childrens workes because they be imperfect he might worthily reject all In many things we sin all Perfect Saints are in heaven Heb. 12.23 Imperfect here on earth yet we doe not affirme that the workes of the faithfull are Merae Sordes inquinamenta Though there is filthinesse in them yet they be not filthy There may be a spot of inke or a little dirt on the face of a beautifull Absalom yet he is no foule man there is difference betweene staring and starke mad But who were they that perished They that obeyed not that would not be perswaded to yeeld themselves to GOD and who were they looke Ios. 6.21 Men women and children As for the men and women there might be some reason because they were stubborne and resisted God but why were the children put to death As David cried in the pestilence I have sinned but as for these sheep what have they done So it might be said as for them of the elder sort it made no matter for them but as for the children those little Lambes what had they done 1. We are not to dispute with God Iusta judicia Dei licet occulta 2. They were the brood of rebellious parents conceived and borne in sin therefore they might justly perish with their parents Liberi partes parentum a young Serpent may be killed because he may poyson though actually he cannot poyson as the old doth When a Nobleman is condemned of treason his wife and children smart for it and why may not their children be destroyed that are Traytors to God as the Canaanites were The faithfull say of the Edomites happy shall they be that dash her children against the stones The children of Daniels accusers were throwne into the Lions denne the children of the faithfull are holy because they are within the covenant and the children of the wicked are unholy because they be out of the Covenant Therfore let us not mervaile though they drinke of the Cup of GODS wrath together with their parents But God will bee mercifull to our children because hee is our God and the God of our seede hee will hide them under the shadow of his wings if not from temporall plagues for in that we must refer our selves to his will yet at the least from the plague of plagues from hell fire in the life to come VERSE 32. NOw follow those examples that are shut up in a short Epitome and compendium 1. An enumeration of their persons 32. 2. A narration of the power and efficacy of their faith 1. In actions verse 33 34. 2. In passions to 39. which are amplified by the event 39 40. In the enumeration 1. A preface prefixed before it 2. The substance of the enumeration it selfe The preface hath two parts an interrogation and an affirmation I am entred into so large a field as that I know not how to get out I am at a non●plus I know not what to say If should run on still in this veyne I should run my selfe out of breath I should weary both you and me Why I should want time the time would fayle me telling
Vehagnalithihu 3 His daughter did lament her Virginity alone after she heard of it whereas if she should have beene put to death she would have lamented her life above that 4. At her returne it is not said that her Father sacrificed her but did to her according to his vow Verse 39. which is there expounded hee consecrated her as a perpetuall Virgine to the Lord that she never knew man 5. It is said Verse 40. that the daughters of Israel went yeere by yeere not to lament her but as the Hebrew signifies to talke with the daughter of Iephte Therefore she was still alive It can hardly be imagined that so excellent a man so highly extolled by the Holy Ghost should for his vow sake doe such an abhominable fact yet for all that he is not wholly to be excused It was rashly done of him to vow the first thing that met him as an holy thing to the Lord. What if a dog which is a fauning creature had first met him hee might not have consecrated that to the Lord. This Iephte was an Harlots Sonne loathed and disdained of his brethren thrust out of the house and compelled to live as a banished man yet he hath faith The name of a bastard is contemptible and that justly God hath set many brands of infamy upon them they might beare no office in Israel for many generations Sometimes God bereaves them of their wits and senses they sustaine many reproches in the world yet for all that they may be in the number of Gods Elect and Heires of his Kingdome in the world to come From Iudges he proceeds to Kings where he names but one yet such a one as may be instar omnium a famous and worthy King as ever was Saul was the first King of Israel but David was the best King in Israel the first godly King a man after Gods owns heart his faith was wonderfully tryed by many strong and fearefull temptations without and within too before he came to the crowne and after Hee was hunted up and downe by Saul as a partridge on the mountaines he could never be quiet for him he went continually in danger of his life and could never get the peace of him After he came to the Crowne he was molested by the house of Saul sundry yeeres together his owne sonne had like to have justled him out of his kingdome the pestilence in his time was sore in Israel many inward conflicts had he in his soule as appeareth by his Psalmes Why art thou disquieted in me O my Soule hath God forgotten to bee mercifull He fought with hell and damnation yet by faith he was a glorious Conquerour over them all therefore no marvell though hee be in the catalogue of faithfull men The last that is named is Samuel He was both a judge and a Prophet therefore he is put betweene them both Shamang ael audivit Deus His mother cryed for him hee was dedicated to God before he was borne an upright wise and religious Iudge he challenged all the people for the execution of his office whose Asse have I taken to whom have I done wrong they all gave him their approbation and cleared him before the Lords annointed Last of all in generall he names the Prophets Luk. 13.28 Elias Elisha Isaiah Ieremiah and the rest all these were famous for their faith nec in caeteris contrarium est videre which is wont to be the conclusion of all inductions Therefore all are justified and goe to heaven by faith none flyes thither but by the wing of faith All these that bee here cited had their blemishes never a one of these Roses but had their Prickes Gideon besides many Wives had a Concubine he made an Ephod that was an occasion of Idolatry and made Israel to sin Barac was a faint hearted Souldier Samson defiled himselfe with many strumpets Iephte was very rash and inconsiderate David was tainted with two horrible sins Samuel as it seemeth was somewhat negligent in looking to his Children no Prophet but had some weakenesse being all as St. Iames speaketh of Elias subject to the same infirmities that we are yet they were faithfull men greatly honoured by God Almighty There is not the best man or woman on the face of the earth but it is an easie matter to spie an hole in their coate Shew mee a Garden without weeds and a man or woman without imperfections If ye will have perfect men yee must goe to heaven for them there be the spirits of just and perfect men there be none to be found on the earth St. Peter St. Paul Saint Thomas all the Apostles had their imperfections Yet some prophane wretches there be like Cham if they find never so small a slip in a godly man as Noah was they are ready to laugh at it scatent ipsi vulneribus obijciunt illis cicatrices They themselves are common drunkards beastly adulterers the footesteps of whose uncleane life may be traced in every corner yet if they heare of never so small a thing in a Noah and a David that is their table talke meat and drinke to them whereas in many things we slip all and there is not the best man but treadeth his shooe awry we should rather weepe than rejoyce at it VERSE 33. NOw to the efficacy of their faith 1. Of men then of women which is declared 1. By their actions some are generall in all as the three former some speciall in some 1. The good things they did by faith they subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises 2. The evils they overcame by faith 1. From unreasonable creatures as wild beasts 2. From insensible as the elements 3. From corruptions in themselves 4. From reasonable men 5. From death it selfe 1. Yet not without fighting and wrastling they met with many Antagonists to encounter withall by it Iosua subdued the thirty one kingdomes of the Canaanites Ios. 12. ver 24. by it David subdued the Syrians Moabites and Amorites by it Gideon the Madianites If wee had faith wee should subdue the Turke the Pope and all the enemies of the Gospell but undoubtedly by faith wee shall subdue the kingdome of Satan which is stronger than all earthly kingdomes 1 Ioh. 5.4 Not by their martiall skill and prowesse by weapons and engins of war though they used them too the principall meanes to subdue them was faith 2 There is a civill and morall kinde of righteousnesse doing no wrong but good to all defending the innocent punishing the nocent c. 1 Sam. 12.3 and 15.33 1 Reg. 3.27 Acts 10.35 Marke 10.20 There is also a Christian righteousnesse to glorifie GOD. Vnregenerate men may doe the former as Aristides Cato c. and Luk. 18.4 in them it may be called a morall good worke but no Christian good worke unlesse it come from faith This is a property of faith to worke righteousnesse Righteousnesse cannot bee separated from faith A faithfull man is alwayes a
of them if that be not permitted as it is not by the Papists who are more cruell then Nero himselfe for under him Saint Paul when hee was at Rome had all his acquaintance to come to him and were not forbidden Yet if wee cannot doe that let us send reliefe to them as Onesiphorus did to S. Paul Let us speake for them as Pilats wife did for Christ. Let us write for them as Lysias did for Paul If none of these lye in our power at the least let us pray for them All the Tyrants in the world cannot hold us from that at the least in heart to commend them to the LORD When S. Peter was in prison Earnest prayer was made of the Church for him Let us pray earnestly for them that be in prison for the profession of the Gospell Though there be none in England in these happy dayes of prosperity yet there be Christians in bonds in Turkie in the unholy-house of Rome and such like places Let us remember them to the GOD of Heaven If wee were in prison we would be glad to be remembred so let us remember others But alas we heare often the lamentable cry of poore prisoners and it pierceth us not like Pharaoh's Butler we forget the affliction and imprisonment of Ioseph And them that are evilly intreated namely in the body as appeareth by that which followeth whether they are afflicted with poverty with want of meat drinke cloth and other comforts or with sicknesse that puts them to much paine let us remember them as being our selves also in the body that may well bee supplied Some supply the word afflicted Others interpret it of the Mysticall Body as being of the same body that they are of Some understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that is boldnesse The words may be taken as they be 2 Cor. 5.6 Being in the body subject to like calamities that they be They are poore so we may be They are sick so may we be The nayle in the wheele that a while agoe was aloft is now below in the myre and dirt so we that are now at liberty and enjoy prosperity may on the turning of an hand be evilly entreated This is the reason why we are so little affected with the miseries of our brethren because we poste light by it What is that to us said the Chiefe Priests and Elders to Iudas So when one tels us such an one in the Towne wants bread for him and his children What is that to us Such a family is grievously visited the man wife and children are all downe at once I am well a flye for it Thou hast no charter of thy health what a shame is this Who is weake sayes S. Paul and I am not weake So we should say who is poore who is sick in all the Towne and I am not sick If the goute be in the feet shall the head say what is that to me if the head ake shall the foot say what is that to me The affliction of our brethren should be our affliction Let us in pitty remember one another that GOD in mercy may remember us all VERSE 4. IN the former Verses the Apostle hath commended three vertues to us charity hospitality pitty and compassion over the afflicted In this Verse he comes to the fourth which is chastity shewing the meanes whereby we may keepe our selves chaste and the judgement of God against all unchaste persons So that this Verse divides it selfe into two parts 1. A commendation of mariage 2. A condemnation of all uncleane persons that neglect or violate mariage In the former first the estate is commended secondly the bed is defended The commendation of the estate is in these words mariage is honorable in all where three points are to be considered 1. The subject what mariage is 2. The attribute why it is called honorable 3. The persons among whom it is Honourable Mariage hath three names in the Latine Tongue Nuptiae à nubendo because at the solemnization of the mariage the maried parties in token of modesty were wont to be covered Conjugium à conjungendo of the joyning of them together matrimonium quod à matre nomen accepit either quasi matris munium the office of the mother because the mother is most occupied about the children when they be young or quasi matrem muniens mariage is a defence to the woman she gets a husband that is a vaile to her eyes or quasi matrem monens putting the woman in minde of her duty to her husband and children It may be thus defined Mariage is a copulation of one man and woman together for GOD's glory and the comfort of them both The first man that had two wives was a wicked man The Patriarks Abraham Isaac Iacob sundry holy Kings as David and Salomon had many wives That was ex dispensatione non ex institutione howsoever it was winked at by God yet it was an aberration from the first institution ab initio non fuit sic and if ever there was any necessity of many wives it was at the foundation of the world for propagation c. God might dispense with a man to have many wives but hee cannot dispense with a woman to have many husbands sayes Bellarmine l. 1. de Sacr. Mat. c. 11. No though there were but one woman in all the world This is strange may the Pope dispense with all the ten Commandements and shall Gods hands be tyed up from dispensing but in very truth by Gods appointment mariage is only betweene two There may come no more into this yoke save two at once God gave but one wife to Adam yet there were plures costae in Adamo as Tert. indefatigabiles manus in Deo there were many ribs in Adam and power in God to make moe wives if it had pleased him The first mariage being of GOD's owne making must bee a president to us all Among the Turkes it is lawfull for a man to have as many wives as he can keepe yet he must have but one at once with him in his house Christians doe abhor it we have a sharpe yet a wholesome statute against it of late in England Mariage then is the conjunction of a Man and Woman together after a comely and religious manner in the publike face of the congregation that the Church for avoiding of offence may take notice of it and that all things may be done in order as the Apostle speaketh this here is termed honourable He doth not say mariage is lawfull good it is a convenient thing but honourable Vertue is laudable said the Philosopher but felicity onely is honourable This is the highest title of all it is to be had in great price honour and estimation it is honourable before God his Saints and Angels Some honour it too much as the Papists that make a Sacrament of it Sacramentum hoc magnum est Eph. 5. Yet the Greeke word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
the husband of one wife not which is So. So wee may say of the rest such a one must bee chosen which was sober which was modest which was apt to teach 2. Tit. 1.6 The Verbe of the Present tense is plainely expressed Ob. 3. Bell. Soule that Saint Paul doth not make a law that a Bishop should have a wife but that he forbiddeth him to have moe wives then one So. But if it had not beene his meaning to permit a Bishop a wife why doth hee make mention of his wisedome in the education of his children unlesse hee should have children without a wife as the Pope and his Clergie sometime have had if their owne Authours say true 3. If it bee lawfull for a Minister to demande maintenance at the charges of the Church for the keeping a wife then may hee lawfully have a wife But it is lawfull as Saint Paul disputeth by many reasons Who goeth a warfare at his owne charges what shepheard doth not live of his flock why should not the spirituall Shepheard of the soule bee maintained himselfe his wife and children by the sheepe whom he feedeth Ob. This is to be referred to those women which served the Apostles of necessaries as certaine wealthy women following Christ ministring unto him of their owne substance Luc. 8.3 So. 1. It cannot be understood of them They were wealthy more able to give then to receive but it is the drift of Saint Paul in that place to proove that hee might lead about such a woman as should be maintained by the Church 2. Having put the name of Sister in the first place for so the words are to be translated according to the Greeke not as it is in our English Bibles He addeth the name of Wife in the next place to shew what manner of sister he meant not any common woman but a wife It were ridiculous thus to translate it Have we not power to lead about a sister a woman as if there were a sister that were not a woman 3. Those women were wont to follow the Apostles of their owne accords they were not carryed The Greeke word importeth that right which the husband hath over the wife to carry her about with him 4. Clemens Alexandr as Euseb. reports l. 3. c. 35. doth interpret this place of the Apostles wives 4. All the Apostles were marryed All save two at the most Saint Paul and Saint Iohn Saint Philip also the Evangelist was marryed for hee had foure daughters that were Prophetesses Act. 21.9 Sundry might be alleadged in the Ecclesiasticall histories Gratian and Platina both reckon up many Popes whose Fathers were marryed Priests as Boniface the first Felix 3. Gelasius the 5. and others yet hee saith they were not borne in fornication but in lawfull marriage One exception they have that they were marryed before they had taken Orders not since and that afterwards they lay not with their wives But how proove they that The Apostles indeede forsooke all and followed Christ but it is like they left their wives no more then they did their goods rather affectu then effectu as one speaketh for Matthew retained his house still and made Christ a great feast in it Luc. 5.39 Iohn 19.27 it is not like they would keepe their houses and not their wives 2. Saint Paul affirmes 1 Cor. 9.4 That the brethren of the Lord and Peter did then lead about their wives when they had long since taken holy Orders and hee prooveth that hee himselfe being then in holy Orders hath authority to doe the like 3. If the High Priest in the time of the law after he was anoynted with the holy oyle might marry then Ministers now after they bee in Orders may marry for greater sanctity was required in the High Priest being a type of CHRIST then the Ministers of the Gospell but hee after hee was consecrated might marry Levit. 21.10 13. A virgin hee might marry but not a widdow Wherefore let the Ministers of the Word as just occasion is ministred unto them take upon them this estate which the Lord pronounceth to be honourable among all and let us heartily give thanks to GOD for this happy reigne of our gracious Sovereigne wherein wee may safely enjoy the libertie which GOD hath left unto us in his Word Here a Question may be demanded whether it be honourable among them that marry the second third or fourth time c. As for the first marriage all confesse except it be the Tatians Eustathians Eucratitae that this is lawfull The Papists doe not condemne second marriages yet they count them not so honourable as the first for they subtract benediction and blessing from them Tertullian writing to his wife perswades her not to marry againe the second time but in his Booke de monogamia hee shewes himselfe plainely in his colours and is very bitter against second marriages his principall reasons are as weake as water 1. Vnum matrimonium novimus sicut unum Deum A strange reason God lives ever therefore there needs but one God a wife lives not ever but dyes therefore there is no necessitie of one wife when one is dead in the feare of God we may take an other 2. It is not good for man to bee alone Faciamus ei adjutorium adjutores dixisset si eum pluribus uxoribus destinasset There was but one man then in all the world therefore one helper would suffice him 2. This is spoken of a wife in generall not of the first wife alone every woman successively is an helper the second third or fourth is an helper God provided but one helper at once yet successively hee may have many helpers 3. They that be of Faith are Abrahams children Now when Abraham beleeved God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse he was monogamus praepatiatus therefore they that be Abrahams children must be Monogami Recipe digamiam admitte Circumcisionem 1. Abraham believed God after hee was marryed to Keturah his second wife as well as hee did when hee had Sarah his first wife therefore digami may bee Abrahams children as well as monogami 2. Circumcision and a second wife are not relatives for Abraham was circumcised when he had his first wife Then they that have but one wife must also be circumcised 4. Ioseph had but one wife hoc nomine audeo dicere patre meliorem Aaron and Iosua had but one wife Anna one husband Saint Peter one wife We may oppose many holy men to them that have had two wives 5. Christ supped at the first marriage not at a second Whether it was the first or second is not expressed All the acts that CHRIST did are not recorded hee might afford his presence to a second marriage 6. This was the Institution of Matrimonie they twaine shall be one flesh A second wife is aliena Caro and a second marriage is adultery The first twaine are one flesh so are the second twaine and the third
twaine 7. Wee must bee as innocent as doves A dove hath but one mate Hee speakes there of a woman whose first husband was an heathen hee would not have her to marry a heathen againe if shee marryed a Christian hee should be as her first husband because the former being an infidell was as no husband 8. 1 Tim. 3.2 A Bishop must bee blamelesse the husband of one wife c. This tyes all Christians as the other to rule the house well to be no strikers no evill speakers not to be given to wine to be the husband of one wife at once for Polygamie began at that time to be frequent in Asia Howsoever some have unadvisedly declamed against them the Scripture allowes second marriages 1 Cor. 7.39 Loquitur indefinite sayes Saint Augustine de bono viduit ca. 12. he doth not say if her first husband but husband whether first second or third c. 1 Tim. 5.11.14 Yonger widdowes S. Paul would not have to bee admitted to office in the Church because they might marry and hee wishes them to marry and beare children Our Saviour CHRIST Iohn 4.18 reprooveth the woman of Samaria for keeping a paramour instead of an husband but he doth not checke her for having had five husbands Hierome de monogamia makes mention of a man that had buried twenty wives and of a woman that had two and twenty husbands No question but all marriages are lawfull yet as Saint Paul sayes all things are lawfull but all things are not expedient There is more inconveniency in regard of diversity of children of the diverse disposition of sundry wives and husbands c. in the second marriages then in the first therefore greater care wisdome circumspection is to be used in them Yet as God hath ordained mariage for all so all may flye to it Notwithstanding because the time is short as the Apostle speaketh contracted into a more narrow roome than it was before Let them that have wives be as if they had none Let us use this world as if we used it not for the glory and pleasure thereof fadeth away So much of the estate Now let us come to the bed and use of mariage The estate peradventure is honourable but the bed is dishonorable nay sayes the Holy Ghost Bell. l. 1. de Sac. Bapt. c. 5. sayes there is turpitudo immundities in the act of mariage abusing that place Apoc. 14.4 Where it is apparant the Spirit of God metaphorically cals all the Elect Virgins that shall triumph with the Lambe in the life to come Otherwise no maried persons should be in Heaven Men may be defiled with women that be Harlots but not with an holy and religious use of their wives And the bed undefiled Either the Verbe substantive may be supplied in the middest of the sentence and then the sense runneth thus And the bed is undefiled meaning the mariage bed it is no polluted bed as the bed of adulterers and fornicators is it is no polluted thing or else the beginning of the Verse must be repeated and bed undefiled is honorable whereunto I doe rather leane because such repetitions are usuall It is a profitable caveat to married folkes instructing them how to behave themselves in the bed of mariage They are so at all times and in all places to carry themselves as that no dishonesty be admitted into that honourable estate nothing that is repugnant to the Law of nature or Christian modesty is to be committed No doubt but that a great liberty is permitted to them that be maried they may have their lawfull sports and honest recreations one with another Isaac sported with Rebeccah neither did he incur any just reprehension for it If he had thought he had beene in the sight of Abimelech he would not then have shewed such familiar tokens of love yet wheresoever they be they must doe nothing but that which may be warrantable by the Law of Nature and the Word written As the Psalmist speaketh Whither shall I goe from thy presence If I climbe up into heaven thou art there c. So all maried persons may say within themselves in the middest of all their delights Whither shall I goe from thy presence If I walke abroad with my wife into the fields and pleasant pastures thou art there if I sit with her at the Table or by the fire side thou art there if I be with her in my chamber and bed thou art there therefore I will doe nothing in this estate which may be displeasing in thy sight This is the bed undefiled that is honourable and well-pleasing unto the Lord. God grant it may be so among us all The bed it selfe is undefiled As they bee put together in the Church so they may meet together in the bed for the procreation of children that may be mutuall comforts to them both and may be as Olive branches round about their Table which may be profitable members both in Church and Common-wealth and Citizens of Heaven Yet let them take heed they be not drowned in the pleasures of mariage Let them not say with him in the Gospell I have maried a wife therefore I cannot come I cannot pray heare sermons reade the Scriptures c. A wife is appointed as an helper to further thee to Heaven not as an hinderer to keepe thee out of Heaven That may suffice for the commendation of mariage now to the condemnation of all uncleane persons that neglect or violate mariage Whoremongers Graec. fornicators when either the one or both parties be unmaried then it is either simple or joynt fornication The Greeke word is derived of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to sell such as sell their bodies as victuallers doe their meat so doe fornicators They make a sayle of their bodies from Christ unto whom it is due unto an harlot that hath no interest in it Adulterers The filthinesse committed betweene maried persons which is more detestable GOD. Which is the Lord of Hosts having all creatures in Heaven and Earth to be his executioners whensoever it pleaseth him Though the Magistrate be negligent in punishing of them yet GOD will judge them Iudge That is metonymically he will punish the cause being put for the effect There is a but against them Iustice is good but unjust dealing is nought So mariage is honourable but fornication and adultery is abominable What need I have a wife of mine owne when I may borrow of another man I but Whoremongers and Adulterers GOD will judge GOD judgeth them sundry kinde of wayes in this life and in the life to come In this life 1. His judgement is on their soules which are translated from GOD to the Devill Wine and adultery take away the heart the heart of an adulterer is more on his Harlot than on God and that is a fearefull judgement A covetous man makes his money his God and an adulterer makes his queane his God 2 His judgement is
never looke backe but continue with him to the end That this is the native meaning of it is apparant by the words following wherein he corroborateth his exhortation For many deceivers are come into the world which will supplant you if they may therefore walke on stedfastly in the truth VERSE 7. 1. HE warnes them of false teachers 2. He armes them against them verse 8. In the warning 1. There is a signification that they become 2. A marke whereby to know them being come 3. An application of that marke For the former 1. There is the qualitie of them that be come they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 planing subtile cheating deceitfull fellowes they will deceive you with fine words and nise distinctions 2. Here is the quantitie of them They be not a few but many Many Beares many Lions many Foxes If they were but Waspes and Bees yet being many they might scare us and make us circumspect much more these 3. They be not to enter but are already entred 4. Into this wicked world which is a receptacle of good and bad I will give you a marke whereby ye shall discerne them They confesse not that Iesus Christ is come in the flesh and so subvert the very foundation of Christianity There be divers kindes of them Some deny that Christ is come in the flesh at all as the obstinate Iewes whose eyes the god of this world hath blinded Some confesse him to be come in a kinde of flesh yet not in true but in phantasticall flesh as Marcion whom Tertullian eloquently confuteth 1. The Angels appeared in true and solid flesh Abraham washed their feete they tooke Lot his wife and two daughters by the hand and lead them out of the city and doe ye thinke that the Sonne of God would dissemble and deceive the world with phantasticall flesh 2. He was borne of a woman he did not passe through a woman as water through a channel He came not out of her wombe transmeatorio but genitorio more not as one that passed through her but as one that was begotten of her The fruit of her wombe ut homines nascerentur ex Deo primò ex ipsis natus est Deus That men might be borne of God God was first borne of men We are commonly borne of a man and a woman He was singularly borne of a woman without a man 3. If his birth were phantasticall then his death was phantasticall then they are not to be blamed that killed him 4. If his humanity was phantasticall then we may justly imagine that his Deitie was phantasticall too Quomodo verax habebitur in occulto qui fallax repertus est in aperto How shall we beleeve him in that which is secret when he was deceitfull in that which is open Againe Some confesse him to have a true body but no soule as Apollinaris His Deity supplied that whereas he saith My soule is heavy even to the death Father into thy hands J commend my Spirit But let us acknowledge with thanksgiving to his Majestie that he is come in the flesh God manifested in the flesh seene of Angels beleeved on in the world ascended into glory Worthy then is the lamb that was borne and killed for us to receive all honour and glory praise power and might for ever Magna misericordia Domini nostri Iesu Christi Great is the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ. Factum esse eum propter nos in tempore per quem facta sunt tempora that he which made time would be made for us in time that he which made man would be made man least that should have perished which he made Then he applies the marke to them before mentioned This is a deceiver and an Antichrist But why doth he change the number Why doth he not say these be the deceivers and Antichrists Catharinus supposeth he doth it to point out the devill qui est verus primus maximus Antichristus who is the true first and chiefe Antichrist that needeth not the alteration of number is frequent in all Authors There were many Antichrists in the Apostles dayes as forerunners of that great Antichrist in time to be revealed That shall sit in the Temple of God and exalt himself above all that is called God VERSE 8. HItherto he hath warned them of false teachers now he armes them against them 1. He wisheth them vitare errorem to eschew their errors 2. Fugere communionem to flie their communion and society verse 10 11. In the former 1. The Caveat then the reasons the caveat look to your selves and looke narrowly too with both eyes with all the circumspection you can We must looke to others too For no man liveth to himselfe none must say with Cain Am I my brothers keeper We must looke to our brethren too yet first and principally to our selves because every one of us must give an account of himselfe to God A traveller must looke to him that travells with him but chiefely to himselfe we must rather be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishops over ourselves then over others that is condemned by S. Peter yet some there be that spend more time in other mens Diocesses than in their owne in looking to others than to themselves Multi multò sciunt scipsos nesciunt alios inspiciunt seipsos negligunt Many know much and know not themselves they looke upon others and neglect themselves This caveat he doth enforce by 4. Reasons 1. A damno from the losse 2. A praemio from the reward in this v. 3. Ab incommodo from the discōmoditie 4. A commodo from the commodity in the next He doth not say ye but wee including himselfe in the number the best of us all have neede to be vigilant that we lose not the things for which we have wrought namely the joyes of heaven for the which we have wrought by prayer and fasting by reading of Scriptures by hearing of Sermons and divine Service by a patient suffering of divers afflictions and shall wee now through negligence lose them We must worke for the meate that endureth to life everlasting We must not be idle not unfruitfull in the excellent knowledge of Iesus Christ. Wee must worke for heaven not to purchase it that hath Christ done with his owne precious bloud but to confirme it to our selves Goe worke in my Vineyard Worke out your salvation with feare and trembling But let us so worke that wee loose not our working be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the crowne of life Ye are they that have continued with me in my temptations therefore I appoint to you a Kingdome Without continuance no Kingdome A traveller loses his labour though hee have gone 40 or 50 mile if he goe not on to the end of his journey Marriners lose that which they have wrought unlesse they worke till they