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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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their kingdome replenished with good and able teachers and forasmuch as the Apostle would haue Elders chosen by election in euery Citie let all those that are Patrones of benefices and bestowers of Ecclesiasticall liuings looke out godly and learned preachers where there is want that euen small preferments in little Parishes and villages may haue Ministers of more ability then commonly they haue lest euen the blood of them that perish through the ignorance of the one and default of the other be required at their hands If the cure or Congregation be small it is by many thought to be a sufficient cause to bestow it vpon an vnsufficient person and sometimes vpon their porters or other seruants if so be they can in any reasonable or tollerable sort reade English and satisfie the Law they think no more is required at their hands and all this is practised because forsooth it is a little Parish But Christ hath shewed by his owne example that little Parishes are to bee instructed as well as great and wide Cities And if this example cannot teach vs it shall be able to condemne vs of vnfaithfulnesse and of want of mercy and compassion toward the soules of men The Lord put it into the hearts of such as are to dispose the liuings of lesser Congregations to set ouer them such Pastors as may feed them with the bread of life that is with the preaching of the Gospel of the kingdome 40 And the Lord said vnto Moses Number all the first borne of the males of the children of Israel from a moneth old and vpward and take the number of their names 41 And thou shalt take the Leuites for mee I am the Lord in stead of all the first borne among the children of Israel and the cattell of the Leuites instead of all the firstlings among the cattel of the children of Israel 42 And Moses numbred as the Lord commanded him all the first borne among the children of Israel 43 And all the first borne males by the number of names from a moneth olde and vpward of those that were numdred of them were twenty and two thousand two hundred and threescore and thirteene 44 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 45 Take the Leuites in stead of all the first borne among the children of Israel and the cattell of the Leuites in stead of their cattell and the Leuites shall be mine I am the Lord. 46 And for those that are to be redeemed of the two hundred threescore and thirteene of the first borne of the children of Israel which are more then the Leuites 47 Thou shalt euen take fiue shekels apeece by the polle after the shekel of the Sanctuary shalt thou take them the shekel is twenty gerahs Exod 30.13 Leuit. 27.25 and 18.16 Ezek. 45.12 48 And thou shalt giue the money wherewith the odde number of them is to be redeemed vnto Aaron and to his sonnes 49 And Moses tooke the redemption money of them that were ouer and aboue them that were redeemed by the Leuites 50 Of the first borne of the children of Israel tooke he the money a thousand three hundred and threescore and fiue shekels of the Sanctuary 51 And Moses gaue the money of them that were redeemed vnto Aaron and to his sonnes according to the word of the Lord as the Lord commanded Moses Hitherto we haue spoken of the numbring of the Tribe of Leui simply without any relation to others Now we are to speake of it comparatiuely For in this place the Leuites are compared with the first borne among the people whom God commanded to be redeedeemed by substitution of the Leuites and appointing of them in their roome This hath two parts First the enumeration it selfe comparing the persons to be redeemed with those that are to succeed them and come in their places to the 44. verse Secondly the manner of matching or equalling of them both whose number was different to wit the Leuites and the first borne by a Pecuniary redemption of those that did amount to more then the Leuites to the end of the Chapter Touching the first we are to consider these particulars first the commandement of God charging Moses to number the first borne that are males among the children of Israel the Leuites being already numbred as we haue heard in the former part of this Chapter from a moneth old and aboue and to take the number of their names and then commanding him to substitute the persons of the Leuites for his seruice and their cattell for the cattell of the first borne Secondly the obedience of Moses to this commandement all the first borne of the males being numbred amounted to the number of two and twenty thousand two hundred seuenty and three The second point is the paralleling or equalling of them both by redeeming the ouerplus of the first borne wherin also we may behold the commandement of God and execution of it by Moses The Lord commandeth the Leuites to succeed the first borne and whereas there were 273. moe of the first borne then of the Leuites he ordaineth that fiue shekels of the Sanctuary should be paid of the people for euery person that was aboue that tribe which money was to be giuen to the Priests The execution of the commmandement followeth in the three last verses wherein we may see how Moses obeyeth in them both for he tooke the redemption money of the people and gaue the money of them that were redeemed to Aaron and to his sonnes according to the word of the Lord. Out of this diuision sixe questions may be demaunded all which we wil runne ouer and briefly dispatch that we may proceed to the doctrine Obiect 1 The first question may be asked how the number of the first borne which came to 22273 surmounted the number of the Leuites which amounted to the number of 22300. For if we consider what Moses hath expressed before in the particular summes of the seuerall families mentioned in this Chapter it may seeme at the first sight that the Leuites were moe in number then the first borne exceeded them by 27. persons For the summe of the family of the Gershonites was accounted to be 7500 persons verse 22. The summe of the family of the Kohathites was accounted 8600. verse 28. Lastly the summe of the family of the Merarites was said to be 6200. The totall summe of these three particulars amounteth to 22300. whereas the first borne amounted onely to 22273. ●nswer I answere this difference is onely in shew and not in substance for in the family of the Kohathites the Priests also were comprehended and the first borne of the Leuites so that whereas the number of these amounted to three hundred the Leuites are rightly said to be two and twenty thousand verse 39. and the first borne among the Israelites to be two and twenty thousand two hundred seuenty and three Obiect 2 Secondly the question may be asked how the money commanded to be
with vs if we haue hollow and barren harts we neuer profite though we heare al day long but if we haue good honest harts when we heare the word we keepe it bring forth fruit with patience some an hundred some sixty and some thirty fold We haue many that heare in these dayes but they are as ground that is out of heart they bring forth nothing but weeds thistles brambles and briars no good Corne can bee seene to spring vppe and grow in them The sixt and last helpe is feruent prayer and an earnest begging of Gods blessing at his hands which if we be carefull to aske his promise is sure gone out of his mouth which he will neuer call backe nay which he can neuer call backe namely that we shal receiue Iam. 1.5 1. Kin. 3.6.9 The Apostle Saint Iames saith If any man want wisedome let him aske it of God who giueth to all frankly and vpbraideth no man If then we be not wanting vnto our selues God wil not be wanting vnto vs but open the gate of his mercy if we knock thereat Thus much of the generall obseruations by way of Preface now let vs come to the particular handling of the booke it selfe CHAP. I. 1 THe Lord spake againe vnto Moses in the Wildernesse of Sinai in the Tabernacle of the Congregation in the first day of the second moneth in the second yeare after they were come out of the Land of Egypt saying 2 Take ye the summe of all the Congregation of the children of Israel after their Families the housholds of their Fathers with the number of their names to wit all the males man by man And so forward vnto the end of the 16. verse WE haue shewed already that Moses in the ten first chapters prepareth the people of Israel to vndertake their iourney toward the promised Land the land of Canaan If they had beene taken vnprepared and vnprouided it would haue stopped their course and hindred their way and encouraged their enemies Wherefore there is order taken in the first place that all should be in readinesse fitted to go and rightly disposed to attaine the end of their desires In these chapters we must consider three things First the numbering of the people taking the summe of them Secondly lawes are prescribed how to keepe themselues pure and holy in their iourneyes For how should the Lord their God go with them vnlesse they walked in holines Thirdly the maner of their going is deliuered in what sort they were to proceed The numbering of the people is set downe in the foure first chapters The lawes of sanctification are handled in the fiue chapters following to wit the 5 6 7 8 9. chapters The maner of their iourney in the tenth and last chapter The taking of the number of the Israelites and setting downe the summe of them which is the argument drift of the foure first chapters is of two sorts the one of the people the other of the Priests and Leuites that ministred before God and serued in the Tabernacle of the congregation The gathering of the sum of the people is in the two first chapters the numbring of the tribe of Leui is in the 3. 4. chap. Touching the numbring of the people we haue a rehersal and reckoning vp of their persons in the first chapter and of the ordering and disposing of them vnder seueral Ensignes and Regiments in the second chapter This first chapter into which wee are now entred cōtaineth these two points the former is the taking of the summe of the people of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai the latter is the exempting of the Leuites together with the cause wherefore they were not numbred So then we see who they wer that were numbred and then who were not numbred Touching the former it comprehendeth both the commandement of God to number them and the obedience of Moses The commandement of God is amplified by sundry circumstances as of place of time and maner of doing The place is twofold generall in the desert of Sinai where the Law was giuen and special in the Tabernacle of the Congregation from whence God promised hee would declare himselfe vnto them Exod. 25.22 and tell all things which he would giue in commandement vnto the children of Israel For we must know there were three places out of which God gaue audience to Moses In what places the Lord vsed to speake with Moses and vsed to speake vnto him One was at the dore of the Tabernacle where the Altar of the burnt offerings was as Exod. 29 42. This shall be a continual burnt offering in your generations at the doore of the Tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord where I wil make appointment with you to speake there vnto thee Another was out of the cloud of pillar Num. 12 5. But this for the most part did concurre with the other inasmuch as the pillar of the cloud did most vsually stand in the doore of the Tabernacle whensoeuer the Lord did from thence speake vnto Moses The third was the Mercy-seate which was the chiefe and principall place Numb 7 89. When Moses went into the Tabernacle to speake with God hee heard the voyce of one speaking vnto him from the Mercy-seat that was vpon the Arke of the testimonie between the two Cherubims and he spake to him The second circumstance is the time when God commanded the people to be numbred that is the first day of the second moneth and of the second yere after they were com out of the land of Egypt By this it appeareth that the Israelites abode in the desert of Sinai almost an whole yeere For they came into that wildernesse the first day of the thirde Moneth in the first yeare Exod. 19 1 and they continued in that place vnto this time neither did they remoue their Tents before the twentieth day of the second Moneth of the second yeare as appeareth chap. 20 11 of this booke The cause of this long staie and continuance in this wildernesse was because God would haue his people throughly taught and instructed in all things belonging to his worship and seruice before they inhabited and possessed the Land of promise For within this space of time the Lord published the Law in Mount Sinai commanded the Tabernacle to be builded which Moses erected the first day of the second yeare and in the daies following of the first moneth hee gaue them Lawes touching the sundrie sorts of sacrifices and touching the difference of cleane and vncleane prescribed at large in the booke of Leuiticus The third circumstance is the manner of their numbring namely that Moses Aaron must take other Princes the heads of the house of their Fathers to bee helpers and assistants vnto them who ioyning with them must take the summe of all the Congregation of the Children of Israel after their families and households of their Fathers from 20 yeare old and aboue
good things and the rich he hath sent empty away Luc 1 53. Luc. 1 53. There is a perfection in Gods children accompanied with much imperfection and strength mingled with much weaknesse Phil. 3 15. So that albeit the faithfull finde their owne infirmities yet they do not please themselues in thē but continually striue against them and more and more get the vpper hand of them Fourthly we must make conscience of the least sinne that we may be afraid of the greatest When Dauid had cut off the lappe of Sauls garment his heart smote him 1 Sam. 24 5. How could he be induced to shed one drop of his blood that confessed he ought not to haue touched the lap of his garment The Apostle requireth of vs to abstaine from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5 22. If we cast out the mote that is in our eyes wee cannot suffer a beame to sticke in them If we would learne indeed and in truth to straine at a gnat we should not so easily swallow a Camell The wages of all sinne is death and therefore we should feare to runne into any sinne Pull out the sting of this serpent in the beginning Cure this sicknesse at the first lest it grow incurable Cut downe the tree while it is young and greene one stroke now will doe more good then an hundred when it is growne old and tough and hard The labour is little at the beginning but custome in sinning groweth into another nature Fiftly we must grow ftom good to better We must not alwaies be babes and sucklings children and weaklings but euermore grow in grace There is a perfection of Christians to which we must be led as Heb. 6 1 where he moueth them that leauing the principles of the doctrine of Christ they should goe on to perfection not laying againe the foundation of repentance from dead workes and of faith toward God Not that any perfection can be attained in this life as the Anabaptists and other phantasticall persons dreame off most falsely not knowing themselues nor the law of God but we must aime at it as at a marke and make it the end of all our workes forasmuch as in the Schoole of Christ wee must waxe old euermore learning somewhat God accounteth vs as pure The faithfull sa●ctified in part are accounted pure accepteth vs as pure albeit we attaine not vnto the parts of perfect purity for these causes and considerations of apprehension regeneration imputation and glorification For though we be sanctified in part yet Christ calleth the Church his Loue all faire pure as the Sunne cleere as the Moone bright as the Morning because we lay hold on the righteousnesse of Christ by faith the worke of regeneration is begun in euery one of vs and goeth forward by degrees the perfect purity and perfection of Christ is ours for the present in whom we are accounted pure and for the time to come we haue the promise of glorification when we shall be without spot or wrinkle and made so absolutely pure as if we had neuer beene defiled with sinne Lastly it is our duty to pray vnto God to giue vs vpright hearts which in themselues are crooked and corrupt The Apostle in the shutting vp of the Epistle to the Hebrewes prayeth for them that God would make them perfect in euery good worke to do his will ●●b 13 21. working in them that which is well pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ That which we desire for another we ought much more to craue and aske for our selues Hence it is that the Apostle assureth his owne heart that the LORD would deliuer him from euery euill worke and preserue him vnto his heauenly Kingdome 2. Tim. 4 18. If this meanes be diligently practised of vs wee shall grow more and more in good things we shall abolish the kingdome of sin and Satan in vs so that the Lord which hath begun his good worke in vs will perfect the same vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ CHAP. III. 1. THese also are the generations of Aaron and Moses in the day that the Lord spake with Moses in Mount Sinai ●xod 6 ●3 2. And these are the names of the sonnes of Aaron Nadah the first borne and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar 3. These are the names of the sonnes of Aaron the Priest which were annointed whom he consecrated to minister in the Priests Office 4. And Nadab and Abihu died before the Lord when they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse of Sinai and they had no children and Eleazar and Ithamar ministred in the Priests Office in the sight of Aaron their father WE haue already shewed that the numbring of the Israelites which of a small stocke grew to so many millions is of two sorts one of the people fitted for the warres the other of the Priests and Leuites that were to minister to God This whole multitude consisting partly of the people partly of the Ministers are all of them warriours and souldiers howbeit there is a twofold warre ciuill and sacred Now of such as were to wage the ciuill warre wee haue spoken before in the former chapters It remaineth to intreate in this and the Chapter following of such as follow another warre and belong to another warfare and are another kinde of warriours The former is opposed against temporall and bodily enemies but this against spirituall and both of them haue their seuerall Captaines their swords their armour their furniture their victories The former warre is carnall prophane this is sacred and holy The Generall is Christ Iesus The Captaine of the Lords host Iosh 5 14. The enemies are Satan the world and the flesh the armour is as the war wholly spirituall for our warfare is not carnall yet mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holdes casting downe imaginations and euery high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captiuity euery thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10 4 5. We fight not against flesh blood but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknes of this world against spirituall wickednesse in high places Eph. 6 12. And therefore our whole armour must be of the same nature that it may be of proofe Eph. 6 16. able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked our brest-plate must be made of righteousnesse our shield must be of faith which is our victory our helmet must be of saluation our sword wherewith we are to be girded is the word of God Hence it is that the Apostle exhorteth Timothy a Minister of the Gospell to bee strong in the grace that is in Christ Iesus and to endure hardnesse as a good souldier of Iesus Christ 2 Tim. 2 1 3. Now then as we obserued in the two former chapters concerning the mustering of the people both their number and their order the like we are to consider in handling
the Lord Obiect Ephes 6. Ephe. 6.4 If any obiect against these commandements They will be vnruly and disordered albeit they be neuer so well brought vp and though their parents be very carefull they will be very carelesse and therefore they were as good holde their peace as to speake to them and not to be regarded Answer I answere so it is sometimes but alwayes it is not so Many that haue feared GOD with all their housholdes haue receiued much comfort by their children and seruants that haue had good instruction put into them as pure and wholesome liquour into a vessell and haue seene the fruite thereof to the vnspeakeable ioy of their hearts This we might shew at large in the reformed families of Abraham and Cornelius and sundry others As they planted and sowed good seede in the parts of their families as it were in a fruitfull field so they reaped a plentifull haruest Abraham had seruants that were also Gods seruants Gen 24.12 and 14.14 Act. 10.7 and prayed earnestly vnto him Cornelius had a souldier that waited vpon him that feared God yea all his band of Italian souldiers were Christian souldiers Againe we must trust GOD with the effect and successe of the education that we giue them He will worke thereby by his Spirit in all that belong vnto him as seemeth good to his heauenly wisedome If he doe not giue a blessing for causes vnknowne to vs but knowne to him let vs leaue Gods secret yet iust iudgments to himselfe The third particular branch is to pray to God for them to guide them in his wayes and to blesse them in his feare and to blesse our labours bestowed among them This wee see in Iob Iob 1.5 Chapter 1. toward his children When the dayes of their feasting were gone about he sent and sanctified them and rose vp early in the morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all for he said It may be that my sonnes haue sinned and cursed God in their hearts He was carefull for those which were committed vnto his charge and feared they might offend God in their meetings albeit hee knew no such euill by them The wise man saith Happy is the man● that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Prou. 28. Prou. 28.14 A like example wee haue in Dauid Psalme 72. where he prayeth for Salomon Giue the king thy iudgements O God and thy righteousnesse to the kings sonne hee shall iudge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poore with iudgement So then the faithfull are to entreate and craue from God the continuance of his couenant to their children and to begge from his handes an holy and sanctified seede We must not presume because we are faithfull and haue receiued to beleeue that therefore our seede must of necessity be so likewise for then we shall but deceiue our selues Let not vs therefore faile in crauing a blessing from God vpon our children if we desire to make them heires of blessing Fourthly it is required of vs to reioyce in the blessing of God vpon them and to giue him praise and glory when he vouchsafeth to shew mercy vpon them and vpon vs. If hee did leaue them in their sinnes and in that corruption which they receiued from vs Psal 51. as it were by inheritance we could not finde iust cause of complaint against him who is bound neither to vs nor to our children but forasmuch as he sheweth much mercy to our posteritie as he hath done vnto vs we haue matter of praise and thankesgiuing giuen vnto vs whereby also we shall procure their farther good It is noted of the Iailour Actes 16. Act. 16.34 that he reioyced that they of his houshold also beleeued in the Lord. He accounted it not sufficient for himselfe to beleeue nor reioyced onely in his owne saluation but forasmuch as God had vouchsafed greater mercy vnto him to call his family also to the faith this cheered his heart much more If we haue tasted of the like mercy let vs not be forgetfull of the like duty Lastly it belongeth vnto vs for the furtherance of their good to giue those all good encouragement in well doing that are conscionable in their duties to God and to vs we are bound to praise and commend them to comfort them to cheere them vp and to defend them against all malicious enemies that seeke to disgrace them The Apostle Paul willeth parents not to prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Coloss 3.21 It is a meanes to coole and quench zeale to finde discouragements in godly proceedings On the other side we ought to shew all dislike and hatred against euill and an angry countenance toward such as are vnreformed The Prophet touching the right ordering and good gouernment of his house declareth that hee would not know a wicken person and him that hath an high looke he will not suffer Psal 101.4.5 His eyes should be vpon the faithfull of the land that they may dwell with him hee that walketh in the perfect way hee shall serue him This is a good meanes to make both houses to prosper and kingdomes to flourish when the godly are aduanced and the euil doers are beaten down but when euil is set aloft and goeth vnchecked and vncontrolled and godlinesse is driuen to the wall it prognosticateth and foretelleth the ruine and vtter desolation of those societies albeit for a time they may continue When they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse Wee haue hitherto spoken of the destruction of Aarons sonnes before the face of their father now let vs see for what cause it was done The sinne of his sonnes is remembred to be this they offered strange fire that is such as was not appointed and commanded of the Lord they tooke not the fire from the altar to burne incense with all which came downe from heauen and was preserued by the diligence of the Priests vntill the captiuity of Babylon Now whereas the authour of the second booke of Macchabees telleth vs that whē their fathers were led into Persia the Priests that were then deuout tooke the fire of the altar priuily Macch. 1.19 and hid it in an hollow place of a pit without water where they kept it sure so that the place was vnknowne to all men hath no testimony of trueth out of the sacred Scriptures as we shal shew more in the 26. Chapter of this Booke of Numbers Moses maketh mention of this example of the sinne and punishment of Aarons sonnes to the end the Leuites should be more wise and wary in the execution of their office because God hereby sheweth that they shal neuer escape his hand that do not rightly discharge the duties committed vnto them For the examples of Gods iudgements vpon the corrupters and contemners of his worship must make vs more carefull and fearefull to offend Now whereas they are punished according to their
good master will not turne out of his dores an olde seruant that hath beene faithfull to him but keepe him for the seruice hee hath done him in his youth and some will doe as much to their very dogge when hee is growne olde Much more then ought it to be so with the Minister hee should not bee turned out to the wide world but reape the fruit that hee hath sowne in his youth Others while they are in poore and low estate preach diligently but when they are once growne warme and haue feathered their nests and haue caught that for which they fished can bee content to holde their peace and hang vp their nets and say nothing at all These lye vnder a fearefull curse ● 16 Woe vnto them because they preach not the Gospel These men grow rich themselues but it is to be feared they make a poore people The flocke hath fedde them to the full but they will not feed the flocke but suffer them to remaine empty Secondly this teacheth what loue ought Vse 2 to be betweene the Minister and the people seeing there is so much required of one toward another If there bee true loue on the Ministers part toward the people it cannot be that he should giue ouer but rather spend his strength and his time onely for the good of those that are committed to his charge This made the Prophet Esay answer the Lord Esay 6.8 and 8.18 Heere am I send me When he heard the voyce of the Lord saying Whom shall I send and who will go for me Behold I and the children whom the Lord hath giuen me So doth Christ charge Peter as he loued him to feede his sheepe and his lambes Ioh. 21.15 On the other side it is a great discouragement to the Minister if hee finde not some loue againe from the people answerable in some sort to his care and diligence Neuerthelesse if he finde no fruits of loue from them it shall not excuse him if hee hold his peace forasmuch as God will giue him his reward vpon whom he is to depend Lastly great comfort should arise from Vse 3 hence to euery faithfull Minister and make him conscionable in his calling to know that God requireth of him to perseuere in teaching and therefore he must neuer giue ouer to speake in the Name of God Such as lay their hand vpon the plough and looke backe are vnfit for the kingdome of God Luke 9.62 As then it is said of euery Christian man that if hee be faithfull vnto the death hee shall receiue the crowne of life Reuel 2.10 so it is true of euery Christian Minister if hee bee faithfull in preaching the Gospel vnto the death hee shall receiue an incorruptible crowne of glory not otherwise The prophet Ieremy would haue ceassed crying and haue holden his peace but the word was as fire within him that it could not bee smothered and suppressed but the flame of it brake out We haue no promise except wee continue Let no man therfore faint and waxe weary let no man giue ouer but hold out constantly to the end 20 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Aaron saying 21 Separate your selues from among this congregation that I may consume them in a moment 22 And they fell vpon their faces and saide O God the God of the spirits of all flesh hath not one man onely sinned and wilt thou be wroth with all the Congregation 26 And he spake vnto the Congregation saying Depart I pray you from the tents of these wicked men and touch nothing of theirs lest ye perish in all their sinnes Now doth the Lord take the cause into his owne hand and reuealeth to Moses what hee will doe that he would vtterly destroy these conspirators and al that belonged vnto them Touching the prayer of Moses and Aaron who humbled themselues so soone as they heard the threatning of God it teacheth that Gods children haue soft and tender hearts if they heare the sound of Gods threatning behind them for it is as the cracke of a terrible thunder like to rent the hard rockes in sunder whereas the vngodly are senselesse and feele nothing albeit the threatning doe concerne themselues see more of this before chap. 14. Againe Behold the loue of God to the faithfull behold how in this destruction God prouideth for the safety of his seruants hee could doe nothing till they were departed and separated from the wicked The like we see in Gods dealing toward Lot hee being mercifull vnto him Gen. 19.16 for the Angels professe that they could doe nothing till he were gone v. 22. and chap. 18.32 We see then how the vngodly doe fare the better for the company of the godly for why were these seditious persons spared so long but because many good men were among them and so soone as they were departed from them the earth opened and swallowed some of them and a fire came from heauen and consumed others When the Sodomites were taken prisoners and carried away as captiues they were rescued and deliuered but it was for Lots sake because he was among them So then wicked men may thanke the godly for their deliuerance 2 King 3.13 14. Iob 22.30 Act. 27.24 And why doth God spare this wicked world Doubtlesse it is for his childrens sake but when once the number of them is accomplished then will he raine down fire and brimstone vpon the reprobate Now from this commandement of God giuen to Moses and by Moses to the people for the separating of themselues from the Synagogue and departing from the assembly of these sinfull men Doctrine we learne that they which haue society and familiarity with incurable and incorrigible persons Such as haue society with wicked persons shal be partakers of their punishment whē God commeth to iudge and punish shal be partakers of their punishment Gen. 14.12 The Sodomites had much good in that Lot was among thē but Lot had no good by his being among the Sodomites They were freed from captiuity because they had him in their company but he was led captiue by the enemies because he had them in his company The Scripture is plentifull in this point Pr. 9.6 and 4.14.15 Act. 2.40 Re. 18.4 Reason 1 The reasons are first because either they commit the same sinnes with them or els they are drawne after a sort to consent vnto them if not in word or deed yet at least by their silence and then it will follow in equity that they which consent with offenders shall also haue one punishment with them So it is with God in this case they that partake with other men in their sinnes shall also partake with them in the punishment For as there is an euill in word so there is an euill in silence Secondly all vnnecessary society is a countenancing Reason 2 and a confirming of them in their euil and consequently it keepeth them from a sight of their sins from turning vnto God
10 31 32 that saw a certaine man robbed of his money spoyled of his rayment and wounded of his body yet departed from him and passed by on the other side leauing him halfe dead But when we are so farre from releeuing them in theyr wants and comforting them in theyr distresses and helping them with our counsell that we seduce them our selues or boulster them vp in their sinnes or draw them into wickednesse we shall draw vpon our selues the heauy iudgements of God in the day of his visitation For if they shall not escape that are ledde out of the way and follow the direction of false and lying seducers of greater iudgment and sorer punishment shall they bee worthy that lay snares to catch others and draw them vnto destruction In the Prophesies of Ieremy we see Pashur the sonne of Immer the Priest threatned Ier. 20 6. that because he had preached lies hee and all that belonged vnto him should dye in captiuity And in another place the Lord denounceth his iudgements to come vpon the Prophets which haue sweet toongs Ier. 23.31 seducing the people with pleasing lies Herevnto wee may referre all ignorant Ministers which are vtterly disabled for the performance of their duty in teaching the people they haue the place but want the gifts 1 Tim. 3 2 they haue the calling but want the ability 2 Tim. 2.2 they fill vp the roomes of workmen but are not able to do the worke These commit an heynous sin not onely destroying their owne foules but bringing the people to destruction For through their ignorance and insufficiency they cast away their owne soules the soules of other men The wise man teacheth Prou. 29 18 that where there is no vision there the people decay Wherefore to conclude let all faithfull Ministers of God with care conscience be stirred vp to deliuer that Embassage which they haue receiued from God not as men pleasers but as the seruants of Christ And let all the people know that it becommeth them with al patience and reuerence to receiue the word of exhortation which God hath sanctified as the meanes to worke in thē faith and obedience It shall excuse no man in the day of the Lord to say I would haue hearkened to the truth but I was deceyued I would haue walked in the right way but alasse I was seduced These are olde Adams figge-leaues which will not serue to couer our shame and to hide our nakednesse wee must seeke after the truth and learne to discerne of it from errour If we be content to liue in ignorance and voluntarily submit our selues to be led or rather misled by blinde guides that can neyther informe themselues nor vs in the wayes of the Lord if we wilfully shut our eyes because we will not see our ignorance is without excuse and for want of knowledge wee shall certainly bee destroyed Let vs all walke in the right way and make streight steps vnto our feete Heb. 12 13 that God may be glorified our soules saued we entirely preserued in the truth through Iesus Christ to whom bee praise and glory in the Church for euer Amen CHAP. XXVI 1 AND it came to passe after the plague that the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saying 2 Take the summe of the Congregation of the Children of Israel from twenty yeares old and vpward throughout their fathers house all that are able to go to warre in Israel 3 And Moses and Eleazar the Priest spake vnto them c. 5 Reuben the eldest sonne of Israel c. 9 This is that Dathan and Abiram which were famous in the Congregation c. 10 And the earth opened her mouth c. HAuing sufficiently seene the weake estate and condition of this people who as much as lay in them rushed forward to their owne destruction and were vnworthy of the mercy of God that they might learne in the matter of their saluation to ascribe al to God Deut. 8 17. Let vs consider the power of his grace 1 Cor. 12 6 seene and made perfect in their weaknesse to the end of this booke wherein we are to marke a description partly of the holy and Ecclesiasticall Lawes giuen to the 31. chapt and partly sundry Ciuill and politicall Lawes belonging to their inheritance in the Land of promise Before both these we haue in this and the chapter following a new numbring of the people by the commandement of God wherein we must marke two things one touching the numbring of them the other touching the order to be deuised in the diuiding of the inheritance Touching the numbring of the people we must remember that this is now the third numbring since the Israelites by the mighty hand of God departed out of Egypt The first was the same yeare they were brought foorth when the summe was taken of them and a generall payment exacted of rich and poore for the prouision and preparation of holy things requisite for the Tabernacle Exod. 30 14 15 16. The second was in the beginning of the second yeare when the holy things were made and an order set downe among the people in their iournies Numb 1 and 2. The third is that which is in this place And notwithstanding the two former this was not without speciall causes The causes of this new nūbring of the people for there had beene a great change and alteration among the people since the second nūbring of them which was 38. yeares before they that were then numbred beeing dead in the plagues and punishments that fell vpon them Againe the diuision of the Land could not but by these breaches among them be very vniust and vnequall vnlesse this summe had beene taken whereas the Land ought to bee indifferently diuided and parted to ende all controuersies to cut off all occasions of enuie and emulation and to preserue loue and vnity among brethren Thirdly in regard of military discipline that they might march in good array and keep order the better among them for they were now in a manner come to hand blowes with their enemies and were ready to encounter with them Fourthly that the hand of God toward this people might be better seene and knowne to wit both his power and goodnesse in that though many thousands of them were wasted consumed in the Wildernesse yet the number of them was not diminished but rather encreased likewise his iustice and truth in that though he chastened the rebellious and refractary against him yet hee kept the promise hee had made to their fathers touching the multiplying of their seed as the starres of heauen Theod. quaest 46 forasmuch as he is able of stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham Mat. 3 9. And to call those things that are not as though they were Rom. 4 17 18. Lastly to shew that as he knoweth perfectly and exactly the number of all that entred into the earthly Canaan so he knoweth the
purchase it The Prophet teacheth that the people are destroied for want of knowledge Hos 4 6 thereby depriue themselues of the means of saluation Vse 3 Lastly we should learne to eschew auoid Idolatry in the very beginning before by custome and continuance it be encreased If we once entertaine it with the least liking and approbation we shall neuer or hardly reclaime our selues till we fill vp the measure of it The Apostle exhorteth vs to abstaine from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5 22. And Iude admonisheth vs to hate the garment spotted with the flesh verse 23. We must hate therefore as well the occasions and appurtenances of Idolatry as Idolatry it selfe as those things which bring much dishonour to God and much hurt vnto our owne soules Obiection But some peraduenture will say What need all these things or what cause is there of so many words touching Idolatry the remnants therof all this might well enough be spared and passed ouer forasmuch as heere are none of vs that are Idolaters and if any haue beene so that is forgotten and forgiuen long agoe I answer Answ it is not to be denyed but confessed that we liue in a reformed Church wherein Idolatry is swept away and yet many do in this point much deceiue themselues and are like the Pharisies that iustified themselues For if we would examine our selues by the strict rule of the word of God what Idolatry is and what it is not then certainely it will manifestly appeare that in the Church of England there are Idolaters yea notable Idolaters to bee found The Law is plaine and do we not reade what God saith Exodus 20 verse 4 Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image neither the similitude of any thing thou shalt not bow downe to thē nor serue them If these were asked of this Commandement they would be ready to answer with the young man in the Gospel All these things haue I kept from my youth Matth. 19 20. For we thinke commonly that vnlesse we be popish Idolaters to fall down before an Idoll worship it we be no Idolaters at all But heereby we shew that we doe not vnderstand the Law of God neyther the rules of interpretation For as murther consisteth not onely in taking away life but in hatred also and reuenge as the Apostle Iohn testifieth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him 1 Iohn chapter 3 verse 15. Matth. chapter 5 verse 22 and as adultery consisteth not onely in the outward acte but also in the inward and secret lustes of the heart so may there be Idolaters that do not fall downe and worshippe an Idoll and there is an Idolatry in the heart as well as in the practise The Apostle Paul in the second Epistle to the Corinthians chapter 4 verse 4 calleth the diuell The god of this world and yet there are none in the Church that worshippe the diuell in any outward or visible shape but they hate the thought of it no lesse then the deed How then is it that many or that any make him their god but that they beleeue in him obey him and trust more in him then they do in almighty God Whereupon he concludeth that they are no better then worshippers of the diuell howsoeuer not in outward fashion yet in the inward affection So if we would examine our owne hearts and spirits by this law which is spirituall we shall finde our selues to be grosse Idolaters many wayes Many worship theyr wealth and make theyr riches theyr god and set it vp as an Idoll in theyr hearts and this is one relique of Idolatry These are they that thinke gaine to be godlinesse 1 Tim. 6 5. and are grosse Idolaters in theyr hearts howsoeuer they neuer worshipped any visible Image Againe there are some that worship GOD with theyr bellies Phil. 3 19 such are the drunkards gluttonous persons howsoeuer otherwise they hate an Image yet are they notable Idolaters in theyr hearts There are also Idolaters of other sorts and other reliques of Idolatry some haue made theyr pleasure theyr god this is the common sinne of great men and these worshippe and serue theyr owne delights and pastimes loue them more then the Lord. Now whatsoeuer a man loueth better then GOD that same he maketh to bee his God Many such there are among vs who albeit they abhorre the open worshipping of Images yet in theyr hearts they reteyne the dregs of Idolatry and are indeed notable Idolaters And if wee would make diligent tryall of our selues and search into the secret corners of our harts by the cleere light of the word as with a candle we should finde our places persons and times to be full of Idolatry forasmuch as the most part haue preferred theyr pride theyr couetousnesse theyr lustes before God himselfe and therefore these are Idolaters haue ioyned themselues to Idols And concerning those that haue liued heeretofore in Idolatry and thinke that now they haue forsaken it therefore shall do well enough let them take heed they do not deceyue themselues For a man may leaue sinne and yet not repent for it A man may ceasse from the practise of it and yet not hate it neyther turne vnto God And doubtlesse if these men can yet laugh heartily at theyr former practises and make a iest and sport in telling what they haue done before an abhominable Idoll they may iustly suspect that they remaine filthy Idolaters still and if occasion were presented vnto them againe they would fall afresh to theyr former Idolatry as the dogge to his vomite I say therefore vnto such that without vnfeyned repentance there is no saluation but as they liued in Idolatry so they shall dye Idolaters and be condemned with Idolaters eternally Reuel 21. verse 8. CHAP. XXXIII 1 THese are the iournies of the Children of Israel which went foorth out of the Land of Egipt with their armies vnder the hand of Moses and Aaron 2 And Moses wrote their goings out according to their iournies by the commandement of the Lord and these are their iournies according to their goings out 3 And they departed from Rameses in the first Moneth on the 15 day of the first Moneth on the morrow after the Passeouer the Children of Israel went out with an high hand in the sight of all the Egiptians 4 For the Egiptians buried all their first borne which the Lord had smitten among them vpon their gods also the Lord executed iudgements 5 And the children of Israel remoued from Rameses and pitched in Succoth 6 And from Succoth c. AFter the inheritāce was giuen to the two Tribes the halfe on this side Iordan Moses describeth by the commandement of the Lord the places of their abode in the Wildernesse their seuerall mansions where they pitched their Tents vntil they entred into the Land of promise In this Chapter consider
51. but amongst these there was not a man of them whom Moses Aaron the Priest numbred when they numbred the children of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai for the Lord had sayde of them They shal surely dye in the wildernes and there was not left a man of them saue Caleb the Sonne of Iephuneh add Ioshua the Sonne of Nun Verse 64.45 This muster being taken Moses as his last enterprize appointed out of them twelue thousand to be chosen out to inuade the Cities of Midian Numb 31 5. who together with the Moabites had practised with Balaam to curse Israel Deut. 23 4 5. and to allure them from the worship of the true God to the seruice of Baal-Peor to the rest of their beastly idolatry ouer which Companies Moses gaue the chiefe charge to Phinehas who slew the fiue Princes of the Midianites who were or had lately bene the vassals of Sehon king of the Amorites Numb 31.8 as appeareth in Ioshua chap. 13 21. Thus hauing subdued all their enemies on this side Iordan and none of them being able to stand before them Moses is commanded by God before his death which followed immediately after to charge the Israelites to bound out the land so soone as they were come into it Numb 24 2. and 35 2 and to assigne to the Leuites certaine cities taken out of the inheritance of their possession that there might be no diuision nor contention among them when once they were passed Iordan which haply otherwise might haue disturbed and disquieted them This is the historicall part of this Booke which hath entermingled with it many and sundrie ceremonies of the Leuiticall Law as touching their Fasts and Feasts the yeare of Iubile their feasts of Trumpets and Tabernacles as also of the Passeouer and Pentecost a few chapters whereof I published certaine yeares past which I haue now reviewed and added the interpretation of the whole Booke from the beginning to the ending which I presume to offer vnto your Worships as a testimony of my loue and duty toward you The Iewes in the Gospel commend the Centurion and make it a motiue to perswade Christ our Sauiour to heale his seruant that was deere vnto him being sicke and ready to dye because hee loued their Nation and had built them a Synagogue Luke 7 5 4. So I may truly affirme of you that you loue our nation and are true friends of the church loue the preachers of the Gospel which is so much the more worthy praise and commendation as there are few in these euill dayes especially of your ranke and calling that affect eyther the one or the other It is a true saying as proceeding from the mouth of the author of all truth Them that honor me I will honor they that despise me shal be lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2 30. It is the cheefest honor that we can receiue in this world to honour the Lord which is the beginning of that honor which shall neuer decay whereas all other without this is vaine and vncertaine And albeit I confesse you neede not any helpe or furtherance from mee in the race of godlinesse wherein you runne neither is my weaknesse able to affoord any thing that way yet I am so farre from being discoraged hereby to presse into your presence that I acknowledge it as a speciall reason to induce me to this because I offer the same to you that are able to iudge whose learning and sufficiency that way all men know perfectly that know your person in that both of you are well exercised in the Scriptures and in the doctrine which is according to godlinesse so that I nothing doubt but at vacant houres from waightier affaires you will vouchsafe to peruse this Commentary or at least some part of it it being a duty belonging to all high and low rich and poore to search the Scriptuaes in which our hope is to haue eternall life Thus crauing pardon of my great boldnesse and hoping of your Worships good acceptance and praying the Almighty to increase the sauing graces of his Spirit vpon you I humbly take my leaue resting euer Your Worships at commandement William Attersoll A Recapitulation of the particular Doctrines handled throughout euery Chapter of this Booke of NVMBERS Doctrines out of the Preface OBseruations by the way of preface touching the Author of this booke fol. 1. 2 Obseruations by way of preface touching the Writer of this booke fol. 6. 3 Obseruations by way of preface touching the Title of this booke fol. 8. Obseruations by way of preface touching the principall substance and vse of this booke fol. 10. 5 Obseruations by way of preface touching the diuision and parts of this booke fol. 12. CHAP. I. 1. THe people of God may lawfully make warre fol. 16 2 God knoweth the number and names of all such as belong vnto him fol. 20 3 It is our duty to performe obedience to Gods commandements fol. 29 4 The promises of God made to his children shall be accomplished fol. 41 5 It is the office of the Minister to doe the duties proper to his calling fol. 49 CHAP. II. GOd delighteth to haue a comely order obserued both in Church and commonwealth fol. 55 2 Magistrates and rulers are needfull to be set ouer the people of God fol. 63 3 Gods iudgements are alwayes tempered and seasoned with great mercy toward those that be his fol. 71 4 The Tabernacle of the Congregation is placed in the middes of the hoast fol. 80 5 God bestoweth his gifts and graces freely to whom he pleaseth fol. 85 6 Euery one ought to be content with the present condition wherein God hath set him fol. 98 7 God oftentimes maketh choyce of inferiour things to effect great matters fol. 105 8 It is a duty belonging to all Gods children to yeeld obedience to all Gods Commandements fol. 109 CHAP. III. AMong all people vnder heauen the Ministery aboue all other things ought to be established fol. 118 2 Godly Parents haue oftentimes vngodly and disobedient children fol. 130 3 In Gods worship we must not bee carried by our owne deuices but by his direction fol. 137 4 God hath sole authority to ordaine the Officers and Offices of his Church fol. 146 5 The first borne were sanctified to the Lord and the vses thereof to vs. fol. 158 6 The word of God ought to direct all the actions of our life fol. 167 7 God raiseth vp honourable instruments from meane places to do him seruice fol. 175 8 Euery one in the Church hath his proper peculiar Office fol. 179 9 It is the Ministers office carefully to looke to his charge fol. 188 10 God will haue all places and people taught how small and meane soeuer they be fol. 197 11 The Office of the Ministery is an high worthy and honourable Calling fol. 206 CHAP. IIII. 1 THe Ministers must be men of grauity sobriety and moderation fol. 216 2 Euery one must know
in the house of God but good faithfull seruants b Hebru 3 5. such as Moses was in all his house shal continue in the house Lastly it is no sound consequent to conclude that the seruant is not to be heard because the Master is rather to be heard neither is this to equall or prefer the seruant before the Master to heare the seruant beare witnesse of his Master For we are taught that he heareth the Lord that heareth the seruant as the Ambassador of his lord The Title of this Booke Hitherto of the Authour and writer of this booke now let vs come to consider the second point which is the Title or inscription being called the book of Numbers The Hebrues haue a threefold maner which they vse in the entituling of bookes For their custom is to call name the bookes either of the first words in the booke as the fiue books of Moses and the Lamentations or of the authors and persons spoken of in them as the Prophets as Iob Samuel Ruth Ezra Ester Neh●mi●h or els of the matter and principall part handled as the Kings the Chroni●l●s and such like The Iewes call this booke by two names the first by the first word where-with it beginneth Vaiedabber that is and he spake The second Bemidbar that is in the wildern●sse either because this word is also vsed in the beginning of this book or else because herein are expounded and expressed such things as were done dispatched in the wildernesse the space of more then 35. yeares The Grecians and Latines whom wee in English follow doe call it The booke of Numbers by reason of the often numbering that is vsed in it aboue other bookes For as the c first booke of Moses is called Genesis The reasons of the names of the bookes of Moses because it containeth the creation of the world and the generation of the first Fathers and as the second is called Exodus that is a departure because the first part thereof is spent in shewing the going of Israel out of Aegypt wherein they were helde in bondage and as the next is named Leuiticus of the Tribe of Leui because it setteth foorth the Office and function of the Priests and Leuites together with the Sacrifices and Ceremonies belonging thereunto their Feasts and solemnities the purifications and differences betweene cleane and vncleane beasts so doth this booke beare the Title of Numbers because beside the Historie of the peregrinations and murmuringes of the people he numbreth them vp particularly vnder seuerall Regiments and rangeth them in order for their better proceeding and trauailing in their iourneyes in the Wildernesse The Reasons why this Booke hath this name aboue all other are these First Causes why this Booke is called Numbers beecause there is comprized heerein a double numbering of the people One in the Desart of Sinai which is described in this Chapter the other in the Plaine of Moab ouer against Iordan mentioned in the twenty sixth chapter of this Booke Secondly by reason of the numbering of the Leuites who were consecrated to the Office of the Priest-hoode and separated for the Ministery of the Tabernacle which is reckoned vp in the fourth chapter Thirdly the Booke may haue this Title in regard of numbering vppe particularly the gifts and Offerings which the Princes of the Tribes at the consecrating of the Tabernacle and the Altar offered of which we reade a large rehearsall in the 7. chapter Last of all for the enumeration and numbering vp of the 42. places of abode where the children of Israel pitched their Tents after they wer come out of Egypt described from iourney to iourny in the 33. chapter Thus we see the causes rendred wherefore this booke hath the inscription of Numbers giuen vnto it Let vs see what vses may be gathered from Vse 1 this Title which is made peculiar and proper to this booke First we learne that the holy Scriptures of God giuen by inspiration are distinctly to be retained in the Church without mixture and confusion For to what end and purpose are the titles giuen but for difference distinction sake to know the one from the other Thus is this booke by this Title discerned from euery other booke of the old new Testament The Church must haue a speciall care of this point seeing the Scriptures d Rom. 3 2 are committed as a Treasure to their trust therefore it is required of them that they be found faithfull and answere the credite that is reposed in them The Church of the Iewes was careful in this point did not content themselues to preserue the Scriptures whole entire but retained them seuerally and distinctly that one booke might be known from the other If a body had all his parts without addition a Hor de a●t poet of any strange member or detraction of any that is naturall yet if the partes were hudled and confounded together that the arme did grow out of the legge and the legges bee wrapped about the necke and no limbe remaine distinct from the other but all shuffled together it were a deformed mishapen body and no member could performe his office ●f all parts of the world were so confounded that the Elements were hudled in one rude lumpe or vndigested Chaos that fire were iumbled together with the earth and the aire with water what place were there for anie creature Or what profit could these elements yeeld In like manner if the whole volume of the Scriptures which is as a bodye consisting of many distinct members were put into one confused heape albeit no part were lost yet the comelinesse and profit and beauty of them were taken away For the body b 1 Cor. 12 4.9 20. is not one member but many for if they were al but one member where were the body but now there are many members yet but one bodye So the Scripture is not one booke or one part but it hath many bookes and sundry parts to make it a perfect and a complete body and all must remaine in their proper place that they may be knowne one from another This appeareth by the words of Christ conferring with the Disciples going to Emaus and expounding vnto them the doctrine of the Gospell more perfectly c Luke 24 44 when he saide vnto them These are the words which I spake vnto you while I was with you that all must bee fulfil●ed which are written of me in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes Whereby wee see he diuideth the Scriptures into three partes the Law the Prophets and the Psalmes so that they were distinguished one from another so that the old Testament is diuided into three parts This is farther confirmed vnto vs in the Sermon of Paul preached at Antioch●a where he saith d Acts 13 33. God hath fulfilled the promise made vnto the Fathers vnto vs their children in that he raised vp
all that go foorth to the warre in Israel Whereby we see in this particular numbring who are excepted and exempted to wit first all that were strangers from the Children of Israel Moses did not meddle with them Secondly women for he was charged to take account onely of the males Thirdly such as were vnder twenty yeare old Fourthly olde men that were not fit for Shielde and Speare or to draw the sword Fiftly such as were maymed or impotent or sickly diseased are also essoined by this Law and haue as it were a pasport giuen vnto them beeing cashired and discharged from seruice and left out of the numbers that are enrolled and recorded Question 1 In this diuision two questions arise which are to bee answered First touching this numbring whether it were the same which is mentioned in the Booke of Exodus I answere Answere there is a threefold numbring of them described by Moses first that in Exodus chapt 30. The second is in this chapter the last is afterward in this book chapt 26. These summes were taken vpon seuerall occasions at seuerall times for seuerall ends and differ much in the number of such as were accounted as may appeare by the seuerall comparing of one of them with another Secondly it may be demanded for what Question 2 cause God commandeth a particular account summe to be taken of his people to whom they were well knowne I answere Answere not because God would vnderstand whether they wer sufficient for number or able for strength to buckle and encounter with their enemies forasmuch as nothing is vnknowne to him nothing is hard to him or vnpossible for him to bring to passe who is able to saue as well with a few as with many The causes are these First for order sake that there shold be no occasion of contention for primacy or precedency but that euery Tribe and family should know his place and time when to remoue and when to stand still when to fight with their enemies and in euery point what to doe Secondly that such things as were to be paide for the vse of the Tabernacle might the more easily bee collected and gathered when they were separated according to their Tribes and the Tribes according to the families the families according to the household man by man Thirdly to make manifest the truth of his promise and the power of his hand his truth in performing his promise made long ago to Abraham Gen. 15. that he would increase his posterity in power partly in multiplying the people so greatly in so short a time and partly in feeding and sustaining them in the wildernesse without haruest or husbandry without planting or tilling without sowing of Corne or without feeding breeding of Cattell Fiftly to testifie his exceeding great loue toward them and speciall care ouer them Such things as are deare vnto vs we delight oftentimes to looke vpon them and to take the number of them lest any of them should be lost A faithfull shepheard will many times tell the sheep committed vnto him lest any of them should be missing So in this Commandement to haue all his people numbred is set foorth an infallible token of his care and prouidence toward them Lastly they are seuerally and distinctly numbred euery Tribe by himselfe that in time to come it might bee certainely knowne and perceiued of what Tribe family Christ Iesus the promised Messiah should be borne for as much as according to the ancient promise vttered by the mouth of Iacob and other Prophets he should be borne of the Tribe of Iudah and of the house of Dauid to whome also he is often promised Now let vs come to the doctrines of this diuision Verse 2 3. Take the summe of all the Congregation of the Children of Israel c from twenty yeare old and aboue all that go foorth to the warre in Israel c. We see in these words who is the Author of this numbring of the people not Moses not Aaron not the heads of the house of their Fathers but God alone who hath sole authority both ouer Princes people From hence we might obserue that God is the directer commander and instructer of his people and therefore wee should depend vpon him and aske counsell at his mouth But wee will not stand vpon euery particular circumstance nor examine euery word heere let vs marke who they were that God would haue numbred not women but males not children not old men not impotent men but such as are able to handle the sword and to draw the bow and to fight against their enemies for their liues for their wiues for their children and for the maintainance of Gods worship Doctrine 1 This teacheth vs that a godly man may lawfully be a warriour A godly man may lawfully be a warriour If war were not in it selfe lawfull God would neuer take order in this place to haue a muster taken of such as are able to beare armes True it is euery good ordinance and profession may be abused and nothing is so well instituted but by mans corruption it may bee wrested and the right vse thereof ouerturned We see in this place in this Commandement of God that his Church and people may lawfully take vp weapons and make war against their enemies Abraham is saide to bee the Father of the faithfull and the faithfull to be carried into his bosome and to sit down with him in the Kingdome of Heauen Yet hee made warre Gen. 14 14 18 and ouer threw the enemies that had spoyled Sodome and carried away the riches of it as a prey and was not reprooued of Melchizedech the Priest of the liuing God but refreshed together with his army The like we might say of Moses Ioshua the Iudges and other godly Kings 1 Sam. 17 47 and 2 Sam. 25 28. who fought many battels by the commandement of the Lord. The Scripture teacheth that Dauid a man after Gods owne heart did fight the battels of God and the people of God standing in battell aray against the Philistims are called The hoast of the liuing God When the Souldiers heard the preaching of Iohn the fore-runner of Christ they came vnto him and asked of him what they must doe he did not disswade them from warre or perswade them to cast away their weapons but gaue them directions how to behaue themselues in that honourable profession Doe violence to no man neither accuse any falsely Luke 3 14. and be content with your wages Neither did Peter being sent for to come to Cornelius a captaine of the Italian Band a deuout man and one that feared God command him to follow a new trade of life Neither did Paul perswade Sergius Paulus the Deputy Acts 10 3 4. and 13 7 12 a prudent man to renounce that calling which no doubt they would haue done if the profession of Chiualry had not stood with the profession of Christianity The Apostle in the
vntoward but holde on in a constant course 2 Tim. 2. Proouing if God at any time will giue them repentance to come out of the snares of the Diuell of whom they are holden captiues Lastly we must testifie our sorrow for our people mourne for the hardnesse of their heart and be heartily greeued to see their vntowardnes that though the Sunne shine neuer so cleerely yet they shut their eies and will not behold the light of the truth whose eyes the god of this world hath blinded and hardened their hearts lest they should bee conuerted and saued This affection of vnfeigned sorrow was in Christ our Sauiour when he had preached with great power but small profit in the hearers He looked round about on them angerly mourning also for the hardnesse of their heart Mark 3 5. If these things bee found in vs readinesse of minde to care for the people painefulnesse in our places to turne them to God and sorrow of heart for their hardnesse and infidelity we may truely comfort our selues and be assured to be honoured of Christ both in this life and in the life to come CHAP. II. 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses and to Aaron saying 2. Euery man of the Children of Israel shall campe by his standard and vnder the Ensigne of their Fathers house farre off about the Tabernacle of the Congregation shall they pitch IN this Chapter is set foorth the disposing and ordering of their Tents For in the former chapter we haue heard how the people were numbred the Tribes distinguished and ouer euery one seuerall Princes appointed who were choise men euen the heads of the house of their Fathers to be Rulers Gouernors ouer this great multitude For what is the people without Princes but as an hoast and armie of men without Captaines to leade them as a shippe without a Pilot or as a body without an head or as an house without a maister The heathen haue seene thus far that the multitude is as a monster with many heads Horat. Epist resembling the confusion that was at Babel Wherefore the necessity of ouerseers being so great it pleased GOD first of al to appoint them Magistrates to take the muster Now wee haue heere to consider another testimony of Gods mercy toward them in that he doth diuide and distribute them into certaine rankes and regiments and maketh choise himselfe in what order they should pitch their Tents and likewise march forward toward the Land of Canaan in what manner they should make a stay and in what manner he would haue them remoue This was both necessary and profitable and not to be omitted seeing nothing can be more foule and deformed then to see a company of men gathered together without order and mingled together in all confusion The causes of this dealing of God toward his people are three Three causes why God assigneth to euery Tribe his place and order one in respect of himselfe another in respect of Israel the third in regard of the enemies of them both of God and his people The cause respecting God is that they and all other might see what a wise God they serue For he would haue his name not onely knowne in Israel but magnified throughout all the world If they professing the knowledge and seruice of the true God had wandered vp and down in the wilde and waste wildernesse in such troopes and bandes of men in a confused and disordered manner not knowing who should go before nor regarding who should follow after the name of God would haue beene dishonoured his wisedome impaired and his glory diminished It pleased him therefore euen in regard of himselfe to make manifest his wisedome and excellency in leading them foorth in most excellent and exquisite order and to assigne to euery one his proper place that they might say What god is like vnto our God Or who is to bee compared with him Who is so glorious in holinesse fearefull in prayses doing wonders Exod. 15 11 Let vs therefore confesse that he is wise in heart yea the wisest and mighty in strength yea the mightiest so that the foolishnesse of God is wiser then men and the weaknesse of God is stronger then men Iob 9 4 Esay 31 2 1 Cor. 1 25 and therefore to this God onely wise must bee praise and glory through Iesus Christ for euer Secondly hee leaueth them not to themselues but assigneth to each Tribe his proper mansion to take away from them all confusion and to cut off all matter of contention For except he had established as by a law the order that should be obserued among them and thereby decided all questions and controuersies that might arise touching priority precedency many hurli-burlies and heart-burnings would be entertained and part-takings would be nourished which being kindled at the first as a little sparke of fire would afterward breake out into such a fire and flame as would spread further and in the ende hardly be quenched For the tribe of Reuben challenging the preheminence in regard of birth-right would not easily lose his right but wold take it done in contempt and to his reproach to be put behinde to come after any other On the other side their harts were not so high and haughty to lift vp themselues aboue their brethren but the rest of the Tribes woulde haue thrust them downe as low and to their perpetuall disgrace and dishonour haue sunke them downe to the bottome and appointed them the last and lowest place in regard of the curse of Iacob that lay heauy vpon them who had saide long before Gen 49 4 Thou shalt not bee excellent thy dignity is gone Againe a new trouble and tumult would arise touching the sonnes of the Concubines for such as were borne of Rahel and Lea the two wiues of Iacob would neuer yeeld nor thinke it fit to make thē equal to themselues much lesse to suffer them to go before them and so to carpe and crow ouer them For as it was in their fathers while the corne was in the grasse hope of posterity was in the cradle so it would bee in the children We see the emulation that was between Isaac and Ismael betweene Iacob and Esau likewise betweene the sonnes of Iacob who were the founders and fountaines of the twelue Tribes Moreouer such as did exceede the other in multitude of men and strength of armes had tasted of Gods blessings before others would iudge themselues worthy to be honored and preferred and themselues wronged iniured vnlesse they had not onely the right hand of fellowship giuen them but the vpper hand of iurisdiction authority granted vnto them and thus the sonnes of Simeon would neuer haue suffered themselues to be brought into order and haue pitched vnder the standard of Reuben but haue iudged themselues worthy of the place of superiority and haue made the other their vnderlings as a footstoole to tread vpon For
vnderstand what the wil of God was they murmure not against it they enquire not the reason of it they stand not vpon their owne priuiledges there is no man thinketh better of himselfe then others nor offereth to breake the order transgresse the Law giuen vnto them But they did according to all that the Lord had commanded Moses Verse 34. The former point that concerneth the Commandement of God is double First it is set downe generally in the two first Verses what belongeth to all the Tribes indifferently namely that they must encampe euery one by the Ensigne of his Fathers house then particularly what concerneth the tribes in speciall in the residue of the chapter Verse 1 2. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Euery man of the children of Israel shal Campe c. Heere he beginneth to rehearse the order that was to bee obserued among them For there are two things which are most needfull in euerie thing that is done aright to wit number and order Wherefore after the description of their number he beginneth to direct them in the order which was to be kept among them We learne from Doctrine 1 hence to omit sundry impertinent collections and vnprofitable Allegations God delighteth to haue a comely order obserued in the Church Common-wealth which manie stand vpon seruing rather to please the eare then to profit the heart and to delight the outward man rather then to edifie the inwarde man I say we learne that God commandeth a comely order to bee obserued as well in the Church as the Commonwealth When Balaam the false Prophet mentioned hereafter in this booke sawe the Israelites thus ordered in their Tents as God appointeth in this place he was carried into an admiration of it Numb 24 5 6. How goodly are thy Tents O Iacob and thy habitations O Israel As the valleyes are they stretched foorth as Gardens by the Riuers side as the Aloe trees which the Lord hath planted as the Cedars beside the waters As if he should haue saide The Church of God consisting of this people is the verie picture and resemblance of most goodly order This speaketh the Prophet of the place that God had chosen to set his name in it Psal 122.3 4 5. Ierusalem is builded as a Citie that is compact together in it selfe whereunto the Tribes euen the Tribes of the Lord go vp according to the testimony to Israel to praise the Name of the Lord for there are Thrones set for iudgement euen the Thrones of the house of Dauid This Paul saw and obserued and commended in the Church of the Colossians Chapt. 2. verse 5. Though I he absent in the flesh yet am I vvith you in the Spirit reioycing and beholding your Order and your stedfast Faith in Christ These things to which we might adde and annexe sundry other testimonies are sufficient to shew vnto vs that God will haue all things in the Church and Commonwealth done in order The Reasons are euident For first God Reason 1 is the Author of order and not of confusion He appointeth in this Booke the order to bee obserued in their mansion in their peregrination in their possession of the Land The Apostle giueth vs this instruction touching God 1 Cor. 14 33 God is not the Authour of confusion but of peace as we see in all the Churches of the Saints Hence it is that we see an order in God himselfe euen in the holye and blessed Trinity though all the persons be coequall and coeternall yet there is an established order of the first person of the second person and of the third person not in regard of essence which is indiuisible yet for better order of teaching and instructing of vs to attaine to so much knowledge of his nature as the Scripture hath deliuered and we are able to conceiue Hence it is that the Father is first the Sonne is conceiued and deliuered in the next place and the holy Ghost proceeding from them both is expressed in the last place not thereby insinuating any inequality because none is in nature before or after other none is greater or lesse then other but onely intimating an order in existing or working as hee hath manifested himselfe in his worde vnto vs. As then God hath order in himselfe so he commandeth and commendeth an order to be vsed of vs. Secondly all wise men will order their affaires Reason 2 with wisedome and discretion and will dispose of them with seemlinesse comlinesse An expert Captaine that goeth against his enemies will keepe his Souldiours in good array whether he march or retire If he flye out of the fielde out of order one is readie to ouerthrow another and all are left to the mercy of his aduersarie Hence it is Veget. lib. 14 that they haue an eye to these things to the Sunne the Winde and the Dust that the Sunne be not in their faces that the Winde be not against them that the Dust bee not carried vppon them For the Sunne shining in their faces taketh away sight the Winde blowing contrary abateth their strength and the blow but helpeth the weapons of the enemy the Dust cast vppon them filleth and shutteth their eyes to their great hindrance A prouident house-keeper knoweth the necessitie commoditie and profite thereof in the administration of all his businesse and affayres Xenophon speaking of Socrates that nothing is so good as the right ordering of them The Philosophers in all their teaching shew vs this who haue broght the Arts and Sciences into Method and good order Common experience declareth that wee loue order when it is wanting wee doe wish and desire it when it is present we rest in it and at all times wee prayse and commend it Thirdly the Church is not a confused Reason 3 multitude shuffled and iumbled together where no man knoweth his place or his Office and one encroacheth vpon another but it is the house of the liuing God 1 Tim 3 15 the pillar and ground of truth Now in an house well ordered is to be seene the Maister as the Ruler the family subiect to his gouernment euery one imploying his proper gifts and no man vsurping the place and calling of another If this bee to bee seene in our priuate houses which haue a weaker foundation to beare them a lesse anker to holde them a feebler shore to vnderprop them and vnsurer means to containe and continue them how much more must we conceiue this of the Church of God Hebrewes 11. Esay 5 1. Ephes 5. which is the house that he hath builded the vineyard that his right hand hath planted the spouse of Christ which he hath loued the mountaine of the Lord which he hath prepared and the peculiar people which hee hath chosen Thus we see the doctrine sufficiently cleered and confirmed Let vs before we come to the vses diuert a little as it were out of the way and ordinary path to answer an obiection
Shepheard to leade them in greene pastures Mat. 9 36. Is it not a wofull miserable thing to see Satans kingdome flourish and to see him ruling in the hearts of men and as it were dancing in their soules No greefe or sorrow should be like vnto this to see so many thousands perish euerlastingly But there is no other way to destroy his kingdome to make him fall downe like lightening then to haue the glad tydings of the Gospell spread abroad in the earth Luke 10 42. Is it not a miserable thing to see a City besieged round about and to haue no watchman to watch it and giue warning of the approch of the enemy Who can doubt but such a City is neere to be taken and surprized God hath made the Ministers his watchmen they must blow the Trumpet Ezek. 3 18 and 33 9. and warne the wicked that they turne from their wickednesse and euill wayes and so dye not in their iniquity Is it not a grieuous thing to haue meate ready to putrifie and corrupt and yet want salt to season it The Ministers of the word are not onely the light of the world but also the salt of the earth Math. 5 13. without which the people are as vnsauoury flesh and stinking carrion in the nostrils of God or else what needed this salt Lastly is it not a miserable thing to be pittied of all men to stand vpon the shore and to see many ready to bee drowned and cast away To behold them tossed vp and downe with the waues and at euery blast of the winde like to be swallowed vp in the seas But thus it is with vs by nature we cannot chuse but perish except this meanes be prouided for vs as an Arke to saue vs. Alasse how many dead carkasses may wee see swimming and floating in the glassie sea of this world that haue no life in them This point is pointed out vnto vs in the vision that appeared to Paul in the night Acts 16.9 There s●●od a man of Macedonia and praied him saying Come ouer into Macedonia and helpe vs whereby he gathered assuredly that the Lord had called him to preach the Gospel vnto thē There are many things may bring vs into misery are able to make vs miserable but the want of Gods word and the sauing hearing of it bringeth a misery of all miseries euen an heap of all miseries which are as it were included in one by the Spirit of God speaking of the estate of the ten Tribes that had driuen away the Priests of the Lord 2 Chr. 15 3. Now for a long season Israel hath beene without the true God without a teaching Priest and without law Where mark that the holy Ghost ioyneth these three together God the Priest and the Law they that were without a teaching Priest were also without God and he that is without God is without all those things that should doe him good The like we see in the 13. chapter of the same book where Abijah concludeth against Israel that they could not prosper because they had banished the Priests of the Lord the sonnes of Aaron from them and on the contrary he saith concerning himselfe and Iudah As for vs the Lord is our God and wee haue not forsaken him 2 Chr. 13 10 and the Priests which minister vnto the Lord are the sonnes of Aaron and the Leuites waite vpon their businesse Verse 12. and afterward Behold God himselfe is with vs for our Captaine and his Priests with sounding Trumpets to cry alarme against you O children of Israel fight yee not against the Lord God of your Fathers for you shall not prosper If then wee would haue God to be with vs we must bee content to accept and make account of his Ministers if we cast them out with contempt from vs we say to the Lord also Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy waies Iob 21 14 15. who is the Almighty that we should serue him and what profite should wee haue if we pray vnto him Iob 21 14 15. Likewise the Prophet complaining of the desolation of the Sanctuary Psal 74 9. saith Wee see not our signes there is no more any Prophet neither is there among vs any that knoweth how long It was a great punishment inflicted vpon Caine to be driuen from the face of God Gen. 4 14 also vpon Agar Ismael the bond-woman and her sonne to bee cast out of the house of Abraham which was the Church of God Gen. 21 14 21. For that is as much as to bee separated from God to be banished from the word to be separated from his kingdome The Ministers are the guides to leade vs the way without them wee cannot but wander out of the way we are blind vnderstand nothing they open our eyes that we may see the truth Acts 8 31 and 26 18. ●he second ●proofe Secondly this reprooueth the vaine conceite and proud imagination of their hearts who hauing learned the principles of religiō and some grounds of knowledge proceed no further as if they had no more vse of the word whereas there is matter of instruction alwaies to be learned out of the word for all persons When wee haue eaten one kinde of meat one day we eate the next day as hungerly of it as we did before So ought we to come to the great Supper that God hath made vs againe and againe alwaies hungring and thirsting after the same This is most certaine and set it down as a most true rule the more knowledge we haue the more still we desire knowledge the greater our faith is the more we desire to haue it strengthened It is our daily praier that God would giue vs our daily bread Math 6 11. how much more then ought wee to craue at Gods hand the gift of spirituall food belonging to our soules that wee may be nourished to eternall life He is a foolish builder that when he hath begun to builde and laid the foundation giueth ouer Luk. 14 29. and neuer proceedeth to finish the worke but suffereth all men that passe by to laugh at him There is no people ought to be without the ministery it must alwaies remain among them that it may build them vp forward Eph. 4 13. and finish that which is begun Till wee all come in the vnity of faith and the knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Would we haue it saide of vs and obiected against vs This man began to build but was not able to make an end This man laide his hand to the plough but now he standeth still and looketh backe There is as great vse to be made of the word after wee are conuerted to the faith regenerated by the Spirit of God as when we first beleeued They thē are greatly deceiued that being puffed vp with an
serueth not onely to soften the waxe but to harden the clay Hence it is that many are made worse by the word ●atth 13.15 but that falleth out through their owne corruption not through the nature of the word Hence it is that the Lord saith Make the heart of this people fatte and make their hearts heauy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and heare with their eares and conuert and be healed Esay 6.10 ●say 6.10 Be it therefore that none are commonly worse then common hearers who heare indeed but doe not vnderstand and see indeed but doe not perceiue yet is the word to be preached and published though it be the sauor of death vnto death in those that heare it It is as the raine or snow that falleth from heauen which returneth not thither againe but watereth the earth and maketh it bud and bring forth that it may giue seed to the sower and bread to the eater so is it with the word that goeth forth out of the mouth of God it doth not returne vnto him voide but it accomplisheth that which he pleaseth and prospereth in the thing whereunto he sendeth it Esay 55. ●say 55 10.11 Lastly the wickednesse of euill hearers ought to be no barre against the preaching of the word forasmuch as euill persons are oftentimes wonne by the Gospel Publicans and harlots are brought by it to the kingdome of God Matth. 21.31 ●atth 21.31 Many of these that crucified the Lord of life and put our Sauiour to death were pricked in their hearts and said to Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Act. 2.37 ●ct 2.37 They gladly receiued the word and were baptized so that in one day there were added to the Church about three thousand soules The like we might say of the Iailour notwithstanding his cruelty and persecution of the Apostles he came to them and said Sirs what must I doe to be saued Act. 16 30. ●ct 16 30. Who preached vnto him faith in Christ by whose Ministry hee was conuerted Shall we then reason as these men doe Hearers are wicked and as bad as others that heare not therefore away with the word out of the Church pull down the chaire of Moses and downe with all preaching let vs haue no more hearing and let the sound of the word be buried for euer O foolish reason O damnable conclusion Nay wee may inferre contrariwise Such as heard long are sinful stil therfore let them heare more cheerefully and let the Minister deale more roundly with them Let them be told and taught that God will take an account of their hearing according to the meanes he hath afforded vnto them that by the word they shall be iudged at the last day and that as much hath beene committed vnto them so much shal be required at their hands againe that they are to heare the voyce of God while it is called to day and are to take heed they neglect not the accepted time and that as Christ hath knocked long at the doores of their hearts so they know not how suddenly he will depart from them Verse 4. And Nadab and Abihu dyed before the Lord c. We haue already declared how God immediately after the ordering of the Armies of the Israelites describeth the tribe of Leui that was exempted and priuiledged out of that muster and multitude and of what family Aaron came Now wee are to shew what became of his sonnes who albeit they were the sonnes of one man yet they neither liued nor dyed after one manner For the two eldest Nadab and Abihu Leuit. 10.4 Num. 26.60 presuming to offer incense to God and to burne it with strange fire were themselues consumed with fire there went a fire from the Lord and deuoured them and they dyed before the Lord with sudden death Thus by the same thing wherein they offered they perished strange fire brought downe a strange iudgement to declare the iustice of God against sinners but of this point we shall haue better occasion to speake farther in the fift Chapter Thus it fel out in the family of Aaron his two sonnes dyed by fire euen they dyed before their father 1 Chron. 24.2 and had no children to whom the Priesthood might descend therefore Eleazar and Ithamar executed the Priests office When the Leuites did offer sacrifice in the Tabernacle God sent fire from heauen Leuit. 9.24 to consume the sacrifice whereupon he commanded the Priestes that the fire should be kept euermore burning vpon the Altar and neuer be suffered to goe out Leuit. 6.13 Which the Gentiles also obserued by a foolish imitation So then their transgression against God consisted in these two things First they vsed strange fire contrary to the commandement of God whereas they should haue taken it from the Altar Leuit. 1.8 Leuit. 1.8 Secondly they entred into the holy place which was not lawfull for the high Priest himselfe to doe but vnder certaine conditions and at a certaine time Leui. 16.1 2. Leuit. 16.1 2. Exod. 30.10 Exod. 30.10 Heb. 9.7 Heb 9.7 Thus then as they sinned openly so God punished them openly and made them publike examples vnto others that should succeed them and come after them in that office as he speaketh Leuit. 10.3 Then Moses said vnto Aaron This is it that the Lord spake I will be sanctified in them that come nigh me and before all the people I will be glorified Babing●on Leuit ch 10. obser 6. It was but yesterday as it were that Aaron and his sonnes had a famous and a glorious consecration into the greatest and highest dignity vpon earth but these sonnes so lately exalted and honoured now lye destroyed before their fathers face to his ouermuch griefe and anguish not by any ordinary and accustomed death but by fire from heauen for their sins and breach of the Law and commandement of God We learne from hence that Godly parents haue Doctrine 2 oftentimes vngodly and disobedient children Godly parents haue oftentimes vngodly children Such as are reformed themselues haue children vnreformed We see this in Adam the first father he had not onely Abel the righteous who obtained good report that he pleased God but also Caine who was of that euill one and slew his brother 1. Ioh. 3. 1 Ioh. 3.12 Because his owne workes were euill and his brothers good Noah a iust man and perfect in his generations Gen. 6.9 had cursed Ham as well as blessed Shim Gen. 9.26 We see this in Abrahams house the Father of the faithfull who rereceiueth this commendation frō the mouth of God himselfe Gen. 18. Gen. 18.19 I know him that hee will command his children and his houshold after him that they keepe the way of the Lord to do iustice and iudgement that the Lord may bring vpon Abraham that which hee hath spoken of him yet he had in his
Ministers and to make them labour more conscionably then they haue done so it should stirre vp the people to seeke after knowledge which is as the light of the eye or as a candle in the house whereby we may see what we do and how we serue God whether truely or falsely and whether we goe right or wrong It is enough with the greatest sort to do as most doe and to practise that manner of the worshippe of God which is countenanced and continued by authority albeit they can giue no reason of it neither know how to warrant it It belongeth vnto vs not only to professe the truth but to bee able to maintaine the truth which we professe against all gainsayers and such enemies as seeke to rob vs of it It is a duty required of vs not to content our selues to doe as the rest of our neighbours do but to be ready alwaies to giue an answer to euery man that asketh vs a reason of the hope that is in vs with meeknesse of spirit 1 Pet. 3 15. ●et 3 15. Euery man presumeth he hath the truth and therefore they neuer enquire farther into the matter nor labor to satisfie their own harts vpon what grounds they stand They doe as their honest neighbours they think it no good manners to differ from them they account it folly to seeke to be wiser then their fore-fathers so they iumpe with the Church of Rome that teacheth her Disciples to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they can yeeld no reason how the Church beleeueth Whereby it appeareth that albeit all men are worshippers of God yet the greatest sort know not how they worship God so that we may say vnto them as Christ spake to the woman of Samaria Ye worship ye know not what Iohn 4 22. ●●●n 4 22. Let all such know that they want true comfort in their worshipping forasmuch as they know not whether they please God or not They are like men that shoote at a marke which know not whether they shoot short or shoot beyond the marke or whether they shoot wide or how much they are wide or whether they hit the marke Thus it fareth with ignorant worshippers they are wholly ignorant whether they go astray in the matter or in the manner of his worshippe whether they doe that which God requireth or that which hee condemneth For this is no otherwise nor no where learned but by the word so that all such as are ignorant thereof are in a wretched case and wofull condition and not farre from destruction whatsoeuer they doe esteeme of themselues or others iudge of them 5. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 6. Bring the Tribe of Leui neere and present them before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him 7. And they shall keepe his charge and the charge of the whole Congregation before the Tabernacle of the Congregation to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 8. And they shall keepe all the instruments of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and the charge of the children of Israel to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 9. And thou shalt giue the Leuites vnto Aaron and to his sonnes they are wholly giuen vnto him out of the children of Israel 10. And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sonnes and they shall waite on their Priests Office and the stranger that commeth nigh shall be put to death 11. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites from among the children of Israel in stead of all the first borne that openeth the matrice among the children of Israel therefore the Leuites shall bee mine 13. Because all the first borne are mine Exod. 13 1. Leuit. 27 26. Luc. 2 23. for on the day that I smote all the first borne in the Land of Egypt I hallowed vnto me all the first borne in Israel both man and beast mine they shall bee I am the Lord. Hitherto of the first part of the Preface consisting in a description of Aarons sonnes and in a relation what became of them part of them dying in their sinnes and part succeeding in the Priests Office Now followeth the second part in these words which is a presentation of the Leuites before him Touching this whole Tribe we must obserue that it was diuided and sorted into two rankes whereof the first is the Priests and the second the rest commonly called by the common name of Leuites who were not admitted into the former order as appeareth more euidently in the 16 chapter following as also in the 18 chapter Touching the Priests they are of two sorts Of the high Priest the one was as the head the other as his hands one was the chiefe aboue all the rest the other were inferiour as assistants vnto him The chiefe was the high Priest Sigon de rep Heb●ae li. 5 c. 2. of whom the Scripture setteth downe foure things First his consecration he was brought before the Altar he was washed with water he was cloathed with those holy garments that God had appointed he had the sacred oyle powred vpon his head lastly sacrifice was offered on the Altar for his sanctification and his garments were sprinkled with the blood of it Secondly the things that were required in him being consecrated in the former manner which are cheefely these hee might not be defectiue or deformed in body his wife must be a virgin of his owne people he might not vncouer his head rent his garments nor go in to mourn for any that was dead though it were his father or mother Thirdly the Scripture setteth downe his imployment which was to goe daily into the Sanctuary to light the Lampes to burne Incense and euery weeke to prouide the shew-bread on the feast daies to offer the peoples sacrifices with the other Priests and once in the yeare on the day of expiation to enter into the Holiest of all to make prayer for himselfe and the people Fourthly his attire or holy vestiments in which he was to perform this seruice of God which were these six in number a brest-plate an Ephod a Robe a broidred coat a miter a girdle Of the inferiour Priests Touching the Priests of inferiour condition they had the same kinde of consecration which the high Priest had in sacrificing they were like vnto him and in the seruice of the Sanctuary in burning incense in prouiding the bread of proposition and in preparing looking to the lampes and lights This was the difference in these betweene him them that he was the chiefe and they were helpers he was the directer they were directed and guided by him Besides this was peculiar to the high Priest that hee consulted with God by Vrim and Thummim Exod. 28 30. Leuit. 16 30. and entred into the holiest place to make attonement to cleanse and hallow it from the sinnes of the people Their vestiments were the same sauing that the high Priest onely
people yet he would haue his children to content themselues to be ranged among the ordinary Leuites though they were not aduanced to be in the number of the Priests much lesse to be the high Priests And note the sincerity of Moses himselfe that he is not ashamed to set downe this in writing and to commit it to posterity so that he cannot be suspected of any shew of ambition or to giue any the least occasion to the vngodly of slandering him Thus do the writers of holy Scriptures deale without all partiality euen in matters that do concerne themselues This we see in Dauid Psal 51 in the title of it who mentioneth his committing of adultery with the wife of Vriah and his repentance for the same The Prophet Ionah Ionah 1 3 17. reporteth his flying from the presence of God and the iudgement that fell vpon him for it in that Prophesie The Apostle Paul spareth not to tell the Church and to leaue it to all posterity that he was a blasphemer a persecutor and an oppressor 1 Tim. 1 13. One borne out of due time the least of the Apostles not worthy to be called an Apostle because he persecuted the Church of God 1 Cor. 15 8 9. Behold therfore the purity of the word of God learne to confesse it and endeuour to finde this effect of it in our hearts Besides we are to obserue and marke from hence that the Tribe of Leui of small and little beginnings did make wonderfull proceedings for whereas he begat three sonnes Gershon had onely two Merari two and Kohath foure who could haue expected so fruitfull a posterity that twelue men in so short a time should swarme into so many thousands Thus doth GOD worke mightily by weake meanes both in the naturall generation and in the spirituall regeneration that his glory might more brightly and beautifully appeare We haue seene and shewed already how God euen when his people were most vexed oppressed did then most of all encrease and multiply them and so manifested his power in their preseruation Likewise also we see in the new Testament he chose out twelue Apostles and sent them into the world not furnished with carnall weapons Erasm praefac in Iraeneum nor armed with the force or fauour or friendship of mortall men By such as were vnskilfull he ouercame the wisedome of the wise by few in number he subdued very many Nations by the weake he vanquished the strong by an vnwarlike company he conquered euery high hold that lifted vp it selfe against God laid it equall with the ground by such as were vnnoble and vnknowne hee dimmed darkned al the glory of the world by silly and simple sheepe he tamed the fiercenesse of roaring Lyons that is the cruelty of bloody tyrants and by innocent Doues hee draue away wily and subtill serpents Last of all albeit Kohath were not the elder brother and consequently the Ruler of Leuies house yet in the common ministery he was preferred before the rest and had the chiefest preheminence and place of honour aboue thē to teach vs that God sheweth mercy from the fountaine of his owne holy will and pleasure euen as he aduanced Moses and called him from feeding his fathers sheepe without any dignity or desert that was found in him Let vs all confesse this when we receiue any kindnesse and mercy from him otherwise we rob him of the glory due to his name But of these points we haue spoken elsewhere and therefore we will come to the doctrines Verse 27. And of Kohath was the family of the Amramites c. Wee are to note that which was expressed before and is repeated againe heereafter but especially is pointed out in this diuision that the office committed to this family is called a charge and ministration they had the charge of the Sanctuary verse 28. Againe their charge shall be the Arke and the Table and the Candlesticke verse 31. And afterward Eleazar shall haue the ouersight of thē that keepe the charge of the Sanctuary verse 32. From hence we learne what the office of the Doctrine Ministery is namely The M●●●●ry is an 〈◊〉 of charge that it is an office of charge It is required of all the Ministers carefully to looke to the Churches and charges committed vnto them and to attend to the flocke that dependeth vpon them The Ministery is a great burden and a work full of employment This doth Peter by way of exhortation teach the Elders Feede the flocke of God which is among you taking the ouersight thereof not by constraint but willingly c 1 Pet. 5 2. Thus doth Paul instruct the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28. Take heed vnto your selues and to all the flocke ouer which the holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood And when he writeth to Timothy he saith This is a true saying If a man desire the office of a Bishop 1 Tim. 3 1 ● hee desireth a good worke So likewise in the same Chapter If a man know not how to rule his owne house how shall he take care of the Church of God And in the second Epistle chap. 4 verse 1 2. I charge thee before God and the Lord Iesus Christ who shall iudge the quicke and dead at his appearing and his kingdome preach the word be instant in season out of season reprooue rebuke exhort with all suffering and doctrine Whereby wee see that the Ministery is an ouersight and the Ministers Ouerseers and the end of their office a caring for the Church of God diligently and vncessantly This may farther be shewed vnto vs by the Reason 1 force of reason First all the titles that are giuen vnto them are as so many goades to pricke them forward or as spurres clapt to their sides I will onely speake of two that they are Shepheards and Watchmen The Ministers are Pastors or Shepheards Ezek. 34.2 Eph. 4 11. Iere. 23 1 the church of God is as a flocke of sheepe subiect to many enemies as the diuell seducers deceiuers heretickes euill dooers euen as an heard is to many wolues and therefore they must be carefully looked vnto Besides they are called watchmen the Church is as a Citty besieged day and night by strong and mighty enemies Ezek. 3 17. Sonne of man I haue made thee a watchman vnto the house of Israel therfore heare the word at my mouth giue them warning from me It behoueth therefore the spiritual watchman to keepe diligent watch Secondly the Ministers are fitly called the Reason 2 Lords committees and therefore they must giue an account for the soules committed vnto their charge Our life must goe for their liues our soule must answer for their soules if they perish through our default This the Apostle declareth Heb. 13 17. Obey them that haue the rule ouer you and submit your selues for they watch for your soules as they that
be as a toy or trifle vnto vs yet at least let vs alwaies haue before vs the iudgement of God vpon our selues and be well assured that the wrongfull and vniust detaining of the Lords portion from the Lords Pastours shall bring such a curse vpon the rest of our substance that it shall be as the eares of corne that are blasted yea it shall kindle such a fire in the middest of our houses that it shall consume them with the timber thereof and the stones thereof The Lord hauing by the Prophet Malachi charged his people with spoiling him in tithes and offerings he addeth this in the next words Ye are cursed with a curse for ye haue spoiled me Mal. 3 9. euen this whole Nation The zeale that Dauid had for the house of GOD was very great so that he professeth it had euen eaten him vp Psal 69 and indeed he sheweth no lesse by his owne practise For when Araunah the Iebusite as a King in the willingnesse of spirit offered to giue to Dauid Oxen for burnt sacrifice and the threshing instruments for wood that he might build an altar and offer thereon he would not accept of it at his hands 2 Sam. 24 24. neither offer to the Lord his God that which cost him nothing as one esteeming in so doing the precious things of GOD light and of small account O how farre are these men from this heauenly affection of this holy seruant of God He accounted nothing too good to giue to God but they account it an happy turne if they might goe away scot-free and pay nothing at all toward the maintenance of the Ministery of the word It is strange to see how bountifull many are and euen prodigall that they care not what they waste and consume in following their owne pleasures pastimes and vanities of their corrupt hearts and yet how backward and pinching they are oftentimes for one halfepeny that is going from them and comming eyther toward the poore or toward the Minister But marke the secret and iust iudgement of God vpon them and tremble at it or rather feare him that inflicteth it and paieth them home in their owne kinde punisheth them proportionably according to their sinne for he detaineth his graces from them and sendeth them poore and leane soules that are ready to famish and perish through want of heauenly and spirituall food Two extremes touching the Ministers True it is there haue beene two extremes in the world both touching the estimation of their persons touching the compensation of their labours In former times the people did so highly account of them that they did sticke and cleaue too much to their persons and therefore Paul saith 1 Cor. 3 5 7. Who is Paul and who is Apollo but the Ministers by whom ye beleeued euen as the Lord gaue to euery man so then neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that gaue the increase but in our times there appeareth not such forwardnesse wherein they are contemned despised This is one extreme Likewise in former times they were ready to giue all and yet they thought al to be too little now they would willingly if they might take away all so that if some positiue lawes did not stay them and restraine them their consciences are so large How the Ministers are dealt withal that they would suffer them well enough to take the corne and feed the Minister with the straw they could be content to fill themselues with the Calues out of the stall and to eate the fattest of them and then to reserue the refuse for the Minister and to giue them the bones to gnaw vpon which they offer to their dogges and yet thinke that too good for them A goodly recompence for their great paines They are not ashamed to share the wool of the flocke among themselues and to cloathe themselues therewith and then to cast the tailes to their Teachers and to stoppe their mouthes with the dung and drauery that is good for nothing Thus are they affected toward religion and the promoting of the word and worship of God they care not though all rudenesse and barbarisme were among vs and the world were become a receptacle of all atheisme like a wildernesse ouergrowne with nettles bryars and all noysome weeds if so be they might get any aduantage by the ruine and ouerthrow of the Gospel In the late daies of superstition which many now liuing can yet remember the people generally were most bountifull to their sacrificing Masse-Priests who fed them with corne that is musty and mouldred or rather with huskes fitter for swine then for the seruants of God and yet they thought nothing too good for them nothing too much to bestow vpon them as the idolatrous Egyptians nourished their idolatrous Priests in the yeares of famine Gen. 47 Gen. 47 22. so that their Land was not set to sale hauing a portion assigned vnto them of Pharaoh and eating the portion which he gaue them Now our people are better taught yet they pay all duties and demands for the most part grudgingly and murmure at all things that go from themselues as if a man did cut a peece of flesh out of their sides or let them blood at the hart veine Then they had a zeale though not according to knowledge and a conscience though it were blinde now indeed by reason of the labours of the Ministers which stretch out their hands all the day long spend their strength among them they haue science but little or no conscience the Gospel would be welcome vnto them at least in word prouided that it do not any way displease them or disease them neither be costly or burdensome vnto thē otherwise if they must depart with any of their morsels they care not for it nor esteeme any thing of it nor will be ruled by it nor order their liues after it 33. Of Merari was the family of the Mahlites and the family of the Mushites these are the families of Merari 34. And those that were numbred of them according to the number of all the males from a moneth old and vpward were sixe thousand and two hundred 35 And the chiefe of the house of the families of Merari was Zuriel the sonne of Abihail these shall pitch on the side of the Tabernacle Northwards 36. And vnder the custody and charge of the sonnes of Merari shall be the boards of the Tabernacle and the barres thereof and the pillars thereof and the sockets thereof and all the vessels thereof and all that serueth thereto 37. And the pillars of the Court round about and their sockets and their pinnes and their cords 38. But those that encampe before the Tabernacle toward the East euen before the Tabernacle of the Congregation Eastward shall be Moses and Aaron and his sonnes keeping the charge of the Sanctuary for the charge of the children of Israel and the stranger that commeth nigh
yeeres old and vpward euen vnto fifty yeres old euery one that entreth into the seruice for the worke in the Tabernacle of the congregation 36. And those that were numbred of them by their families were two thousand seuen hundred and fifty 37. These were they that were numbred of the families of the Kohathites all that might doe seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation which Moses and Aaron did number according to the commandement of the Lord by the hand of Moses 38. And those that were numbred of the sons of Gershon throughout their families and by the houses of their fathers 39 From thirtie yeeres old and vpward euen vnto fifty yeres old euery one that entreth into the seruice for the worke in the Tabernacle of the congregation 40 Euen those that were numbred of them throughout their families by the houses of their fathers were two thousand and sixe hundred and thirtie 41 These are they that were numbred of the families of the sonnes of Gershon of all that might doe seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation whom Moses and Aaron did number according to the commandement of the Lord. 42 And those that were numbred of the families of the sonnes of Merari throughout their families by the house of their fathers 43 From thirty yeeres old and vpward euen vnto fifty yeeres old euery one that entreth into the seruice for the worke in the Tabernacle of the congregation 44 Euen those that were numbred of them after their families were three thousand and two hundred 45 These he chose that were numbred of the families of the sonnes of Merari whom Moses and Aaron numbred according to the word of the Lord by the hand of Moses 46 All those that were numbred of the Leuites whom Moses and Aaron and the chiefe of Israel numbred after their families and after the house of their fathers 47 From thirty yeeres old and vpward euen vnto fifty yeeres old euery one that came to doe the seruice of the Ministery and the seruice of the burden in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 48 Euen those that were numbred of them were eight thousand and fiue hundred and fourescore 49 According to the commandement of the Lord they were numbred by the hand of Moses euery one according to his seruice and according to his burden thus were they numbred of him as the Lord commanded Moses In the former part of the Chapter we haue spoken of the commandement of God wherwith Moses and Aaron were instructed to take the number of the Leuites now of the obedience yeelded vnto it which is answerable to the commandements A threefold commandement bringeth forth a threefold obedience So then we are to obserue that as they receiued the commandements they executed them in order as they were directed vnto them When God required three things at their hands they accounted not themselues discharged by performing one of them and leauing the other two nor by performing two of them and leauing the third vndone as if the doing of part should beare out the neglect of the other part but three they receiued and three they executed Their obedience therefore was perfect and entire A point worthy of our imitation an example that should be put in practise of vs. We must shew our selues to be his children by our obedience forasmuch as his seruants we are to whom we obey Besides in the numbring of these families they did not follow their owne humours to doe that last which they were commanded to doe first or first which they were appointed to doe last but without all shew of innouation or desire of Soueraignty or note of partiality or suspicion of vaine-glory or contempt of any family they obserued the course and order precisely which God charged them to obserue He willed them to number the family of the Kohathites first then the Gershonites and last of all the Merarites Thus then do they testifie their obedience for they number them all and they number first the Kohathites secondly the Gershonites and thirdly the Merarites This is done two wayes first particularly then generally Particularly touching the Kohathites he setteth downe the lawfull age of all that were to bee numbred from 30 yeeres old and vpward vnto 50. yeeres old Secondly the summe of the family which amounted to 2750. 2750. persons ver 36. Thirdly the end of this numbring that they might doe seruice in the Tabernacle of the Congregation ver 37. The second family is of the Gershonites of whom we are to obserue 1. the lawfull age of them 2. 2630. the iust number of them 3. the end of numbring of them as we did in the former The last family is of the Merarites first he sheweth at what age they were numbred 2. to what summe they amounted and 3. the end of their numbring 3200. And this is the particular summe of them the totall summe of all the families put together 8580. is handled in the last part of the Chapter Where also marke the age of all that were brought within the compasse of this numbring to wit all from thirty yeere old to fifty fit to do seruice in the Tabernacle Secondly the maner of the performance of their obedience ver 49. according to the commandement of the Lord. Before the doctrine of this place commeth to be handled Question certaine questions arising out of the words are first to be answered First it may be asked how so many could be emploied in the Ministery I answer Answer not all ministred at one time but in their courses and turnes as we may see how Dauid afterward did distribute them and so diuide their labours according to their families 1 Chron. 24 1. and in the new Testament we reade that Zachary the Priest was of the course Abia Luke 1.5 Againe it may be demanded whether all these that are here numbred serued in the Tabernacle or not Are we to thinke that all could be fit for the Lords seruice or that who so would might be consecrated and that none of all these or of their children were kept from the altar I answere Answer as before they had their courses and seuerall offices some for burden some for sacrifices and such as were sufficient for teaching taught the people and when vnlearned Leuites occupied the chaire of Moses God stir●ed vp Prophets extraordinarily to whom the people resorted 2 King 4.23 But touching Gods ordinance we see he would haue his Church richly furnished and plentifully prouided of able teachers that all might be instructed and that none should be ignorant of his wayes ●●estion Thirdly how doth this stand with the commandement of God in the first Chapter There he chargeth Moses that he should not number the Tribe of Leui chap. 1.49 Heere he is appointed to number them Hath God now changed his minde and altered his purpose to command that which before he forbad I answere ●●●wer the meaning is to be taken out of the words
themselues For he saith in the place before named and mentioned Thou shalt not take the summe of them among the children of Israel that is while thou art reckoning the number and taking the muster of the other Tribes thou shalt not meddle with this Tribe who were exempted from the warres And the reason thereof is rendred Num. 1.50 Thou shalt appoint the Leuites ouer the Tabernacle of the Testimony and ouer all the vessels thereof and ouer all things that belong vnto it He calleth it sometimes the Tabernacle of the Congregation because the people assembled at it for the worship of God and sometimes the Tabernacle of the Testimony ●●mb 17 8. ●●abl annot Nume 1. because in the Tabernacle was placed the Arke and in the Arke the two Tables of the Testimony in which the ten commandements were written wherby God testified his will to the Israelites both what he would haue them doe and what he would not haue them to doe Verse 34. 35. And Moses and Aaron and the chiefe of the Congregation In these words beginneth the execution of the Commandement of God Moses numbring the Leuites according to their families and assigning to euery one of them their seuerall offices and charges This obedience of his is worthy of great praise inasmuch as in this description of the numbring of these families he remoueth farre from himselfe all suspition of giuing scope to his owne affections and therefore he signifieth that he did nothing of pride or partiality aduancing the Leuites before the other Tribes or preferring the family of the Kohathites before the rest of the Leuites but hath dealt in all things as became the true minister of God euen according to the commandement and commission that he had receiued of whom it is said afterward chap. 12. My seruant Moses is faithfull in all mine house ●umb 12.7 ●eb 3.5 euen as in the building of the Tabernacle he added nothing of his owne but did all things according to the patterne that was shewed him in the mount We learne from hence that whensoeuer we haue heard the word and had the will of God reuealed vnto vs we must yeeld Doctrine 1 obedience to the same The word heard must be obeyed It is a duty required of vs to practise so much of Gods trueth as is in mercy made knowne vnto vs. So did Noah Gen. 6.22 when he was commanded to make an Arke he did it as God commanded So did Abraham when he was commanded to circumcise himselfe and the males in his family Gen. 17. This is it that Moses teacheth the people after all his teaching and exhorting of them Deut. 10.12.13 Now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to walke in all his wayes and to loue him and to serue the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soule that thou keepe the commandements of the Lord his ordinances which I command thee this day for thy wealth And in the beginning of the next chapter Deut. 11.1 Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God and keepe his charge and his statutes and his iudgements and his commandements alwayes The Apostle Iames vrgeth this duty vpon those that are swift to heare and haue receiued the word with meeknes which is able to saue their soules chap. 1.22 Be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne soules Christ our Sauiour describing the good hearers by the good ground saith They bring forthwith patience some sixty fold some thirty fold Luke 8.15 Matth. 13.23 and some an hundred fold euery one some fruit no man is barren altogether To conclude this point it was the exhortation of Moses and of the Priests and Leuites Deut. 27.9 10 which they spake vnto all Israel Take heed and hearken O Israel this day thou art become the people of the Lord thy God thou shalt therefore obey the voyce of the Lord thy God and doe his commandements and his statutes which I command thee this day So thē we must all know what is required of vs to wit to be doers and not bare hearers to be practisers and not talkers to be obeyers and followers not idle professors Maruell not at all at this For first to encline Reason 1 our hearts to walke in his wayes that we haue learned is an infallible signe that we truely feare God This we see in the example of Abraham God tempted him and said vnto him Take thy sonne thine only sonne Isaac whom thou louest and offer him for a burnt offering he preferred the commandement of God before the loue to his owne sonne God accepted his willing mind and therefore he heareth this comfort Lay not thine hand vpon the lad neither doe thou any thing vnto him Gen. 22.12 for now I know thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thy sonne thine only sonne from me Not that he was ignorant before but because he made that knowne to himselfe and to others which before was known to him alone and not thoroughly to Abraham himselfe For what is in vs we know not certainly our selues vntill we be prooued Thus then we see that Abrahams notable obedience in so great a tryall was an euident testimony that hee truely loued God Reason 2 Secondly obeience is alwayes ioyned with recompence God-rewarding it to the ful who is a most rich pay-master No man shall serue him for nought If Laban could say thus to Iacob Gen. 29.15 Because thou art my brother shouldest thou therefore serue me for nought will not the Lord much rather say to vs because ye are my children should ye therfore serue me for nothing The Prophet Dauid setting downe the singular fruits and effects of the word of God saith By it is thy seruant made circumspect Psal 19.11 in keeping of it there is great reward Consider brefly how it was with Abraham of whom we spake before he receiued an hard commandement himselfe to offer vp in sacrifice his only sonne yet because he delayed not to put it in present execution he receiued a threefold reward first God deliuered his sonne from death secondly he commendeth the faith of the father and thirdly he repeateth the promise to him and confirmeth his faith in it Gen. 22. Reason 3 Thirdly if we hearken vnto him he will hearken vnto vs if we serue him he will not be backeward or behinde hand with vs to serue vs. This doth the Prophet Esay point out vnto vs chap. 58.9 Thou shalt call and the Lord shall answere thou shalt cry and hee shall say Here I am On the other side if we will not hearken to obey him he will neuer hearken vnto vs neither regard when we call vpon him The wise man bringeth in wisdome crying without and vttering her voyce in the streetes Pro. 1.24 25.26 Because I haue called and ye refused I haue stretched out mine hand and no man regarded but ye
them that mourne in Sion and hang downe their heads through feeling of the wrath of God for their manifold sinnes they are to be comforted as well thereby as if the Lord himselfe from the highest heauens should comfort them and speake peace vnto their consciences There cannot be a greater enemy to the sauing hearing of the word then to imagine this that we haue nothing to doe with God but all with man when we heare the word This shaketh attention cooleth zeale breedeth negligence and hindereth obedience Secondly this serueth to reprooue all such Vse 2 as yeeld no obedience vnto God and his will but rebell against him openly and stubbornly and will doe nothing at all that hee commandeth These are not vnfitly called traitors and rebels against God The name of a traitour is most odious among all men no man can abide to be so accounted But what shall it auaile vs to be faithfull vnto men and vnfaithfull to God to obey them and to disobey him Moses telleth the people of Israel that they haue beene rebellious against the Lord Deut. 9.24 from the day that he knew them Such as rose vp against Aaron and would not submit themselues to Gods ordinance in his Ministery are called the children of rebellion Numb 17.10 and they are exhorted not to rebell against the Lord Numb 14.9 It is a vaine thing to say we are no traitors we hate the name of treason if we nourish open rebellion against God who is the King of kings Such as set themselues against Gods word and yeeld no obedience vnto it are rancke traitors and we need craue no pardon if we call them the children of rebellion Secondly it reprooueth such as prolong the time with God haue no leisure to hearken yet vnto him and so make him attend vpon them No man man must stand to debate or consult with flesh and blood whether he should obey God or not the wisedome and pollicy of man must not bee our counsellours they will deceiue vs and withhold vs from yeelding obedience vnto Gods commandements In his matters we must not pleade pollicy but when he commandeth we must with all speed yeeld obedience 1 King 13.9.18.19.21.26 The Prophet that contrary to Gods commandement did eat bread and drinke water in the house of the olde Prophet was deuoured of a Lyon this was the iudgement denounced against him Foras much as thou hast disobeyed the mouth of the Lord and hast not kept the commandement which the Lord thy God commanded thee c. thy carcase shall not come into the sepulchers of thy fathers The fruit of al disobediēce is our owne destruction notwithstanding our owne good intents which may please our selues but cannot please God When we haue his word we must not suffer our selues to be deluded by traditions by visions or by pretended reuelations The onely word reuealed vnto vs must put al other meanes to silence and make them giue place He that was commanded by the word of God to strike the Prophet and refused it was slaine by a Lyon 1 King 20.35 Let these examples make vs wise and their falles teach vs to stand vpright It is extreme folly to yeeld to the false and fained perswasions of ignorant men who goe about to tell vs that it is not so necessary a duty to obey the word of God deliuered vnto vs as many would make vs to beleeue that we shall be hated and derided of all men and therefore it is better for vs to seeke the fauour and good will of men and the applause of the world then to be singular and so contemned Let not vs be lulled asleepe with these sweet songs which are no better then cunning enchantments neither be led a side by such deceitfull counsellers as goe about to bring vs into eternall perdition Thirdly it reproueth such as part stakes betweene God and themselues and regard not to yeeld entire obedience vnto him but obey to halues For as Agrippa was perswaded somewhat to become a Christian so are these resolued a little to obey Saul was commanded to root out the Amalekites with all that was theirs from man to beast but he set his owne wisedome before the wisedome of the Lord sparing Agag and the better part of the sheepe to offer sacrifice vnto him But God spared not him for his kingdome was rent from him and giuen to his neighbor that was better then he The children of Israel were streightly charged of God to destroy the nations into whose land he would bring them lest by suffering them among them and by ioyning themselues with them they should learne their manners and serue their Idols which would turne to their ruine and destruction They executed part of his commandement they destroyed many of them took their cities yet because they saued a part and spared a remnant of them they found them by wofull experience to be thornes and prickes in their flesh Iudg. 2.3 and afterward they liued many yeres in their slauery and subiection as the booke of Iudges doth witnesse God looketh for full and perfect obedience so that there is no halting or faultering before him We see how Ananias and Sapphira were smitten with sudden death because they kept backe part of the price of that which they had vowed and dedicated vnto God Act. 5. This turned to their vtter destruction albeit they were taken to be zealous and forward disciples So shall it be with vs if we be like vnto them Let vs take heed of hypocrisie let vs labour to be entire and giue him the whole heart Vse 3 Thirdly let vs seeke after knowledge and vnderstanding of the will of God For how can that seruant practise and performe his masters will that neuer knoweth nor regardeth to know what he requireth or can that subiect obey the law of the Magistrate that is wholly ignorant of the Law The Apostle requireth that the word of Christ dwell richly in vs in all wisedome Col. 3.16 The true knowledge of God is the fountaine and foundation of all true obedience From hence as from a roote spring forth and spread abroad faith in Christ hope in the promises loue to the brethren the true worship of God and feare of his holy Name As on the other side from ignorance proceed infidelity distrust despaire presumption hatred of God malice superstition idolatry disobedience and all impiety Hence it is that the Prophet Hosea complaineth that God had a controuersie with the inhabitants of the land and that there was much ryot and excesse of vnrighteousnesse among them by stealing lying whoring swearing and killing because there was no knowledge found in that people thereby implying Hos 4.2 that they were vtterly destitute of all grace and goodnesse of all piety and true religion Such as know not God nor his will are ignorant what pleaseth or what displeaseth him and therefore cannot but offend him in both He that doth the will of God
when we striue to exceede and excell our selues and haue bent all our strength to serue the Lord in speciall manner yet we haue need to aske pardon and confesse that wee are vnprofitable seruants Wee are neuer so perfect but we are stained with some imperfections we cannot be so pure but we are defiled with some impurity and contagion of sinne so that howsoeuer wee desire chearefully and constantly to please God in all things yet euill is present with vs Rom. chapt 7. verse 21. and sinne doth easily beset vs Hebrues chap. 12. verse 1. so that we all stand in need of the pure and perfect sacrifice of Christ the author and finisher of our Faith without which wee cannot be accepted of God the Father We must therefore from hence learne to acknowledge that albeit wee desire to offer vp our selues wholly vnto him yet we can merit nothing at his hands nor attaine vnto perfection but are guilty of his iudgements if hee enter into iudgement with vs Psalme 143 2. For in his sight shall no man liuing be iustified It is the sacrifice of Christ for which hee is well pleased from the merite thereof commeth our merit our merit is his merit and the Fathers mercie He knew no sinne neither was any guile found in his mouth Esay 53. And hence it is that we shall be acquitted and discharged of sinne so that none shall bee able to lay any thing to our charge and though we bee in our selues debters yet hee hath payed our debt and set vs free to whome bee all glorie and prayse for euermore Amen 22 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 23 Speake vnto Aaron and vnto his sonnes saying On this wise ye shall blesse the children of Israel saying vnto them 24 The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee 25 The Lord make his face shine vpon thee and be gracious vnto thee 26 The Lord lift vp his countenance vpon thee and giue thee peace 27 And they shall put my name vpon the Children of Israel and I will blesse them Touching the vow of the Nazarites the first part of the Chapter wee haue spoken hitherto howbeit of vowes in generall wee shall haue fitter occasion to intreate in the twenty one and the thirtieth chapters following Now we come to the second part of the Chapter containing the forme of blessing the people prescribed vnto the Priestes from the mouth of God But first let vs see the meaning and the method of the Words Touching the Blessing obserue that sometimes God is saide to blesse man sometimes man to blesse God and sometimes one man to blesse another God blesseth man when he bestoweth good things vpon vs which we want and remooueth euill things from vs which wee feele The good things which hee giueth vs are partly earthly and partly heauenly and in both hee blesseth vs. Touching earthly we reade in the word Genesis chap. 24. verse 35. where Abrahams seruant sayeth that GOD had blessed his Maister greatly and he was become great then hee telleth wherein Hee hath giuen him Flockes and Heards and Siluer and Gold and men Seruants and maide Seruants and Camels and Asses The like we see Deut. 28 3 4 5. Blessed in the Citie blessed in the field blessed in the fruite of thy bodie c. Touching heauenly it is saide Hee blesseth with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things thorough Christ Ephes 1 3. Againe somtimes man blesseth God when he praiseth God in word and deed with mouth hart and returneth thanksgiuing to him both for bestowing vpon vs his blessings and remouing from vs his blessings When thou hast eaten and art full Deuter. 8 10. then thou shalt blesse the Lord thy God for the good land which he hath giuen thee So Psal 103 1. Luke 1 68. Now this our blessing of God is nothing but an effect of the former For as we loue God because hee loued vs first so wee blesse God because he blessed vs first We can neuer returne him the glory but from a feeling of his owne mercy We cannot open our mouth to praise him except he opened his hands to blesse vs. Genes 14 19. Lastly man is said to blesse man we blesse one another when wee pray one for another Rom. 12 14. Blesse them which persecute you which is expoūded by the words of Christ Mat 5 44. Pray for them which despitefully vse you To apply these things to our present purpose we must marke that in this place the word is thrice vsed and to be vnderstoode diuersly for when the Lord commanded Aaron and his sons to blesse the people the meaning is they must pray for them and heartily desire good things vnto them Again when it is said The Lord blesse thee and when the promise is made I will blesse thee the meaning is the Lord wil bestow all good things on thee and take away all euil things from thee so that they blessed the children of Israel by desiring and praying God blessed them by giuing and bestowing Moreouer the priests of God are taught to craue that God would make his face shine Obiection lift vp his countenance vpon the people It may be asked hath God any face visage or countenāce I answer these things are ascribed to God Answ not properly but for our better capacity vnderstanding It was the error of the Anthropomorphites who because the Scriptures speak of the eies eares mouth hands heart head and armes of God did therfore imagine that God is like vnto vs and had a bodily shape whereas he is a Spirit as also he wil be worshipped in spirit and truth Iohn 4 24. This the Apostle teacheth The Lord is that spirit and where the spirit of the lord is 2 Cor. 3 17. there Obiect 2 is liberty But these heretikes obiect that God made man in his owne image and likenesse Gen. 1. This is true Answer but their consequent is false For we are said to be created according to the Image of God not because he hath any bodily shape for that is against his nature who is infinit and against his word which teacheth the contrary The essence of God is spiritual inuisible and most simple he is a iust and mercifull God loue it selfe holines it selfe goodnes it self In these we were made like vnto God in these we resemble him beare his image being created in righteousnes and true holines Ephes 4 24. True it is some place this image of God in dominion ouer the creatures others in his immortall soule onely others in reason by which we are distinguisht from beasts but these let passe the principall point which the heathen man saw when hee said Tully The vertue which is in a man came neerer to the similitude of God thē the figure or outward shape What then can be the shadow of such a substance and the image of such a nature and the resemblance of such a power and perfectnes but that which the
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
our care and endeuour be to dwell with him first in his other house which is the lower house of which sort is euery particular assembly where God doth also dwell to which he giueth lawes and ordinances as an housholder vnto his house of this Paul speaketh 1 Tim. 3.15 Thou must know how to behaue thy selfe in the house of God which is the Church of the liuing God Let vs examine our loue to the one by our loue to the other our loue to the kingdome of heauen by our loue to the kingdome of grace If we care not for the former we shall neuer haue entrance into the latter God must know vs to be guests in his first house otherwise he wil neuer acknowledge vs as his friends in the second To the many thousands in Israel The words in the original are to the ten thousand thousands a certaine number for an vncertaine A notable description of the church of God Doctrin● Whence obserue that the people which belong to God are many thousand thousands The peop●● that belo●● to God a●● many tho●sand tho●sands They are a great flocke of sheepe they are a plentifull haruest of corne they are a wonderfull hoste and army of men This God promised to Abraham Gen. 15.5 he brought him forth and said Looke now toward heauen and tell the starres if thou be able to number them for so shall thy seed be Rom. 4.18 So Psal 2.8 Psal 72.9 11. Aske of mee the heathen for thine inheritance and the vttermost parts of the earth for thy possession Thus Esay prophesieth of the amplitude of the church Chap. 54.2.3 Enlarge the place of thy tent c. In the New Testament Christ telleth vs that many shall come from the East and West and sit downe with Abraham and Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of heauen Matth. 8.11 so that his elect children are many in number For first of all the mercy of God is the Reason 1 more manifested thereby Hee might iustly haue reiected all because all had sinned in Adam but the more to manifest the greatnes of his goodnesse and the largenes of his compassions it pleased him to call and gather together a great people that they might take hold of his mercy and sing of his louing kindnes to his glory Rom 11.3 God hath concluded them all in vnbeleefe that he might haue mercy vpon all By nature all are alike all vnbeleeuers all disobedient all miserable the elect are no better then others by birth He speaketh heere of beleeuers among Iewes and Gentiles Secondly Christ Iesus will not lose the price of his death neither suffer it to be void and of none effect He died for many and therefore many belong vnto him as sheep of his pasture and as members of his body The Apostle teacheth that by the obedience of one not a few but many shall be made righteous euen as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners Rom. chap 5.19 And the Euangelist Saint Matthew declareth Christ in the deliuering of the Cuppe at his last Supper said This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes 〈◊〉 26.28 〈◊〉 2.10 whereby he brought many sonnes to glory Thirdly none is able to count the number of them which are as the starres that are innumerable and as the sand on the sea shore This made Balaam pronounce afterward in this booke chap. 23.10 Who can count the dust of Iacob and the number of the fourth part of Israel And Iohn speaking of the number of them that were sealed saith he saw a great multitude which no man could number of all nations and kinreds and people and tongues clothed in white robes and palmes in their hands Reuel 7.9 They must needs be many thousand thousands seeing the number of them is without number Vse 1 The vses follow See heere the key to open and vnlocke sundry places of holy Scripture speaking of an vniuersality appointed vnto life and eternall glory as where it is said God would haue all men saued 1 Tim. 2.4 all men to come to repentance 2 Pet. 3.9 that Christ dyed for all 2 Cor. 5.14 2 Pet. 2.1 These speeches must be vnderstood of an vniuersality and generality of the elect onely for they alone are elected they alone are iustified they alone are redeemed they alone shall be glorified They must not be vnderstood though they speake of all and extended to euery particular of Adams seed nor be taken of euery particular person but must be limited and restrained to beleeuers of all sorts and conditions as Rom. 10.12 God is rich to all that call vpon him and Gal. 3.22 the Scripture hath concluded all vnder sinne that the promise of faith in Iesus Christ might be giuen what to all no but to all that beleeue Ioh. 11.52 There is therefore an vniuersality and a world of beleeuers as wel as of vnbeleeuers and they are expressed vnder the word All because they are many in number and consist of thousand thousands which cannot be accounted and therefore Iohn saith Christ is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but for the sinnes of the whole world 1. Ioh. 2.2 that is for the sins of all the elect and beleeuers dispersed thoroughout the world To conclude Christ may be said to saue all as he is said to heale all sickenesses and diseases among the people Matth. 4.23 and 9.35 that is some of all sortes and kinds and as the Pharisees are said to tithe all herbes Luk. 11.42 that is all sorts Vse 2 Secondly we may gather from hence that most glorious shal the name of Christ be when all mee● together in one to magnifie his grace and mercy toward them as appeareth Reu. 7.10 11 12. The Angels and the Elders ascribe blessing and glory and power and thankesgiuing vnto God When we shall all sing Hallelu-iah in the heauens what a sweet and pleasant melody will this make O how should we labour to be of this company that we may beare our part euery one in this triumphant song Hence it is that the Iohn saith Reue 19.1.3 I heard a great voice of much people in heauen saying Alleluia saluation and honour and power vnto the Lord our God and againe they said Alleluia Blessed are they that accompany the Saints to sing with them with heart and voyce Alleluia If we be not of this communion of Saints we cannot tune the right accent we cannot be in the number of these sweet singers our musicke iarreth and hath a discord in the eyes of God he will soone find it out Heere the godly seeme to bee thinly sowen as wheat couered with chaffe and so the song to consist of a few voyces onely The corne which seemeth little while it lyeth in the heap and maketh no shew when once the fanne hath scattered away the chaffe it appeareth to be much in quantity so when the Lord Iesus at his second
fall into the nets be caught in the snares which they lay for vs. Seeing then this is so necessary we learne Vse 1 that a wise and vnderstanding heart is a great blessing of God Indeed a simple minde and a single heart is good in godlinesse that so wee may be innocent as Doues Mat. 10 16. Neuerthelesse we must be wise also as Serpents So force and strength are great gifts howbeit the greatest ornament that GOD giueth which as salt seasoneth euery action is when he giueth a wise and vnderstanding heart so as he enableth vs to preuent euils and to disappoint our enemies as Christ promiseth Luke 21 14. and therefore Gods children haue asked this aboue other 1 Kin. 3 9. Vse 2 Secondly be wise in our generation that they goe not beyond vs. It is most true that he which maketh himselfe a body of Christal that all men may looke through him and discerne all the parts of his disposition doeth withall make himselfe a tame asse and thereby teacheth others either how to ride him or how to driue him But wise men though they haue single hearts in all that which is iust and honest yet they are like coffers with double bottomes which when others looke into beeing opened they see not all that they hold on the sodaine and at once For we haue enemies though they often make faire weather toward vs yet are full of subtilty and pollicy they are we see in their generation wiser then the children of light Luk. 16 8 They are euer watchfull dealing by meanes whether iust or vniust lawfull or vnlawfull and malice against Gods seruants carrieth them so farre that they make conscience of nothing so they may betray thē We may say of such as Paul doeth of Elimas the sorcerer Acts 13 10. O full of all subtilty all mischiefe thou childe of the diuell thou enemy of all righteousnesse wilt thou not ceasse to peruert the right waies of the Lord Especially let vs labour in things of the best nature to prouide things needfull to saluation The vniust steward is commended by his Lord for proceeding preparing wisely for himselfe If then there be any true wisedome in vs let vs prouide things honest heauenly in the sight of God for in vaine is he wise that is not wise toward God and for himselfe Lastly seeke to feare God for that is the Vse 3 beginning of wisedome Psal 111 10. Prou 1 7 and 9 10. and let vs haue his word dwelling in vs plentifully powerfully The word is the wisedome of God and it should be our wisedome because it is able to teach vs wisedome Psal 119 98 99. It is able to make vs wiser then our teachers then our enemies thē the ancient If this be not in vs to guide vs we shall vse vngodly and vnlawfull shifts wicked deuises and leud inuentions These cannot prosper long with vs for God will catch the crafty in their owne craft 1 Cor. 3 18 19 20. 26. And they went and came to Moses and to Aaron and to all the Congregation of the children of Israel vnto the wildernesse of Paran to Kadesh and brought backe word vnto them vnto all the Congregation and shewed them the fruite of the Land 27. And they told him and said We came vnto the Land whither thou sentest vs and surely it floweth with milke and hony and this is the fruite of it 28. Neuerthelesse the people bee strong that dwell in the Land and the Cities are walled and very great and moreouer wee saw the children of Anak there c. The second part of the chapter is the returne and report of the spies Albeit they went to search out the weaknesse of the land yet hauing warrant from Moses nay from God they prosper and his hand was with them in their going and in their returning Touching the report they make and the account they giue of their trauaile and perambulation it is double first to Moses and then to the people To Moses they dare not plainely deliuer the poison of their hearts For howsoeuer this report may seeme at the first The rep● 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 to be the generall speech of all the twelue yet by the words following both in this and the next chapt it will plainely appeare to be the report only of ten of them Caleb and Ioshua being excepted who spake better things and conuinced them For the other ten they vnder glorious and goodly words coloured and couered the wicked purpose and pretence of their prophane hearts thinking to corrupt the people with the leauen of their owne rebellion to turne them away from attempting to conquer the Land and to bring them to despaire of possessing the same Wherefore though they do not openly professedly disswade them yet they speake lies through hypocrisie they doe not deale faithfully and sincerely but hauing two tongues in their heads intended to stirre vp the people to mutiny and murmuring against Moses by laying before them the difficulty nay the impossibility of the enterprise Thus then we see they performe their Embassage subtilly not sincerely fraudulently not faithfully for they praise the Land with a loud voice but their hearts are hollow and they speake the truth to deceiue Their praise is short but the doubts that they cast into the mindes of the people are many The doctrine Wicked men do oftentimes then speak fairest Doctri●● Wicked 〈◊〉 speake f● 〈…〉 when th● meane 〈…〉 2 Sam 2● when they intend the greatest mischiefe and cloke their euill hearts with soft words Ezr. 4 2. Ps 12 2 they speake with a double hart So did Cain Gen. 4 8 so did Ioab 2 Sam. 3 17. For first they haue beene brought vp in the schoole of a very cunning master Satan Reason can transforme himselfe into an Angel of light as when he came to our first parents he wholly pretended their good and made himselfe carefull to aduance them to a better estate Gen. 3 4. 2 Cor 11 3. Secondly thereby they know they shall insinuate themselues more closely and deceiue more easily Open enemies are better preuented Ps 55 12. false brethren hardly discerned this is the way to catch the simple and vnwary in their snares Math. 22 16. Vse 1 Learne from hence a property of mans hart that it is very deceitfull Ier. 17 9 10. It is the nature of wicked men to suppresse the euill which they purpose vntill they can see their fit times according to the saying of the Prophet They will deceiue euery one his neighbour and will not speake the truth they haue taught their tongue to speake lies and weary themselues to commit iniquity Ier. 9 5. Herod pretended loue outwardly to the new borne King of the Iewes that he also would come worship him Mat. 2 8. but indeed he purposed in his heart to kill him albeit the wise men perceiued it not Thus do men dig deepe to hide their counsels and weaue the spiders
is euermore the companion of hypocrisie Fiftly to be confident in good causes and couragious especially in time of perill Prou. 10 9. 28 1. Whereas the hypocrite hauing a corrupt conscience is ouertaken with feare and trembling Esay 33 14. Prou. 28 1. Lastly to be constant and to perseuere to the end in good things to bee resolute neuer to giue ouer a continued course of piety vntil we giue ouer this course of life such bring foorth fruite with patience Luke 8 15. and shall neuer be remoued Psal 15 5. Whereas the double-minded man is vnstable in all his wayes Iames 1 8. his godlinesse and religion is as the morning dew Hosea 6 4. By these signes we may sift and examine our selues whether this grace of sincerity be in vs or not And as the gift is excellent so there are sundry motiues to stirre vs vp vnto it Sundry moti●es to 〈◊〉 vs to sinc● For God is good and gracious vnto such as are pure in heart Psal 73 1. and 125 4 5. hee is the Sun and shield to them Psal 84 11. This is the life and substance of all other graces without it the best things are but counterfet and no better then sinnes against God Our faith must be vnfained and loue without dissimulation and our conuersion must be a renting of the heart Consider also that God is present euery where and knoweth all things Psal 139 7. Prou. 15 verse 3. Moreouer wee must meditate oftentimes vpon the iudgements of God which hee bringeth vpon the world but especially of the last iudgement in the end of the world and of our particular iudgment at the houre of death Ro. 2 16. Eccl. 12 14. The heart is the store-house keeper of the graces of God Pro. 4 23. Mat. 13 18 19. Lu. 6 45. Math. 23 26. therefore we ought carefully to looke vnto it CHAP. XIIII 1 And all the Congregation lifted vp their voice and cryed and the people wept that night 2 And all the Congregation of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron and the whole Congregation saide vnto them Would God that we had died in the Land of Egipt or would God we had died in this wildernesse 3 And wherefore hath the Lord brought vs into this land to fall by the sword that our wiues and our children should be a prey Were it not better for vs to returne into Egypt WE haue seen in the former chapter the occasiō of this fourth murmuring arising from the report of the spies whereby the seed was sowne which in this Chapter groweth vp to an open obstinate mutiny The fruit was answerable to the seed the successe to the report And who can stay the streame driuen by so violent a winde and tempest When the arrow is once shot out of the bow it is too late to wish it may do no hurt where it falleth because where it hitteth it hurteth But to come to the present matter in hand the people giuing eare to these false reports dream of danger where no danger is like the sluggard that saith There is a Lyon without I shall bee slaine in the streets Prou. 22 13. To minds that are fearfull and perplexed all fansies and coniectures seeme things of truth Consider in this chapt two points first the generall murmuring of all that is of the greatest part of the people secondly the proceeing of God against thē for their murmuring Their murmuring is accompanied with impatience disobedience vnthankfulnesse blasphemy infidelity and tempting of God Psal 106 24 25 c. and it is set downe generally and particularly Generally they murmured against Moses and Aaron amplified by the effect 〈◊〉 cause 〈◊〉 the Isra● wept all 〈◊〉 they wept all the night The cause why they wept is the feare of death and the sense of their sinne they supposed that they were led as sheep to the slaughter and brought into the wildernesse as to a place of destruction had forgotten the promise made 400. yeares before to their fathers Wee see heere how quickly and easily they obey euil persons that seduced them they listen with both their ears vnto them ●●●trine 〈◊〉 are natu● ready to 〈…〉 ●ken to ●cers and ●ers and forget what they had often heard and seen Caleb and Ioshua warned them but all was in vaine The doctrine This is the corruption of our nature we are prone to bee peruerted and ready to hearken to seducers to follow euill liuers and euill teachers while in the meane season wee are hardly drawne to hearken and attend vnto those that tell vs the truth without flattery or forgery Exod. 4 1. The prophet of God sent to prophesy against the Altar at Bethel is easily seduced and forsaketh the word of God 1 Kings 13 21. Our Sauiour complaineth of the peeuishnesse of the Iewes 〈◊〉 11 27. Wee haue piped vnto you and ye haue not danced we haue mourned vnto you and ye haue not lamented c. And Iohn 5 43. I am come in my Fathers name and ye receiued me not if another shall come in his owne name him yee will receiue 2 Tim. 4 34. Gal. 3 1 2. and 5 7. Titus 1 11. Mat. 24 5. First because in the minde and vnderstanding Reason 1 howsoeuer there remaine certaine generall notions concerning good and euil as that there is a God that he is iust and a rewarder of them that do well that wee must honour our parents and not hurt our neighbors yet euen these are corrupt and serue only to take away excuse Ro. 1 19 20. and besides wee haue all receiued from Adam ignorance or want of knowledge of the things of God 1 Cor. 2 14. Ro. 8 7. Likewise disability to vnderstand spirituall things though they be plainly taught vnto vs Lu. 24 41. 2 Cor. 3 5. vanity of the mind thinking truth to be falshood and falsehood to be truth Eph. 4 17. 1 Cor. 1 21. Prou. 14 12. So then the originall or seede of all errors and heresies is in our nature Secondly satan is mighty and subtle he can Reason 2 transforme himselfe into an Angel of light he employeth many instruments in his worke to seduce vs as he did Eue which also worke mightily with strong delusions 2 Cor. 11 3. False Apostles are deceitful workers transforming themselues into the Apostles of Christ 2 Cor. 11 23 24 25. they come in sheeps clothing though inwardly they bee rauening Reason 3 wolues Mat. 7 15. 2 Pet. 2 1 2. Thirdly it is Gods deepe yet most iust iudgement vpon all that obey not the gospel to send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies This is a punishment sent vpon the vnthankfulnesse of men when they haue the light and yet shut their eies heare the sound of the Gospel and yet stop their eares and vnderstand the truth yet harden their hearts against the truth Mat. 13 14 15. 2 Thess 2 11 12. This serueth to reprooue and conuince the Vse 1
foule or dung so filthy as we are through corruption Iob 14 verse 4 and 25 verse 4. Esay 64 6. Titus 1 15. There is no sent or sauour no carcasse so corrupt and ready to infect as that which proceedeth from our selues What it is that doeth chiefly infect wherby we defile our selues and one another This Christ teacheth Math. 15 verse 18. Those things which proceed out of the mouth come foorth from the heart and they defile the man Keepe out sinne from the heart and the plague shall neuer defile the man euery one therefore must labour to cleanse the heart Thirdly seeing it is caused by sinne wee must learne to search and finde out the true Vse 3 cause of the plague The enemies of Gods word will make the Gospel the cause of the pestilence and of all other calamities So did Ahab Iehoram make the Prophets the principall procurers of the famine which fell out in their daies 1 Kings 18 17. 2 Kings 6 31. Thus dealt the heathen with the christians that liued vnder the heathen and persecuting Emperours when any famine or pestilence or ouerthrow befell among them they imputed all to Christians and cryed out to haue them persecuted and punished as appeareth at large in the Apology of Tertullian These are blasphemous mockers and deriders of the holy faith of Christ which open their mouthes against heauen The chiefe cause of the plague is the contempt of the word Ier. chapter 29 17 19. Lastly euery one of vs must learne how to behaue our selues in the troublesome times of Vse 4 this heauy iudgement We must haue a tender feeling of their distressed condition that lye vnder this greeuous hand of GOD. The Church is compared to a body wherof Christ is the head Eph. 4 ver 16 and the faithfull are members Romanes 12 4. 1 Corinthians 12 12. They make but one body though they be many different members and are all vnder one head and therefore are to helpe one another to beare one anothers burden and so fulfill the law of Christ Galathians 6 2 1 Corinthians 12 verse 24. Let vs consider the seuerall duties belonging to seuerall persons in the day of visitation The duty of Magistrates is then especially to see religion established The duty o● Magistra●●● time of th● plague euill doers cut off from the City of God and all disorders remoued Psal 101 8. They must humble themselues and cause the people to humble themselues They must appoint fasting and praier that thereby they may moue the Lord to call backe his iudgement We haue a notable example of this in the King of Nineue Ionas 3 6● when he feared a generall iudgement to come vpon himselfe and his people he rose vp from his throne and laide away his robe from him he couered himselfe with sackcloth and sate in ashes yea he proclaimed that neither man nor beast herde nor flocke should taste any thing and that they should cry mightily to GOD saying Who can tell if God will returne and repent and turne away from his fierce anger that we perish not Ion. 3 6 7 8 9. Here is a good president for Kings Princes what by their owne example publike decrees they ought to do that there may be a common humiliation of all estates 〈◊〉 dutie of ●●●●sters in 〈◊〉 of the ●e It is the duty of the Ministers to preach the worde most earnestly both the Law and the Gospell in season and out of season to perswade to repentance to comfort the feeble-minded out of Gods word to stirre vppe the poore to patience the rich to liberality and all men to compassion and commiseration It belongeth vnto them as it were to stand in the gappe they must aboue others pray earnestly to God Amos 7. verse 25. knowing that the prayer of a iust man auaileth much if it be feruent Iames 5 16 17. So was it with Moses and Aaron when the plague was begunne he willed Aaron to take a Censer who ranne into the middest of the Congregation and stoode betweene the liuing and the dead offering Incense and making attonement for the sinnes of the people Numbers 16. verse 48. It is the duty of all parents to teach and instruct their children from whence 〈◊〉 dutie of ●●●●nts in 〈◊〉 of the ●e for what causes God sendeth the pestilence and other calamites Deut. 6.7 They must goe before them in a good example of life Genesis chap. 18 19. and if they should see all other carelesse and negligent in this duty yet must they say with Ioshua chap. 24. verse 15. As for mee and mine house we will serue the Lord. It belongeth vnto them to call their families vnto priuate humiliation as Ester did chap. 14. verse 16. and euery day they should offer vp sacrifice for their seruants and children after the example of holy Iob chap. 1. verse 5. and pray for their safety and welfare and euerie day giue thankes for their most mercifull deliuerance while in the meane season so many fall on their right hand and on their left It is the dutie of rich men in time of contagion 〈◊〉 dutie of 〈◊〉 men in 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 to haue as at al other times so then especially a diligent care of the poore because then the greatest occasion is offered to doe good We must not shut them vppe in their houses and then shut vp our compassion from them as it were in a close prison without releefe It is the commendation of the Christian Church after the ascension of Christ that they had all things common and no man said that ought of the things which hee possessed was his owne neither was there any among them that lacked Acts 4 32 34. If they did this in the neede of the Church how much more ought we to prouide for those that cannot prouide for themselues He is not worthy to beare the name of a Christian that at such times would withhold things necessarie from those that are withholden from the companie of others Woe vnto those that would adde so great affliction to those that are deepely afflicted already The foure Lepers that were put out of the city according to the law dwelt apart by themselues at the entering in of the gate for feare of infection were notwithstanding prouided for in the streight siege of Samaria so long as there was any thing in the city they wanted not but were prouided for 2 Kings 7 4. So it ought to be among vs. It is the dutie of the poore needy to arme themselues with patience The dutie of the poore and needy in time of the plague as a shield buckler in time of trouble knowing that nothing falleth out without the prouidence appointment of God He will not lay more vpon vs then he will enable vs to beare but with the tentation will make an happy issue 1 Cor. 10 13. hee will comfort vs in our tribulation 2. Cor.
need not feare for the time to come but that wee shall also receiue more at his hands who giueth liberally one blessing after another Iam. 1.5 Forasmuch as he is God for the time to come as well as for the time past and all his gifts and calling are without repentance Rom. 11 29. Thirdly this should mooue vs earnestly to Vse 3 labour for the first grace and neuer to giue rest to our selues vntill we feele an addition and encrease of the second and third grace in our hearts and to multiply them one after another that they may dwell in vs plentifully and make vs fruitfull in all holy conuersation If we haue the first grace in our hearts and be carefull to vse the same well it is as seed sown in good ground it will bring forth a wonderfull encrease and a notable haruest in the end Paul would haue Timothy to stirre vp the gift that was in him 1 Tim. 1.6 If wee bee once in Christ he will purge vs more and more that we shall bring forth more fruit Ioh. 15.8 Lastly obserue that this is a priuiledge belonging Vse 4 onely to the faithfull that they shall haue the mercy and fauour of God continued vnto them The blessings that God bestoweth vpon the wicked doe serue to make them without excuse and are as seales of condemnation they are not assurances vnto them that they shall haue moe bestowed vpon them he hath made no such promise vnto them neither can they gather any hope to haue any farther encrease of the same or any addition of new blessings Albeit it be so with the godly that former blessings of God are pledges of more yet it is not so with the vngodly 2 Sam. 7 17. Iudg. 10 12 13. Eccle. 8.12 13. Esay 65.20 He tooke away his mercy from Saul but hee would neuer doe it from Dauid he deliuered the vnthankefull and rebellious Israelites out of the hands of their enemies but he threateneth that he will deliuer them no more The euill seruant hath his talent taken from him and neuer restored vnto him againe and therupon Christ deliuereth the manner of Gods dealing as well toward the faithful as the vnfaithfull Matth. 25.29 Vnto euery one that hath shall be giuen and he shall haue aboundance but from him that hath not shall be taken away euen that which he hath For they doe abuse his mercies and neuer make any good vse of them how then should they bee continued vnto them nay how should they not be depriued of them They become much more sinfull and grow worse and worse by his blessings God requireth the more of them but they performe the lesse duty vnto him It is therefore a vaine hope and a meere presumption for such to thinke to haue his goodnesse continued rather they may conclude that God will take them away suddenly and bestow them no longer vpon them except they turne from their euill wayes 20 And the Lord said I haue pardoned according to thy word 21 But as truely as I liue all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. 23 Because all these men which haue seene my glory and my miracles which I did in Egypt in the wildernesse and haue tempted me now these ten times and haue not hearkened vnto my voyce 23 Surely they shall not see the Land c. 24 But my seruant Caleb c. We haue in these words the effect of the prayer of Moses and the answer that God giueth vnto him The summe whereof is this that the fathers should die in the wildernesse because though they had seene his glory and miracles in Egypt and in the wildernesse yet they tempted him ten times that is not once nor twice but oftentimes a certaine number put for an vncertaine as Gen. 31.41 Iob. 19.3 Dan. 7.10 and therefore they should be all destroied excepting Caleb the seruant of God If any aske the question why Ioshua is not expressed ●ction and wherefore his name is concealed I answer ●er because the Lord pronounced the former sentence concerning the people that were in their tents but Ioshua that attended vpon Moses was present with Moses and Aaron before the dore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation therefore the iudgement denounced against the people that abode in their tents no way touched him Caleb was with the people so that it behoued him who had spoken the truth of the land to be excepted Ioshua was not and therefore there was no need to haue him exempted from them who was not among them For being with Moses and Aaron he is accounted in their number Secondly they are commanded to returne backe againe into the wildernesse by the way of the red sea verse 25 when they were now come to the borders of Canaan which they could not heare without great greefe and anguish of minde Before they wept without cause verse 1. Now they haue cause to weepe for this heauy iudgement Thirdly their children shold beare the burdē of their fathers sin wander in the wildernes forty yeres howbeit in the end they should enter into the land Fourthly the Spies themselues that had searched the land which were the authors of all this mutiny and had brought vp an euill report of the land were smitten with a fearefull plague dyed suddenly by the hand of God Heere we may obserue in these words that God heareth the prayer of Moses and pardoneth the people according to his prayer so that the Lord heareth the prayers of the faithfull according to his promise Secondly Gods iudgements are tempered with mercy Thirdly such as haue receiued the greatest mercies and become vnthankfull and disobedient Matth. 11.20.21 22 23 24. Luke 12.47 are the greatest sinners and shal receiue the greatest iudgement Fourthly in excepting Caleb and Ioshua from the common destruction it appeareth that God is a iust righteous God who as he doth not account the wicked innocent so he will not account the innocent to be wicked The Popish teachers alledge this example to prooue that God pardoneth sinne Popish doct●ine touching the pardon of sin and the retaining of the punishment and yet punisheth the sinner that the same punishment so inflicted is a satisfaction to God for their sinne and that the eternall punishment due to this people was pardoned at y● request of Moses If this were true then all this people were beleeuers and had true faith in the Messiah which is a bold assertion without all shew of reason and likelihood of trueth It may probably and charitably be thought that some of them were beleeuers and repented to them these were chastisements The like may be said of Moses and Aaron and of Dauid of which they were shut out of the land of promise and he was punished by the death of his child and in other his children and house not thereby to satisfie God by bearing part of the temporall punishment belonging to their sin but that Moses
place but that destruction be brought vpon vs If God haue destroyed other nations and rooted them out for the same sinnes that are found among vs what can be expected by vs but that wee hauing the same weight of sinnes should also haue the same weight of iudgement He hath made vs already to drink of many iudgments onely this remaineth that as yet we haue not dranke the dregges we haue not yet tasted of vtter desolation No nation hath brought forth worse fruits or shewed lesse thankefulnesse We haue iust occasion therfore to feare that the day of Gods visitation cannot be far off by the course of iustice and doubtlesse it is the nearer because we are growne sottish and sencelesse and haue put all feare thereof from vs. The land is generally full of retchlesnesse and security and this addeth to our sinne so that we may say as it is Ier. 6.28 29 30. They are all greeuous reuolters walking with slanders ● 9.28 they are brasse and yron they are all corrupt c. Thus was it with the Sodomits immediately before their destruction the Sunne was risen vpon the earth they thought there had beene a faire day comming but it was a day of wrath a day of trouble and distresse for the Lord rained down fire and brimstone vpon them and all the wicked were as stubble So it was also in the dayes of Noah and so it shall be in the end of the world Vse Secondly it teacheth vs who are the greatest enemies to a state to a nation to a kingdome to a land to a people to our townes and cities to our families euen they that are the greatest sinners These are they that bring those dayes of desolation the dayes of darkenesse and gloominesse the dayes of wastnesse and confusion to wit such as sinne with an high hand that are obstinate and hardhearted and setled to continue in the dregs of them When Ierusalem was besieged by Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon Ier. 32.4 who were the chiefe enemies of the citie and kingdome doubtlesse not so much the Babylonians and their army as the citizens themselues they were such as lodged within not they that lay without 2 Chron. 36.16 Dan. 9.10 11. Nehe. 13.17 18. 〈◊〉 it is ●eake●nd wa 〈◊〉 citie The strongest enemies were in the heart of the citie and they were they that did weaken it It is sinne that openeth the gates and throweth downe the walles and letteth in the enemie and maketh hauocke of all The sin of Achan made Israel to turne their backes to their enemies Iosh 7.8 according to the threatning Deut. 28.15.25 The contempt of the word prophaning of the Sabbaths whordome drunkennesse couetousnesse and oppression doe sharpen the swords of enemies and giue them assured hope of victory Hab. 1.3 4 5 6. If we sin against God with an high hand and breake out into all enormities it is in vaine to trust in our fenced cities and multitudes of men If our armies be neuer so strong if our cities were neuer so sure blocked if we had walles flanked with barracadoes and other fortifications that we feared not to haue them surprized by scalado yet if sin be suffered and fostered within it weakeneth all our force it maketh frustrate all our deuises it throweth our castles and citadels downe to the ground it filleth vp the trenches and maketh the way easy to batter our walles and to breake in pieces the towres thereof Sinne is as a Cannon that beareth all before it and where it beareth sway an hundred wals cannot keepe out the enemy Plaut in Persa And this the heathen knew and confessed But where Religion is entertained and godlinesse flourisheth there the citie is notably garded Deu. 4.6 and 28.1.7 Lastly such as haue any loue to their countrey Vse 3 and would haue the people freed from destruction and continue in peace and quietnesse let them shew it by their loue to the Lord and his Law and by seeking to bee at peace with him If we be reconciled vnto him that he hath no controuersie against vs he wil make euen our enemies to bee at peace with him This serueth to admonish vs all to take heede lest we adde sinne vnto sinne We account him an enemy and that iustly that conspireth and combineth with another to open the gates vnto him and to bring him in to destroy the citie and people such an enemie is sinne it taketh part with our enemies and they both ioyne together and tend both to one end to wit to ouerthrew our peace and safty Stay therfore the course of sinne that it grow not to haue the vpper hand Seeke not to be acquainted with it be not any meanes to spred it farther and to conuey it from one to another Marke then from this consideration who are indeed and in trueth the best Citizens and best townesmen in places where they liue Not alwaies the richest not alwaies the noblest not alwayes the strongest not alwayes the most politicke The best citizen is the godly man the best townesman is the man that feareth GOD and walketh in his wayes Such are the chariots and horsemen of the kingdome They are the strength of the land that are strong in the Lord. On the contrary side the worst citizens are the vngodly who pull it downe as it were with their owne hands What hath beene the ruine and ouerthrow of the most famous kingdomes in the world and what hath turned the noblest Cities into dust what hath brought infinite calamities of famine of the sword of the pestilence of fire of slauery and such like but the impiety of men so that the Lord hath beene compelled to reuenge himself of the very places which they possessed of the wals and buildings yea of the cattell and beasts that fedde thereupon Stand fast therefore in the most holy faith and let not sinne enter for when it commeth it layeth all waste from this commeth the ruines of countreyes of cities of houses and of particular persons 26 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Aaron saying 27 How long shall I beare with this euill congregation which murmure against mee I haue heard the murmurings of the children of Israel which they murmure against me 28 Say vnto them As truely as I liue saith the Lord I will surely do vnto you euen as ye haue spoken in mine eares The Lord as a iust Iudge proceedeth to giue sentence against these wicked men whose destruction was concluded They had gone backe from their obedience God charged them to goe backe againe toward the red sea so that they were forty yeeres before any of that people came into the land which might haue beene possessed in forty dayes This sentence pronounced by the mouth of God is either generall against the whole multitude or speciall against the first contriuers and principall authours of this rebellion The generall punishment is concerning themselues or their children Touching themselues as they had spospoken so the
it far Pro. 22 15. So is it with al those that are stubborne and refractory they esteeme words as winde they neuer lay them to their hearts they must be brought low by strong hand and they must feele the smart of their sinnes before they will be humbled We see this in Pharaoh and his people they had oftentimes heard Moses and Aaron speake vnto them in the Name of the Lord Exod. 5 1 8 1 9 1 13 10 3. But what did all this worke in him but as so many hard strokes vpō the anuill which make it harder so Pharaoh hardened his heart and would not let the people go Exo. 8 15 so that God is constrained to enter into iudgement with him and he that would not giue eare to the word was constrained to giue place to the waters for he and his host were drowned in the red sea Thus was it also oftentimes with the Israelites that refused misused the Prophets they euer brought vpon their heads some iudgement or other 33. And your children shall wander in the wildernesse forty yeares and beare your whoredomes vntill your carcases be wasted in the wildernesse 34. After the number of the daies in which ye searched the Land euen forty daies each day for a year shall ye beare your iniquities euen forty years and ye shall know c. In these words Moses farther describeth the sentence of God against these rebels the punishment rested not only vpon their own persons but slowed downe to their children like a violent tempest that first falleth vpon the Mountaines and after descendeth into the vallies Note heere first of all how God dealeth with these mutiners and with their off-spring The spies had bin 40. daies in searching the Land and for their wickednesse they shall wāder 40. yeares in the wildernesse a yeare for a day A dram of sin hath a pound of sorrow A day of pleasure hath a yeare of paine Doctrine Obserue from this Sinne and the punishment of sinne are proportionable Gen. 19 5 24. that in iudging and punishing of sinnes God oftentimes punisheth in proportion so that the iudgement is answerable to the sinne Of what kinde the sinne is of the same kinde is the punishment Gen. 42 21. God sent vpon Sodome a punishment like to the nature of their sin they burned in vnclean and vnnaturall lust one toward another and the Lord sent fire from heauen to burne them vp The people in the wildernesse with their viperous and venemous tongues spake against God and Moses his seruant and the Lord sent venemous and fiery serpents to sting and to bite them Numb 21 5 6. So Dauid sinned greatly in numbring of the people through the pride of his heart and vaine glory in his owne greatnesse God could haue punished him many other waies but he meeteth with him in the same kinde he diminisheth the number of his people exceedingly by the pestilence in whose strength he much trusted The reasons follow First God hath many waies to punish sin Reason 1 yet it pleaseth him to send his punishments according to our sinnes thereby to strike vs with inward remorse and to worke a deeper impression in the conscience For when he punisheth after this manner rather then after any other the iudgement it selfe doth more effectually force the sufferer to acknowledge Gods iustice in plaguing of him in that sort This we see in Adoni-bezek who was serued himselfe as he had serued others he had cut off the thumbes and great toes of threescore and ten kings which gathered their meat vnder his table the Israelites serued him with the same sauce they also cut off his thumbes and his great toes this measure repaied vnto him caused him to say As I haue done so God hath requited me Iudg. 1 7. The punishment presenteth the sinne as it were visibly before his face and when God dealeth thus with a man it oftentimes bringeth him to thinke of those sinnes which otherwise he would neuer haue remembred so that thereby he may iustly acknowledge that it is iustly come vpon him Secondly this maketh men not onely to Reason 2 iustifie God whose iudgements are alwaies iust but maketh thē also to iudge themselues and thereby they oftentimes preuent the more heauy iudgments of God He doth it for their good iudgeth no mā twice 1 Cor. 11 31. if he be wise to iudge himself Thirdly God hath giuen a law Reason 3 by y● law he requireth a proportionable punishment for sinne Leuit. 24 19. This course will the Lord take who is the supreme Magistrate so often as it pleaseth him albeit he do not tie himselfe to that law Vse 1 This serueth to warrant vs that wee may lawfully expect iudgement from God in proportion vpon men for their sinnes For that which hath bin may be and that which the Lord hath done he will certainely do it againe so that we may promise and perswade our selues that they shall in the end be paid home to the full with due proportion of punishment according to their sinnes In the destruction of Ierusalem we reade that the enemies came vpon them the same day that they put Christ our Sauiour to death euen then I say came the sword vpon them and recompenced them in the same manner by putting them to death How many are there which haue sometimes beene seruants though now they are masters and beene faithlesse to their masters what hath followed haue they escaped nay hath not God met with them in the same manner by giuing to them faithlesse seruants deceiuers purloiners and theeues that haue wasted and spoiled their goods as they in former time did their masters How many in our daies haue bene stubborne and disobedient against their parents in their youth neuer doing them reuerence nor yeelding to them any obedience mocking at their age and other infirmities Haue not these monsters bene punished Yes God hath paid them home with the like and sent them dissolute children disobedient such as grow weary of them and thinke they liue too long minding their patrimony more then regarding their parents How many are there that haue abused and wronged their former wiues and hath not God vsually plagued them in the same sort in giuing them a second into their bosome which hath embraced the bosome of strangers and dealt wickedly and falsely with them 2 Sam. 12 11. Iob 31 9 10. God could haue met with thē by other means and punished them a thousand other waies but it pleaseth him to make his punishments answerable and carrying a likenesse with the sinne for which it is inflicted so that they are punished by that thing by which they haue sinned against God Couetous persons which get their goods by fraud and oppression are themselues or their heires many times oppressed and deceiued and brought to beggery Gluttony surfetting and drunkennesse are oftentimes punished with dropsies and many grosse and corrupt humors distempering their bodies and bringing
Aaron the Saint of the Lord Psalm 106 16 so that he was constrained to ratifie confirme the Priesthood by the swallowing vp of Dathan and Abiram in the earth and by consuming of Korah and his confederates with fire all of them being the children of rebellion as they are called in this chapter verse 10. But heere wee may behold a notable example of Gods wonderfull mercy who is more ready to compassion then to reuenge and therefore destroyeth some that he may instruct others Wherefore in this chapter Moses continueth the same argument handled before and sheweth how GOD once againe establisheth the Priesthood to Aaron and his sonnes for an euerlasting couenant whereupon he commandeth that euery Tribe should bring a woodden staffe with a name written vpon them to put them together so as they might not be discerned asunder but by the sight of the names These staues thus prepared and ordered were laide before God in the Sanctuary and when they were taken thence againe Aarons staffe that had his name vpon it did flourish and all the rest without any change remained dry and dead as they were before whereby the Lord shewed that he had chosen that house to serue in the Priesthood 〈◊〉 diuision 〈◊〉 chapt Consider in this present chapter two things First the confirmation of the Priesthood to Aaron and his snnnes Secondly the repentance of the people and resting in the ordinance of God after they were humbled by the plagues of God and saw the flourishing of Aarons rod. Touching the first to wit the ratification of the Priesthood and the deciding of the controuersie to whom it did belong ought to belong hereafter we must obserue the commandement of God to Moses and his obedience God commandeth Moses to take of euery Tribe a rod. Ezek. 37 16. Now whether it were of seuerall kindes of wood according to the number of the Tribes or of one kinde only to wit the almond as Munster thinketh it is vncertaine Munster annot in Num. And the question may be asked whereas euery staffe must haue a name written that is the 12 rods 12 names what name was written Some thinke that the Tribe of Reuben had the name of Reuben the Tribe of Simeon the name of Simeon and so of the rest But it is to bee thought that the name of the Prince of the Tribe was written rather thē the name of the author of the Tribe and the words of the text doe fauor this interpretation v. 2. else to what purpose is Moses appointed to take seuerall rods of the Princes of euery Tribe so that for example the rod of the Tribe of Reuben had the name of Elizur written and so of the rest as they haue bene set downe before ch 1 5 6 7. and 7 12 30 36. For as the name of Aaron was written vpon the rod of Leui not the name of Leui himselfe v. 3. so no doubt the names of other Princes that were heads of the families of their fathers were written vpon the rods of their Tribes not the names of the authors of the Tribes Al these rods were laid vp together in the Tabernacle of the Congregation then the Lord giueth them this token to assure them whom the Lord chose and ordained that there might be no more contention about the Priesthood namely that his rod should waxe greene flourish and beare blossomes Thus doth God cut off all occasions of murmuring among them Speake vnto the children of Israel and take of euery one of them a rod. The people ought to haue bin throughly humbled for their offence to haue their hard hearts broken in peeces by the consideration of Gods iudgements and miracles and so throughly to bee moued to reuerence the ordinance of God concerning the Priesthood But because God is constrained to work another miracle to change the course of nature and to call things that were not as though they were it appeareth they were not yet sufficiently touched and humbled for God doeth no worke in vaine If then the dignity of the Priesthood had bene sufficiently confirmed by the punishment taken of the seditious and their partakers this new miracle had not beene wrought in the dry and withered rod. Wherefore God goeth about by this meanes to remedy their pride and presumption and sheweth his great mercy and goodnesse toward them in calling them to repentance and in curing of their infirmities We learne heereby Doctrine that the Lord is very desirous to haue sinners conuerted and brought to repentance God is desirous to haue sinners broght to repentance that so he may saue them Esay 65 2. Ezek. 33 11. and 18 31 32. Math 23 37. 2 Cor. 5 20. Peter preacheth repentance to them that killed the Prince of life and denied him in the presence of Pilate when hee was determined to let him go Acts 3 13 15. Euen to these that murthered and betrayed the Sonne of God did the Lord offer saluation To this end he is of such great patience because he is not willing that any one should perish 2 Pet. 3 9. The reasons Reason 1 Because first they are his creatures and his workmanship and therfore there is great reason why he should desire their good Naturall parents do desire to saue and keepe in health their children They that belong to God are his deere children Esay 49 15 16. He loueth Reason 2 Israel as his first borne Secondly he hath not onely created them when they were not but also redeemed them when they were lost and that with no lesse price then with the blood of his owne Sonne Col. 1 20. 1 Ioh. 1 7. Ro. 5 9 10. If then he haue done this for them doubtlesse he will goe forward with his loue toward them he will raise vp them that are fallen seeke them that are lost quicken them that are dead and bring them home that are Reason 3 strangers to him Thirdly it is more honour to God to conuert and saue then to destroy and cast away his people Doubt not but bee well assured that God will do that which tendeth most to his owne glory Rom. 11 1 2. Iustice and iudgement causeth him to be feared but his mercy and loue is that which maketh him to be honoured of men Vse 1 The vses remaine Hath God an earnest desire to conuert and saue men Then it ought also to bee our desire to bee like in this to our heauenly Father that is to labour to conuert and bring home others vnto God that goe astray from him for in so doing wee shall follow the footsteps and example of God dealing with our brethren in mercy and compassion as God hath dealt with vs. Let the husband labour to conuert the wife 1 Cor. 7 16. and the wife to win her husband the parents their children and the children their parents and euery one to conuert his brother A duty most acceptable to God and most profitable to others An
was with power Math. 7 21. Luke 4 32. and they were astonied at his Doctrine In his works and myracles Math. 11 ● Iohn 5 36. and 10 25. because they plainly proued him to be God The doctrine of Christ serued for faith the myracles serued for the doctrine forasmuch as they tended eyther to prepare the mindes of men to receiue the doctrine 1 Cor. 14 ● or to strengthen faith in the doctrine already receiued Iohn 14 11. Both these were committed to writing by the will and appointment of Christ himselfe to further the faith and saluation of the people to the end of the world The doctrine long since written is no otherwise to be regarded then the liuely voice of Christ if he were among vs we heard him preach to vs as the Iewes did and the myracles that are written are no otherwise to be esteemed ●ede no ●yracles ●me ●racles then if we saw them done before our eies so that wee need no other no new myracles to confirme the doctrine of Christ of his Apostles They were needfull when the Gospel was first planted and seemed strange in the world as it were in the infancy of the Church That truth is already plentifully confirmed except we should account it new euermore Hence it appeareth how found vnreasonable the Romanists are that require of the Ministers of the Gospel to confirme their calling by myracles For thus they reason Extraordinary callings are to bee confirmed by myracles but the planters of our Churches shew no myracles therefore their calling cannot be of God These are like to the Iewes of whom Christ speaketh Mat. 12 38. If I should aske of them what signes and myracles the Prophets shewed Nathan Iddo Obadiah Micah many others I think their best answer would be silence Wee reade expresly that Iohn the Baptist did no myracle Ioh. 10 41. yet was his calling extraordinary The rule that Christ giueth vs to discerne false doctrine from the true is this By their fruites ye shall know them Mat. 7 16. The doctrine that is taught is the true fruite they are known therfore by deliuering the doctrine not by working of myracles We teach no other doctrine then is set downe in the Scripture so that it is sufficiently confirmed by myracles already For if the doctrine of the Apostles be our doctrine doubtlesse the myracles of the Apostles are ours also which may not bee seuered and diuided from the doctrine it selfe 〈◊〉 defens This then discouereth the weaknesse of Turrian the Iesuite who is more ridiculous thē the rest that asketh the question how wee know that Luther was a teacher raised vp of God and what myracle he euer wrought as also when he telleth vs that if any should aske of them what signe they haue giuen to them of God they haue this myracle the Sacrament of orders A very vnorderly answer whereby it appeareth that he knoweth not what a myracle is For who can call an ordinary thing a myracle As well we may say the preaching of the word is a myracle yea we may better say that the wonderfull effects wrought by the Gospel are a myracle whereby faith is wrought in the hearts of the elect and eternall life begun in them If we will not beleeue the truth of the Gospel by beholding the glorious effects which it worketh in the consciences of men it appeareth euidently that we would not beleeue though we saw a thousand others yea though one should come from the dead vnto vs Lu. 16 31. 7 And Moses laid vp the rods before the Lord in the Tabernacle of witnesse 8 And it came to passe that on the morrow Moses went into the Tabernacle of witnesse and behold the rod of Aaron for the house of Leui was budded and brought foorth buds bloomed blossomes and yeelded Almonds We haue in these words the obedience of Moses in word and worke to the former commandement as also the performance of the promise that God made touching the budding of Aarons rod. Consider in these words Doctrine Obedience is required of al Gods seruant that it is the property of Gods children to yeeld obedience to his word so soone as the same is deliuered and reuealed vnto them All the faithfull are commended in holy Scripture in this respect The ten lepers that were commanded to shew themselues to the Priest prepared themselues immediately to go though as yet no cleansing or curing appeared in the flesh Lu. 17 14 15. they neuer consulted with flesh and blood they beleeue that Christ was true of his word able to performe in deed what he had promised in word Thus did Noah whē God commanded him to build an Arke thogh he had many discouragements the greatnesse of the worke the length of the time the mockings of the wicked the danger of putting himselfe into it and committing of his life to the mercy of the raging waters yet none of these could terrifie him Heb. 11 7. but by faith hee ouercame them all Peter being commanded of Christ to let downe his net to take fish sheweth that he had wearied himselfe his fellowes all night neuerthelesse at the commandement of Christ he let it down hoped for an happy issue Lu. 5 4 5 6. Thus haue Gods childrē alwaies done let vs therefore beware of disobedience vnder what pretēce soeuer it be Saul had his excuse he could set a faire face vpon a bad cause but hee was punished with the losse of his kingdome 1 Sam. 15. Woe had it bene to Naaman who shewed himselfe discontented with the Prophet because he being before instructed of God had willed him to wash himselfe seuen times in Iordan he had gone away a leper as he came if he had not hearkned to the counsel of his seruants 1 Ki. 5 10 12. Moses was shut out of the land of promise because he obeyed not God in striking the Rock Psal 106 33. but spake vnaduisedly with his lips The Prophet receiued a commandement frō God that he should go to Beth●el reproue the idolatrous worship of the two calues that Ieroboam had set vp and that he shold neither eate not drinke in presence with the idolaters 1 Ki. 13 8 9. but because he did contrary to the commandement he was torne in peeces of a Lyon paying the punishment of his disobedience and teaching vs by his example obedience to God Againe Doctrine obserue that God performeth more then he hath promised He onely told Moses God is better then his word that the mans rod whom he had chosen shold blossome but it appeareth that for farther manifestation of the truth of his word and the dignity of Aaron he verified more for the Lord did not only cause it to bring foorth buds and to bloome blossomes but likewise to beare almonds We see then from hence that such is the goodnes of God that he performeth and bringeth to passe more then he promiseth to
wee should follow our pleasures and delights eate and drinke and be merry and neuer mind better things or think of any other life like swine and beasts that know not God vers 32. To tell the yong man that he may freely follow the lusts of his eyes and walke in the wayes of his owne heart Eccle 11.9 or the rich man that he may take his ease and pastime while he liueth heere because when he dyeth all is lost Luk. 12.19 or the ambitious man that hee may say in his heart Who shall bring me downe to the ground Obad. vers 3. or the secure person that liueth deliciously that he may say I shall see no sorrow Reuel 18.7 I haue neede of nothing Reuel 3.17 I say to tell them thus is a damnable and pernicious doctrine and not to be taught and heard in the Church of God 1 Cor. 15.33 for this were to open a gappe to all prophanenesse and to hinder all practise of piety This ministreth comfort against all paines sorrowes afflictions wrongs and iniuries done vnto vs wee shall in the end bee free from all all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes we shall shine as the Sunne and be raised againe in glory 1 Cor. 15.43 Thirdly is God able to put life into things Vse 3 that are dead contrary to the course of nature then from hence ariseth a notable comfort to all that are in trouble and affliction though they be neuer so great and so desperate he is able to restore vs bring vs out of the same When the Isralites went into the red sea what was it but as it were to goe to present death and descend into the graue yet God brought them out againe into a place of rest and they beheld the confusion of all their enemies Exod 14.30 We are ready in euery danger and trouble to doubt nay to despaire of helpe and succour which maketh many to seeke vnlawfull meanes to recouer themselues we little remember this flourishing of Aarons rod that the Lord is able to quicken the dead and to preserue in the midst of all perill Psa 33.18 19. and 34.15.19 This point is notably taught by the Lord to Ezekiel vnder a type not much vnlike in substance to this chap. 37.5 6 7 11 12 13 14. The Iewes lay now vnder an heauy iudgement they were in captiuity in Babylon their case seemed to be desperate yet vnder that parable of the dead bones doth God comfort the people with assured hope of deliuerance For as those bones which were shewed to the Prophet in a vision had skinne and flesh and sinewes come vpon them and life and breath put vnto them so should it bee with that captiued people they should be restored to their former estate teaching them and in them vs therby that as it was easie with God to raise vp these dry bones to cloth them with flesh and to quicken them that had bene dead that they stood vpon their legs againe so it is as easie nay more easie for him to bring our soules out of trouble and to restore vs to ioy and gladnesse It is in his power to heare vs and helpe vs in bondage and banishment in sorrow and sickenesse and to deliuer vs out of all aduersity Psal 30.5.11 The arme of God is infinite and stretched out farre and neere hee is Almighty and able to bring to passe whatsoeuer pleaseth him Lastly this setteth forth vnto vs the state Vse 4 and condition of all the faithfull wee may behold an image of our naturall estate wee are by nature borne dead in sinnes and trespasses and there is no life of God in vs Ephe. 2.12 4.18 Neuerthelesse we should not despaire of our saluation or of the saluation of any other Ephe. 5.14 Gal. 2 19 20. There is hope of Gods gracious acceptance though they be greeuous offenders The gate of Gods mercy standeth wide open whose power is so great that of persecutors blasphemers and oppressors of the Church he can make conuerts professors and preachers Matth. 21.31 32. 1 Tim. 1.16 Gal. 1.23 This mercy of God was shewed to Paul yet it was not proper to him but exemplary he was made a patterne to shew the way of forgiuenesse vnto others that he would deale in like maner with them if after his example they should forsake their sinnes and embrace the Gospel This doth Paul teach touching the Iewes that are now strangers themselues from the couenant of God and from the promises God is able to graffe them in againe albeit blindnesse bee hapned vnto them vntill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in Rom. 11.25 Hee can say to the dead liue and they shall liue as hee made the withered rod to flourish This is sufficient to keepe vs and our hope aliue when things seeme to be almost desperate forasmuch as we beleeue in him Theophil enarr in epist ad Rom. to whom it is not vnpossible to make them the sonnes of Abraham which are not his sonnes And as it is easie for vs to call those things that are so it is not hard to him to raise vp those things that are not and to make them appeare When the Gentiles were no people of God hee made them his people and raised them as it were from death to life as also he will doe the Iewes if they abide not still in vnbeleefe Rom. 11.23 for as he brought light out of darknesse in the creation so he bringeth vs from the death of sinne ignorance and infidelity to the life of knowledge faith obedience in our regeneration 9 And Moses brought out all the rods from before the Lord vnto all the children of Israel and they looked and tooke euery man his rod. 10 And the Lord said vnto Moses Bring Aarons rod againe before the Testimony to be kept for a token against the rebels and thou shalt quite take away their murmurings from me that they die not 11 And Moses did so as the Lord commanded him so did be The former miracle is made cleere and open to all Israel As God made Aarons rod to blossome so he would haue the children of Israel to looke well vpon it and to take good notice of ir and to beleeue not the words of Moses but their owne eyes The doctrine All the miracles of God are wrought openly apparently cleerely and euidently to the senses of men Doctrine All the miracles of God are wrought openly and euidently that no doubt or controuersie should be made of them Luk. 7.11 12. Ioh. 11.39 44 45. For either men might feele them as the darkenesse of Egypt that was palpable or else they might heare them or taste them or smell them or see them and sometimes the most of them concurre together When the Lord brought his people out of Egypt all the miracles which hee wrought among them were most apparent vnto their senses When they went through the red sea he made the waters to diuide themselues
as a gift of God let him chuse them before they make choise of him let the gifts of God in him commend him before any write letters of praise for him They shall one day answer to God for the soules of such as perish through their default There is no dalying with Church-liuings let them therefore prouide sufficient Preachers for their own discharge in the great day of account Sixtly as they must looke vnto it that haue power to present so must they that haue authority to institute for if they lay their hands rashly vpon any they are thereby partakers of other mens sinnes 1 Tim. 5 22. and therefore they ought to endeuour to keepe themselues pure Seuenthly touching the people they must acknowledge themselues vnworthy of such a blessing and not take it as a fruite of their own deseruings We can deserue no good thing much lesse the greatest good We cannot deserue our daily bread that nourisheth the body much lesse our spirituall meate that feedeth the soule A good Pastour commeth not as lands and liuings by inheritance therefore as Salomon speaketh of a good wife so we may say of a good Minister House and riches are the inheritance of fathers but a good Minister is the gift of God Prou. 19 14. Eightly our duty to God is to loue him a-againe that hath so loued vs and to giue vnto him our hearts our soules and bodies that hath giuen vnto vs such a gift He could not ●estifie his fauour toward vs more thē by such a sure pledge and loue-token This the Prophet teacheth Psal 147 13 14 15. where he praiseth God for many blessings but for the word as a most speciall blessing aboue all the rest and farre surmounting all such things as are common to all nations and people Hee shewed his word vnto Iacob his statutes and his iudgements vnto Israel Ps 147 19 20 he hath not dealt so with any nation and as for his iudgements they haue not knowne them So then among al the Lords gifts none is comparable to haue faithfull Pastours to feed mens soules with knowledge and vnderstanding and so to bring saluation vnto them True it is God hath many graces in store for vs he giueth riches and health and wealth it is he that healeth all our infirmities and restoreth vs from sicknesse but the gift of the Gospel is aboue all which being entertained bringeth saluation vnto all men The other also are graces they are enriching graces healthy graces wealthy graces healing graces but this is a sauing grace Therefore the Prophet saith If thy word had not beene my comfort I had perished in my affliction Psal 119 92. Ninthly the people should loue their feet that bring glad tydings of good things account them best welcome vnto them True it is the vngodly and prophane of the world can see no such benefit in it nor such good to come by it as to be any way beholding to God the giuer or to the Minister that is the messenger Satan the god of this world hath blinded their eies so that they are become like swine which finde more sauour in the mire of this earth thē in the sweet perfumes of the Gospel or like to children that value a beautifull toy before a precious stone These account them their enemies that tell them the truth as Ahab did 1. King 21 20. they thinke they come to trouble thē as Herod all Ierusalē thought of Christ Math. 2 ● Lastly al good people such as are Gods people should earnestly desire to liue vnder the Ministery of the word where this gift of God is that they may alwaies heare the holy doctrine of saluation sounding in their eares remembring that faith commeth by hearing Ro. 10 17. We see how carefull commonly men are to dwell in wholsome and healthy places where a sweet aire is so if we desire the health and wealth of our soules let vs frequent the preaching of the word and keep the Sabbath with our families by hearing the voice of God As for those barren places where no corne groweth and where no dew nor raine falleth they are vnwholesome flye from them they are dangerous come not neere them Hence it is that the word coupleth preaching and beleeuing together and therefore let no man put them asunder Ioh. 17 20. Acts 8 12 and 14 1. 1 Cor. 15 1 2. No man can be saued except he be called for whom he did predestinate them hee also called Rom 8 30. but he calleth none by his voice from heauen but by his word in the earth Either he calleth immediately by himselfe or mediately by his Ministers but now he hath ceased to call immediately and if we waite for such a calling wee waite vpon our owne vanity we do but deceiue our selues like Herod that waited for the wisemen but they neuer came vnto him If then we would be saued we must first be called and if wee would be called we must heare Gods Ministers speake vnto vs and call vnto vs out of his word 8 And the Lord spake vnto Aaron Behold I also haue giuen thee the charge of mine heaue offerings of all the hallowed things of the children of Israel c. 9 This shall be thine of the most holy things reserued from the fire euery oblation of theirs euery meate offering of theirs and euery sinne offering of theirs c. 10 In the most holy place c. 11 And this is thine the heaue offering of their gift c. 12 All the best of the oyle and all the best of the wine and of the wheat c. 13 And whatsoeuer is first ripe in the land c. 14 Euery thing deuoted in Israel shall be thine 15 Euery thing that openeth the matrice c. 16 And those that are to be redeemed c. 17 But the firstling of a Cow c. 18 And the flesh of them shall be thine c. 19 Al the heaue offrings of the holy things c. We see here that God would haue the Priests to be wholly occupied in the Ministery of his seruice therfore they could not get their liuing with the labor of their hands or by tilling of the ground they might not be Merchants Artificers or Farmers but must wholly attend vpon the worke of the Tabernacle so that the Lord sheweth by what meanes they shold liue and how he would haue them maintained And first of all hee speaketh of the stipend of the Priests which had the worthier calling they were to be maintained by oblations whether meate offerings or sinne offerings or trespasse offerings by the first fruites of the corne of the wine or of the oyle by all things deuoted in Israel by the first borne that openeth the matrice in all flesh whether of men or beasts yet so as that the first borne of men and of vnclean beasts which might not be offered should bee redeemed taking for a man fiue shekels of the Sanctuary
or greeke sentences which a slender scholler in the Grammar schoole may quickly do whereas they ought to labour and striue to profite the meanest of their hearers in which number the greatest part are I haue heard many iudicious hearers many times complaine that the producing of forreigne testimonies and the speaking of strange tongues much hindereth attention and disturbeth the memory they haue so much variety of sauce set before them that they forget to taste and eate of the meate But our doctrine must put vs in minde that the Minister must haue a care of euery part of his flocke The heathen Oratour pronounceth that they are worthily laughed to scorne that vse such words Cicer. offic li. 1. as that they are not vnderstood Curandum est vt sermone eo vtamur qui notus est nobis ne vt quidam Graeca verba incultantes iure optimo irrideamur Hee wrote this to him that vnderstood the Greeke but because hee wrote it for the vse of others also he abstaineth from intermingling of vnknowne words And in another place hee saith Cicer. Tuscul quaest lib. 1. he disliked as much the speaking of greeke among latine as the speaking of latine among greeke So should we account it as vnfit and vnseemely to speake latine in an english Sermon as to speake english in a latine Sermon Thus the Gentiles that knew not the true God yet by the light or naturall reason amended by the helpe of art and learning knew the inconuenience and incongruity of this medly and therefore we should take notice of it Againe it reprooueth such Ministers as are ignorant that cannot are idle that will not teach the people as also Non residents that neuer come among thē for their good but for their goods not to teach the truth but to receiue their tithes these doe indeed take care of none whereas they should take care of euery one Secondly let the Ministers labour to practise Vse 2 this duty to shew their care as of the whole so also of euery part Doubtlesse they haue not performed loue to Christ that haue not care of his lambes as well as of his sheepe of the feeble as well as of the strong of the small as well as of the great and do not seek to be profitable euen to the meanest and the simplest Little children must haue the bread broken vnto them and cut into little peeces for them that they may eate it if an whole or hard loafe should be set before them they might rise vp an hungred as they sate downe and we might iustly bee thought to desire to starue them rather then to feed them So ought the Minister to studie to shew himselfe approoued vnto God a workeman that needeth not to be ashamed rightly diuiding the word of truth 2 Tim. 2 verse 15. A Physition that dealeth with his patient hath not onely a care of the whole body in generall but he applyeth his physicke to euery particular as he seeth it in his discretion to haue need so he that is a spirituall Physition must deale after the same manner he must not only haue a generall care of all in grosse but a speciall care of euery one to apply vnto them either doctrine or reproofe or instruction or consolation as hee shall see them to stand in need He must labour to strengthen the weake to beate downe the proud to instruct the ignorant to comfort the broken-hearted to raise vp them that are fallen and to deale toward euery one as his condition requireth Lastly seeing this duty is required of the Vse 3 Ministers it admonisheth the hearers that they suffer them to deale thus in particular with them They are wolues and not sheepe that cannot abide that the shepheard should touch them and handle them whose desire is to tarre them not to teare them because hee hath a care of their good in particular It is the common corruptiō of the multitude they cannot abide that the Minister should strike them home or apply his doctrine to thēselues Some speake against the Minister because he is too sharpe he points at them he aimeth at them like those that would bee angry with the Surgeon because he toucheth the sore laieth the plaister vpon it Others reprooue the Minister because he bringeth common knowne things ordinary points such men haue itching eares and hunt after new things and so turne away their eares from the truth 2. Tim. 4 3 4. These doe not consider that the Minister hath charge of euery soule and must haue a care of the whole and of euery particular and in the Congregation though some be strong yet others are weake though some be learned yet the greatest part are vnlearned whereas their care must bee to strengthen the weake as well as to establish the strong And as for them that are strongest their memory is weake their affections oftentimes cold that they haue need to be put in minde often of the same things indeed it is profitable to thē Phil. 3 1. 20 And the Lord spake vnto Aaron Thou shalt haue none inheritance in their Land neither shalt thou haue any part among them I am thy part ● 10 9. Iosh 13. ●e 44.28 and thine inheritance among the children of Israel 21 And behold I haue giuen the children of Leui all the tenth in Israel for an inheritance for their seruice which they serue euen the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 22 Neither must the children of Israel henceforth come nigh the Tabernacle of the Congregation lest they beare their sinne and die The Lord declareth in these words how the Leuites shall be maintained They had no inheritance in the Land as the rest of the Tribes neither might they take vpon them any trade but must wholly attend the duties of their calling and therefore they haue the tenth in Israel assigned vnto them for the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation The doctrine arising from hence is this The Ministers of the word of God must be liberally maintained of the people ●trine Ministers ●e word of must be ●ally mained Mat. 10 10. 1 Cor. 9 14. Gal. 6 6. 1 Tim. 5 17 18 God claimeth and chalengeth all tithes due to himselfe Leuit. 27 30. Heere he maketh an assignation or resignation of thē to the Leuites whom he maketh as his Bayliffes or Deputies to receiue them as his rent and reuenue and the Priests are appointed to receiue the tenths of their tenths Here two causes are rendred wherefore God made ouer these tithes to these persons First because they had no part of the diuision of the Land the rest of the Tribes had the Land diuided to them by lot therefore they must be prouided for another way Secondly because their labour was incessant and continuall and they were worthy to be rewarded for it accordingly They were deputed to teach the people bestowed much paines and attendance in the
Answer in matters of speciall trust it is not lawfull to substitute by the lawes of the land Hee that is the Princes Ambassadour chosen of him may not chuse another to goe for him forasmuch as he shall be his Ambassadour and not the Princes and he that is chosen to be a Captaine may not assigne another to go in his place he in the meane season remaine at home But of this wee haue spoken elsewhere Thirdly to leaue the reproofe of the Ministery Vse 3 from hence by proportion we may extend the doctrine to all others that receiue wages for their labour It reprooueth therefore seruants and hirelings that serue for hire whether they worke by the day or by the yeere and yet doe not the businesse faithfully for which they are employed Ephes 6 6. Most of these are eye-seruants not heart-seruants who are more nimble with their tongues then quicke with their hands These can find time enough to prattle with others but they care not how little they worke for their masters To giue these their right and to doe them no wrong they are plaine theeues and no better then such as picke their masters purses The law of GOD esteemeth no otherwise of them which is the Law and rule of all equity They ought to labour with a good conscience and to be as ready to do their worke as to receiue their wages and to be as vnwilling to slacke their hand in labouring as they would bee to haue their master to slacke his hand in paying of them Againe as they would haue their seruants in time to come when God shall blesse them with seruants inable them to set workmen on work to labour truly diligently and faithfully for themselues so let them deale as true labourers with their bodily masters that so God may blesse them with faithfull seruants and faithfull seruice another day And as they ought at all times to be diligent so then especially when house keeping is chargeable and groweth to be double so much as it was before But what is this to the greatest sort so that they haue enough and feele no want so their bellies be filled with meat and they no way pinched with famine they care not what themselues doe or what others suffer Neuerthelesse as the expences are double so their diligence should be double with good will doing seruice as to the Lord and not to men Ephes 6.7 Lastly to returne to the Ministers to Vse 4 whom the doctrine doth especially belong it admonisheth them that they should keepe themselues from this sinne and seeke with a good conscience to discharge their seuerall places whatsoeuer duties be required of them For the Apostle doth set downe a woe against his owne soule writing to the Corinthians Chapter 9 verse 16. of whom he receiued no maintainance as we declared before but laboured with his owne hands to get his liuing then much more shall it bring a woe to those that take the benefit but doe not discharge the function And albeit many of these are growne great in the world yet it is not their greatnesse nor their dignity nor their riches nor their preferments that shall excuse them but woe vnto them if they preach not the Gospel God grant that their rising be not by the fal of the Church and their mightinesse by the miseries of the Church It should be our meate and drinke to doe the will of our heauenly Father that sent vs and to finish his worke Ioh. 4.34 and the zeale of his house should eate vs vp Psal 69.9 And when we must goe the way of all flesh and leaue our riches and treasures behind vs the good which we haue done in the Church shall more comfort vs then the heaping together of much goods It is reported of Gregory Thaumat when hee asked the question Vide Gregor Nyssen Ruffin lib. 2. cap. 9. being now ready to leaue the world and to giue vp the ghost how many Infidels yet remained in the city Neocaesarea and answer was returned vnto him seuenteene that he reioyced greatly and comforted himselfe and gaue thanks to God saying There were onely so many faithfull and beleeuers when I was made Byshop of this place Totidem erant fideles cum coepi Episcopatum Let vs all apply this vnto our selues you that be Ministers of the word and haue taken the charge of soules must endeauour your selues to preach the word constantly forasmuch as you haue vndertaken to doe it let it bee your care to performe and accomplish it And you that are the people must giue them encouragement and draw them on to greater labor by your loue to the Word When the people grow carelesse it maketh the Minister oftentimes carelesse also and so it commeth to passe that though they take the profit yet they are no whit carefull to take the paines whereas if they could cause him to see the fruit of his labour it would constraine him to goe forward in his place with cheerefulnesse For when doth the husbandman labour with ioy but when he beholdeth the encrease of the earth and his paines to come to some profit and perfection so likewise doth the faithful Minister labour with comfort and delight when he seeth his labour bring forth a fruitefull and plentifull haruest in the people True it is if the Minister grow dull and dumbe because he hath no encouragement from you it is his sinne it shall be no excuse vnto him but the sinne of the people is so much the greater and their condemnation deserueth to be double On the otherside if both of them be diligent the one in preaching the other in hearing they shall mutually edifie one another and growe in grace together within the house of God and heereafter shall receiue the fruit and benefit of it in the life to come CHAP. XIX 1 ANd the Lord spake vnto Aaron saying 2 This is the ordinance of the Law which the Lord hath commanded saying Speake vnto the children of Israel that they bring thee a red heifer without spot wherein is no blemish and vpon which neuer came yoke 3 And ye shall giue her c. 4 And Eleazar the Priest shall take of her blood c. 5 And one shall burne the heifer c. 6 And the Priest shall take Cedar wood c. 7 Then the Priests shall wash his cloathes c. 8 And he that burneth her c. 9 And a man that is cleane c. 10 And he that gathereth the ashes of the heifer c. AFter the murmuring of Korah against Aaron touching the Priesthood we shewed how God is reconciled to his people and they brought into his fauour againe Touching the which we considered two points the first belonging to the Priests and Leuites chap. 18. the other to all the people generally in this Chapter to the end they should haue an ordinary meanes to purge and sanctifie themselues from their vncleannes at all times The summe therefore of
Angel of the Lord had guided them the Arke had gone before them and Manna from heauen had fedde them yet now all is forgotten they beleeue not in God but tempted and prouoked the holy one to anger And yet behold more prouocations then these in these chapters following where we shall see how they complaine and cry out through scarsity of water and through wearinesse of their life when they were stung with the fiery serpents But let vs consider the words of Scripture as they lie in order in this chapter 1 Then the children of Israel came with the whole Congregation into the desert of Zin in the first Moneth and the people abode at Kadesh and Miriam died there and was buried there 2 And there was not water for the Congregation and they assembled against Moses and against Aaron 3 And the people chid with Moses spake saying But would wee had perished when our brethren died before the Lord. 4 And wherefore haue yee caused the Congregation of the Lord to come into this wildernesse that we and our cattell should die there 5 And wherefore haue yee made vs to come vp from Egypt to bring vs into this miserable place No place for seede nor Figges nor Vines nor Pomgranates Neither is there any water to drinke 6 Then Moses and Aaron went from the face of the assembly vnto the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and fell vpon their faces and the glory of the LORD appeared vnto them 7 And the LORD spake vnto Moses saying 8 Take this Rodde and gather thou and thy brother Aaron this Congregation together Of this R● and the waters gushing out of it 〈◊〉 more bef●● in the next chapter that ye may speake vnto this Rocke before their eyes and it shall giue foorth his waters and thou shalt bring them waters out of this Rocke so thou shalt giue this Congregation and their Cattell drinke 9 Then Moses tooke that Rod from the presence of the Lord as he commanded him 10 And Moses and Aaron caused the Congregation to assemble together before that Rocke and he said vnto them Heare now O ye Rebelles shall we bring you waters out of this Rocke 11 Then Moses lift vp his hand and smote that Rocke with his Rod twice and much water gushed out so the Congregation and their Cattell dranke 12 Wherfore the Lord spake to Moses Aaron Because ye haue not beleeued in me to sanctifie me before the eies of the childrē of Israel therfore ye shal not bring this Congregatiō into the Land which I haue giuen them 13 These are the waters of strife where the children of Israel stroue against the Lord he sanctified himselfe among them In this Chapter we are to consider three seuerall things First the murmuring of the people secondly the purpose of the Israelites to passe toward Canaan by the borders of Edom. Thirdly the death of Aaron in the Mountaine in whose stead Eleazar his sonne succeedeth and for whom the people a long time lamenteth All these particulars are amplified in the beginning of the Chapter by the circumstances of time to wit the first moneth of the 40 yeare after their departure out of Egypt as appeareth chap. 33 38. and likewise of the place ●t 2 14. of Kadesh a City in the borders of Edom at which time also Miriam the sister of Aaron and of Moses died These circumstances being set downe the History of their murmuring followeth which we haue often before seene and considered declaring that whensoeuer wheresoeuer any aduersity happened by and by they became impatient vnthankfull and forgetfull of present mercies and fauours A like history to this we saw before Exod. 17. which is not the same recorded in this place but differing in time place as may appeare by collation conference of both the places Now let vs marke their behauiour in this want of water in the wildernesse First they wish they had died by the stroke of Gods hand with the seditious rout of rebels that cōspired against God whom notwithstanding they call their brethren Secondly they expostulate with Moses and Aaron that they had brought them out of Egypt into the wildernesse being barren without fruite miserable without haruest and dry without water Whereas they should comfort themselues in the former mercies of God rest in the experience of his power and remember his helpe euer ready in time of neede they rise vp against Moses and Aaron in shew but in deed against God whom they serued setting downe their present condition and comparing their abode in Egypt where they had tasted all miseries felt all oppressions and groned vnder the heauy burthens with their present estate to amplifie the woe and wretchednesse therof such is their blindnesse and vnthankfulnesse ●mb 12 3. But what doth Moses whose meeke and patient spirit they greeued and whose righteous soule they vexed frō day to day with their vngodly murmurings Hee doth not heere turne himselfe to them nor dealeth with them to reclaime them as he did chapter 16. but went with Aaron to God flying to the Tabernacle as to a Sanctuary throwing downe thēselues on their faces and comforting themselues in his power presence and protection who being alwaies neere to them that call vpon him shewed forth his glory and commanded them to take the Rodde and speake to the Rocke promising them water and assuring them of an happy issue of all their troubles necessities Now as God commandeth so Moses obeyeth and taketh the Rod. Here a question may be asked Question what Rod God meaneth and Moses taketh for we reade of two Rods famous among them and well knowne one the Rod of Moses that he vsed when he kept sheepe in the Land of Midian Exod. 4 2 3 7 8 19 14 1● and 17 5. Numb 17 8. Hebr. 7 4. whereby hee wrought afterward many myracles in Egypt and at the red Sea in the wildernesse the other the Rod of Aaron which did bud and beare blossomes to confirme the calling of Aaron and to declare that God had separated the Tribe of Leui to serue in the Tabernacle I answer Answer we are to vnderstand in this place rather the flourishing Rod of Aaron first because Moses made mention of this in the last place not long before to wit chap. 17 the other is not spoken off in this booke so that we are rather to referre it to Aarons Rod before specified then to the other not named Secondly this serued more fitly and fully to confirme their calling of rule and gouernement ouer the people which by these conspiratours was called into question As if they shold say Do you doubt of our calling aske by what authority we do these things Behold this rod do ye not know it this florishing rod shall conuince you and serue to beare witnesse against you Thirdly Moses and Aaron were fled into the Tabernacle verse 6 now chap. 17 10. it is
had numbred the people after God sent him this word and offered him the choise of famine or sword or pestilence he saide I am in a wonderfull streight let vs now fall into the hād of the Lord for his mercies are great and let mee not fall into the hand of man Who had not rather receiue punishment at his fathers hands of whose loue he is assured then to bee punished with the strokes of an enemy that loueth him not but hateth him to the death Men are proud and cruell fierce ambitious but God is full of compassion and his mercy endureth for euer he knoweth whereof we were made Psal 103.14 Psalme 78 39 he remembreth that we are but dust hee considereth that we are mortall yea a winde that passeth and commeth not againe He will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that wee are able to beare Hitherto the Lord hath visited vs with his mercifull and gentle corrections famines sicknesses and strange diseases Let vs behold his gracious dealing toward vs and profit by these fatherly admonitions for if he should deliuer vs into the hands of barbarous and beastly enemies we should soone discerne the difference betweene the louing chasticements of a father and the bloody strokes of an enemy 22 Then they departed from Kadesh and the childrē of Israel euen al the congregation came vnto Mount Hor. 23 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor neere the border of the land of Edom saying 24 Aaron shall be gathered vnto his people for he shall not enter into the Land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel because yee rebelled against my commandements at the waters of strife 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and charge them to come vnto this Mount 26 And cause Aaron to strip off his garments and thou shalt put them vpon Eleazar his sonne then Aaron shall be gathered vnto his Fathers and shall dye there 27 And Moses did as the Lord had commanded for they went vp vnto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation 28 And Moses caused Aaron to strip off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son and Aaron dyed there in the toppe of the Mount So Moses and Eleazar came downe from off that Mount 29 And when all the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty dayes Hitherto of the Ambassage of Moses to the King of Edom These words containe the third and last part of the Chapter to wit the death of Aaron after the people were remooued from the borders of the Edomites For albeit the King did so vnkindly deny them any passage yet Moses and the Israelites doe not oppose themselues against them or attempt to breake through by force of Armes multitude of men and dint of sword but passe by their borders peaceably and fetch a compasse about their land True it is those enuious Edomites were worthy to perish and to be vtterly destroyed for their inhumanity yet because the time was not yet come wherein the Lord had prophesied and promised that the elder should serue the yonger Gen. 25 23. therefore the Israelites commit vengeance to the Lord to whom it belongeth Rom. 12 19. Now in these verses we see how God beginneth to execute the former threatning against Moses and Aaron For heere wee are to consider three things First the death of Aaron Secondly the succession of his sonne Thirdly the mourning of the people The father dieth the son succeedeth the people lamenteth the death of the high Priest If Aaron had dyed without any prediction and foretelling of his death all men might haue thought it had fallen out at aduentures and ascribed it wholy to the decaying of strength wasting of nature but being reuealed to Aaron himselfe and manifested to the whole Congregation both the time when and the place where he should die it appeareth that his daies were numbred and his yeeres limited which hee could not passe As then God had determined the death of Aaron and denounced his shutting out of the land of Canaan so that sentence is heere executed vpon him Deut. 34 4 5. the other concerning Moses is reserued vnto his time appointed of God In this place God commanded both of them what to doe euen to ascend vp to the Mountaine and sheweth that Aaron shall die there for his disobedience whose garments must be pulled off and put vpon Eleazar lest by touching of the dead the holy garments should be defiled After this commandement followeth their obedience agreeable to the same they come vp to the Mountain Aaron is stripped Eleazar is cloathed with them Aaron without feare of death or longer desire of life or prayer for life departeth in peace according to the word of God he is gathered to his Fathers Moses and Eleazar descend from the Mountaine Moses Eleazar and the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron We see heere according to the former threatning pronounced by the mouth of God verse 12. that Aaron cometh not into the land of Promise but dieth in Mount Hor. We learne heereby Doctri● God-thr●nings are 〈◊〉 comp●●●● that the threatnings of God are accomplished Howsoeuer his iudgments are many times deferred and his punnishments prolonged because hee is patient toward vs and would haue no man to perish but would haue all persons come vnto repentance yet in the end all his threatnings shall be verified and fulfilled in their times and seasons Consider this truth in our first parents Ge. 2 17. ● 3 7. God threatned them that if they did eate the forbidden fruite they should die the death we see the effect in them and all their posterity throughout al times and generations Behold other threatnings of God wee shall alwayes reade the execution after the denunciation So when God by the Ministery of Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Peter 2● had threatned to destroy the whole world if in an hundred and twenty yeeres they repented not wee see how he brought in the flood vpon the world of the vngodly swept them away from the face of the earth which they had corrupted with their cruell and vncleane conuersation This we see likewise taught vnto vs throughout the bookes of the holy history of Ioshua The man is cursed before the Lord Ioshua 6● that ryseth vp and buildeth the City Iericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his eldest sonne and in his yongest sonne shall he set vp the gates of it meaning therby that whosoeuer should attempt to builde this City he should pay for it deerely because what time hee layeth the foundation of the wals his eldest sonne shall dye and when hee setteth vp the gates and hath finished it his yongest sonne shall dye When this threatning seemed quite forgotten and consumed with the rust of time God doeth bring it to passe as we
God and to serue him in the simplicity and sincerity of their hearts This wee must do in health this we must do in sicknesse this we must doe in death and so wee shall glorifie God liuing and dying Thus did Abraham teach his children and seruants and for this is he commended of God Gen. 18 19. I know Abraham my seruant that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the vvay of the Lord to do righteousnesse and iudgment Thus said Iacob when he dyed Gen. 49 1 2. this must all of vs be carefull to practise if we will bee the children of faithful Abraham to speake of the lawes of God in our houses 〈◊〉 11 13. whē we walk by the way when we lye downe and when we rise vp Verse 27 28. And Moses did as the Lord had commanded he caused Aaron to strippe off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son Wee see the obedience of Moses to the Commandement of God for Aaron pulled off his Priestly robes and they are put vpon Eleazar to whom lineally the Priesthood did descend whereby we see that there was a personal succession belonging to the Priesthood from father to son from one man to another Hereby we learne ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 Leuitical 〈…〉 from 〈◊〉 that the Priesthood vnder the law passed from one to another The Priesthood begunne in Aaron and continued in his line rested not in one man but continued by succession from age to age This we see euidently proued throughout the old testament for as they were cut off by death so others arose in their rooms that serued at the Altar As Eleazar succeeded Aaron so did Phinchas succeed Eleazar 〈◊〉 6 ●0 so the Priesthood proceeded from father to son and from one generation to another 〈◊〉 ● 16. as appeareth in the genealogies of the Priests This the Apostle to the Hebrewes plentifully prooueth 〈◊〉 23. Many among them were made Priests because they were not suffered to endure by reason of death declaring that the Priestes after the order of Aaron succeeded each other and confirming it by the reason cause thereof because the Leuiticall Priests were taken away by death and could not endure for euer This then we must hold to be one reason forcible and powerfull to prooue the continued Reason 1 succession of the Priesthood of Leui from father to son because they were cut off by death and so not suffered alwayes to execute theyr Priesthood Seeing therfore these Priests were mortall there must be a succession from one to another This is that reason which was remēbred before out of Heb. 7 23. shewing that they had many Priests because they were all subiect to mortality and could not continue through necessity of death Secondly the promise of God made vnto Aaron and to his posterity must be accomplished Reason 2 and performed Hee consecrated Aaron and his sons and made a couenant with them not with Aaron alone not with his children alone but with their posterity Exod. 28 1. hee established it as a testimony in Iacob and as a law in Israel that their posterity might know it and the children which should be born of them shold stand vp and minister before the Lord in the beautiful garments and glorious robes of the Priests Exod. 28 2. Therefore the Lord saide by Moses Exod 29 29 30. Num. 3 10. 18 7. The holy garments which appertaine to Aaron shall be his sonnes after him to be annointed therein and to be consecrate therein That son that shall be Priest in his stead shall put them on seuen dayes when he commeth into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to minister in the holy place So God made his couenant of peace with Phinehas the son of Eleazar the son of Aaron Nu. 25 12 13 confirmed the Priests office to him his seed after him because in the zeale of his Spirit hee had turned away the wrath of the Lord from the Children of Israel This teacheth vs first of all the imperfection Vse 1 and insufficiency of it both of the Priestes themselues and of the Priesthood it selfe It pointed out a better Priest and a better priesthood and directed them to rest not in it but in some other So the Apostle Heb. 7 11 12. declareth that the Leuiticall Priesthood was vnperfect because another Priest is promised a long time after according to the order of Melchizedek If any perfection had beene by the Priesthood of the Leuites what needed it furthermore that another Priest should arise after the order of Melchizedek and not to bee called after the order of Aaron c. Where we see he sheweth to what purpose there must bee a Priest after another rule and fashion not after the order of Aaron euen because perfection is not in the Priehhood of the Leuites nor vnder the Law which was established vnder it so that wee must acknowledge it hath an end forasmuch as with the ceremoniall law the ceremoniall Priesthood was cancelled and abolished Vse 2 Secondly from hence we learne to acknowledge a difference betweene the Priesthood of Christ and the Priesthood of the Leuites This standeth in diuers points and circumstāces as the same Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrewes euidently declareth The Priesthood of Christ is eternall as the Prophet declared long before Heb. 7 17. Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchizedek he was made with an oath by him that saide vnto him The Lord hath sworne and wil not repent But the Priests of Aarons order were mortall Heb. 7 20 21. not eternall they were made by the word of God but without an oath Heb. 7 26. Besides our great high Priest Christ Iesus holye harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the Heauens hath a * Aparabaton Heb. 7 24. Priesthood which cannot passe from one to another wherefore he is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing hee euer liueth to make intercession for them who by his own blood entred in once into the holy place Heb 9.11 14. and obtained eternall redemption for vs purging our Conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God Hebru 10 4. for it is vnpossible that the blood of buls Goats shold take away sinnes Thus we see that the Priesthood of Christ can haue no succession inasmuch as being once performed it hath no imperfection and whereas the Iews in the time of the law had Aaron and his posterity which were but mortall and miserable men we haue Christ the immortall and blessed God who liueth for euer to be our euerlasting Priest Vse 3 Lastly we learne that seeing the Leuiticall Priesthood passed from one to another so as by death they were not alwaies suffred to exercise and execute their Priesthood we see I say that the Church of Rome bringing in againe such a Priesthood such Priests as
King of Bashan Now let vs come to the first point which is the encounter with the Canaanites in these words 1 And Harad a Canaanitish King dwelling toward the South heard tell that Israel was come by the way of the Spies then fought he against Israel and tooke of them a multitude of prisoners 2 So Israel vowed a vow vnto the Lord and said If thou wilt surely deliuer this people into mine hand then will I vtterly destroy their Cities 3 And the Lord heard the voice of Israel deliuered them the Canaanites and they vtterly destroyed them their Cities and called the name of that place Hormah What Canaanitish King this was whereof Moses maketh mention in this place is vncertaine Some thinke it to be the king of the Amalekites which Moses pointeth out but this carieth no shew or semblance of truth For first the Amalekites long since endeuoured to stop the passage and proceeding of the children of Israel and were destroyed with a great destruction and therefore it is not likely that now they would come out againe to make a new on-set especially seeing the Israelites inuaded not their Land Besides the Amalekites cannot be accounted in the number of the Canaanites Gen. 36 12. inasmuch as they descended not of Canaan but of Esau and so were alied to the Israelites being of the race of Shem. Rather we are here to vnderstand some King of the Amorites who because they came of one common stocke as Moses teacheth Gen. 10 15 16 ate comprehended vnder the Canaanites But to come to the matter it selfe here we see how the Israelites encounter with Harad occasion of the battaile beeing offered by himselfe For when by his espials and scouts sent abroad he had intelligence that Israel approched he leuied an hoast armed them and issued forth against them of his owne accord not chalenged not prouoked not iniuried by the Israelites but himselfe chalenging and prouoking rusheth forward to the destruction of his person and the confusion of his army The successe of this encounter was double First the Canaanites had the vpper hand slew some of the Israelites and tooke many prisoners led them away captiues so that they turned their backes and were not able to stand before their enemies The people of God hauing had this losse taken the foyle do not fret against God nor despaire of his helpe but after this fresh disaster discomfit they reconcile thēselues to God they flie to him by prayer they humble themselues as Ioshua did when the mē of Ai put them to flight Iosh 7 4 8. saying O Lord what shall wee say when Israel turne their backes before their enemies They vow vnto God to turne nothing of this Kings Country to their owne vse and profite but consecrate and sanctifie all to God destroying their enemies and razing their Cities if hee would grant them victory and deliuer the Canaanites into their hands in whom now was equall their proud insolency and good successe through the former battaile No doubt the Israelites had sinned before against God and not repented of their sinne they prouoked him by their security glorying in their strength trusting in their multitude and puffed vp with the victories which God had giuen them who had fought their battels gone in and out with their armies and couered their heads in the day of slaughter thus lying in their sinnes nothing can prosper God curseth the works of their hands and letteth them see their owne weaknesse and that they should not be able to preuaile against any of their enemies vnlesse God did fight for them according to that in the 127. Psal v. 1 2. Except the Lord keepe the City the keeper watcheth in vaine it is in vaine for you to rise early and to sit downe late and eate the bread of sorrow but he will surely giue rest to his beloued So long as they trusted in their owne strength and number looked not for victory as a blessing from God they could not stand but when they had repented and craued protection from him that is the strength of Israel they ioyn againe their power vnite their forces order their battails resist their enemies preuaile and put them all to flight Rom. 8 38. For if God bee with vs who shall bee against vs But if he be against vs who shall be with vs or who shall pleade for vs It is not the wisedome of the Leaders nor the vertue of the souldiers nor the counsell of the wise nor the planting of munition can any whit preuaile vntill we be reconciled vnto God and God vnto vs. Lastly the Israelites being masters of the field hauing the Cities and persons standing at their mercy they performe the solemne promise and vow made to the God of heauen not to halues or in part as Saul did 1 Sam. 1● who spared the better sheepe and the fat beasts but they vtterly destroyed their enemies their cities in memoriall of the great goodnes of God hearing them in their prayers and respecting them in their miseries they call the name of y place Hormah that is destruction and confusion This is the principall drift of this diuision Now let vs consider the doctrines that directly arise from this place that our faith may be strengthened our obedience encreased And Harad a Canaanitish King c. We see here how the Canaanites appointed to destruction and to be rooted out enemies to the people of God such as had now filled vp the measure of their sins yet here preuaile against Israel kill some of them and take others prisoners This teacheth vs this Doctrine that oftentimes Doctrine the enemies of the Church preuaile ouer them Enemie●● tentines a● suffered 〈◊〉 preuaile ● the Churc● I say the enemies of God and of his people who in the secret counsell and purpose of God are vowed to destruction doe insult and triumph ouer the Church and particular parts thereof God correcting the rebellion of his children by them This truth God sealed vp in the beginning by the blood of Abel Caine spake friendly Gen. 4 8 But rose vp desperately against him and slew his brother because his owne works were euill his brothers good So iust Lot vexed with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked for he being righteous 2 Peter 2 ● and dwelling among them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous soule from day to day with their vnlawfull deeds was notwithstanding carried away captiue by a proud and insolent enemy Genesis 14 Besides the book of Iudges serueth vs as a plentifull storehouse to teach this truth where we see that whē the people of God did wickedly in the sight of the Lord serued Baalim and forsooke the Lord God of their fathers which brought them out of the Land of Egypt the wrath of the Lord waxed hot against them he deliuered them into the hands of spoilers he sold them into the hands of their enemies
teacheth Eccles 5.3 4 5. Vse 1 Let vs apply this to our selues First from this example wee may learne the doctrine of vowes what is to be holden of vowes what is not to be holden For we see heere what a vow is namely a free and solemne promise made to God touching such things as please him tending to the glory of his Name the profit of our brethren or the repentance and saluation of our soules Secondly we see who may vow to wit such as are free and at liberty nor vnder the power and iurisdiction of others Thirdly to whom vowes are to bee made not to Saints or Angels but to God only and to him alone they are to be performed according to the saying of the Psalmist Psal 76.11 As he onely is to be prayed vnto and from him we are to looke for all good things so to him only we must vow and offer to him the calues of our lips Fourthly it appeares what wee may vow to God not things vnlawfull vnpossible and vnwarranted by the word of God not things whereof we are vncertaine whether they please God or not for who would offer to a Prince or promise to him such things as he knoweth he will not accept or doubteth whether he will accept thereof Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom 14.23 Exod. 23.31 as the Apostle teacheth But such things as the Scripture warranteth being the true rule of all right wayes such was this vow in this place Lastly wee see that vowes thus made are carefully to bee kept and religiously to be performed hauing an eye to the party with whom wee haue to deale For as they are to be made with reuerence so they are to bee performed with care and diligence otherwise wee doe fowly and falsely abuse the Maiestie of God and take his Name in vaine All these considerations and conditions teach vs that vowes are not in thēselues vnlawfull and to be condemned so as they be restrained and bounded in the compasse of the law of God and not suffered to wander after our owne fancies Secondly it serueth to beat downe all false Vse 2 doctrine and erronious opinions touching vowing which are many and to rectifie our iudgements by teaching what vowes are lawfull what vnlawfull First if they be made of any thing flat against the word of God they cannot binde or tye vs to the performance thereof for all the force and power of binding vs is to bee borrowed and deriued from the word of God Wherefore it must bee agreeable to the will of God and whensoeuer it is against the word of God it hath no strength or efficacy to constraine or command They which would haue murthered Paul and had conspired together by a solemne league of agreement Act. 23.12 did make a solemne vow not to eat nor drinke vntill they had executed their diuellish purpose and put the Apostle to death But who now dare say that they were bound in conscience by their vow or that God liked of it For this were all one as if they would make God a companion of their murther Therefore Dauid vowing the slaughter and destruction of Nabal and his family 1 Sa. 25.22 32 reuoked it at the wise counsell of a discreet woman Secondly they must not hee made by such persons as want sufficient reason iudgement discretion and vnderstanding as children fooles or furious persons for these cannot be made with freedome of conscience nor can be said to be taken vp by a mans owne accord in as much as the mind cannot truely discerne what is done as is proued at large in the thirtieth chapter of the booke of Numbers and the fourth verse Thirdly it condemneth such as vowe hauing no power or authority in themselues to bind themselues such vowes cannot binde being made against the law of nature For all lawfull vowes must be made with consent of their superiors so long as they are vnder the gouernement of others Exod. 20.12 as appeareth by the fift commandement Honour thy father c. Fourthly they must be so made as they may stand with Christian liberty for we may not in any sort make such things absolutely necessary as God hath left free vnto vs snaring the conscience and abridging the liberty which Christ hath purchased contrary to the commandement of the Apostle Gal. 5.1 Fiftly it reproueth such as vow things vnpossible and out of the power and liberty of the makers thereof to doe or not to doe so that a vow made of a thing vnpossible is no vow at all but an intollerable presumption and a wilfull tempting of God As if a man should vow to walke vpon his head or to fly in the ayre Iosh 10.12 Exod. 14 21. or to stay the starres as Ioshua did or to diuide the sea as Moses did wherein we haue no assurance of any extraordinary gift of God Sixtly they must not be against a mans generall or particular calling that is neither against his calling as he is a Christian neither that speciall calling wherein he liueth If they be made against the one or the other they are vnlawfull As if the Minister should vow to doe the office of the Magistrate in executing iustice vpon Malefactors or the Magistrate vow to discharge the function of the Minister in preaching the Gospel or if a man should vow to liue in no calling in the Church in the Common-wealth or in the family but walke inordinately with scandall and offence Seuenthly it conuinceth all such vowes as are rash heady sudden idle and vnaduised and requireth on the other side that they bee made with aduice meditation and deliberation For rash vowes bee not lawfull albeit the things vowed may bee done lawfully Therefore the Wiseman saith Eccles 5.1 Be not rash with thy mouth nor let thy heart bee hasty to vtter a thing before God for God is in the heauens and thou art on the earth therefore let thy words be few If we make a promise vnto a man like to our selues we will haue this consideration and thinke with our selues whether hee will accept of it or not whether his will be to like of it or not We must not therfore mocke with God and make lighter account of him then of a mortall man whose breath is in his nostrils They ought not to be made without iudgement and aduisement for that were a defiling of Gods seruice and an abusing of his Name Now as they ought not to be made rashly but with sobriety so ought all our vowes to bee of great moment and importance and therefore wee are forbidden to vow idle and trifling toyes to obserue as is vsuall in the Church of Rome where one voweth a pilgrimage to the Saints another voweth to fast and eate no flesh at such a feasts Euen wherof one is superstitious the other diuellish As for their pilgrimages it is a wicked corruption and an idolatrous seruice which God reiecteth For albeit vnder the Law it
burthen vpon their consciences pressing them downe that they are found vow-breakers and haue broken their faith and promise made to God Let vs all remember that wee haue vowed to God our selues Deut. 23 21. and take heed we performe that which we haue vowed lest it bee imputed vnto vs for sinne Lastly it followeth from hence that such Vse 4 speciall and peculiar vowes as we haue made vpon particular occasions as euery one hath had cause in time of warre sicknesse necessity trouble and danger we must be carefull to keep and to pay our due and debt vnto God If wee feele our selues slacke and slothfull to good duties we may stirre vp our selues and binde ourselues by some earnest and faithfull promise to God If we be inclined to any vice we are to doe the like If a man haue fallen into whoredome and fornication hee may 2 Cor. 7.11 to bridle and halter his lusts vow neuer to delight in the harlots company If we haue fallen into drunkennesse wee may vow fasting and abstinence yea the abstaining from all hateful houses of drunkennesse being allurements prouocations to the same The oppressor may vow restitution and mercy to the poore Luke 19.8 Dan. 4.24 to stir vp his affection the better to performe it Now in al these we must beware and take heed that we be not rash in the words of our mouth nor hasty to vtter a promise before the most high What a reproach and blemish is it in such as will readily promise much to men and yet performe at leisure little or nothing Doe not all despise such persons But the fault and offence is more grieuous when there is a set and solemne promise made to God and not performed So then we that require true honest and iust dealing toward our selues and promises to be kept to our selues by a day haue wee done the like to God our Lord Let vs enter into our selues and examine our hearts a litle Wee are ready in sicknesse in want in great affliction and aduersity to vow and solemnely to promise if God deliuer vs to glorifie him to be thankeful and obedient vnto him to enter into repentance and amendment of life When a man hath loosely and lewdly spent his time in drunkennes riotousnes idlenes wantonnes enuy hatred contempt of God and his word if God strike him with greeuous sicknes that he feareth death as the messenger sent of God to seize vpon him then doth he tremble then doth he desire that God wold haue mercy vpon him and then doth he make vowes If God restore me to health againe and giue me life I will neuer bee the man I haue beene I haue beene giuen to drunkennesse I will neuer haunt the Ale-house I haue led a naughty life I haue dishonoured God and despised his word I will hereafter obey his voyce and attend to his word I haue hated the children of God I wil hereafter shew my loue to them renouncing my sinnes and liuing to Gods glory Oh what goodly promises are these and how well were it if men did so indeed and how were it to be wished that as they haue opened their mouth vnto the Lord so they would doe according as they haue promised But when God hath heard their prayers and restored them to health marke and yee shall finde that for the most part so soone as they are recouered and are able to craule out of the dores they returne againe to their former wayes 2 Pet. 2.22 as the dog to his vomite and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the myre What shall we say of these men Nay what may we not say of them Are they not couenant breakers and greeuous offenders against God They are like vnto Pharaoh King of Egypt when the hand of God was heauy vpon him and his people Exo. 9.27.35 then he humbled himselfe hee confessed the righteousnesse of God the wi●kednesse of his people and the heinousnesse of his sinnes Then Moses and Aaron must bee sent for in all haste to pray for him whom hee before despised in his heart and scorned in his talke yet so soone as the plague was ceassed and the hand of God remooued hee hardened his heart and would not let the children of Israel goe But hee dallyed so long with the iudgements of God Exod. 15.19 that he deceiued himselfe and in the end was drowned in the red Sea as the Flye that playeth with the candle vntill she be burned and consumed in the flame So when men haue beene terrified with the hand of God haue confessed with teares their vngodly behauiour and haue promised and vowed to God if he would restore them newnesse of life and repentance from dead workes and yet being restored and recouered being as vile in sinne as loose in life as beastly in behauiour as they were beforr God hath in iustice striken them againe for their vnthankfulnesse so as they haue dyed in fury and frenzy without any appearance of grace or assurance of mercy or remorse of conscience or acknowledgement of sinne or crauing of pardon or hope of forgiuenesse or signe of sorow or ioy of heart or consolation of spirit or purpose of amendment Matt. 27.3.4 but are wholly possessed with a shame of sinne and guilt of conscience and feare of iudgement and the flashings of hell fire Doth not this shew that Gods wrath is heauy against such vnfaithfull persons as breake their oath and falsifie their promise made vnto the Eternall who alwayes keepeth couenant with vs and will not alter the word that is gone out of his mouth Psal 50. ● O consider this ye that forget God lest he teare you in pieces and there be none that can deliuer you Contrariwise to conclude let vs follow the example of Dauid Psal 66.13 14. I will goe into thine house with burnt offerings and will pay thee may vowes which my lippes haue promised and my mouth hath spoken in mine affliction Verse 3. And the Lord heard the voyce of Israel Here is the fruit and effect of their prayer and humiliation shewing also the lawfulnesse and approbation of their vow God accepteth and respecteth them in their distresses From hence we doe learne that God heareth and granteth the prayers of his children Doctri● God hea● and gran● the Pray● of his ch●dren For howsoeuer sometimes hee deferreth to heare and hearken to their prayers to exercise their faith to kindle their zeale in prayer to teach them whence good things proceed to sharpen their hunger to make them highly to esteeme the graces long begged and to proue them by delay yet in the end God heareth and helpeth he granteth and giueth the things which they aske according vnto his will This the Prophet declareth Esay 65.24 Before they call I will answer and while they speake I will heare And Psal 120.1 I called vpon the Lord in my trouble and he heard me And againe Psal 145.18 19.
Iewell Therefore the wise man saith Prou. 22 1. A good name is to be chosen aboue great riches and louing fauour is aboue Siluer and Gold Eccles 7 4. Wherefore let no man thinke to raise himselfe by the fall of others or to gaine estimation to himselfe by the discredit and defamation of other men But onely what thing I say vnto thee that shalt thou do In the●e wordes God before hand instructeth and informeth Balaam what shall be the euent and issue of all his desires namely that howsoeuer hee coueted to curse the people of God and so to earne his wages and hire by the practise of wickednesse yet hee should be compelled and constrained against his will to wish the flourishing estate of the Church and to pronounce the blessing with his owne mouth Howsoeuer therefore hee were maliciously bent and carried with extreme fury and frenzy against the godly yet God declareth that all his rage should turne to the good of the Church and his tongue should vary from his heart Hereby we learn That the malice of the wicked 〈◊〉 ●●e of ●●●d 〈◊〉 at 〈…〉 re●● how great soeuer it bee is limited and restrained Albeit the enemies of the Church be oftentimes suffered to proceed and preuaile and to lay very great afflictions on the seruants of God yet al their power is stinted and determined they can proceede no further then God suffereth and permitteth This trueth is taught vs in sundry Scriptures for our instruction When Laban intended euill against Iacob God appeared vnto him and sayd Gen. 31 24 Take heede that thou speake not vnto Iacob ought saue good and Iacob telleth him that except the God of his father the God of Abraham and the fear of Isaac had bene with him he would haue sent him away empty but God beheld his tribulation and the labour of his hands and rebuked him yesternight When Pharaoh and the Egyptians pursued after Israel with horses and Chariots and sought their vtter destruction God fought for his people while they stood still and held their peace Exod. 14 25. This is it which our Sauiour signified when the Pharisies sayd vnto him Luke 13 32 33. Depart and go hence for Herod will kill thee Then hee sayd vnto them Go ye and tell that fox Behold I cast out diuels and will heale still to day and to morrow and the third day I shall be perfected neuerthelesse I must walke to day and to morrow for it cannot be that a Prophet should perish out of Ierusalem So Isaiah comforteth the messengers of Hezekiah against the blasphemies of Sancherib against the dangers of the city and against his rayling on and reproaching the liuing God 2 Kin. 19 6 7. So shall ye say to your master Thus saith the Lord Esay 37 26. Be not afraid of the words which thou hast heard Behold I will send a blast vpon him and he shall heare a noise and returne to his owne land because hee hath raged against me and his tumult is come vp into my ears therefore I will put my hooke in his nostrils my bridle in his lips and I will bring him back againe the same way he came All these things teach vs the truth of that doctrine which wee haue in hand namely that howsoeuer the vngodly rage and fret against the church of God yet their malice and madnesse is limited and the time of the continuance thereof appointed of God The reasons to confirme our faith farther Reason 1 in this point are these First the prouidence of God ruleth all things in heauen and earth the least and smallest things are ordained and ordered by him nothing falleth out by chāce neither is whirled about in the wheele of fortune The Birds fall not to the ground the haires fall not from our heads without the will of our heauenly Father Matth. 10 verse 30. Howsoeuer therefore the enemies of the Church doe take crafty counsels and make bloody decrees against the peace and prosperity thereof yet they can doe no more then God hath concluded and then he hath in his purpose determined This the Apostles acknowledge Actes 4. verse 2● in their prayer to God Doubtlesse against thine holy Sonne Iesus whom thou hast anno●nted both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel gathered thēselues together to doe whatsoeuer thine hand and thy counsell hath determined before to bee done They cannot satisfie th●ir owne lusts nor accomplish the desseignes of their owne hearts their rage is restrained as with a bit and bridle that it should not hurt the people of God Againe maruell not that the course of wicked Reason 2 men is stopped by the hand of God for the diuels are limited and all the power of darkenesse is curbed so as the gates of hell shall not preuaile against the church We see this in Iob 1 12. 2 6. hee could not slay his seruants with the sword burne vp his sheepe with fire spoile him of his Camels by Robbers destroy his children with windes and touch his person with boyles before the Lord had saide vnto him Loe all that hee hath is in thine hand but saue his life Likewise when the Lord Iesus dispossessed the two possessed with diuels which came out of the graues very fierce so that no man might goe by that way Matth. 8 31 the diuels could not enter into the heard of Swine before they had besought him to suffer them to enter into them so that wee may bee assured that howsoeuer they be bloody spirits and greedy to hurt yet their tyranny is bound vp beeing compassed within the listes and limites of the power of God and inclosed within the circle of his iurisdiction that they cannot annoy such as are created after the image of God and redeemed with the blood of Christ without the diuine permission For the Prince of this world is iudged and cast out Iohn 12 31. and 16 11. his weapons are taken from him the spoils diuided his workes are dissolued and loosed his head is bruised and broken Vse 1 The vses of this Doctrine minister great comfort and instruction vnto vs. First we learne from hence to acknowledge the infinit power of God aboue all earthly power that is in flesh and blood True it is the rage of the enemies is great and the gates of hell are set wide open against the church of God yet they cannot preuaile or haue the vpper hand for God is with vs his power is manifested and his malice is abridged It hath alwayes beene an hard matter for men to stay in dangers and feare the remnants of infidelity and the dregs of distrust doe rest and remaine in the best men The trueth and omnipotency of God is hardly yeelded and consented vnto as appeareth in the example of Moses Aaron Num. 20 12. Psal 106 33. They beleeued not God to sanctifie him in the presence of the children of Israel but spake vnaduisedly with their
the vertues of him that hath called vs out of darknesse into his maruailous light Seeing we are washed from the corruptions of the flesh let vs not defile our selues againe seeing wee are called out of the world let vs not returne into the world and seeing we are freed from the thraldome of sinne let vs not sell our selues againe to our owne lustes which fight against the soul We cannot come neere an infectious disease without danger of infection We cannot touch pitch without danger to bee defiled with it The Apostle saith Be not deceiued 1 Cor. ● Euill words corrupt good manners The Wiseman teacheth That hee which walketh with the wise shab be the wiser but a companion of fooles shall be the worser Prou. 13 20. Ionathan by the friendship and familiarity which hee had with Dauid changed his life to better Salomon by the society and coniunction with his idolatrous wiues 〈◊〉 11 4. fell into Idolatry And Rehoboam his sonne by walking with his yong Counsellers and following their aduice became worse If then we would auoid euill we must beware of all occasions No occasion more dangerous then euill company Euery man therefore must take heed to himselfe and beware how he ioyn himselfe in acquaintance with all men indifferently Many that haue bin of a stayed course and an approued life haue ruined themselues by making no choise of their company and haue lost their honour and honesty a Iewell which beeing once lost can neuer be repayred and restored This we see by woful experience confirmed vnto vs in the examples of many young men and maydens who hating eu●ll and making conscience of sinne in themselues haue fearefully fallen and made shipwracke of all godlinesse and goodnesse through the seducement of others Verse 10 Who can tell the dust of Iacob the number of the fourth part of Israel Heere beginneth the conclusion of this first Prophesie setting downe the infinite multitude of the faithfull compared by an hyperbolicall or excessiue speech to the dust of the earth which cannot be numbred This he speaketh being as it were rauished and astonied at the great number of them according as the Lord had promised long before to Abraham Gen. 15 5. Looke vp now vnto heauen and tell the starres if thou be able to number them and hee saide vnto him So shall thy seed be Thus then this false Prophet is made a Preacher and Publisher of the glory of the Church and of the largenesse of the boundes thereof Heereby we learne That God hath a great infinite people that belong vnto him ●●●●rine ●e Church ●nd with 〈◊〉 chi●drē Albeit the good Corne be scarce seene when it is mingled with the chaffe yet when it is seuered and brought together it maketh a great heape The number of the elect and chosen people of God which he hath redeemed will in the end glorifie is a great people This appeareth vnto vs in many places of the word The Prophet prophesying of the kingdome of Christ telleth vs that his Dominion shall be from sea to sea and from the Riuer vnto the ends of the Land that all Kings shall worship him and all Nations shall serue him blesse him and be blessed in him Psal 72 8 11 17 19. Christ teacheth vs that many shall come from East and West and shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of heauen He saith that when the laborers were few to put their sickle in the ripe Corne yet God had a great and plentifull haruest to bee gathered into his Barne Math 8 11 and 9.37 And likewise 26 28. at the institution of his last Supper he saith This is my blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes This the Apostle sheweth to the Hebrewes chap. 2 10. The Oracle of God answereth euidently at one time when Elias thought he had beene alone that he had reserued to himselfe seuen thousand that neuer bowed their knee to Baal 1 Kings 19 18. This truth was reuealed to Iohn Reuel 7 8 9. So then the Church is stored with many beleeuers and is as a fruitefull mother that aboundeth with many children The Reasons are plaine and euident For Reason 1 first it is a matter of faith and an Article of our Creed to beleeue the Church to bee Catholique And it is Catholique in three respects In respect of time of place and of person Of time because it hath beene in all ages and times since the first promise made to our first Parents in Paradise Heb. chap. 13 verse 8. Reuel chap. 13 verse 8. and shall continue vnto the end of the world Of place because it is gathered from all parts of the earth Acts 10 34 35 wheras before the dayes of Christ our Sauiour it was included within the Territories of Iudea now it is dispersed farre and neere in the time of the new Testament Of persons Gal. 3 28. because it standeth of all estates and degrees of men high and low rich and poore male female Iew and Gentile learned vnlearned wheras before God called and singled out the seed of Abraham to bee his people If then the Church be thus large and spreadeth it selfe to all times to all places and to all persons if it be so generall and vniuersall it must necessarily follow that many are the parts and members of it Secondly we do not maruaile that there are many members of the Church made partakers Reason 2 of the righteousnesse of Christ seeing by one mans disobedience many are made sinners For we are guilty of the sinne and transgression of Adam and we sinned in his sinne When he sinned we sinned are made guilty thereof in the sight of God because albeit we were then vnborne and without a beeing yet we are his seed and posterity and were all in his loynes Through this guiltinesse it is come to passe Eph. 2 3. that we are conceiued in originall sinne hauing all the powers of the soule parts of the body corrupted and the spawne of all sinne is infused into vs and we are there by made the children of wra●h as well as others the enemies of God the heyres of hell and condemnation If then the power of Adams fall were so great as to infect corrupt al his posterity then much more shal the righteousnesse of Christ be imputed to many and be able to m●ke them partakers of euerlasting life As Adam by naturall propagation hath spread his fault and guiltinesse o● his fall to the destruction of many so Christs obedience hath by grace ouerflowed to many who was appointed for the rising againe of many in Israel Luke chapter 2 verse 34. This the Apostle teacheth thus he reasoneth Ro. 5 14 15 18 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of that one shall many also be made righteous Wherefore seeing the Church is euery way Catholique in
Salomon pointeth out speaking against hatred reuenge The beginning of strife is as one that openeth the waters therefore ere the contention bee medled with leaue off Prou. 17 14 Where he teacheth that as it is dangerous to breake a banke or wall which holdeth in the water in his course lest it ouerflow the fields and meddowes so if there be a little breach begun in the conscience by sinne the floods thereof will so grow and swell that the violence and rage of the streame will quickly and easily enlarge the breach and bring body and soule to sudden destruction Seeing therefore there is such an inundation and flood of sinne when once it getteth vent● it behooueth vs to stay the beginnings of sinne when as first it beginneth to sprout out and to spring vp now these weeds will bee more easily pulled vp then when they haue taken deeper root Heb. 12 13. The diseases of the body being taken at the first when they begin to breed and only a spice of them is marked are easily cured and healed whereas the old festered sore is incurable and without remedy Euen so is it in the diseases of the soule if wee nippe them in the head betimes they are with more ease and lesse difficulty suppressed whereas if wee let them haue their full swinge they are hardly bridled and subdued This we see in the example of Lot when he was fallen into drunkennesse there was an easie and quicke passage to fall into incest When Dauid had committed adultery with the wife he had but a steppe to runne into murther to kill the husband The diuell that old serpent if hee can thrust in his head will easily winde in the whole body the way is to quell him quickly and then shall we be sure to be conquerours He seeketh to preuaile ouer vs by degrees If the deuill had moued Peter at the first to curse himselfe to the pit of hell if euer he knew Christ no doubt he would haue loathed the tentation and not haue hearkned to his suggestion But he dealt more subtilly and prepared him vnto it by certaine steppes whereby he brought him at the last to yeeld vnto that which at the first he detested VVhen he goeth about to allure a man vnto the beastly and more then beastly sinne of drunkennesse he will not by and by say to him Drinke till thou be drunken and transforme thy selfe into a beast but wil make him to delight in euil company to leaue the works of his calling and to haunt infamous houses the nurceries of drunkennesse VVhen he would entice a man vnto whoredome and adultery he will not at the first step throw him into the harlots bed but bring him to looke vpon her to like her to lust after her to haue familiarity with her and lastly to commit the sin it self 2. Sam. 11 2 which being first in the diuels intention is the last in the sinners execution VVhen hee went about to bring Cain to murther his brother he did not at the first say vnto him Kill him and make him away but sowed discord and hatred in his heart Gen. 4 5 and this murther of the heart ingendred the murther of the hand 1. Ioh. 3 15. If then we would auoyde the actuall sinne wee must endeauour to cut and pare away all occasions and not giue the enemy roome no not a little But men in these dayes make a sport and iest of sinne not knowing that they play with a serpent nor considering that they dally with a cockatrice They are like to Salomons sluggard described in the Prouerbes Yet a little sleepe a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleepe Prou. 6 10 and 24 33. So the adulterer sayth a little more vncleannes the drunkard must haue a litle more drinking the couetous person must haue a little more of the world and euery one must wallow as the swine a little longer in his wickednesse the time is not yet come to forsake his wicked wayes the blasphemer that feareth not an oath must continue yet a little longer in his swearing These men like the sluggard must sleepe yet a little while in their sinnes and lye a little thought longer in their lusts but giue the diuell a little hold and he will not in haste let goe grant him an inch and he will take an ell and so long as thou doest not wholly renounce thy sinne but wilt take a little pleasure at it and spend a little more time in it thou art in danger of destruction as Salomon telleth the sluggard 7 And when Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saw it he rose vp from the mids of the congregation and tooke a speare in his hand 8 And followed the man of Israel into his stewes and thrust them both through the man of Israel Chubbah see Deut. 18 3 the woman in her womb ethen the plague ceased from the children of Israel 9 And there died in that plague foure and twenty thousand 10 Then the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 11 Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest hath turned mine anger away from the children of Israel while he was zealous for my sake among them therefore I haue not consumed the children of Israel in my iealousie 12 Wherefore say to him Behold I giue vnto him my couenant of peace 13 And he shall haue it his seed after him euen the couenant of the Priests office for euer because he was zealous for his God and hath made an attonement for the children of Israel 14 And the name of the Israelite thus slaine which was killed with the Midianitish woman was Zimri the sonne of Salu Prince of the family of the Simeonites 15 And the name of the Midianitish woman that was slaine was Cosby the daughter of Zur who was head ouer the people of his fathers house in Midian Hitherto Moses hath handled the sinnes of the people bringing down heauy iudgments vpon the heads of the principall authours and committers of them Now he setteth downe the second point which is the reconciliation of God toward his people Who will not keepe his anger for euer Psal 103 9 Wherein we are to obserue two things the execution of Iustice and the approbation thereof by God The execution heere recorded against the euill doers is double the one extraordinary the other ordinary The extraordinary was by the speare of Phinehas whereby Gods wrath was turned away the ordinary was by sentence of the magistrates that were found free from falling into these offences such as were guilty being hanged vp by the expresse commandement of God Touching the first it is noted that Phinehas one of the tribe of Leui and posterity of Aaron arose out of the congregation that wept before the Lord being stirred vp extraordinarily of God he tooke a speare in his hand Chald paraph. kindled with a zeale arising from a chast and pure mind abhorring all
executing iudgement vpon the offenders and euill dooers which brought a greeuous plague vpon the people His spirit was stirred within him beeing first stirred by the Spirit of God which mooued him to take a speare and to thrust thorow the adulterer and adulteresse Now wee shall see the recompence of reward that was giuen vnto him for that worke which was acceptable vnto God and profitable vnto his people He hath a couenant of peace made with him the Priesthood confirmed vnto him and his posteritie He onely had appeased the wrath of God made vppe the breach betweene God and his people but the blessing is conueyed euen to his posterity He destroyeth two malefactors whereby he bringeth a blessing vnto his children Hereby we learne Doctrine The faithf●● bring able ●sing on the families That when the wayes of a man please God he will bee gracious to his house posterity God is so pleased with the obedience of his people that he wiil shew mercy to such as belong to them This is plētifully proued vnto vs in the word of GOD. When God saw Noah righteous before him in that corrupt age and generation hee made all that belonged vnto him partakers of a great deliuerance saying vnto him Enter thou all thine house into the Arke for thee haue I seene righteous before me in this age Gen. 7 1. This appeareth in the person of Abraham when God had called him out of his Countrey and from his kindred and made a Couenant with him to blesse him Gen. 12 2 3. The Prophet Ieremy teacheth this in the example of the Rechabites Thus saith the Lord of hoasts the God of Israel Because ye haue obeyed the Commandement of Ionadab your Father and ●ept all his precepts and done according vnto all that he hath cōmanded you Therfore thus saith the Lord of hosts the God of Israel Ionadab the son of Rechab shall not want a man to stand before me for euer Ier. 35 18. To this purpose speaketh the Prophet Dauid Psal 37.21 A good man is mercifull and lendeth and his seede enioyeth the blessing If wee come to the new Testament wee haue many testimonies leading vs vnto the consideration of this truth When Zaccheus beleeued in Christ for his saluation and testified his repentance by his restitution Iesus said vnto him This day is saluation come into this house forasmuch as he is become the sonne of Abraham Luke 19 9. When the ruler whose son was sick at Capernaum saw the great power of Christ in restoring him to health againe Hee beleeued and all his houshold Iohn 4 13. This is oftentimes remembred vnto vs in the Acts of the Apostles When God had opened the heart of Lydia that shee attended vnto the things which Paul deliuered She was baptized and all her houshold Acts 16 15.33 VVhen the Iayler beleeued in the Lord Iesus for his saluation and shewed his vnfained conuersion by the fruites of his loue to the Apostles he was baptized with all that belonged vnto him straitway and reioyced that he with al his houshold beleeued in God Reason 1 The reasons to enforce this doctrine are euident if wee consider eyther the person of God or the condition of the faithfull For first God hath in great mercy and goodnesse promised to shew grace and fauour not onely to the faithfull themselues but to the seede of the faithfull that feare him It is the nature of God to be mercifull and gracious to be slow to anger and abundant in goodnesse shewing mercy vnto thousands to them that loue him and keepe his commandements Exod. 20 6 and 34 6 7. VVe see this in the history of the destruction of Sodome the Lord did not onely in great mercy and compassion saue Lot himself but said vnto him Whom hast thou yet heere either sonne in law or thy sonnes or thy daughters or whatsoeuer thou hast in the citty bring it out of this place Gen. 19 12. Hee was ready not to saue him alone but as an ouerplus to deliuer all that belonged vnto him We see the mercy of God to others for his childrens sake hee thinketh it not enough to bee good to them but extendeth his mercies to those that any way concerne them Reason 2 Secondly as the mercy of God is great so the faith of the godly is effectuall for themselues and their children This is the tenour of the couenant that God hath made with al the faithful their faith is auailable both for themselues and for others God will be our God and the God of our seede after vs Gen. 17 7. And this is the priuiledge prerogatiue that the faithfull haue they beleeue this mercifull promise of God themselues and thereby entitle their children vnto it For as a father that purchaseth house or land giueth thereby an interest vnto his son therein so he that layeth hold on the promise which God hath made to all godly parents doth conueygh it vnto his children so that albeit they want faith by reason of their yeares yet they are made partakers of Christ and ingrafted into his body So then we may collect and gather this truth that the loue of God to the faithfull shall so abound that it shall come to their posterity like the precious oyntment powred on the head of Aaron that ranne downe vpon his beard and flowed to the border of his garments or as the dew on Hermon and Sion which watered the vallies that were beneath vpon which it descended Psal 133 2 3. The vses remaine to be handled First wee Vse 1 learne that the children of faithful parents haue right and interest to Baptisme and are to receiue the seale of the couenant This the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 7 14 when hee sayth The vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified to the wife and the vnbeleeuing wife is sanctified to the husband elsewere your children vncleane but now they are holy Seeing then that faithfull parents entitle their children to the blessings which they receiue wee see that there ought to bee a difference betweene them and the children of Turkes and Infidels All the offspring of Abraham was accounted holy in the time of the old Testament because God made with him the couenant of life and the Apostle reasoneth that if the root be holy the branches also are holy Rom. 11.16 Hence it is that he calleth them all his children who are borne of Israel But since the partition wall is pulled downe the grace of God is not obscured and lesse assured vnto vs then it was before vnto the Iewes Infants and children doe no lesse belong to the couenant and Church of God then others doe that are of yeares of discretion as it is plaine by the promise made to Abraham I will set my couenant betweene me and thee and betweene thy seed after thee in their generations for an euerlasting couenant that I will be thy God and the God of thy seed after thee Genes 17 7. Where God doth
diuels Fish in the sea that is all soules in Purgatory Moreouer as this course of interpretation turneth the Scripture into Allegories so it ouerturneth the rules of Interpretation Saint Augustine in his famous bookes of Christian Doctrine handleth at large the manner how to expound the Scripture and what wayes are to be taken to find out the true meaning therof De doct chri lib. 1. 2 3 Hieron in Esai cap. 19 Where he teacheth that seeing the loue of God and of our neighbour is the end of the whole Scripture that must be a false interpretation which doth not build vp in this loue that we must expound the darke places by the plaine the fewer by the greater number that the study of artes knowledge of the toongs is necessary that we must expound Scripture by Scripture that wee must distinguish betweene precepts precepts betweene those that are giuen to all and those that were particularly directed to certaine persons that we must diligently marke all circumstances what goeth before and what followeth after that we must pray vnto him that is the Author of the Scriptures who onely is able to reueale the meaning of his owne word These rules are diligently to be considered of al those that come to expound the Scriptures As for hidden and secret sences we know them not we acknowledge them not we beleeue them not but leaue them to those that seeke an hidden diuinity and a secret religion deuised in their owne braines which will not abide the tryall of the light And thus much touching the true vnderstanding of this diuision and of ouerthrowing the false interpretation thereof now let vs come to the Doctrines that arise out of the same Verse 16. Againe the Lord spake vnto Moses saying c. We heard before the heauy wrath of God that fell vpon the Israelites the heads of thē were hanged the rest of the people were plagued with a sore plague there died in one day foure and twenty thousand But did the Midianites escape the hand of God that were the enticers of them who offered theyr daughters that they should commit fornication with them No they did not escape God giueth Moses charge to draw the sword against them and to destroy them Heere then we are to obserue the order which God obserueth in punishing The Midianites sinned first but the Israelites are first punished The Israelites sinned after the Midianites but the Midianites are punished after them From this course of Gods iudgements Doctrine God doth first chasten his owne people wee learne this Doctrine that God first chasteneth his owne people Howsoeuer he will not suffer the vngodly to escape nor to goe away without punishment but executeth his iust iudgments against them yet he will begin with his owne Church lay the rod vpon them in the first place He could if it had pleased him haue punished these Midianites first as the principal authors of all this mischiefe but he beginneth in iustice with his Church which were drawne to idolatry and adultery by them Thus the Lord dealt with Moses and Aaron when the people murmured through want of water repented of their going out of Egypt and rebelling against God assembling themselues in tumultuous manner against the seruants of GOD that had led them in the wildernesse and carried them in safety as vpon Eagles wings These were the first and chiefe in the offence yet because Moses and Aaron beleeued not the Lord to sanctifie him in the presence of the children of Israel they were first punished and not suffered to bring the congregation into the land which hee had giuen them Num. 20 12. This wee see further confirmed vnto vs in the latter end of the booke of Iob he had indeed offended God and spoken vnaduisedly with his lippes but his three friends had offended much more grossely then he for the wrath of God was kindled against them because they had not spoken of him the thing that is right like his seruant Iob Iob 42 7. Neuerthelesse Iob is rebuked first albeit he were the party that had lesse offended First God findeth fault with Iob and secondly hee findeth fault with his companions The holy history teacheth vs that Iehoshaphat ioyned in affinity with Ahab and went into the battell with him True it is he sinned grieuously in helping the wicked and louing them that hated the Lord for the which he is reproued of the Prophet yet many good things were found in him and he was righteous in respect of Ahab 2. Chron. 19 1 notwithstanding the wrath of the Lord began first to fal vpon him and he had perished in the fight being compassed by his enemies vnlesse hee had cryed vnto the Lord to helpe him who moued them to depart from him 2 Chron. 18.31 This is it which the Prophet Ieremy declareth at large shewing the order of the Lords proceeding in punishing such as sinne against him first he will rayse vp the Caldeans to chastice his Church and then the Caldeans themselues shall not escape I will send and take to me all the families of the North and I will bring them against this Land against the inhabitants therof and this whole land shall bee desolate and an astonishment and these nations shall serue the King of Babel seuenty yeeres when the seuenty yeares are accomplished c. Ier. 25 9 11 12. This is it which the Prophet complaineth of in the Psalme These are the wicked yet prosper they alwayes and encrease in riches Certainely I haue cleansed my heart in vaine washed mine hands in innocency c. Psal 73 12 13. And if we consider eyther the state of the Church generally or the condition of the members of the Church particularly we may in all times and ages see the truth of this doctrine and conclude with the Apostle Peter The time is come that iudgment must begin with the house of God 1. Pet. 4 17. Reason 1 The reasons will further open vnto vs the certainty of this truth and serue to cleare the iustice of God in obseruing this order For first as hee that honoureth the Lord shall bee honoured so they that despise the Lord shall be despised 2. Sam. 2 30. But none more dishonour GOD then his seruants offending against him whose sinnes presse him downe as the sheaues do a cart They open the mouthes of the vngodly to speake euil of God and his trueth If then Gods owne people the lot of his inheritance doe despise him and cause his Name to be blasphemed if they neglect his honour and turne his mercies vnto security and his grace into wantonnesse and so with a proud heart and an high hand set themselues against it can he beare it and wil hee not be reuenged on such a nation as this 1. Sam. 12.14 Rom. 2 24. There can be no greater despite done vnto a man then when his owne children rise against him and offer all villany vnto him So
established by Arcadius and Honorius the Emperors God lib. 5 tit 4 de nuptiis that the marriage of cousin germans shall be allowed and the children borne of them shall bee holden legittimate and succeede their fathers in theyr inheritance And heereunto doe the ancient Councels also accord Epann Concil about the yeare of Christ foure hundred ninety seuen Concil Turon 2. in the yeare fiue hundred and sixty Now the first that did forbid the marriage of cousin germans was Theodosius the Elder as many testifie and that by the counsell and aduice of Ambrose Lib. 8. Epist 66. which hee calleth the Theodosian Law and in his time Austine testifieth it was in force This is wholly or at least for the most part taken out of Zepperus The next witnesse to be produced is Amand Polanus professour in the vniuersitie of Basil in Syntag. Theol lib. 10. cap. 53. who teacheth that the sonnes and daughters of brethren and sisters may lawfully marrie by the law of God whatsoeuer the Popes canon law say to the contrary as Iacob married Rahel his cousin german Of the same iudgement also is Chemnitius in his Examin Chem. exam part 1. For he sheweth that the prohibition of this degree is meerely humane established for no other cause but that the prohibitions of God might bee kept with greater reuerence and where such prohibitions are they ought to bee obserued which is not denied of vs howbeit that is not our case where no such prohibitions are I will annexe to these one forraine testimony more that is of Zanchius a man of eminent note who proouing that the incestuous marriages betweene the brother and sister De oper creat part 3 lib. 4. c. 2 whether they be borne of the same father and mother or of one of them onely are vtterly vnlawfull as also betweene the Nephew and the Aunt and the Neece and her vncle he hath these words The marriage betweene the sonnes and daughters of naturall brethren is lawfull as all the learned and godly agree without any controuersie for as much as we neuer read the same forbidden in holy Scripture in any place but rather allowed by many examples which were neuer condemned by any man And albeit he wish that in all such places as is a restraint heereof men should be subiect to the Magistrate according to the Doctrine of Christ yet hee spareth not farther to deliuer his opinion in this manner For my part I could wish for many causes and those of no smal moment and importance that marriages might simply bee made by warrant of the word of God that whatsoeuer God himselfe hath left free and made lawful the same might also be left vnto men as lawfull I speake freely that which I conceiue of this matter These are the forraine testimonies which I thought good to alledge at this present to which it were not hard to adde infinite others who because they speake the same things and run the same course that the former doe I will not trouble the reader and my selfe any farther in rehearsing of them I will conclude the whole with one more that is our owne countrey-man M. Perkins Mast Perkins a very iudicious godly learned Diuine as any that this age hath brought forth who in a Treatise prouing that a reprobate may in truth be made partaker of all that is contained in the Religion of the Church of Rome and that a right papist by his Religion cannot go beyond a reprobate sayth thus To go further by Gods word they which are distant 4. degrees in the transuers equall line are not forbidden to marry together as cousin germans thus the daughters of Zelophehad were married to their fathers brothers sonnes This example as I take it may be a warrant of the lawfulnes of this Marriage howsoeuer the church of Rome do ouerthwart the Lord in it Let me adde one thing more and then I will end Whereas wee are aduised by many in this question to haue due consideration of offences that may arise in making such matches I would wish also and desire all those that are contrary minded to haue good consideration of such offences as may bee giuen by two earnest disprouing the vnfitnesse and inconueniency of such matches and especially by leauing in doubt and suspence the lawfulnesse of them forasmuch as betweene parties of very good account both in calling and Religion there haue beene and are many matches in this Land of that kinde that betweene high and low rich poore noble and vnnoble which haue beene vndertaken and finished by the iudgement of the godly and learned so that it were not hard to produce sundry examples of Emperors Kings Princes Dukes Earles Barons Knights Gentlemen other of all sorts which now to bring in question for the offensiue conceits of some were more offensiue to the truth to the Church to the learned and to men of all conditions yea more dangerous to the state of those parties and preiudiciall to theyr yssue then any man of iudgement or godlinesse would approoue Thus much of this point of this chapter and of this whole booke The Lord almighty the author of all number of whose vnderstanding there is no number Psal 147 5 who hath ordered all things in measure number waight with whom our dayes are determined and the number of our months are set Iob 14 5 by whose onely mercy wee haue receyued strength to finish this booke of NVMBERS containing the iourneys of the Israelites through the desert from Mount Sinai vnto the plains of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho and admonishing vs of the state of the Church in this life lying vnder the crosse and at length receiuing deliuerance from the Ancient of daies grant vnto vs that being numbred among the children of GOD we may haue our lot among the Saints and be in the number of them that are sealed out of all the Tribes of the children of Israel Reuel 7 4. and so rest for euer in the heauenly Canaan among the soules of iust men perfected and the innumerable company of angels Heb. 12 22. Vnto him be praise and glorie in the Church Amen FINIS Gentle Reader let me intreate thee to amend these faults which otherwise may leade into errour PAg. 18. Col. 2. line 6. had made pag. 79. col 2. l. 37. the iudgement pag. 80 c. 1. l. 1. desired p. 137. c. 1. l. 60. rule and p. 140. c. 1. l. 56. censor p. 167. c. 2. l. 5. not to do p. 206. c. 2. l. 22. vnprobable p. 301. c. 1. l. 26. the Cushite p. 394. c. 2. l. 18. the Cushite p. 422. c. 1. l. 5. his iudgements p. 451. c. 1. l. 30. tender p. 473. c. 2. l. 36. profitable p. 536. c. 2. l. 28. the staffe p. 588. c. 1. l. 47 a double A Table of the principall Contents of this Booke the Figures note out the Page the Letters the Columne If no Letter be
with his hands the thing which is good that he may haue to giue to him that needeth Secondly it is very comfortable to vs to be busied in them we must looke for a blessing vpon vs and them while we continue in them God appeared to Moses in a slame of fire out of the middes of a bush while he kept the flocke of Iethro his father in Law Dauid was chosen and taken from the sheepefolds to feed the people of God The Lord tooke Amos Amos 7. ●● as he followed the flocke and said vnto him Goe Prophesie vnto my people Israel While the shepheards were attending their flocks by night and abiding in the fields an Angel of the Lord brought them tidings of great ioy which should be to all people that to them was borne that day in the City of Dauid a Sauiour which is Christ the Lord Luke 2.10 11. The like we might say of Iacob while he was faithfull in his calling the Lord appeared vnto him He chose his Apostles as they were busie in their callings and painefull in them Gen. 31. ● Matth. 4● 21 and ●● Peter and Andrew as they were casting a net into the sea Iames Iohn his brother as they were mending their nets for they were fishers Matthew the Publican as he sate at the receit of custome he saith vnto him follow me who arose immediatly followed him Mat. 9. While we walke in our callings we may look for a blessing but when once we goe from them and either forsake our calling or busie our selues in other mens callings we can expect no blessing at his hands for when we leaue them he leaueth vs when we returne to them he returneth to vs. Thirdly euery one must iudge and esteeme his particular calling to be the best and fittest for him The Apostle confirmeth this by his owne practise and example Phil. 4 12. I haue learned in whatsoeuer estate I am therewith to bee content This will arme vs against all discontentment and murmuring against God and make vs quietly to keepe our owne standing When Absolon was not content with the place of a Subiect and to be accounted the Kings sonne but said O that I were Iudge among you 2 Sam. 15 4. then he sought his fathers kingdome ● 20 24. When the sonnes of Zebede contented not themselues with the calling of Disciples but were enflamed with the thirst of honour and desire of dignity to be the greatest in the kingdome of Christ then arose enuy and heart-burning among them It is altogether vnpossible that we should rest well pleased with our callings and conditions and not climbe aloft aboue the places wherein we are set except we set downe this as our rest that our calling such as God hath appointed is the fittest and meetest for vs. Lastly euery one is bound to glorifie God in his calling though it be neuer so meane or base Wiues are charged to be obedient to their owne husband that the word of God be not blasphemed Tit. 2 5 10. Seruants are commanded to please their masters in all things that they may adorne the doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things Tit. 2 10. That the Name of God and his doctrine be not blasphemed 1 Tim. 6 1. This ought to be propounded vnto vs and set before our eyes to make it the end of all our actions that whether we eate or drink or whatsoeuer we do we may do all to the glory of God 1 Cor. 10. It is not the highnes or lownesse the greatnes or meannesse of our calling that God so much respecteth as the sincerity of the heart of him that walketh in his calling If it be not sound all our actions are corrupt We must not think that onely men of high callings are to giue glory vnto God it is a common duty required of all and woe vnto vs if we do it not The heauens declare the glory of GOD much more ought man endued with reason and vnderstanding 27. And of Kohath was the family of the Amramites and the family of the Izeharites and the family of the Hebronites and the family of the Vzzielites these are the families of the Kohathites 28. In the number of all the males from a moneth old and vpward were eight thousand and sixe hundred keeping the charge of the Sanctuary 29. The families of the sonnes of Kohath shall pitch on the side of the Tabernacle Southward 30. And the chiefe of the house of the families of the Kohathites shall be Elizaphan the son of Vzziel 31. And their charge shall be the Arke and the Table and the Candlesticke and the Altars and the vessels of the Sanctuary wherewith they minister and the hanging and all the seruice therof 32. And Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest shall be cheefe ouer the cheefe of the Leuites haue the ouersight of them that keepe the charge of the Sanctuary Now we come to Leuies second sonne We haue spoken before of Gershon of whom came the Gershonites It followeth to speake of Kohath for to him his posterity were committed the most honourable offices as we shal see afterward in the next chapter Touching whom we may obserue as we did in the former these particular points First the families that descended of him which are foure in number the Amramites the Izeharites the Hebronites and the Vzzielites verse 27. Secondly the number of the males that came of them to wit eight thousand and sixe hundred verse 28. Thirdly the place where they pitched to wit the South-side of the Tabernacle verse 29. Fourthly the ouerseer or superintendent of them namely Elizaphan the sonne of Vzziel verse 30. Fiftly the charge and function committed vnto them were the chiefe things within the Sanctuary verse 31. Sixtly the ouerseer of all these ouerseers and the chiefe of them that were the chiefe was Eleazar the sonne of Aaron who had authority ouer all the Priests and Leuites verse 32. He was vnder Aaron appointed to haue the ouersight of them that had the charge of the Sanctuary For Aaron himselfe was the high Priest and his eldest sonne Eleazar was vnder him as it were the second Priest euen as in the reigne of Zedekiah the high Priest was Seraiah the second Priest was Zephaniah as we reade in the second booke of the Kings chap. 25 18. The Captaine of the guard tooke Seraiah the cheefe Priest Zephaniah the second Priest and the three keepers of the doore See the notes on the Geneua Bible The second Priest is thought to be one appointed to succeed in the high Priests roome and to supply his place if he were sicke or otherwise hindred and letted by necessary occasions Of this family of the Kohathites came Moses and Aaron And albeit the Lord appeared in speciall manner to Moses called him to be a most excellent Prophet to whom he reuealed himselfe as it were face to face and chose him to be the Gouernor of a mighty
barrell teaching vs to learne and labour to depend vpon him This the three seruants of God mentioned in Daniel the Prophet practised saying O King Dan. 4.16 17 18. wee are not carefull to answer thee in this matter behold our God whom we serue is able to deliuer vs from the hot fiery furnace and he wil deliuer vs out of thy hand but if not be it known vnto thee O king that we wil not serue thy gods nor worship the golden image that thou hast set vp They confesse the power of God they put their trust in him they resolue to abide the extremity of torments they know that to saue their liues by sinning against God was to lose them and to lose them for his sake was to saue them Vse 2 Secondly if we liue by Gods appointment and by that which he will blesse then without this speciall blessing no meanes can doe vs any good For though we haue outward helps at hand they are vnprofitable vnto vs when they are not sanctified to our comfort and benefit by his blessing as our Sauiour teacheth Luke 12.15 Take heed and beware of Coueteousnesse for though a man haue abundance yet his life standeth not in his riches The Lord also often threatneth Leuit. 26.26 Ezek. 4.16 Hag. 1.6 that he will take away not onely bread it selfe but the stay and staffe of bread that is the power of nourishing Take away from a weake and impotent man his staffe whereby he stayeth himselfe he falleth to the ground so take from the meanes of feeding the vertue of Gods blessing it is vnfit and vnable to doe vs any good or yeeld vs any nourishment So the Prophet saith Ye haue sowne much and bring in little ye eate but ye haue not enough and he that earneth wages putteth the wages into a broken bag This should teach vs neuer to presume to apply any of the creatures of God to our vses and nourishment of our bodies vntill we haue sanctified them by calling vpon the Name of God For they are not able of themselues and by themselues to feed and refresh vs being themselues without life and without heat it is Gods speciall blessing that maketh them doe vs any good O that prophane and carnall men whose bellies the Lord filleth with his hid treasure would with wisedome remember this who neuer consider they stand at Gods allowance nor lift their heads hearts to heauen from whence their food commeth but receiue his creatures as brute beasts like the horse that falleth to his prouender or like the swine that gathereth vp the Mast vpon the earth but neuer look vp to the tree and when they are plentifully fed and filled they depart away without remembring the authour and giuer of their meates and drinkes but as they sate downe without vnderstanding so they rise vp without thanksgiuing O consider ye that forget God that when Belteshazzar was eating and drinking with ryot and excesse Dan. 5.4 the hand of God writing vpon the wall determineth his destruction When he sent to his own people quailes in the wildernesse Psal 78.27 30 31. a dainty food he maketh them to come out at their nostrils in most loathsome manner and while the meate was in their mouthes the wrath of God came vpon them and slew the strongest of them So God can make euery bit to be our bane and euery morsell we put into our mouthes turne to our destruction Therefore the Apostle exhorteth vs 1 Cor. 10.31 Whatsoeuer we doe whether we eat and drinke or what else soeuer we must doe all to the praise and glory of God Woe then shall be vnto them in the end that abuse these blessings of God to pride and excesse to surfeiting and drunkennesse to chambering and wantonnesse to riotousnesse and forgetfulnes of God by whom they liue moue breathe and haue their being Lastly we must not enlarge our desires as Vse 3 the graue which neuer saith it is enough nor suffer our hearts to bee oppressed and ouertaken with the cares of this world forasmuch as our life and welfare standeth not in these outward things as food raiment house land liuing and such like but in the blessing of God whatsoeuer he sendeth and affordeth be it much or little bee it homely or dainty shall be able to succour and sustaine vs. Daniel and his fellowes feeding on Pulse Dan. 1.12 and drinking water appeared in their countenances fairer and fatter then such as did eate the portion of the kings meat Therefore the holy Ghost derideth the foolish rich man Luke 12. who promised peace and plenty length of dayes and increase of riches to his owne soule hauing much laid vp for many yeeres So is he that gathereth riches to himselfe and is not rich in God and such shall be the end of those that abound in earthly treasure which the theefe may steale and the Moth may eate Matth. 6 1● and the canker may consume but not in heauenly treasure which endureth to euerlasting life Let vs rest vpon his prouidence which arayeth the lillies feedeth the fowles clotheth the grasse numbreth our haires and promiseth to prouide for vs in all estates if we rely vpon him True it is when we cast vp our eyes Gen. 49 1● 20. Iob 23.6 and behold nothing but peace and plenty on euery side when we wash our garments in wine when wee abound in corne and pleasant fruits or haue the rockes to poure out riuers of oile we can blesse God and confesse our life dependeth vpon his decree But when we see nothing but horrour and confusion when the Sunne seemeth to be darkened and the day is turned into night we must learne to wait on God and to cast our care vpon him who careth for vs as well in time of want as of plenty in time of sickenes as of health in time of warre as of peace This grace of contentation the holy Apostle felt Phil. 4.11 I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therwith to be content I can be abased and can abound I am instructed to be full and to be hungry The cares of this world and deceitfulnsse of riches are a ranke thorne that choake the growth of grace in the heart and as snares that drowne men in perdition and destruction and therefore he chargeth Timothy 1 Tim. 6.9 19. to charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high minded and that they trust not in deceitfull riches but in the liuing God which giueth vs aboundantly all things to enioy laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come that they may obtaine eternall life Verse 12 13. Because yee haue not beleeued in me We heard before the sin of Moses and Aaron speaking vnaduisedly with their mouthes and striking the rocke doubtfully with their hands now let vs see the iudgement of God waiting vpon them as a Sargeant to arest them and their
punishment lying euen at the doore Because ye sanctified not my Name before the children of Israel yee shall not bring this congregation into the land which I haue giuen them Hee doth not onely accuse and conuince them of sinne but amplifieth it by the effect that thereby hee was robbed of his glory and so excludeth them out of the land of promise We learne from hence that God chastiseth his owne children sinning against him ●trine chasti ●is owne ●on When his children forsake his lawes and walke not in his iudgements although he take not his louing kindnesse from them neither falsifie his trueth yet he will visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquities with strokes This we see throughly strengthened thoroughout the whole booke of the Iudges as chap. 4.1.2 When the people of Israel proceeded to doe euill in the sight of the Lord hee sold them into the hand of Iabin king of Canaan c. So when Ionah disobeyed the voyce of the Lord calling him to preach to Nineueh that great Citie and to cry against it for their wickednesse hee was cast into the Sea as an vnprofitable burthen of the ship ● 2 3 15 and swallowed of a Whale so that albeit he fled from the presence of the Lord yet his hand followed after him and ouertooke him When Dauid had trespassed in the matter of Vriah by adultery and murther though he were a man after Gods owne heart yet the Lord raised euill against him out of his house ●m 12.9 the sword of the enemy was shaken against him and his own wiues were defiled in the sight of the Sun ●b 12.10 When Miriam the sister of Moses withstood him in the pride of her heart through ambition and vaineglory albeit he accused her not but in meekenesse of spirit put vp the wrong being lowly in his owne eyes yet shee was striken with leprosie by the hand of God and shut for a season out of the hoast The like we might say of Salomon Asa Iehoshaphat Iosiah Hezekiah and many others all which seale vp this trueth to our hearts that GOD spareth not his owne people when they sinne against him Reason 1 The Reasons of this iust dealing of God are first to cleare his iudgement and iustice that we should know him to bee no respecter of persons but to hate sinne whensoeuer wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer he findeth it He is not a God that loueth wickednesse neither shall euill dwell with him for he hateth all them that worke iniquity This the Prophet Dauid acknowledgeth 51.4 Against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight that thou maiest be iust when thou speakest and pure when thou iudgest If then we breake his statutes and keepe not his commandements when he searcheth with lights and findeth out our sinnes we must giue glory to God and make confession vnto him wee must pronounce righteousnesse to belong vnto him and vnto our selues open shame yea if he should destroy vs we must acknowledge him to be holy in all his waies and iust in all his workes who giueth vs to eate the fruite of our owne labours As then he is iust and righteous so he must punish sinne in whomsoeuer he taketh it and as he denounceth sore iudgements and greeuous plagues of great continuance and long durance so he executeth thē to manifest the truth of his owne word and maketh good his owne threatnings gone out of his owne mouth Againe God chastiseth his owne children Reason 2 lest they sinning with the men of this world whose portion is in this life should be condemned with the world For as in punishing of vs he respecteth his own iustice so he doth it in respect of our owne good and the great profite which thereby is brought vnto vs. If we should alwaies enioy health wealth liberty peace plenty and other good blessings of God according to our hearts desire we would waxe fat and spurne with the heele Deut. 32.15 forsaking God that made vs refusing the strong God of our saluation ioyning hand in hand with wicked men reserued to destruction Wherefore affliction is as the messenger of God to call vs backe from sinne to weane vs from the world to kindle in vs a desire of the world to come This the Apostle aimeth at 1 Cor. 11 31 32. If we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged but when we are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord because we should not bee condemned with the world The vses of this Doctrine are many First Vse 1 consider with me the cause why they keep the word and turne vnto him with all their harts why they run not on in euill as the horse rusheth into the battell as the vngodly do the reason is God calleth them backe by his hand his afflictions are remembrances vnto them and his corrections are their instructions This the Prophet Dauid found true in his owne comfortable experience Psal 119 67 71. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes The Children of Israel liuing vnder the Iudges and sinning against God making a couenant with the inhabitants of the land Iudg. 2. and 4. Deu. 4.29.30 taking their daughters to be their wiues giuing their daughters to their sonnes seruing their idols forgetting the true God and doing worse then their fathers the Lord sold them into the hand of their enemies whom they serued then they lift vp their voyces and wept then they called and cryed vnto the Lord in their afflictions and he deliuered them out of their distresse The same we see in Manasseh who for his euils that he commited like the abominations of the heathen was carryed away captiue put in fetters 2 Chro. 33.2 11 12 13. and bound in chaines and when he was in tribulation hee prayed to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his father and prayed vnto him and God was intreated of him and heard his praier and brought him againe to Ierusalem into his kingdome Then Manasseh knew that the Lord was God But of this we shall speake more in the chapter following Vse 2 Secondly confesse from hence that great is the wrath and anger of God for sinne seeing he punisheth it so sharpely and seuerely in his children whom he hath engrauen as a Signet in the palme of his hand and whom he tendreth as the apple of his eye Marke how hee hath many times schooled his owne seruants offending When Miriam murmured against Moses and made other to murmure shee was striken by the hand of God with leprosie and albeit Moses made supplication for her yet the Lord answered Numb 12.10 13 14. If her father had spit in her face should she not haue beene ashamed seuen dayes Let her be shut out of the hoast seuen dayes and after she shall be