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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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by iustifying of vs by sanctifying of vs and by working in vs such like effect Against mans merits and deserts Secondly this doctrine ouerthroweth all merits and deserts of man which abolish the free grace of God Gods mercy is our merit our workes are not neither can bee our merit If our election be by grace then it is no more of workes otherwise grace is no more grace But if it be of workes then is it no more grace otherwise work were no more worke as the Apostle concludeth Rom. 11.6 We are iustified through faith in Christ in him standeth our saluation and by his merits we are made righteous Christ Iesus is the corner stone of the building Ephes 2. he is the foundation of the building forasmuch as other foundation none can lay 1 Cor. 3. he is also the highest stone of the building notwithstanding the mountains Zach. 4-6 that is the strongest opposition of enemies But let vs see what merit is What merit is that our vnderstanding may be the better and our iudgement the sounder touching this matter Merit is a worke vndue to which we are not bound making the reward and recompence that was not due to be due When a debter satisfieth his creditour he paieth that which he oweth him he giueth no more then is due vnto him by Law and equity by reason and conscience neither doth he deserue any thankes but through the fault of men as the heathen knew well enough Terent. in Phorm Act. sc 1. who confesse that such was the corruption of the times that when a man brought to another euen his owne he was to be thanked Christ our Sauiour a better master teacheth vs this more fully Luk. 17.8 Luc. 17.8 9.10 When a man hath a seruant who girdeth himselfe and serueth him till he haue eaten and drunken Doth he then thanke him because he hath done the things that were commanded him I trow nay so likewise ye when ye haue done all those things that are commanded you say Wee are vnprofitable seruants we haue done that which was our duty to doe Wherefore we make a weake plea to plead our owne merits who haue nothing but by the merits of Christ But it will be obiected Obiection that we find in Scripture no mention at all of the merits of Christ I answere Answere It is true concerning the word it selfe Neuerthelesse if they will conclude any thing against the merits of Christ because the bare name in so many letters and syllables is not extant in the word of God they may as well gainsay the Trinity refuse the Sacraments deny the Catholike Church and hold the Sonne not to be consubstantiall with the Father Forasmuch as none of these are expressed there But if they meane and vnderstand the thing it selfe then we haue the merits of Christ plentifully preached vnto vs in the holy Scripture to whom the whole worke of our saluation is ascribed The Apostle teacheth Ephe. 1 14 that our redemption is a possession purchased by him that is purchased by the merit of his death And in the former Epistle to the Thessalonians 1 Thes 5.6 he saith God hath not appointed vs to wrath but to obtaine saluation by our Lord Iesus Christ that is procured vnto vs by his merits So in the twentieth chapter of the Actes Paul in his exhortation to the Elders of Ephesus willeth them carefully to feed the flocke of God Act. 10.28 which hee hath purchased with his owne blood where he maketh the blood of Christ meritorious And elsewhere he saith we are iustified by his blood and reconciled to God by his Sonne and so shall be saued by his life Rom. 5.9 10. Rom. 5.9 1● If then we challenge any thing to our selues we take so much from Christs worthinesse He was not bound in any bond vnto vs who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to bee equall to God Wherefore our workes can challenge nothing at Gods hands for as much as whatsoeuer wee can doe is as due debt vnto him Thus the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. Rom. 8.1 Brethren we are debters not to the flesh to liue after the flesh whereby he vnderstandeth the contrary as a member opposed but we are debters to the Spirit to liue after the Spirit So then our spirituall life is called a debt which is true in many respects First How all the we can doe ● due vnto God in regard of our creation Secondly in regard of our redemption Thirdly in regard of our glorification Our spirituall life is due to God in regard of our creation because it is God that hath made vs and not we our selues we are the worke of his hands who hath created vs according to his image and therby bound vs as by a strong band to know him and worship him Hence it appeareth that Adam himselfe in his estate of innocency could haue claimed nothing of God by merit because whatsoeuer he was he was it by him whatsoeuer he had he had receiued it through his gift so that he should haue paide him with his owne which deserueth no thankes as we heard before True it is man fell away defaced and deformed this image and made himselfe liable to eternall destruction howbeit he could not thus shake off the yoke of his necke nor the fetters from his feet nor acquit himselfe of the debt and obligation when of a debter to God he made himselfe a bondslaue to the deuill A debter riotously wasting his goods and carelesly consuming the stocke and substance that he hath and thereby making himselfe a bankrout is not discharged of his debt but standeth bound to pay it as before God will not loose his right nor let go his hold and therefore albeit we are started backe from him he remaineth the same as he made vs so we remaine obliged vnto him Hence we see what is the reason why God commandeth duties of vs in his Law that neither wee nor our fathers are able to performe ●ow God re●ireth im●●ssibilities 〈◊〉 our hands If a father should require that of his son or a master exact of his seruant that which were vnpossible to doe as to trauell an hundred thousand mile in one day or to flye vp to heauen might he not be thought to be a tyrant But the case standeth not betweene God and vs as betweene a father and his children or betweene a master and his seruants For he chargeth no more vpon vs then hee had inabled vs to doe and had giuen vs strength to performe so that if there be any impossibility to do it the fault resteth in our selues and not in God It is no cruelty in him to require so much of vs as he doth but iniquity in vs that doth disable vs. He abideth the same that he was but we abide not the same that we were so that there is no change in him but the change is in vs so that
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
point required to make a good worke is that it bee done to Gods glory 1. Cor. 10.31 If we haue any other by-respects ayming at our owne glory or the applause of the world or the satisfying of Gods iustice or the merit of eternall life or any such corrupt and crooked ends wee lose all our labour our works cannot come vp in account before him It is the common and corrupt iudgement of the common sort that Papists abound in good workes but let vs try them by these rules we shall quickely and easily find them what they are failing in the matter and manner and in the maine and principall end of well-doing Now to conclude euery one must doe these good works euery one must be as a tree planted in the garden of God and bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse that he may be glorified Esay 61.3 It is a receiued opinion among many that none can doe good works but rich men as if there were no good workes but almes for they haue no taste in any thing else but that which is giuen them Thus doe the poore cast off all doing of good works from themselues vpon the richer sort that so they may receiue somwhat True it is almes are one good worke but yet not the only good work nor yet the chiefe and principal For the poore may do good works nay must do them as wel as the rich The workes of the first Table are the best works the greatest works these they may doe as well as others To haue a care to know God to beleeue in him to loue him aboue all to feare him to hope in him to stay our selues vpon him to approue our selues in his sight to worship him with the heart to confesse him with the mouth to pray vnto him earnestly to heare his word attentiuely to receiue the Sacraments reuerently and such like diuine and deuout exercises are all of them good workes great workes gracious workes approoued of God and these may the poore performe And that the Scripture auoucheth and God alloweth these for good works appeareth in the example of Abraham mentioned by the Apostle Iames. chap 2.21 Was not Abraham our father iustified by works when he offered Isaac his sonne vpon the altar He shewed himselfe to be a iustified man by his good workes and was called the friend of God ●●●se 23. ●●●se 12. Thus did his faith worke together with his workes But what were his good works were they his almes-deeds and shewing mercy to the poore no he performed a good duty to God and preferred his loue to him before his loue to his sonne his onely sonne euen Isaac whom he loued the sonne of promise the sonne in whom the nations of the world should be blessed Thus must all men doe good workes thus the poorest sort are not exempted or priuiledged from shewing forth these good workes and testifying their faith by these fruites So then when we heare of the necessity of the dignity and value of good workes let no man thinke it belongeth nothing to him but euery man be encouraged to set vpon the doing of them ●●th 5 16. that our light may so shine before men that they seeing our good works may glorifie our Father which is in heauen 84 This was the dedication of the altar in the day when it was annointed by the Princes of Israel twelue chargers of siluer twelue siluer bolles twelue spoones of gold 85 Each charger of siluer c. We shall not need to stand to speake particularly of euery Princes offering because as we noted before the same things are repeated the offerings are the same the matter is the same the forme and ende the same the price and value the same the difference standeth onely in a description of the time when they were offered and of the person who offered described by his name by his father and by his tribe Nowe in casting vppe the value of all these offerings and setting downe the totall summe appeareth the greatnesse of their riches For had they not beene much blessed that way they could not haue continued to bestow so bountifully vpon the Tabernacle These they attained vnto partly by their own labour and partly by entring into the labours of others For at their departure out of the land of Egypt Exod. 12.36 they borrowed iewels of siluer and iewels of gold and rayment at what time no doubt they carried with them the chiefe wealth and treasure of Egypt spoyled the Egyptians which God gaue to his people as a recompence of all their troubles The doctrine Doctrine from hence ariseth to bee this that the blessings of this life are oftentimes bestowed vpon Gods children Earthly blessings are oftentimes in the possession of gods children He giueth them riches honours dignities preferments house land peace and prosperity at his owne pleasure We haue the examples of Abraham Lot their substance was so greatly encreased that they could not dwell together the heardmen of their cattell stroue and contended one against another Gen. 13.7 and Abrahams seruant sent to take a wife for Isaac Gen. 24.35 telleth that the Lord had blessed his master greatly and had giuen him flocks and heards and siluer and gold men seruants and maid-seruants and Camels and Asses Gen. 24 35. Iob was a iust and an vpright man one that feared God and eschewed euil and this man was the greatest of all the men of the East cha 1.1 2.3 and 31 24 25. his wealth was great and his hand had gotten much The like we might say of many godly kings as of Dauid Salomon Hezekiah Iehoshaphat Iosiah of Mordecai and Ester of Ioseph and of Iacob And in the New Testament mention is made of Ioanna the wife of Chuza Herods steward and Susanna and many others who ministred vnto Christ of their substance Luk. 8.3 Of Lazarus the friend of Christ and Mary who entertained him often in her house Luk. 10.38 Of Ioseph of Arimathea a rich man Matth. 27.57 an honourable counsellour Mar. 15.43 he was a good man and aiust Luk. 23.50 which also waited for the kingdome of God Of Onesiphorus who often refreshed Paul was not ashamed of his chaine 2 Tim. 1.16 and many other of all estates some rich some noble some wise some mighty and of great account 1 Cor. 1.26 For hereby the Lord sheweth what he can Reason 1 do so often as it pleaseth him to bestow them True it is sometimes he denieth euen to those that are most highly in his fauour these outward and earthly blessings howbeit it is not because he is not able to enrich them For as Moses prayeth the Lord to spare his people lest the enemies should say he destroyed them in the wildernesse Deut 9.28 Exod. 32.12 Num. 14.13 because he was not able to bring them into the land of promise so he bestoweth many times wealth and substance vpon his children lest the enemies should say it was
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
which notwithstanding is all false the rest being made equall with him what is all this to the Bishop of Rome who is neither Peter nor any builder of the Church but rather a destroyer and puller of it downe Peter is not now vpon the earth neither doth Christ speak any one word of his successours for then hee would haue said Vpon thee and thy successours I will buid my Church whereas Christ saith not either vpon him or vpon his successours but vpon the Rocke which neither hee nor they were And if Christ had said vpon thee and thy successours I will builde my Church what had this beene yet to the Bishoppe of Rome more then to the Bishop of Constantinople or of Alexandria or of Antioch where also Peter sate what is there vttered or what can there be gathered out of Christs words sounding for him more then for them So then as the Romanists craue of vs to produce one place of Scripture to proue the continued succession of our Churches so we aske of them one place of Scripture to proue this succession of Peter or this deputation which they challenge to themselues For as they claime to be his lawfull heires alone and to receiue from him a twofold sword which Peter himselfe did neuer handle and a triple crowne such as Peter himselfe did neuer weare who preached but Lorded it not wheras they Lord it preach not let them bring forth the Tables and produce the Testament let vs see the writings that we may examine the truth and discusse his title then which nothing can be demaunded more iust and equal But marke a little euen ye that haue but halfe an eare how partial Iudges and corrupt esteemers they are of things that any way goe against them In the point of iustification when we teach agreeable to the Scriptures and to all antiquity That we are iustified by faith alone they cry out that we abuse the people and falsifie the word forasmuch as the Scripture neuer saith by faith alone ye are iustified Whereas in the controuersie of Peters Primacy they deale deceitfully and teach that the Church is builded vpon Peter alone that the keyes of the kingdome of heauen are giuen to Peter alone that he is ordained to bind alone and to loose alone as if hee might play fast and loose at his pleasure and send thousands of soules into hell and yet no man to say vnto him sir why do you so as the Canonists teach They can neuer proue that either Christ spake or ment al these or any of these to Peter alone but in the question of iustification by faith alone though it be not found in so many words syllables in the Scripture yet the sense and substance of them is found nothing being more vsuall in the Scripture then this that we are iustified not by workes but without workes not of the law but without the law Rom. 3.20 and 9.11 and 11.6 Gal. 2.16 Ephes 2.8 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 3.5 If then wee be not iustified but by faith what is this but by faith alone So that we adde no more to the meaning of Paul then Christ added to the meaning of Moses which was nothing at all and yet where Moses saith Thou shalt serue the Lord Christ saith it is written Deut. 6.13 and 10.20 Thou shalt serue him onely Matth. 4.10 This then is one note of their partiality that they may adde and alter correct and corrupt at their pleasure wee may not explane and expound the true meaning of the Scripture by the addition of one word Another is this when wee say that these words of Christ in the Euangelist To thee I will giue the keyes and whatsoeuer thou bindest or loosest are not to be restrained to Peter alone but ought to be communicated to the rest of the Apostles in whose name he answered they cry out with a loude voyce and storme mightily at it that wee doe extreame wrong and iniury to Peter the Prince of the Apostles whiles we sticke not to extend and apply the same wordes to others which are peculiarly spoken vnto him and thereupon they vrge against vs in the very words I say vnto thee and Thou art Peter and wil not suffer vs by any interpretatiō though neuer so euident to depart one iot from the syllables but tie vs fast and keepe vs close to these particulars and as it were pinne vs to Peters sleeue Whereas by this limitation they ceasse not to wound themselues more then vs euen vnto the heart and yet doe not feele the force of the stroke that tendeth vnto death For they are not afraid to stretch these words in length vntill they cracke againe and albeit they be vttered in the singular number yet they extend them to all the Bishops of Rome from Peter who they say was the first vnto Paulus Quintus that now sitteth in that Sea as if Christ had said I will build my Church vpon thee Peter and vpon all the Popes of Rome after thee and thus as I haue heard they beare the simple people in hand that take vp all things at the second hand that Christ said I will build my Church vpon the Bishop of Rome What is now become of the words themselues which they pressed against vs did they not tell vs that Christ said Thou art Peter haue they forgotten what was spoken I say vnto thee It is the fairest flower of the Popes garland and as it were the soule and life of the Papacy to enlarge the words as farre as may be and to vnderstand them of the whole rabble of vsurpers and diuels incarnate that haue ruled in these last dayes and yet they cannot abide or endure that wee should extend them to all the Apostles And if I should aske them how the Bishoppes of Rome can challenge a right to be Peters successors forasmuch as they can neuer euidently proue by any testimony of holy Scripture that Peter euer was at Rome it would trouble their patience and put them into a sweat and yet do no good forasmuch as the contrary rather appeareth Coment on Phile. p. 469. as I haue shewed else-where Thus much of the partiality of these men who like enuious persons are content to pull out both their owne eyes that they may put out one of their fellowes Hitherto we haue spoken of the counterfeite head of the Church of Rome the like might be said of the rest of that proud generation who by sacriledge and vsurpation are growne to be great princes and lordes of the earth and namely of the Cardinals the Popes late creatures who glory to be called the princes Electors and thinke themselues to be equall to the greatest kings of the world who not long since were content to bee Parish Priests Hee hath aduanced them and they aduance him and one claweth another There is no testimony of antiquity nor foot-step found in the word of God Apol. Bellar. contra M●●● praef to
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
gates that the gates thereof shall open wide and our workes shall enter with vs because they cannot be forgotten but shal come vp into the presence of God Wee see how it fareth with Kings and Princes and great men of this world they haue great traines and troupes of seruants and a goodly retinue that follow their heeles in the streetes O how happy are they if at the howre of death and the great day of account when their honours and their pleasures their riches and their friends their seruants and retainers shal forsake them and all earthly profits shall faile them they haue as goodly a traine of good works to attend and waite vpon them They shall finde much more comfort and peace in these then in all their life they felt in all the other as the wise virgins found much contentment in that they had store of oyle for their lampes Secondly shall good works come into account Vse 2 with God and be remembred of him then on the other side we may conclude that euill workes shall also be remembred True it is we are ready to forget the euils that we commit but God wil neuer forget them no time shall weare them out they are euer fresh in his sight Hence it is that Nehemiah saith Neh. 13. ●● Remember them O my God because they haue defiled the Priesthood and the couenant of the Priesthood c. And Reuel 16.19 Great Babylon is come in remembrance before God to giue vnto her the cup of the wine of the fiercenesse of his wrath He will remember the sinnes of the wicked and his owne iudgements These though they be great in this world shall not haue their honours and dignities to follow them but their sinnes shall all follow them The swearer shal be sure to haue his oathes and his blasphemies laid before him the adulterer his vncleannesse the drunkard his intemperancy the contemner of God and of his word his prophannesse the couetous person his oppression they shall accompany them vnto iudgement euen vnto hell that there they may receiue the reward and wages that their workes haue deserued It were a great benefit to the vngodly if they might appeare before the iudgement seat of God without their euill deedes and that they could winde themselues out of the company of their sinnes which will be their strong accusers and giue in euidence against them but they cannot by any meanes for they follow them and pursue after them with a loude cry for vengeance and punishment and therefore woe and misery shall befall them that commit them Vse 3 Thirdly we must marke this point albeit good workes be so much regarded yet wee must take heed we giue not too much vnto them nor ascribe any merit to attaine eternall life by faith that it might bee of grace Rom. 4.16 it is the gift of God through Iesus Christ Rom. 6.23 If any of our works should merit then the works that are most glorious and eminent aboue others which the holy witnesses of the trueth of God wrought who did suffer for the Name of Christ and resisted the enemies euen vnto the blood should be meritorious But the Apostle denyeth this vertue to them Rom. 8.18 I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall bee reuealed in vs. If any workes might deserue saluation doubtlesse the workes of righteousnesse but it is the kindnesse and loue of God toward man that the Apostle magnifieth who saueth vs not by workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his owne mercy Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.8 9. So Paul preacheth Act. 13.48 39. that through Christ we haue remission of sinnes and that by him all that beleeue are iustified from all things from which they could not be iustified by the Law of Moses Againe the Lord Iesus himselfe teacheth vs that when we haue done all that possibly we can we must say we are vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 but he that is an vnprofitable seruant and doth onely what he ought to doe is not in any case of meriting He that will merit any thing at Gods hands must first giue him somewhat and so bind him as a debtor vnto him if no man can hinder him any thing of his owne who oweth all euen himselfe to God of whom he hath receiued all it is certaine that no man can merit any thing before him Rom. 11.35 Who hath first giuen vnto him and it shall be recompenced vnto him againe but no man can doe so verse 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for euer Amen Now where is no benefit there can be no merit because merit presupposeth a benefit receiued howbeit our well-doing extendeth not to God he can receiue no good turn at our hands 1 Cor. 4.7 Phil. 2.13 Eph. 2.10 When the husbandman bringeth to his Lord the fruit of his own ground he meriteth nothing because he giueth him of his owne Moreouer the Scripture teacheth vs that temporall benefites and deliuerances are not granted and bestowed vpon the faithfull for any desert of any their good deedes Dan. 9.18 much lesse therefore eternall life The Israelites had not the nations cast out before them nor themselues brought in to possesse the land for their owne righteousnesse 〈◊〉 9 5. or for the vprightnesse of their hearts but because he had chosen them set his loue toward them Let vs not therefore trust in our owne workes which when they are at the best are vnperfect and defiled but rather as the very enemies of the grace of God do admonish in regard of the vncertainty of our owne righteousnesse and the danger of vaineglory ●●●●r de iustif 〈◊〉 5. cap 7. let vs rest wholly as the safest way in the onely mercy of God If then this be the surest and safest way let vs all goe the safest way and leaue by-pathes and dangerous passages vnto others He that walketh safely walketh surely There is but onely one life and there is but one right way vnto life namely Christ Ioh. 14.6 The way by workes is a wrong way a false way he shall neuer come to his iourneyes end by the way of his works that is for the merit of his works because eternall life is neuer giuen for them There is no other name vnder heauen whereby we may be saued Act 4.14 Ephe. 4.5 then by the Name of Christ but if our works deserued lif● eternall there should be another name to saue vs because the merit of our work● is not the Name of Christ but setteth vp our selues in his place or at the least to ioyne a fellow and companion with him in the worke of our redemption This would minister occasion to vs to glory in our owne selues before the Lord as if wee were somewhat and could saue our selues but no man hath any thing wherein or whereof to boast himselfe Ro. 3.27 and
they would not enter into their fieldes they would not meddle with their vineyards they would not drinke of their water freely yet see with what a terror and trembling they were stricken at the approch of the Israelites neere their borders And this was the heauy hand of God vpon them as Moses declareth Deut. 2. This day will I begin to send thy feare and thy dread vpon all people vnder the whol heauen which shall heare thy fame and shall tremble and quake before thee Heereby we learne for our instruction That the enemies of God and his people are many times afraid where no true cause of any feare is Doctrine Euil men fear where no feare is Euill men are often afrayd of the people of God that faine would liue in peace So Saul liued in continual feare of Dauid 1 Sam. 18 15 29 he was vexed disquieted in heart and neuer in rest although hee we●e harmlesse though he sought peace and ensued after it yea the more Dauid prospered the more Saul feared him So did Pharaoh and the Egyptians feare the Israelites when they began to multiply and increase in abundance Exod. 1.12 Thus Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a iust and holy man reuerencing him greatly hearing him gladly doing many things at his preaching Mark 6 20. Thus the high Priest feared the Apostles and the officers of the people Acts 5 26. Whē Herod and the rest of Ierusalem heard of the birth of a new King they were greatly troubled and perplexed in mind Mat 2.3 Al these things confirme the truth of this doctrine verifie the saying of the wise man The wicked flye when none pursueth but the righteous are bold as a Lion Prou. 28 1. Reason 1 The Reasons are these First because an euill man carrieth in his owne bosome a conscience for sinne which striketh and accuseth him which citeth and summoneth him before the barre of Gods iudgement seate Albeit no man can bee deposed against him albeit none can giue sentence and iudgement against him yet hee carrieth that about him which is instead of all Mala mens Tert. 〈…〉 1. sc 2. malus animus as the Poet sayth An euill minde an euill meaning an euill conscience arraigning him at the Tribunall of the eternall Iudge who shall giue to euery one according to his workes It shall serue as plaintiffe witnesse iudge and executioner against him This is confirmed vnto vs by many examples in the word of God When Cain had slaine his owne brother shed his innocent bloode which cryed for vengeance vnto heauen the reuenging hand of God pursued him Gen. 4 10 12 17. liuing as a runnagate and vagabond vpon the earth and fearing the sight of euery creature to bee armed against him he began to build a City to hide his head to yeelde him comfort to prouide for his safety and to defend him from iniury but there also the iustice of God ouertooke him the vengeance of his hand followd him and he was driuen from that enterprize The like we see in Belteshazzer Dan. 5.56 when there appeared fingers of a mans hand which wrote ouer against the Candlesticke vpon the plaister of the wall of the Kings Palace albeit hee knew not the substance and signification of the miracle whether it fore-shewed good or euill yet he carryed his witnesse with him that could not be bribed or corrupted so that his countenance was changed his thoughts were troubled the ioynts of his loynes were loosed and his knees smote one agaynst the other This terror of conscience the Lord fortold as the punishment of sinne Leu. 26 17 36 37. and Deuteronomy 28. verses 65 66 67. Againe no maruel if the wicked be oftentimes Reason 2 smitten with feare as with the spirit of giddynesse because they want the shielde of Fayth and the helmet of Hope which are as two strong Anchors to hold the shippe that it be not shaken in peeces with the stormes or dashed on rockes or drowned in the water or swallowed in quicke-sands A liuely fayth in the Sonne of God is the mother of all true comfort the peace of the soule the life of good workes the key of heauen for beeing iustified by Fayth Rom. 5 1. We haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God Wee haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but we haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Ro. 8 15. We haue boldnesse against the day of Iudgment there is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare for feare hath painfulnesse and he that feareth is not perfect in loue 1 Iohn 4 17 18. The stronger our faith is the lesse is our feare as one increaseth the other decreaseth If our faith bee little our feare is great as our Sauiour sheweth in the example of his disciples tossed with a tempest on the sea crying vnto Christ saying Master saue vs we perish Mat. 8 25 26. who saide vnto them Why are yee fearefull O ye of little Faith Now let vs come to the Vses If this be the Vse 1 nature of the wicked that he carrieth about with him a troubled and trembling conscience then a wicked man is a very coward faint-hearted being afraide of euery thing True it is there are many who neyther feare God nor the diuell who seeme to be valiant to aduenture their flesh and to expose themselues to desperate dangers in fighting and quarrelling as the manner of sundry Ruffians and swashbucklers is who feare not to meete any man in the field at any weapon and for euery crosse word are ready to giue the stab yet bring these ventrous and foole hardy fellowes to encounter hand to hand with the enemies of our soules to wrastle against spirituall wickednesses in high places and to striue as for life and death against pride prophanenesse against concupiscence of the flesh and contempt of the word against idle games of euill report against our lustes and sins which fight against our owne soules we shall see no childe so weake and willing to turn his heeles as these Ruffian-like spirits who albeit they walke with long blades by their sides or long poles on their neckes and iet vp and downe as ●ords of the earth ready alwayes to lay the hand vpon the dagger and to pick a quarrell at euery word yet they haue not the hand or the heart to strike one stroke to conquer sin and the tyrany of the diuell in themselues but yeeld themselues like slaues and captiues to do his will and are led away to destruction as an Oxe to the slaughter Notwithstanding this is true valour and manhoode to wound more and more the corruption of the old man He is stronger that conquereth himself then he that winneth a City Prou. 16 32. He is a better man of his hands that ouercommeth his own concupiscence then he that hath the vpper hand
God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise the weake to confound the mighty the base and despised to bring to nought things that are magnified in the eyes of men That no flesh should glory in his presence c. according as it is written he that glorieth let him glory in the Lord. His glory is lesse aduanced and set forth by great persons they are as a cloud before our eyes or as amist and veile to ouershadow vs and to keep from vs the glorious light of the bright shining Sunne I meane the glory of the mighty God as the Lord himselfe teacheth Gideon The people that are with thee are too many for me to giue the Midianites into their hands lest Israel vaunt themselues against me saying Mine owne hand hath saued me Iudg. 7.2 Iudg. 7.2 So then whether we doe consider the first moouing cause which is the will of God or the last final cause which is the glory of God it appeareth hee will oftentimes accomplish great things by meanes and instruments of low degree Vse 1 Let vs proceed to the vses and handle them briefly First forasmuch as God aduanceth weake things to worke out the decree of his prouidence wee may truely conclude from hence the powerfull hand of God that is able to bring to passe whatsoeuer he pleaseth Hee worketh after the pleasure of his owne will sometimes by weake meanes sometimes by no meanes sometimes aboue meanes and sometimes contrary to meanes When the chiefest among the sonnes of men will bring any thing to passe they make choice of the fittest and forwardest meanes euen such as are most likely in the eies of men and in the iudgement of the world When Salomon purposed to build the Temple for the worship of God he made choice of the fittest wood 1 King 5. ● and of the fittest workmen it was in him to chuse them but it was not in him to qualifie them whom he findeth in themselues to be vnfit But it is not so with God he oftentimes employeth the most backeward vntoward vnlikely vnpossible because he is able to fit them and furnish them with power strength and ability to goe through with the worke that he setteth them about so that wee may cry out with admiration How great and wonderfull is his Name in all his actions This is concluded directly Psal 8. Psal 8.1 2. O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the earth who hast set thy glory aboue the heauens out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength because of thine enemies that thou mightest still the enemy and the auenger Where we see that vpon Gods choice of weake and infirme instruments he gathereth the excellency of his Name and the greatnesse of his power which he repeateth againe in the last verse O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the earth There is none is aboue him none is equal vnto him none can be matched or compared with him all things are put vnder his feet Secondly we learne another trueth to bee Vse 2 acknowledged of vs that all things are not to be respected according to the outward appearance We are oftentimes deceiued and cannot see into the workes of God Our Sauiour speaketh notably to this purpose against the Pharisees Luke 16. Luke 16.15 Yee are they which iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your hearts for that which is highly esteemed amongst men is abomination in the sight of God This may not any way seeme strange vnto vs forasmuch as God respecteth no mans person as Gal. 2. where the Apostle proouing himselfe to be an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Iesus Christ who called him from heauen to preach the Gospel saith Of these Gal. 2.6 who seemed to bee somewhat whatsoeuer they were it maketh no matter to me God accepteth no mans person for they who seemed to bee somewhat in conference added nothing to me In these words he speaketh of the Apostles Peter Iames and Iohn that had beene poore fisher-men and men of small reckoning and respect yet they were honoured of God to be Apostles and planters of Churches so that hee saith It skilleth not what they haue beene in times past Euery man therefore is to be esteemed according to his calling and to bee accounted off according to the grace of God giuen vnto him Many that are first shall be last and the last shal be first We must esteeme of men not as they haue beene but as they are When men haue repented wee may not vpbraid them with their liues past nor cast in their teeth their former offences We must not take occasion by the infirmities of mens actions to contemne their persons Such is the mercifull dealing of God toward vs that he accepteth not of vs as we haue beene but as we are when we repent and returne vnto him It is the policy of Satan and the impiety of his instruments to obiect the weakenesse and slippes of our life past but we say vnto him and vnto them all Tell vs not what wee haue beene but tell me what by the mercy of God I am and what by the strengthening Spirit of God I will be I am a sinner I confesse it howbeit I am a penitent sinner We are not therefore to be carryed away with the consideration of mens persons and outward quality or condition of life as countrey or kindred or sexe or age or birth or riches or pouerty or learning such like for as much as God giueth not his gifts according to the outward appearance of the person but according to his wisedome and pleasure which are alwayes iust and respecteth not the rich more then the poore for they are all the worke of his hands Iob 34.19 〈◊〉 34.19 This doth the blessed Virgin acknowledge ●e 1.48 Luk. 1. that the Lord regarded the lowe estate of his handmaid so that thenceforth all generations should call her blessed Hence it is that hee reprooued the humane iudgement of Samuel beholding the person of Eliab the eldest sonne of Iesse and saying Surely the Lords annointed is before him Looke not on his countenance or on the height of his stature because I haue refused him for the Lord seeth not as a man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 ●am 16.7 Those whom God honoureth we must honour and despise no man for the meanenesse of his place and basenesse of his person and lownesse of his condition They are therefore iustly to be reprooued that reiect the Ministery of the word in regard of the simplicity of their persons that are the Ministers as they dealt with Christ our Sauiour ●●ke 4.22 ●●rke 5.23 Is not this Iosephs sonne from whence hath this man these things and what wisedome is this which is giuen vnto him Is not this the Carpenter the sonne of
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
their families according to the house of their fathers Hitherto we haue spoken of the order prescribed vnto Moses and the people to be obserued now followeth briefly the execution of the commandement as the conclusion and shutting vp of the Chapter in these 3 verses Howbeit before the performance thereof Moses addeth two cautions necessary to be obserued and considered First the totall summe of them that were numbred before which amounted to the number of sixe hundred thousand and three thousand fiue hundred and fifty Loe how great the blessing of God was in multiplying his people and what the truth of his promise is that he made to Abraham Secondly the exemption of the Leuites who were acquitted and discharged out of the former muster being appointed to another office of another nature verse 33. Then is annexed the obedience it selfe to the commandement of God set downe both generally The children of Israel did according to all that the Lord commanded Moses and then particularly in two points They pitched by their standards and they set forward euery one according to their families according to the house of their fathers No man murmured at the order of God no man enuyed his superiour no man contemned his inferiour but all of them rested in his ordinance marched according to his direction and appointment We learne from hence that it is the duty of Gods children Doctrine 8 to yeeld obedience not onely to some It is our duty o yeeld obedience to all Gods commandements but to all the commandements of GOD. God requireth at our hands a full and entire obedience Doe wee require commandements to confirme this vnto vs or would we haue examples Let vs consider both And first for precept The Apostle is plaine 2. Corin. chap. 7.1 2 Cor. 7.1 Hauing these promises let vs cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God Where we see he perswadeth to make a through worke to clense our selues not onely from some filthinesse and to retaine some but from all not onely of the body but of the soule euen of the whole man Likewise in the former Epistle 1 Cor. 5.7 chap. 5.7 purge out the olde leauen that ye may be a new lumpe as ye are vnleauened He confesseth that they were renewed and regenerated in part and therefore concludeth must proceed and goe forward vntill the worke be wholly finished For the word is compounded signifying not only to purge but as much as may be possible to purge out quite and cleane as the Israelites were commended when they celebrated the Passeouer to put away all leauen from them so that whosoeuer had any in his house should be cut off from his people To this purpose commeth the exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 12.1 Heb. 12.1 Seeing we are compassed about with so great a cloude of witnesses let vs lay aside euery weight and the sinne which doth so easily beset vs and let vs runne with patience vnto the race which is set before vs. As if he had said forasmuch as we haue so great a multitude of beleeuers which he compareth to a cloude that is thickened compacted or gathered together in the middle region of the aire of vapours wee must doe as they that runne in a race they doe not onely cast away clogges and impediments but whatsoeuer may hinder them in their course as the cares of this life the delights of the world the lusts of the flesh and generally euery thing that may cloy vs and clogge vs in our spirituall iourney Thus we see how we are commanded to cleanse away all filthinesse to purge out all leauen to cast aside euery weight Behold how the Apostle addeth vniuersall notes in euery of these places But are these precepts without examples are they meere speculatiue considerations without their vse No we haue in the Scriptures of the new Testament many among the faithfull that receiue this commendation from the mouth of God It is noted concerning Noah Gen. 6.22 Gen. 6.22 that he did according to all that God commanded him euen so did he It is recorded of Moses that when Pharaoh did giue them and their children liberty to goe into the wildernesse to serue the Lord onely their flockes and their heards should be stayed he answered boldly Our cattell also shall goe with vs Exos 10.26 there shall not an hoofe be left behind Exodus chapter 10.26 It is testified by the Euangelist Luke touching Zacharie and Elizabeth that they were both righteous before God walking in all the commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamelesse Luke 1.6 Luke 1.6 All these particular testimonies doe teach vs that it is our dutie to labour earnestly and carefully to performe a pure and perfect obedience vnto all the commandements of the Lord that we may be entire wanting nothing Now we come to the reasons that we may Reason be farther confirmed in this trueth First consider the nature of God he is perfect in himselfe and perfect in all goodnesse toward vs. He faileth in nothing so that he may truely say what could I haue done more then I haue done we must therefore answere in duty and obedience vnto him Hence it is that Christ saith Be ye perfect euen as your Father which is in heauen is perfect Matth. 5. Matth. 5. ● If then we must be like him and resemble him we ought to striue to be like him in perfection Secondly Christ Iesus is a perfect Sauiour Reason a perfect redeemer a perfect mediatour Hee hath fully finished our saluation and he dyed to satisfie for all our sinnes If he were but halfe a Sauiour a party obedience might bee sufficient on our part But he neuer left the worke of our redemption vntill he had appeased the wrath of his Father and nailed all our sinnes vnto his Crosse This caused the Apostle to say He gaue himselfe for vs Tit. 2.14 that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity and purify vnto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 Seeing then that Christ Iesus hath redeemed vs from all sinne it followeth necessarily that we should follow after all righteousnesse and make conscience of all sinne Thirdly in respect of the commandements Reason 3 themselues Cicer. de off●●● lib. 2. for as an heathen man said of moral vertues that they were linked together as in a chaine so that he which had one truely had all of them so we may much better say of the Lawes of God that as there is one lawgiuer which is the Author of them all so they are all knit in a knot together that the knot cannot be loosed but all are dissolued Or they being ten words are as a band hauing ten conditions if one of them be broken the whole band is forfeited The testimony of the Apostle Iames fully accordeth and agreeeth hereunto chap. 2. Iam. 2.10 ● Whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law
fret and fume wee chide and chafe as men beside our selues Oh that there were such harts in vs to please God Oh that we would looke so narrowly to our owne soules In our apparell nothing must be out of order in matter or forme to the very skirts and borders of them but in our liues we can be content to be out of frame to haue poore rent and ragged soules and neuer to put vpon vs the rightousnesse of Iesus Christ as the richest robes Rom. 13 14. Galath 3 27 and most precious garment The like we require in dressing our meates which we doe in attiring of our bodies which are ordained for the belly 1 Cor. 6 13. and the belly for them albeit God w●ll destroy both it and them 1 Cor. 6 13. The least fault is soone espied the offenders like to be turned out of seruice and we soone driuen out of our little patience Nay in our ordinary delights and recreations which serue onely to please the eare we see how he that is skilfull in musicke cannot abide the least iarre and discord if hee espy one finger set out of order or heare the missing of one minim rest how impatient is he how much discontented how doth hee testifie his dislike with hand and foot But touching the leading of our liues and the ordering of our actions whereupon dependeth the euerlasting saluation or damnation of our soules though there be a thousand iarres and ten thousand discords in them we thinke the harmony good enough and all things to be in tune This vse that now we vrge hath many branches as furtherances of purity and perfection in vs. First we must labour to haue pure and vpright hearts The branches of this vse which giueth life to all our actions and is much accepted of God It is the counsell of the wise man Prou. 4. Prou. 4.23 23.26 Keepe thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life and chap. 23. My sonne giue mee thy heart and let thine eyes obserue my waies It is as the wheele of the clocke that moueth all the rest it is the roote that giueth life to the boughes and branches and maketh the Tree yeeld his fruite It is the fountaine that sendeth foorth sweet or bitter waters Heerevpon the Apostle exhorteth Heb. 3. Heb. 3 12. Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe in departing from the liuing God A pure heart is the scourge of hypocrisie and as a strong hammer that serueth to breake it in peeces This is first to be looked vnto reform it and thou art all cleane It is the direction that Christ giueth vnto vs Math. 23. Math. 23 26. Cleanse first that which is within the cup and platter that the out side of them may be cleane also It is a vaine thing to be cleane without vncleane within to haue the outwarde man appeare faire and smoothe and the heart to bee foule and filthy Such then as begin not at the hart begin at the wrong end They take long and needlesse paines that thinke to stoppe the streames while they let the spring alone The hart in the body is the member that first hath life in it so is it in the spirituall life Hence it is that the Scripture commendeth vnto vs the simplicity of the heart Eph. 6 5. Col. 3 21 the circumcision of the heart Rom. 2 29 the meditation of the heart Psal 19 15 the vprightnesse of the heart 1 Kings 3 6 a wise an vnderstanding heart 1 Kings 3 9 a perfect heart 2 Kings 20 3. 1 Chron. 28 9 a faithfull heart Nehem. 9 8 an vpright heart Psal 11 2 a pure heart Psal 24 4. Math. 5 a prepared and fixed heart Psal 57 7 and 108 1 and 112 7 an honest and good heart Luc. 8 15 ioyfulnesse and gladnesse of heart Deut. 28 47 a broken and a contrite heart Psal 51 17 a tender heart 2 Chron. 34 24 an heart of flesh Ezek. 11 19 a new heart and new spirit Ezek. 18 31 and 33 26 a purified hart Acts 15 9 an enlarged heart 2 Cor. 6 11 the good treasure of the heart Luc. 6 45 and a true heart Heb. 10 22. These and many such like testimonies teach vs to begin our repentance from dead workes and reformation of life at the heart that vntil we set our hearts and our soules to seeke the Lord wee dally with God and neuer seriously set vpon that worke Secondly we must be free from any purpose to liue in any knowne sinne and must be inclined to euery thing that is good so that we should be able to say with Paul 1 Cor. 4 4. I know nothing by my selfe yet I am not hereby iustified but he that iudgeth mee is the Lord. The Apostle knew nothing for which he should condemne himselfe Hence it is that the Prophet saith Psal 119 112 106. Psal 119. I haue enclined mine heart to performe thy statutes alwaies euen vnto the end And a little before he saith in the same Psalme I haue sworne and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements So ought all the faithfull to binde themselues by a solemne vow and promise to stirre vp their zeale and kindle their affections to all good duties It is recorded to the perpetuall praise commendation of Asa that he moued the people of Iudah and Beniamin to enter into a couenant to seeke the Lord God of their Fathers with all their heart and with all their soule That whosoeuer would not seeke the Lord God of Israel should be put to death whether small or great man or woman And they sware vnto the Lord with a loud voice and with shouting and with Trumpets and with Cornets And all Iudah reioyced at the oath for they had sworne with all their heart and sought him with their whole desire and he was found of them and the Lord gaue them rest round about 2 Chron. 15. 2 Chron. 15 13 14 15. Happy are they that set before them this example as a patterne and president vnto them to resolue fully with themselues to cast from them all sinne as a filthy cloath and to settle their hearts to seeke the Lord and to hate with an vnfained hatred whatsoeuer may bee any hinderance or impediment vnto them Thirdly wee must all take notice of our owne wants and imperfections and earnestly bewaile them and mourne for them It is a degree toward perfection to acknowledge confesse our imperfections and to be greeued for them For no man can haue a feeling of infirmities but by the worke of Gods sanctifying Spirit It is a grace of God to know the want of grace The vngodly are not acquainted with it they thinke themselues full they hunger and thirst after carnall things but neuer after spirituall and heauenly things The blessed Virgin in her song sheweth that He hath filled the hungry with
Lord brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you out of the house of bondmen from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt The like doth the blessed Virgin confesse Luke 1.48 Luke 1.48.49 and 2.8 ●oh 7.46 He hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden for beholde from henceforth all generations shal call me blessed for he that is mighty hath done to me great things and holy is his Name She was a poore despised handmaid in Israel yet chosen to be the mother of Christ The Apostles were many of them taken from base trades other from ignominious offices some were fishermen called as they were mending their nets Matthew was one of the Publicanes which were contemned of the people of Israel yet God made them master builders of his Church and appointed them to lay the foundation and so had the highest and chiefest place of honour and preferment to be made planters of Churches throughout the whole world God therfore vseth when it pleaseth him persons of inferiour place and condition to effect great and mighty things And why should it not be so forasmuch as Reason 1 all things are ruled and ordered by his prouidence he disposeth of them in his wisedome as seemeth good vnto himselfe for the pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world vpon them 1 Sam. 2.8 All the frame of heauen is whirled about the poles this is the order that God hath set and who is able to alter it whatsouer things come to passe in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath are all the workes of his hands he setteth vp and pulleth downe at his owne appointment and who shall be able to controll them Secondly in the choice of simple and vntoward Reason 2 meanes such as haue litle or no force in them his glory is most of all seene Now hee will maintaine his owne glory and will haue it acknowledged and magnified of his creatures and requireth that hee which glorieth should glory in him as 1 Cor. 1.29 hee will haue no flesh glory in his presence Iere. 9.23 neither the rich man in his riches nor the strong man in his strength nor the wise man in his wisedome but let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. So then he chuseth foolish things before the wise weake things to confound the mighty and base things of the world to bring to nought things that are because he hath respect to the manifestation and setting forth of his owne glory Thirdly we are not to maruell that God Reason 3 maketh such a choyce of his instruments which carnall men might account an euill and vngrounded choice because he respecteth the heart and not the outward appearance 2 Chr. 28.4 5. When Dauid the least and so the most vnlikely both in his fathers family and in the eyes of the iudgement of men was annointed to be king chosen as he followed the Ewes great with yong to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel the Lord said vnto Samuel Looke not on the countenance of the eldest nor on the height of his stature 1 Sam. 16.7 because I haue refused him for the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearan●● but the Lord looketh on the heart Thus then we may conclude that God raiseth vp weake instruments to honour him and employeth them to serue him in the workes to which it pleaseth him to fit them Let vs therefore make some vses of this Vse 1 Doctrine which serue vnto vs for great profit First of all it ministreth great comfort to such as are poore and of low degree for albeit men contemne them and disgrace them albeit they are ready to tread them vnder their feet and thrust them to the wall albeit they be hissed at in the streetes and oppressed by the mighty yet God vouchsafeth to respect them and in great mercy to looke vpon them This we see in our spirituall estate and condition What are we but a masse of sinne the children of wrath and condemnation yet God vouchsafeth to elect vs and call vs by his grace to the knowlege of his truth from our naturall life led in the time of our ignorance It was the mercy of God to call Dauid from the sheepefolds and from following the Ewes great with yong Psal 78. But it was a greater mercy to call vs from the greatest bondage and slauery that euer was bound faster then with chaines of yron which giueth vs no time to rest or breathe or feed or sleepe but setteth vpon vs continually day and night This thraldome is worse then that of Egypt it is endlesse intollerable deadly and without intermission What an honour and dignitie then doth God doe vnto vs who were strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in vs to deliuer vs from this captiuity and to bring vs into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Our perdition is of our selues Hos 13.9 but our saluation is of the Lord Reuel 7.10 He will not giue his glory to any other ● 42.8 and therefore let not vs ascribe it vnto our selues or to any creature but magnifie the goodnesse of the Creator who is blessed for euermore We are raised vp from the greatest misery to the greatest glory as the lowest ebbe hath the highest tide and therefore let vs shew all thankefulnesse and obedience vnto him ●●t 9.4 Before the children of Israel entred into the land of promise he gaue them warning and a watchword that they should not say in their hearts nor speake it with their mouthes that it was for their owne righteousnesse they were brought into Canaan and shall we thinke that we are deliuered from the slauery of sinne and Satan and made the freemen of Iesus Christ by our owne deserts and so giue the glory of our saluation to our selues Let this be farre from vs euen as farre as hee hath remooued our transgressions from vs. So then ●l 103.12 heere is matter of great comfort that our sins are forgiuen vs and though the remnants of them remaine in vs yet they haue receiued their deathes wound and shall in the end vtterly die in vs. And in the meane season while we beare about with vs the body of this sinne ●m 8.9 the Lord calleth vs spirituall and esteemeth vs according to his grace not according to our corruption If there be one sparke of grace and one drop of faith as a graine of mustard seede God acknowledgeth vs to be his ●mb 23.21 he seeth none iniquity in Iacob he beholdeth no transgression in Israel He that is euill can see nothing in Gods seruants but euill if sinne be in them Satan will charge them that sinne reigneth in them It is otherwise with God he iudgeth not of vs by the reliques of sinne but by the beginning of grace If we haue the first fruites of the new man in vs the remnants of
them might haue hope And the Prophet Dauid in sundry places setteth downe this effect which himselfe from time to time had found and felt in his troubles as Psal 19.8 The statutes of the Lord are right reioycing the heart the commandement of the Lord is pure enlightning the eyes and the 119. Psalme Psalm 119 24 is a plentiful store-house to furnish vs abundantly with matter of comfort Thy testimonies are my delight and my Counsellers and againe My soule melteth for heauinesse strengthen thou mee Verse 28 according to thy word This is the true way sanctified vnto vs to driue away heauinesse this means the children of God haue vsed haue found by experience and good proofe the force and effect of it It hath beene very auaileable vnto them and filled their bones with marrow and fatnesse To this end he saith afterward Verse 92. Vnlesse thy law had beene my delight I should then haue perished in mine affliction Thus doe the faithfull reioyce in his Testimonies as much as in all riches forasmuch as his statutes do reioyce the heart make wise the simple enlighten the eies and conuert the soule then which it is vnpossible to finde greater matter of comfort Two meanes of comfort To conclude we haue seene that there are two meanes to obtaine comfort the one is from the worke of God in our hearts by his holy Spirit which leaueth vs not desolate and destitute The other is the vse of the word which is sweeter then the hony and the hony-combe and more to be desired then much riches Let vs haue an heape of sorrowes cast vpon vs through enduring of the Crosse and let vs sinke neuer so deepe into afflictions the word of God is able to raise vs vp againe to cheere vp our hearts Verse 7. Then they shall confesse their sinne which they haue done Wee shewed before that Moses setteth downe three waies how this damage offered to men is to be blotted out The course which they ought to take to purge it away is first of all to make confession of their sinne to God forasmuch as where the confession of man goeth before there the forgiuenesse of God followeth after We cannot lye hid from him nor conceale our offences and therefore it is best to acknowledge them before him Doctrine Whosoeuer looketh for forgiuenesse must confesse his sinnes to God From hence we learne that whosoeuer looketh for forgiuenesse must confesse his sins to God This is the practise and property of a true penitent to lay foorth his sinnes to God both originall and actuall and to discouer them in his sight This we see in sundry examples remembred in the old new Testament When Dauid was reprooued of Nathan the Prophet who set his sins in order before him he answered 2 Sam. 12. I haue sinned against the Lord. The Publican going vp into the Temple to pray and standing afarre off would not lift vp so much as his eyes vnto heauen but smote vpon his brest Luke 18 13. saying God be mercifull to me a sinner The prodigall sonne hauing wasted his substance with riotous liuing when he came to himselfe he went to his father and saide vnto him Luke 15 21. Father I haue sinned against heauen and in thy sight and am no more worthy to bee called thy sonne The like confession we reade in Daniel chap. 9 5 6 7. when he perceiued by the word of the Lord that the seuenty yeares were accomplished in the desolations of Ierusalem he praied vnto the Lord his God and made his confession Wee haue sinned and committed iniquity and haue done wickedly and haue rebelled euen by departing from thy precepts and from thy iudgements c. The like we might shew out of Ezra 9 5 6. and Nehem. 9. and many other places which teach that it is a duty required of vs to make humble confession of our sinnes vnto God Reason 1 The reasons are weighty and effectuall to enforce this duty First we shewed in the former doctrine that all sin is committed against God Howsoeuer we may hurt men and damnifie them in their bodies and goods yet the cheefest dishonor is done against God whose law is broken and transgressed as Psal 51 4. Against thee euen thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight If then the iniury done to man be an iniquity cōmitted against God we are bound to confesse our sinne vnto him But all the wrongs offered to our brethren are sinnes against God and therefore confession ought to be made vnto him Secondly we haue shewed also before that Reason 2 it is in Gods power onely to forgiue sins and free vs from the punishment due vnto sinne He onely can giue pardon for sinne Cypri Ser. 5. de Lapsis that carried our sinnes on his body The Scribes and Pharisies had greeuously corrupted the purity of doctrine by the leauen of their owne traditions yet they held soundly and sincerely this principle that God onely forgiueth sinnes They falsely interpreted the law of God and peruerted the true meaning of it by their gloses yet they reteined this truth that none can forgiue sinnes but God onely Mark 2.7 If then God alone can forgiue sins then we must confesse them vnto him But hee alone can forgiue sinnes and therefore we must confesse them vnto him Thirdly without confession of our sinnes Reason 3 there is no forgiuenesse nor hope of pardon for God cannot in iustice forgiue vs except in humility we confesse vnto him seeing without it wee haue no promise made vnto vs to finde fauour at his hands If we be not ashamed to vncase and vncouer our sinnes he will not be ashamed of vs but shew mercy toward vs as Prou. 28 verse 13. Hee that couereth his sinnes shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercy And the Apostle Iohn affirmeth the same If we confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse 1 Iohn 1 verse 9. The like remedy Paul deliuereth to the Corinthians who for their vnreuerent vnworthy partaking of the Lords Supper were some of them weake some sicke and some dead If we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged of the Lord. 1 Corin. 11 31. And the Prophet Dauid declareth the same by his owne experience Psal 32 verse 5. I acknowledged my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquity haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the iniquity of my sinne If then there be no forgiuenesse of sinnes without confession it followeth that it is our duty to confesse them before him Fourthly where there is no true confession Reason 4 of sinne there is no sound repentance for sin For the inward sight of sinne and humbling of our selues for it will open our mouthes cause vs to lay them open As then the confessing of them with
accusation I restore him fourefold He testifieth his repentance by his readinesse to make restitution whereas he that keepeth stollen goods stealeth still and is no better then a theefe and consequently farre from repentance Reason 2 Secondly without restitution there can be no remission forasmuch as repentance is falsely counterfeited and not truely practised God will not forgiue such as retaine with them their neighbours goods To steale from them and to keepe that which is stollen is a plaine token that we are resolued to continue in sinne He that is perswaded and determined not to depart from stollen goods which are sweet morsels vnto him is resolued to be a theefe and not to giue ouer Thus God is mocked and dallied withall and his law neglected and despised This the Prophet Ezekiel pointeth out chap. 18.7 9 12 13. and 33 15. He that hath not oppressed any but hath restored to the debter his pledge he shall surely liue saith the Lord God but he that hath oppressed the poore and needy and hath spoyled by violence and hath not restored the pledge c. he shall surely die his blood shall be vpon him Seeing then such as restore and so make recompense of that they haue taken away haue promise of forgiuenes contrariwise such as neuer make restitution haue a terrible threatning of death denounced against them it followeth that this is a duty required of all persons Reason 3 Thirdly the performance of it is a very speciall meanes to bring a blessing vpon vs a blessing I say from him to whom restitution is made For when he shall see how God hath touched their heart with a feeling of their sin that they can no longer keepe that which is not their owne albeit power be in their hand to do it it shall stirre him vp to desire and procure their good and to craue a blessing to come downe vpon them This is that which we reade in Moses Deut. 24.12 13. If the man be poore thou shalt not sleepe with his pledge c. that he may blesse thee This end is not to be neglected forasmuch as the eares of God are alwaies open to heare the cry of the poore and he hath promised to helpe them and to bring a curse vpon al their oppressors to their destruction Reason 4 Fourthly as the loynes of the poore shall blesse them that restore so God will accept it as a worke of iustice and righteousnesse and as a fruit of his spirit iustifying vs by the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus his Sonne and sanctifying vs to his glory In the place of Scripture before remembred Moses teacheth this and layeth it downe as a strong reason Deut. 24.13 where speaking of such as had taken pledges of the poore he saith In any case thou shalt deliuer him the pledge againe when the Sunne goeth downe that he may sleepe in his own raiment c. and it shall be righteousnesse vnto thee before the Lord thy God This also is a most forcible reason to mooue vs to restitution forasmuch as God setts it down as an infallible testimony of a iustifying faith and therefore the contrary is a fruit of infidelity so that we shal neuer repent vs of that we haue done nor wish it to be in our owne hands againe Reason 5 Fiftly the vniust retaining of other mens goods hindereth many good things from vs inasmuch as God will accept no seruice nor duty at our hands vntill we haue ridde our hands of things euilly gotten We may come to heare his word and to call vpon his Name and sit among the Saints and seruants of God in the Congregation howbeit we heare without fruit and we pray without profit For this poisoneth and corrupteth vnto vs the best things of God This is that which Christ teacheth vs in the Gospel of Matthew chap. 5.23.24 If thou bring thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee but he hath some iust action against vs so long as we keepe any of his goods wrongfully from him leaue there thy gift before the altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift If then we desire that God should heare our prayers or be well pleased with the hearing of his word we must be careful to make recompense and satisfaction for such iniuries as wee haue offered and our brother hath sustained Now let vs come to the vses which are as Vse 1 it were the life and soule of this point that hath beene prooued First of all it serueth to reprooue all such as neglect this duty and so offend against this doctrine The first reproofe And among them it meeteth directly chiefly with those that commit sacriledge robbing the Church and defrauding the Ministers of that portion which God hath granted vnto them in his holy word The wise man saith Pro. 20.25 It is a snare to the man who deuoureth that which is holy and after vowes to make inquiry Our Sauiour himselfe saith Matth. 10.10 The labourer is worthy of his wages The Apostle Paul saith 1 Cor. 9.14 The Lord hath ordained that they which preach the Gospel should liue of the Gospel This sinne came first from the man of sinne by whom tithes were first alienated and impropriations erected and Church-liuings spoiled for the maintenance of idle persons that sate still and did nothing but eate and drinke and fat themselues in cloysters as oxen in a stall and these deale with the goods of the Church as the souldiers did with the garments of Christ Matth. 27.35 Psal 22.28 Luke 7.5 they parted his garments among them and cast lots for his vesture The Centurion is commended in the Gospel that builded a Synagogue for the Iewes but these men doe what they can to pull downe Churches and to impouerish the Ministery and to destroy the soules and saluation of many whom Christ redeemed These spirituall theeues and Church-robbers must learne to pay their due and not muzzle the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corne 1 Tim. 5.18 They robbe God greatly of his honor and dishonour him more then the heathen did their idols which are no gods These men glory in their Christianity and yet are enemies vnto Christ So that the Gentiles that knew not God shall arise in iudgement against them and condemne them The second reproofe Secondly it reprooueth all oppressors that fill their houses with the spoiles of the poore and needy as Esay 3.14.15 The Lord will enter into iudgement with the ancients of the people and the Princes thereof for ye haue eaten vp the vineyard the spoile of the poore is in your houses What meane ye that ye beat my people to peeces and grind the faces of the poore saith the Lord God of hostes And to this purpose speaketh Micah in his prophesies against this sinne chap. 3.3 They also eate the flesh of my people and flay their skinne from off them they
the children of Zebulun did offer 25 His offering was one siluer charger the weight whereof was an hundred and thirty shekels one siluer bolle of seuenty shekels c. Behold heere how the other Princes are not inferiour to the first that offered nor the other Tribes to the Tribe of Iudah Obserue heere that the spirit of God accounteth it not sufficient to set downe what was offered in generall neither in particular what Nahshon the sonne of Aminadab of the Tribe of Iudah offered the first day or what Nathaniel the son of Zuar Prince of Issachar offered the second day but he goeth forward to set downe the speciall offerings according to euery mans name and according to the day assigned vnto him Obiect It may be demaunded what was the cause why these offerings are thus particularly pointed out why are the same chargers the same bolles the same spoones so often repeated might not all these things heere mentioned haue beene more summarily concluded what need more words haue bene vsed when fewer would haue serued I answere Answer we must not account any thing idle friuolous fruitles or superfluous in holy Scripture The Lord knoweth best what is fittest to bee dilated largely and what to be comprehended shortly If there were no other reason then this so it pleased the Lord it ought to content vs and to make vs rest in it The like example we finde Psal 136.1 2 c. Where in euery verse and at the recitall of euery blessing this reason is repeated for his mercy endureth for euer Adde heereunto Reuel 7.5 6 c. where this is repeated according to the number of the Tribes that twelue thousand were sealed of them Hee might haue said briefly of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand but he repeateth the words twelue times so in this place the offerings are repeated twelue times particularly according to the number of the twelue Princes The reasons may be first to teach vs to be content to heare the same things though they be oftentimes repeated as Phil. 3.1 The Apostle saith It is not grieuous to me to write the same things often and for you it is safe Wee are ready to forget the best things and therefore must haue them continually sounding in our eares as many strokes giuen with a hammer to make vs heare Secondly that wee should apply these examples vnto our selues and if wee passe ouer one of them without regard yet we should take holde of the next Thirdly to teach vs that no man shall haue that forgotten to the vtmost of his praise who is any way forward in doing good because he will honor those that honor him but they that despise him shall be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 The doctrine Doctrine from this particular rehearsal and enumeration of the gifts of those Princes is this Euery good worke of gods children is knowne and shall be rewarded that all the good workes of Gods children done to the setting forth of his glory to the aduancement of his worship to the maintenance of true Religion or the good of his children shall be reckoned vp rewarded and come vp in account before him he taketh notice of them all and will neuer forget any one of them As their deeds are here registred in the booke of God so the doers of them are registred in the booke of life Matth 10.42 Our Sauiour teacheth that a cup of cold water shall not go vnrewarded that is giuen to drinke in the name of a disciple to one of these litle ones And afterward it is said Matth. 25.7 A certaine woman came vnto him hauing an alabaster boxe of ointmēt very precious and powred it on his head as he sate at table and because she had wrought a good worke vpon him verse 10. he sayth Verily I say vnto you wheresoeuer this Gospel shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her verse 13. To this purpose speaketh the Angel that appeared to Cornelius Act. 10.4 Thy prayers and thy almes are come vp for a memoriall before God So then euery thing shall be remembred no one worke shall be forgotten Reason 1 For God is a righteous God giuing to euery one according to his workes Hee is the Iudge of the world Gen. 18. and cannot but iudge vprightly Hereupon the Apostle saith Heb. 6.10 God is not vnrighteous to forget your workes and labor of loue which ye haue shewed toward his Name in that yee haue minstred to the Saints and doe minister He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward for he will reward very bountifully euery good worke If we be not barren in good workes he will not bee behind with vs to recompence vs. Secondly how can they but come into an account seeing he accounteth them as done to himselfe Matth. 25.40 When any thing is giuen to the Saints it is esteemed as done to the Sonne himselfe and when it is bestowed vpon one of the least it is regarded as bestowed vpon the greatest and highest The seruant receiueth it but the Master will reward it Vse 1 Touching the Vses we may first conclude the happy estate and condition of them that leaue this world and depart this life in the true feare of God because we heare their workes shall be remembred and therefore the doings of his seruants be rewarded with eternall glory being done in the loue of God and of his trueth none of them are forgotten but they shall follow them nay goe with them and beare them company This we reade in the Reuelations of Iohn chap. 14.13 I heard a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Write blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the spirit that they rest from their labors and their works follow them to wit at their heels as the word importeth Death cannot cut them off though it be a cruell and mercilesse tyrant and hath as it were a sithe or sickle in his hand to cut downe such as come in his way yea though it cut off riches reuenewes honours pleasures dignities delights wife children houses lands and life it selfe according to the saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.7 We brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out with vs yet it cannot cut off good workes neither bereaue vs of the fruits of a liuely faith which are of such great force and efficacy that they are able to breake in sunder the chaines of death and the strength of the graue and cannot be holden in darknes and obliuion It were therefore a point of great wisedome and good policy so many as would willingly die the death of the righteous as Balaamites and all wicked men will seeme desirous to doe to prouide a goodly traine of good works which death cannot keepe backe they will presse so fast and knocke so hard at heauen
the Saints to hinder the best workes Zach. 3 1. Luke 8 12. like a subtill serpent that he may seduce deceiue vs as he did our first parents we may be assured he commeth freely and frequently into the company of his professed seruants which are his children Ioh. 8 44. For as Christ speaketh that where two or three are gathered together in his Name he is in the midst of them so wheresoeuer two or three are met together at his pleasure to his liking and for the doing of his will he will be in the midst of them though not in a visible manner to tempt thē to euill and to make them glory and continue in their euill If then we feare such a companion let vs forsake such company If we will needs frequent the company of wicked liuers we cannot auo●d the society of Satan Do we then see any place where drunkennesse where whoredome where vanity where blasphemy and all impiety is maintained vpholden we may conclude and as it were write vpon the backside of it and vpon euery doore and poste within it This is the diuels house here are the workes of the diuell to be seene heere is the diuell in a speciall manner present with his tētations with his allurements with his instruments to ruine the soules of men and to bring them to confusion and destruction Thirdly it is our duty to frequent those Vse 3 places that make knowne his Name vnto vs and spread abroad his sauing health among al people Here we may haue familiar accesse to him be admitted into his presence In praier we talke familiarly with him Gen. 18 27. where Abraham saith he had taken vpon him to speake to the Lord and in his word he talketh familiarly with vs and therefore do the Prophets continually cry out to heare the word of the Lord and tell vs that the Lord speaketh to his people What an high honour is it to a subiect to haue free accesse to his Prince and to come into his chamber of presence we are so honoured of God to come to him without checke or controlement the more boldly we preasse into his presence the more welcome we are No man is reproued for coming too often The faithfull haue accounted it a great part of their happines to haue liberty to meet together with one minde with one mouth to glorifie God to set forth his praises This made the Prophet say Lord Psal 26 8. I haue loued the habitation of thy house and the place where thine honour dwelleth On the other side they haue lamented their condition with a lamentable bitter cry when they haue bin banished from the place of Gods worship driuen to seeke harbour and habitation among the vnbeleeuers Then their soules longed and fainted for the Courts of the Lord Psal 84 2 and 137 1 2. their hearts and their flesh cryed out for the liuing God yea they wept and lamented when in captiuity they remembred Sion They longed for the Courts of the Lord but many among vs long greatly to be out of them They accounted it a great greefe to be out of the house of God but we account it a great greefe to abide in the house of God They were neuer well nor quiet so long as they were from the worship of God we are euen sicke and discontent so long a● we are at it Finally they were banished from the Lords house we banish our selues they were compelled to be absent we cannot be compelled to be present We wold be thoght to be willing to haue God in our company to desire to haue accesse vnto his presence but if this were truly in vs we would loue the place of his dwelling We shall bee sure to finde him in his word to meete with him at the Sacraments and to speake with him by our prayers This then reproueth the carelesnes of all such as make no reckoning of Church-assemblies that account one day or houre of the day spent in their owne pleasures vanities better thē a thousand in the Courts of the Lord. These are weary of the heauenly Manna it is a light and a loathsome food This is a fearefull sinne to pollute the holy things that he hath sanctified and set apart to holy vses These are scornfull beasts and prophane persons there is but a step betweene them and atheisme They are men without religion and tread vnder feete the Sonne of God and account the blood of the new Testament as a prophane thing Hereby we see the height of that sinne which is too rife and common to wit the carelesse wilfull and negligent forsaking of the holy things of God These are come to the highest steppe of sin and are set downe in the seate of scorners Psal 1 1. These haue faith iustly denied vnto them and haue not the grace giuen them to beleeue because they contemne the meanes by which they might beleeue be saued Act. 13 48. And doubtlesse he that maketh no cōscience of Gods worship will also if occasion shew it selfe make as little conscience of any thing else that belongeth vnto his brother To conclude let vs haue no part or fellowship with these men but carry earnest affection to the exercises of religion hungring and thirsting after them with longing desires When one Sabbath is ended we should wish for the next when one Sermon is finished we should desire another when one Communion hath beene celebrated we should enquire when the next shall follow euen as the Gentiles besought Paul and Barnabas to preach to them the next Sabbath day Acts 13 42. the same things they had offered to the Iewes O that this zeale were found in vs then would God be found of vs O that we would enquire after him he would offer to vs his gracious presence in this life we should be sure to enioy his glorious presence in the life to come CHAP. VIII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Speake vnto Aaron and say vnto him When thou lightest the Lampes the seauen Lampes shall giue light ouer against the Candlesticke 3. And Aaron did so c. IN the latter end of the former chapter wee haue seene how God gaue answer vnto Moses from aboue the Mercy-seate between the two Cherubims according to his promise before Exod 25 22. In this chapter is recorded what he spake Wee haue also learned what was the sanctification of the other Tribes testified by the solemne offering that they brought at the dedication of the Altar heere Moses entreateth of the sanctification of the Church-officers wherein obserue two things the first touching the Priests the second touching the rest of the Leuites For such as serued at the Altar either were taken into the order of the Priests or else were of the rest of the Tribe of the Leuites that serued in inferiour places about the Tabernacle to assist the Priests in their offices Touching the Priests we are to
10 11 13. The Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Iacob regard it Psal 94 7. Depart frō vs for wee desire not the knowledge of thy waies what is the almighty that we should serue him and what profit should we haue if wee pray vnto him Iob 21 14 15. Exod. 5 2. Mal. 3 14. In the second commandement the Lord saith that hee would visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children to the third and fourth generation of thē that hate him Exo. 20 5. Howsoeuer therefore they pretend friendship and loue to him as Iudas did to Christ yet their hearts are farre from him they hate him and cannot abide him Reason 1 And no marueile For first they fight against his Lawes and resist his ordinances They wish there were no God no hell no heauen For as they are the friends of God that do his commaundements so doubtlesse they are his enemies that will not submit themselues to his kingdome nor do his wil. Hence it is that Christ saith Luk. 19 27. Those mine enemies which would not that I should reigne ouer them bring hither and slay them before me They that will not haue him to reigne ouer them and in them are his enemies but such are all the vnregenerate therefore they are Gods enemies Secondly they are vnder the dominion of the Prince of darknesse who is Gods professed enemy he ruleth in them to him they giue homage and obedience From him they will not depart and of him they shal receiue their wages So Christ telleth the Pharisies they were of their father the diuel Ioh. 8 44. they did the lusts of the diuell and therefore they were the children of the diuell The God of this world ruleth in them and therefore they can bee no better then the enemies of God 〈◊〉 2 19. for of whō a man is ouercome of the same hee is brought in bondage Lastly the godly that seeke to feare the Lord are both called and accounted the friends of God as Abraham was Iam. 2 23. To this purpose speaketh Iehoshaphat in his prayer 〈◊〉 20 ● Art not thou our God who didst driue out the inhabitants of this land before thy people Israel and gauest it to the seed of Abraham thy friend for euer If then the faithfull be the friends of God doubtlesse the vnfaithful what are they but his enemies Vse 1 T●e Vses First conclude from hence that most certainly God wil be their enemies Wil he hold friendshippe with those that care not for his loue and fauour that professe and proclaime though not in wordes yet in their workes that they are and will bee his enemies No doubtlesse ●e will cast them of● he will renounce them for being any of his people Thus the Prophet speaketh Psal 78 ●6 He smote his enemies in the hinder parts hee put them to a perpetuall shame And Esa 63 10. ●hey rebelled and vexed his holy spirit therefore he was turned to be their enemy and he fought against thē Would any man haue the displeasure of great men Do not all men feare to haue such as are in high place to become their enemies But behold he that is higher then the highest and greater then the greatest is an enemie to all wicked persons as they are enemies to him Who would not therefore make all possible haste to come out of such a wretched condition as pulleth the enmity of God vppon his head and setteth God against him Secondly let no man glory in their fauor Vse 2 friendship or that they are any way nere vnto them or great with them He that toucheth pitch cannot but be defiled with it Hee that is inward with Gods enemies will learne in time to be enemie also W●e must therefore auoid their company and entertaine no familiarity and acquaintance with them They are Gods enemies and they are enemies vnto vs why then should not we be enemies to them The Prophet setting downe the note of the Citizens of heauen maketh the contempt of the wicked to be one Psal 15 4. He in whose eies a vile person is contemned The Prophet Elisha witnesseth and auoucheth euen to the face of Iehoram the King of Israel that had it not beene that he regarded the person presence of Iehoshaphat he would not once haue vouchsafed to looke vpon him 2 King 3 14. Whatsoeuer titles they claime and challenge vnto themselues this is their true title they are the enemies of God and we must haue no society with Gods enemies Thirdly it sheweth the certaine destruction Vse 3 of all the vngodly for they are his enemies and can they then prosper They fight against him and he will fight against them are they stronger then he or able to preuaile against him No in no wise for though hand ioyne in hand and all of them should combine thēselues in one against him yet the breath of his mouth shall blow them away and they shall not stand in iudgement before him To this end they are compared to chaffe which the winde scattereth away Psalm 1. The godly are like a Tree planted by the Riuers side that bringeth foorth his fruite in due season his leafe also shall not wither but the vngodly are not so they are like the chaffe they are of no more reckoning or account with GOD then the chaffe is with men in comparison of the good corne Hence it is also that they are compared to dung they cast vp as soule and filthy a sauour in the nostrils of almighty God as dung doth in the nostrils of men Therefore the Church in their praier against them Psal 83 9 10. desireth God to do vnto them as vnto the Midianites as to Sisera and Iabin at the brooke of Kison which perished at Endor and became as dung for the earth So doth Ahijah tell the wife of Ieroboam that the Lord would bring euill vpon the bouse of Ieroboam and take away the remnant of his house as a man taketh away dung Iob 20 7. till it be all gone 1 King 14 10. Let them therfore magnifie themselues neuer so much lift vp their hornes on high they are of no price they are in no account they are of no estimation with God they are lothsome and abhominable to him Their sins cry aloud in his eares they haue a stinking sauour in his nostrils they are odious in his eies they greeue his heart and can they escape May we not make an vndoubted conclusion from all these things that they shall certainly perish Vse 4 Lastly to shut vp this point it is a duty required of all of vs to seeke to be at peace with God and to giue vnto him our hands or rather our hearts For so long as we stand out against him and bid him open defiance there can be no peace betweene him and vs neither any hope at all of reconciliation For as Deut. 32 41. If he whet his glittering sword and his hand take hold on
Reason 1 are first because they refuse to heare God speaking vnto them it standeth with the rule of equity that God should deale with them as they deale with him Ezek. 8.8 Zach 7.12 13. and stop his eares against those that will not heare him Secondly his Reason 2 wrath lyeth vpon them Vse 1 Conclude from hence that the prayers of the wicked are abominable Pro. 28. Not only their sinnes prouoke God but their prayers and their best works so that thogh they multiply them yet he will not regard them This sheweth their wretched estate and condition they haue no accesse to God they may come to his gate but they can haue no entrāce it is shut vp against them They may knock say Lord Lord Luk. 13.25 open vnto vs but he wil answere Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity I know you not Secondly let none continue in any known Vse 2 sin but wash their hearts and bee reconciled vnto God For sin stoppeth the eares of God that he cannot heare and casteth such heauy clogs vpon our prayers that they cannot possibly pierce the cloudes ascend into heauen and come into the presence of God Our iniquities wherein we delight are as fetters and bolts that are fastned to our prayers or as lead that presseth them down to the earth The life of a sinner is vncomfortable The life of a sinner that lieth in his sinnes is of all other liues the most vncomfortable For if we cannot pray to God in hope of mercy forgiuenes when our sins disquiet vs or in hope of deliuerance when our troubles oppresse vs what comfort haue we or can we haue in any thing vnder the Sun On the other side when the faithfull lye vnder infinite calamities The Life of the faith●ull is most comfortable sicknes pouerty shame contempt reproch slander infamy sicknes being forsaken of all and hated of all euen laden with an heap of misery and aduersity yet this is their comfort they can freely go vnto God haue accesse to the throne of grace they may pray vnto him as it were poure out their cōplaints in his bosom Lastly it is our duty being reconciled vnto Vse God to be reconciled to our brethrē also For no man is truely at one with God Mat. 6 1● and 3. ● that is not made one with his brother and except we forgiue men their trespasses our heauenly Father will neuer forgiue vs therfore whensoeuer we bring our gift to the altar and there remember that our brother hath ought against vs we must leaue our gift before the altar and goe our way to be reconciled first of al to our brother As then we desire forgiuenes of God so ought we to forgiue God forgiueth vpon condition that we shal forgiue Those that are vnmercifull shal neuer find mercy We cannot haue a more perfect president to mooue vs to mercy then to consider how God dealeth with vs he considereth whereof we are made he remembreth that we are but dust We think it much and oftentimes complaine that God will not heare our prayers but we seeldome or neuer consider that the fault is in our selues because we wil not heare our brethren And what exception can we take against our brethren which God may not ten thousand times better except against vs Haue we deserued better at their hands then to bee so abused as we pretend our selus to be so hath God of vs and we cannot deny it Are we his betters and superiours So is God ours We vse to say we are not for him we liue not by him we can liue well enough without him Neither doth God liue by vs but we by him and he can liue without vs who liued before vs but not we without him Haue we often warned him to looke to his wayes and not to abuse vs any longer So hath God often warned vs. Haue we receiued wrong after wrong and forgiuen seuen times or seuenty times seuen times So hath God forgiuen vs ten thousand talents for an hundred pence Matth. 1● 28. If then we retaine any malice in our harts our prayers are not regarded nay they are reiected as vile and abominable Alas my Lord I beseech thee lay not the sinne vpō vs wherin we haue done foolishly c. obserue here a notable point in Aaron he is not striken with the leprosie but is free from it altogether Miriam is stricken with the leprosie but it is Aaron that calleth for mercy when he looked vpon her and saw it for the Priests were appointed to looke vpon it and to pronounce the person to be either cleane or vncleane so that punishments vpon others should cause vs to amend and to looke to our selues Againe we ought to desire the good one of another to haue a fellow-feeling of the miseries one of another See also that he is as much humbled and cast downe nay more then she is for this sinne and confesseth he had done amisse We learne hereby that sinne committed against God must touch vs and goe neere vnto vs though we feele no punishment ●●●●ine 〈…〉 ●ght 〈…〉 sinne 〈◊〉 we 〈◊〉 pu● Vp● It is no great matter to be humbled when the punishment is heauy vpon vs but to bee brought low euen vpon our knees and to say with Aron Alas lay not the sinne vpon vs is a notable and necessary duty required of vs. The most wicked men in the world that sinne with an high hand will confesse their sinne vnder the crosse while the hand of God lyeth vpon them as we see in Caine in Pharaoh in Saul in Iudas and others but this ariseth more in consideration of the punishment then of the sinne howbeit Aaron in this place felt no punishment though he were a companion in the offence which fell out in regard of the Priesthood For if any aske why he was not stricken with the leprosie forasmuch as he was guilty of the same iniquity I answere it was not that his offence was slight but because his office was great he was a liuely image of Christ Iesus our true Mediatour the onely begotten Sonne of God 〈◊〉 A●●on ●ot pu●d God would not therfore bring his person into contempt and reproch lest the Priesthood also should bee reproched Besides he did not contriue it but consent to it and was drawne no doubt after a sort euen against his will by his sister into a fellowship of this murmuring as he had been before by the people to make the golden calfe she had the principall han● in the sinne and consequently in the iudgment We must therfore be touched with sinne principally because it is sinne not because the punishment lyeth vpon vs but though we should neuer be punished and plagued though there were no day of iudgement no feare of hell no sentence of death no feeling of torment yet sin should be bitter and greeuous vnto vs euen because it is sin
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
this reprooueth such as know not what this holy and sanctified anger meaneth which can prosecute their owne causes and quarrels with the greatest desire of vengeance but know not what it is to be angry in the cause of God It was not so with Moses as we saw before Some are prouoked by euery small and trifling occasion Heereby charity is violated which suffereth long 1 Cor. 13.7 and couereth a multitude of sinnes Prou. 10.12 Anger looketh in a deceitfull glasse which maketh euery Moul-hill to seeme a mountaine euery small slip is esteemed a capitall offence and euery word of disgrace worthy of a stab Others are prouoked when there is no ground but their own suspition as Eliab was angry with his brother Dauid because he suspected him to haue come to the battell in the pride of his heart 1 Sam. 17.28 And this is the common cause of much anger and heart-burning in our dayes want of loue causeth men to interprete the actions of others in worse sense and vpon their owne false surmise they ground their anger One is angry because saluting his neighbour he did not salute him againe and speaking friendly to him he would not speake againe albeit haply he saw him not or obserued him not Another because he heareth his vices reprooued out of the word of God beginneth to rage through impatience in which regard oftentimes it falleth out that he incurreth more anger and danger that reproueth sinne then hee that committeth it Of this euill anger doth the Apostle speake Eph. 4.31.26 27. and Salomon Prou. 14.17 29. and 29.22 Many are the euils and mischiefes that follow this euill affection forasmuch as it ouerturneth both the Law and the Gospel ●r is a 〈◊〉 of the ●e Law It were an easie thing to runne ouer most of the commandements which it causeth men to breake and in a manner defaceth the whole image of God For first how should we loue God whom we haue not seene if we doe not loue our neighbour whom we haue seene 1. Ioh. 4 20. Secondly it ouerthroweth the principall part of Gods worship which standeth in the inuocation of Gods Name Ps 26.6 1 Tim. 2.8 Mat. 5.23 Thirdly it causeth the breach of the third commandement by causing men through impatience to fall to cursing and banning to swearing and blaspheming the Name of God For when they grow cholerick against others they vtter sundry horrible imprecations and begin to fret and rage against God himselfe Fourthly it maketh men altogether vnfit for the exercises of the Sabbath hauing their mindes distracted and disturbed with thinking vpon the wrongs and iniuries of others and their owne reuenge No man can heare the word of God aright that is choked with this thorne Iam. 1.19 20 21. 1 Pet 2.1 2. Neither doth this passion worke any better effects in the second Table for as much as it turneth iustice and charity vpside downe Iustice it selfe which requireth that the same be giuen to euery one which belongeth vnto him whereas anger maketh men not only to neglect doing of good duties which they owe to their neighbours but to oppresse them with iniuries and reuenge Charity which is the summe of the Second Table the effect wherof is this that we loue our neighbour as our selfe But anger maketh men hate them as mortall enemies It often bringeth forth murther and shedding of blood Ge. 34.25 1 Ioh. 3.12 15. Wherby we are also made like vnto Satan for he is the spirit of dissention as God is a Spirit of loue and of peace It is the nature of Satan to delight in rage and fury for he is a murtherer from the beginning Ioh. 8.44 Besides it is a sinne against the Gospel and maketh vs subiect to Gods anger and bringeth impenitency and stoppeth the course of Gods forgiuenesse toward vs. For as we forgiue others so doth he forgiue vs Matth. 6.14 15. if therfore we retaine our anger toward our brethren God will retaine his anger toward vs. Lastly we must examine our selues whether Vse 3 our anger be iust or not We are of our selues prone to breake out into choler and to bee mooued otherwise then there is cause We must therefore marke two things the causes thereof and the effects If the causes bee Gods glory iniury offered to our selues or our neighbours if the cause be weighty and the affection moderate If the effects which it bringeth forth bee dutie to God and man then it is a lawfull anger but if otherwise it is vnsanctified and vnlawfull Let vs learne to be most moued in Gods cause as Moses was the glory of God was precious and deare vnto him So it was with Phinehas Numb 25.7 8. so it was with Elias 1 Kin. 19.14 because the children of Israel had broken downe his Couenant cast down his Altars and slain his Prophets Happy are we if these things moue vs and go neere vnto vs. Verse 15. Respect not thou their offering It may seeme strange that he which before had spoken against them should now pray against them We are commanded to pray one for another so that Moses may seeme to break the rule of charity I answer this toucheth not their persons nor their liues but hee desireth their amendment that they may be ashamed of their own folly confounded in their own pride He craueth of God no more thē to shew and make manifest his owne innocency and vprightnesse which was to be decided by that offering We learne hereby Doctrine that God respecteth not the works of euill men God respecteth not the workes of euill men be they performed neuer so religiously outwardly Gen. 4.4 5. Esay 1.11.12 and 66.3 Prou. 15.8 and 21.27 Ierem. 6.20 The reasons follow First whatsoeuer they doe is sinne 1 Tit. Reason 1 1.15 their minde and conscience is defiled Secondly Reason 2 their persons do not please him Gen. 4.4 5. Mal. 1.10 God regarded not Caines Oblation because he regarded not Caines person and he regarded not Caines person because he was a wicked and faithlesse man Vse 1 The vses First we may therfore conclude that such workes as God hath not commanded shall not be receiued Matth. 15.9 In vaine they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandements of men Many doe thinke to please God by their good intents but that is a vaine worship God will be serued according to his owne will not after our owne fancies He hath set downe and appointed how he will be worshipped he hath not left it to our discretion whatsoeuer the Papists prattle Vse 2 Secondly it reprooueth such as thinke it enough to come to the place of Gods worship and to be present at prayer the word and Sacraments albeit they bring with them no true deuotion These doe exceedingly deceiue themselues dishonour God and prophane his holy things which is a greeuous sinne These men doe lay the foundation of all their hope and the stay of all their comfort vpon the broken staffe of an outward sacrifice
a true miracle But if it were a miracle men might discerne it by sense as all the miracles of Christ were discerned Let them giue vs an instance in any creature in heauen or earth where the Lord wrought any miracle which he did not subiect to the senses of man but heere is nothing that can be discerned by the senses for as much as the bread by the iudgement of all the senses remaineth and appeareth to bee the same in substance which it was before of the same quality quantity colour taste handling smelling vertue and nourishment there is not any one sense or all the senses together that can iudge otherwise of it then it did before therfore it can be no miracle No work is a miracle which cannot bee felt smelled seene tasted or perceiued Wherefore let the Church of Rome teach in their schooles write in their bookes preach in their Pulpits and decree in their Councels neuer so often that there is a miracle wrought in their Sacrament of the Altar yet because we can neither see nor touch nor taste nor feele any thing but the same that it was before we cannot beleeue them But they tell vs Obiect that though the outward forme and accidents of the bread remaine yet the substance of it is turned into the body of Christ which though we cannot perceiue by our senses yet wee are bound to receiue by faith I answer Answer that if the natural body of Christ were there present we might feele him as Thomas did forasmuch as Christ still retaineth his true body albeit it be now glorified Wherefore seeing there is no miracle in the Supper apparent to the senses there can be no miracle at all The difference which is is in the vse before it was common bread ordained for the nourishment of our bodies now it becommeth holy bread sanctified by the Lord not so much to feede the body as the soule To conclude then by this strange and new found miracle they ouerturne the doctrine of the Scriptures touching miracles For wheras we haue shewed that a miracle is a rare worke apparently to the senses wrought by the sole omnipotent power of God they make it to be an vsuall common and ordinary worke wrought by euery Priests pronouncing of fiue words yet so as no sense at all can discerne of it 12 And the children of Israel spake vnto Moses saying Behold we die we perish we all perish 13 Whosoeuer commeth any thing neere to the Tabernacle of the Lord shall die shall wee bee consumed with dying Hitherto of the first part of the Chapter heere followeth the second part to wit the repentance of the people crauing to bee deliuered from present death and from their sinne wherewith they had prouoked God to anger As if they had said We acknowledge that we deserue to die and perish through our sinnes neither did wee know so much vntill the plague that brake in among vs taught vs and the blossoming of the rod conuinced vs to our faces We presumed to meddle with the office of the Priesthood that belonged not vnto vs and therfore we deserue iustly and worthily to die But is there no place for mercy and forgiuenesse We may obserue from hence that this should bee the effect of all punishments which God bringeth vpon sinners to humble vs ●●d explic ●●m to make vs auoide sinne and to submit our selues to God with all obedience Againe we must neuer despaire of Gods mercy which is greater then our sinnes as a garment wider then the body and therfore more then able to couer the nakednesse thereof Thirdly we must acknowledge and confesse our sinnes to God because all sinne is committed against God him onely we haue offended Psal 51.4 Briefly also learne that the first degree of pardon is to know that our sinnes are pardonable this is as a sparke of light in a darke night and giueth hope of great mercy But to leaue these particulars this is the generall doctrine In all chastisements ●trine ●t is to bee ●owled iust in all chastise●ts how grieuous and sharpe soeuer they be God is to bee acknowledged iust and righteous in laying them vpon vs Dan. 9.6 7 8 9 16 19. Ezr. 9.6.10 13 15. Psal 51.4 5. 2 Sam. 24.10 The reasons which are as the grounds of this truth are euident First because his punishments though many times they be greeuous burdens to beare yet are alwayes lesse then our deserts and offences Psal 103.10 He dealeth not with vs according to our offences Secondly our sinnes are the procuring causes of all the euils which we suffer Mic. 7.9 I will beare the indignation of the Lord because I haue sinned against him So then the cause of all our sufferings is in our selues Thirdly in all his corrections and iudgements hee remembreth mercy Hab. 3.2 Wee see this often in this book though the whole people sinned as one man yet iudgment came not vpon the whole but the mercifull God striketh some to admonish and amende others The vses follow First it reprooueth such Vse 1 as stand out with God and are ready to iustifie themselues and accuse God of ouermuch sharpenesse and seuerity These men neuer consider Gods manifold blessings and their owne vnthankefulnesse vnto him who reneweth his mercies toward vs euery morning Lam. 3.23 But we render vnto him euill for good and hatred for his good will We are like vnto stubborne children that murmure vnder the rod and cannot abide correction So it is with vs we can abide to sinne but wee cannot abide to suffer Wee regard not how much we prouoke him but we care not how little he punish vs. It is one of the hardest things in the world to iustifie God and to condemne our selues worthy of eternall death and damnation We see it from the beginning in our first parents they sought shifts and fig leaues to couer the nakednesse of their soules more then they did the nakednesse of their bodies as indeed there appeared much more deformity in the one then in the other and they had more cause to be ashamed of the nakednesse of their soules then of their bodies For sinne maketh vs naked of Gods protection and causeth him to depart from vs it taketh away our shield and defence and leaueth vs in the hands of our enemies We see also in the example of Achan Iosh 7. of Saul 1 Sam. 15. how hardly they were drawne to confesse their sinnes they heard sentence pronounced against them before they would pronounce sentence vpon themselues Let vs not tarry vntill God iudge vs but rather learn betimes to iudge our selues Secondly let vs humble our selues vnder Vse 2 the mighty hand of God 1 Pet. 5.6 and when he draweth out his sword let vs not say wee are righteous like the Pharisee that condemned another but iustified himselfe Luk. 18. rather let vs cry out in the eares of God Spare Lord Ioel 2.17 and confesse that it is
of it wast thou taken because thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne Where the reason is thus framed Thou art made and taken out of the dust therfore thou shalt returne to the dust Secondly we must all die the death because Reason 2 all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God for the Scripture concludeth al both Iewes and Gentiles vnder sin True it is man was created to immortality and if he had euer loued God and neuer sinned he should euer haue liued without seeing death But whē sinne entred death followed in the world as the wages doth the worke according to the threatning of God Gen. 2 17. In the day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt die the death For as they that are adiudged and condemned to dye ●sost hom ●●en 3. are accounted as dead men albeit they be kept aliue in prison so our first Parents although they did not immediately die yet immediately were subiect to death by desart of sinne So the Apostle Rom. 5 12. By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all men haue sinned Where he proueth the cause by the effect that sinne was before Moses and the Law giuen by him because death was in the world which seizeth vpon young and old infants sucklings whereby euery one is conuinced of sinne 〈◊〉 3 19. euery mouth is stopped and all the world subiect to the righteous iudgement of God Seeing therefore wee are all made out of the dust and carry about with vs this body of sin we haue here no continuing City but are placed in the world for a season as men set vpon a Stage to play our parts then must be gone to giue roome to others according to the saying of Salomon One generation passeth and another generation succeedeth Vse 1 The vses follow First the rich the mighty the learned and men of high degree must acknowledge that there shall be no difference betweene them and the poore the lowly and vnlearned in the graue vnto which all must descend True it is there is a difference and distinction betweene rich and poore high and low great small in their life time in friends in honours in houses in lands in liuings in food in apparell in duties in dignities such like externall priuiledges and prerogatiues which shall haue an end yet all these shall ceasse and all degrees must equally meete together in the graue so that albeit an vnequall life haue gone before yet an equall death shal follow after ●rat oda li. 1. This is it which Iob pointeth vnto chap. 17 which we named before where he sheweth that all worldly prosperity and hope shall faile They shall goe downe into the bottome of the pit surely it shall lie together in the dust And the Prophet Psal 49 9 10 11. sheweth that neither wit nor wisedome neither might nor mony neither fauour nor policy can preuent or put away death that all without difference respect of persons must yeeld to Nature and that all meanes which they can deuise for the continuance of their names shall come to nought For hee seeth wise men die and also that the ignorant and foolish perish and leaue their riches for others Secondly let men of excellent and eminent Vse 2 places liue iustly and deale vprightly in their callings wherein they are set As they are placed aboue others so they are seene marked before others and notwithstanding all their honour and estimation their riches and retinue they must die and depart hence when it shall be said to them ●● 16 2. Come giue an account of thy stewardship for thou maiest be no longer steward The remembrance of death must therefore admonish them of their duties that they dreame not of immortality and they promise not to themselues continuance heere and perpetuity This Dauid toucheth and teacheth Ps 82 2 3 6 7. How long will ye deale vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Doe right to the poore and fatherlesse doe iustice to the poore and needy deliuer the poore and needy saue them from the hand of the wicked I haue saide yee are Gods and ye all are children of the most High but ye shal die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others So then when we are tempted to euill we must remember death and the estate that followeth death Therefore the Apostle chargeth them that are rich in this world 1 Tim. 6 17 18. that they bee not high-minded neither trust in vncertain riches but in the liuing GOD because we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine that we can carry nothing out Thirdly this consideration of the common Vse 3 condition of al flesh must stirre vp our affections from resting relying vpon men whose breath is in their nostrils to depend vpon the eternall God which continueth and liueth for euer Let vs beware of all vaine confidence We are ready to rest vpon creatures and stay our selues vpon an arme of flesh as vpon a broken Reed whereby we deceiue our selues of our hope and rob God of his honour This we learne Psal 146 3 4 5. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the sonnes of man for there is no helpe in him his breath departeth and he returneth to the earth then his thoughts perish Blessed is hee that hath the God of Iacob for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord his God Man is vaine and all his pompe is lighter then vanity If then we make him our stay and staffe we beate the ayre wee labour in the fire we build vpon a weak foundation and rest vpon the vncertaine life of mortall and miserable man Psal 144. who vanisheth as a shadow passeth as a dreame flieth as an Eagle speedeth as a Poste consumeth as a garment and goeth away as a thought that cannot be recalled His life is as a span soone measured as a vapour soone gone as a tale soone told as an hand-bredth soone measured as a winde soone ouerblowne and as the weauers Shuttle quickly sliding Lastly it is our duty to prepare for it before Vse 4 it cometh that we may bee found ready and haue oyle in our lamps whē the Bridegroome cometh For death spareth none it respecteth no person no age no Sexe no State or condition no power can withstand it no wisedome can preuent it no bribe can corrupt it no cunning can ouercome it And albeit we often recouer of some diseases yet in the ende we are taken away The whole life of a Christian should be a continuall meditation of death to teach vs as it were to die daily and to number our daies that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome not to set our whole loue and liking on the world which wee must shortly leaue Will a man bestow cost and charges on an house and tenement in which hee shall not long dwell
as the tree and the fruit so that we may proue the one by the other death by sinne and sinne by death the one giuing light and luster to the other The vses remaine to be considered First see Vse 1 heereby a difference betweene this present life and the life to come Heere the reliques and remnants of sinne as spots and staines in the flesh remaine euen in those that are cleansed by the blood of Christ and washed by the renuing of the holy Ghost But when the faithfull shal be glorified they shal be without blame not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing Take heere the best Examples of the best men that haue liued in the best times as Noah Abraham Lot Dauid and Peter yet yee shall see shame in glory darknesse in light folly in wisdome infidelity in faith But when Christ shall appeare and we likewise appeare with him in glory we shall be made like vnto him Therefore the Apostle saith noting out this difference We know in part and we prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come 1 Cor. 13.9 10 12. then that which is in part shall be abolished Now we see through a glasse darkly but then shall we see face to face Now I know in part but thē shal I know euen as I am knowne Here we ceasse not to prouoke God and euery day of our life addeth to the number and measure of our sins which should be bitter vnto vs as gall and wormewood but when this corruptible shal put on incorruption and this mortall shall put on immortality and death be swallowed vp into victory the● we shall ceasse to sin and shal be as the blessed Angels that are in heauen The feruent desire of the creatures waiteth for these times Rom. 8.19 groning and trauelling in pain euen vnto this present to be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God Much more therfore should we which haue the first fruits of the spirit sigh in our selues waiting for the adoptiō euen the redemption of our bodies Vse 2 Secondly we learne that such as say they are without sinne deceiue themselues and as much as in them lieth make God a liar we are depriued of his kingdome wee cannot keepe the Law nor haue iustification by the Law or the works of the Law but are iustified freely by grace and haue need of the benefit of Christs blood If we keepe the law we shal liue by it but if we be transgressors of the law we are vnder the curse For it is written Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Hereunto commeth that which the Apostle Iohn saith If we say wee haue no sinne Ioh 1.8.10 Rom. 3.10 12 24. we deceiue our selues the truth is not in vs we make God a lyar and his word is not in vs. And to the same purpose the Apostle Paul There is none righteous no not one they haue all gone out of the way there is none that doth good no not one we are iustified freely by his grace thorough the redemption that is in Christ Iesus ●ence falleth to the ground the doctrine of merits that aduanceth proud flesh and lifteth vp the supposed worthinesse of vnperfect workes thereby to procure Gods fauour and euerlasting life The Church of Rome place such an inward and inherent dignity in mens persons as maketh them worthy of grace or saluation Moreouer they dreame of such an excellency in the work as fitteth and inableth them to deserue the fauour of God and forgiuenesse of sinnes But in a sight of our sins and in a feeling of our owne corruptions wee must renounce all merits Basil in Psal 114 Aug in Psal 120. and rest onely on the merits of Christ For when we haue done all we must say and confesse that we are vnprofitable seruants c. True it is God wil reward our works but the reward is of mercy not of merit of promise not of debt of grace not of desert Againe hereby falleth another falsehood of theirs holding that good workes are euery way perfect not stained or tainted with sinne but being tryed in the furnace of Gods iudgement will suffer no losse or detriment But the Prophet prayeth Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shall none that liueth be iustified Psal 143 2. Esa 64.6 And againe in another place it is written We haue all beene as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnes or good deeds as filthy clowtes and therefore no good deed of righteous men is without some staine of sin neither can we answer him one of a thousand Lastly we learne that they are deceiued which teach preach a possibility for a man in grace to fulfill Gods law For the Apostle taketh it for a grounded and granted conclusion that the law cannot be fulfilled when hee saith Rom. 8. ● Gal 3 10. It was impossible to the Law to giue vs life because we are vtterly vnable to keepe the condition and therefore God hath sent his Sonne to take our nature vpon him and to abolish sin in our flesh If we could fulfil the law Christ dyed in vaine we might be iustified by the law but Christ dyed not in vaine neither can we bee iustified by the law therfore we cannot fulfill the law Furthermore the Apostle complaineth of his failings defects The law is spiritual Rom 7.14 15 21 22 ● but I am carnall sold vnder sinne what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I. I find then that when I would doe good I am thus yoaked that euill is present with me I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man but I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind and leading mee captiue vnto the law of sinne Now whereas many of the faithfull are said to bee iust Gen. 6.9 Iob 1.1 Luke 1.6 and to walke in all the commandements of God without reproofe the meaning is they endeuor to perfection striue to obey God with all their heart and with all their soule as Phil. 3.13 God accepteth the will for the deed and the endeuour to obey for perfect obedience 2 Cor. 8.12 Secondly they exempt themselues from none of the precepts of God but labour to walke in all the knowne points of his commandements albeit they faile in the performance of them ceasse not to acknowledge their owne imperfections Lastly God accepteth them in Christ as perfectly righteous so that albeit their obedience be in it self vnperfect yet is it acceptable to God through Iesus Christ as if it were perfect and his righteousnesse is as truly their owne as if they had wrought it in their owne persons Lastly seeing the most faithfull haue their Vse 3 failings in duties of piety and obedience we must take diligent heed we do not
Son of God was smitten for the vnnaturall the onely begotten for the adopted the beloued for the enemy greater loue then this could no man shew then to die for his enemies But God setteth out his loue toward vs Rom. 5 8. seeing that while we were yet sinners Vse 1 Christ dyed for vs. The vses follow First we may conclude from hence that no creature shal be able to hurt his people If he haue takē them into his protection loued them with an euerlasting loue who shall by the hatred of thē procure their harme If he be on our side who shall be against vs If he be our friend who shall shew himselfe our enemy What seruant feareth the face of his fellow seruant that hath the good wil of his master Or what mā feareth the hatred of any subiect that hath the loue of his Prince So then the consideration of Gods loue toward vs assureth vs of our blessed condition and of our safety defence from all dangers that may surprize vs. Whosoeuer dwelleth in the secret of the most High Psal 91 1 2 3. shal abide in the shadow of the Almighty hee will deliuer him from the snare of the hunter and from the noisome pestilence This the Prophet concludes Psal 36.10 11. Extend thy louing kindnesse vnto them that know thee and thy righteousnesse vnto them that are vpright in heart Let not the foote of pride come against me and let not the hand of the wicked moue me Let vs labor to haue a true feeling of the loue of God shed in our hearts by the holy Ghost then will he couer vs vnder his wings and we shall be sure vnder his feathers The cause why we feare him that can kill the body is because we are not rooted grounded in the loue of God Vse 2 Secondly hereby we receiue another comfort to our faith for as the wicked shall not hurt vs so we are assured to haue our prayers heard granted Why because God loueth vs as his deare children Comes not that child with boldnesse vnto his father that loueth him in al his need So if once we haue this perswasion setled in vs that God will shew himselfe gracious vnto vs we may aske in faith and not wauer but be assured of the promise of God that he will giue to them that aske and open the gate of mercy to them that knocke This Christ our Sauiour affirmeth Verily verily Iohn 16 23 24 27. I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name he will giue it you Aske and yee shall receiue that your ioy may be full for the Father himselfe loueth you because ye haue loued me and haue beleeued that I came from God What greater comfort can there be then this that God will heare our prayers that we may vnlade al our cares and troubles into his bosome There cannot bee a greater daunting and dismaying vnto any then when God will not respect and regard them though they poure out many praiers yet he wil not heare them as he threateneth those that will not heare his voice speking and crying vnto them in the ministery of his word They shall cry and not be heard Prou. 1 28. Zach. 7 13. So of all comforts that can befall vs in this life this is one of the greatest which cannot be taken from vs though our mouthes should be stopped yet we may safely lift vp our hearts and soules vnto the Lord from whence our helpe cometh Thirdly it is our duty to loue one another Vse 3 as euery one of vs hath a blessed experience of Gods mercy fauour toward vs let vs deale in like measure toward our brethren This the Apostle Iohn exhorteth vnto 1 Ioh 4 1● Heerein is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes Beloued if God so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Iohn 13 3● and 15.12 for heereby shall all men know that we are his Disciples if we loue one another This is my Commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued you greater loue then this hath no man when any man bestoweth his life for his friends Great was the loue of God toward vs as appeareth by many circumstances considerations For he loued vs first not we him 1 Iohn 4 ● Iohn 15 1● as Christ chose his Disciples not they him Heereby God cōmendeth setteth foorth his loue toward vs that he loued vs first and not we him Againe he loued vs when we were not whē we had not our birth or being he chose vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe before the foundations of the world as Rom. 9. Rom. 5 12 Before the children were borne and when they had done neither good nor euill it was said Iacob haue I loued Thirdly he loued vs when we were enemies vnto him he was found of vs when we sought not after him nay when we fled from him and rebelled against him as Ro. 5 6. 10. Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly so as God setteth out his loue toward vs seeing that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for vs. Fourthly he loued vs frankly and freely without any merits or desarts of our owne Ferus An● 1 Iohn 4. but of his owne meere grace and fauour onely Our saluation is wholly of grace We are elected according to the good pleasure of his will Ephes 1 ● Wee are called with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his owne purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1 9. Wee are iustified freely by his grace without the works of the Law Rom. 3 24 28. We haue saluation of grace not of our selues It is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Eph. 2 8 9. Lastly the loue of God is so great that he spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to the death That whosoeuer beleeued in him should not perish ●●hn 3 16. but haue euerlasting life If then the loue of God bee such and so great to his seruants that he loued them first freely when they were not when they were his enemies spared not his well-beloued Sonne for them how great should our christian loue be one to another to promote the good one of another and to releeue the necessities one of another We know the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ that he being rich Cor. 8 9. for our sakes became poore that we thorough his pouerty might be made rich Whosoeuer therefore hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion frō him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Wherefore let vs not loue in word neither in tongue onely as Caine which was of that euill one and slew his brother Iohn 3 17 〈◊〉 19. but in deed and
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
2 20. Because this people hath transgressed my couenant which I commanded their Fathers hath not obeyed my voice therefore will I no more cast out before them any of the Nations which Ioshua left when he died that through them I may proue Israel whether they will keepe the way of the Lord to walke therein or not So the Lord left those Nations and droue them not out immediately neither deliuered them into the hand of Ioshua Reason 2 Secondly the people of God trespasse against him so as the Lord cannot roote out their enemies together but leaueth some among them 〈◊〉 20. ●● 13. as we saw before the Nations were left among the Israelites to be as snares in their paths whips in their sides and thorns in their eyes because they transgressed the Couenant that God had made with their fathers So the Prophet speaketh Psal 81 13 14. Oh that my people had hearkened vnto mee and Israel had walked in my waies I would soone haue humbled their enemies and turned mine hand against their aduersaries Likewise Moses among the curses and iudgments denounced against such as are disobedient to the lawes of God Leu. 26 18 21 24 28 sheweth that when he hath chastened and corrected vs for our sinnes yet if we go forward to despise his ordinances our soule abhorre his lawes he will punish vs seuen times more according to our sins And if wee proceed to walke stubbornely against him hee will then bring seuen times more plagues vpon vs walke stubbornly against vs in his anger The Vses of this Doctrine remaine to bee considered are not to be passed ouer First Vse 1 this teacheth that the prosperity of the wicked cannot assure them of the fauour of God nor secure thē from his punishments It sheweth indeed the patience and long-suffering of God toward the vessels prepared to wrath to make them without excuse but when they haue filled vp the measure of their sinnes they shall know that GOD hath not forgiuen or forgotten them This the Prophet teacheth Psalm 50 19 20 21 and 73 6 7 18. When thou seest a theefe thou runnest with him thou art partaker with the adulterers thou giuest thy mouth to euill and with thy tongue thou forgest deceit thou sittest and speakest against thy brother and slanderest thy mothers sonne These things thou hast done and I held my tongue therfore thou thoughtst that I was like thee but I will reprooue thee and set them in order before thee O consider this ye that forget God lest I teare you in peeces and there be none that can deliuer you And in another place it is declared that albeit the wicked be malicious speaking wickedly talking presumptuously and setting their mouth despitefully against heauen yet GOD hath set them in slippery places and cast them downe into desolation Wherefore whensoeuer we see the wicked prosper and flourish and the glory of his house to encrease let vs not conceiue euill of God as though he loued vnrighteousnes or fauoured the sinnes of men nor thinke that the wicked shall escape therfore Elihu saith Iob 35 15 16. Although thou saiest to God thou wilt not regard it yet iudgement is before him trust thou in him yet his anger shall visite the euill and call them to an account with great extremity Secondly let them not set their hearts vpon Vse 2 euill But let them seeke the Lord while he may be found let them forsake their wickednesse vngodlinesse and returne vnto the Lord that he may haue mercy vpon them who is very ready to forgiue Esay 55 6 7. What maketh many sinne against God but a vaine confidence and presumption to escape the iudgement of God What maketh them to put off the euill day to make a league and couenant with death but the abuse of Gods patience who doth not presently punish them This the wise man teacheth Eccl. 8 11 13. Because sentence against an euill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the children of men is fully set in them to do euill but it shall not goe well with them hee shall be as a shadow because hee feareth not before God Albeit therefore they seeme to sinne scot-free and without punishment yet the greater patience appeareth to be in God the greater destruction is reserued for them Euen as whē the shadow groweth to be longest then the light fadeth and departeth soonest and the night approcheth neerest so when God hath waited a long time for our conuersion the vngodly flatter themselues in their sinnes thē sodainely is the wrath of God reuealed from heauen against all vngodlines and vnrighteousnes of men so that the greater the stay delay of his iudgements hath beene the heauier will the stroke fall vpon them The punishment is prolonged it is not forgotten Their iudgement is comming and sleepeth not it gathereth force in going The higher the axe is lifted vp the slower it striketh but the deeper it pierceth into the wood If then God do not by and by smite the offender and strike him in the prophanenesse of his wicked heart let vs not be secure and continue in sinne God doth not at once make hauock of his enemies but bringeth them to iudgement one after another Wherefore let vs conclude with the saying of the Prophet Say ye surely it shall bee well with the iust Esay 3 10 11. for they shall eate the fruite of their works woe be to the wicked it shall bee euill with him for the reward of his hands shall bee giuen him Vse 3 Lastly as the bodily enemies of the Church shall be wasted with lingring long lasting iudgements so shall it be with the enemies of our soules The spiritual enemies of our soules and of our saluation are not brought vnder our feet at once to trample vpon them and to triumph ouer them they are brought in subiection by little litle For as these enemies are cast down so our sanctification ariseth As the Corne which the husbandman soweth before it can come to ripenesse and yeeld a plentifull encrease must first take roote shoote into a blade and spring vp by little and little till it bring foorth an eare so is it with the grace of sanctification and newnesse of life The kingdome of heauen is like to a graine of mustardseed which a man taketh and soweth in his field Mat. 1● 31 32 33. which indeed is the least of all seed but when it is growne it is the greatest among Herbes and it is a Tree so that the Birds of heauen come and build in the branches thereof Againe the Kingdome of heauen is like vnto Leauen which a woman taketh hideth in three peckes of Meale till all be leauened So is the worke of God little and small in the beginning it is as a building that goeth slowly forward there must be much sweating and toyling about it there must be great laboring and hammering before we can
him and asketh him what the men were that came to him not that God was ignorant and needed to be taught or in structed what those persons were but to draw from him a voluntary confession of the matter which being truely opened and declared God forbiddeth him to go to the Moabites because they had a mischieuous purpose and to curse the Israelites because they were a blessed people Whē he perceiued to his great griefe that God had concluded and determined to continue his mercy and blessings vpon his people which no deuice of man could diminish no works of the diuell could abolish the morning being come he returned an answer to the messengers and sent them backe without their long-hoped desire excusing himselfe that he could not goe with them as himselfe desired and as they had deserued at his hands and hauing his minde wholly fixed on his reward he saith Ioseph 〈◊〉 lib. 4 cap 6. Returne backe to your Lord as for me I desired nothing more then to accompany you but the Lord hath stopped and restrained my purpose and will not suffer me to go with you or to helpe you Wherein obserue how this couetous hyreling false Prophet being willing to vndertake the worke because of the wages and to promise his best helpe that he might finger the hyre behaueth himselfe fraudently and vnfaithfully as hyrelings do mincing the matter and reuealing one part but concealing another part of the reuelation giuen him of God For whereas God had said Thou shalt not goe thou shalt not curse the people because they are a blessed people denying vnto him as well his purpose of going as his promise of cursing he declareth the former but dissembleth the latter he sheweth to the Princes and Gouernors that GOD restrained him from going but hideth this that the same GOD had forbidden him to curse the people together with the reason of it That they are blessed lest the messengers should be offended and his expected hyre denyed deteyned This is the summe and substance of this diuision But before we enter into the handling of the Doctrines offered heerein to our considerations to the end we may cleerely see into the meaning of the whole history it shall not be amisse for vs to answer certaine doubts and difficulties that arise as well from the purpose of Balak as from the person of Balaam Some of reuerent account in the Church Caluin 〈◊〉 in 4 ●ib 〈◊〉 interpret this history otherwise then can stand with the circumstances of the Text and the proportion of faith in other Scriptures For they suppose that Balak sought helpe of the true God reuerenced his Prophet and had the seed of religion remaining in his heart If this were so why doth he not himselfe fly to God by prayer And why doth he not stirre vp his people to prayer Why do they not all as one man ioyne in supplications and intercessions to be helped of God Why did he require Balaam to come with cursings and bannings against Israel if there were any sparke of true piety left in his heart Againe it is imagined that Balaam was a Prophet of God and endued with the spirit of Prophesie to whom GOD vsed oftentimes and ordinarily to appeare so do make him as it were a meane betweene the true Prophets and the false Prophets therby God making himselfe knowne among the Infidels and neuer leauing himselfe without witnesse Such were the Sybils thought to be liuing among the Gentiles and giuing testimony to the truth of God But we know no such meane betweene true and false Prophets ●●swer For whosoeuer is not a true Prophet is a false Prophet and whosoeuer is a false Prophet cannot be a true Prophet of God He that is of God is a true Prophet he that is of the diuell is a false Prophet Neither doth the deliuery and vtterance of some truth make a true Prophet for then the diuell should be a true Prophet who sometime speaketh the trueth albeit to a sinister end For he confessed the Messiah to be the Sonne of God ●arke 1 24. thereby to darken the Doctrine of Christ and to discredite the power of the Gospel raising a suspition that he hath some familiarity friendship with Christ by drawing men to doubt of the truth of our redemption inasmuch as the diuell is a lyar from the beginning 〈◊〉 8 44. the father of lying And touching the Sybils they carry not any certaine credit and authority being all or the most part forged foysted in 〈◊〉 13 2 to win credite to the word of God which needeth not the lyes of any to vphold the truth and authority thereof For they are brought in speaking more clearely and euidently more plainly and particularly of Christ and his kingdome then any of the Patriarkes or Prophets then Moses or any that liued after him Esay is worthily accounted to bee an Euangelicall Prophet prophesying distinctly and determinately of the passion sufferings of Christ yet it is as nothing in comparison of that the Sybils expresse 〈◊〉 S●billine 〈◊〉 ●●nter●●ffe I●●a ●sa●o Ex● 〈…〉 11. touching the name and nature of Christ touching his originall off-spring touching his death and resurrection touching Antichrist and other enemies of the Church Now shall we thinke that God would reueale more to them then to his owne Prophets and the sonnes of the Prophets to such as liued out of the Church more then to all that were brought vp in the Church and sucked the sincere milke of the Scriptures and had the most sureword of the Prophets 〈◊〉 1● to the which they did take heede as to a light that shineth in a darke place Besides we cannot hold this Balaam for any true Prophet but for a false Prophet 〈…〉 such as Simon the Sorcerer mentioned in the Acts Notwithstanding all the goodly glozes that he maketh to winne himselfe credite and estimation whereof wee shall speake more afterward Furthermore others thinke that Balaam meant his own false gods when he saith Tarry heere this night Obiect and I will giue you an answer as the Lord shall say vnto me And againe Returne into your Land for the Lord hath refused to giue me leaue to goe with you but that he was preuented of his purpose by the true God appearing vnto him But this coniecture is ouerthrowne by the expresse words in this place For the word is Iehouah Answer a name alwayes in Scripture giuen to the true God onely and neuer applyed to any false gods yea the true God was knowne by his name among the Gentiles and by it was discerned distinguished from the Idols of the Nations which indeed are no Gods Now that we may attaine to the true meaning of this Scripture and resolue of the right interpretation thereof I will set downe certaine rules and conclusions which concerne the matter in question which being fully determined and throughly descided the truth will euidently appeare
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
Reason 1 God he is the common Iudge euen the Iudge of all the world who hath said Vengeance is mine I will repay and therefore his iustice doth effect it and bring it to passe This the Apostle declareth It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you 2. Thess 1 6. So the Prophet teacheth Hab. 1 13. That he is of pure eyes and cannot see euill nor behold wickednesse to allow or approue it Secondly it is most agreeable to the precise Reason 2 rule of equity that there should be a proportion betweene the sinne and the punishment that euery one should receiue like for like and drinke such as he hath brewed God commandeth it to the Magistrate as a law in his proceedings Exod 21 2● that there should be an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth hand should go for hand foote for foote burning for burning wound for wound stripe for stripe and life for life If God impose this vpon Magistrates much more will he himselfe do it He that requireth equity in Iudges and Magistrates wil much more shew himselfe iust and equal This is it which the Lord enioyneth touching spirituall Babylon Reuel 18 6 and 16 5 6 and 13 10. Reward her as she rewardeth you and giue her double according to her works and in the cup that she hath filled to you fill her double c. So then whether we consider the iustice of God or the rule of equity we see that God punisheth as man sinneth he rewardeth according to the manner and measure of his offence The vses follow to bee considered Will Vse 1 God thus repay and retaile Then let euery one looke to haue his sinne brought vpon his owne head and to be rewarded fully according to his owne works The equity of this is acknowledged of Iob chap. 31 9 10. If my heart haue beene deceiued by a woman or if I had laide waite at the doore of my neighbour let my wife grinde to another and let other men bow downe vpon her The like we may say of all other sinnes looke not to escape the hand of God but feare to commit sinne being thus punished Hast thou beene a bloody beast looke for blood againe Hast thou bene cruell Cruelty extortion shall both wring and waste thee He that smiteth with the sword shall perish with the sword there shall bee iudgement mercilesse to them that are without mercy On the other side in doing good and exercising loue to others looke for loue and good from God and man This made Nehemiah pray to God to remember him in kindnesse according to all that he had done to his people Neh. 5 19. This made the Apostle craue mercy at the hands of the mercifull God for Onesiphorus because he shewed mercy vnto him and refreshed him in his necessity 2 Tim. chap. 1 verse 16. The widow of Sarepta sustayning the Prophet relieuing him with part of that poore pittance that was left her receiued an ample recompence during the time of the famine to her and her sonne being miraculously sustayned 1. Kings 17 14. Obadiah fed an hundred Prophets of the Lord and hid them in caues from the wrath of Iezabel the Lord shewed mercy vnto him againe so that he was the first that had the Prophet directed vnto him to reueale the remouing of the present iudgment from the land So then the consideration of this dealing of God against sinners is a terrour to the vngodly teaching vs to auoyde sinne and the dangerous society of sinful men lest partaking of their sinnes wee partake also with them in the punishment Ierem. 51 6. And likewise serueth as a great comfort to the godly assuring them to finde the fruit of their loue and to receiue mercy at his hands who leaueth not a morsell of bread and a cup of cold water giuen in faith out of an heart vnfaigned vnrewarded Secondly it iustifieth GOD in his actions Vse 2 and proueth that there is no iniquity with our God This doth Elihu set downe vpon this consideration Hee will render vnto man according to his worke and cause euery one to finde according to his way And certainely God will not doe wickedly neither will the Almighty peruert iudgment Iob 34 11 12. So then the Lord bringeth his iudgements in this manner to passe that the mouth of the wicked should be compelled to iustify God and to condemne himselfe when he receiueth measure for measure as hee hath done When Iudah had ouercome Adonibezek and had cut off the thumbes of his hands and feete hee did acknowledge it to be iust and that the hand of God had found him out and repayed him according to his deserts for saith he Seuenty Kings hauing the thumbes of their hands and feete cut off gathered bread vnder my table as I haue done so GOD hath rewarded mee so they brought him to Ierusalem and there hee dyed Iudg. 1 7. GOD suffereth them long to escape and to runne on in their euill actions but in the end he repayeth them and rather in their owne kinde then in another that it might appeare to be his handy worke and not a matter that fell out by chance or casualty vpon them So doth the Church reioyce that the Lord had done vnto them as they thought and intended to doe vnto the Church Vse 3 Thirdly wee are in this respect and consideration to waite for the performance of this promise and to looke with faith and patience for the iustice of GOD in recompencing and rewarding the wicked with the like to fall vpon themselues wherewith they haue plagued his people Wee see this duty performed by the seruants of GOD in the Prophet Esay before remembred for hauing declared that the spoyler shall be spoyled and the destroyer shall be destroyed they say O Lord haue mercy vpon vs wee haue waited for thee be thou which wast their arme in the morning our helpe also in time of trouble Esay 33 2. To the same purpose speaketh the Church in the Psalme O daughter of Babell worthy to be destroyed blessed shall hee be that rewardeth thee as thou hast serued vs blessed shall hee bee that taketh and dasheth thy children against the stones Psal 137 8 9. Let this duty be practised and performed of euery one of vs although wee see the wicked proceede and go forward in his wickednesse as if hee had made a league with death and a couenant with hell yet it behooueth vs to possesse our soules with patience and albeit hee spread himselfe like a greene Bay tree yet in the end his leaues shall wither his branches shall bee cut downe and his root shall rot GOD will draw him foorth in his good time vnto iudgment and proportion his plagues and punishment according to his sinnes Lastly this doctrine ought to warne vs to Vse 4 take heede that wee abuse not any of Gods blessings or any of his creatures to any sinne or excesse
the Minister of GOD to attend the issue Shee stood to be iudged he to be the instrument of the iudgement She was to come vnto iudgement he to bring her vnto iudgement Thus we haue runne ouer the principall questions that were to be touched Analys Iunij in Numer in handling whereof I haue followed the iudgment of the learned who haue discussed and resolued these doubts and difficulties before me Now we are to proceed in order to the doctrine arising from hence Verse 15.16 Then shall the man bring his wife vnto the Priest c. We see in these words that the man is to bring his suspected wife to the place and meanes of her tryall If euery one that was suspected might be put away many husband 's not louing but growing weary of their wiues would readily entertaine any the least flying report and thereupon take occasion to be diuorsed from them Wherefore to the end that euery one suspected shold not by and by be condemned the Lord ordaineth that he should bring his wife to the Priest and before him vndergoe such tryall as is appointed for her Doctrine None is to be accounted guilty before tryall We learne from hence that it is Gods ordinance that no innocent person should be oppressed in iudgement and none at the priuate pleasure of any ought to be condemned before their tryall Euery person must hold vp his hand at the barre before he be pronounced guilty This appeareth plainly in the Law of Moses decreeing against idolatrous cities if the children of Belial haue withdrawne the inhabitants of their citie saying Let vs goe and serue other gods which ye haue not knowne Deut. 12.14 15 and 19.18 Then shalt thou enquire and make search and aske diligently and behold if it be truth and the thing certaine that such abomination is wrought among you thou shalt surely smite the inhabitants of that city with the edge of the sword destroying it vtterly and all that is therein c. Where we see that in the matter of idolatry which God aboue many other sinnes abhorreth as that which goeth neerest to his heart and as it were pierceth into the very marrow of his worship and seruice he would not haue euery suspicion to be taken or euery report to be receiued but hee will haue the matter examined and the trueth tryed out and searched to the full before any processe be made out against them Hence it is that Salomon complaineth of the contrary course oftentimes obserued Eccles 7.15 All things haue I seene in the dayes of my vanity there is a iust man that perisheth in his righteousnesse and there is a wicked man that prolongeth his life in h●s wickednesse To this purpose speaketh the Apostle Iames chap. 5.5.6 against the abuse of their power in rich men Ye haue liued in pleasure on the earth and beene wanton ye haue nourished your hearts as in a day of slaughter ye haue condemned and k●lled the iust and he doth not resist you Thus we set it is no new thing to see innocency it selfe trodden vnder foot and innocent persons condemned The Apostle Peter setting downe the duties of Magistrates willeth those to whom hee wrote to submit themselues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the king as supreme 1 Pet ●3 ● or vnto gouernours as vnto them that are sent by him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that doe well So that it is the ordinance of God that euill doers should be punished and that such as doe well should be commended and rewarded and therefore no innocent person ought to be discountenanced or put to death This trueth is strengthened vnto vs many Reason 1 wayes First by example which is beyond all comparison and exception for no man may compare with him no man dare except against him I meane the example of God himselfe who goeth before vs in the practise heereof that we should follow him in this duty Before he brought vpon the world confusion of tongues he is said to goe downe among them to see their fact Gen. 11.6 Thus he dealt with Adam before he pronounced him guilty and denounced iudgement vpon him hee called vnto him Adam Where art thou hee examined him and asked him farther Gen. 3.11 Whether he had eaten of the fruit of the tree in the mids of the garden of which he had said Thou shalt not eate thereof lest thou die In like maner he dealt with Caine chap. 4.9.10 before hee pronounced him cursed from the earth which opened her mouth to receiue his brothers blood from his hand and that he should be a vagabond and runnagate first he examineth him Where is Abel thy brother then he endighteth and conuinceth him What hast thou done the voyce of thy brothers blood cryeth vnto me for vengeance So in the eighteene chapter of the same booke before he destroyed Sodome and Gomorrha with fire and brimstone from heauen he said to Abraham Gen. 18.20 21. Behold the cry of Sodome and Gomorrha is great and because their sinne is very grieuous I will goe downe now and see whether they haue done altogether according to the cry of it which is come vnto me and if not I will know Whereby he would instruct vs that before wee enter into iudgement with any person or pronounce sentence vpon any people he first taketh good consideration of the fact which causeth his punishment So ought it to bee with euery one of vs wee must lay before vs this example if wee would be the children of our heauenly Father Secondly it is the ende of all Magistracy Reason 2 to protect and countenance the Godly but to roote out and destroy the vngodly to be a praise and protection to the one but a terrour and feare to the other as Romanes chapter 13. verse 3. Magistrates are not to bee feared for good workes but for euill wilt thou then bee without feare of the power Doe well so shalt thou haue praise of the same c. After that Iehoshaphat had beene reprooued by the Prophet he called the people againe to the honouring of the Lord he set Iudges in the Land throughout the citties of Iudah and said vnto them Take heed what ye doe for ye execute not the iudgement of man but of the Lord and he will be with you in the iudgement wherefore now let the feare of the Lord bee vpon you take heed and doe it for there is no iniquity with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward 2 Chron. 19 6 7. He would not haue the stronger to oppresse the weaker and the high to ouerbeare the low and the rich to eate vp the poore like the greater fish that deuoure the lesse but that euery one should receiue according vnto his workes whether good or euill Reason 3 Thirdly it is an abhomination to God for any to oppresse the innocent and as great
a sinne as to iustifie the wicked Wee ought none of vs to doe that which is abhominable in the sight of God the which he greatly abhorreth A Iudge may offend two waies both by oppressing the innocent and by deliuering the guilty person by pronouncing the transgressor righteous and the righteous man a transgressor This is set downe Prou. 17 verse 15. He that iustifieth the wicked and hee that condemneth the iust euen they both are abhomination vnto the Lord. Such a one spareth the wolfe and hurteth the lambes turneth the edge of the sword vpon the godly and the backe of it toward the wicked and vngodly Reason 4 Fourthly God would haue no man put to death without witnesses For wherefore doth he often establish this in the Law that the witnesses shall come face to face be heard but that no man should perish beeing innocent Wherefore doth hee ordaine that one onely witnesse shall not be taken as sufficient but that hee would haue the cause cleered by moe witnesses This is the decree of God Deut. 17 verse 6. At the mouth of two or three witnesses shall he that is worthy of death die but at the mouth of one witnesse shall he not dye Hee will not by any meanes haue innocent blood shed Reason 5 Fiftly innocent blood cryeth to heauen for vengeance and shall not suffer him that sheddeth it to escape It is one of the crying sinnes as wee shewed before in this chapter which ascend vp and enter into the eares of the Lord of hosts There is indeed no sinne so little but commeth vp in remembrance before him against whom it is committed his eyes see and his eares heare all the workes of men 〈◊〉 4 13. which are all naked and open before his eyes and nothing kept from his knowledge neuerthelesse to note out the horrour and hainousnesse of some sinnes in comparison of others the Scripture teacheth that they cry vnto the Lord. Moses to shew the greatnes of Caines sinne committed against his naturall brother bringeth in God speaking vnto him Behold the voice of thy brothers blood cryeth vnto me and to shew the barbarous cruelty and inhumanity of the vexing and exacting Egyptians whereby they ouercharged and ouerburdened the people of God he saith to Moses I haue seene I haue seene the oppression of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry because of their Taske-masters Exod. chap. 2 verse 9. Thus also he speaketh to Samuel at another time of their oppression by the Philistims I haue looked vpon my people and their cry is come vnto me 1 Sam. chap. 9 verse 16. Thus God heareth the cry of the afflicted Iob chap. 34 verse 28. They haue caused the voice of the poore to come vnto him and he hath heard the cry of the afflicted This is the reason vrged by the Lord himselfe Exod. chap. 23 verse 7. And Ieremy protesteth and professeth as much to the face of his enemies and persecutors that sought his destruction chapter 26 verse 14 15. As for mee behold I am in your hands doe with mee as yee thinke good and right but know yee for certaine that if yee put mee to death yee shall surely bring innocent blood vpon your selues and vpon this Citty and vpon the inhabitants thereof for of a truth the Lord hath sent me vnto you to speake all these words in your eares Thus we see how God sheweth himselfe an enemy against all wrong iudgements and he will not suffer them to escape vnpunished but will enter into iudgement with such partiall and corrupt Iudges The vses heereof are to bee marked diligently Vse 1 of vs. First this serueth to reprooue all rashnesse headinesse and heedlesnesse of such as make haste to inflict punishment before an exact knowledge of the fact and fault Such are no better then cruell wolues that seeke and sucke the blood of the innocent lambes This was the sinne of wicked Iezabel that caused Naboth to bee stoned to death 1 Kings 21. We reade in the Acts of the Apostles how the chiefe Chaptaine commanded that Paul should be scourged that he might know wherefore they cryed so against him Acts 22 verse 24. Heere is a preposterous course to punish first and to enquire of the fault afterward so that the punishment shall be certaine whiles the offence is vncertaine But this is the lot and euer hath beene of Gods children they are punished heere oftentimes as malefactors and euill dooers and their enemies both rage and rush most furiously vpon them that doe possesse their soules with patience and doe not by violence resist against them They are more hungry then Beares more mercilesse then Tygers more rauenous then Wolues more greedy then Lyons more fierce then dogges against them they shew no mercy and they extend no compassion at all toward them They hate them in their hearts they slander them with their tongues they smite thē with their fists they grin and grinde their teeth at them they nod at them with their heads they circumuent them by fraud they oppresse thē with sorrow they take oftentimes their liues from them Thus did the persecuters deale with Ioseph with Ieremy with Dauid with Daniel with Paul with Silas with Iohn Baptist with Stephen with Iames with Peter and many others But God will in the end make their innocency knowne and the iustice of their cause manifest to all men It is noted by the Euangelist touching Pilate that albeit hee confessed hee found no fault at all in Christ yet hee would scourge him let him go He was the Iudge yet by his owne mouth he may be iudged himselfe that adiudged him worthy to be scourged that was vnworthy to receiue a stripe in whom he could finde nothing blame worthy He called together the high Priests and the Rulers and people and saide vnto them Ye haue brought this man vnto mee as one that peruerted the people and behold I haue examined him before you and haue found no fault in this man of those things whereof ye accuse him no nor yet Herod for I sent you to him and loe nothing worthy of death is done of him I will therfore chastise him and let him loose Luke 23 14 15 16. And as it befell the Master so the lotte fell vnto the seruants that they might drinke of the cup that he dranke off and be baptized with the baptisme wherewith hee was baptized For the Apostles were diligent in preaching Christ and teaching in his Name so that their enemies were not able to withstand the Spirit of God that spake in them and albeit they oftentimes examined them yet their best arguments and cheefest reasons and strongest motiues to put them vnto silence were beatings scourgings threatnings and imprisonments for otherwise they were not able to deale against them Hence it is that when Gamaliel exhorted them to take heed to themselues Acts 4 35. what they intended to doe touching those men to refraine from them