Selected quad for the lemma: world_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
world_n day_n lord_n week_n 2,982 5 9.9436 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

afford them time to pray unto God unlesse it be to mumble a few prayers when they are washing their hands as Papists or other like or putting on their apparell But upon the Lords day the service of God must permit them unnecessarrily to doe things that might have been before or may be done after or have no necessity to be done at all All the perswading a man can use yet shall he not prevaile in a weeke to perswade them to spend some houres in reading and praying in keeping the bookes of their consciene in good order when as upon the Lords day no perswasion needeth to make them keepe at home and bee busie in their account of the world ever against the service of God they object their calling their children their wives profits pleasures and such like but never the service of God against them doe they not shew they are uncalled unconverted To instruct as many as are called and converted Vse 2 how carefull they ought to be of the worship and service of God yea to shew and seale up their calling by this Peters wives mother delivered from her feaver presenly administred unto Christ when Elijah did but cast his mantle over Elisha 1 Kings 19.19 20. he ranne after him to serve him they must then remember Gods end and not defeat him of it They must remember what they were and see his mercy what they are and acknowledge his bounty who hath of bondslaves made them free of servants sonnes If he had but delivered them all a man could doe were little enough more that he hath thus advanced them Therefore must they doe him the more honor and be more zealous of his service and worship and if they be upbraided for it they must answer as David did 2 Sam. 6.21 22. Then David said unto Michal it was before the Lord which chose mee rather then thy father and all his house and commanded me to be ruler over the People of the Lord even over Israel And therefore will I play before the Lord and will yet be more vile then thus and will be low in mine owne sight and of the very same maid servants which thou hast spoken of shall I be had in honor Incense and an offering By the reall and outward sacrifice of the Jewes he understandeth the spirituall sacrifice of the Gentiles and Church under Christ Under the Gospell Christians are freed from all outward Doctr. and reall sacrifices to be offered immediately to God and of them are only required spirituall sacrifices as their soules and bodies their prayers and praises their repentance and almes Rom. 12.1 Hebr. 13.15 16. 1 Pet. 2.5 Phil. 4.18 Iohn 4.23 Because their priesthood is only spirituall Reas 1 therefore is his sacrifice only spirituall such as the priest such his sacrifice 1 Pet. 2.5 And yee as lively stones he made a spirituall house an holy priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ Because all those outward ceremonies were shadows types Reas 2 now the body and truth being come they are abolished Because ceremonies and sacrifices were given the Church for her infirmities Reas 3 and onely as a help to keep her from the corruptions of Idolaters til she had received the spirit of God in a larger sort and measure Si quis uxorem habet propensam ad impudicitiam eam certis locis concludit cubiculis conclavibus ut ei non liceat vagari pro arbitrio addit praetere à Eunuchos pedissequas ancillas qui eam diligentissimè custodiant ut fides ejus non amplius esset suspecta ita Deus cum Judeis Hos 2.19 verum ille populus admodum fuit infirmus ac debilis ad adulteria idolatriae ultra modum proclivis Quare Deus eam separavit à caeteris nationibus in terra Canaan seorsim habitare voluit à ceremoniis ritibus undique ceu à paedagogis custodiri ut fides ejus non esset amplius suspecta ita ut maritus sic Deus cum jam spiritum sanctum per Christum ecclesiae donavit custodiam ceremoniarum ab ea removit Chrysost St. Chrys compares the Church to a wife and God to a husband and thus expresseth his purpose If a man have a wife wantonly disposed he confines her to some certaine places to her chambers and private roomes that shee may not gad abroad at her pleasure and appoints her Eunuches chambermaids diligently to attend her that her honesty may not be suspected so God dealt with the Jewes Hosea 2.19 that people was much inclined to adultery of false worship therefore God shut them up from other Nations and made them dwell alone in Canaan and kept guard upon them with rites and ceremonies as so many pedagogues that their faith to him might not be suspect But now when God had given his holy Spirit by Christ unto his Church he removed from her the custody of ceremonies Our bodies are reall sacrifices so are our almes Object The first is not outward Solut. the second is not immediately offered to God And the sacrifice is not the thing given but the affection as appeares by the difference which Christ put betwixt the widow and the rich rulers in their offering to the treasury Then are there now no externall reall Priests Vse 1 such as were under the Law because no externall reall sacrifice he who tooke away the sacrifice tooke away the sacrificer And as he was the end of the Law that is of the morall Law because he was the consummation perfection of it working and perfecting that the Law could not so was he the end of the ceremoniall law as death is the end of all living creatures because by it they cease to be so so Christ their period for by him they are abolished And if they then the Priesthood he being the last externall and reall Priest for otherwise the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is never used in the new Testament but either to Christ in respect of his propitiatory sacrifice or to all true Christians in respect of their spirituall sacrifices and never applyed to any Ecclesiasticall order or function of men as we commonly take the word for a sacrificer but as by the etymology of it it signifies an elder a Presbyter or Priest To meet with a generation that lives upon the earth who being carelesse of God his worship and service Vse 2 as he hath prescribed and commanded the same doe pretend that if he would require such sacrifices as were in use under the law they would be at any cost with the Lord like those hypocrites Mich. 6.6 7. Where with shall I come before the Lord and bow my selfe before the high God shall I come before him with burnt offerings and with calves of a yeare old will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousand rivers of oyle shall I give my first borne for my transgression even the fruit of
first hath the reproofe in generall for committing evill and omission of doing things commanded and a denyall of it by the people The second hath an exhortation to repentance with the promise of a gracious acceptance From the daies of your fathers c. The generall reproofe or in particular for committing things forbidden and omitting things commanded but in these first words their sinnes are amplified from the time and continuance in them i. It is not yesterday or a few dayes since you transgressed against me your sinnes are not of short time and small continuance but you have beene long rebellious against me even since the dayes of your fathers so long have I beene patient towards you so much are you the more hardened in your sinnes and have the lesse to say for your selves and I may the more justly punish you The exhortation to repentance is pressed and urged with the benefit that will follow it God will returne to them and by this promise would he intice and provoke them meaning he would declare and make manifest he was appeased towards them mitigating and lessening their punishments and calamities and restoring many blessings unto them This of Gods returning is figurative for he properly cannot be said to change either place or minde Cujus est deomnibus omnino rebus tam fixa sententia quam certa praesentia Vide August de Civ D. l. 15. Cap. 25. But ye say wherein shall we returne The Propher returns to his expostulation with the people about their sins and here reproves them for their impudent hypocrisie and pride that they said they needed no repentance or returning to God being guilty unto themselves of no sinne no transgression or falling away from God i. What have we committed or when did we fall from the Lord Thou calst us to returne They had so long accustomed themselves and not to restore and pay unto the Lord that was his that now they say they ought no such thing now these words containe the continuance of their rebellion or obstinacy When men once give way unto sin entertaine it Doctrine they are often and easily drawne on to continue it from time to time day to day and to grow aged and ancient in sin especially if the Lord punish them not for it so much is here and in the old world and in Sodom c. Isaiah 65.2 and Hosea 10.9 Ob Israel thou hast sinned from the daies of Gibeah That is either from the time of the Iudges when they made war against the Benjamites touching the Levites wife from which time they continued Idolatry or as some from the times of Saul or Salomon example of Davids sinne for many months for not repenting he continued it but Solomon many years Because the preserver of men from sinne is the grace of God Reason 1 either generall as in Abimelech Gen. 20. or particular as Isaiah 30.21 restraining or sanctifying grace now this the Apostle calls fire 1. Thessal 5.19 or compares it to it that as fire by withdrawing of matter oile from lamp or fuell from fire or by adding contrary as water so the spirit is quenched or forced to recoile by sinnes no marvaile then when the resister is gone or grieved if there be long continuance Because custome is another nature and things by custome Reason 2 are in us as if they were bred Now naturall things are hardly changed the continuance easie a man can hardly forget his mothers tongue hardly a speech he hath been accustomed to so in this Because the custome of sinning takes away the sence of sinne Reason 3 even a little custome and giving way to it Now when a man is without the sence of sinne hardly seeing and knowing of it Consuetudo peceandi tollit sensum peccati lest feeling how it woundeth and pierceth him but finding for the present sin pleasant or profitable no marvaile if he continue it and say Prov. 23.35 They have stricken me but I was not sicke they have beaten me but I know not when I awoke therefore will I sccke it yet still To teach men to take heed how they give way to sin Vse 1 but if sinne enter upon them as who sinneth not then with speed to part with it and shake it off lest custome and continuance follow So that when he hath a will he shall have no power to rise out he will be so intangled as with him that taketh up money for necessity he shall easily finde that he may continue it and be in the usurers bonds upon good security but when he would out of them the longer he hath continued the lesse he will finde himselfe able and so be desirous to continue it till he have stript himselfe out of all so in this then must he labour to rise out of them and give no place nor way to them Then it is a goodnesse Vse 2 and mercy of God to a man when he gives a means to him either to keep him for giving way to sin or for sitting downe in sin which of himselfe he will soone do Vide Mal. 1.7 doctr 1. Now in that they had continued thus long and were not consumed it commends another doctrine The Lord is long suffering Doctrine and patient towards such as sinne and provoke him Rev. 3.20 Gone away from mine ordinances Reprooving them for their sinnes he tells them that is sin which is disagreeing to his laws and ordinances to his word That is evill and sin Doctrine and unlawfull to be done which is repugnant to the law of God or a departing from it may it seem to be never so profitable to man or bring glory to God as on the contrary that is good and righteousnesse which is agreeable to the law and word of God seem it never so unprofitable to men or not behoofull for Gods glory Vide Cap 2.10 Doctr. ulti And have not kept them They are accused not only because they committed things contrary to the law but because they did not things agreeable to it not onely committed the forbidden but omitted the commanded They do not onely sinne Doctrine who offend against the law doing the things forbidden by it but those who do not observe and do the things commanded by it but leave them undone manifest by that as a breach of the first Table and Precept Jer. 10.25 Powre out thy fury upon the families that have not called upon thy name Dent. 28.58.59 and 27.26 Matth. 25. Because the law is affirmative Reason 1 and commanding as well as negative and forbidding and though the precepts and commandments run most negatively save only the fourth and fifth yet they all carry the affirmative as the Prophets their Interpreters shew and as those two affirmatives carry their negative so the eight negatives carry the affirmatives so that an omission is as well a transgression as a commission and so a sin Because they go against love Reason 2 and charity and therefore sinne for charity to God
the Cities and habitations of them are destroyed Which thing as it is true and wee doubt not in part the meaning of this place yet not the whole because the Lord aimes not so much to set out his hatred to Esau and his posterity as his love to Jacob and his therefore there must needs be somewhat more in it that is the dissimilitude or dislike effect to shew his love to them which riseth thus Those whom I love I keepe them in their countrey and suffer them not to be led captive yet if for correction I suffer the enemy so farre to prevaile I doe againe reduce them into their owne countrey and give them their owne land and the comforts of it On the contrary those whom I hate those for their sinnes I cast into banishment and never bring home againe but let their land to be a dwelling for beasts Dragons and such like Now the former I have done to you who are Jacobs posterity and the latter to Esaus now contrary effects have contrary causes So then as they may see in them my hatred so in your selves ye may apprehend my love who are now at home in your owne Land and Countrey and enjoy your comforts in your Countrey This then apparently shews his hatred to Esaus posterity as in spirituall things the Apostle being interpreter Rom. 9. so here in temporall things and closely and by comparison his love to Jacobs seed and to this people The first onely to the children of promise but this to all even the whole seed and not they onely which were blessed in Isaac Exile and banishment when it falls to a man or multitude Doctrine to a family or a whole nation it is a signe and a proofe of the wrath and displeasure of the anger and hatred of God So is it here made and proved because God threatneth by his Prophet usually that which men threaten and menace when they are angry that proves their anger when it is effected Deut. 28.41 64 68. Thou shalt beget sonnes and daughters but thou shalt not enjoy them for they shall goe into captivity And the Lord shall scatter thee among all people from the one end of the earth even to the other and there thou shalt serve other gods which neither thou nor thy fathers have knowne even wood and stone And the Lord shall bring thee into Aegypt againe with ships by the way whereof I spake unto thee thou shalt see it no more againe and there ye shall be sold unto your enemies for bond-men and bond-women and no man shal buy you Going into captivity scattering and serving the enemy are threatned as tokens of wrath Mic. 1.15 and 2.4 2 Chro. 36.16 17. Because it is a judgment of God upon whomsoever Reas 1 now the judgment of God shews his wrath and displeasure Because it is a blessing and so a token of the favour of God Reas 2 to have houses or lands and so to enjoy them Many are banished and cast into exile for Christ and the profession of his truth Ergo. Object It is true Sol. that as among the Grecians they had an Ostracismus a Law to banish every one that excelled other in riches or in honour or favour or eloquence and wisedome yea in their outward justice As Aristides was banished Athens by the voyces of all even a rustick who knew him not by face but because they called him just so falls it out in the world and in the kingdomes of it that they doe expell those who professe Christ and piety but that is nothing against this First for that which Justine Martyr saith Epist ad Diognetum de Christianis Omnis peregrina regio patria est eorum omnis patria est peregrina Every forreigne Countrey is their home and at home they are strangers and so they not banished wheresoever Againe because this comes onely from the malice and displeasure of men and is a favour of God that they are enabled to part with all for his sake as Act. 5.41 so wee may rejoyce if we be counted worthy to be exiles for his name but this here spoken of comes both from the wrath and displeasure of God and man Further as Causa non poena the cause not the punishment makes a Martyr Salvian Ex duobus lethalibus malis levius ut reor est captivitatem corporis Christiani quàm captivitatem animae sustinere So Salvian speaketh of a double captivity or of two sorts of captives one who are extrinsecus carne captives outwardly in the body others intus mente captivi inwardly in their mindes and affirmeth Of two great evills I suppose 't is more easie for a Christian to sustaine the captivity of his body than the bondage of the soule Now they which are captives in body for this are freed in their minds and è contr they who hold them captive are most captive for they are in their minds so as 2 Pet. 2.19 This may teach all such as may fall into captivity and exile Vse 1 that when it betides them If any should not we may then use the words of Salvian An credimus forte quod captivus animo populus ille non fuerit qui laetus tunc in suorum captivitatibus fuit captivus corde sensu non erat qui inter suorum supplicia ridebat qui jugulari se in suorum jugulis non intelligebat qui mori se in suorum mortibus non putabat Quo ante they should learne to groane under it as under the manifest signe yea and the thing that is the wrath of God for if they may and ought to apprehend Gods displeasure when their land brings not forth abundance to them and their use what when it beares not them any longer But this lesson you may teach those that are in captivity we neither are neither are we in feare of it I answer that men carefull of themselves will learne and regard medicines or prescriptions before they have need of them especially if there be any likelyhood they may fall into a disease lest the remedy not ready the danger may be and prove the greater and the knowledge of any thing is no burden So in this But have we no feare of this that we have no need to learne it What then meant this late and most horrible treason or practice that every Nation Christian or barbarous whether Turkes Tartars or whosoever heard of If our Papists the greatest enemies of Christ this day the world hath if our Pseudo-catholicks the most despightfull enemies to the King and his posterity to the State and the prosperity of it to the Church and the peace of it had prevailed in their designes what would have beene our condition but this Questionlesse either must it have come to cutting of throats and the spilling of our blood after which the Scarlet-whore and her whorish brood hath a long time thirsted or else this captivity and exile if not carryed out of our owne Land