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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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vnto him and without him we can do nothing no not so much as think one good thought or speake one good word or practise one good worke Reason 3 Thirdly he is a debter to no man neither can any of right challenge any thing at his hands He loued vs first and not we him he made vs and not we our selues he gaue to vs and not we to him we receiue of him not he of vs. ●●m 11.34 ● 36. The Apostle saith Who hath knowne the mind of the Lord or who was his counsellour or who hath giuen vnto him first and he shall be recompensed for of him and through him and for him are all things to him be glory for euer Amen Whereby we see he freely bestoweth all things he oweth nothing of duty he offereth iniury to no man whether he grant or withhold whether he giue little or much liberally or sparingly to many or to few Seing then we are to acknowledge his glory and our owne pouerty and seeing he oweth nothing to any man neither is runne behind hand in arrerages as being thereby bound to helpe him it followeth that God offereth his gifts and graces freely and frankely vnto vs. Vse 1 What is now to be learned from hence and what may be gathered for our instruction First it serueth to reprooue the Church of Rome that maintaine the ragges and reliques of the old Pelagians and refuse to haue the grace of God freely bestowed vpon them lest they should be too much beholden vnto him and therefore they build the castle of mans saluation vpon themselues and lay the ground-worke of it vpon their own strength and refuse to set it vpon the pillar of Gods grace This appeareth in three respects in their doctrine of foreseene works in their doctrine of merits and in their doctrine of mans free will to good Thus they build the tower of Babel that is of confusion and establish false causes touching the order of mans saluation and erre greeuously in the beginning continuance and perfection thereof Now that we doe them no wrong at all in charging them thus farre let vs make it manifest in euer particular Touching foreseene workes The first stone of this tower they lay in such workes as they say serue to prepare men to iustification so they make the foreseene faith of the elect to be the cause of the election to grace and glory that God hath chosen those to eternall life whom he foresaw would beleeue and perseuere therein vnto the end This hangeth the whole frame of saluation vpon the pinne of mans faith as the mouing or procuring cause and not vpon the purpose and pleasure of him that calleth vs whereas mans saluation abideth sure and firme stable and certaine through him onely that hath loued vs and called vs to his excellent knowledge and therefore faith foreseene is not the cause of it The Apostle reasoning of the cause of our election neuer affirmeth it to be of him that beleeueth Rom. 9.11 and 11.5 but of him that calleth for then it might be said to be of our selues Ephe. 2. which cannot be Againe if we obserue the golden chaine wherein the causes of our saluation are linked together we may strongly conclude this point For our faith is in time after the grace of God and therefore cannot be the cause of grace and consequently of election It is against all rules of right reason that that which commeth after should be any cause of that which goeth before But faith is one of the effects of election in as much as God hath chosen vs not because he knew we would beleeue hereafter but to the end we should beleeue that is that he might bestow vpon vs faith and so saue vs in his owne Sonne Ephe. 1.4 Ephe. 1.4 Tit. 1.1 Tit. 1.1 Act. 13.48 Act. 13.48 We are elected that we should bee holy and faith is said to be proper to the elect and so many beleeued as were ordained to euerlasting life Thirdly we are elect as taken out of the common masse of corruption as the sonnes of wrath borne dead in sinnes while we were yet enemies vnto him Now such as God iustifieth such he also chuseth and decreeth to iustifie as Rom. 4.5 and 5.8 Rō 4.5 5 8 Vnto him that worketh not but beleeueth on him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse and God commendeth his loue toward vs in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. But in the sonnes of wrath and in such as are borne dead in sinnes no faith at all could bee foreseene so that the foreseeing of faith could not bee the cause of election For if that which doeth come after cannot bee the cause of that which goeth before as we haue shewed already much lesse can that which is not at all be the cause of that which is Fourthly faith is the gift of GOD. It is giuen of God to vs and the worke of GOD in vs Ioh. 6.29.44 Ioh. 6.29 This is the worke of GOD that yee beleeue on him whom hee hath sent So the Apostle saith Phil. 1.29 Vnto you it is giuen on the behalfe of Christ not onely to beleeue on him but also for to suffer for his sake Phil. 1.29 It is he that bestoweth it and encreaseth it Before this gift there is nothing in vs but infidelity and vnbeleefe As it is not in mans power to repent when he will but when God will Lament 5.21 Ierem. 31. Psal 51. Act. 11.18 2 Tim. 2.25 26. so it is not in mans power to beleeue when he will Ioh. 12.39 40. albeit he haue the meanes though he heare the word and partake the Sacraments wherefore this cannot be the cause of Gods election as if he were mooued to elect vs by that as by a cause which he bestoweth vpon vs after wee are elected for then the same thing should be the cause of it selfe and before it selfe which is against naturall sense right reason and true religion Lastly if faith foreseene were the cause of election then infidelity foreseene should also be the cause of reprobation but this is false because then all mankind should be reprobated and reiected forasmuch as the whole masse of mankind is corrupt and God could foresee nothing in it but incredulity and vnbeleefe Thus we see that our election dependeth not vpon our owne workes or our owne faith or any thing in our selues but on the mercy loue of God there was no cause in vs to moue him For if any thing had bin in vs we might be said to haue the first stroke in our saluation to lay the first stone in that building and God should come after vs or behind vs. True it is he hath determined to elect vs and to saue vs of his good pleasure but he will bring it to passe by meanes to wit by the merits of Christ by calling of vs by giuing of vs faith
themselues deuout but is indeed the language of the diuels God respecteth not such foolish deuotions he requireth of all persons the knowledge of his word as we shall shew afterward and he will bee worshipped according to the knowledge thereof The Apostle reproueth the Iewes for their zeale a vertue that ought to be in al the faithfull forasmuch as God will spew all that are lukewarme out of his mouth neuerthelesse he accepteth it not in them because it was not according to knowledge Rom. 10 2 We must know what God alloweth if we would haue him allow approue of vs. If we regard not to know him we may well assure our selues that in the day of account he will not know vs but turne away his face from vs. The second reproofe The second reproofe meeteth with all such as do things doubtfully and waueringly not knowing whether they do well or ill these do attempt things either against their conscience or without the comfort of a good conscience and therefore albeit it be good in it owne nature which they do and good in regard of the will of God yet to them it is not so because they are not assured by the word whether it be lawfull or vnlawfull and therefore it is turned into sinne This is that which we heard before out of the Apostle Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14 23. All such neede not another to condemne them they condemne themselues in that which they doe The vnfaithfull and vnregenerate man sinneth in euery thing he doth euen in his best actions We must please god before any of our works can please him The Apostle saith Vnto the pure all things are pure but vnto thē that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minde and conscience is defiled Tit. 1 15. And S. Iames in his Epistle chap. 1 7 8. Hee that wauereth is like a waue of the sea driuen with winde and tossed for let not that man thinke that he shall receiue any thing of the Lord a double-minded man is vnstable in all his waies Wherefore it standeth vs vpon ●eral rules ●irect our ●ons to consider the three generall rules set downe by S. Paul in the Epistle to the Romanes chap. 14 to direct vs in all our actions First he is happy that condemneth not himselfe in the vse of those things which hee knoweth to be lawful This concerneth those that are strong ●n 14 22. This is a golden rule and a great honour happinesse of Christian men that their owne consciences doe not accuse them to allow and admit of that which they iudge not to be good and lawfull They know by due triall and examination that the same which they do agreeth with the word of God so that they are assured to build vpō the rock Though all men should accuse them and condemne them yet their conscience grounded vpon the word of God would acquit discharge thē which cannot but giue an inward peace and sweet contentment to their soules This the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 1 12. Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience c. To the same purpose Iob speaketh chap. 27 6. My righteousnesse I hold fast and will not let it go my heart shall not reproch me so long as I liue Likewise Iohn in his first Epistle saith I four heart condemne vs ●oh 3 20 21. God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things beloued if our heart condemne vs not then haue we confidence toward God This comfort of a good conscience they cannot but want which doubt whether that which they do please God or not they are farre from this happinesse which the Apostle pronounceth vpon such as know well and are throughly assured what they do the rest are like drunken men that stagger reele too and fro cannot keepe themselues vpright vpon their feet Secondly no man must do any thing with a doubtfull conscience for such a one woundeth his owne conscience offendeth God The Apostle saith He that doubteth is condemned if he eate ●m 14 23. because he eateth not of faith He that is not perswaded that it pleaseth GOD which he doth cannot direct it to his glory Euery worke that commeth short of his end is sinne and therefore Abraham is commended that he staggered not at the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strong in faith giuing glory to God Rom. 4 20. This rule belongeth to those that are weake who wauer vp and downe in their opinions like a ship that tottereth hither and thither in a tempest Woe vnto such they need no other witnes or iudge against themselues but themselues They do many good things that doe displease GOD which would please him if they were wel and rightly done If then thou wouldst haue any fruite and comfort in those things which thou doest informe thy conscience aright be perswaded throughly of that which thou doest and build thy faith vpon the sure and infallible rocke of God Thirdly whatsoeuer proceedeth not from faith is a sinne committed against God and condemneth him that doth it forasmuch as without faith it is vnpossible to please God Hebr. 11 6. Outward shewes and appearances though they be neuer so pompous and glorious are not respected of him he enquireth whether those things we do proceed from true obedience whether we beleeue by the word that they are required of God and so please him This last rule engendereth two other first whatsoeuer proceedeth from pure naturals is vnpure and whatsoeuer commeth from the force of our free will is sin in the sight of God Such as the fountaine is such are the streames as the root is so are the branches like mother like daughters like cause like effects Doth a spring send foorth out of the same place sweet water and bitter Can the figgetree beare Oliue berries Iam. 3 12. Math 7 18. eyther a vine figges A good tree cannot bring forth euill fruite neither can a corrupt tree bring foorth good fruite Secondly all the vertues and actions of the infidels and vnbeleeuers albeit in regard of themselues and the substance of the workes and as they are the gifts of God they be not euill but good yet in the iudgment of God they are sins The whole life of vnbeleeuers and vnregenerate men is nothing else but a whole practise of sin in a continued course without stay or interruption from the beginning to the ending August in Psal 31. et epist 105 but they are like those that run a great pace out of the way They may do many things beautifull in shew but they are more in shew then in substance in appearance then in deed and truth All their vertues are shaddowes and therefore called by one of the fathers splendida peccata beautifull sinnes August de ciuit dei They lay an euill foundation haue a wrong beginning they do them without faith and they also
I may protest indeed that whatsoeuer I speake is from God and haue drawne and deriued it from him Secondly it is our duty to ayme at his glory that hath called vs. We must not sit downe in Moses chaire to preach our selues and to get credit to our owne names if we make this the end of our preaching it cannot be but we shal prophane the holy word of God and disguise it one way or other The Apostle regarded little to be iudged of men 1 Cor. 4.3 and esteemed nothing the vaine applause of the world but preached Christ among them and him crucified Hence it is that our Sauiour saith How can ye beleeue which receiue honour one of another Ioh. 5.44 and seeke not the honour that commeth from God onely It is a note of a true teacher to seeke his glory that sent him as contrariwise it is the note of a false teacher if any in deliuering his doctrine seeke himselfe rather then God This is the difference betweene a true and false teacher as Christ sheweth at large Ioh. 7.17 18. If any man will doe his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my selfe he that speaketh of himselfe seeketh his owne glory but he that seeketh his glory that sent him the same is true and no vnrighteousnesse is in him That is true doctrine that giueth glory to God and they are true teachers that seeke to set it forth onely Let vs consider of this a little farther If any be desirous to know whether any doctrine be true and haue God the Author of it let him labour to find it by this note The doctrine of predestination hath beene taught diuersly one way that it is of foreseene works another of the purpose of God according to election Ro. 9.11 If any desire to know whether of these two opinions is the truer let him examine them both by this rule and try them by this touch-stone which of them doth best serue to set forth the glory of God Not that which imputeth our predestination to our selues and our owne workes but the other which ascribeth all to his good pleasure who hath elected vs to the praise of the glory of his grace Ephe. 1.6 The like we might say of iustification and saluation of the elect touching which are diffrent doctrines deliuered Some teach that we are iustified by faith alone that is by Christs satisfaction apprehended and applyed by faith others that we are iustified by mens merits and not by Christs obedience alone These two opinions are cleane contrary and cannot agree together if one of them be true the other is false Now by this we shall be made able to iudge marke whether of them giueth God the glory alone They that set vp mans merits and deserts and make him to haue power to work out his own saluation doe giue the glory to man and so robbe God of his honour and glory and therfore they cannot teach the trueth But they that impute iustification to Christs righteousnesse who is our merite doe commend his grace and mercy alone and therefore they teach that doctrine which is of God If this course were wel noted and obserued it would shake in peeces many articles in controuersie betweene the Church of Rome and vs. We should not haue occasion to dispute so often and to reason with them touching mans free-will indulgences pardons intercession of Saints and such like points which leade away our mindes from God and his glory from the Creator to the Creature Let all the Ministers of God therefore proue themselues and their teaching by his note let them set his glory before their eyes according to the example of Christ their Master Ioh. 8.50 I seeke not mine owne glory there is one that seeketh and iudgeth Thirdly it belongeth to the Ministers duty to come well prepared and prouided as a wise Scribe taught to the kingdome of heauen bringing forth out of his treasure things both old and new Matth. 13.52 The Ministers must come with good aduisement and premeditation and so handle the word with feare and reuerence There is no man that is sent on an embassage but will thinke before hand what to say much more is required and ought to be practised of the messengers of God They must eate the roule of Gods booke Ezek. 2.1 Esay 6.7 and haue their tongue touched with a coale from the Altar They must not vtter whatsoeuer commeth into their mind but that they haue before well chewed and digested He that speaketh suddenly shall neuer speake profitably but presumeth too farre vpon his owne gifts regardeth not as he ought the good or the people and cannot haue that comfort to himselfe which were expedient Fourthly they must regard not onely the matter which they handle but the manner of handling Some are so negligent and carelesse in deliuering the word that they regard not what wordes they vse and so let slip from them such homely phrases as it were kitchin-stuffe that it bringeth the Minister and his ministery and the word it selfe into contempt It is noted of Christ that there proceeded gracious words out of his mouth Luke 4.22 according to the saying of the Prophet Grace is powred into thy lippes Psal 45.2 Let vs so speake the word of God both for matter and manner as it ought to be spoken and as we are perswaded Christ and his Apostles would haue spoken it if they had deliuered it to the people Our ordinary talke and communication should be as it were seasoned with salt and minister grace to the hearers how much more therefore when the word of God is in our mouthes and vttered by vs If we set this as a rule and caution before our eies it wil serue as all-sufficient to informe vs and make the word reuerent in our mouthes Some take vpon them to reprooue sinne but it is in such a foolish manner in such a iesting veine and after such a scoffing fashion that they rather perswade to sinne then disswade from sinne and bring the people in loue with it rather then out of the loue of it Therefore let this bee another rule added to the former that no man must gird and glance at sinne to shew forth his owne witte and to magnifie himselfe to be accounted and esteemed that way Rather let vs pierce the very heart of it with the two edged sword of Gods word ●4 12 and strike downeright blowes at it with the hammer of Gods word ● 29 that so it may be broken in peeces Sinne is growne to a great head it is not to be dallied withall He that playeth with a serpent may happely bee stung of it before he be aware Fiftly it is required of the Minister to speake to the people with vnderstanding We must not flie aloft aboue the reach and capacity of those to whom we speake and consider not so much what is lawfull for vs to deliuer but
his perfection that wee may offer our selues to our most louing Father and obtaine of him the blessing of righteousnes And this some of our aduersaries themselues cannot but approue Pigb de fide iustifie con ro 2 and haue giuen their own fellowes the slip Besides this Doctrine standeth best with the glory of God which shineth more clearely in our saluation obtained by iustice imputed then by iustice inherent For suppose there were a miserable and desperate debter perishing and languishing imprison were it not farre more honourable gracious for a Prince wholly to pay the debt and to cancell the bond hand-writing standing against him then to put into his hands a stock of money wherby himselfe might be enabled to worke out his debt Therefore the Apostle teacheth that we are made the righteousnesse of God in Christ and are saued by grace thorough ●ith not of our selues it is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Eph. 2 8 9. Thus Paul concludeth also concerning Abraham the father of the faithfull Rom. 4 2. Thus doeth Christ determine this question drawing a comparison frō the brazen serpent Iohn 3 14 15 16 for he teacheth that the sonne of man must be lift vp on the crosse as the serpent was on the pole in the Wildernes that whosoeuer bel●eueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Let vs then renounce all met it and righteousnes in our owne selues flye to the merits and righteousnes of Christ according to the practise and example of the Apostle Phil. 3 8 90 I haue counted all things losse and do iudge them to be dung that I might win Christ and might be found in him not hauing min● owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnes which is of God through faith Hereunto cometh the reason of the same Apostle Abraham beleeued God and it was counted to him for righteousnesse now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that ius●ifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse Rom. 4 3 4 5. True it is works are necessarily required as the fruites of faith and of iustification by faith but our iustification is one thing our sanctification is another for they are made seueral graces distinct gifts 1 Cor. 1 30. neither is it likely that the Apostle would repeat the same thing twice without cause And in another place he concludeth that a man is iustified by faith without the worke of the Law if it be of grace it is no more of works for then were grace no more grace but if it be of works it is no 〈◊〉 gra●e for the● were worke no more worke Rom. 3 〈◊〉 11 6. Therfore it is truely said that good works follow a man being iustified but do not go before in him that is to be iustified Neither let any say It is absurd that one should be made righteous by the righteousnes of another for the righteousnes of Christ is both his and ours His as being inherent in him as in a subiect Ours being giuen vnto vs and imputed to vs so that by i● we are iustified before God and accepted to eternall life And that horrible blasphemy is this to teach that by the Popes indulgences wee should bee made partakers of the merits and good works of the ●●ints and to deny it as most vnreasonable what we should be partaker● of the ●●●ries and righteousnes of Christ Iesus But as the transgression of Adam was both his and ours also not his alone ●●r ours alone but his and lo●●s together because hee stood in on● places and we were in his loyns so is Christs righteousnes and obedience his and ours And why should not the righteousnes be of another Bernard 〈◊〉 1 0 seeing guilt is of another As another maketh vs sinners why should not another make vs righteous and iustifie vs from sinne It might seeme to flesh and blood as vnreasonable that the brazen serpent in this place being an artificiall wor● made with mans hands without sence life should restore health and giue life to such as were mortally bitten yet we see by beholding it they were recouered Moreouer the people stung by the fiery serpents ●ryed out in the anguish and bitternes of the paine yet none was able to helpe himselfe or his brother by his owne power of strength or by any acte wrought by him no nor Moses himselfe could minister any cure o● comfort vnto them but onely the graces of God directing them to looke vpon the brazen serpent set vp for when GOD had appointed them one way they must not seeke another way so although a man feeleth the sting of the old serpent that is sinne Ferus in l● Mato●● yet no man can deliuer himselfe or others nay if he should flye to the works of the Law they can do nothing The Law sheweth the disease it is Christ that must take it away it is God that must shew mercy it is faith that must iustifie vs. We affirme therefore with the Apostle Gal. 2 16 that we are iustified freely not of the Law not by the Law not of works not of our selues not of the works of the Law but by faith all matter of boasting is excluded iustification by grace is concluded that God may be all in all Fiftly great consolation ariseth from this Vse 5 comparison and similitude to all such as ●●e weake in faith feele the corruptions of their hearts pressing them and the tentations of Satan often ouercomming them alwayes assaulting them For we haue great comfort giuen vs to enter into the combate and to fight the battels of the Lord against the enemies of our soules by consideration of these fierce and fiery serpents True it is they did continually bite sting the children of Israel for otherwise there had bin no need of the brazen serpent yet they could not destroy them they did not ceaffe to vexe thē but they could not wound them vnto the death for they had a remedy at hand to helpe themselues they looked vpon the brazen serpent and were healed So hath God restrained the rage and malice of all the enemies of our peace and saluation For howsoeuer the diuell his angels are alwaies tempting prouoking and seeking to 〈◊〉 vs as men do wheat yet their homes and ●ot short and their strength is diminished their will to hurt is greater then their power of hurting so that they cannot execute the c●uelty they desire as the Lord himselfe testifieth from the beginning Gen. 3 verse 15. Albeit therefore the battell be long the skinnis● oftentimes hot bloody albeit we take many a foyle and haue the Bucklers beaten to our heads albeit we be felled with the stroke and driuen to fight vpon our knees yet the victory shall be ours
the Infidels when they should learne that he is the God that ruleth and ordereth all things in heauen and earth that disposeth the counsels of his enemies and maketh them further the good of his people that depend vpon him Yea when God saw his couetous humour and wicked heart that hee would not rest in his word nor obey his commandement giuen vnto him first by way of an Ironicall concession he biddeth him goe howbeit in his wrath indignation but yet reserueth to himselfe the rule of his tongue the power of his speech and the gouernment of all his works as seemed good in his heauenly wisedome As if the Lord had said Forsomuch as the messengers be so importunate with thee and thou so earnest with me that thou wilt take no denyall nor rest in my word nor yeeld thy selfe to my charge goe to goe forward follow thine owne course runne on of thine owne head yet will I bridle thy tongue thou shalt not speake what thou desirest nor doe what thou delightest in but what pleaseth me Balaam glad of this answer and thinking this concession better then a denyall reioyced in his heart that he had leaue as if there had beene some change in God and told it to the Embassadours he prepareth for the iourney sadleth his Asse and consenteth to goe with them which is the second part of his answer Here obserue with mee aga●ne a false finger most wretchedly dissembling one part of the diuine Reuelation imitating therein his master the diuell who in his tentation of Christ Mat. ●● Psal ●● and allegation of the Scripture omitteth a principall part to peruert the meaning of the words and to draw our Sauiour into wickednes So whereas God had challenged as proper and peculiar to himselfe the ordering and disposing of all his affayres that albeit he had liberty to go yet his going was with restraint and limitation that he should speake no more then God should put in his heart yet the wizard neuer declareth this to the messengers which neyther pleased him nor would pleasure them neyther profit him or them Onely he feedeth his owne foolish fansie in this that he was bidden to goe which God before had denyed vnto him Now hee taketh hold presently on these words and went with a ioyfull heart hoping that in time the same God wold suffer him to curse them also For as God had said at the first thou shalt not goe yet after said Go with them so he supposed that albeit hee had forbidden him to curse the people yet afterward he hoped to finde a change in this as he thought he had gained in the other and so conceiued a strong imagination that the Moabites should bee fully satisfied himselfe plentifully rewarded and the Israelites miserably cursed and detested This is the summe and effect of these words Now let vs come to the Doctrines arising out of the same Verse 16. Be not staied from comming vnto me for I will promote thee vnto great honour Consider here the couetousnesse of this false Prophet He had receiued a charge and commandement not to goe yet seeing new regards come with the new messengers he would not rest in Gods former answer He had beard the will of God wherein hee ought to haue rested but pricked forward with couetousnesse and allured with the recompence of reward he comforteth the men that were sent vnto him to attaine their purpose This the Apostle Peter noteth describing the false Teachers which priuily brought in damnable heresies he saith They forsooke the right way and haue gone astray following the way of Balaam the sonne of Bosor c. 2 Pet. 2 verse 15. And the Apostle Iude speaking of such like Teachers as turne the grace of God into wantonnesse and bring vpon themselues swift damnation saith Wo be vnto them for they haue followed the way of Caine 〈◊〉 7. and are cast away by the deceit of Balaams wages and perish in the gainesaying of Core See heere the force and power of worldly wealth it is able to set open the gates that are shut vp with barres and bolts And albeit this point hath in part beene handled before yet because it is offered to our considerations againe in this place it is not to bee passed ouer without further meditation From hence we learne 〈…〉 God 〈…〉 that the loue of this world and the hunting after honour and dignity preferment and promotion cause men to make shipwrack of a good conscience and draw them from obseruing the lawes of God and from resting in the knowne will of God Hereunto commeth the reproofe of Reuben who being called came not to the battel fought against the Canaanites neyther furthered the worke of God that his people had in hand but had their mindes fastened to their riches and dwelling in a fat and fruitefull soyle they set their hearts vpon the world For the diuisions of Reuben were great thoughts of heart Why abodest thou among the sheepe-folds to heare the ●leatings of thy flockes for the deuisions of Reuben were great thoughts of heart Iudg. 5 15 16. The like appeareth in the Prophesies of Haggai where the people fell to build their own houses and left the house of the Lord desolate therefore the Prophet saith Is it time for your selues to dwell in your seeled houses 〈…〉 and this house lie waste What was it that preuailed with our first Parents in the Garden to entice thē from God and to hearken to the tentations of the diuell Gen. 3 3 4. but hoping for honour and aduancement in a better condition This bayte was laide before Moses in Pharaohs Court he was tempted with dignities allured with delights prouoked with profits he had laid before him the glory of a kingdome the pleasures of the Court and the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11 24.25 26. yet he preferred the suffering of aduersity the shame of the Crosse the fellowship and communion of Saints that so he might be receiued into the bosome of the Church Thus we see that the loue of the world the things of this world drew this Sorcerer away from vpright iust dealing If honour had bene offered vnto him alone or riches alone if they had come seuerally vnto him they had bene of great force but coming ioyntly together and rushing vpon him as an armed man they are more forcible and powerfull to preuaile with him The Reasons are to be wisely waighed of Reason 1 vs to gaine our affections to imbrace the Doctrine before deliuered First the setting of the heart vpon the loue of riches is the beginning of all euils and the fountaine frō whence sundry mischiefes do proceed is auaileable to draw from all good into all euill This the Apostle vrgeth 1 Tim. 6 9 10. They that will be rich fall into tentations and snares and into many foolish and noisome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction for the desire of money is the roote
and not through impatience accuse God neither impute the euill successes of our affaires to him but to our selues euen as he that stumbleth and falleth against a stone should not accuse the stone but his owne hastinesse and heedlesnes Now then if wicked men want the knowledge of God and the feare of his Name to guide them in the search and suruey of their owne wayes to enquire into the true cause of their euill successes wee cannot maruaile if they wander vp and downe in their owne imaginations and can neuer finde the fault to bee in themselues Secondly the vngodly are blinded with a Reason 2 selfe-loue and selfe-liking of themselues aboue God or his Word The loue of the creature or of our selues more then God or equall with God hindereth vs in good things and quite swalloweth vp the loue of our brethren and darkeneth the light of vpright iudgment that it cannot shine in our hearts The conceited person thinketh himselfe a wise man and imagineth his owne course to be the best vsing no aduice of others as if he himselfe were in all things sufficient of himselfe to see what is best for himselfe This Salomon excelling in wisdome teacheth to these conceited persons abounding in folly Prou. 12.14 The way of a foole is right in his owne eyes but he that hearkeneth to counsell is wise So in another place Prou. 18.2 A foole is not delighted with vnderstanding but with those things which are in his owne heart And againe Prou. 26.12 Seest thou a man wise in his owne conceit There is more hope of a foole then of him These selfe-louing and selfe-liking fooles are delighted with their owne folly which they labour to publish and make knowne to all men and may worthily beare away the bell from all the fooles in the world For these are proud fooles that highly esteeme of their owne wisedome and scornfully disdaine the counsell and wisedome of all other men Seeing therefore euill men want the wisdome of God that is from aboue and abound with selfe-loue which descendeth not from aboue but is earthly sensuall and diuellish we cannot greatly maruaile if wicked men will acknowledge no fault in themselues but wholly looke to second causes and lay the blame vpon the most High when they faile in their purposes Vse 1 The vses of this doctrine First of all wee learne this truth that no euil man can look for any good successe in the matters he taketh in hand but let him alwaies be sure to be crossed cursed of God Albeit thou lay in thine own conceit neuer so strong a foundation work neuer so wisely in thine own imagination yet if thou make not God thy Counsellor 〈◊〉 119.24 and his Word thy director thy wisdome shall be turned into folly and thou shalt be taken in the snare of thine owne hands For all sin against God bringeth with it the wrath of God and the euill life of a sinner drawes vpon his owne head sundry crosses and calamities causeth him to haue ill successe and raiseth vp infinite iudgments against him Whensoeuer we despise his word prophane his Sabbaths defile his Sacraments and practise any vnrighteousnesse against men and impiety against God then followeth and falleth vpon vs some sicknesse or trouble some crosse or affliction one way or another as the Apostle sheweth For your dissention and vnreuerent receiuing of the Lords Supper 1. Cor. 11.30 many are weak and sick among you and many sleepe Now when the rod and scourge of God lyeth vpon the backe of transgressours and they feele themselues sore plagued either they accuse God as the authour of their trouble or murmure against his punishment or rest vpon second causes which are ordered by him who is the principall cause Vse 2 Secondly we learne that if we would haue God blesse vs and the lawfull labours of our hands we must be godly in Christ Iesus If we leade a sincere and sanctified life purge our hearts to be a peculiar people to God zealous of good workes wee haue a sure promise of good successe and strong assurance of a plentifull blessing to follow vs all the dayes of our life There is no good successe in any thing without Gods blessing And this is the cause why God blesseth vs not because wee blesse not his Name wee liue not as a people vnder his protection wee do not deny vngodlines worldly lusts liuing soberly righteously and godly in this present world hauing our conuersation in the heauens and looking for the blessed hope of glory and immortality Hereunto commeth the saying of Salomon Prou. 16 3. Psal 37.3 1 Pet. 5 7. Commit thy workes to the Lord and thy thoughts shall be directed This is a worthy saying to redresse our weakenesse and distrust and to make vs rest and rely our selues on Gods good prouidence This also the Prophet Dauid teacheth Psal 127 1 2. All the fruit of our labours cares dependeth vpon the prouidence of God yea all our industry and studie shall be vaine and vnprofitable vnlesse he guide all our affaires To this purpose the Prophet speaketh in another place that the godly Psal 1.1.3 refusing the counsell of the wicked the way of sinners the seat of scorners shall bring forth fruite in due season so that whatsoeuer he shall doe shal prosper It is God alone that directeth the wayes and works of the faithful and without him is no good successe This wee see verified in Ioseph Gen. 39 2 3. The Lord was with Ioseph he was a man that prospered and was in the house of his master the Egyptian And his master saw the Lord was with him and that the Lord made al that he had to prosper in his hand The like the Scripture● testifieth of Hezekiah that hee prospered in all his workes 2 Chro. 32 30 and 20 20. So Iehosaphat spake to the people Heare ye me O Iudah the inhabitants of Ierusalem put your trust in the Lord your God and ye shall bee assured beleeue his Prophets and ye shall prosper Thus also the Lord exhorteth Ioshua after the death of Moses Iosh 1 8. We do all of vs desire the blessing of God vpon our labours and to haue good successe in our seuerall callings this is the pathway that we must walke in namely a godly life and conuersation without this his blessings shall turne into curses and wee shall neuer attaine the end of our hope This appeareth by the words which the man of God spake to the King of Israel saying Thus saith the Lord Because the Aramites haue saide 1 King 20 28 the Lord is the God of the Mountaines and not of the Valleys therefore will I deliuer all this great multitude into thine hand and ye shall know that I am the Lord. Lastly we are bound euery one to consider Vse 3 the true cause of euill successe to be in our selues When the hand of God is any way vppon vs that he plagueth
be effectuall to stay vs in our obedience because God wil continue the same God of mercy and truth vnto vs without alteration which he was to Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph and all the faithfull so highly renowned and greatly commended in the Scriptures so it must serue to bee a bridle in the iawes of the vngodly and prophane wretches of the world that as he hath plagued consumed and throwne downe into the bottomles pit of hell the wicked heretofore that rebelled against him and resisted his will so he is vnchangeable in Name and Nature and therefore he will do the same to them now and to as many as shall walke in their steps for euer This we may see to be a plain case in the righteousnes of God Eccl. 8 12 13. Though a sinner do euill an hundred times and God prolongeth his dayes yet I know it shall be well with them that f●are the Lord and do reuerence before him but it shall not be well to the wicked neither shall he prolong his daies he shall be like a shaddow because he feareth not before God And the Apostle Iude in his Epistle Iude 6 7. 2 Pet 2 1 5. alledgeth and applyeth the examples of Gods vengeance vpō the wicked past to those present and to come shewing that if God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hell and deliuered them vnto chaines of darknesse to bee kept vnto damnation neyther spared the olde world but brought in the flood vpon the vngodly c. Let vs remember that wee shall finde God the same toward vs for euer neuer presume that he can or will be changed now from that which he hath beene heeretofore toward others Verse 21. He seeth not iniquity in Iacob he beholdeth not transgression in Israel Hitherto we haue spoken of the vnchangeablenesse of Gods loue toward his Church Now let vs see the reasons of it both in spirituall things and then in temporall The cheefest priuiledge of the Church standeth in the fruition and enioying of spirituall blessings Among all spirituall blessings this is one of the cheefest Remission of sinnes This is expressed by this phrase that God seeth not sinne in them that is he forgiueth theyr iniquity and imputeth not sinne vnto them To the same purpose the Prophet saith Our sinnes are couered Psalm 32 verse 1. These may seeme at the first strange speeches and phrases For shall not he that made the eye see Psalme 94. Shall not he that made the eare heare He that made the heart shall not he vnderstand and know the secrets of the heart Are not all things naked and open before him or can any hide himselfe from his presence and winde himselfe from his prouidence The meaning is not that God doth not behold them but it is a borrowed speech from the custome of men which lay away those things out of sight which they do not vse or would not remember so that he doth not see them when he doth not punish them he couereth them when he doth pardon them and account them as if they were neuer committed So Hezekiah saith Esa 38 17. God had cast his sins behind his backe Thus the Prophet speaketh Esay 1 18. Though your sinnes were as Crimson they shall be made white as Snow though they were red as Scarlet they shall be as wool And chap. 44 22. I haue put away thy transgressions like a Cloud and thy sinnes as a Mist So the Prophet Micah saith chap. 7 19. He will turne againe and haue compassion vpon vs he will subdue our iniquities and cast all their sinnes into the bottome of the sea From all these Testimonies we learne this truth That to euery true member Doctrine of the Church To all the members o● the Churc● belongeth the forgiu●nesse of 〈◊〉 belongeth the forgiuenes of all theyr sins It is a peculiar priuiledge of the faithfull for the merits and righteousnesse of Christ to haue theyr sinnes forgiuen whereby it commeth to passe that God esteemeth of sinne as no sinne and of iniquity as if it had neuer bene committed Heere then we haue offered to our considerations a principall and fundamental point of our Christian Religion and of the holy faith That all our sinnes wants and impections originall and actuall as well in the committing of euill as in omitting of good in thought word deed are couered healed and released thorough the righteousnesse of Christ imputed vnto vs which being apprehended by faith and applyed vnto vs doth not onely make them as if they had neuer bene but also iustifie discharge vs causing vs to appeare blamelesse and spotlesse in the sight of God Thus God proclaimeth him selfe to be a most gracious and merciful God readily inclined to forgiue sins Exod. 34 6 7. Esay 33 24. and 43 25. Ier. 31 31 32. and 33 8. Reason 1 And this truth to wit that iustification stādeth in the remission of sinnes through the satisfaction of Christ is confirmed vnto vs by sundry reasons out of the worde of GOD. For first we must appeare as iust and perfect in Gods sight either by the imputatiō of Christs righteousnesse or by the merite of our owne workes there is no third way can be deuised This is a full distribution of causes as appeareth by the Apostle speaking of the election and calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 6. If it bee of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it bee of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke Thus we see hee maketh an opposition betweene the grace of God and the workes of men But no workes can iustifie vs neither of congruitie nor condignity neither of nature nor of grace wrought in vs by the spirit of God but by Gods acceptation of the intercession and merits of his owne Son This the Apostle witnesseth Rom. 3 20. Gal. 3 6. By the workes of the Law shall no flesh be iustified in his sight And in another place I count all things but losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus my Lord that I might bee found in him not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith Phil. 3 7 8 9. Reason 2 Secondly whatsoeuer giueth the creature cause of boasting and robbeth God of his glory may not be admitted and cannot be accepted in the worke of our iustification But all things sauing the righteousnesse of Christ minister to vs matter of boasting depriue God of the honor and glory due to his name This the Apostle teacheth in sundry places Rom. 4 2. If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce 〈◊〉 2 8.9 but not with God By grace are ye saued thorough faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe So
vncleannesse and filthinesse and pursued them into their filthy stewes and brothel-houses where he thrust them both thorough reuenging the dishonour done to God the scandall laide vpon his people A worthy example for all Magistrates to follow to be sharpe seuere in punishing sinne and taking away euill out of the citty of God Thus the plague was stayed and the anger of God turned away after that iustice was executed and so many thousands at one time and for one sinne swept away But heere two questions arise which are to be discussed before we proceede any further the first touching the fact of Phinehas the second touching the number of the dead heere remembred Touching the fact of Phinehas Obiection it may be thus obiected How can it be lawfull in him being a priuate person to exceede rhe bounds and lists of his calling Hee was of the tribe of Leui and of the family of the Priests to whom it belonged not to draw the sword For as the other tribes were not appointed to the seruice of the Altar so the tribe of Leui was not called to the execution of iustice Besides there are generall rules directing all priuate men and generall Lawes restraining them from shedding of blood as he that sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed hee that smiteth with the sword shal be smitten with the sword loue your enemies and doe good to them that hate you The seruant of God must not striue but must be gentle toward all men suffering the euill and instructing them with meekenesse that be contrary minde 2. Tim. 2 25. How then can we iustify this act of Phinehas departing from these holy rules of Gods Religion I answere Answer there is a double kinde of calling an ordinary calling and an extraordiry calling the one necessarily distinguished from the other For God doth oftentimes giue vnto his seruants a new and special vocation and addeth it vnto their former function Hence it is also that some workes are ordinary and some are extraordinary Ordinary workes must be guided and directed by ordinary rules such as those are which wee haue set downe before Extraordinary workes proceede from a special motion of Gods Spirit warranting them and making them albeit going against the common rules lawful cōmendable and necessary Such was the fact of Moses smiting the Egyptian Exod. 2 12 the fact of Samuel hewing Agag in pieces 1. Sam. 15 35 the fact of Eliah slaying the Priests of Baal 1. King 18 4 the fact of the Israelites spoyling the Egyptians and such like Exod. 12 35 who had an inward motion like to the commandement giuen to Abraham to kill his sonne These actions albeit warranted to the doers Luth in Gen. cap. 29. are not to be drawne into example and imitation vnlesse we haue the inspiration of the same Spirit and therefore Christ our Sauiour answereth his Disciples that would haue called fire from heauen to consume the Samaritanes Yee know not of what spirit ye are for the Sonne of man is not come to destroy mens liues but to saue them Luk. 9 55. Now that this fact of Phinehas is of the same nature it appeareth both because the plague ceased by it and Gods wrath kindled against his people was appeased so that the action is both commended rewarded This the Spirit of God teacheth in the Psalme Phinehas stood vp and executed iudgement and the plague was staied and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse from generation to generation for euer Psalm 106 30 which is not so to be vnderstood as if he were iustified before God by this one acte because whosoeuer will bee iust by the Law is bound to keepe the whole law according to the tenour of the law Do this thou shalt liue Gal. 4 12 20. One good worke doth not serue or suffice to make a man perfectly iust and righteous in the sight of God seeing hee that continueth not in all things written in the booke of the law is accursed So then we must know that the Psalmist meaneth that this fact was lawfull and allowed For hauing set down the vengeance that Phinehas tooke vpon this adulterer and the adultresse hee preuenteth the Obiection which might be made Was not this horrible and damnable murther in him who being a priuate man had not the sword of iustice committed vnto him and being one of the Priests of the Lord was to meddle onely in matters belonging vnto God and not in ciuill things who was to draw out the censures of the church not a materiall sword to strike offenders No saith the Prophet it was not murther it was a righteous and commendable acte he beeing stirred vp by Gods Spirit inasmuch as it proceeded from faith and aymed at the glory of the great Name of God Wherefore this place is falsely alledged and peruersly wrested by the Church of Rome to ouerthrow iustification by faith alone and to establish iustification by good works For there is a double iustification one of the worke the other of the person The Prophet speaketh in that place of the iustification of the worke which albeit in the sight of men it might seeme sauage inhumane yet God did accept of it account it as a good and iust work which pleased him being done in faith which purifieth the heart Acts 15 9. He speaketh not of the iustification of his person which was by apprehending the mercy of God in Christ by beleeuing not by doing Thus the Apostle in the fourth chapter to the Romanes verses 4 5. maketh a double kinde of imputation saying To him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauor but by debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is accounted for righteousnesse Thus much of the first question touching the acte of Phinehas whether it were lawfull or vnlawfull whether it were priuate reuenge or publike iustice The second Question is touching the number that dyed in this plague Obiect wherein appeareth some difference and disagreement in outward shew betweene the old Testament and the new For Moses in this place verse 9 sayeth There died foure and twenty thousand But the Apostle Paul alledging this iudgement of God mentioneth onely Three and twenty thousand 1 Cor. 10 8 subtracting one thousand from the former number which Moses added I answer some reconcile these places thus that the Scribes or Penmen fayled in copying out the books of Pauls Epistles which shold haue written foure twenty thousand where they wrote three twenty thousand But this is shifting rather then reconciling cutting the knot with a sword rather then loosing it asunder with the hand inasmuch as all the copies generally with full consent as it were with one voice agree in the former reading Others suppose and surmise that it might bee a slip of memory in the Apostle according to humane infirmity But this answer is worse then the former and these are
much the rather because it is so generally neglected Nay it is not onely shamefully omitted but the contrary is commonly practised For how many are there that make a mocke at the miseries of the Church as Shemei did at the troubles of Dauid who cursed him when he should haue comforted him 2. Sam. 16 7. Thus are the deare Saints of God dealt withall thus they are reuiled and railed vpon with horrible taunts thus they are slandered and reproached with bitter imputations such as the diuell deuiseth and malice setteth abroach The bowels of their pity are breathings out of cruelty Their shewing of compassion is the adding to their affliction Their visiting of them in their aduersity is a casting vppon them of the greatest miserie These are the daies of the patience of the Saints which are filled with reproaches and giue their cheekes to him that smiteth them Lamen 3 30. Let them commit their causes to God who in his good time will looke vpon them for good and reward their enemies according to their workes Verse 17. Vexe the Midianites and smite them Heere is the commandement giuen by God to Moses and by Moses to the Israelites to execute vengeance vppon the Midianites because they drew the people of God into sin allured them to whoredome enticed them to idolatry and brought vpon them a most fearfull iudgement that entred in among them destroyed many thousāds of them This commandement giuen in this place is afterwards renewed and executed according to the direction giuen vnto them For inasmuch as they troubled Israel the Lord troubled them to be put to the sword so that their cities were burned their goods were spoiled their Women captiued their Kings destroyed and all theyr males massacred This is set downe more at large in Numb 31 1 2. where the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Reuenge the children of Israel of the Midianites and afterwards shalt thou be gathered vnto thy people And Moses spake to the people saying Harnesse some of you vnto war and let them go against Midian to execute the vengeance of the Lord against Midian Seeing then that they haue such a charge commission from God to destroy them we learne from hence That warre is lawfull Doctrine The people of God may lawfully make warre The people of God may lawfully make wars both offensiue and defensiue against their enemies The truth hereof appeareth in many places of the word of God This is charged vpon the people of God Deu. 7 2. 20 10 11 12 13. Whē the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the Land whither thou goest to possesse it and shall roote out many nations before thee then thou shalt smite thē thou shalt vtterly destroy them thou shalt make no couenant with them nor haue compassion on them And afterward in the same book when thou comest neere vnto a city to fight against it thou shalt offer it peace but if it will make no peace with thee but make warre against thee then thou shalt besiedge it and the Lord thy God shall deliuer it into thine hands and thou shalt smite all the males therof with the edge of the sword So when Amalek fought with Israel in Rephidim which was the first of the nations that encountered with thē after they came out of the land of Egypt Moses saide to Ioshua Choose vs out men go fight with Amalek so hee discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword Exod. 17 9. The like we see in Ioshua the Generall of the Lords hoast at the taking and winning of Ioshua so soone as the wall fell down at the sounding of the Trumpets and the shouting of the people they tooke the City and vtterly destroyed all that was in the City both mā and woman young and old with the edge of the sword Iosh 6 21. 10 13. This the Prophet teacheth when hee praised the Lord for deliuering him from the hand of all his enemies Psal 18 34 37 38. He teacheth my hands to fight so that a bow of brasse is broken with mine armes I haue pursued mine enemies and taken them and haue not turned againe till I had consumed them c. Reason 1 And howsoeuer these testimonies may seem sufficient to perswade this truth yet we shall be better confirmed therin if we consider the strength of reason to inforce the former truth First it is a title proper to God to bee called the Lord of hoasts and al warres lawfully vndertaken are called the battels of the Lord so that as God is serued in the day of battell so he is the Captaine and Leader of the Armie Hence it is that Moses saieth The Lord is a man of warre his name is Iehouah Exod. 15 3. This is it which Saul said to Dauid when hee promised to giue him his eldest daughter to wife Onely be a valiant sonne vnto mee fight the Lords battels 1 Sam. 18 17. And it is saide that many of the enemies of Gods people fell downe wounded because the war was of God 1 Chron. 5 32. Seeing then God is the Lord of hoasts a man of war the Captain of the army the onely author and sole giuer of victory wee must needs hold that warres are lawfull and may bee lawfully vsed and taken in hand Reason 2 Secondly as wee are taught the lawfulnes of war by the titles of God so we are farther assured of it by the speciall commandements which God giueth for the carrying of armes against common enemies as also by his gracious and mercifull promises made vnto his people for good successe and prosperous proceeding in their iust cause honest quarrel To this purpose tended the law of God charging Saul to smite Amalek and to destroy all that pertayned to him and to haue no compassion vpon them but to destroy them all 1 Sam. 15. Iudges 8 1 3. Likewise the Lord charged Ioshua to take all the men of war with him and to lye in wait on the backside of Ai to take it and to slay the inhabitants thereof with the sword Neither had the people of God onely the charge of a commādement but the comfort of a promise the commandement to warrant them the promise to strengthen and incourage them When Ioshua was to go against Iericho which was shut vp closed because of the children of Israel the Lord said vnto him Behold I haue giuen into thy hand Iericho and the king thereof and the strong men of war Iosh 6 2 3. And afterward when sundry kings gathered themselues together against the Gibeonites that had subiected thēselues to the Israelites the Lord said vnto Ioshua Feare them not for I haue giuen them into thine hand none of them shall stand against thee Iosh 10 8. Thirdly as the children of God haue prayed Reason 3 for the help of God in the successe of their busines and in the workes of their hands that they haue attempted and haue beene heard so when
heauen is not giuen but to those to whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 and 25.34 But election is not of works but of grace and therefore is called the election of grace Rom. 11.5 This appeareth Ephe. 1. Ephe. 1 5.6 He hath predestinated vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will c. No man could be saued except Christ had come and had satisfied the iustice of God for the sinnes of the world by his precious blood for there is no other name vnder heauen wherby we must be saued Act. 4.12 but all his benefites proceed from grace and the euerlasting loue of God toward vs as Ioh. 3. Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the word that hee hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life No man can be saued except he be effectually called to Christ and his Gospel outwardly by the word and inwardly by the Spirit but whence proceedeth this grace but from grace as the Apostle testifieth 2 Tim. 1. 2 Tim. 1.9 Gal. 1.6 He hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was No man can be saued except he hath faith in Christ for the iust shall liue by faith Hab. 2.4 and without faith it is vnpossible to please God Heb. 11. But from whence haue we faith By grace as the Apostle witnesseth Ephe. 2. Ephe. 2.8 By grace ye are saued through faith that not of your selues None can be saued except he be iustified as Psa 34.15 16. The eies of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open to their cry but the face of the Lord that is his anger and indignation is against them that do euill to cut off their remembrance from the earth But our iustification commeth from grace as Rom. 3. Rom. 3.24 We are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus No man can be saued except being iustified by faith he be also sanctified and renewed by the spirit of regeneration for except a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3. But whence haue we this but from the grace of God as the Apostle expresseth Tit. 3. Tit. 3.6 The bountifulnesse and loue of God our Sauiour toward man appeared and according to his mercy he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the holy Ghost which he shed on vs aboundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour No man can be saued without good workes and a carefull and constant endeuour to walke in them for we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath ordained that we should walke in them Ephe. 2.10 But how are wee inabled to performe them but by the grace and free gift of God as Ezek. 36. Eze. 36.26 ●● A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you an heart of flesh and I wil put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and ye shall keepe my iudgements and doe them The like may bee saide of remission of sinnes No man can be saued without continuall forgiuenesse of sinnes for into many sinnes and offences we fall daily Iam 3.2 But this is giuen vs through his grace onely as the Prophet teacheth Esay 43. Esai 43.25 I euen I am hee that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake that is for no deserts of thine but thorough grace and fauour and will not remember thy sinnes and Ephe. 1.7 We haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Lastly no man is saued except he perseuere and continue in faith in loue in Christ in repentance in Christ and in all good works as Matth. 24. he that endureth vnto the end he shall be saued and Reuel 2.10 Be thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life but from what root and fountaine proceedeth this gift and from whence hath it his beginning The Apostles and Prophets tel vs most plainely and directly as Iere. 32.39.40 Ier. 32.40 ● I will giue them one heart and one way that they may feare me for euer I wil put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from me Phi. 1.6.29 and 2.13 God that hath begunne his good worke in his Saints will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Now as we haue said of all the rest so we may say of eternall life Rom. 6.23 that it is the free gift of God and therefore all his giftes and our saluation come not from our our merits but from his mercies not from our deseruings in whole or in part but from his free fauour in Christ Iesus Let vs come to the reasons and consider Reason 1 aright the causes hereof First of all God wil haue the praise and glory of his owne works and will not giue and grant ouer the same to another But if the graces of his Spirit were well deserued of vs and not freely bestowed vpon vs wee had matter of reioycing in our owne selues and of boasting against God The Apostle hauing shewed that the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the Law saith Where is then the reioycing Rom. 3.27 and 4.2 It is excluded And touching Abraham th● father of the faithfull he sayeth If Abraham were iustified by workes he hath wherein to reioyce but not with God Likewise writing to the Ephesians chap. 2. By grace ye are saued through faith Ephe. 2.8.9 and that not of your selues it is the gift of GOD not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe So then he giueth all his gifts freely that he may haue the whole praise of his mercy But so much as we take to our selues so much hee loseth of his glory Reason 2 Secondly he knoweth we haue nothing of our owne we craue our daily bread and drinke at his hands We are beggers and destitute of all good things and neuer are able to supply our owne wants Our owne penury is such that we haue nothing to boast off but our misery pouerty blindnesse nakednes and wretchednesse We were saith the Apostle dead in trespasses and sinnes ●he 2.1 2. wherein in times past we walked according to the course of this world and after the Prince that ruleth in the ayre euen the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience We are vnable to thinke or to doe any thing it is God must worke in vs the will and the deed it is he must draw vs before we can runne after him or come
where he had graciously bestowed much he may iustly require the more Againe our spirituall life is a debt and our workes due to him in regard of our redemption iustification and sanctification in consideration of all the which we owe our selues wholly vnto God and he in iustice may require all the seruice that wee can possibly performe vnto him A seruant bought with money and redeemed out of bondage is a debter to his master and is wholly at his commandement because he oweth to him his life his liberty and all that he hath How much more then must we consider our selues to be wholly the Lords to serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues being redeemed from the bondage of sinne and slauery of Sathan not with siluer and golde but with the precious blood of Christ as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled 1 Pet. 1. 1 Pet. 1.19 Neither were we once onely made free men but moreouer are laden with many benefites by this our Sauiour and redeemer being regenerated with his Spirit to walke before him in newnesse of life So that our vnthankefulnesse is exceeding great if forgetting the greatnesse of our deliuerance we returne to our vomit againe as dogges 2. Pet. 2.22 and lye wallowing in the mire as filthy swine Lastly in regard of the benefits to come which by the Spirit of Christ we doe certainly expect and looke for to wit our resurrection of the body and glorification in the heauens These being exceeding blessings do make vs infinite debters vnto God Hence we learne to detest the heresie of Popish hypocrites that dare boast of the merits of the Saints and of workes of supererogation an euident argument of intollerable proude spirits For debt and merit are quite contrary they are so opposite the one to the other that the first being established it ouerthroweth the second as Rom. 4.4 5. Rom. 4.4 5. To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt but to him that worketh not but beleeueth on him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse If then our whole life be a debt of the Spirit it must of necessity be false that there is any meriting of life and saluation by any workes either of congruity or condignity or supererogation For whatsoeuer it pleaseth them to prate of merits either publikely or priuately to their disciples dare any of them when they are ready to goe the way of all flesh and must be presented before the eternall iudge dare any of them I say desire of God to giue them according to their merits dare any in the pride of his heart so exalt and lift vp himselfe as to pray Lord I am worthy of thy mercy I haue deserued thy kingdome pay me that thou owest vnto me I desire nothing at thy hands gratis or freely my works are truely and properly meritorious I haue a right to heauen and deserue it worthily I expect not eternall life as an almes but as a price due vnto my labours I am content thou enter into iudgment with me for I haue righteousnesse in mine owne person and therefore I craue not to be accepted in thy beloued Ephes 1.6 1 Pet. 2.5 but in my selfe Lord thou hast made me able to merit heauen for my selfe and the●efore repay me according to my worth I thinke none of them are come to this presumption to pleade for themselues with God therfore whatsoeuer they write whatsoeuer they speake whatsoeuer they resolue and determine in their schooles and pulpits they deny it renounce it wholy at the point of death with their own mouthes condēne their owne folly In their life they talke of merits but at their death they are glad to call for mercy so by their owne practise proue and confirme the trueth of the doctrine of the Protestants howsoeuer against the light of their own consciences they oppose themselues flatly as enemies vnto it The debt of the creature euen of the man regenerate is greater then he is able to pay the thousandth part nay the more he payeth the more he oweth and is bound to pay forasmuch as the benefits of God do daily grow and encrease toward him and abound in a wonderful measure that they augment the debt strengthen the obligation Neither can they escape and auoid the force of this Obiection by a friuolous and false distinction that our works are not indeed meritorious in the rigour of Iustice or absolutely considered in themselues but that they are so by the ordinance and acceptation of God Answere For albeit God accept of our workes and reward them euen to a cup of cold water Mat. 10. yet he accepteth them not as merits but as the due obedience of his sonnes which he recompenseth freely and fully because he that cannot lie or deceiue hath promised the reward Neither is it the ordinance of God that we should merit by our obedience but that we should performe the worship and honour that is due vnto him Tit. 3.4 Act. 15. Let them therefore shew vs where God hath made any such promise vnto vs to accept our workes as merits and we will beleeue them The Lord gaue the Israelites the land of Canaan not for their workes Deut. 7.8 and 9.5 but for his owne loue and mercy If they could not merit the earthly Canaan how should any deserue the heauenly Wee are taught to pray to GOD to giue vs our daily bread If wee cannot merit the foode of this life no not one morsell of bread but must craue it of him as poore beggers doe an almes at the dores of men much lesse can we merit euerlasting life which is the gift of God Rom. 6.23 Rom. 6.23 For what is a bit of bread in comparison of the kingdome of heauen or what is the food of the body in respect of the food of the soule Lastly this doctrine destroyeth another bulwarke of the Church of Rome Against mans free will whereby they set vp mans nature and that is free will teaching that there is a cooperation of mans free will with Gods free grace in the first act of our conuersion A doctrine full of pride and folly as well as the former for as much as this is to part stakes betweene God and our selues and to diuide our conuersion betweene him and vs and consequently to ascribe as much to man as to God Christ saith that without him we can do nothing Phil. 2.13 we cannot come vnto him except the Father draw vs Ioh. 6. It is God that doth worke in vs the will and the deed saith the Apostle We are all by nature corrupt there is no part sound in vs or without vs. We are not onely as crazy or sicke but as dead men God doth all and we nothing in good things Hee preuenteth vs with his grace he prepareth vs by his word he enclineth vs by his Spirit and worketh both the
Mary the brother of Iames and Ioses and of Iuda and Simon and are not his sisters with vs Thus they were offended at him Hence it is that Christ saith vnto them A Prophet is not without honour but in his owne countrey and among his owne kinne and in his owne house Mar. 6.4 ●arke 6.4 It skilleth not whether the Ministers be rich or poore wise or simple noble or vnnoble if they say vnto vs Siluer and gold haue we none but such as we haue we giue vnto you Act. 3. ●ct 3.6 we must accept of them and of the word of reconciliation and account their feet beautifull that bring glad tidings of good things Though they bring heauenly treasures in earthly vessels yet the excellency of the power is of God so that the meaner the person of the Minister is the more we ought to magnifie the Author of their ministery remembring alwayes that we ought not to haue the faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons Thirdly for as much as God vouchsafeth Vse 3 to chuse weake agents to promote his causes and to further his workes we conclude from hence that fearefull is the estate of the wicked if their eyes were opened to behold it and their hearts enlightened to take notice of it Howsoeuer they set their hornes heads on high and exalt themselues in their owne pride yet the poorest and simplest meanes strengthened of God and armed by his power shall be able to bring them downe to the ground and to lay their honour in the dust They shall know one day that they fight against God and rebell against the most High who wanteth no weapons to destroy them he can arme the least things against them as wee see in the destruction of the Egyptians to wit lice flyes frogs grashoppers and such like all brought vpon them by the rod of Moses This vse is concluded by the Prophet Esay Chap. 27.11 Esay 27.10.11 When the boughes thereof are withered they shall be broken off the women come and set them on fire for it is a people of no vnderstanding therefore he that made them will not haue mercy on them and he that formed them wil shew them no fauour He sheweth in these words and in this place the certainty of the destruction of the enemies of the Church their defenced cities shall be desolate and left like a wildernesse But how shall this be God needeeth not the power of mighty enemies hee needeth not armies of men or legions of Angels or such like strong meanes to effect it the women shall come and set them on fire that is weake meanes and silly creatures euen such as are by nature fearefull an army of Hartes shal haue strength and courage enough when God setteth them on worke Great is the force of weake Souldiers vnder such a Captaine If they that haue the least power and pollicy be made the Lords workemen and employed in his seruice who shall be able to daunt them and to driue them from their worke who shall fray them and affright them and make the rest of them turne their backes They haue their calling and commission and they canneuer ceasse vntill they haue ended the businesse and finished the worke to which they were sent according to that which Gamaliel saith of the preaching of the Apostles being in themselues of themselues simple and vnlearned men Refraine from these men and let them alone c. for if it bee of God ye cannot ouerthrow it lest haply ye be found euen to fight against God Act. 5. Act. 5.38.39 This is little regarded or considered of the enemies of God and the persecuters of the Church they runne on in their wilde courses think they can doe what they list whereas they ly open to euery iudgement and euery creature shall be able to worke out their destruction Vse 4 Fourthly seeing it seemeth good to God to accept of their seruice that seeme farthest off and most vnlikely to doe him seruice let no man presume vpon the greatnesse of his gifts and the excellency of his calling let him not lift vp himself aboue others to think himselfe better preferre himself before his brethren neither contemne them of lower degree of meaner place of lesser gifts The heart is of the Lord the blessing is of the Lord the successe is of the Lord. Hence it is that the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 4.6 7. Who maketh thee to differ from another and what hast thou that thou diddest not receiue Now if thou diddest receiue it why doest thou glory as if thou hadst not receiued it 1 Cor. 4.7 Our Sauiour rebuketh a young man that would not giue ouer the world and telleth him Matth. 19.30 and 20.1.16 the first shall be last and the last first Such as in the visible Church haue the chiefe place and in the opinion of men are in greatest account because they carry the greatest name of piety and holinesse are nothing lesse inwardly then that which they appeare outwardly and therefore notwithstanding the roome and reputation that they hold in earth they shall be quite shut out of the kingdome of heauen as was verified in the Scribes and Pharisees and all hypocrites who for a pretence made long prayers but shall receiue the greater damnation This he sheweth farther by the similitude of an housholder who hired labourers at all houres into his vineyard and thereupon concludeth the point againe that the first shall be last and the last first Presume not therefore of thy selfe neither glory in thine owne workes nor boast of thine own gifts it may please God to sanctifie others to goe before vs and to make them out runne vs that sette out after vs. Hee accepteth them that are of smaller gifts and lower place and therefore we ought not to reiect them or contemne them When he chose speciall witnesses of those things that he spake and did and sent them out to heale the sicke and raise the dead and cleanse the lepers to giue sight to the blinde and to preach the Gospel he did not call the learned wise men of the world but simple fishermen and such as the world accounteth idiots and men of no fashion or estimation Such then as seeme to be behind are taken forward and made more profitable then those that were before them Wee see this in Amos Amos 7.14 15 He was no Prophet nor a Prophets sonne but an heardman and a gatherer of Sycamore fruite the Lord tooke him as he followed the flocke and said vnto him Goe Prophecy vnto my people Israel 1 Tim. 1.13 1 Cor. 15.8.9 Act. 8.1 and 9.1 Ephe. 3.8 Gal. 1.23 The like wee might say of Paul he was most vnlike to be called and to be imployed in the affaires of the Church as himselfe confesseth and the history of the Actes importeth 1 Tim. 1.13 1. Cor. 15.8 9. Act. 8.1 and 9.1 Ephe. 3.8 He confesseth that
good things and the rich he hath sent empty away Luc 1 53. Luc. 1 53. There is a perfection in Gods children accompanied with much imperfection and strength mingled with much weaknesse Phil. 3 15. So that albeit the faithfull finde their owne infirmities yet they do not please themselues in thē but continually striue against them and more and more get the vpper hand of them Fourthly we must make conscience of the least sinne that we may be afraid of the greatest When Dauid had cut off the lappe of Sauls garment his heart smote him 1 Sam. 24 5. How could he be induced to shed one drop of his blood that confessed he ought not to haue touched the lap of his garment The Apostle requireth of vs to abstaine from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5 22. If we cast out the mote that is in our eyes wee cannot suffer a beame to sticke in them If we would learne indeed and in truth to straine at a gnat we should not so easily swallow a Camell The wages of all sinne is death and therefore we should feare to runne into any sinne Pull out the sting of this serpent in the beginning Cure this sicknesse at the first lest it grow incurable Cut downe the tree while it is young and greene one stroke now will doe more good then an hundred when it is growne old and tough and hard The labour is little at the beginning but custome in sinning groweth into another nature Fiftly we must grow ftom good to better We must not alwaies be babes and sucklings children and weaklings but euermore grow in grace There is a perfection of Christians to which we must be led as Heb. 6 1 where he moueth them that leauing the principles of the doctrine of Christ they should goe on to perfection not laying againe the foundation of repentance from dead workes and of faith toward God Not that any perfection can be attained in this life as the Anabaptists and other phantasticall persons dreame off most falsely not knowing themselues nor the law of God but we must aime at it as at a marke and make it the end of all our workes forasmuch as in the Schoole of Christ wee must waxe old euermore learning somewhat God accounteth vs as pure The faithfull sa●ctified in part are accounted pure accepteth vs as pure albeit we attaine not vnto the parts of perfect purity for these causes and considerations of apprehension regeneration imputation and glorification For though we be sanctified in part yet Christ calleth the Church his Loue all faire pure as the Sunne cleere as the Moone bright as the Morning because we lay hold on the righteousnesse of Christ by faith the worke of regeneration is begun in euery one of vs and goeth forward by degrees the perfect purity and perfection of Christ is ours for the present in whom we are accounted pure and for the time to come we haue the promise of glorification when we shall be without spot or wrinkle and made so absolutely pure as if we had neuer beene defiled with sinne Lastly it is our duty to pray vnto God to giue vs vpright hearts which in themselues are crooked and corrupt The Apostle in the shutting vp of the Epistle to the Hebrewes prayeth for them that God would make them perfect in euery good worke to do his will ●●b 13 21. working in them that which is well pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ That which we desire for another we ought much more to craue and aske for our selues Hence it is that the Apostle assureth his owne heart that the LORD would deliuer him from euery euill worke and preserue him vnto his heauenly Kingdome 2. Tim. 4 18. If this meanes be diligently practised of vs wee shall grow more and more in good things we shall abolish the kingdome of sin and Satan in vs so that the Lord which hath begun his good worke in vs will perfect the same vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ CHAP. III. 1. THese also are the generations of Aaron and Moses in the day that the Lord spake with Moses in Mount Sinai ●xod 6 ●3 2. And these are the names of the sonnes of Aaron Nadah the first borne and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar 3. These are the names of the sonnes of Aaron the Priest which were annointed whom he consecrated to minister in the Priests Office 4. And Nadab and Abihu died before the Lord when they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse of Sinai and they had no children and Eleazar and Ithamar ministred in the Priests Office in the sight of Aaron their father WE haue already shewed that the numbring of the Israelites which of a small stocke grew to so many millions is of two sorts one of the people fitted for the warres the other of the Priests and Leuites that were to minister to God This whole multitude consisting partly of the people partly of the Ministers are all of them warriours and souldiers howbeit there is a twofold warre ciuill and sacred Now of such as were to wage the ciuill warre wee haue spoken before in the former chapters It remaineth to intreate in this and the Chapter following of such as follow another warre and belong to another warfare and are another kinde of warriours The former is opposed against temporall and bodily enemies but this against spirituall and both of them haue their seuerall Captaines their swords their armour their furniture their victories The former warre is carnall prophane this is sacred and holy The Generall is Christ Iesus The Captaine of the Lords host Iosh 5 14. The enemies are Satan the world and the flesh the armour is as the war wholly spirituall for our warfare is not carnall yet mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holdes casting downe imaginations and euery high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captiuity euery thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10 4 5. We fight not against flesh blood but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknes of this world against spirituall wickednesse in high places Eph. 6 12. And therefore our whole armour must be of the same nature that it may be of proofe Eph. 6 16. able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked our brest-plate must be made of righteousnesse our shield must be of faith which is our victory our helmet must be of saluation our sword wherewith we are to be girded is the word of God Hence it is that the Apostle exhorteth Timothy a Minister of the Gospell to bee strong in the grace that is in Christ Iesus and to endure hardnesse as a good souldier of Iesus Christ 2 Tim. 2 1 3. Now then as we obserued in the two former chapters concerning the mustering of the people both their number and their order the like we are to consider in handling
and Paul chargeth the Philippians to let their patient and equall mindes bee knowne to all men But of this vertue of contentation we haue spoken at large before ●he fift re●oofe Fiftly it reprooueth such as contemning their owne callings as vile and base become male-content and thinke better of themselues and their owne gifts then there is iust cause and better then they would indeed if they rightly and truely knew themselues Such are all ambitious and aspiring spirits that loue to be aloft and scorne to be below that seeke for themselues an higher place and a better estate then God hath alotted vnto them as if the bramble should seeke to be promoted ouer the rest of the trees If our first parents through the tentation and instigation of Satan grew discontent with that estate wherein they were created sought to be as Gods knowing good euill Gen. 3 verse 5 no marueile if their posterity draw this corruption from them as the childe that sucketh the brest of his mother Absolom through his high mind 2 Sam. 15 4. was moued to fawne vpon the people and to seeke his fathers kingdome and life also iudging basely of his present estate and climbing vp to an higher What caused the Scribes and Pharisies to contemne and disdaine Christ and his Disciples Mat 23 6 7. but this they loued the chiefe places at feasts and desired the highest seates in the assemblies and looked to be greeted and saluted by men Rabbi Rabbi What was the cause that Diotrephes would not receiue Iohn and the other faithfull Ministers of the word 3 Iohn 9. but did prattle with malicious words against them neither would he himselfe receiue them nor suffer others to entertaine the brethren He loued to haue the preheminence in the Church Loe here the horrible plague and as it were the ranke poison of pride vain-glory and ambition These are the causes of all confusion and disorder These weeds must be pulled out of our hearts by the contrary graces if we would haue any wholesome hearbs grow therein We haue many sharpe tooles lent vs put into our hands if we list to set them on worke to grub them vp by the rootes First we must consider the state of our bodies what it is We are but dust and ashes Meanes to pull downe pride and ambition and to dust we must returne Gen. 3. What a vaine and foolish thing is it to thinke so highly of our selues that were raised out of the earth do carry about vs the matter of our mortality If we had come downe from heauen and had our beginning aboue the Clouds we should haue had wherein to glory but being all of vs fraile and mortall creatures that are here to day and lye in the dust to morrow like the grasse of the fielde Math. 6 30. which flourisheth for a time and by and by withereth away what vanity hath possessed our hearts that earth ashes should waxe proud Our life standeth wholly in vncertainty it is appointed to all men once to die and after death commeth iudgement Heb. 9 27. Neither do we know at what houre the Lord will come Math. 24 42. Why then should we soare so high seeing we must lie so low Why should we say in our hearts I will ascend into heauen seeing our pompe shall be brought downe to the graue and the wormes must couer vs Secondly we are altogether set vpon sin and bring foorth the bitter fruites of our corruption in regard whereof we are more wretched then other creatures They sinne not against God they prouoke him not to anger but keepe their originall condition wherein they were created but we miserable sinners are turned out of the right way and become abhominable so that there is none that doth good no not one Rom. chapt 3 verse 12. If then we will glory of our selues or any thing in our selues we must glory in our shame hauing nothing of our owne but sinne and iniquity Thirdly we are not able of our selues so much as to thinke one good thought neither are we sufficiently furnished to doe the least and smallest duty that God requireth of vs we haue the spawne and seed of all sinne in our nature We are ready to fall into the most horrible sinnes except God sustaine vs and hold vp our heads and strengthen our weake knees We cannot set forward one foot toward the kingdome of heauen It is as vnpossible for vs to doe any good as for a dead carcase to flie We are as poore miserable wretches that are dumbe and cannot speak blind and cannot see deafe and cannot heare The Prophet acknowledgeth that he is a man of vncleane lippes Esay 6.5 and another confesseth he could not speake Ier. 1.6 our eares also are stopped so that we cannot heare the voyce of God that we might liue Ioh. 8.47 Matth. 13.13 our eyes are closed vp so that seeing wee see not but grope as blind men in the darkenesse The light shined in darkenes and the darknesse comprehended it no Ioh. 1.5 Men naturally take themselues to be sharpe eyed and quicke sighted Ioh. 9.41 but because they say We see therefore their sinne remaineth because the carnall mind is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8.7 Fourthly whatsoeuer gifts are bestowed vpon vs we must thinke meanely and humbly of our selues and of them The Apostle willeth vs to decke our selues with lowlinesse of mind Phil. 2.3 and that each esteeme other better then themselues We know that our best gifts are stained with many blemishes we feele our owne corruptions more then the corruptions of other men so that Gods grace and our nature are ioyned together in one subiect We are not therfore to despise other men or dwell in the contemplation of their imperfections but be alwayes working vpon our selues and considering our owne vnworthinesse that so we may more and more mortifie the deeds of the flesh and grow in the graces of Gods Spirit Fiftly let vs set before vs the example of our Lord and Master Iesus Christ we must be ready to learne of him the lesson that he offereth to teach vs by word example Hence it is that he calleth all to him that are weake and weary and saith Take my yoke vpon you and learne of me for I am meeke and lowly in heart and ye shall finde rest vnto your soules Matth. 11.29 He disdained not to wash the feet of his disciples to teach them humility not only by doctrine but by practise He is a perfect patterne as of all other vertues so also of this and therefore the Apostle setteth him before vs for our imitation Phil. 2.5 6. Let this minde be in you which was also in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God c. He made himselfe of no reputation and tooke vpon
iudgment vpon the vnbeleeuers and impenitent persons Great is the authority of Princes and Rulers of the earth They may banish from their kingdoms such as are offenders but they cannot banish and exclude any from the kingdome of God They may binde the hands and feet of the body but they haue no power to binde the soule and conscience The Magistrate may say Take his body but the Minister may say Let him be deliuered to Satan Lastly we see from hence that those Churches are deceiued that cast from them this holy ordinance of Christ Iesus they are as a body subiect to many diseases yet want a soueraigne medicine to cure them For albeit they haue the Christian Magistrate to assist them and to resist euils yet his iudgement is externall not internall he may punish he cannot amend and reforme Euery Church therefore ought to haue this remedy to take away euill out of Israel The second point in the description of excommunication is ●e second 〈◊〉 of the de●ption that it must bee executed vpon him that is a member of the Church For as it is the sentence of the Church so it extendeth onely to such persons as are professours in the visible Church and haue giuen their names to Christ and submitted themselues to the doctrine and discipline thereof This is expresly grounded vpon the words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 5 11 12. If any that is called a brother be a fornicator or couetous or an idolater or a drunkard c with such a one eate not 2 Cor. 2 6. For what haue I to doe to iudge them also that are without Doe not ye iudge them that are within In like manner Christ in the Gospel prescribing this spirituall physicke to recouer dangerous sinners saith If thy brother trespasse against thee From hence we learne what person is to be excommunicated to wit such an one as was called our brother and registred in the number of the children of the church For how can he be excommunicated that is cast out of the communion who neuer was in the communion Wherefore it belongeth nothing at all to those that are out of the church as Turkes Persians Iewes Pagans and other Infidels that were neuer baptized in the name of the holy Trinity neyther had entrance into the church This censure concerneth such as are reckoned among brethren and not accounted strangers from the faith and aliants from the Common-wealth of Israel Hence it is that when Paul had written in an Epistle to the Corinthians that they should not keep company with fornicators lest they should thinke he wrote this of all the fornicators of this world he expoundeth himselfe that he vnderstood it not of all wicked persons in generall for then they must needs goe out of the world Verse 10. but of such as were members of the church and would needs be called brethren These are they that giue scandall to the enemies of God and his Gospel through them the Name of God is blasphemed the church is contemned slandered the word is reuiled the weake are offended and the rest of the parts infected and therefore deserue worthily ro bee excommunicated The church taketh care of all her children shee is as a carefull mother and tender Nurse that hath promised to bring them vp to see them rightly ordered and gouerned and therefore ought to vse all good meanes for their recouery that their spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord. Againe we are put in mind heereby of the folly and corrupt dealing of the Church of Rome who directly crosse the doctrine of the Apostle and set themselues in the place and seate of God For as they haue defiled the most holy ordinances of God the word praier sacraments and worship of God so they haue horribly abused the institution of excommunication as wee shall see farther afterward The truth is they haue nothing to doe with excommunication they are fallen from grace they haue denyed the faith they haue defiled themselues with Idols they will not haue Christs righteousnesse imputed vnto thē they set vp their owne works seeke iustification by thē they will not receiue Christ to be their onely King and Priest they will merite saluation for themselues and therefore they are not a true but a false Church But excommunication is the Churches right it is none of theirs that are not the Church so that albeit they curse vs and banne vs euery yeare yet it hurteth vs not forasmuch as the curse that is causelesse shall not come But suppose they were the true Church and wee out of the Church who hold all that refuse to be subiect to the Popes supremacy to bee no Church at all how commeth it to passe that they dare excommunicate vs who neuer were of their communion and do not belong to their iurisdiction They teach we are out of the bosome of the Church and Paul affirmeth that the Church is not to iudge them that are without they are therefore abusers and prophaners of this ordinance euen by their owne confession Let them either admit vs to be parts of the true Church or else remit vs to the iudgement seate of God who iudgeth them that are without 1 Cor. 5 13. For as a Prince draweth out the sword against none but his owne subiects so is this censure to be drawne out against none but such as are subiect vnto it that is the Church If the Church proceed any farther it may be said vnto it Who made thee a Iudge and Ruler ouer them Lastly let not vngodly persons atheists that are out of the Church bee encouraged heereby to continue in sinne neither let any enuy their freedome and liberty because they are not to be touched with Church-censures but rather let them consider that they shall not escape scotfree they haue God the Father high possessor of heauen and earth a sharpe and seuere Iudge against them and all their euill deeds for thē that are without God iudgeth who wil giue to euery one according to his deserts Thus much of the second point The third part of the description Let vs go forward in the description The third thing necessary to be obserued in excōmunication is that the person offending bee conuicted of some greeuous hainous crime either against the first or second Table of the law Hence it is that the Apostle nameth not onely whoremongers couetous drunkards railers 1 Cor. 5 11. and extortioners but also idolaters so that as well hereticks and worshippers of Images sorcerers and enchanters and such like brethren as drunkards and adulterers are to be excommunicated In like manner Christ himselfe expresseth not the seuerall kindes of sinnes for which the brother that offendeth is to bee excommunicated but contenteth himselfe to say onely in generall If thy brother trespasse against thee So the Apostle Paul teacheth Tit. 3.10 A man that is an hereticke after the first and second admonition
4.2 1 Cor. 1.31 Lastly to bring the aduersaries of this doctrine once more to plead for vs against themselues They teach that no man can certainly know that he hath true merits without a speciall reuelation or that he shall persist and perseuere in them vnto the end whereupon we inferre and conclude that therfore we may not beleeue that we shall obtaine eternall life for our workes sake for that were to torture and torment mens consciences to set them vpon the racke that were neuer to giue peace to the distressed soule but to leaue it in doubt and perplexity wheras the Apostle gathereth the quite contrary from the doctrine of iustification Roman chap. 5.1 Being therefore iustified by faith wee haue peace with God thorough our Lord Iesus Christ But from the popish doctrine of iustification wee see there followeth no effect of peace no tranquillity or quietnesse of conscience because they are taught to stand in doubt of their reconciliation and attonement with God Fourthly this serueth as a great consolation Vse 4 to such as are carefull to doe good and to shew foorth good workes that they shall in time reape if they faint not This was good Nehemiah assured of and therefore accordingly he desireth God to remember him chap. 13 31.14 Remember me O my God for good and a little before Remember me O my God concerning this and wipe not out my good deedes that I haue done for the house of my God and for the offices thereof And chap. 5.19 hauing declared his care to releeue the poore and distressed among the Iewes and his own conscience bearing him witnesse of his sincerity in this behalfe he prayed to God Thinke vpon mee my God for good according to all that I haue done for this people Obadiah had comfort by the workes of mercy shewed to the persecuted seruants of God who in the reigne of Ahab hid an hundreth of the Lords Prophets in a caue 1 Kin. 18.13 and fed them with bread and water and he had the fruite of it he was the first to whom glad tidings was offered in the daies of famine when heauen was shut vp that it yeelded no raine and was made an instrument to publish it to others No worke shall fall to the ground but come vp in remembrance to our comfort This is as true and certaine touching the workes of euery seruant of God as if the Angel that spake to Cornelius were sent vnto him to say vnto him Thy workes are come vp in remembrance before God An● as God saith that he keepeth the tears of his children in his bottle so he keepeth the workes of his ●●ildren in his booke This is and so it ought to be a great encouragement to vs in well-doing to consider that the number the greatnesse and the measure of all our good workes shall be registred and recorded by him It is spoken in deed for our capacity for God needeth no writings of record or bookes of account the meaning is he wil neuer forget our good workes but as certainely remember them as if he had put them all particularly in writing Hence it is that the Lord saith so often to the seuen Churches of Asia to whom hee commanded Iohn to write hee knew all their workes nothing was hidden from him nothing vnknowen vnto him Vse 5 Lastly seeing good workes are in so great account with God it is necessary that we learn what good workes are that are pleasing in Gods sight and how they are to be done of vs. For there is more required to a good worke then the bare deed done A good worke is a duty commanded of God What a good worke is performed by a regenerate person and done in faith ayming at the glory of God and the good of man Wherby we see that sundry points are required to make a worke accepted of God First of all the worke must haue the wil of God which is the rule of all goodnesse and righteousnesse to warrant the same that so we may doe them in an holy obedience vnto him For except he appoint them hee doth not approoue them and vnlesse he command them he doth neuer commend them Will-worship is abominable to God and euery where reiected when men thrust vpon God their owne inuentions in stead of his seruice Col. 2.22.23 Deut. 12.32 Euery good work is commanded in the word either expresly or generally God is in vaine worshipped when for doctrines the commandements of men are taught and obserued This reproueth the Romish Religion maintaining ● t a man may do good works which are neuer required or appointed of God and likewise the blinde deuotion and superstition of the people that if they in their worship haue a good intent and think no man no harme they doe a good worke Secondly goo● workes must be done by a regenerate person that is in the state of grace that is a member of Christ and borne againe by the holy Ghost If we bee not reconciled to God in Christ made acceptable through him wee are as euill trees that cannot bring forth good fruit whereas no man can gather grapes of thornes or figges of thistles Matth. 7.16 The person must please God before any thing that commeth from him can please him for he had respect to Abel Gen. 4.4.5 and then to his offering but not to Caine and therefore not vnto his offering Hence fal to the ground the workes of Turkes and Infidels and meere ciuill men who often abstaine from outward sinnes liue orderly among men and do works of mercy iustice liberality yet in them they are not good because they proceed from a corrupt heart The like we may say of the workes of all vnregenerate persons bee they neuer so beautifull in the eyes of the world they are but beautifull sinnes in the sight of God whether they eate or drinke or walke sleepe or buy or sell or come to Church or heare the word or pray or receiue the Sacraments the rule of the Apostle standeth for euer Vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minde and conscience is defiled Tit. 1.15 Thirdly good works must be done in faith because whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 and without faith it is vnpossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Now there is required in a man a twofold perswasion first an assurance that God hath willed and commanded it to be done for he that giueth almes and yet doubteth whether God would haue him to giue almes sinneth Secondly a perswasion in his own conscience of his reconciliation to God in Christ This is iustifying faith which purifieth the heart and doth fit and inable it to bring forth a good worke There is a double vse of this gift it maketh vs to begin the work well and when it is once done it serueth as a cloake or garment to couer the defects and imperfections of it applying the merits of Christ The last
but he beginneth to ingrosse into his owne hands the other Trumpet also claiming power to depose and dethrone Princes and to dispose of their crownes and scepters at his pleasure as if all kingdomes were giuen vnto him and it belonged to his right to dispose of them Had Peter any such power or did hee euer claime any such dominion No the Apostle well vnderstood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Christ forbad them to exercise any such Lordship Math. 20 verses 25 26. Secondly it reproueth those that being summoned by the sound of these Trumpets that is called together by the Magistrate refuse to come Moses by vertue of these Trumpets put into his hands called Corah and his company but that crew answered We will not come vp ●●b 16 12. but if we would know what became of these rebels some were consumed with fire and others we must seeke for vnder the earth for the earth opened her mouth as they had opened their mouthes against Moses the supreme Magistrate and swallowed them vp their goods their houses and persons yea the Apostle denounceth a fearefull woe against them that perish in the same contradiction gainsaying of Core Iude verse 11. So then if the Magistrate call no man must refuse or deny to come In the naturall body the beginning of all motion is from the head and so it ought to be in the body politike Thirdly it reproueth those that assemble before they were called the former would not assemble when they were called these assemble before they be called The other were too slow and dull these are too quicke and nimble headed So then all must keepe their places and standings they must come when they are called but they must be called before they come The mutinous company mentioned Numb 20 23. when they wanted water stayed not for the sound of the Trumpet but came together in a tumultuous manner but God sware they should not enter into his rest This euill is much worse then the former It is euill not to come when we are called but to gather together without a calling is worse more dangerous and produceth more dangerous effects For they that presume to meete without Moses his precept will not sticke afterward to meete against Moses his person in conclusion also to wrest the Trumpet out of the hand of Moses Therefore the Towne-Clearke said 〈◊〉 19 40. We are in danger to bee called in question for this daies vprore there being no cause whereby we may giue an account of this concourse As if he had said we haue done more then we can well answer seeing we may be endighted of treason or at least of a riot for this dayes worke We must therefore know that euery such Congregation assembled without a lawfull call is no better then a conuenticle whatsoeuer account we make of it Vse 2 Secondly from hence ariseth an instruction to the Ministers of God For as Aaron and his sonnes the Priests of God are commanded to blow the Trumpets so this is an image and representation of the faithfull Preachers and Ministers who by the cleere and shrill sound of the word of God must bring men to the true knowledge of God as 2 Chron. 13 12. where the King of Iudah telleth Ieroboam The Lord is with vs for our Captaine and his Priests with sounding Trumpets to cry alarme against you It is their office to sound the alarme against Gods enemies and to bid defiance against all sinne So the Prophet Esay saith ch 58 1. Cry aloud spare not lift vp your voice like a Trumpet and shew my people their transgressions and the house of Iacob their sinnes Likewise Ezekiel chap. 33 ver 2 3 c. the Ministers are made watchmen ouer the house of Israel if they see the sword coming and blow not the Trumpet the blood of such as perish shall be required at their hands So then they must haue zeale courage and boldnesse to reproue sinne without feare of mens faces and without respect of persons and must strike at it where they finde it Such a one was Eliah that feared not the Kings face but told him it was he and his fathers house that troubled Israel 1 King 18 18. Such a Trumpet was Iohn Baptist who is said to be the voice of a crier in the wildernesse and told Herod it was not lawfull for him to haue his brothers wife Math. 14 4. This reprooueth such as are dumbe dogges and hold their peace such as cannot opē their mouthes or say any thing whose breath serueth them not to blow this Trumpet such also as winke at sinne and will not see it such also as rebuke coldly and are afraid to speake whereas they should blow the Trumpet and euen thunder out against obstinate sinners and make them afraid to sinne Iude verse 23 seeking to saue them with feare pulling them out of the fire Hence it is that Amos saith Shall a Trumpet be blowne in the City and the people not be afraid Amos 3 6. Or will a Lyon roare in the Forest when he hath no prey When a Trumpet giueth a sudden signe by the sound of it out of a watch-tower all the people hearken and are troubled and prepare themselues this way or that way according as the Trumpet giueth the token So at the voice of God sounding by his Minister we ought to be attentiue and giue eare and to be moued at the noise of it and as he giueth warning prepare our selues and looke about vs while it is time lest afterward it be too late For God doth not threaten for forme or fashion sake as if he did not purpose to punish neither are his threatnings ordinary words of course forasmuch as the very Lyons themselues do not roare except they see some prey or booty The word is neuer without his effect neither returneth vnto God empty Esay 55 10 11 but it accomplisheth that which he pleaseth and shall prosper in the worke to which he sendeth it As then the roaring and yelling of the Lyon is an assured token of the prey so the threatnings of God are prognostications and fore-shewings of the wrath of God ready prepared Woe therefore vnto those that albeit they heare the sound of the Trumpet yet sit as stones or steele and are neuer a whit moued but passe ouer Gods iudgements and threatnings as if they concerned them nothing at all Thirdly these Trumpets teach vs with ioy Vse 3 and gladnesse to praise God for his benefits bestowed vpon vs. For the Priests were commanded to blow with the Trumpets at their peace offerings and burnt offerings ver 10. and Ezra 3 10. to be a testimony of their spirituall ioyfulnesse and to be a memoriall before the Lord as Leuit. 23 24. In the seuenth moneth and the first day of the moneth shall yee haue a Sabbath a memoriall of blowing of Trumpets an holy conuocation And Psalm 81 3 4. Blow vp the Trumpet
nothing Another sort seeing the Ministery so vilified and seeking to shun that rocke do rush and dash themselues violently against another for they giue almost no reuerence at all to the Liturgie neither care to affoord vs their presence at the same But we must walke in the golden meane betweene both these giuing to each that which is meete without comparing the one to the other and so yeelde obedience to both In the one God speaketh to vs in the other we speake to God The Wiseman handling them both beginneth with the preaching and hearing of the word as the most principall part of Gods worship and afterwards he proceedeth to prescribe rules of praier Eccl 4 5. Acts 2 42. So the church is saide to haue continued in the Apostles doctrine in prayers They then deceiue themselues that vnder a pretence of receiuing the prayers of the church do contemne the Ministery of the word and think they haue done enough if they haue bin present at them saying We haue godly praiers published and set forth by commādement of the Prince why cannot men bee contented with them These speake through hypocrisy and would seeme zealous of publike prayers howbeit they are like to Iudas he cried out against the waste of the ointment as if it might haue bin better bestowed vpon the poore He seemed very carefull of the good of the poor but hee spake this not that he cared for the poore but because he was a theefe and bare the bag Ioh. 12 6 So do these men talk much of prayers as if they were so zelous that they were altogether giuen to prayer howbeit they do not this for any zeale to prayer or for any great care they haue to frequent thē but thereby to seeke a couer for their owne negligence in hearing the word Such as liue vnder an vnpreaching Ministery thinke themselues well enough when as notwithstanding they want a chiefe and principal part of Gods seruice the ordinary meanes of saluation Ro. 10. Iam. 1. On the other side such as ascribe al to preaching and regard not the prayers of the Church are blame-worthy this must be done but the other must not be left vndone It is the office of the Ministery to perform both Act. 6. and the duty of the people to bee present at both yet great is their negligence this way if not contempt Vse 3 Lastly from hence ariseth great comfort to such as are weake in faith and in the giftes of faith For God will not reiect vs or our prayers though we be not able to performe them as we ought to do Albeit we come vnto him halting and borne by others yet he will embrace vs and receiue vs. This may bee a notable motiue to encorage vs to this duty Christ hath promised that he will not quench the smoaking flaxe nor breake the bruised reede Math 12 20. Blessed are they that come to him creep on hand and foote if they cannot wal●e vpright but woe vnto them that come not at al. If wee haue but a graine of Mustard seede of faith he cherisheth it and accepteth of vs. Let vs therefore come vnto him by prayer howsoeuer we come by our selues or by others forasmuch as our comming to him shall haue a reward See more of this before chap. 6. Rise vp O Lord and let thine enemies be scattered and let them that hate thee flie before thee This is the prayer made when they began to march This prayer is short but it is verie effectuall The summe and substance is to commend vnto God the good and preseruation of the church from the many enemies of it As if he had saide O merciful God which hast promised thy presence among vs go thou before vs and scatter thine and our enemies put thē to flight which seeke to stop our way and to hinder vs from entering into the land of Canaan which thou hast promised vnto vs. The prayer consisteth of two parts a cause and the effect The cause is Gods arising to the defence of his seruants wherein he speaketh after the maner of men because properly God neither riseth vp nor sitteth downe as also he neither slumbreth nor sleepeth Psal 121 4. But it is spoken in regard of a new worke whereby he manifesteth his help to be ready at hand and sheweth that he shrinketh not backe in time of neede from those that are his Sometimes he is saide to lie still and to be as it were asleep when he doth beare with patience Illyr c●au S● and suffer the wicked to rage and run on against the righteous and against religion so when he beginneth to take the cause into his owne hand both by defending his children and maintaining his owne glory against the wicked hee is saide to arise and stand vp Esay 2 21. as 2 Chro. 6 41. Psa 44 23. 82 8. 132 8. The reason of the speech is borrowed from men who can do no work of any moment or account while they lye still but if they wil go in hand with any thing they must rise vp The effect of his arising is the scattering of his enemies If he once arise to the help of his people then followeth quickly the fall of his enemies If he fight for them They shall flye before him as chaffe before the wind and as wax melteth before the fire so the wicked perish at the presence of God Psa 68.2 We might note from hence that when once God sheweth himselfe for his people the enemies are quickly put to flight Exod. 14. When Pharao pursued the Israelites and ouertooke them at the redde sea and that their hearts began to faile and fall away to be troubled and as it were to melte away Moses said vnto them Feare not stand stil and see the saluation of the Lord which he shal shew you this day 13. The Lord shal fight for you and you shal hold your peace 14. Deut. 28 7. and Ro. 8 31. If the Lord be on our sides who shal be against vs This is a great comfort to the Church 2. Chro. 15 2. The Lord is with vs if we bee with him Againe let euery faithful soule apply this to himself and gather assurance by it to stand vnmoueable vnder the shadow of the almighty Lastly it noteth out the wretched miserable condition of the enemies of God and of his children for when they thinke to arise God wil giue them a sodain and shameful fal But I onely point out this point and proceed to the consideration of the titles which Moses giueth to the vngodly ●●●●rine he calleth them the enemies of God ●●e wic●●●●e Gods ●●i s and ●●●●m such as hate him So then obserue that al wicked men are vtter enemies to God they hate him they abhorre him they cannot abide him They say in their hearts There is no God Psal 14 1. God hath forgotten he hideth his face hee will not require it Ps
iudgement he will execute vengeance on his enemies and will reward them that hate him If a king heare of another coming against him with an huge and mighty host and consider that he is not able to encounter with him hand to hand while he is yet afarre off he sendeth embassage desiring conditions of peace Luke 14 32. This wisedome ought to be in vs. Let no man thinke to preuaile get the vpper hand by standing out against him He that continueth an enemy vnto him is an enemy to himselfe nay to his owne soule It is sinne that maketh this separation betweene God and vs Esay 59 2. We rise vp against him we rebell against the Lord 2 Chron. 13 6 and then the Lord riseth vp against vs. We cannot prosper so long as wee prouoke him with an high hand Let vs therefore repent vs of our euill waies How we may haue peace with God and turne vnto him assuring our selues that then he will turne vnto vs. Let vs humble our selues vnder his mighty hand and he will lift vs vp Let vs confesse our sinnes vnto him and we shall finde mercy for he is iust and mercifull to forgiue vs our sins There is no peace to be obtained but vnder these three conditions repentance humility and confession these as a trumpet sound the retreate of his iudgements they are as peace-makers betweene God and vs and are as a strong threefold cord which is not easily broken whereby his hands are after a sort bound from pouring wrath and vengeance vpon vs. Let thine enemies be scattered and them that hate thee flie before thee Marke in these words the title that he giueth to those that were ready to hinder their approch vnto Canaan hee saith not Let our enemies and them that hate vs be scattered but let thine enemies and them that hate thee c. Neuerthelesse if he had so praied the praier had beene lawfull but his words are more powerfull and effectuall whereby we see that the Churches enemies he calleth Gods enemies and sheweth that they hated not onely the godly but God himselfe So then the doctrine Doctrin● is this that the enemies of the Church in generall The e●e●● of the ch●●● are the e●●mies of 〈◊〉 or of any his faithfull seruants in particular are indeed and in truth the enemies of God himselfe Howsoeuer they may in the blindnes of their harts perswade themselues that notwithstanding their hatred to Gods deare children they may be the good friends of God yet they do but deceiue themselues for they are accounted his vtter enemies and such as inwardly hate him as Exod. 15 verses 6 7. speaking of the drowning of Pharaoh and his host in the redde sea Moses singeth that the Lord ouerthrew them that rose vp against him he saith not they rose vp against Israel And Deborah speaking of the destruction of Sisera Iudg. 5 verse 31 saith So let all thine enemies O Lord perish Thus the Prophet alluding to the common prayer of Moses in this place beginneth the 68. Psalme in this manner Let God arise let his enemies bee scattered let them also that hate him flie before him The like we see Psalm 83 2 3. Deut 32 It is plaine therefore that the enemies of the godly are Gods enemies though if they were asked the question they would vtterly deny it thinke themselues vniustly charged with it For first God is entred into a league and couenant with them to haue the same friends and the same enemies as if he should say Reason as Iehoshaphat said to the Kings of Israel 1 King ● 2 King 3 I am as thou art my people as thy people and my horses as thy horses This appeareth in the Couenant which God made with Abraham Gen. 12 3. I will blesse them that blesse thee and curse them that curse thee and his he verifieth in all that imbrace the faith of Abraham Secondly wherefore are the vngodly persecuters enemies to Gods children or what hath the righteous done and why do they set themselues against them is it not for the Lords sake is it not for his truth and religion True it is they may haue and indeed haue other colours and pretences but religion is the cause of all the true feare of God as Psal 44 22 38 20. Rom. 8 36. as it is noted of Caine that he was of that euill one and slew his brother because his owne workes were euill his brothers good 1 Iohn 3 12. Woe therfore vnto them that set themselues against Gods people for they fight against Vse 1 God and he will fight against them for those that are his If they cannot preuaile against him for what is an arm of flesh to the Almighty then certainely not against the Church So long as God standeth the Church shall stand vpright the gates of hell cannot preuail against it Mat. 16. Zach. 2 Deut. ●● Psal 17 Hence it is that the Prophet saith He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eie We may therefore conclude as a principle not to be gainsaid the sure and certaine destruction of all the enemies of the Church in asmuch as he will thrust through the loynes of them that set themselues against his sanctuary They may for a time prosper preuaile but in the end they shall be confounded and come to ruine Let them in time consider in what case they stand They thinke they haue to deale only with men ouer whom they may insult at their pleasure through their might and greatnesse but they shall find they haue to doe with God who is able to vphold his seruants O that they could consider this Vse 2 Secondly we may truely inferre the woful estate of those that defend not the cause of God and his children that do not stand with them but stand still as newters and looke on as idle beholders and suffer them to be borne down and trampled vnder the feet of proud men as myre in the street such as shrinke backe from them for feare of danger that may befall thēselues For such as forsake the faithfull in their iust defence do in the height of their sin and in the pride of their hearts forsake the Lord himselfe and renounce him This made Dauid say 〈◊〉 50.51 Remēber Lord the reproch of thy seruants how I doe beare in my bosom the reproch of all the mighty people wherewith thine enemies haue reproched O Lord wherewith they haue reproched the footesteps of thine Annointed As he bare the reproches of his enemies which were Gods enemies in his bosome so he prayeth that God would recompence their sin into their bo●ome Therfore it is that Deborah saith Curse ye Meroz curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof 〈◊〉 23. because they came not out to the help of the Lord to the help of the Lord against the mighty They did not ioyne with the enemies of God yet they are cursed because they sate
are swept away together with one vniuersall Flood Gen. 7. The like wee might say of Sodome and Gomorrha and the cities about them which giuing themselues to fornication and going after strange flesh suffered the vengeance of eternal fire Iude ver 7. The like we may say of kings and Princes nobles iudges Magistrates old and yong bond and free 2 Sam. 12.10 11. 2. King 7.19 20. and 1.9 10. Luke 12.20 and 16.22 23. Psalm 82.6.7 and 49.2.10 1. Sam. 2.29.30 Luke 1.20 Eccle. 11.9 2 King 2.24 Reason 1 God chastiseth his children that they shold not be condemned hereafter 1 Cor. 11.30 32 when they runne astray he putteth as it were a bridle in their mouthes whereby they are curbed and kept in obedience Secondly hee is constrained to take this course least they should trust in themselues whereas they should trust in the liuing God 2 Cor. 1.8.9 We are hardly driuen out of our selues and to renounce all confidence in the flesh We are quickely induced to sacrifice vnto our net and to burne incense vnto our drag Hab. 1.16 Thirdly hee doth it to humble vs and to prooue vs Deut. 8.2 Reuel 2.10 and that hee may doe vs good in the latter end Deut. 8.16 2 Sam. 16.12 so that he aymeth euermore at our good Vse 1 Vses follow See from hence the cause why they keepe Gods word whiles other run on in euil Psal 119.6.7.70.71 It is good for them that they are afflicted for before they went astray and wandred from his commandements Doubtlesse if they had all things that the corrupt flesh desireth and lusteth after they would runne into all excesse of riot with other men for as they are no better then other by nature so their workes would be no better then the workes of others God seeing much drosse in them is driuen to cast them into the fining pot to purifie them that they may bee as pure and precious golde in his sight Vse 2 Secondly we must learne hereby to iustifie God and to condemne our selues For if sinne draw downe his iudgements vpon the most excellent that offend then doubtlesse wee are bound to confesse that in his corrections he is iust and mercifull Lam. 3.22 When he afflicteth a nation or particular soule with famine sword or pestilence as his quiuer is full of arrowes he correcteth indeed but the cause is in our selues for his iugements are wrought out by man himselfe and we must learne to search out the cause in our selues It is sinne onely that deserueth and draweth downe his iudgements We must therefore learne to iustifie God in all his wayes and workes yea if he should ouerthrow our nation and strike downe our brethren and sisters and bring vs vtterly to confusion because we prouoke him daily by our iniquities his compassions neuer faile and for that cause alone wee are not confounded Thirdly we learne that there is no respect Vse 3 of persons with God in punishing for none shall escape his hand He punisheth not the simple and letteth others escape no man can pleade any immunity or impunity by his high place by his honour riches possessions or any other prerogatiue whatsoeuer Rom. 2.6 for he will render to euery man according to his deedes He looketh not vpon the outward appearance but so many as haue sinned without law shall also perish without law and as many as haue sinned in the Law shall be iudged by the Law As God in the decree of his election respecteth no mans pe●●on nor in bestowing his graces of saluation which are the fruits of election as vocation faith Gal. 3.28 iustification sanctification and such like so in his corrections and chastisements hee doth not strike the poore and spare the rich winke at the noble and honourable and strike downe the vnnoble and baser sort but hee respecteth euery one as he findeth him and punisheth sinne wheresoeuer sinne reigneth that all should feare Fourthly conclude necessarily that the Vse 4 wicked cannot escape If he strike his friends he will not passe ouer his enemies If the gold must passe the furnace the drosse shall be reiected If the good corne must be ground in the mill before it can be bread for the vse of man the chaffe shall be burned vp with fire vnquenchable Prou. 11.31 1 Pet. 4.17 18. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced in the earth much more the wicked and the sinner and if the righteous scarcely be saued where shall the vngodly appeare It is well said of one that the tribulations and afflictions of good men doe not bring them behind the wicked but rather shew that the plagues and punishments of the wicked are yet behind for God reserueth wrath for them Nahum 1.2 and will take vengeance of his aduersaries Ierem 25.29 Luke 23.28.31 The death and passion of Christ hath taken away the vengeance curse of the afflictions of the godly as he hath taken away the sting of death and strength of the law though both death and the Law remaine so that whatsoeuer remaineth in the cup for vs to drinke is wholesome and medicinable The vngodly doe now laugh at vs and deride vs when they see vs beaten at our Fathers hand in the house or at our masters hand in his schoole so it was with Dauid they clapped their hands and made a great shout when he was vnder the rodde saying Aha where is now his God Psal 41.5 now he lyeth he shall rise vp no no more verse 8. Psal 69.12 but let vs waite a while before the time be long we shall see them scourged with whippes and cast in prison where they shall neuer get out They shall be put in the stockes as euill doers they shall be arraigned as guilty persons and receiue the sentence of condemnation as traitors against God woe vnto them there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Vse 5 Lastly let vs learne to reforme our rash iudgement touching the suffering of the seruants of God We are ready to iudge them as plagued of God Psal 73.14 howbeit wee are not to iudge men to bee wicked and vngodly to be strangers from God and from his kingdome because we see sometimes the hand of God to be strangely vpon them for as much as they may belong vnto God albeit they suffer in that manner and measure Rather we ought to admire and wonder at Gods iudgements which are so iust that hee will not spare his owne people when they sin against him and it is rather an argument that they are the Lords because iudgement beginneth at his house and he will begin to plague the citie where his Name is called vpon When we see stones cut and hewed and squared should we therefore thinke and thereby conclude that those stones were not regarded or that they were good for nothing Wee should rather iudge that they are fitted to some speciall part of the building So if a man come into an orchard and find many trees cut and pruned he knoweth it
doctrines fundamentall otherwise 1 Cor. 3 11 12 13. Secondly touching diuorce and polygamy there is no allowance but a permission onely Math. 19 8. and that of vsurie was particular for those nations Deut. 23 20. Exod. 21 1. Obiect Fourthly it doeth greatly manifest commend and extoll true religion 1 Cor. 11 19. I answer no otherwise then as one contrary being set to another Answer doth make the same better to be seene and thus doth sinne serue to commend the grace and mercy of God as Rom. 5 20. Where sinne abounded grace did much more abound howbeit this commeth to passe accidentally not directly and properly Obiect Fiftly the conscience is not to bee forced therefore men should be left to themselues I answer Answer it is lawfull to force them to the means Luke 14 23. Compell them to come in that my house may be filled that by the blessing of God vpon the vse of the means they may afterward willingly yeeld 2 Chron. 34 33. Ezra 10 8. The sonne that answered his father that hee would not work in his vineyard afterward repented and went Matth. 21 29. And some haue bene forced in the beginning to come to the word who afterward could hardly bee forced and driuen from it There is an actiue violence and a passiue Many are haled to the means by violence and come to the church as a Beare to the stake but afterward the violent take the kingdom of God Math. 11 12. and lay hold on it by force Obiection Sixtly all manner of wicked men and wickednes are to be left vnpunished for the tares and the wheate in one field must bee let grow together vntill the haruest and then they shal be separated Mat. 13 30. the tares shal be burned Answ the wheate shall be preserued I answer the scope is onely to shew that both good and bad are by Gods decree to remaine til the end of the world to vphold the godly against that tentation as the application or reddition the second part of the comparison doeth shew in the exposition of it by Christ himselfe Mat. 13 36 37. The godly must not be offended at the multitude and growth of the wicked we must neuer look for perfection vpon the earth This parable doeth no way touch the authoritie of the Magistrate Beza de haeret à mag puniend nor the discipline of the church neither pleadeth pardon and impunity for malefactors but warneth vs that offences shall neuer be wanting in the church to the end of the world but it shall alwayes bee troubled with such abuses August de fide oper cap. 1. 2. There shal alwaies be a mixture so long as the world standeth and therefore we ought not to depart out of the church as schismatiks do for the blots and blemishes that appeare in it Thus much of this parable Seuenthly Obiection euery christian Magistrate is not of power to suppresse contrary religions without the ruine of his kingdome I answer Answ wee speake of such as God hath giuen power into their hands whensoeuer God requireth it at their hands he will enable them to perform it and then they ought to set vpon that as a speciall duty Where there is no power God accepteth the will for the deede 2 Cor. 8 12 so that if they endeuour to restrain such and cannot it is not their sinne Hitherto we haue spoken of false religions in generall Popery 〈◊〉 be tollera● in any state now among all other false religions popery is one of the worst and least of all to be tollerated in any State or in any sort as that which raceth the foundation of the christian faith and pulleth it vp by the rootes as plainly appeareth by these particulars First it maintaineth inherent righteousnesse of their owne and iustification by workes done by themselues in themselues and therby make iustification and sanctification all one contrary to the Apostles doctrine 1 Cor. 1 30. 2. Cor. 5 21. It reiecteth and derideth the imputation of Christs righteousnesse whereby we stand righteous in the sight of God thorough his righteousnes and merits imputed vnto vs. And hence it is that they make his righteousnes vnperfect and giue a power to themselues to make satisfaction for sin by temporall punishment and the sacrifice of the Masse Secondly they corrupt the worship of God in substance by professing and practising idolatry and worship of images making the church an harlot by forsaking her first husband and bringing in more then heathenish idolatry by adoring Saints angels crucifixes relickes their breaden god Rai●ol 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 8. by entertaining a mixture of Paganisme and Iudaisme Thirdly the church of Rome is the church of Anti christ therefore not of Christ for to the bysh of Rome do all the notes and properties whereby Antichrist is described in holy Scripture The byshop of Rome is Antichrist agree truly fully solely This wil not be hard to resolue if we consider the place where we are to seeke him and where wee shall finde him the time when the church was to looke for him and lastly the qualities wherby he is to be known The seat of Antichrist is mysticall Babylon mystical Babylon is no other thē Rome it self For the whore of Babylon is the great citie which in the Apostlestime had rule and dominion ouer the kings of the earth Reu. 17 18. and this City is situated vpon seuen hils Reu. 17 9. the seuen heads are seuen mountaines on which the woman sitteth which agreeth properly to Rome and euery historian nay euery Poet almost Prop● 〈◊〉 lib 3 〈◊〉 Georg lib 〈◊〉 Vano lib 5. l●g● Lat● Pluto Pr● Ren. cal it the city on seuen hils Secondly touching the time of the reuealing and manifestation of Antichrist it was foretold by the Apostle that he should come when the Emperors were remoued and taken out of the way and when once the Empire in the west should be dissolued then should Antichrist succeed in that seate that is in the gouernment of Rome 2 Thes 2 8. and this we see with our eies to haue long agoe come to passe that it needeth no farther inquiry The Apostle had spokē plainly of this to the Thessalonians by word of mouth therfore forbeareth to set it downe in writing lest he should bring on his owne head and on the church the needlesse hatred of the Romane monarchy his own writing remaining as a strong euidence against himself and others For when the Romans should reade or heare that he had prophesied of the dissolution of the Romane Empire they would soone raise persecution against him and the rest of the beleeuers as if they expected the ruine desired the downfall thereof And this truth in all likelyhood was wel marked and continued in the church from age to age because it is generally vnderstood of the Roman Empire and Emperor 〈◊〉 detesur Amoros Thes 2. in Thes 2. 〈◊〉 ad
neither more nor lesse is morall but if it should euer be changed againe we could not keepe the iust number of one in seuen but at the first change the proportion and morality would be broken ●ct If any aske how then was it changed at the first I answer ●er the Iewes that beleeued altered not the morality of one in seuen albeit they changed the day which was ceremoniall For in the first change they kept two Sabbaths together to wit the Iewish and the Christian yet without breach of the former proportion The Iewes kept the seuenth day for the week past we take the first day which is next to it and so keepe the Sabbath for the weeke to come they obserued that day in memoriall of the worke of creation which was past we christians keeping as we haue great cause the remembrance of the worke of redemption begin our Sabbath at the resurrection of Christ for the time following And thus was the day altered without breaking the morality of one day in seuen which is vnpossible euer to be so changed againe The Princes of Iudah are charged to change the boundes and landmarkes Hos 5 10. God hath set stakes and boundes as it were to compasse and inclose his Sabbath by appointing the time and limiting the season therefore to remoue this is as great an offence to God as to pull vp the pales and hedges of the ground is a trespasse to man If then we take vpon vs to appoint another day of our owne it cannot be called the Lords day but mans day or our owne day or the Churches day And it may be said of vs as Esay 1 12. Who required these things at your hands To set vp another day is to appoint a strange day like to Nadab and Abihu that offered strange fire If any say we may serue the Lord as well vpon another day I answer so might Nadab and Abihu consume the sacrifice with strange fire as well as by that preserued on the Altar yet they were punished of God because they altered his institution as we haue seen before Secondly this reproueth sundry sorts of persons Vse 2 that offend against this doctrine Of all the commandements of God none are more often vrged and yet not one is or hath beene more despised and transgressed The breach of the Sabbath is the maine sin of the world a generall euill spreading farre and neere an iniquitie abounding in euery congregation as if God had neuer spoken anything touching a Sabbath or as if it were a meere ordinance of man Nay humane inuentions and traditions are ordinarily better obserued and more regarded then this commandement of GOD. Now it reproueth especially three sorts First The first reproofe such as make the Lords day which should be the market day of the soule a day of vain pleasures and carnall delights a day of sports and recreations thinking it enough if they follow not the workes of their calling For wherefore are the workes of our ordinary vocations forbidden vpon the Sabbath and why are we restrained from them not that they are vnlawfull in themselues but because they take vp the minde and suffer it not to bee emploied in Gods businesse The same may be said of our owne pleasures much more which naturally we follow with more greedinesse and earnestnesse And it is well obserued that the multitude had rather goe to Church then goe to worke yet had rather go to play then to the Church This is the disposition of the greatest part especially of seruants and of the younger sort who commonly make no other reckoning of this day then as of a day of riot and reuelling of gaming and drinking neuer intending the worship of God which ought then especially to be performed Thus is the commandement turned vpside downe and that day which should be kept holy to the Lord is spent in the seruice of the diuell If they haue beene at the Church in the forenoone they dispense with themselues to serue Satan in the afternoone But as Christ telleth vs that none can serue God and Mammon so no man can serue GOD and their pleasures on that day Secondly The second reproofe heere are reproued such as seeme more ciuill then the former but yet take liberty to follow their owne businesse ordinary affaires Such are they which go or ride about their worldly matters to buy to bargaine to sell to talke with others robbing God of his day to spare one of their owne God hath kept but one day in the weeke to himselfe and euen this also we take from him and grudge at it to giue it to him like the rich theefe that hauing many sheepe of his owne yet killed his neighbours that had but one 2 Sam. 12 4. The third reproofe A third sort are reproued who thinke it enough if they obserue so much as is enioyned by lawes and in iunctions of men if they be at morning and euening praier they thinke they giue to the Lord a large allowance and iustifie themselues as if they were good obseruers sanctifiers of the Sabbath Such men take liberty all the rest of the day to do what they list pertaining to thēselues whether to their profit or to their pleasure Thus they make it partly the Lords day and partly their owne howbeit there is no parting of stakes with him We cannot properly call it the Lords day except wee make it wholly to be his and consecrate it wholly to his worship Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to remember this day before hand that so wee may euery way fit our selues to the sanctifying of it and therfore the Lord said Exodus 20 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Our nature is very forgetful of this performance of holy duties and therfore we haue need to think of them before hand God hath giuen vnto vs sundry commandements but he commendeth the Sabbath to vs especially aboue all the rest he dealeth with vs like a master that giueth many precepts to his seruant but willeth him to remember one aboue all the rest So it is with the Lord he saith Thou shalt haue no other Gods before me Exodus 20 3. Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image verse 4. Thou shalt not bow downe thy selfe vnto them nor serue them verse 5. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine ver 7. But aboue all these Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holy For indeede the right obseruation of all the rest consisteth in the due regard of this How can we learne obedience to the rest vnlesse wee be carefull to keepe this day Or how should we be able to practise them to know what God requireth except we giue attendance at the posts of his house to heare his voice We must euermore remember the precept of the Apostle Col. 3 2. Set your affections on things aboue and not on things vpon
to saluation Moreouer the Apostle speaking of one Mediatour and naming Christ to be that one 1 Tim. 2 5. speaketh in that place of prayer and therefore euen in praier he will haue vs to acknowledge no Mediatour of intercession but Christ Iesus onely A Mediatour of intercession as it is defined by Austine Aug. contra epist ●arm lib. 2 cap. 8. cannot agree to any sauing to Christ for he teacheth that it is commanded that euery Christian shold pray for others but he who requests for all and for whom none requesteth is the one and true Mediatour Againe they obiect Obiect that the Saints pray for vs and therefore we may pray to them Answ I answer this will not follow What the praiers of the Saints departed are Againe they pray for the perfecting of the body of Christ desire the full gathering together of the Saints they long for the resurrection restitution of their bodies which lye in the dust they wish to see the auengement of the blood of the holy martyrs shed for the testimony of the truth and craue to behold the last comming of Christ to iudgment to restore all things howbeit they know not the particular troubles of Gods children neither vnderstand the inward wrastlings and bucklings with sin and Satan which the conscience sustaineth no more then Eli knew the trouble of heart that Hannah had though she praied in his presence Wherefore let vs content our selues with the onely and all-sufficient mediation of Christ remembring the saying of the Apostle Iohn We haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes 1 Ioh. 2 1 2. And seeing he calleth vs vnto himselfe let vs not refuse to goe to him When he saith Come to me Mat. 11 28. shall we say nay we wil go to some other When Mary called her sister secretly saying The master is come and calleth for thee as soone as she heard that she arose quickly and came vnto him So it ought to be with vs Our master Christ calleth vs why doe we run from him why do we not run to him why do we run to any other Let vs not refuse to come to him who gaue his life for vs that we might liue in him Shall we then depart from him that calleth vs to them that call vs not that know vs not that heare vs not that help vs not that saue vs not Secondly this condemneth the ignorant Vse 2 multitude which through palpable and horrible ignorance rush into the presence of God without any Mediator knowing neither God nor themselues They dream that God is mercifull neuer consider what he is in his owne nature to wit a God of perfection a most iust Iudge and we can neuer reconcile his mercy and iustice but by looking vpon him in the face and countenance of Christ Iesus in whom only he is wel pleased Mat. 3 17. We can receiue nothing at his hands except we come to him in his Son For as he is perfect so he accepteth of nothing that is vnperfect But we can offer nothing to God but that which is tainted and defiled with sin and if God looke vpon vs our wants out of his Sonne wee are no better then the children of wrath he findeth matter enough in vs to reiect our workes and to condemne our persons We haue our praiers heard no other way but in the Name of Christ We are no otherwise accepted but in his beloued Iohn 15 6. Eph. 1 6. Acts 4 12. Heb. 2 14 ● Math. 1● 1 to wit in Christ He is the onely Sauiour of the Church he saueth his people from death and him that hath the power of death that is the diuell He saueth vs from our sins guilt and punishment For sin is the power sting of death an vgly serpent Christ only hath quelled him he hath merited our saluation by his death and passion none else hath done it none else could do it The Saints glorified and all the company of the elect Angels in heauen were too weak and vnworthy to accomplish this work The Papists as we haue shewed make him but half a Sauiour ioyning others with him in the worke of saluation For they teach that with Christs merites we must ioyne the workes of grace in the matter of iustificatiō that with Christs satisfaction of the wrath of God we must ioyne our satisfaction by temporall punishment But we haue shewed before that he will bee a sole Sauiour or else no Sauiour at all Thirdly it behoueth vs in remembrance of Vse 3 this excellent benefite of Christs attonement to be thankfull to God This is the main cause of al thankfulnes The most common blessings which we receiue must at all times moue vs to be thankfull as meat drinke health wealth liberty peace prosperity and the like but this should as it were swallow vp all the remembrance of all the rest and the zeale thereof cōsume vs Ps 116 12 ● What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefites toward me I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. What deadnesse of hart then remaineth in many mē that neuer remember this great worke thereby to be prouoked to obedience and newnesse of life that so we may return our loue to God againe who loued vs first Lastly we must acknowledge what we are Vse 4 in our selues to wit vtterly lost the enemies of God the children of wrath the bondslaues of Satan and the heires of condemnation This we must confesse frō the bottome of our hearts haue a liuely feeling thereof before we can receiue him as our Peace-maker and Sauiour Math. 18 11. and 15 14. Luke 4 18 and 19 10. We must say with Daniel Shame and confusion of faces belongeth vnto vs chap. 9 8. What was due to the people in this place and what might they haue looked for if Aaron had not made an attonement but present death So is it with vs we are borne dead in sinnes and trespasses can looke for nothing but wrath and iudgement and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries Hebr. 10 27. if Christ do not make peace between God and vs. Let vs therefore looke for saluation from him as men hearing of cunning Physitions to cure diseases do seeke and send to thē farre and neere Math. 9 20 21. Iohn chap. 7 verse 37. CHAP. XVII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Speake vnto the children of Israel and take of euery one of them a rod according to the house of their fathers of all their Princes according to the house of their fathers twelue rods write thou euery mans name vpon his rod. 3. And thou shalt write Aarons name vpon the rod of Leui for one rod shall bee for the head of the house of their fathers WEe haue seene in the former chapter how the people enuied Moses in the Camp and
and to stand on an heap on the right hand and on the left like mighty mountaines that they did most manifestly see and behold the same with their eies They saw when Moses strake the stony rocke and when the waters gushed out they tasted of them When God bestowed the gifts of tongues vpon the Church they heard the Apostles speak in their owne tongues the wonderfull works of God Act. 2.11 When God would confirme the calling of Moses he cast his rod vppon the ground and it became a serpent his eye saw it or else he could not haue fled from before it Exod. 4.3 Againe at the commandement of God he put forth his hand he touched it and tooke it by the taile and it became a rod in his hand and therefore he must needs see it Psal 106.27 28 29 c. All the miracles wrought in Egypt were sensible Their water was turned into blood the eye saw it the taste discerned it and they could not drinke of it When God sent downe Manna to eat which fell among their tents they tasted of it what it was Whē Christ turned water into wine at the marriage in Cana the taste of the ruler of the feast discerned it by and by Ioh. 2.9 And the Iewes said vnto Christ What signe shewest thou vnto vs seeing that thou dost these things Ioh. 2.18 The reasons First that it might appeare that God would Reason 1 not deceiue his people he dealeth plainely and openly as he speaketh to Thomas Ioh. 20.27 Reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithlesse but faithfull Secondly Reason 2 he holdeth not his in suspense doubting but maketh the truth of his works plaine and manifest When the disciples of Christ were troubled and their thoughts arose in their hearts being sore terrified affrighted supposing they had seene a spirit for he came miraculously among them and stood in the midst of them he saith vnto them Behold my hands and my feete that it is I my selfe handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see me haue Luk. 24.39 The vses remaine From this flourishing of the rod openly Vse 1 shewed we learne what a miracle is to wit a rare worke apparently wrought by the sole omnipotent power of God aboue nature or naturall causes It is no vsuall or ordinary worke but rare and extraordinary and therefore we reade when Christ or his Apostles by him did any miracle the people maruelled and were astonied and amazed and there came a sudden feare vpon them Luk. 7.16 Act. 2.12 Mat. 8.27 and 9.8 and 12.23 We cannot say that repentance or regeneration is a miracle though it be after a sort the raising of a man from death to life and wrought onely in a few mens hearts in comparison of the multitude because it is ordinarily and vsually wrought in all Gods childrē Again it must be wrought by Gods almighty power as we haue declared already Touching the which we must know that the omnipotent power of God cannot be communicated to any creature whatsoeuer no not to the Angels in heauen For as the Lord saith onely of his wisedome iustice and mercy so also of his power that he will not giue his glory to any other Again Esa 42.8 thogh this power might be communicated to any other yet there is no creature capable of it whether in heauen or earth none I say is able to beare it or comprehend it This is euident in the example of Peter when Christ had wroght a miracle before him and thereby shewed the glory of his power which in some sort he saw hee saide vnto him Depart from me O Lord for I am a sinfull men Luk. 5.8 and Esay 6.2 3 4 5. Lastly a miracle is said to be aboue or against nature Nature neuer had any inclination to worke aboue it selfe and so to bring forth a miracle for that were to confound things naturall and supernaturall When at the passage of the red sea the waters stood on both parts nature had a desire to make the waters runne and flow in their course as before therefore when they stood still as on an heape it was contrary to the nature of them True it is there are many strange and wonderfull works in nature which yet are not aboue nature The adamant we see by experience though we know not by what force will draw yron to it selfe though it be heauy and of it selfe cannot possibly mooue from place to place yet if it bee aboue it it will draw it to it selfe which is strange and admirable yet because it is not rare but vsuall and common and wrought by an inherent force in the stone it selfe albeit to vs vnknowne it cannot be accounted neither doth any man account it a miracle So we know the nature and power of some waters to be such that they turne that which by nature is gold as also any other mettall into an hard stone We see this to be true by experience ● Gerard ●ha● in end of it ● cap. 166. that whatsoeuer is put into it purposely or falleth into it accidentally is also turned into a very stone as also there is some kind of earth that will turne stakes of wood fastned into it into stone as our best Herbalists do tell vs. No man can shew any sound reason for this why that water or that earth should doe it more then any other water or earth yet doubtlesse there is a reason of it and therfore though it be strange and wonderfull yet it is vsuall or ordinary and according to the nature of the things themselues and consequently no miracle Vse 2 Secondly this condemneth the lying signes and wonders of Satan which are meere illusions and deceits and no true miracles But cānot Satan work wonders strange things hath he no power at all that way yes Neuerthelesse we must vnderstand that the power of Satan is no way equall or answerable to the power of God it is not so great so strong so large it is euery way infinite lesse forasmuch as there can bee no comparison betweene a thing infinite and finite betweene a creature and the creator True it is it is farre greater then the power of men euery way and yet a limited and finite power a natural power not a supernaturall Otherwise woe were it vnto vs for then doubtlesse none could be saued such is his malice and cruelty 〈◊〉 ledge of and ●e came If any aske wherein it consisteth I answer partly in his knowledge and partly in his actions For a as mans knowledge is such are his deeds and therefore as his knowledge is great so are his workes great also Touching his knowledge and vnderstanding hee attaineth to it many wayes First from his owne nature for he is not flesh blood as we are but a spirit and therefore hath by nature such measure
band knitteth faster nor bindeth closer then this while loue and liking lasteth so no contention is so bitter no hatred so deadly as that of brethren and others that are neere in blood when the knot is broken and dissolued The tender glasse when it is once broken will neuer be set together againe No water proueth so exceeding colde as that which was once heated exceeding hot so no hatred prooueth like to the hatred of brethren which are often found mercilesse one toward another such as can neuer be appeased as we see in the malice of Cain toward Abel This is it that Salomon pointeth out in Prou. 18 19. Prou. 18 19. A brother offended is harder to win then a strong City their contentions are as a barre of a Castle For as they loued most entirely deerely before so when once they grow enemies they hate one another most extremely whose hearts are as stony wals that cannot be pierced and as barres of iron that cannot bee broken Now as the Prophet teacheth That it is a good and comely thing for brethren to dwell together in vnity Psal 133 1. so it is a noisome and vnnaturall thing to behold greatest enuy and most mortall malice where the greatest and neerest bands of kindred should knit together Secondly how much more is it required of those that spiritually are knit together in the profession of the same faith to loue and helpe one another that haue one God to bee their Father one Church to bee their Mother one Christ to be their elder Brother one Heauen to be their hope and one Faith to be their assurance These considerations are of far greater might and moment then al bands of other societies which begin in the flesh and end in death Wherefore the Apostle handleth this at large Eph. 4 3 4 5 6. Ephe 4. ● 5 6. Endeuour to keep the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace There is one body and one spirit euen as yee are called in one hope of your vocation There is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all which is aboue all and through all and in you all To this purpose Christ our Sauiour teacheth that there is a neerer coniunction betweene himself the faithfull as also betweene the faithful among themselues then betweene brethren and kinsfolkes in the flesh For when some of his hearers saide Behold thy Mother and thy Brethren stand without desiring to speake with thee he answered and saide to him that told him Math. 12 ● 48 ●9 5● Who is my Mother and who are my brethren And hee stretched forth his hands towards his Disciples and saide Behold my mother and my brethren for whosoeuer shall do my Fathers will which is in heauen the same is my brother and sister and mother Lastly there is no man in the world but we are after a sort charged with him to affect him as a brother to account him as a friend to help him as a neighbour and to loue him as hee is a man Albeit hee be neuer so far remoued from vs albeit we neuer saw him albeit wee know him not in the flesh yet we are appointed as his keeper and guardian to doe him good all the dayes of his life Esay 5 ● defending him from wrongs garding him from enemies sauing him from dangers It was a prophane voice of a prophane man who being asked where his brother was answered I cannot tell Genes ● Am I my brothers keeper Therefore our Sauiour in the Parable of him that fell among theeues teacheth Luke ●● Rom. ● that euery man is to be called and accounted our neighbor It is not for any to aduance and lift vp himselfe aboue his brethren in disdaine or pride of heart be he neuer so high great in the world but to acknowldge from whence hee came and in that respect to make himselfe equall with them of the lowest sort Thy Brother Israel Hitherto we haue spoken of the strength of the reason and considered the words not simply in themselues but as they are referred to the point they argue that is to perswade their passage Now we wil weigh them as they stand by themselues They declare in their plea that there is a coniunction betweene them in the flesh Doctr●●● Amon● 〈◊〉 kinde ●●tain b● hood ●●●mon 〈◊〉 The Doctrine from hence arising is this Among kinsfolkes and generally among all mankind is a certain brotherhood acquaintance familiaritie and vnion one toward another True it is there is not fleshly kindred immediately among all men to make them so neere of blood as to cal one another kinsmen and to descend of the same line and linage but there is a certaine common kindred in generall to ioyne bind vs one to another So then all mankind thogh seated and placed farre one from another by large and many Countries and distinguished by seuerall languages rites lawes religions and customes are one blood one flesh yea all as brethren issuing out of one fountaine hewne out of one Rocke Euery one is of kin to euery man whether Iew or Grecian Turk Barbarian Scythian French Spanish Italian German c. This appeareth in many places of the word of God 〈◊〉 20.32 ●3 Thus Ahab calleth Benhadad King of Aram his Brother that is his Friend So Christ compriseth euery man vnder the name and title of a neighbor This also the heathen knew and acknowledged well enough as the Apostle testifieth Acts 17 26. God hath made of one blood all mankinde to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath assigned the seasons which were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation declaring hereby that there is an vnion and coniunction among all mankinde Reason 1 The Reasons are these First we had all one beginning from God who is the Creator and Maker of all things visible and inuisible and therefore hee being the efficient cause of all there must be some dependance vpon him and some fellowshippe among the workes of his hands This the heathen confessed as the Apostle alledgeth out of their owne Poet Acts 17 29. 〈◊〉 17 29. We are the generation of God Hee is the Creator we are the workes of his hands he is our Father we are his children consequently brethren one to another Reason 2 Secondly as we had one beginning so we al were made of one mould and matter being framed of the clay and dust of the earth which the Lord tempered and fashioned to make man as appeareth in the history of the Creation So then the matter of all mankinde is remembred vnto vs to be the earth This Moses teacheth Gen. 2.7 3 19. Heereunto the Apostle accordeth 1 Cor. 15 47 The first man is of the earth earthly Thus the most noble and notable creature of a wonderfull frame and composition representing in it the glory of the world was made of the most base matter
nor do all these commandements I will appoint ouer you fearefulnesse a consumption and the burning ague the sword famine and pestilence to destroy you and to make you few in number so as your high waies shall be desolate It was the Lord that brought the tenne plagues vpon Egypt ●od 8 24. ●a 11.25 38. ●y 45 7. It is the Lord that smote Nabal that he dyed It is the Lord that formeth the light and createth darknesse he maketh peace and createth euill It is the Lord that doth all these things Finally there is no euill in the City which the Lord hath not done Amos 3 6. All which things agree fitly with this history in hand that God sent fiery serpents among his people and do teach vs that he is the author of all iudgements punishments that fall vpon vs or vpon any of the sonnes of men The reasons hereof are euident and apparent Reason 1 First afflictions come not vpon vs at all aduentures they proceed not from the earth or the ayre or the heauē it is the hand of God that lighteth vpon vs for our sinnes For what can any one or all the creatures of God do of themselues or what power is there in them to be reuenged vpon vs This therefore is our great folly that we vnwise men gaze about heere and there wandring vp and down in our owne imaginations and searching all the corners of our wits to finde out the causes of our calamities out of our selues and yet all the while we perceiue not the true and right cause to be in our selues Whensoeuer a man hath any aduersity he must looke vp to God into himselfe When we see the ayre infected it is not so disposed of it selfe When God sendeth famine 〈…〉 23. and maketh the heauen as yron the ground as brasse it is not so hardened of it owne nature When the earth is barren and vnfruitful it proceedeth not of it owne kind but we our selues are the cause of all Whensoeuer therefore we haue wofull experience and a lamentable feeling of many miseries we must not cast our eyes hither and thither but euery man must enter into himselfe search out his particular sins assuring himselfe that God knocketh at the doore of his heart and thereby prouokes him to consider beter of his own waies This Eliphaz beateth vpon Iob 5 5 6 7. The hungry shall eate vp his haruest and the thirsty shall drinke vp their substance for misery cometh not foorth of the dust neither doth affliction spring out of the earth c. Reason 2 Secondly God worketh out afflictions he claimeth and challengeth them as his own peculiar worke that no man should bee able to controule any thing in this world This the wise man vrgeth Eccles. 7 16. In the day of wealth be of good comfort and in the day of affliction consider GOD also hath made this contrary to that to the intent that man should finde nothing after him The vses of the doctrine are many First we Vse 1 learne in all troubles and calamities on vs and those that are ours to looke vp to God as the chiefe principall author of them frō whence they come and vpon our selues and our owne sinnes from whom they come It falleth out with many as it doth with the dog if a man throw a stone at him hee runneth eagerly and angerly after it he falleth vpon it and biteth it so do men of this world Prou. 19 3 when God any way visiteth them they looke vpon inferiour meanes as the highest causes which they can reach vnto but neuer cast vp their eyes to the Lord whose hand and worke it is wheras we are bound to behold the stroke of God in all our distresses We silly men accuse sometimes heat and sometimes cold sometimes drouth sometimes moysture sometimes the ground and sometimes the ayre sometimes one thing and sometimes another thing to be the cause of our calamitie but cannot bee brought to finde out the true and proper cause True it is the Lord hath secret causes that we know not of sometimes the manifestation of his owne works sometimes the triall of our faith and we must take heed we measure not the greatnesse of the sinne by the greeuousnesse of the crosse Iohn 9 2 3. wherein the Apostles themselues were deceiued Notwithstanding the reuealed and originall cause of all calamity hath his beginning and head-spring from our iniquity insomuch that if we had in vs no guilt of corruption we should not taste at all of the cup of affliction This the Prophet teacheth Lam. 3 39. Wherefore is the liuing man sorrowfull Man suffereth for his sin And our Sauiour warneth the man that had bene diseased 38 yeares finding him in the Temple to consider the cause of his long and lamentable affliction Iohn 5 14. Thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee so that this disease was laide vpon him for his sin He thought himselfe an happy man when he was restored to health Now lest he should rest therein the Lord telleth him hee must change his heart or else God will bring seuen times moe plagues vpon him according to his sins though he had bin afflicted many yeares yet he would make his iudgements vpon him more wonderfull euen great plagues of long continuance and sore diseases of long durance To the same purpose the Apostle saieth The wrath of God is reuealed from heauen against all vngodlines and vnrighteousnesse of men which with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnesse Ro. 1 verse 18. Wherefore euery visitation of God should be a sermon of repentance to put vs in remembrance of our sinnes to admonish vs not to sowe vpon the furrowes of vnrighteousnesse lest we reape the croppe of affliction an hundred fold Let vs desire God to sanctifie the crosse vnto vs that it may consume sinne in vs and prouoke vs to a more holy conuersation Vse 2 Secondly the meditation of this that God is the author of all afflictions must teach vs to haue patience in our troubles not to murmure not to repine not to grudge when we are vnder the crosse For seeing God hath visited me with his hand I must take it patiently as a dutifull childe beareth the chastisements of his father This the Prophet practised as we see Psal 39 9 I spake not a word but held my peace because thou Lord didst it This the Apostle teacheth Heb. 12 5 6. My sonne despise not the chastening of the Lord neither faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth The flesh alwaies seeketh ease and is ready to be impatient if deliuerance come not by and by so that wee must remember from whence our trouble cometh to asswage the sorrow and bitternesse of our affliction For this is a great comfort to Gods children that our sicknesse yea euery pang fit of our
body Thirdly in this Type we see the nature of Vse 3 the Sacraments The brazen serpent in it selfe had no operation to work any thing in it selfe it had no vertue to cure or recouer any man of any disease The Sacraments of themselus cannot conferre grace onely they are instruments of Gods mercies which he vseth of his goodnesse toward vs to conuey to vs good things They are as the Kings gracious pardon that sealeth vp vnto vs forgiuenesse of sins so that being by his institution very auaileable wee must frequent thē with a feeling of our wants with reuerence of his ordinances with hungring after his graces with calling vpon his Name to fit and prepare vs to that heauenly worke God could haue healed his people with his word alone without the serpent as well as with the serpent as the Centurion confesseth to Christ Speake the word onely Math. ● ● and my seruant shall be healed yet he addeth the serpent set vpon a pole for farther assurance of his word and to be a signe of their recouery so God can saue by the Ministery of his word without the Sacraments if it please him yet he addeth and annexeth them as appurtenances to the word to confirme the weaknesse of our faith and to make good the truth of his owne promise And as it was not enough for them to beleeue the word of God to the curing of their bodies the taking away of the stinging of the serpents vnlesse they vsed the helpe of the brazen serpent no more is it sufficient for vs to beleeue the forgiuenesse of sins by Christ vnlesse we labour to strengthen our faith by the Sacraments Nay if any wold not vouchsafe to looke vpon the Serpent being the meanes that God ordained for their recouery it is certaine they regarded not the word of God it selfe that they should liue so if any contemne or neglect the Sacraments being holy seales of heauenly blessings they are plainely conuinced to their faces that they respect not the word it selfe whatsoeuer they pretend to the contrary notwithstanding This we see in Ahaz who neglecting a signe offered vnto him for the better strengthening of his faith is said to tempt God and to despise his word Esay 7 12. The naturall reason of man would neuer beleeue that he should be healed by a serpent of brasse hauing no vertue or vigour in it so carnall wisedome and vnderstanding cannot discerne how a little water sprinkled on the body should be the lauer of regeneration or how a small cantle of bread should bring and conuey vnto vs the body of Christ or a little wine offer and exhibite vnto vs the blood of Christ So that as in this bodily cure both their eye did behold it and their faith did beleeue in like manner in the Sacraments we must shut the eyes of our carnall reason and open the eyes of faith beleeue his word and we shall be comforted For euery man doth in them receiue through the promise of God so much as he beleeueth he receiueth This Christ assureth to the woman of Canaan who had shewed an vndaunted and inuincible faith taking no repulses ouerstriding all difficulties refusing all denials and striuing against all doubts that might arise in her heart saying O woman great is thy faith be it to thee as thou desirest Mat. 15 28. So when two blinde men followed him crying saying O sonne of Dauid haue mercy vpon vs he saide vnto them Beleeue ye that I am able to doe this and when they answered Yea Lord hee touched their eyes saying According to your faith be it vnto you Mat. 9 29. Moreouer albeit the Serpent restored life yet was not life present and inherent in the brazen serpent neither abiding in the matter or resting in the forme thereof so albeit Christ be offered and signified yea conueyed and conferred vnto vs in the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper yet he is not carnally and corporally present nor carnally and corporally eaten as the Capernaites imagined ● 60.66 but he is spiritual meat for spirituall men the rest eate the outward signes but are not partakers of the thing signified Thus we see how the consideration of the similitude of the brazen serpent directeth vs in sundry conclusions to be holden and acknowledged touching the Doctrine of the Sacraments of the new Testament Fourthly this present type teacheth vs that Vse 4 we are iustified by faith alone without the works of the Law For as the Israelites stung of these serpents were cured so are we saued as health was offered by the serpent so is saluation by Christ But the Israelites did nothing at all but onely looke vp to the brazen serpent they were not willed to make satisfaction for their rebellion or to goe on pilgrimage nor so much as to dresse and binde vp their wounds but only to behold the serpent set vpon the pole as Christ saith to the Ruler of the Synagogue touching the healing of his daughter Feare not onely beleeue Mar. 5 36 so is it in the saluing of the sores of the soule in the attaining pardon of our sins and obtaining the righteousnesse of Christ There is required nothing of vs touching our iustification and saluation but to fixe the eyes of our faith vpon Christ True it is many other vertues and graces are required to make vp the full perfection of a christian man that he may be complete wanting nothing yet he is iustified and doth stand as righteous in the sight of God by faith onely It is a great weighty controuersie in these daies betweene the Church of Rome and vs what is the cause of life and saluation they ascribe the cause of saluation in part to the merit of our own works and to a righteousnesse inherent in our owne persons and in part likewise to Christ who say they hath made vs able to merit the fauour of God and to satisfie for our own sins We ascribe all our saluation to the mercy of God and the merite of Christ wholly applied to vs by a liuely faith the which manner of sauing vs most fitly agreeth to the nature of God the chiefe Fountaine of our saluation who can abide no pollution neither can any wickednesse stand in his presence who is of pure eyes requireth our perfect obedience so that wanting the perfect righteousnesse of the Law of our owne wee must bee cloathed with the righteousnesse of another whereby we may be saued Euen as Iacob though hee were not by birth the first borne Ambr. de Iacob lib. 2. cap. 1. yet hiding himselfe vnder his brothers garments and hauing put on his coate which smelled most sweetly came into his fathers presence that vnder another mans person he might receiue the blessing of the first borne so is it necessary that we lye hid vnder the precious purenesse of Christ our elder brother that hauing the sweet sauour of his garments our sinnes may be couered with
charged the Leaper not to publish and spread abroad the miraculous worke of his cle●nsing but this was to correct the peruerse iudgement of the people who regarded more to see his miracles then to heare his doctrine and that hee might haue the greater liberty to teach from the persecutions of the Pharisies Mar. 1 45. Vse 1 Now let vs proceed to the vses of this Doctrine First it teacheth that we must not slander and discredite any of his workes but say with the sorcerers This is the finger of GOD Exod. 8 19. When the Pharisies heard that Christ cast out the diuels by the power of his deity they backe-bited and blasphemed the workes of God maliciously saying This man casteth out diuels no otherwise but thorough Belzebub the Prince of diuels Matth. 12 24. 28 12 13. So the watchmen set to keepe the sepulcher of Christ sure shewed vnto the high Priests all the things that were done who tooke wicked counsell and gaue large mony vnto the soldiers to spred abroad that his disciples came by night stole him away while they slept Likewise when the holye Ghost fell vpon the Apostles that they beganne to speake with other tongues as the Spirit gaue them vtterance they mocked and slandered the worke of God saying These are full of new wine Acts 2 13. so that Peter iustified as well the Apostles of Christ as the miracle of God In like maner are we to do in like cases when an euill name is brought vpon the workes of Gods election or reprobation vpon the workes of his prouidence and protection of his people we must stand forth to giue glory to God and to stop the mouth of iniquity when it is opened against heauen For if a man bee commanded to open his mouth in the cause of the dumbe much more in the cause of God It is one kinde of taking the name of God in vain to hold our peace when any reason dispute against Gods workes If wee deny him any way before men Christ Iesus will deny vs before his Father Prou. 31 8. We must therefore open our mouths in defence of God and his workes put the obstinate gainsaiers to silence wipe away the slanderous reports raised of them lest others receiue hurt thereby and to the end God may haue the glory and praise of his owne worke And albeit we doe not alwayes conceiue the right cause and reason of them let vs not deride but admire them with the Apostle Rom. 11 33. O the deepnesse of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God! How vnsearchable are his iudgements and his wayes past finding out If a man should take vpon him to iudge those that are out of his libertie and ouer whom he hath no authority and to pronounce sentence vpon their doings would a worldly man thinke wel of this presumption But it is lesse wisedome and greater p●e●umption to take vpon vs to rule God and to giue him his lesson and to enter into iudgement of his workes Therefore Elihu wisely teacheth in the booke of Iob this point Who hath appointed vnto him his way Or who can say Thou hast done wickedly Remember that thou magnifie his workes which men behold Iob 36 23 24. Secondly it is required of vs to be diligent Vse 2 markers and obseruers of the works of Gods prouidence For how shall he report them remember them to others that is not carefull to muse vpon them and to marke them himselfe Or how shall he open his mouth to declare them that shutteth his eyes lest he shold see them and stoppeth his cares lest he should heare of them It standeth vs therefore greatly vpon wisely to obs●rue the works of God and suffer nothing to passe from vs nothing by vs without making profite of it to our selues bringing it to the vse of others This wisedome Eliphaz one of the three friends of Iob teacheth hauing shewed that the vngodly shall not escape vnpunished but that God will finde them out in their hypocrisie he addeth Iob 5 27. Loe thus haue we inquired of it and so it is heare this and know it for thy selfe This we are all to marke by continual experience how God dealeth with the godly sometimes chastening them sometimes blessing them neuer forsaking them albeit sometimes leauing them for a season yet in the end returning in mercy vnto them Likewise how hee dealeth towardes the wicked thereby to auoid their steps consider that though they flourish for a time it is but the pleasure of sin for a season that they inioy and alwayes Gods iudgement in this life arresteth some and maketh them fearefull examples vnto others Thus did the Prophet ponder in his heart the wayes and works of God and profited thereby to his great comfort as we see Psal 37 35.36 I haue seene the wicked strong and spredding himselfe like a greene Bay-tree yet he passed away and loe he was gone and I sought him but he could not be found Marke the vpright man and behold the iust for the end of that man is peace but the transgressors shall be destroyed together and the end of the wicked shall be cut off And if wee will giue our hearts to this meditation on the works of Gods prouidēce ruling the world and disposing all things we shal see how he alwayes meeteth with the vngodly though they digge deepe to hide their counsels and diue downe vnto the depth and bottome of their deuices yet the hand of the Lord doth finde them out and bringeth to iudgement euery secret worke So if we shall weigh with wisedome his workes toward his owne seruants as he doth loue them with an euerlasting loue so is he alwayes gracious vnto them and maketh all things fall out to further their saluation This the Wiseman teacheth by his experience Eccles. 8 11 12 13. Vse 3 Lastly let all Fathers of families teach the workes of Gods mercy and the workes of his iudgements according as they see them to be offered vnto them For to whom should we rather publish them then to our posterity the children that come out of our loins when a Father beholdeth the Lord punishing the vngodly and taking vengeance on the contemners of his word the blaspheme●s of his name the prophaners of his Sabbathes the vncleannesse of adulterers the beastlinesse of drunkards the oppression of vsurers the periury of false witnesses and the cruelty of mercilesse dealers should he suffer such publicke examples to dye and these workes of God to sleepe in the dust Nay seeing God doth single out some and maketh them examples admonitions vnto others we ought to whet them vpon our children and seruants teach them thereby to serue the Lord and to hate those heynous and horrible sins that prouoke such great and greeuous iudgements Abraham is commended by the Spirite of God for this care and conscience of his dutie when he should behold the wofull destructi of Sodom
then our iustification standeth not in our good workes but in that God pardoneth our euill workes For we haue all bene as an vncleane thing And all our righteousnesse is as filthy clouts Esay ch 64. ver 6. Vse 1 Now let vs make vse of this doctrine First this ministreth great comfort to the faithfull that are in Christ The glory and happines of our soules and bodies in this life in the life to come consisteth herein The forgiuenesse of sinnes comprehendeth vnder it as it were in a short summe all the mercies of God This is it which the Prophet Esay teacheth chap 40 1. So Dauid declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnes without workes saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sins are couered blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not his sin Psal 32 1 2 7. This mercy of God will bee sweete vnto vs and cheere vp our hearts with vnspeakeable comfort and giue vs ioy in the holy Ghost if we consider these circumstances that wee dayly offend God after our new birth that all sin is odious in it selfe and maketh vs vile and abhominable in the sight of God keeping all good things from vs and pulling downe all euill vpon vs and that the wages thereof is death beeing able to presse vs downe to the very bottome of the gulfe of hell Ier. 5 25. Esay 59 1 2 3. If a man had all the skill of wise Salomon to speake as he did of the nature of beasts of birds and creeping things knew the vertues of all trees and plants 1 Kings 4.33 from the Cedar that is in Libanus vnto the Hysop that springeth out of the wall and were ignorant of this blessed priuiledge and had not the comfortable assurance of it in his conscience it could not auaile or profit him one whit It might peraduenture delight the outward man for a season but wanting the sweet feeling of Gods fauour in washing away his sins the other can be but vanity and vexation of spirit If a man were able to measure the heauens to tell the order height distances influences and number of the starres and yet be ignorant at home and doe not know what is done as it were within his owne house and within the doores and clossets of his owne heart what should it profit him thus to gaze vp into heauen when the burthen of sinne is ready to thrust him downe to hell If a man were so excellent and expert as out of the knowledge of herbes and Simples to remedie all the diseases of the body yet if he be not able to salue the sores of his soule know not how the sicknesses and infirmities therof shall be cured this can be little comfort to him for then he may haue a sound body but an infected soule an healthy body but a sickly soule full of the botches and blemishes of sin which of all diseases is most dangerous and deadly If a man had the knowledge of all lawes and statutes and were able to decide any controuersie and end any suite between man man yet is not assured how himselfe shal be acquitted when the Iudge of all the world shall come and holde his Assises and how things shall stand with him it can bring no peace vnto him seeing God hath a controuersie against him so long as his sinnes are vnpardoned Hos 4 1. What shal it profit a man to bee passing well seene in musicke by voice or instrument to be skilful in reports and descant and bee alwaies troubled with a iarring conscience Last of all what shall it auaile if a man vnderstood all Arts and Mysteries if hee could worke miracles and speake with the tongues of men and Angels if he knew al sciences and secrets of nature yet were ignorant of the forgiuenesse of his sinnes and of the grace of Christ Philip. 3 7. 1 Cor. 2 2. whom onely if we know the matter is not great if we know nothing else whom if we know not it is worth nothing if we know all things in the world beside Vse 2 Secondly wofull is their estate that are not of the Church that are not in Christ that are without true faith and feeling of this heauenly doctrine Wretched and miserable is the condition of many thousands in the world which want this assurance it is such a burthen as ●tayeth vs from the heauens and waigheth vs ●owne to hell Pouerty is a great burthen the ●word famine pestilence imprisonment sicknesse oppression and such crosses are indeede ●eauy burthens but the burthen of sinne sur●ounteth them all Therefore the Prophet ●aith Psal 38 4. Mine iniquities are gone ouer mine head and as waighty burthens they are too heauy Hence it is that the Apostle exhorteth vs Heb. 12 1 to cast off euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on that so we may run with patience the race that is set before vs. So heauy it was on the Angels that kept not their first estate That it cast them downe to hell and they are reserued in chains vnto the iudgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2 4. So heauy it was vpon the shoulders of Dathan and Abiram that the earth was not able to hold them but receyued them to destruction Yea it is so intollerable a burden as it bringeth terrors and horrors that cannot be expressed and leadeth to the gulfe of desperation when God chargeth the conscience with sinne so that though a man had al riches and honors all pleasures and delights al kingdomes and glory of the world what ioy or comfort can he feel in these things so long as he is not at peace with his God Contrarywise he that is eased of this waight lightened of this burthen though hee haue all the troubles crosses and afflictions of Iob be laid in fetters with Ioseph be banished his country with Moses be cast to the Lions with Daniel he put in the stockes with Ieremy be fed with bread of affliction with Micaiah and haue no more comfort and compassion shewed vnto him then the poore begger in the Gospel to haue the dogges licke his sores Luke 16 21. though his estate be vile contemptible and miserable to the world yet so long as he hath a discharge of his debt a pardon of his sin a cancelling of the bill of enditement drawne against him written in his heart and feeles that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding sealing him vp to the day of redemption this man before God is most happy and blessed for euer But if sin be imputed vnto vs and God enter into iudgement with vs Who shall bee able to stand before him or be righteous in his sight Psal 130 3. 143 2. This feeling of sinne and wound of conscience which the stroke of Gods hand hath made will weary the strongest and lustiest man that liueth when hee shall open the eye to see
wickedly in the sight of the Lord they were made slaues and captiues sometimes to one enemy and sometimes to another Iudg. chap. 4 ver 1 2. When the Israelites began to loathe the offerings of God the Lord threatened a greeuous iudgement to come vpon them 1 Sam. 3 1● and executed it accordingly for the Philistines fought against them and Israel was smitten downe euery man fled into his tent and there was an exceeding great slaughter for there fell of Israel thirty thousand footmen Thus through sinne reigning among them the enemies of God are armed the people of GOD are destroyed the Arke of God is taken and the priests of God are smitten with the sword It was the sin of Eli and his house especially that drew the iudgment of God on the whole Nation Wee see this in the example of Salomon when his hart was turned away from the true God and his hands were holden vppe to strange gods the Lord was angry with him because hee had giuen him a charge concerning this thing that hee should not follow other gods Then the Lord stirred vp one aduersary vnto Salomon and afterward another aduersary which did much mischeefe and euill against Israel 1 Kings 11 14 23. This appeareth in Rehoboam the son of Salomon when once he forsooke the Lord and all Israel with him the Prophet is sent to say vnto him Thus saith the Lord Ye haue forsaken mee therefore haue I left you in the hands of Shishak 2 Chron. chap. 12 verse 5. Reason 1 The Reasons being considered will make the doctrine more euident First sin maketh vs execrable to the Lord and abhominable in his sighr Nothing doth more deforme vs and make vs cursed and detested in the sight of God If then sin make vs to be had in execration it is no maruell if we be left destitute of Gods protection This is the reason which the Lord vseth why Israel fell before their enemies and he went not forth with their armies when they fell before the men of Ai Therfore the children of Israel cannot stand before their enemies but haue turned their backes before their enemies because they be execrable Iosh 7 12 13. Wee see then the nature of sin it maketh men abhominable and detestable in the sight of God Reason 2 Secondly God leaueth and departeth from them that fall from him they forsake him therefore he forsaketh them For so long as we walke in the wayes of godlines and please God in all things according to his will God is among vs He dwelleth with vs hee will neuer depart from vs hee walketh in the middest of our habitations 2 Cor. 6 16. But when we commit wickednesse in his sight and follow the abhominations of our owne hearts he is gone hee will take vp his seate no more among vs hee will not come nere our dwelling places This is the reason which the Lord vrgeth to Ioshua in the place before named saying There is an execrable thing among you O Israel neyther will I be with you any more except ye destroy the excōmunicate from among you Ios 7 12 13. So then our lying in sinne doth driue the Lord from vs that he will haue no more fellowship with vs to do vs any good Vse 1 We are now to set downe the vses of this Doctrine First this teacheth vs to acknowledge that all iudgements which seize and fall vpon vs are iust righteous God chastiseth vs often but alwayes iustly neuer vniustly True it is the particular cause is not alwayes discerned of vs why he chastiseth and sinne is not alway the cheefe and principall cause as appeareth in the example of the blinde man of whom Christ sayth Neither hath this man sinned nor his parents but that the workes of God should be shewed vpon him Iohn 9 3 yet his punishments are alwaies deserued and neuer inflicted when he is not mooued who rowzeth vp himselfe as a Lyon out of his denne as the Prophet speaketh to execute righteous iudgements We see in the booke of Nehemiah how the Leuites lay open the sinnes of the whole land confessing Gods kindnesse vnto them and their vnkindnesse to the Lord and iustifying his name Nehem. 9 33 34 Surely thou art iust in all that is come vpon vs for thou hast dealt truly but we haue done wickedly And our Kings and our Princes our Priests our fathers haue not done thy Law nor regarded thy commandements nor thy protestations wherewith thou hast protested among them So when there is any imminent danger of iudgment as of the plague of sicknesse of famin of war or such like this must teach vs that then especially wee should take heede that we lay not our selues naked vnto them by rebelling against God I meane not this of any bodily nakednesse appearing to the eye of man but of spiritual nakednesse in the sight of God whereby man in his sight appeareth a deformed sinner This is a fearfull condition this is the foulest nakednesse that can be A man or woman by the light of nature would be ashamed to bee seene naked which teacheth vs to couer the body but much more should we take heede that we appeare not naked to God and see the filthines of our hearts Let vs craue the righteousnesse of Christ to be a couering to cloath our souls For they are blessed whose sinnes are couered Psal 31 1. When GOD threatneth to bring any plague or iudgment vpon vs let vs not wound our owne soules or lay them open to the wrath of God but rather humble our selues before him that hee may call backe the punishments that are gone out against vs This is it which Moses teacheth Deut. 23 9 When thou goest out with thine hoast against thine enemies keepe thee from all wickednes Secondly seeing sinne layeth vs open to reproches Vse 2 of enemies and to the iudgements of God as appeareth in this great plague vpon the people this sheweth that whensoeuer we haue layd our selues thus naked by ●alling into sinnes we must not go about to hide and to couer them from God through hypocrisy For all things are naked and open to his eies with whom we haue to do so that we must learne to acknowledge them and confesse them before his presence We see how ready men are to hide their sinnes with Adam from the sight of God but the more wee seeke to conceale them the more we reueale them the more vgly we appeare before him What folly or madnesse is it that is practised in the world to hide our sinnes from men and neuer regarde how bare and naked they bee in the presence of the all-seeing God If a man committing sinne were sure to keepe it secret from the sight and knowledge of all others that none could accuse him or detect him of it what should this auaile him seeing it is open to the eyes of God and appeareth as plainly as wee behold the sores of poore Criples that vncouer
and of the Land of Canaan but the eternall rest with Iesus Christ in heauen This do none attaine but onely the faithfull and now we are in the way that leadeth vnto it wee are not yet in possession of that rest 2 Corinth chapter 5. verse 7. As then the passenger doth not sitte still but alwayes is going forward and further vntill he come to his iournyes end so ought wee to make continuall steppes in the faith vntill we come to receiue the ende of our faith which is the saluation of our soules 1 Pet. chapter 1 verse 9. Why eternall life is called a rest Now we must vnderstand that eternall life is called a rest for two causes First because thē and there wee shall rest from all our workes that is from our sinnes for then we shall sinne no more but shall know God euen as we are knowne no euill shall dwell there When the Angels had sinned they were immediately cast out and are reserued in chaines to euerlasting perdition Iude verse 6. Secondly wee shall rest from all troubles and miseries of this life Reuelat. chapter 14 verse 13 and hence it is that this place of rest is called by the name of Abrahams bosome Luke 16 22 23 because Abraham and all beleeuers that are the sonnes of God do there quietly rest and repose themselues as the childe in the bosome of his mother Vse 3 Thirdly it teacheth vs to auoyd all prophanenesse vpon this day of the Lord the works of our callings and the pleasures of our owne hearts are meere prophanations of this holy day Euery one will be ready to confesse that it is a great sinne eyther for the husbandman to goe to plough or for the tradesman to follow his businesse or for the day-labourer to worke or for the handy-craftesman to apply his vocation howbeit for a man to giue himselfe to his sports pleasures and delights they thinke there is some greater liberty Howbeit it seemeth a most ridiculous thing to me that God forbiddeth to the poore man his labour and alloweth to the rich man his pleasure to permit that which is lesse necessary and to restraine that which is more necessary But let vs see what we are to hold as well of the one as of the other out of the Law of God First Adam himselfe was commanded to sanctifie this day which God had blessed Genesis chap. 2 2 and the people in the wildernesse are forbidden to gather Manna Exod. chap. 16 verse 6. For this day is a market day for the soule and a time to prouide spirituall food farre more excellent and precious then Manna Iohn chap. 6 verse 58. 1 Pet. chapter 2 verse 3. Secondly our ordinary buying and selling keeping of fayres or markets on this day to whom we may ioyne those that bring theyr wares and commodities into Church-yards that after morning prayer they may vent them among the people This is another abuse among vs which toucheth the buyers as well as the sellers And if such commodities bee brought vnto vs we ought not to buy them Nehem. 13 15. For what maketh sellers among vs but because they easily finde those that will take their cōmodities at their hands It is certaine if there were no buyers there would be no sellers Thirdly there ought to be no carrying carting vpon this day lest God lay some heauy burden vpon vs too heauy for vs to beare Ierem. 17 21 22. Many carriers offend this way and as they breake the Sabbath themselues so they are the cause of the breach of it to many others Fourthly we must not follow our labours no not in haruest time when we might claime the greatest priuiledge and the season seemeth to offer vnto vs liberty and to giue vs a dispensation yet euen then we must rest prouided that our corne and prouision for the yeere be not in danger to bee lost for then God will haue mercy and not sacrifice Math. 12 7. If wee may saue the goods of others much more our owne And if saue the life of our beast much more our corne wherby our liues are preserued Fiftly they are reproued that wander from their places that runne about after euery pleasure or profite or feast a common abuse prophanation of the day almost in all places Exod. 16 29 these are like prophane Esau who sold his birthright for a messe of pottage Hebr. chapter 12 verse 16 so do they sell the word and sacraments for small trifles These are louers of pleasures more then louers of God hauing a forme of godlinesse but denying the power thereof 2 Tim. chapter 3 verses 4 5. and many of them make theyr belly theyr god Philppians chapter 3 ver 19. And touching theyr profits they take great gaine to be godlinesse not godlines to be great gaine the first Epistle to Timothy chapter 6 verses 5 6. Sixtly the Iewes were forbidden to build the Tabernacle vpon this day which was a place consecrated to God for his seruice and worship Exodus chapter 31. verse 15. It is not therefore lawfull to builde Gods house with materiall stones vpon that day but wee must labour to bee liuing stones built vp a spirituall house and an holy Priesthood to offer vp spirituall sacrifice acceptable to God by Iesus Christ the first Epistle of Peter chapter the second verse 5. Seuenthly they are reproued that keepe a carnall sabbath vnto the diuell not an holy Sabbath to God who spend the time in carding dicing drinking surfetting reuelling and such like This is the diuels sabbath and no better then to serue him The diuels Sabbath They are euill vpon any day but worse vpon this day Saul was offended when he saw Dauids place empty at his Table but how often may our places be seene empty at the Lords Table and in his house Lastly not to regard the hearing of the word whereby wee may encrease in good things and learne our duties to God man The neglect of these duties bringeth many iudgements and curses of God vpon our heads Amos 8 4. Nehem. 13 17 18. Ier. 17. verse 27. Vse 4 Thirdly we must labour to performe obedience to God vpon this day without wearinesse or distraction both publikely and priuately It is our duty to heare the word preached in it 2 Kings 4 23. Luke 4 16 Acts 13 14 15 15 22. We must exercise our selues in the Word and Sacraments pray with the Congregation lay vp in our hearts what wee haue heard meditate vpon it conferre about it and seeke to encrease in knowledge faith and obedience otherwise the Sabbath shall passe from vs without profite We must try our hearts and liues whether we goe forward or backward or stand at a stay If we do these things then shall we be wise obseruers of this day and haue the blessings of GOD come downe vpon vs Exod. 31 13 17. Ezek. 20 12 20. Esay 56 2 3 4 c. and 58 13 14. Ier. 17 24 25 26. Vse