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A16853 A revelation of the Apocalyps, that is, the Apocalyps of S. Iohn illustrated vvith an analysis & scolions where the sense is opened by the scripture, & the events of things foretold, shewed by histories. Hereunto is prefixed a generall view: and at the end of the 17. chapter, is inserted a refutation of R. Bellarmine touching Antichrist, in his 3. book of the B. of Rome. By Thomas Brightman.; Apocalypsis Apocalypseos. English Brightman, Thomas, 1562-1607. 1611 (1611) STC 3754; ESTC S106469 722,529 728

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them which keepe the wordes of this book Worship God 10 After he said unto mee seale not the words of the prophecy of this book for the time is at hand 11 He that hurteth let him hurt still and he that is filthy let him be filthy stil and he that is iust let him be iustifyed stil and he that is holy let him be holy still 12 And behold I come quickly and my reward is with mee to render to every one as his worke shal be 13 J am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending the first and the last 14 Blessed are they that doo his commaundements that they may have right to the tree of life and may enter by the gates into the city 15 But without shal be dogges and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and Idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh lies 16 J Iesus sent my Angel to testify these things unto you in the Churches J am the roote and that generation of David that bright and morning starre 17 And the Spirit and the bride say come and he that heareth saith come and let him that thirsteth come and let him that will receive of the water of life freely 18 For I testify there withall unto every one that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book if any man shall add unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this book 19 And if any man shall take away of the words of the book of this prophecy God shal take away his part out of the book of life and out of the holy city and from those things which are written in this book 20 He which testifyeth these things saith ye I come quickly Amen Even so come Lord Iesus 21 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you al. Amen The Analysis THVS farr the two first outward arguments wherby the glory of this city is set forth the two last follow the aboundance of things necessary continuance The first handleth two things which comprehende all other plenty the most pure water proceeding out of the throne ver 1. and the tree of life ver 2. whose fruite is described and how many foulde it is partly in the kinde for thete are twelve fruits partly in the time bearing every moneth and how profitable which appeareth from thence that also the leaves are for the health of the Gentils ver 2. and thus much of the aboūdance the continuance is declared by remooving of the corrupting causes ver 3. and by setting downe of the preserving causes ver 3.4 5. And hitherto hath bin a prophetical narration both of special things and also of common things to the whole Church There foloweth the conclusion of all the Revelation and of the Epistle partly consisting in a confirmation partly in a salutation The confirmation first takes in hand a recounting and collecting of things before spokē that being put as in a patterne ūder one view they might have greater force for credit And this recounting is cōtinued even to the eighteen verse relating the authour of the Revelation ver 6. the happines of the keppers ver 7. the ministers ver 8.9 a publishing commanded wherby ther should be a free examination ver 10. with an answer of a secret obiection ver 11. the upright nature of the revealer ver 12. eternall ver 13. the thing revealed ver 14.15 the plaine testimony of Iesus ver 16. and lastly the desire of the Spirit and bride ver 17. Every one of which apart is of great weight to establish the authority of this Prophecy but al togither are very much greater Next Iohn of his owne part addeth some new thing when he uttereth certain destruction to them which shall corrupt this prophecy never so little ver 18.19 then testifying his most earnest desire of a speedie finishing ver 20. The salutation lastly concludeth the whole Epistle with a praier ver 21. Scholions 1 Afterward he shewed mee That wholesome fruite dooth more declare the excellent glory of this city which not onely the citizens but also forreiners doo receive Wherunto also apperteine this river and tree of the which both they drinke and also are fedde unto life both which the Angel sheweth to Iohn For he saith he shewed mee But who is he that shewed That sevēth Angel which manifested the city to him in the former chapter ver 9.10 and therfore neither as yet are we come to the heavenly blessednes of the saincts after the last resurrection when we shal not use Angels or any other masters But as touching the water it is not some litle fountaine but a river neither corrupted and troubled as Nilus but flowing with most pure waters as Kidron Gallirrhoe making glad the citie of God Psal 46.5 Furthermore it is a river of water of life not onely because of the continuance for it runneth alwayes with new waters as is the water of a fountaine or spring which also in the Scriptures is called living but because it bringeth life to the drinkers Iohn 4.14 The river is shining as Chrystall farre exceeding the clearnes of the fountaines Lastly it proceedeth out of the throne of God and of the Lambe which it hath for chiefe fountaines and to which againe as a companion it doth leade or rather being a forerunner goeth before as a streeme to the sea In Ezechiel the same flood issueth out of the temple altar chap. 47.1 But in this new Ierusalem there is no temple as hath bin spoken in chap. 21.22 therfore the throne of God is set in the place thereof Whether it runneth here is no mention but the Prophets plentifully teach it namely towards the East from the South side of the altar first towards Galily and into the plaine then the waters come to the Sea and by emptying themselves into the same sea the waters therof are healed Ezech. 47.1.8 So in Ioel there shal issue forth a fountaine from the house of the Lord and shall water the valley of Shittim chap. 3.18 That is the plaine of Moab where the Israelites committed whordome with the Moabitish wemen Numb 25.1 Zacharie also There shal be saith he in that daie waters of life going forth out of Ierusalem part of them to the East sea and parte of them to the uttermost sea which shal be both in somer and winter chap. 14.8 This river is the most fruitfull doctrine of Christ which shall flowe forth towards the East because the people watered with the moisture hereof shall grow and at last true life shall budde forth For every living creature that creepeth whersoever these rivers come shall live and there shal be a very great multitude of fishes for by the comming of these waters thither they are cured and live whersoever this river commeth Ezech. 47.9 For this Prophet and Iohn speake of the same things and times of the state and condition of the Church in earth as those things which in so many places we have
saith that the time is at hand because the things should be begun forthwith and from that time should proceede in a perpetuall course without interruption Although the last acomplishment should be at length for many ages after ¶ And he signifyed That is which also he signifyed when he had sent by his Angell to his servante John Twoo instrumentall causes are rehearsed the Angell and Iohn Christ useth his ministery not because he disdayneth himselfe to speake to us for he giveth himself to be seene in his owne person in this very chapter but because both our weaknes cannot endure the beholding of so great maiesty as it appeareth by and by after in John who fell downe dead at the sight of him ver 17. And also that he may shewe that he doth rule and commande to the Angels and all other thinges 2 Who bare record As touching John he describeth playnly himselfe unto us shewing that he is no other thē the Apostle himselfe of which two certē and proper markes are rehearsed one the testimony given to the word of God and to Jesus Christ The other an eye beleefe of those thinges which he testifyed For Christ chose twelve out of all his Disciples who should be with him continually and should be present at all his miracles and conferences of which they should be witnesses afterward even unto the furthest parts of the earth Act. 1.8 by which double marke Luke doth note them out writing thus Who from the beginning were beholders themselves and ministers of the word Chap. 1.2 By which arguments also Iohn himselfe doth maintaine his authority in an other place That which we have heard which we have seene with our eyes which we have looked upon and our handes have handled of the word of lyfe 1 Ioh. 1.1 And the thinges seen which are here mentioned are not the visions of this booke which followe but the actes and miracles of Christ at which whyle they were done Iohn was present Otherwise howe could those thinges have procured authority to the writer which thing onely the mentioning of these respecteth in this place which were not yet made knowne to the Church Wherfore that John who wrote the Revelation was the Apostle unto whom those markes doe agree by which the Apostles were knowen famous in the Church above others neither is there any other John besides to whom these same thinges can agree And indeede he hath declared himselfe to be such by very good advise when as it would be very much avaylable for the credit of the Prophecy that men should be perswaded of the authority of him that did write it I mervayle therefore that Dionysius of Alexandria regarded these things so little that he would dispute against them so egerly But his foolish coniectures have bene confuted by others most leardnedly He then being let passe from hence it may be understood that those wordes which Aretas testifyeth to be added herein in some bookes wee see to have ben put in by Plantine and Montanus out of the Compluten translation And whatsoever he heard and whatsoever thinges are whatsoever must be done hereafter that these words I say have crept in wrongfully and into an unmeet place for thinges not knowne have no authority themselves much lesse can they bring it to an other 3 Blessed is he that readeth Hitherto of the Authours the Fruict of the Prophecy is the happines of them that reade or shall give eare to others that reade to them yf truly they doe observe the thinges that are written therin knowledg and workes are to be ioyned togither in s●ch order that that may go before so at lenght men come to that happines But no word unlesse that which is inspired of God can conferre such fruict to men But who are those blessed ones that read Are they those that shal be alive in that space of the last three yeeres wherein Antichrist shall exercyse cruelty tyrāny a little before Christ shall come to iudgement as the Papists doe imagine In deede Frauncis of Ribera the Iesuite doth thrust togither this whole Prophecy almost into these narrowe straites prudently verily as touching his Pope but in respect of the truth it selfe very perversly For were men utterly voyd of this felicity by the space of those whole thousande five hundred yeares which are now past since the Revelation was given Or can any be happy eyther in reading or keeping those things which perteine no thing to him If all these thinges are to be thrust into this three yeeres space they shall in no wise be blessed But they have bin curious in vaine who eyther hitherto have searched out those things or have used diligēce in effecting them Which same thing must needes also come to passe in future tymes wee know not for the space of howe many ages But the whole handling of the thinge shall convince this invention eyther of very great fraude or ignorance and unskilfulnes Let us know in the meane tyme that such a fruite is here praysed which is common to all ages since this divine Revelation came forth to be seen of all mē which sheweth severally and one after an other the condition of every tyme even unto the last ende as shall be manifested with God his helpe by this exposition of ours ¶ For the tyme is at hand Wherin these thinhs shal be put in execution But seeing the whole prophecy doth denounce a battaile rather then put on a crowne the reason seemeth to be fetched from the danger nigh at hand as though he should say blessed are they that are fortified with some firme aide against the evils hāging over their heads But huge great evils stāde at the doores of which this prophecy is full therefore they are blessed that shall take heed and keepe faithfully the way of escaping them 4 John to the seaven Churches Hitherto the Proheme The Epistle followeth the person of the wrighter of which namely Iohn was knowne sufficiently by the thinges before spoken They to whom he writeth are the seaven Churches in Asia that is the universall Churches in every place as Aretas and Beda doe well affirme and all as I thinke Interpreters with one consent doe iudge Neither can invery deede the thinges here rehearsed beare to be restrained to these seaven Churches We shall heare in the Epistles sent to every one an admonition that all should heare what things were written to the Churches Secondly it belongeth to these seaven Churches to knowe as well of future things as of present the charge of both namely of writing and sending he shewes afterward to have bin committed to him And the last conclusion of the whole booke which wished the grace of Christ to them all shewes that this whole Prophecy was sent to the seaven Churches for an Epistle chap. 22.21 But wha● had it availed these seaven cities which were to remaine but a litle time to have understanding of such things that after many ages should be which
rivers but for to give them a kind of force and edge wherby they may prick the sharper and peirce the deeper How notable the goodnes of God is in this respect towards these last times ther is no man unlesse he be shamefully unthankfull and envious but doth acknowledge For by the paynes of some very excellent for why may I not so cal those learned men which have so greatly holpen Christian religion with their studies many things are made unto us most easy and playn in which the ages past have been much deceived Neither is this a vayn boasting of our times but a true preaching of the bounty of God Notwithstanding ther shal be a time at lēgth whē the light of the Moone shal be as the light of the Sun and the light of the Sun shal be seven fold like the light of seven dayes in the day that the Lord shall bind up the breach of their wound Isa 30.26 as partly by the things that folow wil appeare more manifest Many things ther are in the Scriptures not yet sufficiently explayned but the neerer we come unto that day the more copiously wil the light increase dayly by the neer beams of the rising Sun That I may tel the very thing Antichrist is in deed layd open now long agoe through the grace of God in marvelous manner but seing in these yeeres wherin now we live and wherunto the order of time hath brought us the wayting men of the seat of Rome have felt nothing heavier then that their Iesuits should be put to death which was the sentēce of the vial next before this burning heat of the Sun is to be expected ere long even some greater perspicuity of the Scriptures wherby the man of sin may be more vehemently scorched His filthines shal be discovered yet more wherupon men will the more hate him which wil drive him and his unto such intemperance that he wil gnash and rage against the Sun which hath manifested to the world his so horrible hiew that himselfe shal not indure to behold the same Wherfore I am to exhort you yee learned men whom God hath adorned above others with a singular facultie of perceiving and illustrating the truth that ye would diligently employ your selves in this noble work for the Church You hear what a garlond God hath reserved for these last times Great is the prayse of our Ancestors which first plucked off Antichrists vizar no lesse will theirs be which shal utterly hysse him and drive off the stage Yea they are wont in special to make the triumphe which doo make an end of the battel This onely conflict seemeth to be left for learned men the more are they to be styrred up to apply their studies That which further dooth remayn fyre and soword shal performe and shall not be accomplished by ynk and pen. ¶ And it was given unto him to torment men by fyre The first event it shall torment men with heat But what men why is nothing here added as the mark of the Beast or some such like wherby we may know unto what flock it perteyneth Shall others also be burned with this Sun besides the houshold of Antichrist verily so it seemeth Hypocrites and all others that ar not indued with true godlines whatsoever religion they professe cannot endure that their wickednes should be manifested and reproved by the light of the heavenly truth Wherupon it is no marvel if many other earthly men also which are not of the Popes profession be molested by this heat of the Sun But the words of the next verse which hath power over these plagues seem to be of those men as I sayd which have felt the former scourges also But to what ende is this added by fire seing the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 burn doth sufficiedtly expresse the burning of the Sun It is that wee may know that the heat wherwith they shall boyle shall not be heavenly but earthly such as is fire to weet envy contention strife and al bitternes of minde For fire is here metaphorical which playnly sheweth that this is not the proper Sun seing it worketh not by it own but by an others vertue Such then shal be the first event that men shall boyl in heat not onely by a secret exacerbation of their mindes but even by open brawles and reproches But shal the Angel of the Sun receave such a reward It had bin better for him to have stopt his vial that it might not distill such trouble unto him But let him not be discouraged God will prepare him a secret place with himselfe to keepe him from the virulence of tongues The same hath been the condition of al the Prophets alway so it is with the holy book that being tasted it is sweet in the mouth as honey but being eaten it maketh the belly bitter chap. 10.9 Wherfore let ungratious men reproch freely so as the manifestation of their wickednes doo move their choler 9 And men boyled with great heat The second effect shal be marvelous unusual vexations when ther shal be no shelter no not in the thickest forrest that men can use to alay their heat Therfore they blaspheme the name of God that hath power over these plagues like the men of Atlas which curse the Sun with al execrations because it parcheth them with too much heat as Herodotus relateth These last words seem to make this plague peculiar unto them that were vexed also with soates and whose fountains were turned into blood Notwithstanding we are not to think that it shal be open blasphemy against God so as his holy name shal be manifestly violated after the manner of the Hethens and them that know not God but that then men doo also commit this wickednes when they difame his truth and use cursed speaking against it such manner of indirect blasphemy it seemeth it shal be ¶ And they repēted not to give him glory A defective speech which is more full in chap. 9.20 as if he should say And they repented not of their workes to give him glory and so after in ver 11. Now therfore see what this greater light and heat shal effect it shal drive men to blasphemy but they shal persist in their wickednes no lesse then before Least perhaps thou shouldst look that they being convicted in conscience should submitt themselves to so manifest truth This therfore take thou knowledge of before that thou be not offended at the obstinacy of men 10 And the fift Angel powred out his vial upon the throne This vial upon the Beasts throne hath for the first event the darkning of his kingdome for the second rage blasphemy darkning of the Beasts brood ver 11. VVho this Angel is we shal see in the next chapter upon ver 17. wher the declaration of this thing is purposed What the Throne is the things that wee have heard before doo sufficiently teach us for it is the City which the Dragon gave to the Beast
accomplished wherof hope is given in this book For as the soules under the altar cryed with a loude voice desiring deliverance ch 6.10 so the faithful through hope of the future marriage leap for joy greatly desire that day to be shortned ch 19.7 For the word Spirit signifyeth here every faithfull in whom the Spirit dwelleth the word bride the whole Church cōpany of the faithful The godly al of thē both severally ioyntly desire the same by prayers ¶ And he that heareth saith come As though he should say this is not only the desire of the Church present but also of it proceeding from day to day even unto the last ende Every of the elect at the first knowledge of these things shal be inflamed with the same desire with their ancetours ¶ And let him that thirsteth come Neither doo these things serve onely to inflame but also to satisfy the mindes which is the peculiar property of Gods word And that nothing may be wanting to certenty thou must understand that this Prophecy doth give hope of salvation to men not by expectation of a due reward but by the grace and mercy of God alone It publisheth a free salvation onely as all the rest of the sacred scriptures not due to our desertes A notable rule of the heavenly truth 18 19 For I testify togither Hitherto the rehearsing of the former testimonies and arguments which were used here and there in this precedent book Now Iohn addeth a certaine newe one but of the same divine authority with the former to wit that this Prophecy is most true and unviolable which it is not lawfull to violate eyther by adding or taking away even the least thing without extreame punishment Which being proper onely to the word which cometh down from heaven this Revelatiō must needs be put into the same degree Deut. 4.10 and 12 32. 20 He that c. Christ himselfe who is called that witnesse both in respect of the Gospel which he hath brought into the world also of this Prophecy which is grounded on his authority onely In conclusion the whole matter is sealed up both by his testimony repeated Iohns pryer 21 The grace c. The usual forme of concluding Epistles such as is this whole Prophecy sent to the 7 Churches by the commandement of Christ himselfe chap. 1.11 Come L. Iesus Glory praise be to God for ever Amē I give thee thankes Almighty and everlasting God because thou hast lead mee blind and unskilful man of no reputation of no iudgement of no wit by thy onely mercy for Christs sake through this unbeaten wildernes hast made mee to view many secret corners and hast given mee a safe iourney by the dennes of the Dragon and wilde beasts Even so ô Father for such is thy good pleasure Thou chusest the unnoble base men of the world hast foūded strēgth from the mouth of babes sucklings that no flesh should reioyce How incōprehensible is thy wisedome how admirable thy truth How iust holy at al thy wayes Who shal not fear thee I would gladly tell thy prayses but my tongue doth lacke wordes the words a minde Whither soever my mind shal turne it selfe it is swallowed up of thy infinitnesse If it shal ascend into heaven thou art hyer if it shal cōsider thy workes thou art greater if it doth meditate on thy holinesse thou art purer then the very Sunne O wonderful deepnes unmeasurable bottomlesse pit how dost thou compasse us about on everie side art comprehended no where What mortal sight cannot be overwhelmed with this so infinite brightnesse Therfore my sight turneth frō the light that no man can come unto that it may consider thee through the cloud of the creatures Chiefly it delighteth much to behold thy most pleasant face in thy Sonne But as in this glasse thou art most visible so art thou most admirable so farre surpassing our understanding as thou dost abasse thy self neer to our sense Thou art great ô Lord abov al that can be either said or thought grāt that we may reverēce thy exceeding greatnes which the world cōteineth not that we may feare thy presence which the eyes see not that we may adore thy maiesty in cōparison of which the universal creature beneath is nothing that we may embrace thy goodnes wherwith thou followest us most unworthy men Accomplish at length thy great mystery let the world acknowledge thy long delay to hav bin for thy onely mercy not of forgetfulnesse or neglect of thy promise Destroy the Romish Beast and the Constantinopolitan Dragon build up thy new Hierusalem wherin Christ shal raigne and the saints shal beare rule togither with him to enioy for a time a blessed raigne on earth and most happy and eternal with thee in heavens Heare ô Father to whom no thought of the mind is unknown Be thou present who art no where absent but heare the prayers before whom thou hast gone before by thy decree Then will wee bring forth our harpes sing praises to thee celebrating thee the one three God the Father the Sonne Holy Ghost to whom be all honour praise and glory for ever and ever Amen FINIS
Ioh. 1.12 He againe entertaineth us that wee maye suppe togither with him as often as with pure mindes wee come to the Sacrament of the Supper wherin he feedeth us with his owne flesh and blood most sumptuous delicious dainties above all that can be spoken or thought In which sense it is spoken in Luke chap. 13.29 Then they shall come from the East and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit downe in the kingdome of God that is men shall assemble togither to the Gospell from all quarters shall embrace the doctrine of the kingdome and shall be partakers of Chr. truely whose pledges they shall take bread wine sitting downe at his table in celebrating his sacred supper For he speaketh of the calling of the Gentiles whose faith and assenting to the whole truth he signifyeth by one sacramentall action These guests now Christ would call when in the meane tyme the Iewes of whom he speaketh in the parable did abhorre and despise the way of salvation as wee see it hath come to passe now for the space of many ages Wherto pertaineth that which in the same place the Iewes excluded doe alleadge requiring an entry for thēselves because of their former familiarity in eating drinking in his sight ver 26. as though they should say O Lord wee communicating at thy table have feasted merrily with thee in eating of thy sacrifices wilt thou locke the doore nowe against us For in this respect the meate of the sacrifices was the same thinge to the Iewes that the bread and wine is to us Neither are these thinges notwithstanding so to be taken as though the elect were limited within the boundes of this life but because the supper which is made on earth is a pledge of the eternall feast in the heavens These thinges therfore proove that a double and great good thing doe abyde in the English Church that is to say the preaching of the word and the lawfull administration of the sacraments In both which Christ bestoweth him selfe upon hispeople keeping a mutuall feast with them he first being received of us by hearing secondly entertaining us againe with the supper-of his body O wee therefore most impure as often as wee fly from and forsake hearing of the word for wee refuse Christ to be our guest O wicked despisers that wee are as often as wee withdrawe our selves from receaving the sacrament with our brethren For wee despise Christ bidding us to supper But these thinges are added for the singular confort of the godly For who would not quake and thinke of flying very quickly from this Church when they should heare that the condition of the Ministers is hated of Christ whom not repenting he will vomit out of his mouth shortly unlesse by the words of Christ himselfe they were assured of their communicating with him Praise be to thee therfore most meecke Lambe who finding the dore shutte against thee dost not departe quickly being moved with anger and fury and deprive us of all meanes of salvation but leavest yet an abondance of thy selfe to all that doe open to thee knocking by the word and despise not thy most sweete inviting by the Sacrements Therefore wicked and blaspehmous is their errour who doe fall away so from this Church aa if Christ were banished wholy from hence and that there could be no hope of salvation for them that tarry there Let them minde here Christ feasting with his people Will they be ashamed to sit downe there where they see Christ not be ashamed Are they holier purer then hee But why doe they not convince themselves by their owne experience They cannot deny but that they beleeved in Christ before they made a separation from us whence came this faith Cam it not from our preaching in our Church Can any then preach except he be sent Rom. 10 13. c. Why then doe they so perversly refuse for some blemish in the outward calling that worde whose divine force they feele in their harts Althoug the fruict it selfe doth noe more free from blame our corruptions then a true childe adultery And therefore neither may wee eyther take pleasure in them nor they forsake and fall away from us for some blemishes Wherefore returne to the unity of the Church which hath begate and nourished you Yf you fly from this Christ who suppeth with is elect in our assemblyes and welcometh them againe yee shall finde him no were In the meane time let us also minde how great evill wee call for upon our selves who by holding hard our superstitions doe throwe our brethren into so great danger Certenly if that hath any weight which the truth himselfe once confirmed it were better for such men that a milstone being hanged about their necks they were drowned in to bottome of the sea Mat. 18 6. I wish health of minde to both But more over this place is to be delivered from the fraude of the Papists who will have it to be in the power of men to open to Christ knocking Whether saith Bellarmine doth he not know that they cannot open Should he not be a foole who would knocke at the doore of his niggbour if he knewe certēly that none were within who could opē in his first book of grace and free will chap. 11. I answere he should not without cause be a foole if his onely end of knocking were that he mitght enter in But Christ knocketh at the doore of the reprobates whom he knoweth neither to be willing nor able to open not that he may enter in but partly that he may upbride thē with their impotency gotten by their owne fault partly that he may encrease their condemnation For so speaketh the Evangelist expressely Therfore they could not beleeve Iohn 12.34 Why then useth he wordes to them who have not ability to beleeve Christ himselfe sheweth If I had not come saith he and spoken unto them they should not have had sinne but now they have no cloke for their sinne Ioh. 15.22 Therefore he spake unto them that for the contempt and hatred of his onely begotten sonne their condemnation migh be the greater Such are the powers of the naturall man as is the love of the trueth in the Papists who seeing it refuse it wickedly 21 To him that overcometh J will give to sit word for word in the Greeke is He that overcometh I will give him in stead of I will give to the overcomer by the nominative case absolute as was observed before chap. 2.26 This third reason is taken from the reward of being a companion and partaker of his throne Not because the glory of every one of the children shal be equall to the honour of the Man Christ but because the glory maiesty of the head shall redounde to every one of the membres Therefore the thrones are not peculiar to the twelve Apostles of which see Mat. 19.28 but common to all the elect Althoug in a certen
false friends open enemys coūterfait Sosiae who should vaunt themselves under the shewe of her and many other things of that sorte were to be declared with which shee should contende and have to doe it was needfull that first a certen forme and image of her should be pourtrayed which is the principall point of the treatise following lest peradventure in so great sturres and troubles wee should suppose her to have ben wholy extinguished and abolished or at least wise her face being not knowne wee should be the more hindred from acknowledging of her Werfore wee shall finde this Type to be common to all ages as of which there is mention made in the fourteene chapter of this booke and thirde verse Where the companions and followers of the Lambe sing a newe songe before the foure Beasts and the Elders And againe nearer to the ending of the Prophesy the foure and twenty Elders and the foure Beasts fall downe and worship God as may be seene in the nineteene chapter of this booke and in the fourth verse So in other places as speach is made of the true Church so farre as any thing is to be done in the publike assembly shee is noted alwayes after the manner of this type For wee may not thinke that any congregation on earth is to be found of so absolute purity and sounde perfection as is here described but that all the holy assemblyes of the elect are counted such in Christ before God the Father although much terrene dregges be sprinckeld upon them according to that The Church to be sanctifyed by Christ to be purged by the washing of water through the word made also glorious without spot or wrinkle or any such thing but to be holy and without blame Ephes 5.26.27 An exemple of which description wee have here set before our eyes And for that purpose besides that wee should conforme all our assemblyes unto this rule even as Moses was commaunded to make the frame of the Tabernacle and all his implements altogither as was shewed to him in the mount Exod. 25.9 But the type of our Church is shewed in the very heavens according to the more plentifull glory wherewith the Gospell shyneth above the Lawe But howe much the more diligently all things are to be considered Seeing therfore wee knowe the drift of the vision let us search out the exposition of the severall things First the head it selfe of the Church is described such as the true members doe alwayes confesse and worshippe both by his sitting in a Throne in this verse and also by the similitude following The sitting declareth the maiesty and glory of the most high God and noe lesse his steddy and stable dwelling among the Saints in whose assembly he hath placed his throne of dignity to goe to noe other place And because there is but one throne and one that sitteth on it wee knowe that God is one in nature power maiesty glory and that there is not any other beside who ruleth in the middes of the saints Therfore the holy Church worshippeth and prayseth with all honour and reverence the one onely supreme Iehovah 3 And he that sate was to looke on like Aretas the Complutent edition and the Kings Bible doe not reade these first wordes and he that sate was but they adde by and by to the ende of the former verse these following wordes like in sight Our bookes and the comon latine translation doe distinguish more playnly the sitting and the similitude which thing in describing the true God seemeth that it ought not to be omitted This verse sheweth a little more fully of what sorte this one God is of whom yet it setteth forth noe image but onely a certen kinde of colour after those auncient representations made once to the olde people You saw sayth Moses noe similitude in the day that Iehovah spake to you in Horeb out of the middes of the fyre Deut. 4.15 For the same is that one true God reigning in the Christian assemblyes whom from the beginning the primitive Church worshipped And seeing that in the infancy of the Church he shewed noe image of himselfe much lesse is any similitude to be expected in this up growen and ripe age This is a more familiar fuller manifestation seeing beside one and the same essence which the common glory noteth the incomprehensible distinction of the three persons is in some sorte revealed by the three pretious stones the Iasper Sardin and Emerald For it pleaseth the Spirit to use the delightfull Iewels to disclose these mysteryes because the grace and beauty of these doth most of all excell in this world belowe whereupon they may be most fitte images of that pleasantnes which exceedeth all created understanding especially seeing the representation is rather of the vertue then of any forme The first sight of the Iasper resembleth the person of the Father this Iewell is greene and not without cause called the mother of Jewels the kindes of it are so many and the honour so auncient And what more fitly among pearles could shadowe out the Father who is the first in order alwayes of a flourishing eternity of whom the other persons have their beginning and originall The second sight is of the Sardin wherby the Sonne is represented This Iewel is redde of a fleshly colour frō whēce also it is called a Carneole fitly in deede being in his stead who tooke upon him flesh for our sake and was made a man like unto us The third sight is of a rainebowe of the colour of an Emerald wherby the H. Ghost is noted He compasseth the Throne round aboute as in the booke of wisdome chap. 9.4 compassing the whole circuit of the divine maiesty with an unutterable sweetnes For the Emerald doth shewe so acceptable pleasant and shining greenes that the eyes beholde nothing more gladly Yet this Raynebowe is not like that which is comonly so called For this is not over against the Throne but about the Throne neither is it an halfe circle but whole and full on every side For it is rounde about the throne finally it is not of three colours as the true Rainebowe but of one onely and simple colour of the Emerald Such therfore is that God one in nature three in persons the head and centre of the Church whome alone the faithfull are in love with and doe worship taking pleasure most sweetly with all their hartes in his incomprehensible sweetnes ¶ And rounde aboute the Throne So is the Head nowe he adioyneth the body like the circumference of this centre as wee have sayd Which is described by the place the number of members age apparell and crownes The place is double common about the hyghest throne and proper the peculiar throne of every one The comon rounde about the throne is before behinde at the right hand and at the left that it may parte the Raine bowe which compassed also the Throne but with a contrary situation above beneath and
appointe to so great an Office Then shee presented to CHRIST Sainct DOMINICVS To Whom CHRIST said in deede he is a good and stout Champion and will doe carefully all the thinges of which thou hast spoken unto mee Shee presented also SAINCT FRANCES And CHRIST commaunded him likewise as the former c. In the same place after And blessed DOMINICVS continuing in prayer and intreating the Blessed Virgine MARIE to whom as a speciall Patronesse he had commited the whole care for his order c. From which wee see what haire these fryars had And not these onely but also the whole nation of the Papists who hold not Iesus Christ to be favorable to them any otherwise but so farre as Marie by her intercession procureth them favour But it shal be superfluous to wring out that thing by witnesses which they confesse at this day of their owne accord But thou wilt say howe now doe I attribute longe haire to the fryars whom of late I had sayd to be shorne and shaven To be shaven and to glory in the name of a woman are not contraries which to be signifyed by these allegories and not any proper covering of haire I suppose to be manifest enough So before chap. 4. Foure and twenty Elders are said to sit upon thrones crowned who yet afterward fall on their faces and throw downe their crownes at the voice of the Beasts giving glory to God continually which seeme so repugnant that they cannot stande if they be taken not figuratively but properly Christ also in the parable from one that had not on a wedding garment and cast into utter darkenesse inferreth that many are called and fewe are chosen when as the proper application would make the contrary that many are called fewe are reiected Mat. 22.13.14 But the favourable readers will unloose these thinges easilie of themselves ¶ And their teeth were as the teeth of Lions The well knowne rage of both hath sufficiently proved to the world their teeth to be as of Lions seeing the Saracenes assailed with sword and fire they devoured widowes houses under a colour of prayers and godlines 9 They had also habergeons Both the one and other should be fenced nobly and should be noe lesse safe then if they should have ben covered with iron corselets labour should be undertaken in vaine either for to subdue them by warre or restraine them by any force as long as their time of reigning should continue How unprosperously did the Romanes warre often times with the Arabians untill their fore appointed time of tyrannizing was passed over is relatetd by Zonaras in Constans the nephewe of Heraclius in Justimanus Rhino●meta and others The same also is evident in the friars one exemple shal be instead of many The Vniversity of Paris accused to the Pope a certen blasphemeous booke patched by the Dominicanes which they called the Eternall Ghospell The Pope disallowed the booke yet he would not have it to be condemned publikely that nothing might be diminished of the estimation of the Monkes neither would he correct any further their wicked impudency Maidenburg Cent. 13. chap. 8. col 776. Therefore he that did strike them with any weapon it was as if he had cast it against an iron corselet or rather against a brazen wall ¶ And the sounde of their winges The huge noise of the Locusts whē they should even move themselves to make an assault against any I will speake nothing of the Saracenes whose hostile in roades howe great terrour they brought to men who is ignorant Was it not a thing worthy of feare unto all Kingdomes and Dominions whatsoever that almost an infinite host of most strong men did remaine in the middes of them who were wholy addicted to the faith of a forren Pope and did altogither depend upon his pleasure alone By what cunning could the Pope more terrify the Kinges then by the clapping togither of these winges It is noe mervaile that the Popes cherished so greatly this bande of men whose labour was so profitable unto him 10 And their stinges were in their tailes The Complutent edition some other bookes read otherwise then the translation of Theod. Beza And they have tailes like unto scorpions and stinges and in their tailes they have power to hurt men five monethes Aretas agreeth with the same And so indeede the declaration of the thinges in order set forth requireth For that which was set downe before undeterminatly verse 3. and 5. as though the power to hurt had ben common to all the Locusts in this maner is drawne more distinctly and expressely to one certē kinde Nowe it is shewed that the chiefe fiercenesse shal be in the tailes to which also the five monethes should properly belong but the tayle is every worst and filthyest thing in his kinde Doth not the thing it selfe declare that it came so to passe Who of the Saracenes did chiefly bring misery upō our men Certēly the tayle of the Saracenes the basest route the rascall sorte and company of vile persons which having noe resting places of their owne rāne hither and th●ther into Cyprꝰ Creta Sicilia Sardinia the two Ilandes Baleares Spaine Fraunce and Jtaly to seeke a place to dwell in The other multitude whose tyranny was more stable and which continued longer kept the countries more quietly and with more estimation which they had once possessed Also of all the Religious the Begging fryars are the tailes to whom especially the sting belongeth the five monethes of tyrannizing For taking their beginning from Innocentius the third they grew into almost an infinite number untiil the yeere one thousand three hundred and fiftieth that is untill Gerardus Ridder wrote a booke against them which he intituled the teares of the Church in which he proved that that kinde of life was farre from a Christian perfection that it is against charity that they doe feede of other mens labours when a man should be able to get his living with his owne handes that they are hypocrites that they live most filthily that for mens sake and for lucre they mixed fables Apocrypha most vaine dreames with the syncere trueth that they devoured widowes houses under a colour of long prayers that they did troble the whole Church many wayes by their confessiōs sermons and solemniti●s at mens burials and therefore that it belongeth to the Bishops to restraine and represse this immoderate libertie and abuses of the Monkes Those are his wordes the summe of which I have mentioned because it agreeth wonderfully with this description of the Locusts Neither doe I attribute it to him alone that this plague was quailed and repressed but many couragious men desirous of true godlines wer about that time who with ioint forces did put to flight the same From hence therefore it is more apparant which wee said at the fifte verse That the whole Kingdomes either of the Saracenes or of the Pastists is not to be gathered into that space of five monethes
seven to wit so many as are the branches of one after the similitude of the candlesticke in the temple which representing the Church had one shafte onely but seven branches coming out of the sides Exod. 25.31 c. For there is one Catholique Church as one shafte but the particular congregations are many which comming forth out of that one and abiding in the same as the divers branches of one shafte do stay as it were upon the same base Where those first seven Candlestickes shewed that there was then a most flourishing Church as long as the Apostles and their next true successours did burne as it were candles in the same But at this time wherein the PROPHETS should goe clad in mourning apparell the Candlestickes are but two which lacke five to make up their full number because the dignity of it was much diminished and almost brought to an extreme condition Neverthelesse the elect should have some fatnesse as it were of the olive trees wherby they should cherish the celestiall flame in their hearts neither should a candlesticke be wanting from whence the Ministers should give light aboundantly howsoever the companies of the faithfull should be most rare and very small These thinges yet hitherto doe not peradventure content our mindes especially seeing in this space of a thousande two hundreth and three score dayes which wee have shewed to be so many yeeres and to have their beginning in the yeere 304 wee have taught that sixe Antitype candiestickes did shine chap. 2.3 So then I thinke that the three last the Sarden Philadelphien Laodicen were not kindled but after a thousande two hundred and almost twenty yeeres and therefore worthily not to come into any accounte to which so small a number of those dayes agreeth But as touching the other three the Smyrnen belonged to the Church decaying the Thyatiren to the same rising againe but the Pergamen lying in a most deepe pit of all corruption from it is neither of any reckening but of set purpose passed over Not that there should be none at all in that state of things but because none should be greatly in sight at that time 5 And yf any will hurte them Nowe followeth the power to destroy the enemies But why are they clothed in sackcloth but for iniurie received Doe they then destroy the worlde with fire doing wronge daily unto thē Iniurie is double one more grievous done advisedly eyther by open force or fraude an other lesse of ignorance and lacke of heed taking They seeme to have worne sackecloth because of this second kinde in the meane while continually punishing their more deadly enemies with this devouring fire It is said to come out of their mouth by whose threatning prayers such a iudgement is exercised Even as in olde time at the signifying before of Moses a fire comming from the Lord consumed the two hundred fifty men which rose up against him with Corah Numb 16. Or as at the prayers of Eliah fire came from heavē consumed the Captaine his 50 men which Achasia sent to kill him 2 Kings 1. God defendeth these Prophets after the same maner that he did those auncient ones yea rather he will have these provided for in a more notable manner by how much he regardeth more his owne trueth and whole assemblyes of the Saincts then singular persons The Holy SCRIPTVRES therefore pronouncing most certen punishments against all ungodlines and transgression doe sende as it were fire out of their mouth whereby they doe utterly consume and devoure the unrepentant For it cannot be that one tittle of Gods word should perish Mat. 24.35 But chiefly they doe vomit fire upon them who will hurt them that is who dare corrupt their most syncere trueth by humane inventions patched unto it threatning that Jf any man shall adde unto this Prophecy that God will lay upon him the plagues that are written in that booke chap. 22.18.19 Not because they doe estime the sacred authority of the Revelation onely ratifyed by so great a punishement but because there is the same regard of the whole trueth inspired of God as Yee shall put nothing to this word which I speake unto you neither shall yee take away therefrom Deut. 4.2 Put nothing to his wordes least thou be reproved founde a lyar Pr. 30.6 Frō hēce in time past came the horrible slaughter of the Baalites 1 Kings 18.40 2 King 10.25 and so many most grievous calamities which did come with force upon the world all these two and fourty moneths because almost nothing was done according to the true meaning of the scriptures but now the whole world was taught by traditions despising Gods trueth either altogither or wresting it onely for the confirming of their fables and trifles Therefore these Prophets being so evill intreated burnt up the third part of trees and all green gr●sse with fire mingled with haile killed the third part of the creatures which were in the Sea by a burning mountaine cast into it turned the rivers and fountaines into worme wood by a starre that fell and did burne like a torch yea they gave power to sende the Locusts and the Euphratean Angells as hath ben declared already in the trūpets from every one of which either fire or hellish smoke did issue forth All which evils wer no other thing then the flame going out of the mouth of the Prophets sorely punishing the wicked contemners of the trueth There is the same reason of the Candlestickes that is of the assemblies of the Saincts For God sufferreth not the Churches to be oppressed without rewarding the wicked but moved with the prayers of it requireth meete punishements of the oppressours Diocletian giving over the Empire determined to spende the rest of his life quietly But he escaped not so For his house being wholly consumed with lightning and bright burning fire that fell from heaven he for feare of the lightening hiding himselfe dyed shortly after So Constantine the Great himselfe hath writen in his booke commonly called the fift booke of Eusebius of the life of Constantine leafe 168. Although Eusebius Nicephorus and others doe tell of a farre more horrible death Maximinian Hercule his conpartner died his wezand being broken with an halter Maxentius his sonne was drowned in the river Tiber Galerius is destroyed by horrible torment of diseases Maximinus also is taken away in the same manner Lucinius often overcome and often put to flight at length is killed What should I recite others Valens fighting against the Gothes in fortunately flying into a base cottage was burnt togither with the house it selfe by a fire throwne upon it by the enemies But these were but alone persons but also the whole multitude were oftē and very sorely punished by famine pestilence and warre as might be declared plenteously but that it would be longe and not greatly needfull These thinges may shewe sufficiently that howsoever these Prophets might then seeme to be wretched raged and
vilely apparelled were yet notwithstanding armed with a power not to be despised The same is the condition of the rest of the Prophets 6 These have power to shutte heaven He cometh to another very great power and wonderfull wherein they are equall to the olde even the chiefe Prophets Renowmed is Eliah at whose praiers God did shut the heaven so that for three yeeres and sixe moneths the earth was not watered with any showre of raine 1 King 18.1 Luke 4.25 But wee have not reade any such thing done of these Prophets It is true it may be if wee take the wordes properly but if wee transferre them to spirituall things after the manner of other thinges which have ben spoken before how great a proportion shall wee finde That drouth was for three yeeres and sixe moneths at the prayer of Eliah so the time of this power granted to these Prophets should be for so many great yeeres and moneths For two and fourty moneths or a thousand two hundred and three score dayes doe fulfill this distance of yeeres and moneths but great ones as I have said and hath ben already proved sufficiently before not those common ones such as were those of Eliah every one containing three hundred three score common yeeres and the halfe one hundred and foure score yeeres How great drouth and lack of spirituall dewe was there all this time through want of which godlinesse withered in every place But they that bring every thing to the letter and will have the three yeeres and an halfe to be meant of common yeeres doe they dreame also of such a staying of rayne which they must needes doe Surely they get for Antichrist a Kingdome ill favoured hungerstarven every way wretched and unhappy altogither contrary to that excesse wherewith the Spirit saith that he should abounde Neither shall Antichrist have any leasure to carrie about armour to subdue the nations but rather shall leave droves of beasts and cattell to the water as wee read that Ahab did long since But it is no marvell that they fall into many such absurd things who had rather followe their owne conceived opinions then the trueth it selfe ¶ And they have power over waters As Moses who turned the waters of Egypt into blood and as these Prophets have done in very deede when the third part of the Sea became blood chap. 8.8 For all this power was shewed forth in those plagues of which wee heard in chap. 8.9 It is iust with God that all that will not beleeve the trueth should beleeve lies 2 Thes 2.11 Which indeede is noe other thinge then to have their pure and cleare waters turned into blood The next wordes which follow and 10 smite the earth with all maner of plagues as often as they will in a short summe comprehende the other plagues which are not mentioned in this place to wit of the Sunne smitten of Locusts sent and the foure Angels loosed From which power is manifest that which wee have taught in the beginning that this whole Prophecy of the temple measured of the court cast out and of the two Prophets doth apperteine to the same time of the sixe former trūpets which doe recite one after an other the plagues in that order wherein they came to passe But this Prophecy rehearseth the causes to wit the puritie of the Scriptures violated and Gods worship in the assemblies of the faithfull defiled These thinges call forth scourges upon the world and come not either by chance or by fortune These have power to afflict the earth with any kinde of plague whatsoever as often as they will Because God ruleth and governeth the world according to his will revealed in the scriptures and all things for the benefite of the Church In the beginning he delivered the earth unto Adam uncorrupted and now againe he will have all thinges to doe service to his children which are restored in their integrity through Christ 7 But when they have finished their testimony The second limited time as wee have distinguished them in the Analysis taketh his beginning after that of profecying went out to wit in the yeere one thousand five hundreth fourtie sixt Howe farre the thousand two hundred and three score dayes doe extende every ech one being taken for one yeere as wee have said at the second verse and if wee count from the yeere of the Lord three hundred and fourth in which CONSTANTINE tooke unto him the rule of the Empire as Cassiodorus saith prooving that the yeeres of CONSTANTINE should be reckened from thence and as Onuphrius having made a most exact account seemeth to have collected For a thousand two hundred threescore yeeres eighteene being taken out how many the counting of yeeres which the Angell followeth laketh of the Iulian as before at the second verse doe make a thousand two hundred two and fourty Iulian yeeres which from the beginning of the reigne of Constantine doe ende in the sayd yeere 1546. ¶ That Beast which cometh out of the bottomlesse pit So expresse a noting by Articles sheweth that this Beast knowne and declared long since which can be no other then the Angell of the bottomlesse pit of whom wee heard in the ninth Chapter and eleventh verse to wit the Bishop of Rome For wee reade of noe other comming out from the bottomelesse pit when he sent the Locusts out of the pit being opened but that hee rose up long before wee shall understand from the things which follow Therefore he shall not be a Beast onely of three yeeres and an halfe continuance He hath gained 5 moneths mor at the least wherin he should reigne with the Locusts From hence there is an other argument also to confirme this Prophecy to belong to the former trumpets because the Beast with whom the Prophets have to doe in the last course of their time perteineth to the fift trumpet Furthermore also that of the thirteenth chapter belongeth to the same period of the trumpets For this and that is the same beast and both againe is the same Angell of the bottomlesse pit of the nine chapter ¶ Shall make warre against them Shall the Beast now first of all call unto weapons He shall assay to doe violence the whole thousand two hundred threescore dayes chap. 13.5 But this battell which he shall make when that time is finished deserveth before others the name of warre both for the very kinde of preparation and hostile cruelty and also for the notorious slaughter done to the Prophets And the thing it selfe proveth that at this very time there was very little warre For as touching the Scriptures the Councill at Trent began in the yeere 1546 the 7 day of February to wit after those thousand two hundreth and three score dayes were ended in their third session the eight daye of Aprill pierced and murdered them most pittifully For here the Hebrewe and Greeke fountaines were refused and the Latine corrupt translation established for Authentique Here unwritten traditions were
wounding of the whole Popish nation was reserved to this time Which after they heard of our England and Queene overthrowing the Romish impiety burst out altogither devising for us by what meanes soever they could a finall destruction And many wordes are not needfull in this matter Known to the whole world are the Popes curses against us our people being stirred up often to rebellion the bloody Iesuites sent privily daily hired traitours privie murtherers sorcerers the Popes armies set out in Ireland the Spanish navie then which there was never any stronger and better appointed Neither yet with weapons and armour more for fight then with scourges and haltars and things of that sort for torment the desirous inquiry of Philip the Father lately wakened almost from very death concerning our England as though he were to goe by by into that place where the teller of our evill should be noe lesse pleasant to others then to himselfe Rages certenly meete for wicked mindes For these are onely the beginnings of furie although famous notable then chiefly the Papists shall storme when Christ shall enter upon his full Kingdome as after more at large The Pope and Turke shall purpose the last desolation of the whole Church for which cause they shall gather very great armies But the rage of men shall turne the greater glory of God as the Psalmist singeth For by how much the danger shal be greater by so much his honour shall shine the more in delivering his As touching the second Gods punishement begun which these wordes signify and his wrath is come that conteineth the summe of the Vials which therefore are called the last plagues as shall be said in his place The full reward and first of all goods as great as can be on the earth is found in these wordes and the time of the dead that they should be iudged Which things perteine to the Iewes yet strangers from Christ and therefore without salvation and dead in deede but at length they shall be iudged and shall come to the trueth Which Interpretation I have taken out of Daniell Ezechiel and some places of this Prophecy following of which how great is the weight it shall appeare after more clearly The recompensing of the evill in the last wordes and shouldest destroy them that destroy the earth To wit The Pope and Turke and all their servants yet mighty robbers of the whole earth And so is the short summe of the things to be declared afterward more plenteously 19 Then the Temple was opened Therefore it was shut before when it was measured in the beginning of this chapter and because the elect were sealed But now it should be opened noe more to be used to the receaving of a fewe faithfull but that is should extende to an huge multitude of Saincts Neither onely should the Temple be opened but also the most holy place in which was set the Arke of the covenant Into this once it was lawfull for the High Priest onely to enter and that but once in a yeere Now it should be gone into of all Saincts in likewise all the mysteries of salvation being as plaine cleere and manifest to every one as before time they were to the learned and skilfull men all whose study was bestowed in them And who but a very envious anthankefull man acknowledgeth not a most rich encrease of trueth which is come to passe in these last times since the yeere 1558. in which the seventh Trumpet sounded The doctrine was made lightsome in many points more clearly known delivered more distinctly then hath happened in many ages past Neither doe I speake this to boast but to praise Gods bounteousnes and to shewe forth the trueth of the Prophecy Surely God hath begun to consume in his mountaine the forme of that veile which covereth all people and that covering which is spread upon all nations Isay 25.7 He began I say because it shal be taken away more fully when it shal be taken from the Iewes also ¶ And there were lightnings The third part of the signe which declareth what should follow after the opening of the Temple great evils should fall upon the world from the Church increased and abounding with so great riches of divine knowledge The world waxeth leane throug her prosperity and by howe much the Sunne shineth more brightly upon it so much the more are the sicke eyes of it grieved Therefore it desireth that this were abolished and endevoureth as much as it can but prevaileth nothing by endevouring unlesse to call forth lightnings upon it selfe and those evils which are rehearsed But this is onely a briefe foreshadowing of the things the patterne shal be mote lively set forth afterward CHAP. 12. AND there appeared a great wonder in heaven a woman clothed with the Sunne under whose feete was the Moone and upon her head a crowne of twelve starres 2 And being great with childe shee cryed traveiling in birth was pained that shee might bring forth 3 And there appeared an other wonder in heaven for beholde there stood a great red Dragon having seaven heads and ten hornes and upon his heads seaven crownes 4 Whose taile drewe the third part of the starres of heaven which he cast to the earth And that Dragon stood before the woman being ready to bring forth that when shee had brought foorth he might devoure her childe 5 And shee brought foorth a man childe which should rule all nations with a rod of iron and her childe was taken up unto God and his throne 6 But the woman fled into the wildernes where shee should have a place prepared of God that they should feede her a thousand two hundreth and three score dayes 7 And there was a hattell in heaven Michaell and his Angels fought with the Dragon and the Dragon fought and his Angels 8 But they prevailed not neither was their place found any more in heaven 9 And that great Dragon that olde serpent which is called the Devill and Satan was cast out which deceaveth all the world he was cast I say into the earth his Angels were cast out with him 10 And I heard a loude voice saying in heaven nowe is salvation and strength and the kingdome of our God and the power of his Christ because the accuser of our brethren is cast downe which accused them before our God day and night 11 But they overcame him by the blood of the lambe and by the word of their testimony and they made no accounte of spending their life even unto death 12 Therefore reioice ye heavens and ye that dwell in them woe to the inhabitans of the earth and of the sea for the Devill is come downe unto you full of great wrath as who knoweth that he hath but a little opportunity 13 When therefore the Dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth he persecuted the woman which had brought forth the man childe 14 But to the woman were given two winges of a
had graunted of his owne accord Italy to the Gothes which he had no hope to be able to retaine VVhat could he expect from the VVest every country wanting helpe so farre off were they from being able to succour others Therefore O Pope thy woūd was deadly whereof no remedie appeared from any place ¶ But this deadly wound was healed The third condition of the Beast cōsisting in his dignity recovered by the healing of the head VVhich began at the yeere 555 when Iustinian being Emperour the Gothes were destroyed in Italy b● the valiantnesse of 〈◊〉 N●r●●●●● The Emperour played the Physitian mani●estly for first he tooke away the noxious humours by ●●pressing yea rather utterly abolishing the Barbarians afterward he powred in wine oyle That Decree of Iustinians new constitution 131 w●s a most pleasant ointemēt Wee ordaine that according to the Decrees of the holy Coun●●lls the most holy B●shop of auncient Rome shall be the chiefe of all Priests H●● much was the wound amended hereby But Phocas the Parricide afte● 〈◊〉 yeeres more or lesse that is in the yeere sixe hundreth and sixe fini●h●● the cure bound up the wound healed it up into a skarre Hee did g●aunt unto Bonif●ce the third that the Romane Bishop should be counted Vnivers●ll not onely that he should goe before the rest in order honour as Iust●nian decreed limitting the Primacy with the bounds of holy Concills b●t who should have the whole world for his Diocesse the Bishop of Cōstantinople strove afterward in vaine from whom the Primacy was given by the sentence of the Emperour Now he perceived that the wound was healed and that therefore it was superfluous to pleade any more for this matter And certenly not very long after the Pope Leo second shewed that he had recovered health when about the yeere 680. by the warres of the Emperour he compelled Felix the Bishop of Ravenna to acknowledge the Bishop of Rome for his Lord and that the Bishop of Ravenna should not rise up any more it is ordained by the authority of the Pope That afterward the election of the Clergie of Ra●enna should not be of force unlesse the consent of the Romane Pope were added to it Sabellic Ennead 8. book 7. Thus was the wounded head cured which being healed did more hurt the Christian world then before he received the wounde ¶ And all the world wondred followed the Beast Now he declareth how great the recovered dignity should be first by the honour which the worshippers of the Beast should give to him this honour is in admiring in this verse also in worshipping both the Dragon the Beast in the following And he speaketh significātly after the Hebrewes manner to wonder after the Beast which is as much as in wondring to follow the Beast that is to give up thēselves wholly to be ruled by his Empire as the Israelites going a whoring after their Idols forsooke the true God cōsecrated thēselves to the worship of them They who so admired the Beast are the earth that is men savouring the earth altogither strāgers frō the heavēly city But how many is the nūber of them All without exception For he saith the whole earth Therefore it should come to passe that the Beast after the head was healed should rule with farre larger boundes then before Prosper said that Rome was more ample at the first receiving of this dignity by the tower of religion then by the throne of power Which seemeth to be understood rather of the consent of the trueth then of the dominion of the Citie of Rome although then it was doubtlesse large The trueth was propagated further then the Romane Empire But Britanny had not yet acknowledged the authoritie of Rome in the matter of religion till under the Pontificate of Gregory the fift that is after some hope that the wound should be cured Augustine the Romish Munke forced our countriemen to take upon them the yoke neither did France Friseland Denmarke Germanie Sclavonia depend much of Rome before Bonifacius or Venefride an Inglishman about the yeere 720. brought these countries or the chiefe parts thereof unto the obedience of the Pope of Rome Now therefore was the time when the whole earth should admire the Beast when besides these and other Princes of Europe countries also most remote Ireland Scotland Norway Gothia Sueveland Luten and other nations of Sarmatia honoured the same as some God Let therefore the Pope glory in his universality by how much he hath the greater multitude by so much a surer argument is he that Beast But as touching the admiration it was indeede great some ages before and that of the most famous lights of the Church who carryed away with the too much honour of the Beast and not regarding sufficiently to what mischiefe at length the matter would growe did exalte too proudly the preheminence of the Apostolike Chaire Yet did they not wonder after the Beast so as they thought they must embrace all whatsoever he should ordaine but they had one rule of godlinesse and duty to it the sacred trueth Neither were the commendations of those times any thing to that admiration which followed the healing of the wounde Heare Bernard Thou saith he speaking to the Pope art the great Priest the chiefe Pope thou art the Prince of Bishops thou art the heire or the Apostles thou art in Primacy Abel in governing Noe in Patriarchat Abraham in order Melchisedec in dignity Aaron in authority Moses in iudgement Samuel Peter in power Christ in an-annointing c. in the 2. booke of Considerat Verily o Bernard thou hast played the foole through admiratiō Yet neverthelesse I dare not put thee among those who wonder after the Beast considering that I heare thee else where reprooving boldly and sharply the wickednesse of the Popes Cardinals Bishops and other Clergie men The times deceaved thee but there was in thee I thinke somewhat borne of God which at lēgth did overcome the world But of what sorte was the woūdring of other men who were more blinded lesse fearing God Heare what the Ambass of the Emp. of Sicilia being prostrated on the groūd cry which takest away the sinnes of the world hav mercy on us which takest away the sinnes of the world give us peace P. Ae. b. 7. VVhat also Simo Begnius Bishop of Modrusium speaking to the Pope Leon in the Councill of Lateran sess 6. Beholde here cometh the Lion of the tribe of Iuda the roote of David thee o most blessed Leo wee have expected for Saviour Adde unto these Cornelius the Bishop of Biponte who shewed his astonishmēt in the Coūcill of Trēt in these words The Pope being the light is come into the world and men have loved darknes more then the light for every one that doth evill hateth the light and commeth not to the light O Blasphemous Fooles is it not enough for you to adorne the Man of Sinne with the praises of the Saincts
condition is double the first is of an host where the happy lot of the Saincts is declared from the Captaine the Lambe standing upon mount Sion Likewise from the souldiers both defined and also selected ver 1 furthermore from the ioy of the Spirit expressed by a newe song ver 2.3 and the holines wherewith they are endued ver 5. And this multitude of the Saincts is that seed of the woman scatered here and there in the world whith whom the Dragon made warre after that the woman in flying into the wildernes disappeared chap. 12.13 The second condition is of fighting wherby they goe forth into the army wher some ar Emissaries who the breaking in being made do skirmish with Antichrist and first by the word which is done three manner of waies by three Angels following one an other in order The first of which doth cast upon the earth a generall light of the Ghospell ver 6.7 The second foresheweth the ruine of Babylon ver 8. The third dispoiled the Beast of his coverings and setteth him in the open light by threatning a terrible iudgement against them who setting light by the judgement doe neverthelesse cleave unto him ver 9.10.11 But when as the weake are apaled at the afflictions and torments which they are cōstrained to undergoe while they returne to the trueth a double consolation is added one of Iohn ver 12. The other of a voice sent from heaven whereby the former is confirmed ver 13. And so the first coping is performed by the word The second skirmishing is by deed which is also double The Harvest and Vintage unto the harvest the servant is furnished with an instrument ver 14. with a commaundement ver 15. and goeth about the worke ver 16. Vnto the grape gathering the Angel cometh forth prepared and in a readinesse ver 17. received the commaundement from an other Angel ver 18. and dispatched the businesse ver 19.20 Scholions Then I looked and behold there was a Lambe standing This Prophecy beginneth at that time wherein the Dragon being cast into the earth drove away the woman into the wildernes chap. 12.13 c. where more fully the condition of the Church lying hid is declared in regard of the clearer knowledge of the seventh trumpet as hath ben observed at the beginning of the 12. chap. The eleventh chapter toucheth the state of former thinges as it were in one word spending all the rest of the Prophecy in the sufferings of two witnesses as the chiefe members but here more largely is unfolded in what state the affaires of the whole body wer in the meane time both as touching the safety and also in respect of the fortitude of some by whose cōduct a ioyfull victory is begun Iohn therefore repeating the matter from thence saith that he sawe a Lambe standing on Mount Sion Which Lambe is Christ the Sonne of God as is manifest from his correlative in this verse his Fathers name He playeth the Lambe all this time patiently sufferring the Dragon and the Beast neither punishing them with that severity that both he was able and also they had deserved And yet notwithstanding he lyeth not downe carelesse neglecting the safety of his people but standeth in readinesse to defend them covering under his winges the woman and her scattered seed that they should receive no hurt from the enemies Mount Sion on which the Lambe standeth as on a tower or high hill is the Church it selfe which standeth firmly like Mount Sion against all the force of adversaries Before it was the Temple and the holy Altar but a small covert to hide in chap. 11.1 Afterward a wildernes and desert because it had noe cleere outward face on earth chap. 12.6.14 Now it is called Mount Sion because it persisteth invincible in the middes of these tēpestuous stormes A notable confort against either the paucitie or deformity ¶ And with him an hundred fourty and foure thousande This bande of men is the same which was before of the sealed chap. 7.4 Aretas thinketh it to be an other because the article having relation thereto is wanting But it is wonte to be omitted in things very well knowen as the woman in Iohn J knowe that the Messias shall come which is called Christ chap. 4.25 and many the like Verily these beside the concurrence of the number have also a name written in their foreheads but what is this else then to be sealed further more they sing also a song which no man could learne but they ver 3. Therefore they are chosen out of the whole company of them that perish upon whom alone while those troubles of the Church continued Christ bestowed the wholesome knowledg of himselfe Wherefore in all things they are those sealed ones togither with the measured temple and the womā slying into the wildernes to be referred unto that time of the seaventh chapter From hence then see with how great a traine the woman was in the wildernes and how great a company of Saincts were in the temple with the two Prophets chap. 11.1.2 Although it be very small if it be compared with that which possessed the holy city and the court But as before time there were unknowen to the world seaven thousand men whi●h never bowed their knee to Baal so of late in these last ruines of the Church there were an hundred and foure and fourtie thousand Saincts in Mount Sion who when the rest of the whole world ran after the Dragon and the Beast were conversant alwayes together with the Lambe never departing from his side ¶ Having his Fathers name Aretas the Complut edition and another to the same ende read thus having his name and his fathers name so also the old Latine translation Which reading as being more expresse seeing wee are by Christ adopted to be sonnes so many copies agreeing I thought is rather to be followed As touching the chiefe point of the matter there is no difference yet one is more significant then the other But from hence there is light to illustrate that in the 7. chap. ver 3. where mention is made of sealing but no shewing what manner of ma●ke was imprinted from this place wee learne that there was writtē in their foreheads that God by Christ was their Father For iust cause is this made the badge of the Saincts wherby most of all they are discerned from the wicked of the world whose māner is as wee see in the Papists blaspheming the sacred trueth to condemne of arrogancy the filial confidence But thou must observe that there was not any sensible marking or if that were granted that yet it was not the signe of the Crosse but his Fathers name written in their foreheads 2 And J heard a voice from Heaven from Mount Sion where the Lambe stood with this multitude from the Temple to wit from the Church The same thing is signifyed by divers names In this Mountaine onely they did bend themselves with all their power to praise God
casting the clusters of grapes into the wine presse v. 19. after by treading the wine presse v. 20. The shredders are two Angels companions conversant in the same Temple that is both free citizens of the true Church yet lying hid For it was not yet freed from her narrow straights although the Gentiles in the meane time reigned in a great assembly in the court and holy city Which is diligently to be observed seeing the place of the Angels manifesteth also the time when the thinge was done and as it were beareth a candle before us to put away darkenesse Touching the first Angel mention is made particularly in this verse that he had a sharpe sickle that is power to cut off the clusters of grapes and to prune the vine in which thing he should carry himselfe couragiously as the sharpe sickle declareth But he neither sitteth on a cloude neither hath a crowne on his head as the Angel of the harvest ver 14. Whether are these thinges set downe once in common to be trāsferred hither Or whether rather this Angel doth not attaine that degree of dignity in which the former was but that it is of a somewhat lower classe and degree So it seemeth seeing it is not a safe thinge to adde any thing to the wordes inspired of God but upon most certain reason Therefore this Angel is Thomas Cromwell in the dayes of K. Henry the eight most mighty Prince a man with us most famous Earle of Essex keeper of the Great Seale who came out of the Temple which is in heaven a syncere favourer of pure religion He had a sickle being appointed the K. deputy in matters Ecclesiasticall did apply the same sharply and lustily to the worke yet not endued with any either crowne or diademe being rather a minister of anothers power then an authour of his owne 18 And an other Angel came out of the Altar The second Angel is described by a threefold property that he commeth out of the Altar that he hath power over fire and that he exhorteth his fellow Angel to cut the vine Touching the first it is said significantly to come out of the Altar For so the Greeke hath out of the Altar Theod. Beza translateth from the Altar which expresseth not the force of the speach sufficiently A man commeth from a thing nigh to which he was but out of a thinge within the compasse whereof he was contained But how can he come out of the Altar This may be understood from chap. 6.9 I saw saith he under the Altar the soules of them which had bin killed This kinde then of speaking declareth that this Angel is an holy Martyr such as they are who have a place under the Altar But they that lye under the Altar must needs come out of the same when they goe any whither But whereas there are many kindes of Martyrdome for some are consumed by sword some by an halter some by wilde beasts other some by fire that it may be understood of what sort this Martyr is it is added that he hath power over fire that is to say that he sufferring and overcoming the torment of fire for this is to have power over fire he gave testimony to the trueth But that in the third place he crieth to him that hath a sickle it is taught that this Martyr is described to be such an one rather because of the future combate then passed victory For a Martyr that is dead cannot exhorte to any excellent great act The example of his constancy may stirre up the minde to the like courage but it is not granted him to instruct by word unto any peculiar actions as this of pruning the vine is unlesse he were living togither with us This exhortation therefore puts us in minde that Martyrdome was at length to be endured of him not that he had sufferred it before whē he exhorted to these things All which circunstances ioyned togither lead us unto Thomas Cranmer Archbishop as they call him once of Canterbury This was a notable Martyr having power over fire to which he gave his body to be burned for the trueth Whose power over fire was so much the more famous because first having fallen by humane infirmity in subscribing to a wicked opinion repenting by and by and revoking his subscription when he was brought to the fire he would have his right hande first to endure the burning flame because it had ben so ready an instrument of wickednes which being consumed at length he gave his body to be devoured in the same flames He cryeth with a loude cry to him that had the sickle because in the time of King Henry the eight he stirred up Thomas Cromwell by his wordes to make this grapes gathering For being excellently learned and burning with an ardent zeale he could not but hasten forward the worke to his power inflame him whom he saw to be endued with the power to doe it 19 Then the Angel thrust in his sickle Thus farre the preparation now the execution is accomplished in cutting downe the grapes of the vineyard Which Vine is the shining and Princely glory of the Popish Church the felicity whereof was great among us in time past even as in every other it swelled with full and redde grapes it hung on railes aloft made fast togither overshadowing the whole earth on every side with large branches and thicke clusters of grapes For it is knowne the rubbish doe yet testify how all fruitfull hilles were planted with these wilde vines all our Iland through how deepe rootes they tooke with how farre spread branches they did so stoppe up the Sunne that it could no where shine on the corne But when it pleased God at length to punish this wicked people he raised up Henry the VIII who for iust causes being angry with the Pope both shooke of from himselfe the Antichristian yoke also tooke it from the neckes of his people Neither content with this ministery of the Angels partly of Cromwell with his sharpe sickle partly of Cranmer having power over fire In the yeere 1539. he laboured that this whole vine should be not so much cut as plucked up by the rootes and utterly destroyed For hence the Abbeys and Fryeries were pulled downe the Nunries layed evē with the ground and the landes and revenues of olde appointed to wicked superstitions were brought againe to the common treasure and at length being set forth to a publike sale they were solde to divers persons And this is the cutting of the clusters of grapes and the casting of them into the wine presse a thing indeede memorable if wee shall consider it diligently according to the noblenesse thereof 20 And the wine presse was troden without the city This city is the holy Church of God which the Scriptures doe note often times by the name of a city beyond the territories of which this presse was troden how wōderfully doth this agree For howsoever England spoyled
first Decad. See chap. 13.3 11 And the Beast which was and is not That is and that seventh King the Pope which had come and was as touching the rising and originall of his power for the space of an hundred yeeres after Constantine And is not after that time utterly perished in mens opinion by the invasion of the Barbarians this Beast I say is the eight and one of those seven Wherby it is to be observed that the seventh King by himselfe alone doth obtaine the name of the whole and to be called that Beast whose description was in the eight verse by foure succeeding courses of times All which chaungins are proper to this one from whēce now at lenght after the second mutation wherof he made mention in the former verse he addeth a double condition of him in the very words of the first description shewing in the same that these words and when he cōmeth he must continue a short space are all one with these the Beast which was and is not ¶ And he is the eight to wit King For here octavus the eight agreeth not in gender with Bestia the Beast The common translation translateth amisse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the eight Beast For there are not eight Beasts but eight Kings the seventh of which is this Beast The pronoune relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee seemeth in this place to be a demonstrative as sometime also else where he is the eight King that is the eight King Also the whole antecedent member of the sentēce maketh the supposite of the verbe substātive as though he should say The Beast which was and is not is both that eight Kinge and also is one of the seven This eight King is the same Pope after his dignity recovered from that maine overthrowe which the Barbarians did make when his wounded head w●● c●●ed as in chap. 13.3 or when the Beast which is not did ascēd from the bottomlesse pit as at the 8 verse of this chapter or when the second Beast aros● from the earth chap. 13.11 When Gregorie the second his next successours did appeare with two hornes Pipine and Charles the Great For we have shewed already before that all these things perteined to that third mutation But from whence then is this eight hath the Beast eight heads which even now were but seven In no wise but this eight is the same with the seventh of the same nature purpose soveraignty wherupon it is added and is one of those seven onely of a greater impiety blasphemy and sacrilege wherin he passeth the seventh The Popes in their beginning after Constantine were not so wicked as after Phocas But more lesse doo not distinguish the kinde Therfore the Pope revived is the eight most worthy of all to be pointed at with the finger and to be sayd that it is hee From which now the reason may be apparant why in chap. 13. one Antichrist is painted out by a double Beast to wit because he is the seventh King the eight ¶ And goeth into destruction To be destroyed utterly in his due time this last member is the fourth time of the Beast fetched from the general interpretation in ver 8. And so that which there is sayd was and is not and shall ascend out of of the bottomlesse pit and shall goe into destruction here is expressed in words some what divers so as to the first member these are answerable when he shall come to the second he must continue a short space to the third and he is the eight King and one of the seaventh the fourth is the same in both places Wherfore that which was spoken generally of the Beast wee may see perteineth to the speciall mutation of the seventh head Seing then this Beast is the seaventh King who should have the next place after him who bare rule in Iohn his time and the regiment of the Popes at Rome followed by and by that Heathen Empire by a second most sure demonstration wee have found out both Antichrist himselfe and also the time wherin he was borne Which that it may become the clearer may be proponded after this manner The seventh King succeeded next after the Heathen Emperours who made the sixt King reigning at that time when Iohn wrote ver 10. Five are fallen one that is the sixt is But Antichrist is the seventh King ver 10.11 Therfore Antichrist succeeded next the Heathen Emperours and seeing the Pope of Rome after the time of the Heathen Emperours is that seventh King as before we have manifested it followeth also necessarily that the Pope of Rome from the time of the Heathen EMPEROVRS is that chiefe Antichrist of whom the Scripture forewarne us so diligently and that the City of ROME from the same is the whore See now yee Iesuites from how necessary principles the argument proceedeth apply what engins you can to overthrow the same you shall doo more good then if you should bring ladders to conquer heaven But your things which you doo treate off concerning the time of Antichrist are divised are absurd and more foolish then any toyes as wee shall after declare 12 And the tenne hornes which thou sawest are ten Kings Thus farre touching the Heads Now followeth the Hornes which by their consent doo bring yet a more full light of time For by how much thinges are neerer togither they are so much the more clearer and the more perceived and observed Therfore to the end that that seventh head might become knowē by more tokens and his first beginning more undoubted it is furnished with these hornes as it were with a certen pompe and company of servants by whose noise as it were we should be stirred up to regard his comming The Angel expoundeth these hornes to be tenne Kings which afterward are described of what sort they are both by their Kingdome in this verse and mind in verse 13. and the warre which they shall make verse 14. Their Kingdome is declared by a double or twofold time the first of it not yet received Who sayth he have not yet received a Kingdome The second of it received but they shall receive power at one houre with the Beast The first meeteth with a doubt wherby some body peradventure might thinke that these Kings reigned at the very same time in which Iohn wrote no saith he they reigne not yet but shall reigne shortly For otherwise the warning had bene superfluous if they should not come but about three yeeres and an halfe before the last day The second time exhibiteth yet a clearer knowledge of the thing by a certaine mutual bewaying which the hornes and the Beast doo one for an other They shall receive power as Kings at one houre with the Beast for so I translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the accusative case in which these words are taken some time for the space of time as these last have wrought but one houre Mat. 20.12 Also watch with me one houre
they which of late triumphed as conquerers now the case being altered were overcome Mauritius put to flight the Emperour and at length compelled him to graunt liberty to true religion as we said in chapter 11 11.12 This free profession of the trueth is this victory which the Lambe wrong from the Emperour against his will And not from him alone but also from the rest which followed Ferdinandus Maximilianus Rodulphus who seeing that they kicked in vaine against the pricke caused noe trouble to the reformed religion I would to God at lēgth the Emperour would set forth the victory of the Lambe not onely by resisting but also by detesting the Romish impostures and by embracing the wholesome trueth it selfe Why mindeth he not that he now followeth unwares the Lambes charriot For it happeneth not by chance but belongeth to a mighty conquerer to make great states of a realme favourable to his Church But whether were it not better to accompany the triumphant charriot a fellow and partaker of the victory then a prisoner and miserable spectacle of the disconfiture received God open his eyes that in rewarding the whore from his vertues he first of the hornes may receive the price of that victory which if hee shall not regard neverthelesse some other shall have it shortly ¶ And they which are with him called and chosen faithfull The Christian sauldiers Mauritius and the armies of the Protestants by which the Lābe got the victory For it pleased him not by sending fire from heaven to overcome the enemies by his owne power alone but by the labour of his faithful servants So then we have these hornes declared by this warre no lesse notable marke toward their ende then the number of tenne was at their beginning so the beginning and ende being known here can be noe doubt of the other race that commeth betweene 15 And he sayd unto mee the waters which thou sawest Hitherto the exposition of the Beast that of the whore followeth and first in respect of the whole dominion the same flourishing in this verse Waters which he mentioneth in the first verse he expoundeth to be people multitudes nations and tongues that is nations of every tongue obeying Rome the Empresse So the Prophets are wonte to signify a great multitude of people as waters doo come up from the North and become a swelling flood Ier. chap. 47.2 And of right doo they attribute this name unto them because of the notable varietie inconstancy and often chāging of their opinions as of waves tossed with the wind whose troublous motions are greater then of any arme or straigth of the sea as saith the Oratour These therfore are the waters of the whore ruling farre and neere what kinde of dominion shee had once while her age favour was flourishing in the last times when olde age should disfigure her forehead with wrinkles they should become farre more shallow narrower as followeth in the next verse ¶ Where the whore sitteth That is upon which the whore sitteth as in the first verse But nations tongues are said two for one as though he should say nations of divers tongues 16 And the tenne hornes which thou sawest on the Beast Now he commeth to the afflicted condition of the whore declaring by whom it shal be brought upon her and how to which he addeth a common cause the will of God in the next verse As touching the words in stead of upon the Beast the Compl. edition which Montanus and Plantine followeth doth reade and the Beast as if the Beast himselfe at length should hate the whore contrary unto Aretas reading the vulgar Latine and Theod. Beza from the authority of very many copies and in very deed contrary to the manifest trueth for by the desolation of the whore which he foresheweth here the Spirit understandeth that calamity that shal be brought upon the Kingdome of the Beast by the vial poured out upon his Throne chap. 16.10.11 Therefore how can the Beast shew himselfe a helper for to abolish and roote out the whore as it followeth from the false reading whose fall he shall take so grievously and immoderately that he shall gnawe his tōgue for exceeding great griefe Furthermore Iohn saw the woman sitting upon the Beast at what time shee commeth forth to condemnation and punishment When then shal be this separating of company which they would have when so great a concorde remaineth even to the last destruction VVherfore it is a vaine thing which Bellarmine endevoureth to stablish from this place that Rome is not the seate of Antichrist because Antichrist shall hate the whore which he granteth to be Rome For he shall not hate saith he his owne seate But the whole assumption is manifestly false and leaneth upon no other thing then a corrupt reading But why dareth he now depart from the vulgar Latine which with so great praises hee extolleth elsewhere and the Councill hath decreed to be authenticall alone The force of the trueth hath compelled him to seeke all corners which if by any meanes he could avoide he knew pardon would easily be gotten of the Councill VVherefore they which shall hate the whore are the tenne hornes not the Beast together with them For the relative of the neuter antecedent is masculine because by these hornes men are to be understood But as in the warre against the Lambe that was attributed to the tenne Kings which was done onely by the labour of one ver 14. So all are said to hate the whore and at length to torment her with the last slaughter which neverthelesse is peradvēture the commendation of one of these For there are not wonte to be many Emperours togither of the same dominion And it may be that even at the rising of the Beast the tenne first Emperours were famous for good will toward the Pope so contrariwise nigh his ende the tenne last shal be for a certaine peculiar hatred to the whore the last whereof shall burne her with fire But I say the last not as though they should cease when the Pope ceaseth but because they shal be no longer his hornes whose nowe they are counted from which it is manifest that the Turke is not hee by whom Rome shall utterly perish but one of the Emperours to whō these hornes agree in beginning progresse and end Neither indeede would the Turke if he knew to provide for himselfe attempt any thing against Rome as long as shee shal cōtinue safe our armies shall doo him no harme Take yee an example o Christians from that victory at Karesta a few yeeres since to wit in the yeere 1596. What was the cause that overcomming ye ranne away headlong by a sudden terrour Why when the Turks sled and left their campe and tents three whole dayes in the fieldes without any keeper on the other side you should runne with violence into a most desperate flight Some men in time past knew not to use doubtfull victory but after the
shal come saith Christ in my name saying I am Christ where he speaketh chiefly of them that should rise among the Iewes Mat. 24.5 Also their own History sheweth that more than one have been counted for the Christ which have sacrilegiously chalenged the name of the Messias to themselves And as touching their exspectation this dooth no more prove one singular person then the Papists exspectation proveth him to be one certayn man We doo exspect that you should bring forth some thing more firm than your foolish exspectations Thirdly you say that Al false Prophets have come in the name of an other not in their own name Therfore Antichrist which shal come by a special manner in his owne name is one singular person I answer Antichrist shal come in no other manner as touching his name than al the other false Prophets For name is not an appellation or title but authority as is manifest by the opposite branch therof to weet the name of the Father J am come sayth Christ in my Fathers name that is not with the Fathers appellation as if I were the Father but by the mission and authority of the Father So to come in his owne name is not to boast of the proper title of his name but to come in his own authority no lawful power being given him of God And thus doo al the false Prophets come both in the name of an other in their owne name In the name of an other feighnedly and counterfeitly in that they falsely boast of a sending but in their owne name in very deed because they have none but their owne authority and run when they are not bidden as sayth the Prophet Wherfore there wil be no difference in this thing between Antichrist and the other false Prophets his companions Fourthly you say Our Lord would not have sayd If an other come but many come if he would have spoken of false Prophets I answer Christ by this word an other signifyeth that many shal come for it is a nown partitive of multitude as we have shewed Neither could that swarm of False-Christs which he mentioneth in Mathew be intimated more breifly and significantly than in this maner But as you by your supposed silence which yet perhaps you now perceive is lowder uttered than you would doo endevour to establish one singular person so give me leave I pray you by Christs true silence to overthrow most certainly the same singular person For doo you think that Christ in Mat. 24. instructing his Disciples so diligently of future evils even until his coming and specially of False Prophets from whom much danger should arise would not so much as one word make mention of this one singular man so cruel a plague of whom it behooved them most of al to beware It is certayn therfore that this whole dream of one singular Antichrist was an errour in the ancient writers and is madnes in you that wil persevere in the errour Hitherto of the first Scripture The second is that of Paul 2 Thes 2.3 Except ther come a departing first and that that man of sin be disclosed even the son of perdition c. and afterward ver 8. and then shal the wicked man be reveiled whom the Lord c. where you say the Apostle speaketh of a certayn particular person as appeareth by the Greek articles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the Greek articles draw the signification unto one certain thing and therfore you marvel that our men which boast of skil in the tongues perceived not this I answer it is true in deed the Greek article hath his force to recal restrein so unmeasured uncertain a motion unto some certayn thing but this certayn thing is as wel a certayn genus as a certain individuum or singular according to the nature of the thing in hand Wherupon we novices doo think this new and unheard of that the Greek article should alwayes signify some singular individuum Shal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be one singular sower one singular reaper Iohn 4.37 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one particular sin entring into the world and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one singular death Rom. 5.12 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one theef Ioh. 10.10 We are furnished now by master Iesuite with a new rule which no Grecian I think did ever so much as dream of Our dull men observed not this thing doubtlesse this garlond was reserved for you whose name is worthy for this notable observation to be registred in the next edition among the Jnventors of things But you say Epiphanius teacheth this same Her 9. which is of the Samaritans saying that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth a man in common but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a singular man I answer this iniury of yours is not to be suffred that you doo to the learned man whom you would blemish with so notorious ignorāce Epiphanius teacheth no otherwise in this thing than al other learned men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Where the article saith he is adioined to anie one definite and most evident thing there is verilie a certayn Emphasis or force for the article but without the article the word is to be taken indefinitely of any cōmon thing Even as if we should say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King we expresse the name but doo not cleerly shew anie definite one For we say King of the Persians and of the Medes and of the Elamites But if with apposition of the article we say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the King it is out of doubt what is signified For by the article is intimated that King of whom the question or speech was or which is known or which ruleth in any country In like manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dead and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the dead and so in the rest Epiphanius therfore meaneth that by the article ther is denoted something spoken of before famous wel known being in questiō or in speech but it never came into his mind much lesse did he ever write that everie word is by this circumscription of the article alwayes tied to a singular person An article like a Iesuite can put on any habit according to the variety of time and place Wheras therfore you marvel that our mē which boast as you say of skill in the tongues could not perceive this I marvel rather that you a man exercised in learning famous in scholes a professor of controversies on whose mouth almost the whole popish nation dependeth should so misse in a childish rudiment But desire of getting victory letted you from seing the truth One way ther is to wipe out your reproch if you wil be a mean to persuade your men hereafter to conclude any thing rather from these articles than one singular person The third place is 1 Iohn
with them as you doo dream of Of the three reasons which you bring the first is that the preaching in al the world is a signe Christ saith of the end of the world for so he annexeth then shal come the end But if the Gospel should not be preached in the whole world properly but by comprehension of a part for the whole the signe would be of no value For in that manner the Gospel was preached by the Apostles through al the world in the first twenty yeres I answer wheras from these words you affirme that the preaching in al the world is a signe of the end of the world this is yours Bellarmine not Christs He saith no more but and then shal come the consummation or the end That of the world he addeth not Neither is the end or consummation wherof he speaketh of the world but of the tēple of the Iewish politie the law wherof was abrogated in Christs death but now also by dissipation of the nation the whole use should be taken away For the Disciples inquired of a twofold end ver 3. of the temple of the world Of the first Christ answereth unto the 23. verse of the later in the rest of the chapter under the name of his coming Neither had he satisfied the demaunds unlesse he had comprehended both Wherfore that universal preaching was a signe of Ierusalems destruction the neerer token wherof was the abomination of desolation fore-told by Daniel which being next added may teach of what end the former words doo speake For Christ answereth not so confusedly and intricately as that from the last end of the world he would straightway leap back againe to the Iewes affayres Seing therfore in this place he speaketh of this consummation and not of any other ther is no necessity that the preaching through the whole world should be properly Your second reason is that properly al nations are promised to Christ Psal 71. All nations shal serv him therfore the preaching ought to be general properly I answer I deny not but all nations shal be gathered unto Christ and that by a general preaching properly before he come unto judgement For preaching is that silver trumpet which is appointed for the gathering togither of the elect and I find in the Scriptures a twofold general preaching figurativ and proper as in the end of this chapter I wil more fully declare But what is this to the coming of Antichrist It is shewed that he is com a thousand and three hundred yeres agoe Also his destruction shal be a long space before the last iudgement as shal be shewed after chap. 9. Of the end of the world and in the rest of the enarration of this Apocalypse Therfore that may be before Christs coming which shal folow after Antichrists destruction And in verie deed the general preaching shal not beginn before Antichrist be at an end or at least be ready soon after to dye The times may not be confounded nor that which is proper to one be transferred to an other Your third reason is That the Gospel shal be preached in the whole world for a testimonie to al nations Therfore a general preaching must goe before the general iudgement I answer This argument is one with the former but that it is after a sort distinguished in the subiects That treated of the salvation of the elect this of the iust condemnation of the reprobates But the answer is one For I grant a general preaching must goe before the general judgement but when you shal have proved that the general iudgement and Antichrist are things so conioyned as that which goeth before the one must needs also goe before this other then wil I easily grant you that a general preaching must properly goe before Antichrist And now as if you had put the matter out of al controversie you goe in hād to answer unto Paul concerning those wores Rom. 10.18 Their sound is gone out unto al the earth the interpretation wherof you bring from Augustine Ierom Thomas The summe is that they are to be understood figuratively VVhich you might easily have obteyned without so much a doo Ther is no man but granteth that the like Scriptures fore-alledged are not to be taken properly But if Paul speak figurativelie why maie not Christ likeweise Because it is not absurd you say if we grant that our Lord spake properly and the Apostle figuratively For the reasons wherby we are compelled to take our Lords in a proper signification have not the same force if they be applyed to Pauls words especially seing our Lord spake of a thing to come and Paul of a thing past I answer Seing that end wherof Christ spake was onely of the citie not of the whole earth to weet of Ierusalem not of the world ther is no reason which more compelleth us to take our Lords words in a proper signification then those words of Paul in the Epistle to the Romanes ch 1. verse 8. Coloss 1.6.23 spoken of before For wheras you say that Paul Ro. 10.18 speaketh of a thing past you might have remembred from Augustine that he tooke the time past for that which was to come as David did whose words they are as you wrote a litle before and that so the Prophets are wont to speake almost everie where of things to come as if they wer past In the other Scriptures Paul speaketh of that thing performed which our Lord foretold should be performed This your first demonstration therfore is altogither lame having no certaintie no truth but it is such a signe in the sense that you would have the preaching to be taken of Antichr to come as the Iewes have feighned to themselves of Christ to come namely such as mans bold ignorance hath feighned without anie authoritie of the oracle of God Wherfor seing you have written nothing right of this matter I wil endvour to shew some surer thing as even now I promised wherby the readers maie have what to think concerning this matter Vniversal preaching therfore is twofold as I said figurative and proper The first was given to the Apostles for a signe of the Iewish desolation so likewise should goe before the Antichrist who should not come forth until some ages after al that Politie was utterly extinguished The later which we cal general properlie shal not goe before Antichrist but folow For after he is slayn the Gospel shal be spredd farr and wide even unto those nations which as yet never had the hearing of it For then shal the nations bring their glory and honour unto the new holie citie Apoc. 21.24 Then shal the tree grow amidds the street of the heavenly citie whose leaves shal minister cure and health unto the nations Apoc. 22.2 Then shal the temple be opened into which no forreyner could enter during the seven plagues with which Antichrist is consumed Apoc. 15.8 and chap. 16. Then shal the waters flow out of the temple towards
the men of Iericho seeking their bodies upon the earth what say I your labour yea a greater losse hangeth over your head namely be not you found in the number of them that folowing the Beast have not their names written in the book of life Ap. 17.8 Chapt. 7. Against the fourth Demonstration from the publik persecution AN other conioint signe you make to be the publik persecution which you say shal be most grievous notorious so that al ceremonies sacrifices of publik religion shal cease none of which things we yet see According therfore to the threefold marke of this persecution you make a threefold proof first that it shal be most grievous 2. most notorious 3. that it shal cause a ceasing of religion And you prove it shal be most greevous frō Ma. 24.21 ther shal be thē great tribulatiō such as was not frō the beginning of the world neither shal be frō Ap. 20.3 wher we read that thē Satā shal be loosed who until that time had been bound And you cōfirm it by testimonies of Aug. in the 20. b. de civit Dei ch 8. 9. of Hippolitus martyr of Cyril unto which you add at last that the persecutiō by the Pope is not the most greevous therfore he is not Antichrist I answer to al first as touching the greevousnes of the persecutiō frō the words of Mat. I say that you care not what you bring for confirmation Those words perteyn to the calamity of the Iewes which they felt in the desolation of their city by Titus within a few yeres after Christ Luke expresseth this people by name saying for ther shal be great distresse in this land wrath on this people Luke 21.23 So Mat. then let them that ar in Judea flee to the moūtayns ch 24.16 And what ells meaneth that prayer against flight on the Sabath but properly to note out this nation So farr verily is it that Antichrists persecution is from these words proved to be most greevous as the contrary may plainly be concluded for they evidently doo confirm that no tribulation shal be to be compared wit that of the Jewes therefore not that which Antichrist shal procure I know that Chrysostome referrs it typically unto Antichrist but not truly nor advisedlie for when Christ opēly saith none shal be like it he cutteth off al typical interpretation not obscurely forbidding the words to be further drawn for to signify any thing to come For the type must needs be inferiour to the truth of it a greater distresse must folow afterwards contrary to that Christ saith if so be the words should be expounded by a type Mathew therfore makes nothing for the vehemency of this persecutiō the Apocalyps dooth even as much Satan in deed shal rage when he is loosed but the outragiousnes which is mentioned in that place is nothing to that which he shewed before he was bound For Satan is the same that the Dragon Apoc. 12 9. and before his imprisonment he lived in heaven drawing with his tayl the third part of the starrs of heaven which he cast unto the earth until by Michael he was overcome and thrown down from thence That is to say the Hethē Emperours not only lived but also ruled in the midds of the Church which they vexed in most cruel māner til Christ put them out of the Empire as upon that place I have shewed From that time the Divil that is the open enemie was bound for a thousand yeres which being fulfilled his bounds should be loosed he should be styrrd up agayn but not with that abilitie to hurt as before for here he should have no place in heavē that is in the Church but should abide only in the utmost borders territories therof compassing the tents of the Saincts the beloved city as Ap 20.9 wherupō he should not so much raise persecution as warr neither should the saincts dye lik sheep but resist lik soljers How much therfore an inward noisom enemie is mor greevous than an outward so much greater is the afflictiō of the former times thā that when Satā is loosed in the last age Morover Antich reigneth a 1000 yeres whiles Satā lyeth in prisō Ap. 20.9 Wherupō if whē he is loosed this felow doo trobel al ther should be great trāquility whē he is boūd so the greatest part at least of his reign should be void of those turbulēt storms neirher should Antich hav an helper of his persecutiō in the other part of his reign seing he should abid within the Church Satā without as is manifest by the things forespokē also that now he was appointed for the scourge of Antic himself not for their hāgmā torturer whom he should use for the tormenting of others For the Divil being now loosed the four Angels at Euphrates are loosed whō God sendeth to punish the Angel of the bottomlesse pit with his infernall crew which came out of the pit Apoc. 9.20.21 all which things we hav made playn in their places Therfore wher Augustine saith that Antichr shal most rage when the Divil is loosed as though he were now first loosed and should be his helper unto crueltie he iudgeth not rightly of this loosing for he was loosed before in heaven Apoc. 12.3 c. which could not be a prison and pit unto him seing he took it heavilie to be cast from thence unlesse perhaps he went out of prison against his wil Apoc. 12.10 Neither is Hippolitus to be hearkened unto concerning this persecution when he teacheth that Antichrist is no man but the verie Divil that should take false flesh of a false virgin And no better account is to be made of Cyrill if he though that the Divil should personally range abroad making Antichrist to be a true man but one that should be a Divil also because as he thinks he should be made man by incarnation What sincere thing could they utter about this matter whose minds were possessed by such manner errours Wherfore this grievousnes of persecution which you speak of hath no confirmation at al from the Scriptures A very greevous persecution in deed ther should be but of an other sort then you mētion even such as should consist not so much in killing of bodies as in murthering of soules For Antichrist is Balaam who though it better to put a stumbling block before the children of Israel that they migh eate of things sacrificed to Idols and committ fornication then to folow thē with the sword Apoc. 2.14 He is that Beast wheron Iezebel the whore sitteth with the wine of whose fornication the inhabitants of the earth are drunken Apoc. 2.20 17.2 He is the Angel of the bottomlesse pit who opening the pit the Sun and aier is darkned with the smoke Apoc. 9.2 Finally he is that man of syn whose coming is with the efficacie of Satā with al power and signes and lying wonders and with al deceit
yeres before the first resurrection then they that first rise doo reign 1000 yeres as is expressely said ver 6. Therfore these seats and this iudgement which you suppose to be of the last end doo goe before it 2000 yeres at least such a stranger are you in these mysteries Then to that which is alleged out of Dan. 12. Blessed is he that wayteth and cometh unto the 1335 dayes that is say you unto 45 dayes after Antichrists death for then the Lord shal com to iudgment and wil give the crowns of righteousnes to them that overcome I answer as touching this place we are to explain it after chap. 20.11 and it may be one day we wil take in hand the ful handling of it In the meane while let us know that the destruction of Antichrist properly so caled is not here handled nor our Lords coming to the last judgmēt which shall not make al blessed upon whom it cometh whē manie shal desire that they may be covered by the mountains from his sight but the ful caling of the Iewes where Daniel stayeth his Prophesie neither doo anie Prophesies go further Fourthly you come unto Mat. 24. this Gospel of the Kingdome shal be preached in the whole world for a testimonie to al nations and then shal the end be I answer here is no mention of your Antichrist and again the end in this place is the end of the Iewish politie not of the world as I have shewed ch 4. against your first Demonstratiō But you add the words folowing Straightway after the tribulation of those dayes the Sun shal be darkned and the Moon shal not give her light and then shal appeare the sign of the Son of man I answer neyther dooth these make anie thing for Antichrists destruction to be ioyned with the end of al things seing they speak not of him at al. Yet that wee may see the interpretation of the words let us discusse them a litle VVith one consent as I suppose it is applyed unto our Lords last judgment But this Apocalypss teacheth both to think and to speak more distinctly of this thing For from hence we doo understand that the Lords coming which is yet to be hereafter is twofold the one spiritual so named for excellencie in the caling of the Iewes the other corporal at the general iudgment And that coming in Mathew seemeth to be spiritual which is in deed described to be most glorious and powrful by the corporal furniture as that which shal be both a clear resemblance and as it were a certayn pawn therof also no change shal afterward come between which may make the corporal to appear as new And that thus the thing is may easily be perceived if we mind how the Disciples in the beginning of the chapter inquired of the end of the Temple of the Lords coming and the end of the world VVithout doubt under Christs coming they comprehēded the restoring of their nation and therfore after the Lords resurrectiō supposing that this was the coming which he had givē them hope of they aske him agayn Lord wilt thou at this time restore the Kingdome to Israel Act. 1.6 But Christ answering and by a continued order prosecuting the things to come teacheth first the destruction of Ierusalem and dissipatiō of the Iewes then he annexeth the rest of the course of things neither anie where mentioneth he anie restoring before this his glorious coming Therfore it must eyther be conteyned in this his appearing or ther wil be none which opinion if the Disciples had in mind conceived by this answer surely they would not have nourished any exspectation of a Kingdome afterwards Besides a tribulation next goeth before this coming for so he saith immediatly after the tribulation of those dayes the Sun shal be darkned and then shal appeare the sign of the Sun of man c. But before his corporal coming no such tributation shal goe immediatly before For after the caling of the Iewes and the new constituted Church God wil wipe awaie everie tear from their eies and death shal be no more neither shal mourning nor crying nor sorow be anie more for the former things are passed away Apoc. 21.4 VVherfore that coming is not corporal It may be also that hath some force which he saith that the signe of the Son of man shall appear as if purposely he would distinguish between this spiritual coming and the corporal folowing Hereunto perteyneth that those words All the Tribes shal wail c. Apoc. 1 7. we have there shewed to belong unto the Iewes and that this wailing is of repentance which wil be too late at the corporal coming Thus much breifly touching the meaning of these words which though they help your cause nothing how ever they be taken yet was it not impertinent by the way to seek out the truth that is hidd in them Therfore I answer unto that Thess 2.8 Then shal the wicked man be reveled whom the Lord shal slay with the Spirit of his mouth destroy with the brightnes of his coming ther is the same meaning of this coming that is of that in Mathew At the caling of the Iewes when he shal give a most bright resēblāce of himselfe present in the Church shal Antichrist utterly be destroyed as we made playn in the former chapter For after the throne of the Beast is darkned the way shal be prepared for the Kings of the East that is the Iewes shal be caled straight after Rome is destroyed For shee onely hindreth this ioy Then after the Beast and False Prophet and Dragō are cut off that is after the Bishop of Rome and the Turk be extinct as after shal be shewed more at large the mysterie shal be finished and the ful caling performed Your Pope whom you Bellarmine boast to be the head of the Church shal neither be head nor foot in the holy congregation of the children of God And now see how farr these mountayns are under heaven whose tops you standing a farr off did think were hidden among the starrs The last place is 1 Iohn 2.18 Children it is the last hour and as you have heard that Antichrist cometh even now ther are manie Antichrists wherby wee know that it is the last hour I answer what Iohn here concludeth we easily see and acknowledge he proveth that it is the last hour because then manie Antichrists were come For Antichrist should come in the last hour VVhere is to be observed that Iohn alluding to the parable of the labourers Mat. 20.6 of whom some were hyred about the eleventh hour cōpareth al this age from Christ until his last coming unto this last elevēth hour Then that he saith this noysome age shal be of Antichrist whom he putteth not off unto the last minute of this howr but deferrs him to some indefinite space therof These things dooth Iohn truly holily agreably to his other writings But what must you needs conclude from hence who wil not
Antichrist hath reigned Whiles the woman lived in the wildernes and the Saincts lay hid in the temple ther was in deed a lamētable fewnes of true worshipers and so great darknes and obscuritie possessed al things more store of smoke bursting forth daily out of the bottōless pit that the truth commōly could not be seen Yet in the mean time Antichrist dominered in the holy citie and in the utmost court wherupon by counterfeit religion he deceived egregiously whiles al mē almost thought because of his neernes unto the Temple that he did sit in the true Temple The second chief point of doctrine you say is that he shal openly and by name cal himselfe the Christ not his Minister and Vicar as appeareth by those words of our Lord Jf an other shal come in his own name him ye wil receive And those words in his owne name you wittily warne to have been purposely added against the Lutherans and Calvinists which would say that Antichrist should not come in his owne name but in the name of our Christ as if he were his Vicar I answer you understand Christs words verie perversely For name in this place is not an appellation as you would have it but a mission and authoritie as we hav shewed in the 2. chapter touching Antichrists singular person By which it may appear that his own name and the Vicar of Christ doo not so contrary one an other but the Bishop of Rome may boast himselfe to be this vicar and doo it also in his own name to weet his own authoritie having no such right given him of God Moreover if name be an appellation Antichrist shal come in his own name and his appellation properly is not Christ how I pray you dooth he openly by name cal himselfe Christ See you not that you speak contraries Can any come in his own name openly cal himselfe an other whose name he beareth not Besides wee have often answered that this place perteins nothing to Antichrist properly so caled but to those whom the Iewes should submitt themselves unto who what manner of persons so ever they were they doo not in al points expresse the great Antichrist The third chief point of doctrine is that he shal affirme himself to be God and wil be worshiped for God as it is written so that he sitteth in the Temple of God shewing himself as if he were God 2. Thes 2.4 not onely say you by usurping some of Gods authoritie but the very name of God And here because your vulgar authentik Latin text is too weak to defend the Pope you flee to the Greek not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as God say you but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he is God The Argument is this Antichrist shal in words acknowledge himselfe to be God the Pope of Rome dooth not acknowledge himselfe to be God therfore he is not Antichrist Let Oecumenius make answer to the proposition who thus interpreteth that word of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he saith not saying but shewing that is by works signes and miracles endevouring to shew that he is God According to his interpretation therfore a manifest publishing is not necessarie Yea let the Holy Ghost expound himselfe who by a like manner of speech in Ezek. 28.2 teacheth how this is to be taken Thus he saith of the King of Tyrus Because thy hart is lifted up so that thou sayest J am God No man I trow requireth that this Tyriā should pronoūce the self same verie words False therfore it is that Antichrist should in word professe himselfe to be God Notwithstanding because your Pope had liefer abound with tokēs than barely and slenderly to be furnished with such as are necessarie onely we forgive you the proposition and pray you to think with your selfe whither the verie thing proclaimeth not quite cōtrarie to that which you deny in the assumption For what I pray you did P. Sixtus acknowledg himselfe and the other Popes of Rome to be when he said Whosoever accuseth the Pope it shal never be forgiven him because he that sinneth against the holy Ghost it shal not be forgiven him neither in this life nor in that which is to come Concil Tom. 1. in Purgat Sixti What did Boniface the 8 when he said We declare define and pronounce that it is absolutely necessarie to salvation for everie creature to be subiect to the Bishop of Rome Extrav de Major Obed. unam sanctam I forbear to cite more witnesses I appeal to your selfe why doo you dissemble Doo not such speeches often sound in your ears But say you he dooth not acknowledge himselfe God because he acknowledgeth himself his servant I am ashamed of your proofs as if out of the same mouth ther could not come blessing and cursing horrible blasphemie and counterfeit obedience You know that in words he is sometime servant of servāts but again when he list he is King of Kings The fourth point is that he shal extol himself above al that is caled God or that is worshipped 2 Thes 2.4 that is say you he shal not suffer anie God neither true nor false nor anie Jdols To this argument we have answered in part before in handling Antichrists name wher we shewed that the Apostle meaneth not the heavenly God but the earthly that is the civil Magistrates which are venerable as also that in Daniel 11.37 And he shal not esteeme the God of his Fathers nor care for anie God because he shall rise up against all Ierom interpreteth this sacrilegious pride to be a kind of immoderate power over al religion for thus he saith And Antichrist shal warre against the Saincts and overcome them and shal be pufft up with so great pride as he shall attempt to change Gods lawes and ceremonies subiecting al religion to his owne power Com. in Dan. cap. 7. In which words he finely painteth out Antichrist the Pope of Rome although he was farr from this your comment For shal a false Prophet lift up himself above everie God A Prophet is always the Prophet of some God needs therfore must he professe himself subiect to some God whom the Scriptures note out by the name of a False Prophet Again when he shal sit in the temple of God whither shal this be in the tēple of an other God or in his own If of an other then he acknowledgeth a superiour but if in his owne then the Apostle speaks unproperly and should not have said so that he sitteth in the tēple of God as God but rather so that he sitteth in his owne temple as God But by this māner of speaking what fruit had redounded to the Saincts For what manner of sign had this been of this Monster when it was no where known what manner of Temple he should have or where But thus ar they wōt to erre from the right which reverence their lusts for truth As touching the Idols which you say Antichrist shal
your selves not to be Ministers of Christ And in this weise is the first calling of the Iewes that shal be now shortly which Daniel describeth by a certen pointing out of the time chap. 12.12 c Ezechiel saw it shadowed out by the dry bones moving themselves with an exceeding great noise shaking and by and after covered with sinewes flesh chap. 37.78 as wee shal heare afterward God willing more fully 11 Then J saw heaven open It being declared how Euphrates must be dried up or rather to what ende that is to say that nothing may be an impediment to the Iewes returning into their owne countrey now he proceedeth to the other part of the sixt vial the preparation for warre the Captaine wherof is first described And such a forme of him is exhibited not onely as is needful for this warre but also which declareth the whole state of things from that instant moment even to the end of al things It is no new thing that under the person of Christ a short and brief Prophecy of the whole state of his spouse should be delivered He is not chāged unlesse in so much as it is convenient for his Church Therfore in this new shape as in a glasse we ought to behold the face of the spouse by how much it is to be considered the more diligently This wonderfull sight is seen in heavē open that is in the holy Church whose most bright glory now most of all shal be made manifest to al men as before by a dore open in heaven the notable dignity and excellency of the first Church as it was in the Apostles daies and by and by after chap. 4.1 But this is more ample glory that heaven is opened not by some little dore but by a whole gate ye whole walles that I may so say nothing letting but that her full maiesty now may be seen of men as farre as is granted on earth ¶ And behold a white horse We may not suppose that Christ shal come forth in any visible shape these things are farre from his last comming as those things which follow wil manifest but he wil shew forth openly and evidently such a force in the administration of things as this figure representeth The whole description consisteth of foure parts In every one of which is to be considered the preparation and name In this first part the furnishing is a white horse the name faithful and true The similitude of which things with that in chap. 6.2 hath caused that some did thinke this to be the same vision by which errour they confound all things They differ much in times and in argument That white horse belonge to the first lists But this to the last goale That former went forth by and by after Iohn when Traiane flourished and his next successours This last is not seen but after the destruction of Rome There the confused multitude of all the beleevers was respected Here the conversion of the nation of the Iewes onely is intreated off Yet herin they agree that the white horse in both places signifyeth Christ triumphing by his truth but thē the Gentiles being subdued now at length a stubburne people being reconciled unto him To which thing he carried a name fitted wherby he sheweth that he wil now at last manifest to the whole world how faithfull true he is in performing his promises and that not any thing even the least shal be frustrate which once he foreshewed by the Prophets concerning the restoring of this nation in the last times Such a one therfore shal Christ be notable by these marks when he shal beginne the conversion of this people His promise shal seeme to have bin forgotten through long delay which at length he shal performe with most plentiful increase of new joy ¶ And who jugeth and fightest iustly So Theod. Beza translateth a relative being put between as though these things togither with the former should constitute the name it selfe which in the rest is wonte to be shorter but the sense is al one seing it is in likeweise whither a man be counted such by his name or found to be of this sort in very deed The worde have this force properly and he iudgeth and fighteth in righteousnesse where the coniunctiō copulative may be a causal as though these words should render a reason both of the white horse and also of the name should be added to the same in stead of an interpretation He sitteth upon a white horse because he fighteth righteously His name is faithful and true because he iudgeth righteously Which words are spoken in respect of his own people taken as they seem out of Psal 96.10.13 where to iudge in truth and righteousnes signifyeth to rule and moderate his people in framing and ordering their life according to truth and righteousnes that not onely as touching their outward actions but also in respect of inward newnesse of the heart which dependeth upon the regeneration of the Spirit wherby we are reformed after the Image of God as Calvin hath written very wel These words therfore declare the effectual power of calling which Christ shal now bestow aboundātly upō his and moreover safety from their enemies with whom he wil make warre and render them a reward meet for their deserts 12 And his eyes The second part of the description where his eyes are as it were a flame of fyre and on his head are many crownes but a name unknowne to all men but to himselfe alone As touching his eyes they are most sharpe pearsing al things which as flames of fyre consume whatsoever letteth the sight make lightsome the darkenesse it selfe and set most hidden things in the light What cā hide it selfe from such eyes Such an one shal Christ shew himselfe in drawing out his people into the light of truth from the hidden dennes and darkenesse whersoever they lurked so as this sharpnes of sight shal be very admirable to the world I wil say to the North saith the Lord give and to the South keepe not backe bring my sonnes from farre and my daughters from the endes of the earth Isay 43.6 The crownes are many because of the many singular victories which the Iewes shal get when first they shal give their name to Christ from those sundry nations among which they live dispersed striving as much as they can against their conversion But why is his name unknown that here we may know that great mystery to be wherat Paul cryed out O the deepnesse of the richesse both of the wisdome and knowledge of God! how unsearcheable are his iudgements and his waies past finding out Rom. 11.33 c. There he speaketh of this same thing of the hardening of the Iewes for a time calling at length in their time which whole matter he concludeth with an admiratiō of Gods wisdome affirming that no wit of any creature can comprehende the infinitnesse of the mystery So this vision foreshewing in the
streame neither is ther at this day almost found any hold so strong that can withstand his furie But the time of this tyrāny is but short to weet onely for an houre a day a moneth a yeere that is about three hundred ninety yeeres if wee count the yeere by twelve moneths and every moneth by thirty daies after the account of two and fourty moneths and three dayes and an halfe chap. 11. If we follow the reckening of the Iuliā yeeres the impious kingdome shal not be prolonged beyond seven yeres more then utterly to be abolished without leaving so much as the footsteps of his name after him as shal be said afterward 4 Then I saw thrones Hitherto the brief History of the Dragon the same now is handled somewhat more fully there being added togither also the state of the Church wherin it was in every of those times The two first of which are shewed elegantly in the same words For when after the Dragon is bound the thrones set are seen and also the soules of them that were beheaded sitting upon them and iudgement given to them by these is signifyed that the primitive Church was miserably afflicted before that mortal enemie was cast into prison Then was ther no seat established for her no iudgement was given but she lay on the ground trode under foote every moment spending the life of many of her members for the truth whereunto belongeth the cry of the soules which desired vengeance of their most cruell enemies chap. 6.10.11 Therfore all that time from Iohn even until the binding of the Devill by Constantine was a time for the hatched for flaming fires for the racke and all manner of torments as is very wel shewed here Againe the same thrones and iudgement given after that the Dragon was delivered to prison by Constantin doo shew the notable felicity of the second distance of time which the Church enioyed having obtained Emperours for her Defendours For these thrones belong not to the saincts raigning in heaven as the Iesuite will have it intangling himselfe in many absurdities but they which dwell on earth in a better estate in regard of the open enemy then in former time For why should the raigne in heaven be limited with a thousand yeeres Or why should they beginne to raigne after the Dragon was bound as if the raigne in heaven wer not perpetual Moreover such ar counted in this raigne who ar dead a thousand yeeres agoe as in the next verse which can not be understood of the raign in heavē in which unlesse the soules of them that die fly forthwith they shal never afterward come thither But more plainly of this matter at the next verse ¶ And they sate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may be put and perhaps better transitvely they did set So the order of construction runneth easily being reduced by the accusative cases which folow et animas and the soules et illos c. and them which worshiped not in the same sense vidi thronos I saw thrones and they did set on them to whom iudgement also was given both the soules of them which were beheaded and also those which worshipped not the Beast c. who all lived and raigned with Christ a thousand yeeres and iudgement was given them they were dealt with according to their righteousnes themselves being set at liberty and their enemies suffering the punishments of their cruelty Even as on the other side on s iudgement is said to be taken away when a man is oppressed with iniuries and the doers of them goe away scotfree as Iob complaineth God liveth who hath despised my iudgement c. chap. 27 2 and 34.5 Or iudgement to be given may belong to the raign as in the Psalmist O God give thy iudgements to the King thy righteousnes to the Kings sonne Let him iudge thy people iustly and thy poore with equity Psal 72.1.2 as though he should say the Church now is advanced to that dignity wherby shee should give lawes to others which but lately was accustomed to receive them being most abiect and obscure and of no estimation with the world ¶ And the soules of them that were beheaded If ekathison they sate be taken as a verbe neuter then these words are to be referred to the verbe eidon vidi animas and I saw the soules c. These are the soules of the godly Martyrs of the first period who under the Heathen Emperours laid downe their lives for Christs sake who now at length by meanes of Constantine obtaine glory and honour But how is this wilt thou say they not being on the earth Their soules were placed on thrones when they who tooke away their lives uniustly were iustly punished by Constantine that is whē the tyrants were killed and condigne punishment inflicted upon them for their cruelty The iust man shall reioice when he seeth the vengeāce of the wicked and shal wash his footsteppes in their blood as the Psalmist describeth And againe a two edged sword is in the hand of the Saincts to execute vengeance on the Heathen which honour shal be to all the Saincts Psal 149. It is a glorious thing for the Saincts that their iniuries are nor neglected but ar at length recōpensed with iust punishment This is it which the soules desired earnestly chap. 6.10 And these seats are that deliverance which they obtained a promise off in the same place ¶ And which worshipped not the Beast These also were placed or sate in the seates which are men then living in the second period wherupon he not onely mentioneth their soules as even now of the Martyrs which were in the age past but the whole man saying those which worshipped not c. From which we must observe seing the godly are described by those marks that they worshipped not the Beast neither suffered themselves to be noted with his marke either in the forehead or on the hand and that in the second period whē the Devill was bound which took the beginning at Constantine himselfe and continued from thence by the space of a thousand yeeres that the Beast was all this time Otherweise ther could have bin no praise of the Godly living in this time if there had bin no occasion and matter for them to get praise by Wherfore the Beast was bred togither with Cōstantine when the Dragon being thrust out of heaven and going into prison gave his power and his throne and great authority to the Beast chap. 12.13 and 13.2 He could not suffer that any truce should be granted to the Church but when he saw his open furie to be repressed he ordained the Beast his Vicar in his roome being absent by whose endevour at least he might satisfy his hatred Therfore the three yeeres raigne of Antichrist is a trifling toy a part wherof we see here manifestly to extende unto a thousand yeeres Secondly let the Papists consider what a vaine forgerie that Antichrist is whom they dreame off
playnly to Christians al coverings being removed as on whom the noone Sunne of truth shineth and all things are naked and open And indeed he openeth most significantly in one word that long obscure description in Ezechiel saying that that temple so magnifically gloriously prepared is in truth none at all not as though the Prophet had uttered so many words vainly but to shewe that we must not stick in the bark of the lettre but that the kernell of the Spirit is to be found out Let the Iewes heare neither let them expect a renewed temple as hitherto they doo amisse and obstinately but let them with minds and harts aspire in that right way which shal need no temple Let them look for the omnipotent God and the Lamb to dwel among them in comparison of which glory whatsoever can be built of men shal be vile 23 Neither hath this city any need of the Sunne or Moone For in very deed the Moone shall be ashamed and the very Sunne shall blush when the Lord of hosts shall reigne in mount Sion and Hierusalem and shall be glorious before his auncients Isaiah 24.23 And why may it not be ashamed of her former darkenesse when the light of the Moone shal be as the light of the Sunne and the light of the Sunne seven folde as the light of seven daies Isay 30.23 Which thinges are not spoken to that ende as though there should be no use then of the Scriptures but because all shall so understand Gods will as if they had no need to learne wisdome from books Full saith the Prophet shall this land be of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters covering the chanell of the Sea Isay 11.9 Neither shall they anie more teach everie man his friend and everie man his brother saying know yee the Lord for they shall all know mee from the least of them even to the greatest of them saith the Lord that J doo forgive their inquity and remember their sinne no more Ier. 31.34 From hence let us observ that that Church is most glorious in which the sunne of righteousnesse shineth with most open face covered with no cloudes of ceremonies therfore let them see in how great errour they are whom bring in a pompous shew of ceremonies to procure authority to religion with the people Furthermore let us note to what times Iohn applyeth the sentences of the Prophets that we may know the things are yet to come which we interpret commonly to be past and not onely in the heavenly countrey whose happinesse needeth the words of no man but here in earth in that restoring wherof we have spoken ¶ And the Lambe is the light therof Therfore this light the most bright of all godly times shal not yet be perfit as it shal be after this life but a candle onely in respect of that least peradventure wee should rest in our iourney as if we had come to the last ende 24 And the Gentiles that shal be saved The second outward argument is glory from the Gentils Before time the Iewes have alwayes found the Gētiles most hatefull who left no meanes unattempted to doo them hurt now contrariweise ther shal be no cause to feare that they will doo them any harme yea rather why should they not expect all good at their hands who shal apply al their forces to the advancing of them But these Gentiles are not al generally but are limited with a certain kinde which saith he shal be saved which word is inserted for an exposition The place is taken out of Isaiah 60.3 where it is thus and the Gentiles shall walke to thy light which Iohn draweth to the elect by putting in of one word least any should think it was spoken of every one generally And see how Iohn trāslate that sētēce they shal walke to thy light thus they shal walke in the light of it the sentēce being well expressed For to walke at the light is not to come only to the light which one may doe depart again by by being at once both seen despised but to walke after or according to the light as to walke at the feete is alone with to follow serve one 1 Sam. 25.42 Neither-hath this place in the heavens that the people should walke at the light of the Church when Prophecyings shal be abolished and tongues shall cease and God shal be all in all 1 Cor. 13.8 and 15.28 But it may be doubtful how it can have place on earth For shal this difference remaine of some people which are saved and of other that are lost in this most happy government of the Church It seemeth indeed that there shal be many which yet still shal contemne the truth obstinately for the day of the Lord shall come cas a share upon all that dwell on the face of the earth Luke 21 35. But the children of the Church are not in darkenesse that that day should take them as a thief in the night 1 Thess 5.4 Moreover it was said before that the haile of a tale●t weight of the last vial shall drive men to blasphemy chap. 16.21 Neverthelesse those despisers shal be of so feeble strength that wil they nil the they shal be compelled to yeeld their necks The Complut edition and the Kings bible doo omit these words which are saved and so doth Aretas and the vulgar Latine neither doo they reade in the light of it but by the light ¶ And the Kings of the earth shal bring their glory unto it Then the Kings borderers on the Ocean and of the Yles shall bring a present the Kings of Sheba and Seba shall bring a gift finally all Kings shall worship him and all nations shall serve him Psal 72.10.11 And Isay The labour of Aegypt and marchandize of Aethiopia and of the Sabean Princes shall come unto thee and they shall be thine and shall follow thee they shall come in chaines and shall fall down before thee and shall make supplications unto thee saying onely the strong God is in thee there is none besides no where else is God chap. 45.14 Againe Kings shal be thy nurcing fathers and their Queenes shal be thy nurces they shall worship thee with their faces toward the earth and shall lick the dust of thy feet chap. 49.23 For then shal be given unto Christ a dominion and glory and Kingdome that all people nations and tongues should serve him whose dominion is an everlasting dominion which passeth not away his Kingdō a Kingdō which shall not be destroyed Dan. 7.14 It shal not also be from the purpose to add here in what words the Sybille hath described this same thing that at least wee may help tthe Iesuite if he will who in expounding the same is cleane out of the way thus therfore shee Prophecyed in the 3. book of the oracles of Sibyll And then the world by womans hands shall rul'd be and obey But when the widow over all the world