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A07348 Ecclesiastica interpretatio: or The expositions vpon the difficult and doubtful passages of the seuen Epistles called catholike, and the Reuelation Collected out of the best esteemed, both old and new writers, together with the authors examinations, determinations, and short annotations. The texts in the seuen Epistles of Iames, Peter, Iohn and Iude are six and forty. The expositions vpon the Reuelation are set forth by way of question and answer. Here is also a briefe commentary vpon euery verse of each chapter, setting forth the coherence and sense, and the authors, and time of writing euery of these bookes. Hereunto is also annexed an antidot against popery. By Iohn Mayer, B. of D. and pastor of the Church of Little Wratting in Suffolke. Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1627 (1627) STC 17731; ESTC S112551 448,008 564

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the meaning is I would put you in minde of the great deliuerance that was once wrought by the Lord for his people which yee know So that knowing this once is as much as knowing this to haue beene once done But the second time he destroyed those that beleeued not that is as all agree afterwards he destroyed euen those for whom he had done such wonderfull things partly by serpents partly by plagues and partly by the sword and the earths opening of the mouth Touching the Angels sinning Vers 6. and being punished therefore see 2 Pet. 2.4 only I will adde thus much more in way of expounding these words The Angels that kept not their beginning this in the vulgar Latine is their principalitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word vsed signifieth both Graec. Scholia Oecumen c. the Greeke Scholia fauoureth that of principalitie saying that they kept not the dignitie of their nature Others that after their beginning Erasmus Bezs they continued not such as they were created for they were good but became euill the Reader may follow either of these readings for their beginning was both holy and full of power and glorie This they kept not when they sinned but left their habitation Faber Stapi● Some expound this of the punishment of their sinne when they were cast out of Heauen downe to Hell But seeing the punishment followeth in the next words and hereby their sinne is set forth I rather subscribe to those that expound it of the holy and heauenly course of life in which they were set by their creation which was as it were Oecumen a proper dwelling for them or according to the sound of the words that in ambition they went out of the places assigned vnto them aspiring to the Throne of the most High Th. Aquinas and so this passage is an allusion to that of the Prophet Esay 14.13 For the chaines of darknesse in which they are said to be kept enough hath beene spoken already in the place before referred vnto 2 Pet. 2.4 Note that heretickes are vnder a spirituall iudgement Note which is a certaine fore-runner of the Eternall at the last day they please themselues indeed in their damnable errours and sensuall liuing but blinde soules they see not how little cause there is of taking pleasure yea what great cause of horrour and feare vnto them as being now in the verie suburbs of hell Note againe that it is not without a secret prouidence Note that heretikes and sensuall liuers spring vp in Christian Congregations to the great scandall of the Church for such as haue beene guided by the Spirit of God haue written long agoe of them Though some fall thus fouly yet the estate of all is not fickle and vncertaine for these haue beene long agoe appointed vnto this it is not the case of any of the elect true-hearted Christians to fall thus Note lastly Note that there is one externall blacke brand of Arch-heretickes seruing to discouer them to such as are not able to iudge otherwise of them by their doctrine and that is vnder a pretence of religion and zeale to bee wanton and filthie in their liues And such are most of the holy Orders in the Church of Rome and Popes themselues as their Histories doe abundantly declare Haply some of the common sort may be stricter in their liues but their Ring-leaders are notoriously licentious VER 8. Likewise also these dreamers doe defile the flesh they set light by authoritie and blaspheme glories Vers 9. Yet Michael the Arch-Angell when striuing with the Deuill he disputed about the bodie of Moses durst not bring the iudgement of blasphemie c. In calling them Dreamers Oecumen in Iud. hee doth wonderfully hide the obscoenitie of the thing by the honestie of the speech their filthinesse was so great as that it was too much for any waking to doe so The filthinesse of the Barborites so called from their sordid basenesse is laid open by Epiphanius in his booke written purposely thereof called Pannarium Neither did they onely such filthy things according to the flesh but waxed mad moreouer against the Diuine Nature abrogating the Domination and vniuersall Empire thereof as Ireneus writeth Or else by the Domination or authoritie which they are said to set light by or to vilifie the ceremonies of Christs mysterie are meant in the roome of which they brought in their owne villanies The glories which they are said to blaspheme are the old and new Testaments for vnto them both Paul attributeth glorie 2 Cor. 3. 2 Col. 3. 3 Ioh. Or else Ecclesiasticall Dignities against which they inueighed as Saint Iohn saith of Diotrephes that he vsed railing speeches against them The Arch-Angell Michael conflict with the Deuill about the bodie of Moses was this The sepulture of the bodie of Moses is said to haue beene committed to Michael herein the Deuill hindred him alleaging that Moses was guiltie of murther for that he killed an Aegyptian and therefore ought not to haue any such honourable buriall but his bodie belonged vnto him Vpon this his striuing with him the Arch-Angell refrained himselfe from opprobrious speeches and so from the greater being in contention with the Deuil he argueth to the greater conuiction of them in their railing Moreouer there is another end also in alleaging this example that hereby wee might gather how the Deuill lieth vpon the catch after our departure out of this life to hinder vs from Heauen if hee can obiect any wickednesse against vs and how the good Angels of God stand to defend vs if wee bee guiltlesse Vers 10. Such things as they know not they raile against c. that is the mysticall points of religion but in those things wherein they haue knowledge that is in vile lusts they doe like bruit beasts defile themselues Then hee compareth them to Cain Vers 11. because by their errours they killed mens soules and by eating the seed of generation they destroyed bodies that might haue beene And to Balaam because they did these things for gaine And lastly to Core because though vnworthy they did with him arrogate to themselues the authoritie of teaching They set light by authoritie that is Tho. Aquin. either of Princes or Prelates whom they commonly disobey through a desire to aduance themselues And they blaspheme the Maiestie of God yet the Glosse by glories vnderstandeth either God or the Angels or Saints who are blasphemed by erroneous doctrine Out of what Scriptures the storie of Michael is taken it is vncertaine yet it is credible when God by the ministerie of his Angell hid the bodie of Moses Deut. 34.6 lest the people of Israel finding it should abuse it to idolatrie the Deuill stroue with him to bring it to light In other passages here Thomas Aquinas differeth not from Oecumenius Mayer neither is there much difference more amongst other Expositors Briefly therefore these expositions
It deliuereth from death Dan. 13. Susanna prayed and was deliuered 4. It preuenteth temptation Matth. 26. Watch and pray that ye enter not c. 5. It ouercommeth the aduerse powers Exod. 17. Moses lifting vp his hands Isra●● preuailed 6. It purifieth the heart August Orationibus mundamur lectionibus instruimur 7. It pacifieth Gods anger Exod. 32. 8. It presenteth our desires 〈◊〉 God Quasi quaedam persona ad Deum intrat August 9. Healeth the sicke Note Note that the time of sicknesse is specially a time of prayer Psal 50.14 thou must pray much and desire the prayers of others for thee All physicke and diet and warmth is nothing without prayer pray therefore continually 1 Thes 5.17 but specially in the time of sicknesse Note againe Note that the Minister is a principall man to be sought to in sicknesse he therefore is with all speed to be sent for and if there be more neere send for two or three that together they may pray for thee Matth. 18. For when two of you shall consent together about any thing vpon earth saith Christ to his Apostles it shall be done in heauen Consider what wonders Elias did by praying and doubt not but that the men of God shall preuaile as well for thee in thine extremity if it may be for Gods glory that thou maist be deliuered otherwise thou must resolue that to be sicke still and to die too if God will haue it so is most for Gods glory as that mans being blinde Iohn 9. and Lazarus his dying Iob. 11. and therefore rest contented Note lastly Note that sinne is the cause of sicknesse and confequently of all sufferings except they be meerely for trialls as Iobs sufferings were Lament 3.27 1 King 8. for when he would shew that healing shall follow vpon faithfull prayer hee doth it with this addition and if he hath committed sinne it shall be forgiuen him and till sinne be done away there is no expectation of being healed Wherefore the chiefe thing to be intended in sicknesse is to be deliuered from sinne which is not but by true repentance to the furthering whereof it auaileth much to confesse to the Physitian of the soule If any be healed of their sicknesse but not of their sinne it is but a repriuing for a time that they may come vnder some greater iudgement according to that Iohn 5.14 Goe thy way sinne no more lest a worse thing befall thee CHAP. 5. VERS 19. If any man hath erred from the truth and one turneth him let him that hath turned him know that he saueth a soule from death c. There is some question about the cohering of these words with the former and some about the sense Mayer Touching the coherence Some say Tho. Aquin. Gorran that hauing before exhorted to pray for others in the time of sicknesse that they may be healed here is intimated a further duty to be done viz. not onely to be sollicitous for a brothers bodily safety but chiefly for the safety of his soule by endeuouring to conuert him Pareus Piscator Some without any coherence speake of it as a proposition of a new duty I subscribe to the coherence there being nothing in this Epistle but deliuered in a method as I haue shewed in my Analysis Touching the sense Pareus The. Aquinas Faber Occumen Some by erring from the truth vnderstand onely erring in matter of doctrine in points concerning the foundation and some both in doctrine and manners neither doe I see any reason why they should be seuered because either way the soule is endangered Any errour in manners that is walking in the way of any sinne in dangereth the soule for the wages of sinne is death and he that faileth in one point Rom. 6.23 Iames 2.10 is guilty of all the law And to erre in matter of doctrine if it be in the foundation is deadly The Galathians erring thus Gal. 1.6 are spoken of as departed to another Gospell when they erred onely in the point of iustification by workes If any man erred in the matter of circumcision vsing it now vnder the Gospell Gal 5.1 2 Thes 2.11 he is pronounced to be such as that Christ shall not profit him And to beleeue lyes is set forth as the way of destruction to which disobedient persons are in iudgement giuen ouer Iohn 17.17 It is the truth that sanctifieth and saueth and therefore errout must needs corrupt and destroy But euery errour doth not bring a man into this danger for hee that holdeth the foundation shall be saued though he buildeth hay or stubble 1 Cor. 3.12 And to erre in a point fundamentall destroyeth not where there is a minde willing to learne the truth but yet for want of meanes or time the perfect knowledge hereof is not attained vnto as was the case of the Apostles Acts 1.6 who thought till the resurrection of Christ that by the exercising of outward regall power hee would saue his people and confound his enemies Touching the words following Hee saueth a soule from death Parens and hideth a multitude of sinnes Some apply both these to the person conuerted the first in respect of God hee saueth him from death to which God would haue adiudged him for euer if he had continued still in his sinne and the second in respect of men who now that he is turned absolue him from all his sinnes and make account of him as if he had not erred at all And all this he doth that conuerteth another not by the merit of any thing that he can doe but because vnder God he is an instrument of bringing him into the right way which is the way to escape death Faber Stapul and the danger of sinne Some apply the first of these to him that erred and the other to him by whose meanes he is conuerted or both alike vnto him that is conuerted or that conuerteth for God doth so accept of this so excellent a worke as that hee will therefore saue him that conuerteth also Beda And therefore some reade it animam suam his owne soule I subscribe vnto the first that by the soule saued is to be vnderstood the soule of him that erred onely for this is most agreeable to the speech the subiect whereof as being before in the way of death is the sinner whom one conuerteth not the conuerter who is commonly supposed to bee in the state of saluation before And hee hideth his sinnes according to the phrase borrowed Prou. 10.12 because when a man is conuerted all his former sinnes are hidden vnder the couert of his new life The. Aquinas he is now before God as if hee had no sinne Psal 32.1 And to this also Pareus assenteth that the conuert hath no sinne imputed vnto him now that by his conuersion hee is in Christ Before men I cannot see how it should so much auaile to haue ones sinnes
Gods iudgements is to haue true and vnfained loue in vs towards one another For feare commeth out of the conscience of sin from which we shall be free if we haue such loue in vs wee shall not sinne against the degree the life the chastity the goods or the good name of our brother which kinde of sins are vsually the originall of inward trouble and feare in the minde CHAP. V. IN this Chapter the Apostle treateth of faith prouing that the faithfull loue the children of God because they loue God and that they loue God because they keepe his commandements vrging to beleeue in Christ because of the testimony which God the Father hath giuen vnto him The coherence of it with the former is this Hauing proued that he which loueth God must needs loue his brother he proceedeth to confirme it further from the consideration of the nature of faith Hereby we are begotten of God and therefore we cannot but loue others that are begotten of him also and the ground of this is our louing of God the Father both of vs and them for he that loueth a man loueth his children also for his sake Vers 1 2. So that this is indeed a new argument we cannot loue God but we must loue our brethren also because they are the begotten of God this being the state of euery faithfull person And hauing reasoned so much about the loue of God he sheweth in the next place what this loue is viz. to keepe his commandements Vers 2 3. and that it may not be thought hereupon that no man then can loue God he sheweth that the faithfull haue the Spirit whereby they are so inflamed with the loue of God as that this is their continuall study and care by the assistance of the same Spirit they ouercome the world the chiefe enemy hindring them from keeping these Commandements v. 4 5. Then because the obiect of faith is Christ Iesus hee sheweth by what certaine testimony he came that wee might vndoubtedly beleeue pressing the same vers 6 7 8 9 10. and then what benefit doth redound to the beleeuer euen eternall life vers 11 12. for which cause he saith that he wrote vnto them resuming againe the argument touching boldnesse before vsed chap. 4 17. For if Christ and by him life be ours wee cannot but with confidence aske any thing at his hands vers 14 15. wherefore he exhorteth to pray for them that sin so that their sinning be not vnto death vers 16. yeelding a reason of praying for such vers 17. and then affirming againe the immunity of Gods children from sinne and shewing how all the world is vnder sinne but the faithfull in grace through the knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ he concludeth with a dehortation from idolatry vers 19 20 21. 1 IOHN Chapter 5. Verse 2. Hereby we know that we loue the children of God when wee loue God and keepe his Commandements IT is a maruell Mayer that the Apostle hauing reasoned before from our louing of one another to the louing of God doth now reason from our louing of God to our louing of one another But certainly there may be areciprocall argument drawne both waies wee cannot haue true loue towards one another but in the loue of God and obedience to his Commandements as Piscator noteth Piscator for there may bee a wicked loue and delight in one another this appeareth to be no true loue because we haue no loue of God in louing thus seeing his Commandements are transgressed It was necessary therefore hauing spoken so much of mutuall loue to insert this here lest that should be taken for true loue laudable before God which is wicked and damnable In the first verse he speaketh in the singular number Hee that loueth him that begetteth Vers 1. loueth him that is begotten of him But here in the plurall whereupon many haue gathered that by him which is begotten Christ Iesus the onely begotten Sonne of God is meant touching the loue of whom he speaketh because many that outwardly embraced the Faith of Christ Hilar 6. c Trin. August lib de fide ●2 Beda did not in heart loue him but were enemies vnto him But many againe on the other side expound it of the regenerate as Dydimus Oecumenius Glossa ordmaria c. But I assent rather to this latter because of the sudden change of the number and an assumption as it were made out of the former verse and because euery one that beleeueth is said to be begotten of God the same word being vsed that is to expresse him which is begotten Vers 3. In that his Commancements are said not to bee grieuous it may seeme that they are possible to be kept in euery thing a speech agreeable to this is that of our Sauiour Christ My yoke is easie Mat. 11 28. and my burthen light But the next words scrue to explaine these Vers 4. Because euery one that is borne of God ouercommeth the world The true faithfull person delighteth in Gods Commandements Rom 7. though by reason of the flesh that hee carrieth still about with him he cannot perfectly fulfill them They are not grieuous because they doe not with-hold vs from any thing profitable or truly pleasant vnto vs. August de natura gr●t c 43. Quo● odo est graue cum dilectionis est mandatum Aut en●m quisqua non diligit graue est aut diligit graue esse non 〈◊〉 est dug de nat perfect inssitae Saint Augustine speaketh excellently in shewing that they are not grieuous How should that be grieuous which is the Commandement of loue for either a man doth not loue and so it is grieuous or else he loueth and so it cannot be grieuous Popish writers doe hereupon insult ouer vs teaching that no man can perfectly keepe Gods Commandements for if it be impossible say they for the regenerate to keepe them without sinning how are they said not to bee grieuous Saint Augustine shall answer for vs it is the loue and delight that we take in them that maketh them not grieuous seeing hereby we are not pressed as with a burthen but cleuated as with wings as the same Father also speaketh For though we cannot doe the thing that we delight in so exactly yet it is not grieuous vnto vs. As Gregory speaketh Greg. lib. 5. in 1 Reg 12. Quid graue non leuiter ●oll●rat qui amat quicquid enim diligitur cum magna deuotione por latur what grieuous thing doth not hee lightly beare that loueth For whatsoeuer is beloued is borne with great deuotion Indeed if for our imperfections and failings in keeping Gods Commandements we should be iudged it must needs be grieuous but seeing by Faith we are stated in him that hath done all things perfectly and God doth not behold vs any more in our selues but in Christ whose perfect righteousnesse is ours we become secure in respect
furnace and then taken out againe It is said to come vpon all the world because in all countreys none that professe the Christian religion escaping for all that will liue godly must suffer persecution Touching this Church in particular it is not to be thought that it should bee altogether exempt but supported with patience to endure so that their faith should not be hereby shaken or any grace impaired as must needs bee through the terriblenesse of persecution if the Lord did not deliuer therefrom And all these comforts belong to euery one that cleaueth to Gods word resoluing to endure any thing rather than to be beaten from it his sufferings shall be but an houre to his triall and bettering and his soule shall bee safe from all euill that might accrue vnto it thereby Quest 5. Vers 11. What is meant by saying that no man may take thy crowne Can any that are elected to the crowne of heauenly glory miscarry and lose it Answ Some vnderstanding these words of the glory to come inferre the vncertainty of saluation because euen the Angell of this Church so highly commended is yet spoken to as in a possibilty of losing his Crowne as Thomas Aquinas and other popish Writers Pareus Others that maintaine a certainty of saluation trouble themselues much about the resoluing of this doubt how there can be any certainty of any mans saluation if he may lose his Crowne and another not appointed to it may get it But they resolue it by saying that this is spoken for excitation only and because by such admonitions the Lord worketh perseuerance in the Elect. Others by this Crowne vnderstand nothing but the glory and praise of well-doing Bullinger Brightman which would be lost and fall to another if either hee should grow remisse or be corrupted by heresie after that hee had carried himselfe thus worthily and to this I subscribe For he that weareth a royall Diadem hath not more glory amongst men than the vertuous Christian before God true piety is a Crowne vpon the head of him that is endued therewith Quest 6. What is meant by this Vers 12. I will make him a Pillar in the Temple of my God and hee shall not goe out any more and I will write vpon him the name of my God c. and why is the reward thus set forth to this Church Answ Some thinke that it is alluded to the custome of the Romans Bullinger Pareus who were wont to set vp Pillars to the honour of famous Conquerours inscribing their names and noble acts But it is to be noted that he doth not say I will set him vp a Pillar but I will make him a Pillar and therefore the very same Authors after that allusion mentioned preferre another exposition taking this to be an allusion to the Pillars set vp in the Temple by Salomon 1 King 7.15 For as they were an ornament to the Temple so the great lustre and glory which these should haue in Heauen is hereby set forth Some apply this to the present state of the faithfull in this world who are set fast as those Pillars or of whom some are most eminent as Pillars for so Peter Gal. 2.9 Iames and Iohn are said to haue beene Pillars 1 Tim. 3 15. and the Church it selfe is called The ground and Pillar of truth And as those Pillars so they are firme by faith Richard de Sancto Victore strait by equity erected by intention and lofty by contemplation But seeing the rewards promised in this life went before being plainly distinguisht from the reward here set forth which is to come I consent with those that vnderstand by the Temple of God Heauen and by the Pillar eminency of glory there Brightman And because those Pillars of the Temple were carried away by Nebuchadnezzar that this estate might appeare to be more firmely and vnmoueably setled it is added He shall not goe out any more For the names which hee saith he will write vpon him The seuenth Epistle to Laodicea Chap. 3.14 herein the allusion is still continued for Salomon wrote vpon those Pillars certaine names vpon the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee shall establish and vpon the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it is strength so for the greater glory of this Pillar Gods Name shall bee inscribed because hee is the childe of God new Ierusalems name because hee is a Citizen thereof and Christs new name that is Iesus Christ risen from the dead and set at the right hand of God because hee is of the number of his redeemed ones For the other question why to this Church the reward is thus propounded I finde nothing amongst Expositers but the reason I take it is plaine because they were a long time of little strength and much wronged and disgraced but they should bee strengthened as a brazen Pillar and honoured with the highest titles conferred by the Iudge of the whole world Let this then comfort euery ones heart that mourneth in Zion for the tyranny oppressions and opprobries of persecutors they shall be set as Pillars c. And to the Angell of the Church of Laodicea write These things saith the AMEN Chap 3. Ver. 14 that witnesse that faithfull one and true the beginning of the creature of God This Epistle doth consist altogether of reprehension and admonition for luke-warmnesse hauing nothing of commendation in it as the Epistle before going was altogether commendatory and in no part reprehensory This Laodicea was the chiefe City of Caria according to Strabo and Pliny built by Antiochus Theas and named from Laodice the name of his Queene signifying the Prince of people giuing Lawes vnto them Quest 1. Why is the Lord thus set forth to this Church and whence are these titles taken and what is meant by them Answ These titles are taken from Chap. 1.5 where hee is called The faithfull witnesse and vers 18. Amen and generally in all passages the beginning and the end How hee is said to be Amen Saint Paul teacheth 2 Cor. 1.19 20. saying For the promises of God are in him yea and in him Amen because whatsoeuer he saith is true and certaine for which cause that witnesse and that faithfull one is added The Arrian layeth hold vpon this that he is called the beginning of the creature to proue Christ to be but a meere man but the words doe not imply this for he is the beginning and the end that is eternall both ex parte ante and ex parte post all creatures had their beginning in him Bullinger seeing he made them all The beginning of the creature then doth not argue a creature though Bullinger vnderstandeth it thus of his humanity Brightman Pareus but the greatest power by which the creature hath the beginning according to others who say that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may also be vnderstood of principality but for so much as often
world shall vilitate Great gifts and goods then shall he impetrate Huge heapes of gold he shall haue into treasure With siluer hid and money without measure Discouered things he shall loose and remit Of Magicke Art well shall he know and wit The mysteries and secret sorcery The mighty God he makes a Babe to be Downe he shall tread all true worshippin And at chiefe heads of error first begin His mysteries to all he shall expone Then comes the time of mourning and of mone c. These bookes of the Sybils were much esteemed of and kept in the Capitoll at Rome during the Ethnicisme thereof the prouidence of God ordering it so that from Rome wee might learne that he whose Sea is there is the childe of perdition and after the Popes triple crowne for he is most plainly here described much corruption should be in the worship of God and after that should come vpon that state ineuitable destruction Touching Romes rise at the fall of the Grecian Empire no learned man is ignorant it fell again by means of the Goths Vandals and Heruls and Longobards But touching the time of the new kinde of Empire in him that weareth many crownes it may iustly be doubted seeing many fifteene Emperours haue beene before the Pope came to this height of honour which was not till the dayes of Phocas It is therefore necessary to distinguish betwixt Heathen and Christian Emperours for this being applied to the first sort will in no case stand but to the other it doth very well agree for from Constantine the first Christitian Emperour to Phocas are but fifteene if Iulian the Apostata be cast out who was no Christian and Mauritius by the murthering of whom Phocas attained the Empire be not reckoned as there is no reason to reckon him seeing another vsurped that dignity and tooke it from him The second to Constantine was Constantius and his brethren together the third Iouinianus the fourth Valentinianus and Valens together the fift Gratianus Valentin and Theodosius the sixt Arcadius and Honorius the seuenth Theodosius and Valentin the eighth Martianus the ninth Leo the tenth Zeno the eleuenth Anastatius the twelfth Iustinus the thirteenth Iustinianus the fourteenth Iustinus the younger the fifteenth Tiberius Next to Tiberius Phocas gate the Empire from Mauritius his Master in whose dayes this new kinde of Empire began which from Ponti may iustly be called Pontificiam These things thus consenting to make plaine the mysterie of iniquity in the Popedome doe not harden your selues O ye Papists but be wise in time and come out of Romish Babylon that ye come not with her to perpetuall most horrible destruction CHAP. XIX AFter the vtter destruction of Babel represented here followeth a representation of the great ioy which should hereupon bee amongst the faithfull triumphing ouer her in heauen together with the cause of her destruction and of her partakers and the description of the King by whom shee is destroyed Brightman Vers 1. Some will haue the Church of God vnderstood by heauen which hearing of the destruction of Babel praiseth God for it lest if heauen bee properly vnderstood it should follow that the Saints there know of the things done vpon earth Bullinger Pareus Grasserus But I subscribe rather to those that vnderstand heauen properly as they in heauen were exhorted before Chap. 18.20 to reioyce ouer Babel fallen for howsoeuer they are ignorant of particulars yet it is not vnlikely but that they vnderstand either by the relation of Angels or by reuelation from God what ingenerall is the state of the Church in this world else how could the soules of the slaine lying vnder the Altar cry out for reuenge vpon persecutors as not being yet taken Reuel 6.10 Moreouer there went before a particular exhortation to reioyce for this which argueth the notification of it in heauen by diuine reuelation Touching the song Hallaluiah Vers 3. it is compounded of Hallalu praise yee and iah the Lord Hebrew words It is a question amongst Expositors why they are exhorted to praise God by an Hebrew word To this some answer Brightman that mystically the ioyning of the Iewes who should now be conuerted to the faith is intimated but most without any such mystery hold that a word of this language is chosen as in many other passages in alluding to the old manner of praising God in his Church that first was Bullinger Pareus for Halleluiah in prefixed before many of the Psalmes as a word then ordinarily vsed to praised God And for the same cause the Arke of the Testimony the Altar and Censers with incense are mentioned before because what was and was done in the Temple of God of old amongst the Hebrewes did serue to figure out what should be Vers 4. and be done afterwards in heauen Touching the foure and twenty Elders and foure beasts who haue hitherto stood by as spectatours of all that hath beene done and now giue their applause and approbation it hath beene already shewed what they are Vers 6. Chap. 4.4 c. The voice of all the multitude that stirre vp to praise God compared to the sound of many waters and of thunder is so compared to set forth the greatnesse of the company for they must needs bee very many from whom such a loud sounding voyce must come Vers 7. The matter of this ioy next vnto the ruine of Babel is the marriage of the Lambe approching and the adorning of his wife for the marriage This wife is the woman before spoken of Chap. 12. that fled into the wildernesse from the face of the Dragon but her enemies that sought her life being destroyed shee is brought in now againe her weeds of mourning and sorrow being laid away and garments of ioy and gladnesse as of a Bride going to be married being put vpon her For after the ouerthrow of Popery there shall be no enemies any more to cause mourning and wearing of sack cloth but a most flourishing estate of the Church begun here and soone after perfected in heauen For I doe not thinke that the ioyfull time of this marriage here set forth is to be vnderstood onely of the flourishing estate of the Church in this world after so long a time of persecution but because here is both a preparation and a marriage Supper both the time of the Churches ioyfull condition for a time here where it is prepared and hereafter in heauen where the marriage is perfected and the supper held are included for here the Church is prepared for the Bridegroome Christ by sanctification through the word and Sacraments which haue now their course more freely than in times past there she is presented vnto him and they being really ioyned a feasting supper is held of heauenly comfort and ioy euerlastingly And this is the apparelling of sine linnen granted to the Church here spoken of which is said to be the righteousnesse of the Saints but