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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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provide and purchase livings and benefices for them and thrust them into them To these and their like I may apply that Dan. 1.10 And to these may I adjoyne those Ministers which themselves having knowledge yet I know not out of what corruption it commeth they thinke a few men of learning is enough If a few Parishes in a Citie or Countrey have learned men and preachers as if all Ministers should not be men of knowledge To reprove all Ministers who are ignorant Vse 3 whose lips have not knowledge who though they should be good Scribes yet are as ignorant of the word of God as Samuel was in his childhood of the voyce of God 1 Sam. 3.4 So unable are they for that place Like to Balaam Num. 22. that though God forbad him yet for gain he would needs go So these for the wages of iniquitie when as God by denying them gifts hath said Go not yet they will threap kindnesse of him and will go As Ahimaaz 2 Sam. 18.23 that would needs run to carry the King newes from the Campe but when he came he knew nothing So these needs must they be Ministers of the Gospel Messengers of glad tidings such as will carry newes from the King to the Campe but when they come to tell their message they know nothing no more or often not so much as many of their flockes as Hosea 4.4 To admonish every man how he takes this calling upon him Vse 4 that he finde in himselfe some competent sufficiencie for it not to be perswaded by friends drawn by others not thinking it is enough when he hath the calling of the Church for he must be a man of knowledge These things may increase other mens sinnes but not lessen his owne for he must be accepted by that is in him therfore must he be studious and of some competent parts before and still continue in reading and looke to learning as 1 Tim. 4.13.16 For he shall finde himselfe still bound to study and to have need of it daily for so great a worke to finde out knowledge for his people the Word being so deep as it is Bernard Whether if he have not gifts Object not knowledge is he a Minister or not He is though not such as he should Answer as he is a Minister which is corrupt and lewd though not as he should From these words some of our Papists do gather that the Priests could not erre and so by consequent not now the Bishops nor a Councel The reason is because this is a promise and God keeps his promises * The Councell of Chalcedon not denied to be a lawfull Councell equalled the Bishop of Constant with the Bishop of Rome in authoritie honour and other priviledges save onely in precedence which they say is an error The first Councell of Nice decreed That those hereticks who followed Paulus Samosatenus should againe be baptized as Cyprian and the Anabaptists The second of Nice decreed That Images should be worshipped and that Angels had bodies and that the foules of men were corporall Why else did Augustine appeale from the Councell of Africa where Cyprian was present to the Scriptures affirming we may not doubt of the Scriptures but of them it is lawfull lib. 2. de Baptist cont Donatist cap. 3. Concilia plenaria errare posse dicens If the Qu. be of the authoritie of the Pope whether greater then a Councell Hierom answeres Si authoritas quaritur major orbis est urbe But aske the Councell of Constance which deposed Iohn 23. and chose Martin 5. Either the Councell erred or else Martin was no lawfull Pope Then all his successors were schismatickes no lawfull Popes To this I answer It is no promise but a commandment shewing what manner of man a Minister ought to bee The same which the next sentence is Againe I affirme that if it be a promise it is generall for the reason is generall to all yea and particular to every one But the Scripture is manifest that both particular Priests and generall Councels of Priests have erred In general are these Isaiah 59.10 Jerem. 6.13 and 14.14 which places shew that the most of the Priests and Prophets were then corrupt Now if there should have been a Councell gathered of these what good might be hoped for from them by going to the Councell they might have changed their places but not their mindes they would have been the same in a Councell they were at home Besides is it not manifest that Councels have erred 1 Kings 22. But Bellarmine happily will answere they were a Councell of Prophets not Priests gathered by the King not the high Priest Then see a Councel of Priests gathered by the high Priest erring John 9.22 and 11.53 and Mark 14.64 But Bellarmine will say that a Councell of the Jewes lawfully called before Christ could not erre but he being come they might The ground must be because they are not Priests neither the high Priest but this is false for the Priestood of Aaron was not abolished till Christ became a Priest which was not till his sacrifice for if they had been then had he sinned in communicating with them And if this were so it were marvell how the Rhemists and the generall Popish argument will hold who by the example of Caiaphas Joh. 11.49 proves that the Pope cannot erre though he be wicked for if he were not a high Priest then holds not this argument but he was a high Priest and they all Priests and yet they erred and so may it erre More ingeniously deale Hosius and Canus affirming the Councell did pronounce a right sentence when they condemned Christ of blasphemy that they might establish this a Councell cannot erre And they should seek the Law at his mouth The commandment touching the people shewing what they ought to do The people of God and they who be of his Church Doctrine must heare and receive the word of God at the mouth of the Ministers It is not spoken exclusively as if these must onely heare from the Minister and not to read themselves for that is commanded Joh. 5.39 but principally they must heare it from him and ordinarily when he speaketh the Word they must not withdraw themselves but must heare This is the order God hath ordained in his Church This is that is commanded here so Hag. 2.12 so Jam. 1.16 Isaiah 2.3 To Gods house to heare and be taught there speake the Ministers Heb. 13.17 Then must they be heard Because they are begotten and borne againe of the seed of the Word Reason 1 but that not by their owne private reading but from the preaching of the Ministers 1 Pet. 1.23.25 They are the sonnes of God by faith Gal. 3.26 But faith is not to be had ordinarily but by hearing Rom. 10.14.15.17 Because Reason 2 as Chrysostome Hom. 11 ad pop Antioch Se quisque per seipsum non facile emendare potest Men are so partiall in judgement so perverse in affection
restitution then thou shalt be accounted a fraudulent and deceitfull man and every body will cast it in thy teeth upon any breach if privately thy credit will so sinke for thon art not able to drive a trade as before and to maintaine thy selfe wife and children Know this thou art void of this servile feare while thine heart is so full of pride that it will not stoope to God and his commandement for if thou fearedst his power and justice thou wouldest not stand upon this reputation with men Can he not make thy wickednesse knowne to thy shame and can he not make thee as poore to thy dishonour If thou diddest feare this thou wouldest never stand upon that The like may be said of men who make profession of conversion and Religion and yet neglect the duties of it for feare of the scornes and reproaches of men and stand upon reputation they have no feare But if thou canst be content to hazard thy credit to obey him that gives credit and honour and riches to whom he will and takes them from he pleaseth it will prove to thy selfe and to others that thou hast this feare at lease what else may be more if not then the contrary for there can be no place for feare where the heart is passed up with pride To obey God in honourable things and things to be done without crosse or hazard of credit is but to serve themselves The fifth effect of this feare is diligence and carefulnesse that is it will never let a man rest till he have used all the meanes whereby he may have any hope to escape that which he is afraid of Instance for the feare of man in Jacob Gen. 32.6 c. manifest in Ahab 1 King 21.27 Exod. 9.20 Acts 2.37 Acts 9.6 Ninevites Because this feare is credulous Reas 1 makes a man beleeve that will come which is threatened and that such things are not scarre-crowes but if they be not prevented they will come and suspects often more than is uttered Now that men beleeve they use meanes to compasse it if good to avoid it if evill If good hope for it if evill feare it and so seeke to avoid it Because feare breeds a desire Reas 2 whether a man feare he shall not enjoy some good he would have or lest some evill should come upon him he would escape the desire to have and the desire to escape is increased by his feare He that feares neither may have some desire but when feare comes it increaseth his desire yea as the feare increaseth so doth this Now a desire and a desire enlarged gives a man no rest till he use the meanes to have or escape desire is never without endeavour for it or against it to use all the meanes knowne unto the desirer This Vse 1 as the other two argues great want of this feare because men are so secure and use no meanes at all to avoid Gods judgments here or to come or use them carelesly and coldly which must needs prove want of feare when they heare that no adulterer usurer blasphemer or any that loves and lyes in any smne shall inherit Heaven but shall have their portion in the burning Lake without faith and repentance which can never be had but by diligent and carefull hearing of the Word this they contemne or regard not if it come not to them well they will not feeke after it if these fall into their mouths well it is but otherwise they will never trouble themselves further about either of them For if they be elected they are sure to be faved and the refore they will leave all to Gods disposition Thus some say desperately but more deale thus and shew plainely there is no feare of God in their hearts or before their eyes for that would keepe another manner of coyle in them and would not suffer them to sleepe so securely in sinne never regarding what became of themselves If they had this we should not need to threaten the wrath of God nor to excite them to flye from the wrath to come and by well-doing to seeke honour and immortality And we should need lesse to doe it or at least we should more prevaile with them for them workes the hammer when the Iron and metall is mollified and softened by the fire then the Word when men are softened and mollified by this feare then the Word is most regarded when the heart is wakened by the present feeling or feare of judgment to come Questionlesse the generall security that hath overgrown the whole body of our people that they neither seeke to escape the vengeance to come of themselves nor yet when the Ministers of God doe with one consent threaten them though many Johns have preached for a long time that the Axe is laid to the root of the tree yet they come not to enquire what to doe as the people did Luk. 3.9 10. Our age as Chrysostome observed is like to the old world our Cities like Sodom and Gomorrah still secure The plague of God that was upon our houses and persons hath not wakened them the Sword that was even at our heeles hath not made them shake off security and begin to feare what is this but a fearing of some judgment that will make our hearts to ake and the eares of posterity to tingle when it shall be told them according to that of Jer. 2.19 Thine owne wickednesse shall correct thee and thy turnings back shall reprove thee know therefore and behold that it is an evill thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my feare is not in thee saith the Lord God of Hosts Yea finally to knit this to our present matter what proves this else but that the men of our times are so farre from the truth of Christianity howsoever they professe themselves to be Christians that they are not come so farre as yet to be Gods servants worse than servants yea than beasts yea than Sathan Jam. 2. who beleeves and trembles This may teach every man to try whether he have this feare or no Vse 2 feare breeds carefulnesse to avoid that is feared or is and ought to be fearefull Doth any man heare of the judgments of God sounded out many wayes by the words and workes of God is he carelesse of them for himselfe for his family if he have a charge and possessed with the security of the age not seeking all meanes to avoid them not as the masters of the families Exod. 9.20 such then as feared the Word of the Lord among the servants of Pharaoh made his servants and his cattle flee into the houses But as Gedaliah when it was told him by many the danger by Ishmael he beleeved it not and so would not prevent it Jer. 40.14 16. and saith the Lord will doe no such thing and so will not take the meanes to avoid them thou hast not so much as this feare And dost thou thinke thy selfe a good
escaped a serpent and is fallen into the power of a Lion Therefore let every one examine whether it be a blessing to him to be thus delivered if the patience of God hath brought him to repentance and reformation but otherwise thou art delivered rather in anger then in mercy and art deceived as the sicke man that thinks a good turn is done him when he hath what meat and drinke he desires unlesse that which the fire could not soften the sunne do and that thy heart relent as Sault at Davids kindnesse who had spared his life when he might have taken it away 1. Sam. 24.17 VERS XVI Then spake they that feared the Lord every one to his neighbour and the Lord hearkened and heard and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his name THen spake they that feared the Lord. The Prophet having reproved the blasphemy of the wicked shewed their grounds on which they denied the providence of God he now answereth them First in this vers by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of these who did truly fear God Secondly vers 17. By a sweet promise on Gods part of great goodnesse and mercy towards the godly who rested in his pomises Thirdly verse 18. Denouncing a judgement which the wicked should have experience of when they should see the difference betwixt them and those who feared him Then spak they that feared the Lord. In this verse the Prophet brings in the godly answering and incouraging one another contrarie to that which the wicked had said And so it is i. The godly of those times though happily but few at what time the wicked spoke thus blasphemously did mutually exhort one another not to faint or be dismaied by those speeches of the wicked or by them to be drawne from their pietie to wickednesse and corruption but they had their mututall speeches to further one another in their good course as the others had to harden one another in their wicked courses But what said they St. Hierom and some others thinke that the Prophet hath not told us but that telling us the just did speake it must be supposed that they spoke fitting and good things in defence of the providence of God and his government and such things as they had learned by the Scriptures and had received from the instruction of their teachers but saving their judgments I rather encline to those who think the words following to be theirs and not Gods words who seemeth not to speake till the 17. verse Thus then in comforting one another they sayd The Lord harkened and heard i. Howsoever they imagine that the Lord sees and heares nothing respecteth nor regardeth what is done or said yet he hath heard and doth most diligently observe what is said and done for so much hearkening doth carry and will import namely care and diligence As Psalm 5.2 2 Chron. 6. And so by this they confirme the contrary to that which the wicked had said that God did not regard that it is manifest that he heares their words not a word drops from them which is unknowne to him much more all their actions are diligently and attentively regarded And that it may appeare it is not for a space or a short time but perpetually therefore he hath a booke of remembrance which is not spoken as if God had any such booke or stood in need of it as if he were subject to forgetfulnesse but it is spoken in respect of men by which they may be assured that the will and decree of God touching them and the wicked is certaine and constant which is better expressed by a booke then by words for that which is written is more durable and permanent whereas things spoken vanish away and are blown away in the aire For them that feared the Lord. That is for such as feare him that he will not forget their labours and obedience but will recompence and reward it even to their very thoughts and intents thinking and remembring his commandements to observe and doe them Therefore spake they who feared the Lord. The Prophet answereth the blasphemy of the wicked in this verse by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of those who did truely feare God And in this First their encouragement Secondly their ground First Gods hearing and regarding Secondly his certaine decree for shewing good to them The first thing here is the encouragement one of another It is the duty of every one fearing God Doctrine to encourage and strengthen one another in the service and worship of God Here and Heb. 3.13 But exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin And 10.24 And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good workes Mich. 4.2 And here we may make that generall which was spoken particularly to Peter as to all Ministers so to Christians Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not therefore when thou art converted strengthen thy brethren So Baruch and the Princes did helpe one another Jerem. 36.11.13.15.16 When Michaiah the sonne of Gemariah the sonne of Shaphan had heard out of the bookes all the words of the Lord Then Michaiah declared unto them all the words that he had heard when Baruch read in the booke in the audience of the people And they said unto him sit downe now and reade it that we may heare So Baruch read it in their audience Now when they had heard all the words they were affraid both one and other and said unto Baruch we will certifie the King of all these words Because they are Gods such as have received this honour to be called his and to be his therefore reason as sonnes Reason 1 they should not onely themselves but by all other meanes seeke it in others and draw others to it Because they are members one of another Ephes 4.25 Reason 2 therefore as members they ought to strengthen uphold and keepe up one another that as they naturally in the health and good temperature of the body so these spiritually in the good state of the soule To convince their error who thinke it onely a duty appertaining to the Minister to exhort and stirre up others Vse 1 and to strengthen and confirme them Truth it is that it is specially and principally his duty as being Christs Lievetenant upon the earth who doth by them performe that Isaiah 61.1 Namely preach and binde up the broken hearted but yet it appertaines to every one so is it manifestly proved If any say he is not appointed to be his brothers keeper it is but the voice of Caine of a wicked and gracelesse man To condemne their practice who either out of this error of their minde or out of the corruption of their heart Vse 2 altogether neglect this duty to say nothing of those who labour to weaken the strong to coole the zealous
A LEARNED AND VERY USEFVLL COMMENTARY VPON THE WHOLE PROPHESIE OF MALACHY BY That late Reverend Godly and Learned Divine Mr. RICHARD STOCK sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet London and now according to the Originall Copy left by him published for the common good Whereunto is added AN EXERCITATION VPON THE SAME PROPHESIE OF MALACHY By SAMUEL TORSHELL LONDON Printed by T.H. and R. H. for Samuel Enderbey and are to be sold at the Starre in Popes head alley 1641 Reador if euer Fame did fill thy eare withe name of Reuerent Stock behold him heere Not in this Shaddow onely but turne ore the Booke and venve this Stockès improued store There shalt find mix't with Graue Diuinitie a Prophets depe mysterious Prophecy then thanke his care whose goodness doth unlocke and publish to the world 〈◊〉 Rich a Stocke TO The ancient Friends and Hearers of the Author especially to the Right Worshipfull EDWARD RUDGE Alderman To the Worshipfull Captaine JOHN VEN Mr. WILLIAM KENDALL Mr. RICHARD ELLIS with the rest of the Inhabitants of the parrish of Alhallowes Breadstreet LONDON MY owne occasions together with some other difficulties and impediments have hitherto hindred a purpose that I had from the very first time that the papers of this worthy man were intrusted to me to communicate them to the World and to you But I have now done it and I hope it is not too late either to revive his memorie or your remembrance of those things you have heard from him I will not beleeve that you have forgotten or can forget a Pastor whom you did so much love and reverence For he was a burning and shining light John 5.35 and yee rejoiced in his light I have taken this paines to peruse his notes Heb. 11.4 that he againe though dead might still speake unto you and I doe endeavour that now after his decease you may have these things alwaies in your remembrance 2 Pet. 1.15 God was pleased to send you a rich treasure by his Ministerie 2 Cor. 4.7 but this treasure was brought unto you in an Earthen vessell and least haplie when that earthen vessell was broke by sicknesse and death and the shards throwne into the Earth you saved not the treasure I have now gathered some of it and kowing to whom it did belong have brought it back to Restore it unto you Now what remains Ephe. 4.21 but that you enjoy it use it let that be your care to be answerable to the Doctrine you have received to walke so as yee have learned Christ If so bee that yee have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in JESUS This is the onely thing that I have to say unto you that your conversation may tell the world you doe remember him Let him live in your lives That so even they who never knew him nor ever heard him preach a Sermon may see by your practise what and how hee preached And as yee have made a Monument for him in your Church set up one also in every one of your lives you shall thereby doe him a greater honor then that stone-work though otherwise a Commendable Testimonie of your love and respect can doe him Be yee your selves his Monument his Statue Phil. 4.1 his Trophee 1 Thes 2.19 and as the Philippians and Thessalonians were to St. Paul 2 Cor. 3.2 his Crown of glorying Be yee his Epistle known and read of all men Let all men see what he writ in you What precepts of Holinesse of Righteousnesse of Temperance Psal 45.1 hee wrote downe in your hearts when his tongue was the pen of a readie writer so long among you He was a Father I suppose unto manie of you I have heard some of you professe it 1 Cor. 4.15 though yee have ten thousand instructers in Christ yet have yee not many Fathers If in Jesus Christ hee hath begotten you through the Gospell bee followers of him imitate him so as that men may say of you when they see the grave and sober and godlie carriage of any of you he hath his fathers Counteinance he hath his fathers Gate He set a most faire Copy doe yee imitate the hand He did as his great Master Iohn 10.3.4 1 Tim. 4.12 he went before his flocke And was an example of beleivers in word in Conversation in Charity in Spirit in faith in purity In all things he shewed himselfe a patterne a stampe Tit. 2.7 that is the Apostles word such a stampe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as makes an Image of it in Coine or such a stamp as Printers use which leaves an Impression on the Paper be yee his Impression be yee his printed worke be yee the Commentary your selves and then yee need not buy it at the shops He was Typus Gregis be yee Antitypon Pastoris Goe through the world like good and current Coine with the right stampe Mat 22.20 Shew whose Superscription and Image you beare on one side Gods on the other side Cesars and both stampt upon you by your Pastor who was wont to Preach unto you those two points Holinesse and Obedience Shew that you suffered him while you sate under his Pulpit to enter deep into your hearts A deep stamp is long before it is worne out let it appeare that these fifteene yeeres since he dyed you have not forgotten the word of his exhortation They heare best Luke 11.28 that practice best If any of you be prophane and unholy if deceitfull and dishonest in your dealings if intemperate voluptuous and wanton yee might happily bee his Hearers and in the throng but none of his Disciples but such as listned with the other eare to your lusts But I am perswaded better things of you Heb. 6.9 and things that accompany salvation though I thus speake for I know your husbandman was skilfull and the seed good Math. 13.3 1 Pet. 1.23 Beare not therefore thorns and briars for such ground is rejected and nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned but rather shew your selves to be the earth that hath drunk in the raine that came oft upon you and bring forth fruit that so you may receive a further blessing from God Unto whose blessing and most gracious protection I commend you and remaine Your servant in the Lord SAM TORSHELL To the READER THE holy Scriptures that had so many praises given unto them by the Antients were by them much read and studied who used also many waies of interpreting them wee finde their Commentaries that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 writings in which they set downe-heads for remembrances Interpretations that is Enarrations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they called them or Examinations of the words Significations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scholies that is Glosses which they writ at their leisures in their ordinary reading Metaphrases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 delivering the text in other words Paraphrases a
he to hold them to himselfe they to draw them from the Gospell Because saith Chrys the people of Israel who were brought up in Aegypt had polluted themselves with Idolatry would have sacrifices ceremonies so that if they were not permitted unto them they were ready against to fall to Idolatry though God desired a people to worship him in spirit truth yet he granted them unto them dealing as a wise Physitian who having a patient sick of a feaver by reason of heat desiring earnestly cold water and unlesse it be given him he is ready to seek a halter to strangle himselfe or some waies to destroy himself there the Physitian compelled by necessity gives him a cup of water prepared by himselfe and commands him to drinke but forbids him to drinke of any other but that so God gave the Jewes goodly ceremonies but so as it was not lawfull for them to use any other And then were they grieved saith he when he shewed his wrath upon them for making a calfe of their ear-rings c. So in cunning and mischievous policy hath the Church of Rome when they saw how the nature of man was affected with holy things because of the outward meanes when simple and base because the Gospell is such they little regarded them but glorious things were those that affected them therefore have they fallen from the simplicity of the Gospell to that whorish Babylonish pride they are now in when it was with her as Boniface the Bishop and Martyr said to one that asked whether it was lawfull to administer the Sacrament in woodden cups he answered In times past they had golden Priests and woodden Chalices then would they bragge of nothing such a multitude as now when they have woodden Priests and golden Chalices since Pope Vrban hath made all the ministring attire golden and gay and so because they are led by their sences therefore they are violently carried after this superstition This teacheth us Vse 2 why in the Church the meanes of Gods worship his word and table are so little esteemed or regarded because men are so led by their sences and when the meanes are base and simple they thinke so of the worship it selfe as Hierome said putabant altari deesse religionis sanctimoniam quia deerat aedificationis ambitio they thought the Altar was not to be so religiously regarded because it was not richly bedecked and adorned such are they as give no respect to the word because the Minister is of no great respect but a meane plaine man who have not learned more to esteem the earthen vessels for the treasure but lesse to account of the treasure for the earthen vessels Hence many set light by the holy Table because they see nothing here but bare bread and wine very base and meane elements such as they use ordinarily to feed on else where and so as a foole or a naturall if he light on an obligation or a deed he maketh no more reckoning of it then of a piece of parchment a little wax because he understandeth not the contents and end of it So in these things not considering the end and use of them by whom they were appointed As there are some who overvalue these mysteries specially the Sacraments that tye the grace of God inseparably to them and make the opus operatum a matter of sufficient vertue that ascribe some divine power to the very outward elements and so bring a divine adoration of them that of holy mysteries make magicall miracles as the Church of Rome doth so againe are there many in the Church of England that undervalue them that make no other reckoning of them then as of ordinary elements and repaire unto them as to the bodily food because they are in nature and substance the same the Doctrine here being the ground of it they being so dull sighted they can look no further then that which is object to the sence of them they can see no end nor use of them more no secret grace nor vertue in them and that which is worse will not submit themselves to be taught or if taught not believe when oportet discentem credere To teach every one in these actions sursum corda habere Vse 3 and to lift the eyes of his minde upwards as with his bodily eyes he seeth the outward elements here so with the eye of faith to apprehend the matter of it that which these outward things represent to the minde The word of God for letters and syllables is but the same with other humane writings but it hath another manner of worke with it in regard of the spirit and grace of God accompanying it unto those that heare it with a sanctified eare As we see that ordinary water and aqua vitae in a viall or glasse look both alike but they differ much in work and effect because there is a kind of Spirit in the one which is not in the other so the Word and the Sacrament though the same in substance with ordinary Bread and Wine yet they have a farre divers worke and effect with them unto those who receive them with a holy heart and a faithfull in regard of Gods covenant whose seales they are in regard of the mercy of God of which they more assure us in regard of Christs Death that they represent unto us and put us in minde of and in regard of the grace of Gods Spirit that accompaineth them in those that so receive them for the effecting of these former matters VERSE VIII And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice it is not evill and if yee offer the lame and sicke it is not evill offer it now unto thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hostes ANd if you offer the blinde for sacrifice The Lord proceedeth to prove that they despise him and his table shewing how they have erred both against his law and the rule of honesty and comelinesse Levit. 22.21 22. And if you offer the blinde for sacrifice it is not evill These words are read of some by way of interrogation When yee offer the blinde is it not evill Now a negative interrogation ever affirmeth strongly q. d. it is very evill and yet yee doe it Hierom Junius others read these words by way of affirmation God continuing to tax their thoughts you think it not evill you think it is good enough for God you make it no fault and this is the common reading which is more agreable to the context but the matter is not great how we take it both tend to one end and one effect both a disliking disallowing of such sacrifice For the sacrifice here spoken of some understand it only of the sacrifice the Priests offered for themselves Levit. 4.3 Heb. 5.3 Others for the sacrifice the people brought which when they were burnt offerings which were all consumed upon the Altar the Priests nothing regarded but the
by their fruit and practice For when their little love to the assembly of the Church appeareth by their negligent frequenting of them when prayers are made and the word Preached Saint Hierome tels me directly that some thinke they need not the preaching of the Church some not the prayers but thinke they are able enough to instruct themselves of themselves to prevaile with God which riseth commonly either from ignorance or knowledge the ignorance of their infirmities or the knowledge of their graces that makes them not desire the helpes of others as Moses tooke Aaron and Hur with him when he went to pray being privy to his own infirmities This makes them disdain others being puffed up with pride and self conceit To instruct every man be his excellency what it may be Vse 2 to affect and desire the prayers of others of the Ministers and publique congregations and the people of God for besides that God is in a speciall manner there present the caue why David and his men so desired the Temple Psal 84.1 3 7. So men in desiring them shew themselves to delight in the presence of God as gracious children in beholding the face of their father there is much profit to be had by them Non parvus est fructus domine ut à multis tibi gratiae aguntur de nobis à multis regeris pro nobis August confess 10.4 The benefit is not small O Lord that thou shouldest bee praysed by many of us and prayed unto by many for us For a man shall have not only the benefit of the prayers of one or two but many hundreds and if one faithfull prayer prevaile much Jam. 5. how much more many Thus shall he enjoy the communion of Saints which is a worthy thing so shall he better increase in the graces blessings received and keep that he hath for the best here and the most perfect must not imagine himselfe to bee already a burning and shining light within the house of heaven Sic ardens lucens nondum in domo se esse confidat ubi sine omni timore ventorum accensum lumen deportatur sed meminerit se esse sub dio utrague manu studeat operire quod portat nec credat aeri etiamsi videat esse tranquillum Repentè enim hora quae non putaverit mutabitur si vel modicum manus remiserit lumen extinguetur Bern. ser 3. in vigil nat Dom. l. where once kindled there is no danger of any winds to blow it out but must remember that he is yet in the open ayre and must cover and defend the light he carries with both hands nor be confident though the ayre seeme to bee calme for sooner then he is aware if he take away his hand his light may be pussed out saith Saint Bernard If the prayers of living Saints bee so needfull and profitable Quest whose prayers we may desire and intreat why not also of dead Saints why may not their prayers be profitable to us and we desire them How profitable soever their prayers may be to us Answ and how certaine soever it may be that they doe pray for us as some think with Bernard ser 2. in vigi Nat. Dom. that Apocal. 6.10 doth prove it because of the anser vers 11. yet to desire their prayers as those who are living is not lawfull because it is without precept or president in the Scripture because it is agains reason and the Scripture For first that they know not what we doe nor heare our prayers is manifest Isaiah 63.16 againe how should they come to the knowledge of them they in Heaven we in Earth and dispersed in many severall places As for the answer of the Rhemists out of Hierome against Vigilantius that they are in every place because they must follow the Lambe withersoever he goeth Revel 14.4 if the place be understood of them who imitate Christ upon earth and not of the soules departed as it may be at least it must bee unstood of all the lect whereof part are in the Church in the earth then the conclusion must be they who are upon earth must be every where as well as they who are in heaven which is most absurd But admit it of the Saints in heaven how is it possible they should be every where Not at one and the same instant they say but such is their motion speed and agaility to be where they list and their power and will is answerable as ell as the devill can be every where to worke mischiefe To which I answer that their comparison is absurd for the Devils by propriety of nature and the Lords permission have such passage in the wold So have not the soules of the Saints for they are appointed by God to rest Revel 6.11 and 14.13 What rest if they must be tossed up and downe by the breaths of men sometime in England sometime in France c But say they did how were it possible they should heare the prayers of all that call upon them at one and the same instant if they be not in many severall places at one and the same instant And if it be impossible the prayers must needs be vaine Besides if it were not yet in that which Papists give their reason for it is made more abhominable that is to make way for themselves to the favour of God even as by Nobles and great men we procure accesse to the King Numquid tam demens est aliquis c. Is there any so mad saith Ambrose in Epist ad Rom. cap. 1. or so carelesse of his life that he will give the honour of the King to a Noble man to procure him accesse to him when he shall be guilty of treason when hee commeth before him And yet they thinke they are not guilty of treason to God who under pretence of seeking God by Saints doe give unto the Creatures the honour of God the Creator and forsaking the Lord worship their fellow-servants And though there be saith he some reason why they should make way to a King by his Nobles and Pensioners because hee is a man and knows not who are fit to be trusted with the Common-wealth yet unto the Lord who knows all things and knows the worths and worthinesse of men there needs no spokes-man but onely a holy mind Thus farre he But to adde to him that this thing is without precept in Old or New Testament confessed by themselves Eccius grants not in the Old because the Fathers were then in limbo a good reason against him and the Israelites were marvellous prone to Idolatry Not in the New lest the Gentiles should returne to their Idolatry and lest the Apostles should be too vaine-glorious and ambitious if they had commanded it and so a great difference and strong reason why we may pray to Saints living but not to Saints departed Fur us He separates not himselfe from this Church for all the corruption
my body for the sinne of my soule when they could not endure what is told them Verse 8. hee hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee surely to doe justly and to love mercy and to humble thy self to walke with thy God Any thing but that they should doe they pretend to be willing to doe like children who like any manner of education but that their parents would bring them up in If in a trade oh if they might follow their book any thing but that they should and their Parents would have So with these they know not or will not know their owne heart which is naturally irreligious and never will like that is commanded but would goe a whoring with their owne imaginations and ever will like that they may not have or will not be accepted when they contemne that they have and not respecting these they cannot but contemne that is otherwise enjoyned as Luke 16.30 31. he said Nay father Abraham but if one come unto them from the dead they will amend their lives Then he said unto him if they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rise from the dead againe They are like to a woman to whom one making love and desiring her person she disliking his answers him she will give him any thing but her selfe her riches jewels bracelets and such like onely to put him off because she sees he desires her person onely and the other if he would desire she would soone deny him To teach us how wee ought now with all diligence and frequency performe these Vse 3 and offer these sacrifices more than they these were common to us and them they were burdened with others of which we are eased which were chargeable and toylesome Acts 15.10 As 2 Kings 5.13 it was with Namaan his servants came and spake unto him and said Father if the Prophet had commanded thee a great thing wouldest thou not have done it how much rather then when hee saith to thee Wash and be cleane So say I if he had laid that burden also upon us ought we not to have done both how much more when he hath eased our shoulders And if we should not how should we be justly condemned of unthankfulnesse The Wife that newly married had a wise and strait Husband knowing her frailty and infirmities and therefore set a watch over her and appointed servants to observe her till her affection and faith were setled when she ought and did honour and obey and love him If he free her from them and set her at liberty from that grievous bondage and tedious thing will she then honour him the lesse Questionlesse she ought not but if she doe as the corruption of all is to waxe worse by liberty then is she condemned of unthankfulnesse the more So 't is with us Incense The worship prayers and service of the Gentiles is resembled by this not onely familiarly to shew to them of that age but to teach that their service works and worship is acceptable unto God as such things are acceptable to the smell and sences of men for in them God tooke no delight at all neither could doe his nature being spirituall The works of Gods children Doctrine their worship service and spirituall sacrifice is delightfull and acceptable to him as sweet perfumes are to the smell of men And a pure offering It is opposed to the Jewes sinnes who offered unto God polluted and unperfect sacrifices not such as they ought and such as were according to the Law But now their offering shall be pure The works actions Doctrine and worship of such are truely called and converted are holy and pure Thus prophesieth Malachy that the Gentiles converted unto God their workes and worship of him shall be a pure offering Thus St. Paul speakes of the offering of the Romans Chap. 12.1 that it is holy Jude calls their faith most holy vers 20. There were a few in Sardi truely religious and converted their garments were undefiled Revel 3.4 Because they are done according to his Word Reas 1 now they walke by that rule things before they did at randome now they know his Will and after that they doe And it is a rule that worship performed according to the Word in themselves are good and pure as the sacrifices which were according to the Law were pure and cleane for the matter of them Because the parties are holy they are a holy Priesthood Reas 2 1 Pet. 2.5 now a good thing done in matter by holy men must needs be holy But how can they be holy when there is eadem ratio totius partis And the Church for spots is compared to the Moon Object Cant. 6.9 This is answered that he is so because he is in Christ Answ and hath his righteousnesse imputed to him both to his person and his obedience 1 Cor. 1.30 non radiis solaribus sed ipso sole amictus Revel 12.1 as the Church is said to be cloathed with the Sunne Hebr. 13.15 1 Pet. 2.5 Thirdly because of his inward sanctification Reas 3 the ground of it the party being regenerated by the works of the Spirit and so every action is in him part holy and good and well pleasing to God as comming and proceeding from his Spirit though having a tang and tast of his infirmities as water passing through a pipe or channell Rom. 8.26 and 15.16 This teacheth what to judge of the works and worship of all that are uncalled and unconverted Vse 2 not onely of Heathen and Infidels but of unbeleevers in the Church they must needs be impure and unholy else were it nothing that is here affirmed of these after their calling And indeed needs must it be for Tit. 1.15 Vnto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled So farre is it that they should be merita praeparatoria as some Papists speake of them for unholy things cannot please him lesse procure or deserve good things from him though they doe the things for matter good yet a good thing is oftentimes marred in the handling and more when they are done by some men and such men Secondly Vse 2 this proves that mens callings are free without deserts when the things that they doe before even their best are impure and unholy such as God shewed his great patience in that he did not confound them for them and more the riches of his mercy that for all them yet he called them This comforteth every one that is truely converted unto God Vse 3 his works and worship is pure and holy and so accepted of God even then when he carryeth the body of sinne about with him Rom. 7.21 when in himselfe he finds many infirmities yea and when his heart tells him that his best work is not without the taint of his corruption yea and when his heart may misdeeme him as Jacobs did
under poore Christ which they had not under wealthy Satan they are rich in the Church who were beggers in the world And in another Epistle Contrary to all mens opinions they dye very rich who lived under a profession of poverty To overthrow the carnall conceit of naturall men Vse 2 who live in their sinnes in their impenitency and thinke by almes and some such things or outward works to satisfie God for other sinnes and often for those sinnes by which they got them Many men when they spend the whole weeke in sinne thinke to make amends for all by acting some outward worke of his service on the Lords day and thinke that their outward and customable serving of God in the morning and evening pro forma tantùm should satisfie for the sinnes of the rest of the day And many when they have spent all their life in sinne thinke by some doale or some gift to satisfie for all the rest that the Ministers can speak more of their gifts than of their sorrow and repentance As one saith sperans aut placaturum pro peccatis aut placiturum non obstante peccato But to such I say as Prov. 21.27 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind They shall finde they have trusted to a broken reed To teach every man not to let naturall reason deceive him Vse 3 to make him to trust to any such naturall or worldly meanes thereby to reconcile God to him or to appease him these things can no more doe it than oyle will quench the fire such a consuming fire is God that these will rather kindle his wrath And if he be deceived that would thinke to quench fire by that then must he needs be that shall think by this which is matter for the wrath of God he should learne to know that those outward things are not the most acceptable sacrifice to God That which is acceptable is Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a contrite spirit a contrite and a broken heart O God thou wilt not despise He that receiveth this from God may have comfort that God will accept him as a Physitian that directs a man to the onely restorative Daniel 4.24 Object Sol. Redeeme thy sinnes by Almesdeeds It is answered by some that by sinnes is here understood the punishments of sinne and they think that works proceeding from faith prevaile not a little with God to lessen and mitigate temporall punishments But it is not like seeing he spoke to such a King who could not worke any thing by faith at all But the word is not here redeeme but breake off If it were properly so taken then might men not onely redeeme the punishment of their sinne but the sinne it selfe which opinion is not held Againe if it be a redemption it is not to be made before God but in recompence to those whom he hath hindered and the Prophet speaks not here of the forgivenesse of sinnes as the old Latine Forsan ignoscet Deus but of the prolonging of his peace and prosperity as Tremellius hath it Finally the words are breake off turning from wicked wayes and seeking Gods will and whereas thou hast beene an oppressour of the poore and an afflicter of men in misery shew thy repentance by dealing mercifully with the oppressed and having compassion on them as Zacheus Luk. 19.8 VERSE XIIII But cursed be the deceiver which hath in his flock a Male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great King saith the Lord of Hostes and my Name is terrible among the Heathen BVt cursed be the deceiver In this is contained the last judgment against this people and it is positive as before hee had threatned the taking away of their goods so here to inflict some punishment upon them And in this we observe first the judgment secondly the sinne thirdly reasons whereby they may be perswaded the judgment shall come if they repent not themselves of their sinnes and performe their vowes But cursed As woes in the Scripture Matth. 24. and Isaiah 5. and other where are two-fold so are curses First temporall sending of outward evills Deut. 28.15 16 17 20 21 22. or turning of good things to hurt Psal 109.7 and 69.22 Secondly spirituall most fearefull Rom. 1.28 Matth. 27.5 2 Thes 2.10 11. The deceiver The sinne is generall thus expressing the nature of an Hypocrite that he is a deceiver one that carryeth himselfe craftily who casts and fetcheth about in his mind how he may deceive both God and man and who deals craftily with the Lord. Who voweth a Male. The particular sinne vowing and not paying when he is able to performe having a Male that is one without blemish such as the Law required Here is thought to be Epitheti Eclipsis as in Isaiah 1.18 wooll for white wooll But some understand by Male a perfect and absolute offering the use of the word being such in divers Authors Now the vow here spoken of is either the generall vow of their Circumcision or else their particular when willingly they vowed a thing being not tyed unto it by any Law and dealt deceitfully in that which should make it the greater sinne And sacrifice a corrupt thing a weake and feeble so a corrupt thing as it were repenting of their vow they bring unto him a corrupt vitious and unlawfull sacrifice The Lord is able Doctrine and will not onely withdraw good things from men that dishonour him and live profanely and wickedly but will inflict much evill upon them and punish them with all kind and variety of curses As here so 2 Chron. 7.13 Deut. 28.16 60 61. This he shewed in Ely 1 Sam. 2.8 c. and 2.12 13. In David 2 Sam. 7. In Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4.30 The tryalls of Job shew what he can doe when he will punish Because in blessing he can deale thus Reas 1 not onely take away the evill but showre downe many blessings upon them so in cursing for these are the two armes of God his mercy and justice neither is shorter nor longer than the other unlesse he be unperfect these are his treasures or he hath treasures of both neither fuller nor emptier than the other Because he is a true God Reas 2 and so infinite in all things he is not as the false gods of the Heathen who had little even their great god Jupiter who they thought would be soone drawne dry if he should punish much and many if send abroad apace his revenging arrows his quiver would be empty not so with God whose mercy is a treasure inexhaustible so his justice not as the Sea but as the fire the Sunne Chrysost Because it more manifests his displeasure Reas 3 and men are more sensible of it to be humbled by it either in truth or hypocrisie To stand in awe Vse 1 and feare God to feare to displease or provoke him who cannot onely take from us that we
prophecied of two in this verse Famine and Reproach Thus hath God decreed to punish those but before he will execute he makes it knowne to the Prophet and tells him what he will doe When the Lord purposeth to bring a judgement upon his people Doctrine 1 he communicates his counsels with his Prophets and Ministers I will corrupt your seed The first judgement in this verse is Famine for the seed corrupted that it can bring forth no fruit must make that must cause famine For the iniquities of a land and people Doctrine 2 the Lord will lay dearth and famine upon them even for their sin and for this in speciall for contempt of his Worship and Word So here and 2 Chron. 7.13.14 Levit. 26.19 20. Psal 107.34 Ezech. 5.16.17 Amos 4.4.5.6 8.8.13 Because this Reason 1 when many other things prevails not is a meanes to make men retire and returne to God by repentance As the instance in the prodigall son Luke 15.16.17 Because as S. Chrysostome speaks Reason 2 Indigni sunt uti creaturis Deum glorificantibus ipsum blasphemantes quoniam filius contumelia patrem afficiens servorum ministerio fungi non est dignus Chrysost Hom. 25. ad pop Antioch they who blaspheme God deserve not the use of those creatures which glorifie him because the son which reproaches his father is unworthy of the ministery of servants Because it is just with God to starve their bodies Reason 3 who by the contempt of the word starve their owne souls as Haggai 1.4 God called for a famine upon the people because they contemned his house and decked their owne So in this the soule being his perpetuall house where he would dwell for ever and their bodies their owne clay houses and momentarie To informe mens judgements Vse 2 who when such judgements are upon them to ascribe them to second causes as to the winde and weather to the disposition of heavens and earth or to the crueltie of men in hoording up and making a dearth as the sick often imputeth his disease to his meat or bad diet or taking the cold such like and never to their sins as the cause of it these may be the means and so thought of and as in health and prosperity there is somewhat to be given to them as means so in this But the principall is their sins thus provoking God thus shutting heaven and opening it against them either by drouth making a dearth as in Judea or by moisture making a famine as in England or howsoever else it comes yet the cause of it is mans sins the imquities of the people out of the Church sins against honesty and the second Table and in the Church both those and sins against the first Table contempt of Gods Worship and Word To teach us in our land and time what we may expect Vse 2 as by the course of Gods dealing adding famine to pestilence before he bring the sword and other destructions As Princes do with rebels in a walled towne or intrenched in a fence cut off their provision and victuals to make them yeeld so the sins of the time abounding as it was prophesied of the latter times and the contempt of the word being marvellous great amongst us even among all sorts of all degrees If it was just with God for sending a famine upon Israel three yeares yeare after yeare for breaking their faith with the Gibeonites and not regarding their word they had passed to them 2 Sam. 21.1 what will it be with God to send it so upon us who have so often broken faith with him and contemned his Word and his Promise Are not they unworthy of the creatures of God which glorifie him not in their places who do daily blaspheme his Name and Word and make it to be evill spoken of Are such sons as contemne their father and regard not his word and command unworthy of the help of any of his servants Let us sit as Judges in the generall and we will give sentence against others that it is so To us Nathan the Prophet speaketh We are the men Therefore what expect we else nay what can we expect better And if we have not been bettered by Gods hand as Dauid called the pestilence It is better we fall into the mercie of insensible creatures then into the crueltie of unreasonable men To direct men when they are under such a judgement Vse 3 God sends cleannesse of teeth and scarcenesse of bread not to quarrell with the meanes and complaine of this and that but for a man to quarrell with his owne sinnes and consult not with flesh and bloud which will make him accuse the meanes but with the Oracle of God which will make him accuse himselfe and let him see where the sinne is that it may be reproved and he humbled and the land cured David tooke this course though it was long before he did it to enquire of the Lord the cause of their famine in the end of the third yeare and understanding why it was and that the satisfying of the Gibeonites I will corrupt The word signifies to rebuke i. I will with a word of my mouth destroy it God is able with his bare Word to bring judgement and destruction upon a whole land and people Doctrine if he but speake the word they shall soon come to naught and perish he that is powerfull in the voyce of the people by the sound of Rams hornes to the overthrowing of the walls of Jericho Joshua 6. can be powerfull by his owne word to overthrow whom he will Or thus it is as easie for the Lord to punish and destroy men as it is for man to speak a word Jer. 18.6.7 Psa 104.29 Because he made all things with ease Reason 1 and with his own word Gen. 1. Now it is a farre lesser thing to destroy thousands then to make one A man can more easily overthrow whole Cities in shorter time then build one house sooner sinke a Navie then make one ship Because he is Lord over all Reason 2 and hath all creatures at his command being Lord of hoasts Now how easie it is for Princes to destroy their enemies or those they hate and are displeased withall when they are of a great command To teach men not to rely Vse 1 or put confidence in man or any creature There is in it selfe that which might keep men from it being well thought of and considered because they are in themselves mortall and mutable very uncertaine and deceitfull but more when this comes to be considered that God can so easily destroy them with a word or blowing upon them which to trust and put confidence in them will certainly procure him to do and which done will make a man marvellously ashamed that he hath put any confidence in them To let us see the fearfull condition Vse 2 and the danger wherein they stand who live by reason of their corruptions and iniquities out of the
corrupt affections then theirs which know not Now the knowledge here spoken of is of two things of their dutie and what they ought to do and of their dignity and what God had bestowed upon them And both makes their sinne the greater because they have gone against their owne knowledge and Gods kindnesse That though God had bestowed great blessings upon them they had forgot it though they knew it and were unthankfull unto him Unthankfulnesse is a sinne Doctrine 2 when men do not answer Gods love as he hath had care and dealt liberally with them vide Chap. 1. verse 2. I send this commandment unto you that my covenant might stand They must performe that is their parts or else he would performe no covenant with them God will not Doctrine 3 neither is bound to performe covenant with man to give him any thing he hath promised whether spirituall or temporall of this life or that is to come unlesse he performe his covenant and conditions The covenant of God is either generall or speciall The generall either legall or Evangelicall All which requires the conditions to be performed on mans part if he would have God performe or else c. Levit. 18.5 Gal. 3.11 Mark 16.16 1 Sam. 2.30 2 Chron. 15.2 Because their not performing Reason 1 frees him from his promise and binds him not to performe it to give such good things to such unworthy fedifragies covenant breakers not to give as it were the childrens bread to dogs When they performe Reason 2 he will because he is most faithfull that hath promised and can neither lye nor deceive he being true and Truth it selfe Rom. 3.3.4 Object For what though some did not beleeve shall their unbeliefe make the faith of God without effect God forbid yea let God be true and every man a lyer as it is written That thou mightest be justified in thy words and overcome when thou art judged Then will he performe when man doth not That will not follow from this Answer which is manifest thus The Apostle asketh the question Whereas many of the Jewes were unfaithfull and covenant breakers whether their infidelity should abrogate and make void the covenant of God that he should shew no fruit of it among them and as man should break his promise and performe to none that which was promised to all He answereth that cannot be but howsoever the greater part of them had broken covenant with whom he might justly breake and would yet his covenant should have his full force and efficacie though not in all yet in the Nation because there was ever some good men among that people who believed the promises and lived uncorruptly and holily therefore in them and to them should that be performed which was promised Shewing that the wickednesse of a multitude shall not make the promise of God void and of none effect but he will perform them to the beleevers and they who performe conditions though they be but a very few And so the place makes for the point not against it Many enjoy Gods blessings Object and never perform the condition but live wickedly and prophanely They enjoy not the blessing of eternity Answer neither ever shall and as for temporall things they may enjoy them but not any blessing by them it were better for them to be without them for they increase their sinne and are but fed and sustained by them for the slaughter as the damned are by Gods power to endure his wrath and punishment If in our observation we finde Vse 1 that many promises God hath made are not performed to our selves or others As there are many other things which may be answered for clearing and acquitting the truth and fidelity of God in this kinde especially in temporall things he gives spirituall an ounce of which is better then many a pound of the other And if he breaks not that promiseth silver and gives the greater summe in gold so not God If he promise deliverance and gives patience under the crosse which is better for the sufferer he still performes because such things had those exceptions And so in many other things but this especially when the good things promised are not performed the cause is in our selves and other men why they are not performed and not in God because we performe not conditions And this being makes us not him covenant-breakers who have made our selves uncapable and unworthy of his blessings and so have freed him from his promise by our breaking with him Now he that is freed cannot breake covenant though he do not the thing before covenanted To let us see the folly of those men who thinke to have Gods promises performed unto them Vse 2 and him to keep covenant with them and in many things makeno doubt but he hath done and in future times assure themselves he will when they neither have done nor yet endevour to keep any covenant with him If the former be true do they not deceive themselves and are they not though how wise soever in other things yet in this stark fools For if he be a foole that because he hath the word or the bond of a good man one able and that never broke for the payment of a thousand pounds at such a time and such a place but upon condition he performe such a service or effect such a worke to lay his whole state and his whole condition upon thta that it will be performed in the same time and place and yet he never go about to perform the conditions at all or as it should be performed were he not a foole Sure in all your judgements he were very unwise And yet alas how many fools and unwise men have we who deale thus lay all upon Gods fidelitie and performe nothing themselves at all As if God must needs performe because he had promised and could not be faithfull unlesse he did perform when they keep no condition Many a man deluded by Satan and his owne secure heart perswades himselfe God hath been mercifull unto him and forgiven him his sins though he never came truly to see sinne nor to sorrow for sinne nor forsake and reforme his corruptions wherein true repentance consisteth and which is the condition on mans part if ever he would have God take away his sinne and put them out of his remembrance Many one thinkes God had performed his covenant of temporall things because he is in the middest of abundance and hath his barnes full and his bagges full and every where findes he increaseth though he never made any conscience of his wayes and the workes of God but at best lived but civilly and kept his credit with men and sees not that he is deceived sees that these are but things that are common things wherewith he is but fatted for the shambles and such as are reserved for his evill And for time to come many doubt not but they shall obtaine great things in this life and that God will
Covenant is here amplified by the parts of the Covenant First on Gods part which is double a Gratious promise of life and peace and a faithfull performance My Covenant was with him of life and peace That is I covenanted with him and tooke him into favour and made a league and agreement with him and by my covenant I bound my selfe to give him first life that is length of dayes here on earth Saint Hieroms opinion of the life of grace here and of glory hereafter is not greatly probable hardly any instance of the like interpretation and that peace following after not so to be understood of spirituall peace but of an outward prosperity in this life and so they who incline to Hierom in the former understand it And it must needs be according to that which is Numb 25.12.13 Wherefore say to him Behold I give unto him my covenant of peace and he shall have it and his seed after him even the covenant of the Priests office for ever because he was zealous for his God and hath made an attonement for the children of Israel For the covenant of peace is expounded by the perpetuall Priesthood And in other places the branches of this covenant are set downe in the abundance of outward things by the offering and other means both to the Priests Numb 18.8 ad 20.26.30 and for the Levites Numb 18.21.24.31 And I gave them him Gods performance As I promised him these things so I did very certainly and assuredly perform to Aaron and Phineas and others who did performe conditions and covenant with me and will do to as many as shall so deal also with me For my feare Now he comes to the second containing the conditions performed by Levi and these are the fear of God and humilitie Some read it I gave him my fear which is true and agrees well with the doctrine of faith for the feare of God is the gift of God Jer. 32.40 but the words are otherwise I gave him these for the feare wherewith he feared me Because he beleeved my word and honoured me in his place and lookt to my worship in himselfe and others I honoured him and gave him these things And was afraid before my Name Iunius readeth it He was destroyed for my Name i. for not honouring my Name Numb 20.12.24.28 But the whole speech here is against it for he intending to set forth the care which Aaron and his sonnes had of the worship of God and to commend him rather then tax his infirmities It is rather he was humbled before me he walked humbly and lowly and did all in humility not lifting up himselfe either for his high calling or for his faithfull service The parts of the covenant which is the Priests dignity And first on Gods part and first his promise Long life and the length of dayes is the blessing and gift of God Doctrine that which he promiseth and performeth to all those who feare him and walke in his wayes Prov. 10.27 The feare of the Lord increaseth the dayes but the yeares of the wicked shall be diminished and 16.31 Exod. 20.12 Deuter. 25.45 1 Kings 3.14 And if thou wilt walke in my wayes to keepe mine ordinances and my commandments as thy father David did walke I will prolong thy dayes Psal 91.16 Because God will be glorified by his in this life Reason 1 as the Psalmist I will not dye but live and declare the workes of the Lord. Now the longer they live the more they may glorifie God then it is a blessing Because it is a blessing to helpe many Reason 2 and to draw many unto God in this life but that is done by living long seeing it is so long before a man comes to be able to doe either many of his yeares and dayes spent before he be fit for it But many of the children of God dye untimely Object and live not long how then is this true This is not simply a blessing Answer as if he were happy that lives long but as a symbole or signe of Gods good favour and love If then he shewes his love to some rather by taking them out of this life then by prolonging their daies he doth the rather performe his promife then breake it A man promiseth ten acres of ground in one field and gives him an hundreth in another he hath not broken his promise So if God have promised long life that is an hundred yeares here and after not give it him but gives him eternity in the heavens hath not broken his promise for it being not promised as a blessed and happy thing in it selfe but as a signe of his good will which is greater sometimes to be taken out of this life As Ieroboams good sonne was that he might not be infected with the sinnes of his fathers house and not afflicted with the sight of those horrible judgements that were to fall upon that gracelesse family which was no ill bargaine to be taken from earth to heaven from the conflict to the triumph from the battell to the victory from men to God and to the company of his Angells and Saints This is to admonish old men to be thankefull unto God for his mercy in preserving them so long Vse 1 and lengthening their dayes specially if they have beene found in the way of righteousnesse Prov. 16.31 If they have feared God and walked uprightly and humbly before him it hath beene his blessing upon them and mercy to them otherwise it hath beene but a curse unto them for they have but lived to heape up wrath against the day of wrath and to make up a greater measure of their sinnes that God may make a greater measure of vengeance So that it had beene better for them never to have beene borne or else to have dyed so soone as they were borne for the longer they live the more sinnes they commit and the greater shall be their torments But greater shall be his glory that is found in the way of righteousnesse and in wel-doing because he hath more glorified God And he ought still to use this as a blessing of God that he may glorifie him more and fit himselfe more for him and for his service imagining that as old age is a blessing so is it a bond that he should performe as Psa 71.17 18. O God thou hast taught me from my youth even untill now therefore will I tell of thy wonddrous workes Yea even unto mine old age and gray head O God forsake me not untill I have declared thine arme unto this generation and thy power to all them that shall come And if he have borne it in his youth it will be lesse burdensome in his old age for to others it is heavy Then is it lawfull for a man to pray for long life Vse 2 that he may live to glorifie God here so did David Psalm 102.27 so Hezekiah Isaiah 38.3 True it is that a Christian man should be equally prepared to life or
deep mysteries First children must be taught letters then sillables after words then construction and after all the matter So is it here This teacheth the Minister of God how diligent he ought to be Vse 2 both in his private state and publicke preaching both to finde out the whole will and counsell of God and to deliver it to his people he must exercise himselfe in diligent reading of the Scriptures and comparing of spirituall things with spirituall as Daniel did Chap. 9.2 his time must not be spent in hunting after profits and preferments not in idlenesse pleasures and pastimes more than such recreation as is helpfull to make him fit in body and minde for his Ministery Ars is longa and vita is brevis therefore had he not need to lose no more time then needes must but spend it so as that the Scripture may dwell in him by which he may be made perfect to his workes 2 Tim. 3.17 Then must he be instant to teach it cap. 4.2 To deliver the whole counsell of God But no man knowes the whole counsell of God how can he deliver it to others and many have not life and time to deliver it If any man know it not by his owne fault not searching for it not studying and endevouring it will not excuse him but condemne him the more If God hide something from him it is without doubt such a thing as is not so profitable to be knowne or taught and not required of him If God shorten his dayes and that in the first yeare or second of his Ministery there is no more required of him then he can performe so the default be not his To teach the hearers that they must endevour by diligent hearing Vse 3 to know from the Ministers the whole law of God the whole counsell of God for therefore must the one teach that the other may receive it For he would not have it delivered onely because it should be spoken but that it should be learned and received If any say they are not able to conceive and are not capable of it I answere their children at first are not capable of all the learning the School-master can teach them yet at length and by successe and progresse he learnes as much as he can teach him and is fit for a higher Schoole So may it be with them The wit and capacity of man is compared by one to the wombe of a woman which at the first is not able to containe the infant if it were at first conception as perfect for quantity as when it is borne but as parts are added to parts so is it enlarged so they when Christ is formed in them And there was no iniquity found in his lips The second commendable part in them they never taught errour nor deceived his people with lies The Minister of God must not corrupt the doctrine of religion Doctrine nor teach any errour unto his people whether touching knowledge or obedience in matter of doctrine or manners If it was Aarons commendations it is others commandment Hence are the reproofes Isa 3.12 Jer. 23.13.16 Ezek. 13.10.14 Acts 20.29.30 2 Cor. 2.17 Gal. 1.8 Jude vers 13. Because when he exhorteth and perswadeth Reason 1 he may the better be beleeved and prevaile For the case is here as in common affaires once taken in a lie hardly beleeved afterwards so once in an errour and uncertaine in his judgement hardly beleeved again and things before and after will be doubted of Because he being a guide of others a leader of the blinde Reason 2 it is not with him as with another a private man whose errour may live and die with himselfe but it is the hurt of many even so many as are led by him who are readier to wander with him then to walk in the right way after him This sheweth how farre the Priests of Popery are from being true and commendable Priests before the Lord Vse 1 who deliver nothing but lies unto their people For as they have turned the truth of God into a lie hardly holding any one point of the truth truly and uncorrupt but having falsified all the truth of God so that which they specially preach unto the people are lying legends the false reports of lying and false Saints their lying miracles of foolish childish ridiculous impossible things that were done by them That Paul said of the Cretians Tit 1.12 so I may truly of them It were infinite and unprofitable to enter particulars This one thing may sufficiently prove that they have no meaning the people should be taught the truth seeing it is manifest they forbid their Priests to read such things as they may understand the truth by to teach the people or to see more of the truth then ordinary men do For there was an inhibition by his Holinesse that no Priest should be allowed to read Bellarmine because he hath more truly set down the truth as we hold and more largely then others have done therfore none may read him without speciall licence lest they should see the truth and none must be licenced but such as are sufficient grounded Priests that there is no fear they should receive any tincture of the truth being such obstinate heretickes already He walked with me in peace and equity The third thing commended in him his sincere faithfull and upright walking in his place and calling The Minister of God ought to walke with God in peace and equitie Doctrine that is to have his conversation so holy faithfull religious and godly that it might be pleasing and acceptable to God and give him no cause of quarrelling and contending with him Commended here So Mat. 5.15.16 1 Tim. 4.12 Tit. 2.7 1 Pet. 5.3 The reproofs of all of corrupt lives and conversation in the old and new Testament prove this Because they are ever to be neer unto the Lord his remembrancers for his people Reason 1 Now they who must live ever with him and should intreat him for others they had need be such as he will like of and approve They who are ever in Princes Courts nigh them ought to be clad in white and fine apparrell they who must commend the suites of others had need be in favour and liking themselves Because they must deliver his will to his people Reason 2 preach his word and performe his ordinance which lest they should make to be abhorred for their corruptions as queasie and full stomackes will do meat for the sluttishnesse of the Cook and many the gifts of Princes if the bringers be leprous or have the pest As the people abhorred the sacrifice because of the wickednesse of Elies sonnes To reprove the Priests of Popery Vse 1 who impropriate unto themselves to be the onely Priests and Ministers of God To which we may have enough to say out of Bellarmines defence of Iohn 23. lib. 4. de Pont. Rom. cap. 14. He was accused in the councell of Constance for denying the resurrection of the
labour and so to walke that by the blessing of God upon his endeavours many may be gained to God out of the bondage of sin and Satan be called and converted unto God This is given unto the Word Psal 19.7 in the Ministers preaching of it Rom. 10.14 Isai 49.5 Ezek. 3 17 c. and 33.7 c. Matth. 28.19 Acts 18.9.10 2 Tim. 2.24.25.26 Because he shall be free from their bloud and perishing Reason 1 not onely if he convert but if he so labour as they may be converted though they never be for it not being in his power to work upon the heart and to alter it if he do what he can by all meanes to the outward man he is free else he must be culpable and guilty of his perishing If in Ezekiels parable Chap. 33. a watchman set up of themselves shall answer for their bodies if they perish for want of warning what shall he do that is set up of God Because if God do make his labour effectuall Reason 2 his honour shall be the more I cannot say as Chrysost Non minus praemii if hee come without them he shall not lose his labour but lesse sure because of that Dan. 12.3 And they that bee wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for ever and ever This reproveth and condemneth all Preachers and Ministers Vse 1 who do not labour so in doctrine and live so in practise that men may be converted to God from iniquity but by negligence and corruption suffer men to remaine still in their sinnes yea harden them in their iniquities They are farre from their dutie and farre unlike to these Priests who were thus approved and commended of God To teach all Ministers so to preach Vse 2 and so to live that they may convert men to God and turne them from iniquity They must exhort improve and rebuke with all meeknesse long-suffering constancie and courage that there may be nothing wanting in them why they should not be turned This is his dutie and he that is a Priest and rebukes not delinquents he forsakes the office of a Priest In the doing of it faithfully he may well expect a blessing from God because of that Isaiah 55.10.11 Surely as the raine commeth downe and the snow from heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it to bring forth and bud that it might give seed to the sower and bread to him that eateth so shal my word be that goeth out of my mouth it shall not returne unto me void but it shall accomplish that which I will and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I send it And if he doe waste himselfe hazard his life and spend his strength and gain but one or few it will be the recompence of his labour The Captaine that redeems and recovers but one captive whose freedome is desired by his Prince shall not lose his reward though he shall have greater that recovers more So in this Dan. 12.3 And if God do not blesse his labours yet if he be not wanting in his dutie care and endeavour but be found wise and faithfull he shall be rewarded Isai 49.5 And now saith the Lord that formed me from the womb to be his servant that I may bring Iacob again to him though Israel be not gathered yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and my God shall be my strength This may teach us why the Ministery of the Word Vse 3 and the Ministers of it are so harsh and so unacceptable unto most men if they be faithfull and will seeke by all means to convert men to God because they must turne them from their sin separate them and their iniquities which they love so dearly as Micha 6.7 Sin is either naturall or by custome or both naturall diseases are almost incurable and no lesse diseases that grow into a custome which is another nature And the Physitian that should go about to cure these against a mans will should have little thanke for his paines and be not greatly welcome when such things cannot be removed without most sharp and bitter medicines great paine and griefe So in this And here is the cause why many a mans ministery at the first comming to a place is very acceptable for a while because he speakes things good and wholesome but somewhat generally because he knowes not the state of his flocke and people but after he hath lived some yeares and sees their sinnes and begins to speake home unto them then is he unacceptable because he would part them and their sins As that Minister that should perswade a divorce betwixt a man his wife which he loves most dearly should never be welcome to his house or company so in this It may be it is but the same he hath often spoke of before but then it was borne because they probably conjectured he meant not them but when he hath been a while with them that it is like he may know them to be guilty of that sinne though happily and ten to one he did not then is it tolerable because they thinke he would separate them and their beloved sinne their profitable and delightfull sinne All the while he will preach peace and comfortable things to them and bring the word of reconciliation and tell them of Gods love and Gods mercie and that he is sent to wooe them to be married to God all that while he shall be kindly welcome As he that should sue for a Prince to win the love of a woman to him all the while he tells of his honour and riches and beauty and such things he shall be kindly welcome but if he come to tell her that she must separate her selfe from some place and company she loves well and change her manners and forsake her friends and fathers house he shall finde his entertainment both for usage and countenance changed So in this Which makes oftentimes Ministers if they be not the more faithfull grow cold and carelesse and so fall into many grievous sins And turne many from iniquity In themselves and of themselves by nature they were in iniquity carnall and sold under sinne Rom. 7. till the Minister by the word brings them out of it and turnes them to God from sinne and makes them his No man naturally is Gods but a slave to sinne and Satan Doctrine 1 till he be turned and converted by the preaching of the Word and work of the Ministerie Turne from iniquity Their conversion to God Doctrine 2 and their calling is thus noted By turning from iniquitie To note this unto us Those who are truly called and converted are turned from their sinne and corruption that is washed cleansed and purged from them 1 Cor. 6.11 VERS VII For the Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seek the law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of
doctrine There may be an ordinary and externall succession of place and person without succession of faith and truth of doctrine Doctrine Manifest here in these Priests who held the places and did ordinarily succeed the Priests who were specially approved of God yet did not succeed them in faith and in soundnesse of truth And as it was in the times before often a succession of the one without the other And this is first manifest by the former doctrine for when it often happened that all the ordinary Priests such as had the outward succession were in errour God exciting extraordinary Prophets to reprove them as Isaiah Ieremie c. It must needs be that there was a separation of these two In particular it is manifest in the time of Elijah 1 King 19.14 So when wicked Ahaz was King 2 King 16.11 Vriah the high Priest corrupting the worship In the Church of the Jewes in Christs time it was so for they condemning Christ and his followers as schismaticall Joh. 9.22 and 12.42 This is further proved Acts 20.29.30 These had their succession from the Apostles and held the same seats the same places which the Apostles held yet had snot the same truth and faith So out of the Ecclesiasticall stories it is manifest that the Arrian Bishops as Eusebius Nicomediens and Eustathius and others did derive their succession of place persons seats and Churches from the Apostles For they were called chosen and ordained after the custome of the Church and had no new but the lawfull calling So of the Donatists and Paulus Samosatenus in the Church of Antioch succeeded Peter as well as they did at Rome And the Greeke Church judged by the Papists schismaticall hath her personall succession not onely 1200. yeares as they confesse from Constantines time but long before from Andreas the Apostle as Nicephorus lib. 8. Chronol cap. 6. Because the grace of God Reason 1 and the truth is not hereditary that men should leave it at their pleasure to their heires and successors as they can their places and seats for John 3. as the winde so the Spirit blowes where it lists Not living men can make others whom they gladly would partakers of their faith and truth how should the dead and departed living men more likely Because as in a common wealth new Lords new lawes Reason 2 and succeeding men have different mindes affections wills desires ends c. and so change many things so it is in the Church And though they should leave them it as an inheritance yet we see children hold not their patrimony but many spend all so of this And as is said of Himeneus and Alexander that they made shipwrack of faith 1 Tim. 1.19.20 So of others Then falls to the ground the doctrine of Popery Vse 1 making this externall and personall succession a note of the Church and by it would prove theirs to be the true Church But if there may be such a succession without true faith and if true faith onely makes a true Church then can it be no true nor certaine note Besides it is not certaine nor expressed in the word of God that the Pope was Peters successor no not in place but to be proved onely by tradition and not to be deduced out of the Word as Bellarmine de Rom. Pont. lib. 2. cap. 12. confesseth And so the maine point whereon the government and Hierarchy of the Papacie dependeth hath no word in the Scriptures to prove it and so the whole is hanged upon the conjectures of men as upon a rotten threed For the Scripture not affirming it what assurance can there be for matter of faith the matter must needs be suspitious and doubtfull Againe even the histories which is their proofe are in such various opinions that a man can hardly tell whom to follow touching Peters comming to Rome and his immediate successors Some say he came to Rome in the first yeare of Claudius the Emperour some in the second some in the fourth some in the tenth and it may be that none of these is true sure it is all cannot be true For his successors Tertullian maketh Clement his next successor Optatus nameth Linus and then Clement Irenaeus maketh Linus then Cletus then Clement If they differ thus what certainty where should faith finde any sure ground If then the succession at best is questionable and doubtfull if it may be certaine and yet be dis-joyned from the succession of faith as it is most certainly in them and true faith onely makes a Church then can this be no true note of the Church To teach us not to be deceived with the glorious shew and great boast of such succession Vse 2 specially when there is an apparant digression from the faith or a probable doubt of corruption in it For what succession soever be it never so long or glorious as a greater could not be then these Priests and people could have objected unto the Prophet yet if it be without truth of doctrine and true faith which is the very soule of succession it is nothing else but a very dead carkasse whereas true faith without any such outward succession establisheth and maketh a Church And indeed one of the purest and most excellentest Churches was without such a succession For the Church of which Christ in his owne person was Authour and Master in which the Apostle was brought up instructed had no succession And yet none will or dare deny that it was the best and purest Church For whom succeeded Christ and his Apostles Did he succeed Aaron and the Leviticall Priesthood Did he elect his Apostles out of them Nothing lesse For he succeeded not Aaron but Melchisedech being a Priest after his order not the others and so the succession was interrupted for many hundred yeares and so may be still And on the contrary there may be succession and no true Church when the faith is corrupt and not sound which made the Fathers when they speake of succession not urge a naked and externall succession but a true succession and such as was joyned with the succession of faith and religion * Non sanctorum filii sunt qui tenent loca sanctorum sed qui exercent opera eorum S. Hierom. They are not the children of the Saints who hold their seats but who follow their workes * Nonex personis fidem sed ex side persones probari oportet Tertul. lib. de Prescr avers Haeret. We must not prove the faith from the persons but the persons from the faith So say we let them prove the persons from the faith and not faith from the persons They have not the inheritance of Peter who have not the faith of Peter All which shewes they would not have us to stand upon the succession of the place and person but the faith and doctrine * Non habent haereditatem Petri qui fidem Petri non habent Ambr. lib. 1. de poenit c. 6. This wil prove
our Church to be a true Church Vse 3 though we have no succession externall and personall which separated from faith makes no Church but we have succession of faith which makes a Church for if these may be separated if there may be a Church where there is no personall succession as before If a personall succession and no Church as also before we holding the true faith of Christ the true doctrine of salvation are notwithstanding the want of personall succession the Church of Christ If they understand an extraordinary succession such as hath oftentimes been in the Church we say we have it Neither hinders that which the adversaries object that an extraordinary succession ought to be confirmed with miracles which we have not for the calling of the Prophets was extraordinary yet had they no miracles to confirme it let them shew us what miracles Ieremy Ezekiel Ioel Hosea Amos had who were called extraordinarily or Iohn Baptist John 10.41 Besides what miracles needs there when as our Pastors either deceased or living bring in no new doctrine or new faith nor erect a new Church but restore the old faith and repaire and purge the Church foully corrupted And whereas they deny us any ordination of Ministers because they which are lawfully ordained must be by an Apostle or one succeeding him immediately they be all fictions of their owne without a word of the Scripture for they are true Pastors which are called of their flockes and of the lawfull Magistrate teaching the people and doing those things which good Pastors should do And for Bellarmines distinction of calling or election which he acknowledgeth was sometime alone of that the people did chuse and grants may be good but not ordination It is answered if election be good we contend not much about ordination for they who have authoritie to chuse and call have to ordain If an orderly ordination be not to be had And finally if all Bishops should be Arrians and such as would ordaine none but them of their owne sect as sometimes they were must ordination by them be necessary or we must have no Ministers Then ought men to labour for knowledge Vse 4 that they be not deceived by the face of men and the Church but that they may know what is the true faith and who they are that bring it knowing them to be the Pastors of the Church by their doctrine Mat. 7.15.16 This fruit is doctrine Yee have caused many to fall by the Law The second thing reproved in them in seducing or mis-leading others making them to fall into sinne It is a manifest corruption in the Ministers of the Church Doctrine a thing wherein they are farre unlike to their faithful predecessors whereby they are made unacceptable unto God when their preaching or carriage is such as men by them are kept in sin caused or occasioned to sinne As this proves it and Isaiah 3.12 Ezek 13.22 And this is done either by not preaching or very negligently that they cannot know what to doe and so must needs sinne and offend Or by not reproving by which they doe not thinke thir sinnes to be sinnes but remaine in them according to that Levit. 19.17 or by dawbing as Ezek. 13.10 and promising life unto them notwithstanding their sinnes as vers 22. or by bad example as Gal. 2.12.13 Because it is against the main and principall end of his calling Reason 1 which is to turne men from sinne and Satan to God and godlinesse and righteousnes As then it is a fault for men to go contratry to the main end of their calling or trade any Artificer as when he should build to pull downe when he should make to marre when he should cure to wound And if we may speake familiarly as we complaine of Tinkers for making two holes when they undertake to stp one or of Chyrurgions that make two wounds when they professe to cure one made already so must it needs be a corruption in these Because he crosseth the desire of God Reason 2 who delighteth much in the conversion of a sinner and would have men converted from sinne and not kept in them This will convince many Ministers of corruption degenerating from the Prophets faithful Ministers of God Vse 1 who so walk in their Ministery as men are hardened by them caused and occasioned to sinne they preach so seldome and carelesly instruct the people they have charge of they reprove so little or smooth so much or are so corrupt and licentious And this not in the Church of Rome only but in the reformed Churches which haue justly separated from her so that sinne abounds every where Now woe be to such watchmen for they shall answer for the bloud of those perishing soules and that which perisheth shall be made good soule for soule And woe unto such dawbers Ezek. 13.13 This may serve for an Apologie for the Ministers of God Vse 2 when they preach and exhort and reprove and threaten but with small thankes from those that heare them yet seeing the contrary is corruption and a degenerating from the faithfull and their steps and a meanes to make them unacceptable to God their Lord and Master It may speake for them if they thus preach and practise It may be if they preached all peace all placentia and waken never a secure man out of his sinne they would cunne him more thanke and all speake well of him But woe unto you when all men speake well of you saith Christ Luke 6.26 this is a signe of a false Prophet a corrupt Teacher but blessed on the contrary vers 22.23 when they speake but that which he hath commanded and do but that he hath enjoyned them Isaiah 58.1 For want of which he reproves and threatens the false Prophets and will condemne all Ministers A Physitian hath two sonnes of a Prince committed unto him the one taken with a frenzie the other sicke of a lethargie upon paine of the Princes displeasure if they mis-carry and be not cured by his default for him to lose life for life if he should be heard and seen chiding and beating and binding the one and pinching and nipping the other and using all such meanes as might cure them he were not to be blamed Yee have broken the covenant of Levi. This is the third thing and the generall of the former the former being a proofe of this that the covenant was broken when they had failed in these particulars Of the covenant and the conditions of it and so of the keeping and breaking of it hath been spoken vers 4. and 5. One thing may we observe which will serve for more generall use which is from this that by two particulars they are made guilty of the breach of the whole covenant One or two particular offences makes a man guilty of the whole covenant which he hath made with God Doctrine And to speake with Jam. 2.10 He that is guilty of one is guilty of all
what fellowship hath righteousnesse with unrighteousnesse and what conmmunion hath light with darknesse The proposition of the Apostle is generall forbidding all society and fellowship with them much more then this then which nothing is more strict and by none men are so firmely knit together as by this And by the name of yoking he seemeth to allude to the type of the law when God commanded that men should not plow with an Oxe and an Asse together Deut. 22.10 whereunto also belongs the prohibition of the like Levit. 19.19 which God spoke not for them but to teach man Because it is dangerous Reason 1 lest by that meanes through their continuall society and cohabitation the beleever and godly party may be drawne from their piety to impiety and from the true worship to the false It fell out with Solomon and Iehoram 2 Chron. 31.6 yea with the whole people of God Num. 25.2 Now that which fell out with such great men and with such multitudes is danger it may fall out with others inferior fewer simpler and weaker Nay the Lord saith without any may bees that it shall befall unto them Deut. 7.4 For they will cause thy sonne to turne away from me and to serve other Gods then will the wrath of the Lord wax hot against you and destroy thee suddenly And the reason of that is because being confident in their owne srength they tempt God And so it is just he should give them over to see their owne weakenesse Because it cannot be but that the service of God which every beleever is bound to performe even in his private family must either be omitted altogether Reason 2 because the man not beleeving will not suffer it or interrupted greatly because the wife will be a scoffing and mocking as Michal And to this may I apply that of Chrysostome * Sicut mulier adjutrix est sic saepè insidiatrix fit sicut portus est conjugium ita saepè naufragium parit Chrys hom de libel Repud Reason 3. As the woman is an helper so she often becomes a traytor and as marriage is an harbour so it often causes shipwracke Because it must needes be prejudiciall to the education of their Children When the parents consent not betwixt themselves how should the children be brought up in piety the fear of the Lord Nay the children will ever follow the worse side though it happen to be the weaker because nature is so capable of error and false worship over that it is of the true Hence hardly an Idolatrous King made mention of in the stories of the Scriptures but their mothers are named with them as they who prevailed with them for false worship more then the fathers did or could for the true But against this Doctrine there are certaine objections by which some would prove that it is lawfull to marry with those who are of a contrary Religion Object And first for the places alledged out of Exodus and Deuternomy they say that they are not to be taken generally as forbidding all matching with such but particular prohibiting to match with those seaven nations of the land of Canaan Those inhibitions are generall for all of a diverse religion Answer because it is a certaine and true Rule where the reason is generall there the precept is but the reason of it is generall There being still as much danger as ever was lest by the unbeleever the faithfull may be drawne from the true God and pure worship Object Answer Salmon one of the Princes of Iudah married Rahab the harlot a Canaanite Math. 1.5 Iudah married a Canaanite also Gen. 38.2 It may be there was some mystery in that of Rahab to shew that Christ wold not onely save that which was lost but honour them also Moses the daughter of Iethro Ioseph of P●tiphar Solomon the daughter of Pharoah Solomon is condemned for it by the Scriptures Iudah was a wicked man no matter what he did Ioseph and Moses went before the law but yet no doubt they had them to embrace the true Religion and they were converted As the Scripture speakes manifestly of Rahab And so it might be lawfull Though there be of the learned who thinke that they might not marry any of those nations though converted because God hath so utterly banished those nations from his people that without some speciall dispensation they might not marry with the converted Deuter. 21.11 Therefore lawfull to marry such Because it is lawfull by a speciall warrant and dispensation therefore it followes it was simply unlawfull for else there needed no dispensation Againe all the signes set downe in that place shew rather that the Lord did dislike it then approve it and that he did yeeld so much it was because of their incredible wantonnesse and corruption First she must shave her head that whereas the haire is an inticer or that which gaineth the uncleane affection he liking her in that when she was shaven might beginne to dislike her and her nailes must be pared to make her more deformed and her garments must be changed that whereas some garish apparell was as a snare to an unchaste heart shee being put in modest apparell and plaine he might lesse affect her And she must mourne thirty dayes that if for her pleasantnesse and chearefull carriage she deceived and delighted him now in her mourning and dejected countenance shee might lesse affect him finally if he disliked her he might neither make her a servant to himselfe nor sell her to another which thing they accounted a burden By which things God endeavoured rather to cure such an inordinate love and affection then to give liberty to it Finally some adde that these were used for signes of her repentance and renouncing of her false worship and if she were converted then was it lawfull If such doe match together Object whether is their marriage lawfull or whether a marriage or no Many of the learned doe thinke it is none Answer but ought to be dissolved Tertullian hath called it stuprum The ground of all their reason is because God hath forbidden such mariages to be made therefore they ought to be dissolved but this saving their judgement is not universally true but rather that many things quae fieri non debent facta valent For instance in the like There is a twofold infidell one who doth openly professe it and deny some maine Article of faith as that there is no such Trinity in the Unity Another who professeth in words and denyeth it in deeds and is in heart an infidell It is not lawfull to marry with either of these being known not the later But say a man or woman do marry and after it appeareth whether is it a lawfull marriage or no I presume no man will thinke that after the knowledge of it there ought to be a divorce made But to unfold this as I thinke more fully I would demand this question whether if one of the
which he ordained Who is the wife of thy youth One whom thou hast had from thy youth who hath beene long delightfull comfortable and amiable unto thee by her beauty helpes and chearefulnesse and other fruits of her youth and of marriage when thou being in thy youth married her a young Virgine And so it is no new reason nor yet any strange and obscure name of your duty mutually to be performed that it may be accounted either a small thing or is to be denyed and lightly regarded but it is most ancient and of long continuance even from your youth neither is there any thing committed by her why thou shouldest violate thy faith and breake thy covenant with her for so that against whom thou hast transgressed Is to be read with whom thou hast dealt unfaithfully breaking thy covenant Those words hath beene witnesse Some understand as if it were meant that he were witnesse of the injuries and indignities done against them And that howsoever some would lessen things yet the Lord tooke notice of them as great injuries yet this meaning the very tenor of the words will not carry it for it is not he is witnesse of you have been unfaithfull to them but between thee her with whom thou hast dealt unfaithfully Others would have it he is witnesse That is he hath contested betwixt thee and her that is hath commanded how thou shouldst carry thy selfe towards thy wife when he said Gen. 2.24 Therefore shall man leave his father and his mother and shall cleave to his wife and they shall be one flesh But though some of the learned as Hierom and Cyril incline to this it seemeth to me somewhat violent Yet is she thy companion This is added to amplifie the crime of unfaithfulnesse because she was united to him in nighnesse of blood being flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone and in society of life admitted to a partaking of his government and goods or companion of his bed and government and that by a covenant made betwixt them whereunto he had bound himselfe Yet is she saith the Prophet that is for all that she is thus thou hast dealt thus and so with her Some for all thou hast dealt thus with her yet is she thy companion c. and not that other thou hast taken and put her away or forsaken her company Because the Lord hath been witnesse between thee Gods answer shewing their sinne in a more heynous degree not against their wives and selves but against him They who breake covenant Doctrine and deale unfaithfully with their wives are not onely injurious to their wives but also sinne against God Let the injurie be the maine one here spoken of or let it be lesse wherein the covenant of marriage is broken And now that which is of the husband to her must be understood of the wives to him So the Prophet here condemnes the mans perfidiousnesse as a sin to God And as much Solomon insinuates for the woman Prov. 2.17 Which forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the Covenant of her God That a leud woman dealing unfaithfully with her husband sinned against God in breaking the Covenant whereof he was Authour This is further proved because their naturall duties are commanded of God as Ephes 5.22.25 Collo 3.18.19 and other places Because whatsoever is against the Commandement and Word of God is a sinne against him though immediately it hurts man Reason 1 Nay indeed it is onely a hurt to man and the sinne against God seeing he is onely the law giver James 4. Now as the tenor of indictments run you did such a thing against the Crown and dignity of the Kings Majesty The hurt is to the private person but the transgression is against the Prince so in this Because God gave him to her and her to him Reason 2 and joyned them together therefore to transgresse one against another is to transgresse against God which I gather by proportion from that of Deut. 22.15 ad 20. where recompence is to bee made to the father for the injury that is done to the daughter for if there be an injury against him that is but in Gods stead and his vicegerent what to himselfe To perswade husbands and wives not to transgresse or injure one another not to deale unfaithfully one with another Vse 1 For besides that it is uncomely and most unnaturall to see that a man should hurt his owne flesh and so a woman That the body should annoy the head and the head the body it is against God therefore as Ioseph disswaded his Mistresse restrained himselfe Gen. 39.9 so should they one with another when occasion and opportunity is given or infirmity is ready to over-sway they should say one to another How can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God The duties of the husband conditioned at the Covenant were to love his wife to be faithfull to her in his body and goods to dwell with her to governe her to instruct her be an example to her give her due benevolence of maintenance and imployment and such like And of the wife to love and be faithfull to him to feare and obey him In any one of these to faile is to transgresse against the Lord. And though sometimes in their corruption they could consent to transgresse one against the other as the husband that his wife should be a harlot and prostrate her for gaine to another or that he might without her reproofe be an adulterer and è contra And so it may seeme to be no injury because of that that volenti non sit injuria yet is it a sinne against God and that which may procure the curse of God upon them to the ruine and destruction of the whole family together with them It is usuall with men that they are carefull not to transgresse one against another in those things especially which are against the law of the Prince therein they will refrain themselves that they trespasse not though they take some liberty in lesser things If married folks can transgresse in any thing which is not against God and his law let them take liberty to themselves but in things that are as what omission of duty or commission of contrary be it lesse or more is not let them refraine themselves and that in the least For though a friend may be a mediator betwixt them and reconcile them soone yet who shall reconcile them to God It was a weighty speech spoken gravely of old Eli to his sonnes if they had had grace to have thought of it 1 Sam. 2.25 If one man sinne against another the Iudge shall judge him but if a man sinne against the Lord who shall intreat for him which may be applied to this To teach man and wife Vse 2 when they have been injurious one unto another one transgressing against the other that it is not enough if upon their second thoughts and after wits upon calme and advised
called the Messenger because he declares unto us the will of his Father is the Prophet of the Church and to it Christ is the principall Prophet of the Church Doctrine to reveale his Fathers will unto them Rev. 3.14 Of the Covenant Christ is so called because God covenanted with the Fathers or promised them he would give him them to be their Prophet Christ was promised to the forefathers Doctrine God did covenant with them to send him in the fullnesse of time to be their Prophet and Saviour So much is affirmed here And is also proved by Gen. 2.23 For so the Apostle takes it to be spoken of Christ and his Church Ephe. 5.30 31 32. Also that Gen. 3.15 Now from hence till this time it was still prophesied of the continuall Oracles of the Prophets As Deuter. 18.18 Isaiah 9.6 This is that generally affirmed Rom. 1.1 2. Because he loved them therefore he promised him unto them Reason 1 For there is the same reason of the promise which is of the performance but this came from love John 3.16 Because in his love he desired to save them Reason 2 and there being no other meanes but Christ Acts 4.12 He promised him that as we are saved by the performance and the vertue of that is past so they might be saved by the promise and the vertue of that which was to come To teach the excellency and worthinesse of the Gospel Vse 1 and the mysteries of salvation by Christ seeing it was promised so long time before by God himselfe and the promise so often iterated and repeated to the Fathers Things that Princes promise are not small or of little worth but of great value but that which they promise so long before and which they so often renew to severall men must needs be great and excellent when they are known to be Princes of great Magnificence and Glory So of this And as by that God would kindle in them a marvelous desire and an earnest desire to have it effected and accomplished so would he in us a due estimation and love unto it being now accomplished for being God hath provided better for us then for them as Heb. 11.40 We ought the more to love believe and esteem of it If Moses accounted but of the sight of the promised Land a farre off and rejoyced in it They who enjoyed it were much more bound to rejoyce in such a performed mercy of God If the Fathers Hebr. 11.13 When they saw the promises but as marriners upon the sea within the kenning of the land the sight of wished for Cities which they never came to much more we who do enjoy them performed least if we delight not in the knowledge and live in the faith of them we see them not Luke 17.22 If God in his love promised them Christ Vse 2 and it was love that he did promise it much more is it love he hath performed it to us Seeing that is more love which is in deed then in words Therefore ought we if they to love him and the more nay if they were bound in words we in deed and if a bare profession acknowledgement or beliefe would have sufficed them it would not us but we must love him indeed which is to keep his commandements and give him obedience and if as Chrys● the Jewes obeyed in the candle light how much more we in the sunne light So if they for the promises we more for the performance If Courtiers give all attendance for to rise more when they are ●isen Behold he shall come This is to be understood of the first comming in the flesh and infirmity not his comming in Glory And so some take this to note his comming in the flesh so his humanity Christ came into the world and became man Doctrine tooke unto him not the nature of Angels but of the seede of man Heb. 2.16 He shall come saith the Lord. In this comming is noted the execution of his office it selfe and this saith the Prophet the Lord saith as noting unto us that Christ did not take this office to hunselfe but he was sent of God and called to it of his father Christ did not take this calling unto him Doctrine to be the Angell and Prophet of his Church but he was called to it and appointed by God So here For seeing God saith he shall come it argues that he sends him and therein the promise appeareth Hence that Deut. 18.18 I will raise them up a Prophet Isai 61.1 The spirit of the Lord is upon me and hath annointed me to preach c. John 20.21 As the father hath sent me so send I you John 5.37 The father himselfe hath sent me Because it is an honor to be but Gods Embassadour under Christ Reason 1 and from him more to be immediately Now the reason for the Priesthood will hold in this Heb. 5.4 No man may take it ambitiously to himselfe but he must be called and sent Because all might understand and know Reason 2 that it was Gods work and his businesse that he did therefore he sent him he doth his worke John 4.34 and that argues God sent him John 5.36 Because he onely knew the will of God and was able to manifest it Reason 3 therefore God sent him as the chiefe John 1.18 No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten sonne which is in the bosome of the father he hath declared him This commends unto us the speciall love of God Vse 1 and his goodnesse to mankind who sent his owne Sonne from his bosome to be our Prophet to teach us his will and the knowledge of himselfe being that which couldnot be had any other waies neither by any other meanes and being that also which was of that necessity that there is no salvation without it John 17.3 If it could have beene had by any other meanes or if it had not such a consequent as the salvation of man it had nothing so appeared the goodnesse and love of God but seeing neither the one could be and the other is it much commends and sets forth his love And so ought we to account of it and to rejoyce much in the incarnation of Christ by which these mercies were conveyed unto us To teach every man to heare and receive Christ Vse 2 seeing he is sent as a Prophet to teach us of the father When I speake of hearing him I meane the hearing of him by the meanes he hath appointed by his delegates and substitutes whom he hath appointed for that purpose his Ministers Therefore ought he to be heard both personally and by what meanes soever he hath surrogated for himselfe to speake in his person seeing God hath appointed him and sent him As Matt. 17.5 While he yet spoke behold a bright cloud shadowed them And behold there came a voyce out of the cloud saying this is my beloved sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him The commandement is direct if we make
conscience of any command we ought of this It is not left arbitrary and if it were yet our owne good should draw us to it for by this we have the knowledge of God and so of salvation So that if there be any desire of this we will hearken to that But it is not arbitrary and besides the neglect of it is threatned with a very heavy wrath and judgement As Acts 3.23 For it shall be that every person which shall not heare that Prophet shall be destroyed out of the people VERS II. But who may abide the day of his comming and who shall endure when be appeareth for he is like purging fire and like fullers sope IN this verse the Prophet goes forward to describe Christ and first from his power which is set downe to us two wayes one by way of interrogation which carries with it a kinde of admiration the other by two similitudes In some part is his power respecting the wicked in some other respecting the godly the first position respects the wicked Who may abide the day of his comming That is which of the wicked i. the day of Christs first comming how tolerable acceptable and delightfull soever it be to the godly how weake and base soever in the outward shew with what outward weakenesse and infirmity soever he come yet will it be to the wicked full of trouble terror and disquietnesse Thus the Prophets and oracles of old did fortell it should be and this the Evangelists and writers of the new Testament have shewed it to be and that at his comming the wicked were marveilously troubled and disquieted Who shall stand when he appeareth Or who shall stand to behold him This toucheth the godly who can with his eyes behold such a light and such Majesty A metaphor borrowed from the sunne whose brightnesse the eyes of men are not able to behold i. the glory of the Sonne of God shall surpasse all understanding and that goodnesse which he sheweth in becomming man and conversing with them for their conversion and salvation Who shall stand That is saith one who thinking of these things doth not faint as overcome with the admiration of it so that as a man whose legges are not able to beare he falls downe For he is like a purging fire The first similitude expressing the power of Christ drawne from fire noting out unto his how he worketh both with the godly and wicked for as it is the nature of fire not onely to separate drosse from the mettall and joyne things which are of one nature together so things that are good it makes more pure and perfect but things that are impure it consumes and turnes to nought So Christ by his word destroyes the wicked and unbeleevers and such as resist his will but saves such as are chosen making them more and more pure and perfect And like fullers sope Or like the fullers hearbe an hearbe that fullers use by which they purge and take out of garments blots and spots of long continuance in them and makes them bright and pure as it is noted Mark 9.3 S. Hierom in Jer. 2.22 The fullers hearbe as it is commonly seene in the Province of Palestine growes in greene and moist places and to wash away spots hath the same force that Nitre hath Signifying that God makes the soules of his by his grace most pure and most holy that their workes shine forth But who may abide the day of his comming By this some think is meant the trouble and destruction that fell upon the wicked at his nativity Because of that Mat. 2.3 21.10 But taking his comming to signifie here his office and the execution of it and so the preaching of his word as in the former verse The meaning I will take to be this None of the wicked shall be able to abide his preaching and ministery but the preaching and the ministery of it is that which will cast them down and destroy them wound them and kill them The preaching of the word by Christ and his Ministers Doctrine none of the wicked are able to abide it and stand before it but it will destroy them and cast them downe wound them to the heart and bring them to eternall destruction so the interrogation affirmes strongly Hence Rev. 2.12 a two edged sword given unto him Who shall endure when he appeareth This sentence divers of the Interpreters take to be but one with the former the same double for the admiration of the power of Christ in such weaknesse able to confound and overturne whatsoever or whosoever stands against him But others understand it as a distinct sentence and read it somewhat otherwise Hierom according to the Hebr. Quis stabit ad videndum cum The Septuagints Quis ferre poterit ut aspiciat cum Simile à sole oculis Who that hath but his naturall and blinde eyes is able to behold him understand the great mysteries of salvation he brings and is hid under the vaile of his humanity As if he said no naturall man by his owne understanding is able to see and conceive these things they are hid from him or too deepe for him That which is gathered hence is this No naturall man of himselfe is able to behold Christ Doctrine and to know him and the mysteries of salvation brought by him Revelat 2.17 For he is like a purging fire The first similitude by which he setteth forth the power of Christ comparing him to fire and this is to shew his dealing with the wicked to whom he is a consuming fire and so are they rather to be read for neither doth the word signifie purging neither yet seemes he to speake of his purging power touching the godly for that followeth in the third verse Therefore it is to be understood of his consuming power by which he confounds the wicked and destroyes them Now generally hence I observe For that it is usuall with the Scripture speaking of God and his power his justice mercy tender regard of his and such like to set them downe by such things as are common and familiar and every day or usually occurrent to the eyes and eares of men And like the fullers sope The second similitude to shew his dealing with the godly his owne that he is like the fullers sope or the fullers hearbe which as it hath a nature to purge and take spots out of garments so it maketh them to have a luster and glorious shew or colour making them fresh and white Marke 9.3 noting the effect of Christ in his that he maketh them white and pure for though it is true that this hearbe doth purge away blots and so might note the purging away of corruptions from his yet because that is the next similitude I observe this here Christ is to his as the fullers sope or the hearbe of the fuller Doctrine making them pure and holy giving them a luster in their lives in holinesse and righteousnesse And this is
and Ministers all their due that is a competent maintenance among them Vse 2 if not for any love to them yet for the love of themselves if for no other reason yet for their owne gaine If all the things spoken before can move if not that which Chrysostome speaketh in 2 Psal ho. 9. that any man would be ashamed to be the disciple of a beggarly master and so while they are kept too too bare the credit and honour of their Ministry yea the fruit is hindered If thy father of thy body and flesh should be so bare wouldest thou not be ashamed at it and if thy spirituall father be driven unto it doest thou not for very shame hide thy selfe or else put to thy hand to take that shame both from him and thee Or if this move thee not will not that which he speakes in Tim. 2. See I pray you how great absurdity there is of these things should the Pastor not be able to keepe a man to tend upon him so that he must make his owne fire himselfe and fetch water breake his stickes for his fire and goe often to the market for things necessary can there be a greater perversity or greater disorder Those holy men the Apostles thought it an unmee●e thing that he which should attend upon the word should be imployed so much as to the service of the poore widowes Finally if this doe not move thee the good of thy soule and the spirituall and heavenly things such rich treasures these earthen vessels doe bring unto thee yet let this that if thou wilt give God his tenth he will encrease and multiply thy ninth even in abundant measure As August speaketh that thou shalt not onely reape by them better things spirituall things for a few earthly but for them from God abundance of earthly things for that shall be true Prov. 11.25 The liberall person shall have plenty and he that watereth shall also have raine And that 2 Cor. 9.6.7 This yet remember that he which soweth sparingly shall reape also sparingly and he that soweth liberally shall reape also liberally As every man wisheth in his heart so let him give nt grudgingly or of necesity for God loveth a cheerfull giver Neither let them answer as the widow did to Eliah 1 Kings 17.12 And she said as the Lord thy God liveth I have not a cake but even a handfull of meale in a barrell and a little oyle in a cruse and behold I am gathering a few stickes for to goe in and dresse it for me and my sonne that we may eate it and dye Or if thou dost distrustfully so a while yet seeing thou hast the word of God here more then she had verse 14. The barrell of meale shall not waste neither shall the cruse of oyle fatle Then beleeve and give Verily if this be true the Prophet saith here many men might have more then they have if they had for the glory of God for the service of the Church and the worke of the Ministery more liberall hearts then they have Verily it is an evill spared penny that loseth a man a pound and that which men think they have spared to themselves and gained in keeping it from God and his Ministers either the Prophet saith not true or it loseth them much more Nay that they give though they may seem to have cast it away yet they shall finde it and with advantage and if they had eies to see it nothing more gainfull then this and that is given to the poore Then as Chrysost for one let me apply it and speake of both ho. 53. ad pop Antioch so use thy riches or that which thou hast that they may bring encrease let God then be thy Creditor not other humane things bestow them upon the Ministers and the poore not upon thy belly upon the humble not honourable upon liberality not covetousnesse upon sobriety not intemperance What will thy belly afford and recompence thee with that spendeth most Dung and corruption What vain glory Envy and hatred What covetousnesse Care and griefe What intemperance Hell and the unsatiable worme Let God then be your Creditor which promiseth and will performe such great things And as Paul exhorteth the Corinthians for the matter of the poore so I for the Levite and Minister 2. Cor. 8.7 Therefore as ye abound in every thing in faith and word and knowledge and all diligence and in your love toward us even so see that ye abound in this grace also I will open the windowes of Heaven and powre you out c. It is the raine that is the means but God is the Author of the blessing Whatsoever the meanes may be that God doth use convey his blessings of peace Doctrine plenty health liberty yet he is the author and giver Isaiah 38.6 And powre you out a blessing You that shall obey me and sear me and walke in my waies Plenty Doctrine and a liberall and prosperous estate the Lord promiseth and will perform to those who feare him and are carefull to obey him and walke in his waies Vide Mal. 2.5 Without measure In marveilous great abundance and very liberally The Lord when he gives to his Doctrine he gives very liberally and abundantly Jam. 1.5 If any of you lacke wisdome let him aske of God which giveth to all men liberally and reproacheth no man and it shall be given him And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes If the Lord should give raine in abundance and by it should rise weeds that should either choake the corne or other creatures which commonly arise of wet or by any other meanes and so devoure their fruit and their hopes be cut off they should but have little profit or benefit that what was given one way was taken away another therefore the Lord promiseth to take away such devourers such creatures as might destroy the fruit of the earth when it was sprung up Every creature is at Gods command at his becke to be restrained or set on to helpe or hurt to punish or preserve Doctrine those who are his Vide Cap. 1.4 Lord of Hoasts And they shall not destroy the fruit of your ground For their sins and iniquities they had destroied it but now that they are received into favour and mercy they shall not but receiving them to mercy will withdraw his judgements from these things he smote for them As God often punisheth men Doctrine punisheth them not onely in themselves but in things that belong unto them so when he withdraweth his hand and sheweth mercy towards them it is not only in themselves but in things which belong unto them Isaiah 38.6 Mich. 7.11 Because that as his hand was against them for mans cause only seeing they in themselves deserved no such thing Reason 1 as being not subject to nor capable of sin which only falleth into a reasonable creature so he receiving them to mercy for whose sake they were afflicted reason that they also should
them we are now lesse fortunate then in former times because we suffer the Christians and because we do not with that religion and devotion worship Iupiter and other of the Gods as we did before therefore are the Gods angry with us so the Papists from a temporal felicity measure piety and gather that God doth favour them because he gives them these outward things by it would condemne us and al other Churches But if the Heathen reasoned absurdly they conclude not well but very impudently but if the conclusion would follow it would be on our sides rather then theirs who have for these 48. yeares not been inferiour to any Kingdome in the world for peace plenty and prosperity and specially when we have beene most severe not in persecuting but correcting of their impieties Idolatries For projustitiâ persequentes persecutores sunt propter flagitium correctores August contra lit Petil. lib. 21. ca. 84. And for victory in warre which is the principallest they stand of we have given them more foiles then ever they us and have often carried the day and triumph both by sea and land blessed be our God for it Therefore must they let this argument this weapon goe or else we will sheath it in their owne sides If this be a blessing Vse 3 then have we cause to stirre up our selves and soules to God to give him thankes for that he hath performed to us which he promised to this land and people that we have had such peace plenty and prosperity as we have beene accounted of all blessed and happy and of our enemies mightily maligned and envied That we use that of August de Civit. D. l. 1. c 7. Quisquis non videt caecus quisquis nec laudat ingratus quisquis laudanti reluctatis in sanus est And yet seeing it is no perpetuall blessing but such as the Church is often deprived of and hath beene let us see we walke worthy of it lest he pull us downe as low as he lifted us up high and make us as vile as he hath made us honourable As he did divers times with his people Deuter. 29.22.24.25 which was then and shall be when they are worse and walke unworthy of this and we be as Salvian ad Catholicum Ecclesiam lib. 1. * Ac sic nescio quomodo c. I know not how but thy felicity flights against thy selfe so much as thou art encreased in people thou art almost as much encreast in vices by how much thou hast more abounded thou hast lost in discipline and thy prosperity hath brought with it a great encrease of evills for the professors of the faith being multiplyed the faith it selfe is lessened and her children encreasing the mother is sicke and thou O Church of God! art made weaker by thy fruitfulnesse and the more children the lesse strength for thou hast spread through the whole world the professors of thy religious name but not having the power of religion as if thou wert rich in men poore in faith wealthy in multitude needy in devotion enlarged in body strengthned in spirit c. VERS XIII Your words have been stout against me saith the Lord yet yee say What have we spoken against thee Your wards have been slout against me Your words have been stout against me faith the Lord of Hosts The Prophet proceedeth to reprove this people of another sinne and to expostulate the thing with them The sinne of it is the denying of Gods providence both over the evill and good not punishing the one and not providing for the other This people afflicted of God with penury and want for other of their sinnes but especially for spoiling God his Levits and Church they thought and spoke blasphemously against God but accusing his providence as not regarding those who worship and professe him but such as dishonoured him and were wicked and never would they accuse themselves of their sinnes which is that he saith their words have been great against him they spoke hard and odious things of him as the words following shew that these were they Yet yee say What have we spoken against thee They answer for themselves not denying simply that they had spoken any such thing but putting God to his proofe as thinking that he did not know nor understand as those who had oftentimes said among themselves that God regarded not the things here below neither tooke notice of what men did Therefore this question of theirs tendeth not to any deniall of the deed but to the tempting of God For if hee could not or did not answer directly and shew them what they had said then would they conclude as before they had that he did not regard nor understand the things that were said and done by men which if he did then could he tell in particular what words they had spoken against him and not thus insist in the generall Your words have been stout Observe Doctrine God takes notice of the words of men as well as their actions and will reprove them for them and call them to an account and judge them Jam. 2.12 Your words have been stout against me They deny the providence of God and his wise disposing of things upon earth among men as the verses following shew and so are accused to have spoken against God himselfe though they have not denied him or blasphemed him They who deny the providence of God Doctrine and his governing of things here below do speak proudly and wickedly against God specially if they deny his providence and government in disposing the states and affaires of men This is the sinne these are chalenged withall Such was that which we have Psal 73.11 And they say How doth Bod know it or is there knowledge in the most High If it be referred to the tenth verse it is the infirmitie of Gods people if to the ninth it is the pride of the wicked In either it is a sinne against God And that Psal 94.4.5.6.7 They prate and speake fiercely all the workers of iniquitie vaunt themselves they smite downe thy people O Lord and trouble thine heritage they slay the widow and the stranger and murther the fatherlesse yet they say The Lord shall not see neither will the God of I cob regard it Such were they Zeph. 1.12 And at that time will I search Jerusalem with lights and visit the men that are frozen in their dregges and say in their hearts The Lord will neither do good nor do evill Job 22.13.14 But thou sayest How should God know Can he judge through the darke cloud The clouds hide him that he cannot see and hee walketh in the circle of heaven Ezek. 9.9 Then said he unto me the iniquity of the house of Israel and Judah is exceeding great so that the land is full of bloud and the citie full of corrupt judgement For they say The Lord hath forsaken the earth and the Lord seeth us not Because God doth chalenge these things unto himselfe
duties of the first table and is studious and zealous of religion And him that serveth him not who hath no care of any such thing but is prophane and in all things irreligious You shall discerne you shall be made to know that God sleepeth not in Heaven when men doe give themselves to all licentiousnesse and iniquity even with greedinesse upon earth and by experience will perceive that men shall not go free for all their sinnes but shall come to an account and reckoning and so the meaning is that by their owne punishments which God shall lay upon them they shall discerne the difference for when as God shall spare them he shall rise in judgement against you and come armed upon you and then you shall know that he tooke notice of all things done by men and that he would not suffer sinne unpunished though he have dissembled as it were for a time You returne This may be taken for the sense of Gods judgement wherewith the wicked shall be affected though they shall not repent though their madnes against God may by this be repressed it breake not forth no more The judgements of God Doctrine shall make the wicked to acknowledge the providence of God that he governes and takes care of men and things which are done here upon earth So much is the scope and sum of this verse manisest by that Isaiah 28.19 and that Psal 58. per totum specially verse 11. the example of Pharoah shewes it and that Dan. 4.22.32 Isaiah 26.11 Because though all his mercies and blessings should draw them to it yet they doe it not Reason 1 even the best are apt to grow secure and fat under them whereas his justice and judgements doe more waken them those daube up these cleare as sharpe things especially clear the sight when they make the eies smart Because they shall see and feel themselves smitten Reason 2 when the other are spared as Egipt and Goshen or smitten otherwise then they Isaiah 27.7.8 Discerne between the righteous and the wicked c. That is how excellent one is above the other that whereas they thought this far more happy and honourable they should see their error and be made to confesse that the other is far more excellent happy and honourable The righteous and he that serveth God Doctrine he that maketh conscience of his waies both with men and God in righteousnesse and piety is farre more excellent happy and glorious then the wicked and him that serveth him not then he that is given to pride and contemnes God c. The Lord saith they shall discerne it then must it needs be so yea it is so though not discerned of them that of the Covenant sheweth it Gen. 12.2.3 And I will make of thee a great Nation and will blesse thee and will make thy name great and thou shalt be a blessing I will also blesse them that blesse thee and curse them that curse thee and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed That of Balaam Num. 23.10 Let me die the death of the righteous let my last end be like his Wishing the worst part as is commonly accounted and so shewing what he thought whose testimony is without suspition he being an enemy That of Isa 27.2 has the Church a vineyard they as vines when the wicked are compared to thorns verse 4. hence that of Cant. 2.2 of the Church and members more excellent as the Lilly then the thornes Reve. 2.1 As gold is more excellent then other mettals yea as in the goldsmiths shop it surpasseth the iron tongs and the hammer the anvile and the coales so these all the rest Because they are in speciall favour and love with God Reason 1 and specially beloved of him whereas the other is in his high hatred In a State what subject more happy and excellent then he that is in the Kings favour who more miserable then he that is in the hatred of the King specially when there ever is matter found in him that he may shew his displeasure in justice How gracious and happy How ignominous and unhappy was Haman successively the book of Ester sheweth Because they are Gods sonnes they but his servants at best at the worst Reason 2 and in truth the slaves of Satan Sons better then the servants of a good King much more then the slaves of such a Tirant Because they are the members of Christ as the Church is his body Reason 3 then such an head must have glorious members whereas the other are the members of Satan The righteous and him that serveth God These two the Prophet joineth together as the other two opposites by these he teacheth this There is no justice Doctrine where there is not the worship and service of God no righteousnesse where there is not religion for these two go still together and hand in hand so much this conjunction of the Apostle sheweth as that Acts 10.35 He that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse Hence Micha 6.8 To doe justly and walke humbly with God are joined together Therefore as Saint Paul makes faith the establishment of the law Rom. 3.21 So St. Iames makes workes and righteousnesse the perfection of faith James 2.22 A justifying faith containeth this faith of profession in it That is that which shewes it to be sincere and lively or living Both that there is no faith without righteousnesse so no true righteousnesse without faith Because Rom. Reason 1 14.23 whatsoever is not faith is sin Because it is not righteousnesse Reason 2 as it is not a good worke though it be the worke that is good otherwise which hath not a good end and a good ground which hath not the warrant of the word not done in conscience to it because it commands it Jam. 2.8 Then ècontra having another end then Gods glory a mans gain or praise or such like hence Christ reproveth the works of hypocrites though they did the works of justice it was not righteousnesse in them Matth. 6.2.5 Now where religion is not it must be that they shall want their ground and have their end corrupt Then not without ground have the Fathers before us and we we now Vse 1 affirme that the works of the Infidels and Heathen are not righteousnesse whatsoever of chastity equity justice virginity or the like but rather splend da peccata for they being void of religion cannot have righteousnesse Jam 2.22 Vse 2 To teach us what to judge of the workes of ignorant and irreligious men such as have no knowledge of religion make no conscience of the service and worship of God certainly we account them not neither can we account them righteousnesse But we say As Jam. 1.26 his religion is vaine no religion though he do the workes of religion which hath not justice and mercy and love joined with it so we say his righteousnesse is vaine which hath not the workes of religion with it we see a man hear the word
his second comming to his owne is a day of salvation and they are bid to lift up their heads when it approaches but to the wicked both the first and second comming are fearfull and full of horror Therefore Montanus interprets it thus the day is great in respect of the good dreadfull in respect of the wicked resembling this place to that of Iohn Matth. 3.12 But the reason why the Papists contend it should be the true Eliah is because they might prove that the Pope is not Antichrist This is one of Sanders his great demonstrations to prove it because Eliah must resist Antichrist but Eliah is not yet come to do it ergo But what Prophet what Apostle what Scripture ever told them any such thing Papall traditions will leave nothing unknowne they tell us things wherein Gods spirit is silent they tell us the souldiers name who pierced Christ the theeves name who were crucified with Christ the hosts name in whose house he celebrated the supper and the names of the two witnesses Rev. 11.3 to the Enoch and Elias if we will believe them but their folly is made manifest to all that will see Before the comming c. Here is the time when Elias shall come immediatly before Christs comming that is his first comming which though it may seem to be described contrary when it is said to be acceptable and gracious yet this is spoken in respect of divers parties that whereas there were some that contemned and made no account of the mercies of Christ to them it should be a dreadfull day but to the godly acceptable and gracious The comming of Christ is very terrible to all naturall Doctrine wicked and impenitent men That is his preaching of the word whether in his owne person or by his Ministers So Esa 11.4 He shall smite the earth with the red of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked which is again repeated Rev. 2.16 And by his Ministers he doth it 2. Thes 2.8 2. Cor. 2.15.16 Because he brings them by this to the sight of sinne Rom. 3.20 Reason 1 1. Cor. 14.24.25 and so makes them to see though unwillingly how ugly and filthy lepers they are how defiled in nature in soule body mind will affections in word deed actions which must needs trouble them and strike terror into them Because by this he brings them to the sense of that punishment which is due for sin Reason 2 so that though the sight of sin last no longer then they are looking into the glasse that discovers them yet the sense of the punishment may terrifie them By this he also troubles his owne Object and the most penitent as we see Act. 3.37.38 He doth so Answ when he first brings them to repentance or after when they grow secure But the difference is that in these it is to salvation in the other to their greater damnation and hardning Other things which might be observed here are already noted Cap. 3.1 VERS VI. And he shall turne the heart of the fathers to the children and the heart of the children to their fathers lest I come and smite the Earth with cursing AND he shall turne the heart of the fathers In this verse is described the end of Iohns comming before Christ Vide brevem expos hujus versus apud D. Abbot Antich Demonstr ca. 6 p. 133. his office which is to convert the hearts of the Fathers to the children and to bring them to an holy union of faith to worke repentance in all and to turne them from iniquity to the living God He shall turne He shall be my instrument to turne or convert men speaking honourably of the Ministery of the word to shew how powerfull it is when he worketh with it The Ministers then convert when they are Co-workers with God 1. Cor. 4.15 1. Cor. 15.10 but prevaile not when he denies assistance 1. Cor. 3.7 The heart of the father to c. Saint Aug. and Hierom by the Fathers understand Abraham Isaack and Iacob and the Prophets and by Children the Jewes when by the preaching of Iohn the Jewes should believe in Christ in whom the Fathers had believed then should their fathers hearts be turned and affected towards them which otherwise were averse from them Some understand by Fathers the Jewes and by Children the Apostles and other Christians according to that Psal 45.16 And when the Jewes were converted by Elias to believe as the Christians did then were the Fathers and Children of one minde consenting in one truth But some understand by them all ages orders degrees of men meaning that Iohn should execute his office with the like authority gravity and power towards all and shall have and see the fruit of his labours in all sorts and so it is interpreted Luke 1.17 That Iohn when he came should finde many dissensions many strange opinions and dotages but he should gather them to God and bring them from those dissensions to true unity that they may grow together in one faith Lest I come and smite the earth with a curse These words menace as many as resisted Iohns Ministry There were among this people many obstinate and wilfull who had need of this rowsing and awakening a threatning also not only against particular men but to destroy the whole Nation of the Jewes by famine pestilence war and exile Repentance is wrought by the preaching of the word Vide Doctrine 1 Cap. 3.7 The Ministry of the word works upon all old yong rich poor Doctrine 2 noble base c. This was manifest by Iohns preaching Mat. 3.5 Luc. 3.10 c. By Pauls 1. Cor. 1.26.27 We read of Noble Theophilus Luc. 1.1 Of the Shop-keeper Act. 16.24 Of the Iaoler ver 34. Of the devout Greekes and the honorable women Act. 17.4 And of the elect Lady 2. Epist Iohn Because God hath decreed to save of all sorts some then must the word needs worke upon them it being the means of salvation Reason 1 1. Tim. 2.4 Because that when he converts by it the wise rich and mighty Reason 2 he might shew his power and the power of the word in the weaknesse of man 1. Cor. 1.25 when by it he shall make them account their wisdome folly c. Because when he calls of all sorts Reason 3 it might appeare that when they are not wrought upon it is not their state and condition that doth hinder them as if God had given it them to snare them but it is from the corruption of their own hearts who abuse them seeing others their equalls are converted To encourage the Ministers in the diversity of their hearers Vse as different in conditions as complexions in hearts as faces yet to go on and deliver the word with faithfullnesse expecting that the Lord shall make it profitable to the saving though not of all yet of some of all sorts that as he wrought effectually in Peter towards the circumcision and was mighty
not corrupt the word b 41 they must be holy b 42. They must preach so as to convert men b 45 they ought to be learned in the Scriptures b 48 It is a great corruption when they occasion men to sinne b 67 when they are contemned and hated justly b 70 71 what they are then to doe b 74 they are Gods Messengers b 166 to defraud them of their maintenance is sacriledge b 215 216 219 220 221 225. Ministery of man ordinarily used by God a 12 13. How to be esteemed a 13 14. None may take it upon him without a calling b 26. The efficacy of the Ministry b 291. N Nature teaches not to wrong any b 79. O Obedience due to God in all things b 4 5. How far due to parents a 62 63 64 66. How far due to Masters a 80 81 82. How far due to Magistrates a 63 82. Old men their duty b 30. Omission of duties b 208. 209. Oppression God not pleased with sacrifices of it a 222. 224 225. Oppressors not heard of God b 110 Originall sin b 126 280 P Papists plea of bounty b 214 Parents to take care of childrens soules b 127 128. Passion a 25. Patience under affliction a 4 5. Patience in injuries b 108 109. Peace only to the upright b 45. People of God may be punished a 8 9 10. Their priviledges a 27. Person must be accepted before his praiers are a 189. Perfection whether in this life b 14. Perfididiousnesse a great sin b 82 83 Piety brings prosperity b 250. Plenty promised to the obedient b 31. promist to paiers of tithes b 231 232 233 Polygamie b 122 129 130. Popes may and have erred b 61 62 their Church robbing b 228. Portion how children to submit in that a 67. Poverty of Ministers b 226 227. Power of God a 37. Praise God to be praised for deliverances a 55. Praier not heard how great a judgement a 169 170. When the season of praier a 170. How we must pray a 172. What to pray for a 173. Praier to Saints departed a 175. Praiers of wicked not profitable a 178. Where to pray a 197 198. All need the praiers of others a 174. Praiers of Gods people accepted b 181 182. Preferring man before God how hainous a 160 163. Preist how the word used a 203. Professors their sin most hainous a 210. Prophanesse of heart how knowne a 145. Prophets 3. sorts a 12. Christ our prophet b 172 173 Prosperity b 158 159. Prosperity promist to piety b 250. No note of true Church b 241 242. Providence of God not to be questioned b 160. To deny it is pride against God b 244 245. Whence it is that men doubt of it b 247 248. Gods providence and protection a bond of service a 105. Publicke worship to be attended b 52 53. Punishment Gods owne people punisht a 8 wicked oft doe escape unpunished long b 256. Purgagatory b 178 179 235 R. Redemption of the elect b 277 Regenerate their workes holy a 205 Reigning sinne what b 278 Religion teaches to do no wrong b 80 81 Remembrance God remembers our waies b 262 Repentance onely removes judgements b 6 210 211 Reproofe a 133 134 Revenge the desire of it a 49 Reward to obedience b 33 Riches the way to attaine them b 32 234 whether fit for Ministers b 226 227 Wicked oft encrease in riches b 254 255 Righteousnesse cannot be without religion b 268 269 Righteousnesse inherent b 276 S. Sacraments their efficacy a 142 the Ministers of them b 28 Sacrifices of N. Test a 144 what Sacrifices required of Christians a 202 Sacriledge b 212 215 219 220 221 239 240 Sanctification of Gods elect b 275 276 Scoffing speeches whether lawfull a 167 Sencelessenesse under judgements a 3 4 Separation may not be from a Church for the abuses of it a 177 180 Servants their duty a 76 78 83 86 89 Service of God must be with best a 150 183 Sicke service a 159 T. Temple people not bound to it in prayer a 197 Tempting of God what b. 230 231 Tithes whether still in force b 216. 217. 218. Thoughts are known to God a 138 Toleration of Papists a 179 Truth all of it to be delivered b 39 V. Virginity how to be esteemed of b 136 Vowes to be observed a 234 235 Vsury b 85 W. Wages of hirelings not to be detained b 195 Wards the abuse b 198 199 Watchfulnesse required of us b 260 Widowes not to be opprest b 196 197 Wicked though flourish shall be destroyed b 272 273 Wife is husbands companion b 117 choice a of wife b 144 145 Witches not to be sought unto b 189 190 Word of God how to be preacht a 6 7. How to be heard a 7. must be applyed b 2 3. must be all delivered b 39. it must be heard publikely b 51 52. It must be sought after b 54 55 All things are good or evill as they are with or against the word b 84. Wicked not able to abide the preaching of it b 174 Workes no cause of justification a 189 Worship of God must be holy a 127 Where that is abused God is abused a 138 Worship of God removed for contempt a 229 Worship of God furthered by maintainance of Ministry b 227 228 Wrath of God a 44 45 Z. Zeale a 159 FINIS AN EXERCITATION VPON THE PROPHECIE OF MALACHY Wherein The Context is illustrate by a cleare Analyse The originall Text is examined Most translations extant are conferred The expositions of the ancients and others are weighed Together with some occasionall observations By SAMUEL TORSHELL Intended by way of Addition to a larger Commentary upon the same Prophecy by that reverend and godly Divine Mr. Richard Stock and now since his death at last published with the consent of his Executors by the same Author LONDON Printed by Edward Griffin for Daniel Frere Thomas Nichols and Samuel Enderbey and are to be sold at their shops in little Brittaine and Pope-head Alley 1640. NO BILISSIMO AC HONORATISSIMO DOMINO D. EDOVARDO COMITI DORSET BARONI DE BUCKHURST Serenissimae Dominae Reginae Domino Camerario praenobilis ordinis Periscelidis Militi Serenissimo Domino regi CAROLO a Conciliis secretioribus DEPVRATAE ELOQVENTIAE FACILE PRINCIPI INGENUORVM OMNIVM STVDIORUM fautori Mecaenati Dignissimo IN OMNIBUS NEGOTIIS A D HONOREM REGIUM ac Salutem publicam spectantibus Vigilantissimo ac prudentissimo Consiliario Has EXERCITATIONES in Prophetam MALACHIAM Ut exile quidem at Devotum tamen perpetuae observantiae maximi obsequii Testimonium D. D. D. Sacellanus ejus indignus Humillimus Servus Samuel Torshel To the Reader IT was not choyce but occasion that cast me upon this Subject Having the originall notes of the Sermons of that reverend learned and godly Divine M. Richard Stock upon this prophet Malachy entrusted into my hands and upon perusall of them finding many necessary points most wholesomely treated of I thought it too great an
brought an offering should I accept this at your hand saith the Lord yee cared not what you brought or offered Thus yee brought Mincha observe that that word is used here too as well as verse 11. where the Papists so much contend for it an offering indeed such as it is but such as I cannot nor will accept That which was torne That which you got by rapine and oppression so the Vulg. Yee say yee afford it out of your labour but yee lie It is what you steale and of that too not of the best So that here are three sinnes discovered together Rapine Irreligion and lying And thus S. Hier. Remigius and Lyran. understand it That which was rent and torne so Tremct and therefore Calvin understood it that they brought sheepe that were worried But they brought the beasts alwaies alive therefore the former exposition is received by most That which you snatcht away by oppression But how doth this agree with the description of the offering in the next words lame and sick I therefore encline to Calvin and it might be wcorried and torne and yet alive Deodate in his Italian gives both senses and leaves it to the readers choyce Thus much of the threatning of judgements privative we have in the next II. A positive judgement threatned ver 14. where First Vers 14 the judgement threatned A curse But cursed be the deceiver Cursed with curses temporall spirituall and eternall Lxx. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fore spoken or execrated The ordinary word of the Lxx Dent. 27.15 c. And of the new Testament as Gal. 3.13 Secondly the sinne 1. generally 2. in particular First Generally set down The deceiver deceitfull against the faith of Religion and against ordinary justice Tremel calls him Machinator Hee that can devise wayes of deceite covertly The crafty deceiver The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who was able Taking the word in the Text Nochel to come of Iachal potuit whereas it is of Nachal To deale perfidionsly Secondly in particular Which hath in his flock a male and voweth and sacrifieeth to the Lord a corrupt thing That hath better for if hee had not ability God would not require at his hands but hee should bee more blameles and yet thinks the worst good enough for God Hee must have a flocke and a male in it that is a sacrifice fit perfect and without blemish according to the law or else God doth not require or so strictly expect from him And voweth and sacrificeth to the Lord A corrupt thing that is that voweth a perfect or sound thing for they were by the law to vow Levit. 22.23 Males and perfect but comes short of his vow and sacrificeth a corrupt not answerable either to the purpose of his vow or to the law There was no man that would vow a corrupt thing though through fraud hee sacrificed or offer'd such a one Therefore the Greekes have exprest this sense cursed bee the deceiver that hath a male and his vow being upon him sacrificeth a corrupt thing And accordingly the Vulg. Lat. That making a vow sacrificeth a weake thing A corrupt thing Vulg. a weake Pagn aspotted or blemished The Tigur a faulty The Hebr. word Maschat is weakened guelded maimed corrupt To the Lord Hebr. Adonai This is the first time in this Prophet that God is directly named by any other name then Iehovah Adon is a Lord who as a foundation or a columne sustaines his people and it is applyed to God who is the Lord of the whole earth who is called Adam Exod 23.17 All thy males shall appeare before Haadon the Lord God But of this appellative there is formed a proper name or epithete of God Adonai with Cametz having the same points with Iehovah Thirdly the reason both why the deceiver is cursed and to assure him he shall be so For I am a great King saith the Lord of hosts and my name is dreadfull among the heathen The Italian For asmuch as I am a great King The sense is It will not stand with my glory to suffer my people to profane and despise that name which the Heathen magnifie and feare Dreadfull Arias and the Genev. Terrible The Vulg. horrible Tremell Reverend The Chald. Potent Onely the Lxx render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illustrious as if the word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To see but it comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To bee afraid And this verse seemes to refer to the sixth If I bee a master where is my feare The very Heathen acknowledge mee to bee so by their dread and feare of my Name Thus having expostulated with them and threatned them for their ingratitude and contempt in the next place in the former part of the next Chapter III. Verse 1 He amplifies the former expostulation and threatnings Chap. 2. ver 1. to the 10th where First to whom he chiefely applies his speech verse 1. And now O yee Priests this Commandement is for you The French Is addressed unto you And so Deodates Ital. also supplies it Hee here returnes his speech to the Priests whose avarice and profanenesse had beene the fountaine of much other evill and profanenes among the people Cursed be the deceaver who ever he be But to you O Priests it is principally to bee applyed My name is dreadfull even among the heathen If it be profaned by you that are neare me in attendance and service the curse is chiefely against you And now or as Tremell Now therefore Their objection is prevented all that hath been said touches the people not us Yes This Commandement is for you or as Montan. To you This Commandement this increpation this intimation of my mind is for you Or this Commandement is for you that is of you I principally required and expected to be honored at my Altar in my sacrifices Secondly the matter of the speech mixt of contestations and threatnings or a conditionall threatning of many judgments unles they repented We will consider 1. Verse 2 The conditions of exemption from his judgements If you will not heare and if you will not lay it to heart To give glory to my name saith the Lord of hosts Here are three conditions of exemption To heare God To lay his Commandement or their duety to heart To give glory to Gods name The Summe of them is repentance Lay to heart The phrase is usuall and frequent The Geneva Consider it in your heart Chald. paraphrase unles yee put my feare upon your heart Lay it what my precepts so Vatabl. your duety so Tremell my glory so others 2. The things that are threatned I. Set down more largely ver 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. II. Repeated againe with more brevity ver 9. 1. Set down more largely 1. In generall verse 2. 2. In particular vers 3.4.5.6.7.8 1. In generall I will even send a curse upō you The vulg I will even send want upon you And they translate it so because
Gen. 28.17 How dreadfull is this place saith Iacob that is Reverend because of the signes of the Divine presence See also Ezek 1.22 Thus even the day of Christs first comming is to be entertained with an awfull dread and reverence 3. That day though a day of salvation to believers yet was to others terrible as it was described to be in the former Chapter verse 2. and is oft described so in the New Testament Luc. 2.34 Luc. 3.9.17 Luc. 19.44 Math. 21.44 See Casp Blockmond System Theol. vol. 2. artic 28. pag. 831. Object 2. It is added lest I come and smite the Earth with a curse But Christs first comming was not to judge but to bee judged Answ 1. It may be understood with Montan. and Winkleman of the destruction of Ierusalem and the calamity that came upon the Iewes upon Christs first comming 2. But I have all the way interpreted this Chapter comprehensive even of the day of judgement also and the sentence then to bee given by Christ Yet it followes not but the place may be meant of Iohn Baptists comming before Christ to prepare men to belive least hereafter for their infidelity they bee condemned It followes not that hee must come presently before that day Object 3. Christ speaking of Elias Math 11.14 Saith This is Elias qui venturus est which is for to come but Iohn was come already Answ The Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quiventurus erat Which was for to come speaking of him whom from Malachy's prophecy they expected and so might well be said of one that was already come as we have the same phrase Math. 2.4 He demanded where Christ should be borne Yet was Christ borne already Object 4. Iohn was indeed allegorically Elias but not literally therefore Christ speaking in the same place Math. 11.14 of Iohn saith If yee will receive it This is Elias that is Elias is indeed for to come yet if you will have one now also in this my first comming this Iohn is he But to shew that this is a mystery he addes He that hath eares to heare let him heare Answ Iohn was Elias literally that is in the Prophet Malachies literall sense but because the Scribes had another conceit not of another time as the Papists but of another person that it must be the Thisbite he tells them they mistake it in that for the Prophet in his very literall sense meant Iohn as the Prophet Ieremiah Ier. 30.9 ment the Mesiah literally as it is confessed not David the sonne of Iesse when he sayth They shall serve David their King And therefore he sayth If yee will receive him and addes Hee that hath eares let him heare Object 5. Elias is prophecyed of againe Rev. 11.3 One of the two witnesses Answ Besides the fuller meaning of that place for which let the Reader consult expositors and especially Mr. Ios Meades learned Commentaries upon his Clavis Apoc. There is there no mention at all of Elias It is but a begging to urge that text Object 6. Why else were Enoch and Elias rapt up before death and doe still live in their mortall flesh to dye againe but that they are for that service before the last comming of Christ Answ That they live in their bodies in Heaven is not doubted see Sixt. Amama Antibarb Bibl. l. 3. Syrach c. 44. pag. 947 c. but that they live in their mortall bodies and that they shall dye there is no Scripture for it neither is it likely seeing the Scripture sayth of Enoch Hebr. 11.5 He was translated that hee should not see death see Ios Scaliger's note upon Math. 17.11 among those few short notes of his which Iohn Bill the Kings Printer hath carefully collected at the end of his Impression of the New Testament Greeke at London 1622. But why they were wrapt up we must bee content to bee ignorant and it beseemes us most to bee so More of this point you have well treated of in the following Commentary Being thus rid of this interpretation wee have another which interprets the place of Christs first comming and we have S. Markes autority for it who makes the last words of Malachy to bee the first words of his Gospell and therefore leades us to understand by Elias in the Prophet Iohn Baptist in his Gospell And that we may bee further out of doubt we have the text clearely so expounded Luc. 1.16 17. See Laurent Valla his Castigation of the Vulg. Lat. according to the corrected edition of Iacobus Rivius Math. 11.14 15. Math. 17.10 11.12.13 Which places let the Reader peruse The name of Elias is given to Iohn not propter identitatem personae as if Elias were Redivivus or by a Metempsychosis were entred into Iohns body but propter identitatem spiritus virtutis because of the like gifts calling and Ministery See Iunius parall lib. 1. par 31. Pet. Martyr Loc. Clas 3. cap. 16. sect 21.22 But especially our late blessed King of famous memory in his Monitory preface before his learned Apology for the Oath of allegiance pa. 77.78 whose arguments are examined by Leonard Lessius Disp de Antichr Demonstr 15. but stand good And besides ours some learned and ingenuous Papists as Paul Burgensis Isid Clarius Bened. Arias Montan. in Locum who doe all admit our interpretation and Bishop Iansenius too in cap. 48. Ecclus. as Bened. Pererius affirmes of him lib. 15. in Daniel pag. 223. D. Let me here note by the way the conceit of Lucas Osiander who as he yields the place to bee meant of Iohn Baptist the second Elias before Christs first comming so hee also interprets it of a third Elias before Christs second comming and that is Martin Luther and accordingly interprets the following words and exhorts to the receiving of Luthers doctrine lest God come and punish our ingratitude Luther indeed was a man of notable zeale like Elias fit for the businesse hee was employed in by God and we have great reason to thinke honorably of him but none to thinke that Malachy thought of him or that the Holy Ghost meant him here Thus much of the comming of Iohn 2. Verse 6 His worke or office is declared in the last verse And hee shall turne the hearts of the Fathers to the Children and the heart of the children to the Fathers Least I come and smite the Earth with a curse For their interpretation of this who respect only the second comming of Christ let the Reader see Corn. a lapid I content my selfe with that of our following author That whereas all was at that time out of order full of corruptions and errors and different sects see Tremell ad marg Zach. 11.8 Iohn was sent to preach repentance Math. 3.2 and to convert of all sorts from the error of their way and to reduce them to the faith of the old Patriarks But for the manner of the phrase Iunius parall lib. 1. par 55. makes it parallel to Luc. 1.76.77.79 and so it will bring
in further light Adde also Luk. 1.17 where observe that the word of the Lxx is not used theirs is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but S. Lukes is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Evangelists Apostles though usually they follow yet sometimes take liberty to depart frō the Lxx concerning the vulgar Latine translation Ioh. Gagneius a Sorbonist professeth hee cannot tell the meaning of it but falls very foule upon Cardinall Cajetan Yet his owne conjecture of the misplacing of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there in the originall text is bold See him ad loc together with Beza his larger Annotations on the same place Lest I come and smite the Earth with a curse The coherence of this and the meaning see before Objection 2. and the Answer Lest I come The comming of Christ is not uncertaine but the smiting I reade it lest I smite when I come And smite the Earth S. Hier. earthly men not Iudaea onely though sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bee taken for a particular region as Genes 41.57 Esay 13.5 yet probably the calamity of the Iewes may be principally respected With a curse Geneva cursing Chald. extermination Pagnin slaughter The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wholly suddenly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lest I smite the earth with utter destruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is An utter curse or Devoting to ruine which Cherem the Rabbins say doth enter into the members of the body the number of which they observe to bee according to the numerall letters of this word The Iewes had three sorts of Anathema's 1. Niddui Rejection or Removing Hee that was Menuddeth was removed out of the Synagogue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ioh. 9.22 Thus they hold Caine was excommunicate Genes 4.14 Esay 66.5 This was of the nature of profligation or proscription among the Romans 2. Cherem which is more properly that which is Anathema among the Greeks which is the curse that they layd upon him whom they put out of the Synagogue if he mended not A giving over to Satan 1 Cor. 5.5.1 Tim. 1.20 At this they lighted Candles and put them out againe to note that such an one was deprived of the light of Heaven This is the word used here And this among us is the highest Ecclesiasticall censure according to the Tables of D. Richard Cosin who Polit. Eccl. Anglic. Tab. V. A. makes these degrees 1. Interdictio divinorum 2. monitio 3. Suspensio vel ab ingressu Ecclesiae vel a perceptione sacramentorum 4. excommunicatio 5. Anathematismus Contra haereticum pertinacem 3. There is a third degree among the Iewes cal'd Sham-atha The extreame and highest degree of excommunication The Etymology of which word is either 1 of Sam Desolate and attha Thou Thou art desolate or Be thou desolate 2. of Sham There and Mitha death There is death Or an Excommunication to death As 1 Ioh. 5.16 There is a sinne unto death Or 3. of Shem or Sama in the Chalde The Lord or The Name that is the Tetragrammaton Iehovah and Atha he comes The Lord comes A forme of speech used by them in sudden accidents as the most learned Heinsius observes exercit lib. 7. c. 15. and especially by such as suffered any oppressions whereby they still comforted the selves This is the same with that which S. Paul useth afterthe Syriack where Maran is The Lord. Maran-atha The Lord comes 1. Cor. 16.22 He that loves not the Lord Iesus let him be Anathema Maran-atha Which curse they fetch from the first words of Henochs prophecy Iude verse 14. And thus much for the last contestation and for the whole Text. For the close wee may take notice of a double observation 1. That in many copies though not here in Montanus his Interlin nor in two others that I have the last verse but one in Esaiah Ecclesiastes Lamentations and this prophecy of Malachy is repeated againe after the Text but without points because all these bookes have sad closes and therefore the Scribes thought fit to leave the verse before to be last for the recreating the spirits of the Reader as containing more comfortable matter See Ioh. Buxt of de Abbrev. Hebraic more in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. That all the Prophets execept Jonah and Nahum● expressely and in some prophecy concerning Christ Hee being the marke at which all of them chiefely aimed And let him bee our Aime likewise Blessed is he who carefully expects his second appearance Come Lord Iesus come quickly FINIS