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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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crowned with glory and honour in that he raised up himselfe from the dead ascended into heaven in a cloud in the sight of his Disciples the Angels attending on him in that Stephen saw him sitting at the right-hand of God in that he sent downe the Holy Ghost from heaven and by a few simple men to look to through the preaching of the Gospell conquered all the world We may all see him crowned with glory and honour Thus he is higher than the Angels though through the suffering of death he was for a time lower than they Christ truly suffered death not phantastically in a phantasticall body as the Manichees and Apollinarists dreamed he felt and indured the bitter pangs of death Which is illustrated by two causes the efficient and finall the efficient is the grace love and mercy of God Iohn 3.16 the finall that as much as lay in Christ all men might be saved CHRIST's death was sufficient for all 1 Tim. 2.4 effectuall only to them that beleeve Isay 9.6 Mat. 26.28 Physick is offered to many sicke Patients that may doe them good if they will receive it but many are so froward that they will none of it the fault why they doe not recover is not in the physicke nor in the Physitian but in themselves so CHRIST offers the soveraigne medicine of salvation purchased by his death to all but some reject it and will not beleeve it can save them It is effectuall for all those that be sanctified that be his brethren as it is expounded afterwards Whereas it is said that Christ tasted death therein he dealt as the Physitian doth he needs not the physike prepared for his patients yet the better to induce them to take it he tastes of it himselfe before their eyes So death belonged not to Christ because he had no sinne yet he would taste of it that we might be more willing to taste and drink of that cup. The Metaphor must not be pressed too farre as if Christ did but sip and taste of the cup of death as a man tastes vinegar but drinkes not of it for he swallowed it up quite 1 Cor. 15.54 It is a borrowed speech Death is resembled to a cup whereof CHRIST did taste let this cup passe from me This hath reference to the time that hee continued in death not to the sharpenesse of his death They that taste of a thing tarry not long at it their lips are quickly removed from it so CHRIST did not continue long in death not past three dayes and three nights hee did but tast as it were of it and so away yet he truly dyed and it was a most bitter taste to him Thus the tasting of death was no dishonour but an honour to Christ. By it hee brought many to eternall life for all that hee is above the Angels and all other creatures whatsoever CHRIST hath tasted of death before us therefore let not us that be Christians be too much afraid of death There is a potion brought to a sicke Patient which the eye loathes and the mouth distasts The poore sick man is loath to drinke of it the Physitian takes it into his hand tasts of it before his eyes by that he is encouraged to receive it so is it with us death is a sowre cup which nature abhorreth we are all unwilling naturally to drink of it but for so much as Christ our loving and heavenly Physitian hath tasted of it before hand let us not be afraid of it The godliest men in the world cannot but in some measure feare death Christ feared it Et non est fortior miles quàm Imperator yet let this be as Sugar to sweeten this bitter Cup to us CHRIST tasted of it and overcame it so shall wee doe by his vertue and power As after the receit of a purgation the body is the better more sound than before so after we have drunk this bitter Cup of Death both in soule and body we shall be the better farre more glorious than before therefore let us be willing whensoever it shall seeme good to the Lord for us to taste it All of us should have died eternally At what time thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye both thou and all thy posterity Wee should have trodden the Winepresse of GOD's wrath and beene tormented with the Devill and his angels in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for ever but CHRIST hath tasted death for us all O the wonderfull and unspeakable love of Christ as if a company of Traytors were going to the Scaffold to be executed the Kings Sonne should step forth to dye for them what an admirable thing were that We by nature are enemies to God traytors to his Majestie the Son of the King of Kings comes from heaven and dies for us Is not this to be admired of us all scarce will any dye for a righteous man we were unholy unrighteous defiled with the scab of sin in soule and body yet the Lord Iesus died for us Life is sweet who will dye for his friend but will any dye for his enemy The consideration of the death of Christ should occupie our mindes continually we should ever be thinking of it it should cause us to be alwayes singing of that song Worthy is the Lambe that was killed for us to receive all honour c. But why did Christ tast death for us what moved God to send his Son to dye for us Surely his owne grace mercy and favour eternall life is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So God loved the world that he gave c. There was no goodnes in us that might procure Christ to die for us no praevisa opera nor praevisa fides it is the grace of God that we are preserved from eternall death by grace ye are saved not by workes Let us not part stakes with the Lord give halfe to our selves and halfe to him but let us ascribe the whole praise of our salvation to the grace of God alone not to us O Lord not to us but to thy owne name and mercy in thy Sonne Christ Iesus be given all praise for ever and ever VERSE 10. NOw he descendeth to Christs humanity by preventing an objection of the adversaries Well you have affirmed Christ to be God above the Angels and all other creatures and that his suffering of death was no derogation from the glory of his Deity but a declaration of Gods grace and mercy to mankinde by his death to preserve men from death eternall but seeing hee was GOD what need was there that hee should become man suffer afflictions and dye Hee might have saved men by the power of his Deity yea even by his bare and naked word whereby he made all things at the first Answer indeed GOD being omnipotent might have saved mankinde if it had seemed good to him by some other meanes than by the incarnation and death of his Son yet this seemed to be the most fit and convenient
death the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 First hee entises men to sin and then he hath power and autoritie from God to give them the wages they have deserved that is death thus he has the power of death as a thiefe and murderer Not to hold us in suspence he names him the Devill who compasses the earth to and fro ranging up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure 1 Pet. 5.8 There be three that have the power of death God Man and the Devill 1. GOD He strikes men dead and that suddenly he rayses up from the dead as Hannah speakes in her song The Lord killeth and maketh alive he bringeth downe to the grave and raiseth up 1 Sam. 2.6 hee hath supremam potestatem Gods power is immediate absolute and unlimited 2. Man a King or a Iudge hath the power of death As Pilate said to our Saviour Iohn 19.10 Knowest thou not that I have power to crucifie thee and have power to release thee True man hath a delegatam potestatem 3. The Devill hath power that is rule and empyre sed consequutam potestatem tanquam carnifex he may not kill us at his owne will and pleasure no more than the hangman may execute a malefactor at his will but according to the appointment of the Iudge VERSE 15. NOw he comes to the second end of Christs incarnation and death that hee might deliver us from the divels hands non liberaretur humanum genus nisi sermo Dei factus esset humanus August Deliver them set them free quaking at the cogitation of death in regard of eternall damnation which it brought with it for their innumerable sinnes whereof their owne consciences accused them Deliverance is a comfortable thing most welcome unto all Galley-slaves and Prisoners are glad to heare of their deliverance Not some but all so many as imbrace his deliverance Not onely those which were bound but subject to bondage that had willingly subjected themselves to the Devill which had bound themselves apprentises to him Rom. 6.16 The Indentures were made betweene them and the devill we will serve thee thou shalt be our Master this was our estate Why were we subject to him what kept us in subjection the feare of death all our life time they were subject to bondage that is to the stroake of death which they expected every moment The devill threatned death to us all our life time every houre being sinners we might looke for death every moment not onely for a temporall death but for an eternall in hell-fire Death is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we quaked at the mention of death this kept us in bondage to the devill A miserable condition but Christ hath delivered us out of it he hath taken away the feare of death that made us to shake the fetter wherewith the Devill kept us bound Now death is but a sleepe a passage to a better life yea it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Basil speakes Thus he hath rescued us out of the divels clawes and made us free Iohn 8.36 The devill sin and death are left still ad agonem to exercise us withall as Antagonists to wrastle withall but the victory through Christ is ours We sin we dye and the devill like a roaring Lion walkes up and downe seeking how to devoure us but none of these shall be able to prevaile over us Sinne though it remaines yet it doth not reigne in us 2. The guilt and the punishment of it is taken away so that it shall not condemne us Rom. 8.1 The sting of death is gone O death where is thy sting Cogitur non abesse sed non obesse hence the servants of God have wished for it Phil. 1.23 I desire to be dissolved c. Neither can it separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus The malice of Satan that shall turne to our good GOD may suffer him to tempt and assault us he walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion 1. That wee should not be secure 2. To stir us up to pray but 1. we are no longer in his jurisdiction 2. we shall be conquerors over him God will tread him under our feet Rom. 16.20 and will give us an issue with the temptation 1 Cor. 10.13 Satan may plot against us 1 Thes. 2.18 Luke 22.31 but God will confound him he may make us sin but he cannot make us continue in sin Sin the Divell and Death are three of the mightiest enemies that we have all these are destroyed by Christ for us therefore let us be thankefull to Christ that hath wrought for us so great and gracious a deliverance Let us not stand in an immoderate feare of death Death is a Serpent without a sting Though he gripe us yet he cannot hurt us Damocles the Parasite extolled the magnificence of Dyonisius affirming that there was not an happier man in the world than he wilt thou have a taste of my happinesse I he caused him to be set in a chaire of state the Table furnished with all delicates singing-men and women making melodie with voices and Instruments noble attendants to wait on him but therewithall he commanded a sharp naked sword to be hung over his head by a slender Horse-haire the which he espying tooke no pleasure in that Paradise but besought him earnestly to take him out of his happinesse againe So though we have the world at will though we be Gentlemen c. yet the sword of death hanging over our heads continually must needs quaile the courage of the greatest Gallant O quàm pulchrum esset dominantibus hic dominari Si mors non posset dominantibus insidiari It is appointed for all men once to dye when and how suddenly we know not our breath may be stopped on the sudden as Valentinians Luc. 12.20 We are all obnoxious to the feare of death but Christ hath delivered us from a slavish feare of it VERSE 16. HEre you have the amplification of it by the comparison of a more excellent nature refused by him the Angels far surpasse us yet he tooke not on him their nature but ours Not the seed of Adam of Noah but of Abraham because the promise was made to him In thy seed shall all Nations of the earth bee blessed If he should have taken on him the nature of Angels it was either for the good Angels or the bad The good needed it not because they never fell as for the evill Angels there was no such reason because they sinned in a more high degree than men 1. They sinned of themselves without the instigation of any man fell by the subtile provocation of the Serpent 2. They sinned in heaven in the Court of the King of Kings we sinned on earth which is his footstoole 3. They were indued with more excellent gifts of wisdome knowledge and understanding we are but babes and children to them 4. They were only of a spiritual essence they had no flesh to intise them to
Testament is made There is no Mediatour besides him Mediatour quasi medius dator Of the New Testament which is farre different from the Old Covenant or Testament for it consisteth on better promises Hebrewes 8. ver 6. By the meanes of death that death being or comming betweene for the redeeming of us from the punishments due to the transgressions and the price wherewith he redeemed us from them was his owne bloud If CHRIST his death doth redeeme us from all transgressions then there needs no sacrifices for sin after his death Yes say the Iesuites one to be a representation of that on the Crosse. I but you say that the sacrifice of the Masse and that on the Crosse are all one in substance differing only in the forme and manner Now if Christ be really present in the Masse how can the Masse bee a representation of him And that manner is opposite to the Scriptures for the Scripture sayes he is only offered up with bloud Your unbloudy sacrifice is no sacrifice In the former covenant whereas we for our part were not able to performe that which belonged to us GOD performed his part but we could not doe ours It is unseasonable here to dispute whether CHRIST delivered them that lived in the time of the Law for by the Old Testament is meant the Old Covenant not the time of the Old Testament Therefore it is opposed to the New Testament In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it were for the sins of them that were under the Old Testament That they which are called namely effectually as well internally by the spirit as externally by the word 1 Cor. 1.2 24. Rom. 8.30 Not only heare it but receive it namely by faith The promise The full fruition whereof they should receive hereafter in the meane season the Holy Ghost is as a Seale and earnest penny of it Ephes. 1.13 2 Cor. 1.22 It is not a thing merited by our workes but a gracious inheritance promised to us CHRIST is the right and principall heire Hebr. 1.2 we are secondary heyres with him and by him Rom. 8.17 Not a fading inheritance as these be but that lasteth for ever CHRIST is the sole Mediatour 1 Tim. 2.5 Ioh. 16.23 Apoc. 8.3 Let us not cry with those Idolaters ô Baal heare us but aske the Father in his Sons name and say ô CHRIST heare us Who prevailes more with the King then the Kings Son Let us not leave the Sonne and goe to servants There is a double calling the one externall alone by the outward sound of the word the other externall and internall too not by the Trumpet of the Word alone ringing in the eare but by the voice of the Spirit also perswading the heart and moving us to goe to Christ. Of this calling spake our SAVIOUR CHRIST no man commeth to me except the Father draw him namely by his spirit as well as by his word Iudas was called hee was not a professour alone but a Preacher of the Gospell Simon Magus was called he believed and was baptized Herod was called he heard Iohn Baptist sweetely and did many things that he willed him Sundry at this day come to Church heare Sermons talke of Religion that doe not answere Gods call Therefore let us entreat the Lord to call us effectually by his blessed Spirit out of our sinnes to holinesse and newnesse of life If wee be thus called we shall receive the eternall inheritance which CHRIST hath purchased for us Let us be suiters to God that he would make us partakers of this calling that makes an alteration of us 1 Cor. 6.9 11. If wee were Idolaters as Manasseh to call us out of our superstition and idolatry if persecutors as Paul to call us out of our persecuting if wee are Adulterers as David to call us out of our uncleannesse if drunkards out of our drunkennes if covetous oppressours as Zacheus was to call us out of our oppression and make us new Creatures in Christ Iesus It is not a purchase bought with the money of our owne merits but an inheritance bequeathed to us by the last Will and Testament of our Saviour Christ Luk. 22.29 and I appoint unto you a kingdome as my father hath appointed unto me The inheritances that bee in the world seeme faire and glorious it is a goodly thing to have the inheritance of a great Gentleman of a Knight Lord Earle Duke but a Kings inheritance surpasseth all yet these are but strawes to this inheritance These inheritances may bee taken from us while wee bee here Mephibosheth's lands were given away to Tsibah and Naboth lost his Vineyard though it was the inheritance of his fathers When Death comes then we must forgoe all houses and lands all that our fathers left us But this inheritance is eternall wee can never be deprived of it we shall enjoy it world without end Therefore let us seeke to have an assurance of this inheritance in our hearts and consciences If a man be sure to be a Lords heyre though hee is in misery yet he will endure it we are sure to have an eternall inheritance by Christ let us therefore abide patiently the miseries of this short life VERSE 16. THere must needs be carryed as a true and an infallible report it must be sure and certaine that the Testatour is dead Where 1. The axiome 2. The proofe or illustration of it Verse 17. Here wee see it was necessary CHRIST should dye Ought not CHRIST to suffer these things and to enter into his glory Luk. 24 26. why not because the Devill would have it to be so not that the rage and fury of the Pharises should bee satisfied not because Iudas would but because God the Father in singular love to mankinde had so ordained in his eternall counsell and because Christ was willing to dye for us Can mankinde bee saved no otherwise but by my death then here am I take me I will dye for them ô the wonderfull love of Christ Here the Testatour would live still if he might and then the legataries should never have their legacies our testatour might have lived still if he would being the Lord of life yet that we might have our legacy hee would dye ô unspeakable love Let it bee imprinted on our hearts that it may constraine us to leave all sins VERSE 17. NOw followes the proofe or illustration of the axiom A Testament is thus defined by Vlpianus Est declaratio voluntatis nostrae de eo quod fieri volumus post mortem Is of force Is firme After the Testatour is dead both because hee may alter it at his pleasure and the goods remaine all still in the Testatours hands it is testamentum ambulatorium usque ad mortem The Testament of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is a good Testament It is partly nuncupativum as it was pronounced by himselfe when hee was alive partly Scriptum as it was after committed to
writing by his Apostles The Testatour is Christ the thing bequeathed is an inheritance the legataries are the faithfull the witnesses to it are his Apostles Act. 1.8 The seales are the Sacraments the exequutor is the HOLY GHOST Ioh. 14.16 which is CHRIST 's Vicar on the earth a faithfull exequutor that will give us our legacies to the full and deprive us of nothing Our SAVIOUR is dead therefore his Testament is of force Object If CHRIST 's Testament was of no force till his death then how could they in the time of the Law have remission of sinnes and eternall life Sol. In seeing the day of Christ by the eye of faith as Abraham did it was not in force complemento till Christ dyed acceptatione it was This eternall inheritance could not have come to us without the death of our Saviour Christ. If hee had not dyed wee could never have had possession of this inheritance therefore how are wee to love the Lord Iesus that hath ratified this inheritance to us by his bloud Let the consideration of the death of Christ worke a death to sinne in us all that as he hath dyed for us to procure this inheritance so we may dye to sin daily more and more Seeing the Testatour is dead we may assure our selves of this inheritance bequeathed to us by his will It is a rule in Law debts must be payd before legacies and oft-times under the colour of paying debts the legataries goe long without their legacies It cannot be so here our Saviour Christ left no debts to pay he ought nothing he departed cleere with all men therefore we may be sure of our legacie All the devils in the world cannot keepe us from it VERSE 18. DEdicated to God by certaine Solemne rites and ceremonies Hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the feast of dedication Ioh. 10.22 Much lesse should the latter bee ordained without bloud VERSE 19. TO the Law as God required Exod. 24.8 Every precept being spoken by Moses Some thinke that all the people are said to be sprinkled because the twelve pillars representing the twelve tribes of Israel were sprinckled Others thinke that some few of the elders were sprinckled instead of all the rest Or all may be put for a great part In a manner all of them were sprinckled VERSE 20. YEt it was the bloud of heifers or of Goates but it is called the bloud of the testament because by it was signified Christ his bloud which is the maker of the Testament to this did our Saviour allude Matth. 26.28 this is the bloud of the New Testament which was shed for you Beza translates it that God hath commanded to you as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but rather expound it which God hath commanded subaudi to be carryed to you The bloud of Calves and goates sprinckled on the people in the time of the Law was a figure of Christ's bloud sprinckled on our consciences Object Here wee may learne say the Rhemists that the Scripture containes not all necessary truths when neither the place to the which the Apostle alludeth nor any other doth mention halfe these ceremonies but he had them by tradition Sol. I but all these are contained in the Scripture The booke was sprinckled on the Altar or at least with the respersion that was cast on the people For the purple wooll and hysop Levit. 14.51 there is the water too Ribera sayes all these are necessarily collected for there could be no sprinckling without them Vnder the peace offerings Exod. 24.5 are comprehended Goates appointed to peace offerings as wee may see Levit. 3.12 The meaning of these words is nothing else but this is a significant token of the bloud of the New Testament that is to bee shed for your sins This bloud sprinckled on the people was a significant type and figure of the bloud of our Saviour Christ whereby the New Testament is confirmed to us That was the bloud of Goates and Heifers this of Christ the immaculate Lamb of God 2. Moses was the sprinckler of that bloud the Holy Ghost is the sprinckler of this 3. That was sprinckled on the face or garments of the people this on our hearts and consciences 4. The aspertorium the sprinckling sticke there was made of purple wooll and hysop the aspertorium here is faith With that doth the Spirit or God sprinckle on us the bloud of Christ. 5. That sprinckling did but sanctifie the outward man this the hid man of the heart 6. The force and power of that sprinckling lasted but a while the efficacy of this sprinckling continueth for ever Therefore let us all be desirous of this sprinckling As the Woman of Samaria said Lord give me of that water So let us say LORD sprinckle us with the bloud of CHRIST continually It is a comfortable thing for a man to bee sprinckled with sweet water it is a sweet smell and refreshes him but nothing so sweete as the bloud of CHRIST sprinckled on our soules and consciences by faith Let us desire the Lord to sprinckle this bloud on us dayly more and more that being washed with it wee may bee made fitt for the Holy Hierusalem and remaine with Christ for ever and ever Hebrewes 9.21 NOw followes an application of the rites and ceremonies belonging to the Tabernacle 1. A narration of them Verse 21.22 2. An accommodation of them The rites are two 1. The rite of consecration or sanctification Lev. 16.14 16. 8 15 18. 2. The rite of purification some by fire some by water Num. 31.23 In all things are comprehended also all persons An accommodation is made of these rites by the way of an antithesis or opposition whereof there be foure members 1. An application of the things Verse 23. 2. Of the place Verse 24. 3. Of the actions Verse 25.26 4. Of the use Verse 27.28 The things are applyed by way of opposition It was necessary that the types of heavenly things should be purified with such externall things for the purification of the flesh or outward man But c. The sacrifice of Christ is termed sacrifices in the plurall number and yet is but one because the fruit and efficacy of it is derived unto many So the wisedome of Christ is set forth by seven eyes his power by seven hornes Apoc. 5.6 The Holy Ghost being but one spirit it is called seven spirits Apoc. 1.4 The place is applyed by way of opposition 1. In respect of the nature that was made with hands this without 2. Of the use or end there the High-Priest did appeare before the Arke and Mercy-seate which were figures of Gods presence here our High-Priest appeares before GOD immediately without figures for us The third is an application of the action or service the dissimilitude whereof consisteth in three things 1. There the High-Priest went often into the holy place here our High-Priest went into heaven but once 2. He went with other bloud ours
So the graces of the spirit clense us from many sinnes which are the corruptions of the soule 6. Oyle swims aloft above all other things it will have the preeminence above all liquid things So the oyle of the Spirit carries us aloft makes us to have our conversation in heaven 7. Oyle makes the lampe to burne the five foolish Virgins went to buy oyle for their lamps So the oyle of the Spirit makes us to continue burning in zeale and all good workes 8. Oyle makes a man chearefull he hath given him oyle to make him a cheerefull countenance when men would looke cheerefully they annoint their faces with oyle So the graces of the spirit infuse unspeakable cheerfulnesse into the faithfull for this cause it is called the oyle of gladnesse none so merry none so cheerfull as they that bee anoynted with this oyle There was great joy in Samaria when this oyle came to the City when the Gospell of Christ was planted among them The Iaylor rejoyced with all his household that by Saint Pauls Preaching he believed in God the Christians in the Primitive Church being for the most part poore folke eate their meate with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart praising God This oyle makes us exceeding cheerefull in all estates and conditions Sometimes indeed we have cause of weeping for our selves and others Saint Peter wept bitterly for his denyall of Christ. There be some of whom I tell you weeping yet this cheerfull oyle of the Spirit comforts us in the middest of all calamities whatsoever in Sicknesse poverty in the losse of goods and friends too yea in the houre of death it selfe David was in a pittifull taking the City was burnt wherein he was his wives taken prisoners the people ready to stone him yet having this oyle in him he was of a cheerefull heart It is said of him yet David comforted himselfe in the Lord his God Some are afrayd to become strict livers because they suppose there is no mirth in that way Christians must be ever weeping with Heraclitus they may not goe to the Taverns and Ale-houses they may not bee dancing skipping and rejoycing as other men yes verily they that be right Christians anointed with this oyle of the Spirit are the merriest men in the world they may in some respect though not as he did be alwayes laughing with Democritus There is no peace saith God to the wicked if no peace then no true joy they may be merry in their cups as Belshazzar was but the soundest mirth is among the godly that are anointed with this oyle of gladnesse Come Warre peace health sicknesse death life they are merry in the Lord ready to sing as the Swanne doth at the sight of death What a joyfull man was Saint Paul when he was in the Lions mouth at Rome I am now ready to be offered henceforth there is laid up for me a Crowne of righteousnesse Therefore let us intreat the Lord to anoint us with this oyle of gladnesse it surpasseth all the joy and mirth in the world All the faithfull have some of this oyle but Christ is anointed with it above us all Semper excipio Platonem said hee So when we talke of rare and excellent men we must say we alwayes except our Saviour Christ. Noah was a famous man Abraham a notable man Moses David Salomon were of great renowne Peter Paul Thomas were adorned with singular graces yet Christ is many degrees above them As he sayes of a good huswife many women have done valiantly but thou surmountest them all So though many of GODS children were beautified with the oyle of the spirit yet CHRIST surmounts them all he is annointed above his fellowes they were as starres he as the Sunne Therefore let us all doe reverence to him we are Saints but he is Sanctus Sanctorum and of his fulnesse we all receive The principall scope of the place is this CHRIST is above all above all men above all Angels above all creatures whatsoever Which must needs bee a pillar of singular comfort for us to leane upon that the King and protectour of the Church is the high mighty and eternall God all stoope to him Let Satan spew out the Sea of his malice against us let his instruments rage never so much let the cruell and bloud thirstie Iesuits be continually plotting against us as out of all question they are never idle yet let us not be dismayed CHRIST our head and keeper is above all he hath all power in heaven and earth hee sits in the high tower of heaven sees all their doings and laughs them to scorne This doctrine concerning the deity of CHRIST in the pressing whereof the Holy Ghost is so large and ample is not lightly to bee passed over let us all apply it to our owne hearts that it may bee a bultwarke to us in the time of need that seeing he is God blessed above all for ever and ever so we may boldly put our trust in him in this world count our selves safe under the shadow of his wings and reigne with him in the world to come VERSE 10. AN other Argument from the Creation of the world Christ is the maker of heaven and earth therefore GOD Ier 10.11 Psalme 102.25 This Psalme intreateth of the deliverance of the Church out of captivity in Babylon of the re-edifying of the Temple and the repairing of the Walls of Ierusalem which is further to bee applyed to our deliverance from sinne to the building up of the Walls and Temple of the Church whereupon the Psalmist converteth his speech to CHRIST the true instaurator of the Church Lord to whom all Creatures are subject as servants to their LORD In the beginning therefore CHRIST was before that beginning Io. 1.1 Before Abraham was I am Io. 8.58 CHRIST is the beginning of the world who was before it had a beginning Layd the foundation of the earth made it firme sure and solid so as it cannot be moved contrary to those Philosophers that are of opinion that the heavens stand still and the earth moveth though it cannot be discerned with the eye And the heavens i. all the heavens the firmament and the ayre are the workes of thy hands it is a metaphor borrowed from Carpenters and Masons else God hath no hands CHRIST in setting up the building of the world observed an other order then earthly Artificers When they goe about to build they lay the foundation first and set on the roofe afterwards for they cannot build otherwise but this celestiall builder made the roofe first and the foundation afterwards first he spread forth the heavens as the roofe and afterwards laid the foundation of the earth which was a lively demonstration of his unspeakable power Heaven and earth is the workemanship of CHRIST the high and eternall God In that respect it should be admired by us all if thou haddest a picture of Apelles making that famous and renowned Painter wouldest
of sores at his gate ever under one Crosse or another If there were no resurrection where this should be righted that sentence of the Psalmist might bee inverted verely there is no reward for the righteous verily there is no God that judgeth in the earth The third pillar is the Solemne funeralls that be in all nations All which are so many glasses wherein wee may behold the resurrection When we goe to a buryall we goe to a sowing the seede that is sowen lies covered in the earth all winter in the spring it shoots up againe and a goodly harvest ariseth of it So the body is sowne in corruption it rises in incorruption more beautifull then ever it was before The fourth pillar is that which Saint Paul urgeth to Christians 1 Cor. 15.12 Christ is risen therefore we shall ryse As Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly So Christ was three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth on Thursday he kept his Maundy he eate the Passeover and supper with his Disciples on good Friday he suffered and was crucified all Saturday being the Iewes Sabbath he lay in the earth on Sunday morning the first day of the weeke the Lords day the Lord Iesus rose triumphantly from the dead and this is the day of his resurrection on this day hee rose victoriously from the dead This is the day that the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and hee glad in it for Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours The first fruits are in heaven therefore the second fruits shall be there the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be there The Husband is in heaven therefore the Wife shall bee in heaven also we shall mee●e him with joy in the clouds and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever After the resurrection comes judgement it is appointed to men once to dye and then commeth the judgement Death were nothing if there were no judgement The Assi●es were nothing if there were nothing if there were no Gallowes no execution but as we must arise so wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it be good or bad Let us all thinke seriously of this eternall judgement It is called eternall judgement 1. Because it is of things eternall eternall life or eternall death 2. Because the sentence of that judgment is eternall the force and power thereof remaines ever both to the elect and reprobate they all goe eternally to the place appointed by the Iudge 3. Because the Iudge is eternall 4. Because the persons judged are eternall Some are to enjoy eternall happines some to suffer eternall punishment The judgement it selfe is not eternall that lasteth not ever but the fruit and event of it is eternall Oh that the cogitation of this judgement were deeply fixed in the harts of us all A great number even in the lap of the Church laugh at it in the closet of their hearts the Preachers talke much of a generall judgement that shall be after this life but if God let us alone till that day we shall doe well enough GOD grant we may escape the judgements here a flie for that judgement Yet Felix himselfe trembled at 〈◊〉 when Saint Paul spake of righteousnesse and the judgement to come though he were a judge himselfe he quaked at it Let us all feare this eternall judgement after an holy and religious manner and tremble at it In these judgements we may have Lawyers to plead for us then none shall be for us all against us especially our owne consciences as a thousand Lawyers and witnesses if our sinnes are not washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Therefore let us judge our selves here that wee bee not judged by the Lord hereafter let us bewaile our sinnes here that wee come not into the place where is weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for ever Let us remember this eternall judgement that it may bee as a bridle to restraine us from sinne That godly Father St. Hierome professed of himselfe whether he did eat or drinke or whatsoever he did this trumpet rang alwayes in his eares surgite mortui venite adjudicium When wee goe to bed in the evening when wee arise in the morning when we are about the affaires of our calling when Satan provokes us to stealing lying coofening purloyning c. Let us remember this eternall judgement let us call our selves to an account for our sins in this world repent seriously of them let us cast away our sins not as we do our coates when we goe to bed and put them on againe in the morning but throw them away and have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee shall have fellowship with Christ both in this life and in the life to come then we shall not need to feare this eternall judgement The Iudge is our SAVIOUR our elder brother our head our husband to whom we are married therefore we may lift up our heads at that day because our redemption is at hand we may rejoyce at his comming for we shal sit on the bench with him and judge the world and reigne with him for ever The Iesuits collect from hence that the Christians had a Catechisme delivered to them by tradition which they learned before they were acquainted with the Scriptures If every one should pick his faith out of the Scripture there would be madd rule Indeed if they had such heads as the Papists have that are bold to call the Scripture a nose of Wax But to answer 1. These Hebrewes to whom St. Paul writeth were exercised in the Scripture for Rom. 3.2 Vnto them were committed the oracles of God 2. Here is nothing in this Catechisme but is derived out of the Scripture 3. How shall men picke their faith out of the Pater-noster Ave-Mary c. being in an unknowne tongue Here wee have a short Catechisme consonant to the Scripture that was used in the Primitive Church Such as is at this day the Lords prayer the ten Commandements and the Articles of our beliefe These be profitable points but we that professe the Gospell must not always be in these they are to be propounded continually in the Church unto Children to them that bee rude and ignorant but Christians must not dwell in these wee must bee carryed to perfection till wee come to a ripe age in CHRIST IESUS wee must be able to answer all Heretickes and gaine-sayers and to defend the sacred truth of Christ his Gospell against them all VERSE 3. LEst hee should seeme to have presumed upon his owne strength when he said let us be lead forward to perfection here he referreth all to God that must be the leader of us all hee must give us feet to walke to perfection by Wee both we that are to teach and you
diverse qualitie of both Priest-hoods The Priest-hood which is everlasting and abideth for ever is more excellent than that which is momentany and continueth but for a time Christs Priest-hood is eternall the Leviticall Priest-hood lasted but for a time ergo This Argument hath two branches the comparison betweene them 23.24 and an effect 25. the comparison is in the number and continuance That the Priest-hood of the Levites was temporarie is evinced by the relatives If the Priests continued but a time then the Priest-hood but they continued but for a time which is illustrated by the number of them and the reason of the number And they verily being many were made Priests And why were they many because they were forbidden by death to endure Death would not suffer them to continue long therefore it was necessary that there should bee many of them one to supply the roome of the other There were not onely many inferiour Priests but many high Priests not at one and the same time but successively After Aaron came Eleazar after him Phinees c. for the same cause there be many Kings one King succeedeth another because death will not suffer them to live death forbids them to abide He brings an inhibition against their continuance I command thee here to stay and to goe no further and all Kings Priests Lawyers Physitians must obey him A paucity is a greater argument of perfection then a multitude The kingdome is better governed that hath one King then that which hath many that house is better ruled that hath one Master then many the world is better with one Sun then if there were many the Phaenix is the most famous of all birds because there is but one of them at a time God being but one is farre more glorious then man being many So is it betweene the Priests of the Law and CHRIST they were many but CHRIST is but one which remaineth alwayes therefore his Priest-hood is more excellent than theirs But why were they many because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death As it is here said of the Levites So it may be said of us all A man walking in London streets or in a corporation is on the suddaine arrested by a Sergeant and commanded to stay so as wee are walking in our race in the world comes death as the LORDS Sergeant and bids us stay here yeeld up thy life I will not suffer thee to tarry any longer Adam was the ancientest man that ever was the first that breathed on the earth yet hee was not suffered to endure by reason of death Methusalem was the longest liv'd man that ever was he lived almost a thousand yeeres yet dyed Sampson a mighty strong man with the jaw-bone of an Asse he slew a thousand Philistims he carryed away the great Gates of the Citty on his Shoulders yet he was arrested by death Saul a goodly tall man higher than any of the people Absalom a faire beautifull man not a blemish in him from the Crowne of his head to the soale of his foote Salomon the wisest man that ever was Saint Paul a learned man he spake with tongues more than they all a profound divine taken up into the third heaven a painfull and powerfull Preacher he converted a great part of the world to Christ yet they were not suffered to continue by reason of death This is the condition of us all high and low rich and poore learned and unlearned none of us all can bee suffered to endure long by reason of death Death is a cooling Card in all our mirth and jollity that comes at length with his Axe and cuts all downe Kings are not suffered to endure by reason of death there is a succession of Kings as well as of other men Dukes Earles Lords Knights Gentlemen are not suffered rich Merchants Lawyers Divines Physitians are not suffered to continue by reason of death The Physition that hath saved the life of many in the end surrenders his life into Deaths hands none of us can endure here long by reason of death The Priests of the Law dyed and the Ministers of the Gospell must dye none but CHRIST endures for ever therefore seeing Death will not suffer us long to tarry here let us so live the little and uncertaine time wee have in this world that wee may live eternally with Christ our everlasting Priest and Saviour in the world to come VERSE 24. HEre in the Priest-hood of Christ there is but one Priest and why because hee is not mortall and taken away by Death as they were but immortall and endureth for ever Indeed in respect of his humanity he dyed but hee continued not long in that death not past three dayes and three nights After he rose againe sitteth now at the right hand of God and lives for ever whole Christ both God and man Rom. 6.9 whereas the Priests in the Law shall not live againe for ever in their bodies till the day of judgement And our Saviour Christ in respect of his deity endureth for ever continually and therefore hee hath an everlasting Priest-hood intransibile which passeth not by succession from one to another as the Leviticall Priest-hood did but continueth for ever in the person of one man Chrysost. expounds it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee hath not a succeeding Priest-hood In the time of the Law there were many sacrificing Priests but now in the time of the Gospell there is but one sacrificing Priest and that is our SAVIOUR CHRIST which offered one sacrifice once for the sinnes of the world This cut●eth off the whole rabble of the massemonging Priests Indeed spiritually wee are all Priests Apoc. 1.6 to offer spirituall sacrifices to God but there is no Priest to offer an externall sacrifice for sin but Christ. The Iesuites chafe at us for this collection yet it is firme VERSE 25. THe eternity of Christs Priest-hood is illustrated by an effect that ensueth thereupon As he is willing so he is able Also which necessarily is inferred on the other To save all that belong to him Thence hee hath his name Iesus because he saveth Matth. 1.21 This is amplified 1. By the manner how he saveth us 2. By the description of them whom he saveth 3. By the cause why he is able to doe it For the manner wholly omnino leaving no part of our salvation to be accomplished by others Acts 4. Verse 12. he needs not the helpe of the Virgin Mary of Thomas c. he can save us wholy of himselfe They that are saved are such as come to God by him not by the Virgin by any Saints or Angell in heaven The reason why because he ever liveth to make intercession for us he discharges the office of a Priest for us still in heaven Romans 8.26 it is said that the Holy Ghost maketh intercession for us yet the HOLY GHOST is not our Mediatour hee doth not in our nature pray for us as Christ doth but
speaketh to us by whom hee revealeth the knowledge of his Majesty to us Christ knew there should be plentie of knowledge at his comming yet he bade his Apostles goe and teach all nations The Lord opened the heart of Lydia yet it was by Saint Pauls preaching the Lord catechized the Eunuch yet it was by Saint Philip the Lord added three thousand soules to the Church yet it was by Saint Peter How can they heare without a Preacher These be the Schoole-masters by whom God teacheth us to the end of the world The head Master of a Schoole doth not take away the Vshers Saint Augustine tract 3. in 1. Iohann Si unctio docet de omnibus nos sine causa laboramus Let us put you all over to the annointing then they might reply why doest thou write this Epistle to us why doest thou teach us nos extrinsecus admonemus magister intùs est qui docet Matth. 23.8 Nos abusivè magistri appellamur Neither doth hee send downe the HOLY GHOST on them in the similitude of cloven tongues as he did on the Apostles at the beginning they must be brought up in Schooles and Vniversities to attaine to the knowledge of the tongues and the right interpretation of the Scripture Paul mentions it as a blessing that he was brought up at the feete of Gamaleel hee disputed in the Schoole of Tyrannus but hee never wished the Schoole of Tyrannus to be pulled downe This doth declare to us the wonderfull abundance of knowledge that shall bee in the time of the Gospell above that which was in the time of the Law yet there bee a number of ignorant persons in the lap of the Church like them that knew not whether there was an Holy Ghost or no They have a confused knowledge of God but they doe not know him so distinctly in CHRIST as they ought to doe they have the more to answer for that living in so great light are still overwhelmed with darkenesse like to Tantalus up to the chin in water and yet drie like carelesse and negligent Schollers that have beene long at Schoole and learn't nothing the fault is not in God who gives them the meanes but in themselves that neglect the meanes 2. As wee have greater knowledge so greater obedience is required of us The servant that knowes his masters will and doth it not shall bee beaten with many stripes Wee know much and practise little therefore our condemnation shall bee the greater at the latter day VERSE 12. THe third branch of the new covenant is remission of sins In sence it agreeth with the Hebrew only the Apostle following the seventie hath for our further comfort enlarged it by the addition of one clause which is not in the Hebrew The first part of Verse is not in the Hebrew In my Sonne CHRIST IESUS I will be mercifull to their unjust and unrighteous dealings to all the injuries they have offered me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faults in manners when as we swarve from the marke of the Law of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in generall signifies all transgressions of the Law He useth many words to signifie to us that all our sinnes by what names soever they be called are forgiven us In acquittances we use to put in words enow for the declaration of a full discharge So doth the Lord when he acquitteth us of all our sinnes whether they be unrighteousnesse slips or violations of the Law they bee all forgiven hee professeth hee will remember them no more hee will cast them behinde his backe rase them out of the booke of his remembrance If wee minde to be revenged of a man wee say well I will remember thee I will one day pay thee home for it but God will not so much as remember our sinnes Oh blessed thing The just man falls seven times a day yet GOD will not remember his falls Hee remembred the sin of Amalek and of some hee sayes their sins shall be written with a penne of a diamond and sealed up in a bagge but he will keepe no register of our sins they shall bee quite forgotten Hee doth not say because they by their workes of penance have made satisfaction to my justice for their sinnes therefore I will remit them I will doe it of my sole mercy and goodnesse for my owne sake c. Object Was he not mercifull to the sinnes of the people in the time of the Law Sol. The forgivenesse of sins is now more cleerely manifested to us To them it was shadowed out by sacrifices and washings but now the Lamb is come offered on the Crosse whose bloud purgeth us from all sin This is a comfortable covenant the heavenly triacle and hony of the soule Our sins are innumerable besides our blasphemies besides the abhominable drunkennesse and whoredome that is amongst us our greedy scraping in the dunghill of the earth seldome or never lifting up our hearts to heaven wee sin daily in our best actions we sin in preaching of the Word for who preaches with such wisedome sincerity and zeale as he ought to doe wee sin in hearing our mindes oftentimes are on wooll-gathering our bodies in the Church our hearts on our Sheep and Oxen we heare more like Iudges to censure Gods Ambassadour than as Schollers to learne of him wee sinne in praying no sighes no groanes no fervency in our prayers no Amen at the end of them wee sin in giving of our almes wee give rather for vaine glory then for Gods glory we sin in our dayly talke and conferences one with another in them we seeke the ostentation of our own witte and learning not the edification one of another Who can cleere himselfe of pride wee are proud of our wit wealth beauty learning yea some are proud of nothing Good Lord then if God should call us into the counting house for our sins alas what shall we doe we cannot answer him one for a thousand and the least sinne deserves eternall death Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy thought if one evill thought remaine unforgiven we are in a miserable case Against all these let us hold up the buckler of this new covenant of the remission of our sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins are bitter accusers In what a pittifull case was Caine who said my sinne is greater than can bee forgiven what a howling kept Iudas O I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what makes men to hang themselves as Achitophel did to drowne themselves to lay violent hands on themselves save that they cannot be perswaded of the forgivenesse of their sins Therefore let us blesse God for this covenant and let us entreat him to seale in our hearts a comfortable perswasion of the remission of our sinnes dayly more and more VERSE 13. HEre followes a collection inferred on the former testimony which he gathereth out of the word new it hath his force from the contraries New and Old cannot stand together
undefiled we are bought with a price and that a deere price even the bloud of the Sonne of GOD. Our swearing drunkennesse c. these cost the bloud of the Sonne of GOD we are washed from them in the bloud of Christ and shall we wallow in them is not this the water said David for the which three worthy men ventured their lives he would not drinke of it though very thirsty So when we are provoked to sinne to drunkennesse covetousnesse adultery let us reason with our selves Indeed the water of these sins is sweete but did it not cost the bloud of CHRIST therfore away with it we think sin to be nothing yet all the Martyrs on the earth all the Angels in heaven could not have freed us from sin The Son of God must shed his bloud for it therefore let the consideration hereof bee a perpetuall bridle to restraine us from sin CHRIST 's bloud is the price of our redemption he sweat drops of bloud when hee was in his agony in the garden at the commandement of Pilat hee was extreamely whipped so that the bloud came exceedingly out of his holy body he had a Crowne of thornes platted on his head that made the bloud runne about his eares being nailed hand and foote to the Crosse the bloud came out in great measure a Souldier thrust him through with a speare and out of his side came water and bloud So that this our High-Priest redeemed us not with the bloud of beasts but with his owne bloud How then are wee to love CHRIST IESUS that spared not his heart bloud for us There was no bloud almost left in this immaculate Lamb he spent all for our sake Wee will love them that give their money for us and shall wee not love CHRIST that gave his bloud for us yet the love of Christ is not so deepely fixed in us as it ought to bee We love the trash of the world the pleasures of the flesh above Christ. This love of Christ should constraine us to forsake our sinnes Wilt thou make much of the knife that cut the throate of thy friend or father Sinne was the knife that cut CHRIST 's throate therefore let us hurle it away but this bloud of CHRIST by the which we are washed from our sinnes is little regarded for all that wee wallow in the mire of our sinnes forgetting the LORD that bought us as Saint Peter speaketh Wee are redeemed from our drunkennesse covetousnesse pride c. by the bloud of CHRIST therefore let us have no fellowship with these sins 2. Heaven is an holy place there dwells the holy God there bee the holy Angels and holy Saints they that remaine unholy shall never enter into it dogs enchanters c. are without By nature we are all unholy borne in sin conceived in iniquity pulling sinne to us with Cartropes and iniquity with Cords of vanity but wee are made holy by the spirit of Sanctification Such were some of you drunkards c. but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6.11 They that continue in sin without repentance shall never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Noah was once overtaken with Wine but he forsooke that sin David fell into adultery but hee washed it away with his teares Peter denyed Christ but he wept bitterly for it Manasseh left his idolatry Paul his persecuting of the Church of God Mary Magdalen her uncleannesse even so if through the corruption of our nature wee have beene carryed into any sin let us by repentance rise up out of it againe Let us strive to be holy in this world holy in heart in conversation that wee may enter into the holy Hierusalem in the world to come Follow peace and holinesse without which none can see God The wicked mocke at them that be holy I but except yee likewise be holy ye shall never reigne with Christ in the Holy Hierusalem 3. By CHRIST wee have a plenary redemption of soule and body out of the clawes of Satan As the Bird is in the fowlers net so were we in the Devills snare but we may say with them in the Psalme the net is broken and we are delivered yea wee are delivered eternally we shall never fall into that bondage againe The afflictions whereunto we are incident in this life are temporall but the redemption is eternall sicknesse poverty malevolent tongues imprisonment death it selfe is temporall our joy is eternall Let that comfort us in all the calamities of this life A burning agew the tooth-ach the stone lasts not alwayes but my joy in heaven shall be eternall here I may be in griefe for a time but there I shall reigne with Christ for ever Wee love them that obtaine a temporall redemption for us If a young man bee bound Prentise to an hard master for tenne or twelve yeeres and if one should buy out his apprentiseship and set him free would hee not take himselfe much beholding to him Wee were bound Prentises to Satan hee kept us in his snare at his will and pleasure being his bond men wee should have remained in hell fire world without end Now Christ Iesus hath redeemed us and made us the free men of God Cittizens of heaven how are we indebted to him If thou wert a Gallislave under the Turke and one should rid thee out of it wert thou not much obliged to him Christ hath brought us out of the gally of sinne and damnation therefore let us sound forth his praises all the dayes of our life Let us say with them in the Revelation worthy is the Lamb that was killed and hath obtained eternall redemption for us to receive all honour and glory and blessing for ever and ever VERSE 13. THat Christ by the shedding of his owne bloud hath obtained an eternall redemption for us is confirmed by an argument à pari à minore from the sacrifices of the Law to the sacrifice of Christ. 1. What they were 2. What was the fruit and effect of them If the bloud of Bulls and goates c. being an outward thing could sanctifie the flesh that was an outward thing then the bloud of Christ being a spirituall thing in force and power everlasting must needs sanctifie the conscience which is a spirituall and internall thing yea this rather than that for many respects as we shall see but the one ergo the other The Protasis is in this 13. Verse Because hee would enwrap the whole Ceremonial Law hee reckons up other sacrifices and rites then those which the High-Priest used when hee went into the Holy of Holies 1 Chron. 29. Verse 21. Among the rest he makes mention of one solemne ceremony whereunto the Iewes adscribed much Num. 19.1 A Red Cow was commanded to bee taken which was without spot and never accustomed to the yoke she was to be burnt to
profits of the world seldome or never thinking of the joyes of the world to come Who will serve a Master that is ready to dye Such a one as cannot preferre thee the world hath one foote already in the grave therefore let us serve him no longer CHRIST hath not redeemed us by the bloud of a Calfe Ram Sheepe c. not with the sacrifice of an Angell of his mother or any Saint but by the sacrifice of Himselfe no other sacrifice could save us Now as Christ in wonderfull love hath sacrificed Himselfe for us so let us offer up our selves as an holy sacrifice to him VERSE 27. THe application of the use is set forth by an elegant antithesis betweene the cursed condition of men by nature and the blessed condition of men by grace through CHRIST IESUS The lamentable condition of men by nature is double 1. They must all dye then there remaines a Iudgement for them Vnto the common death of men is opposed the death of our Saviour Christ that taketh away the sins of the world In regard whereof death cannot hurt the faithfull Vnto the fearefull judgment to come is opposed Christ's second comming amplified by the persons to whom he shall come by the manner how and the end of his comming Layd up in Gods secret Counsell Why for sin at what time so ever thou eatest thou shalt dye the death To all men It an indefinite proposition is equivalent to an universall Man that is borne of a woman is but of a short time c. that is every man Object 1 Cor. 15.51 Sol. That change shall be instar mortis Object 2. Lazarus dyed twise That was extraordinary ordinarily men dye but once But after this the judgement immediately without delay 1. The particular then the generall Then there is no Purgatory We have two purgatories in this life the fire of affliction and the bloud of Christ then wee neede feare no purgatory after this life Here we see an appointment a decree a sentence wherein foure circumstances are to be observed 1. By whom this appointment is made namely by God Almighty in whom there is not a shadow of turning and which is able to bring that to passe which he hath appointed What I have written I have written said Pilat and would not alter his writing so what God hath appointed hee hath appointed and hee will accomplish it Men are mutable they appoint and disappoint it is not so with God hath he said it and shall he not doe it Therefore as sure as God is in heaven this appointment shall stand Who at any time hath resisted his will who can breake his appointment 2. What it is that is appointed once to dye What is death properly to speake it is a separation of the soule from the body Man was made with two parts the body of the dust of the ground the soule breathed into him by God Life is a conjunction of these two death is a separation of them There is an improper death which is a change of these two conjoyned still together which shall happen to them that be alive at the day of judgment but the Apostle here speaketh of the proper death 2. There is an extraordinary dying and an ordinary Some have dyed twise as Lazarus and those that rose with Christ at his resurrection but ordinarily it is appointed to all men once to dye It is not appointed to all to be rich wise learned but to dye 3. Why was this appointment made because of sin Rom. 5.12 at what time thou eatest thou shalt dye the death Sinne is the cause of death Then why should wee bee in love with sin Wee shunne poyson because it will kill us drunkennesse adultery swearing and other sins brought death into the world therefore let them be hated by us Why are wee afraid of the plague because it will kill us Sinne will kill both soule and body therefore let us all bee afraid to sinne 4. The persons to whom this appointment is made to men to all men There is no man living but shall see death it is appointed to Kings to dye to Dukes Earles Lords Knights Gentlemen Merchants Clothiers Husbandmen to high and low rich and poore learned and unlearned It is appointed to the Ministers to dye and to the people to the Master and servant to the Husband and to the Wife We read of a Woman that had seven Husbands they all dyed and in the end the Woman dyed also None can avoid the stroake of death the Physitions that cure others at the length dye contra vim mortis non est medicamen in hortis the godly dye good Women bring forth with sorrow as well as bad so good men and women dye as well as bad as the faithfull are sicke as well as the unfaithfull so also they dye as well as others Oh that this were carefully remembred by us and that wee would lay it close to our hearts We see our neighbours Townsmen one or other almost everyday carryed to the earth yet wee lay it not to heart it workes not in us a death to sin we follow the world with such earnestnesse as if we should never leave the world Let us so live that wee may dye in the LORD IESUS rise againe and live with him for ever When or where we shall dye wee cannot tell that is in Gods hands but this is most certaine wee shall dye quocunque te verteris incerta omnia sola mors certa In all other things we may use a fortè fortè eris Dives fortè habebis liberos but when wee speake of death we may put fortè under our girdles and say certè morieris If any should aske a reason why the godly should dye seeing CHRIST hath dyed for them the answer is easie because CHRIST dyed to free them from death eternall not from the corporall death which is imposed upon all because all have sinned Christ hath taken away the curse of the corporall death but not death it selfe cogitur non obesse sed non abesse wee are all sinners therefore we must all dye Let us bee carefull to feare God while wee bee alive that wee may not greatly feare death whensoever he shall come Death is a bitter cup all of us in some sort feare to drink of it CHRIST feared it non est fortior miles quàm Imperator wee feare it as it is a dissolution of nature but let us not feare it after a slavish manner Take this sugar to sweeten this bitter Cup withall 1. CHRIST hath taken away the sting of it 1 Cor. 18.57 thankes bee to God which giveth us the victorie through our Lord Iesus Christ. Death is a great Goliah yet stripped of his armour as a roaring Lion yet without jawes or pawes as an hissing Serpent yet without a sting the sting of death is sinne Christ hath taken away the sins of the world In his owne body upon the tree he
Vehagnalithihu 3 His daughter did lament her Virginity alone after she heard of it whereas if she should have beene put to death she would have lamented her life above that 4. At her returne it is not said that her Father sacrificed her but did to her according to his vow Verse 39. which is there expounded hee consecrated her as a perpetuall Virgine to the Lord that she never knew man 5. It is said Verse 40. that the daughters of Israel went yeere by yeere not to lament her but as the Hebrew signifies to talke with the daughter of Iephte Therefore she was still alive It can hardly be imagined that so excellent a man so highly extolled by the Holy Ghost should for his vow sake doe such an abhominable fact yet for all that he is not wholly to be excused It was rashly done of him to vow the first thing that met him as an holy thing to the Lord. What if a dog which is a fauning creature had first met him hee might not have consecrated that to the Lord. This Iephte was an Harlots Sonne loathed and disdained of his brethren thrust out of the house and compelled to live as a banished man yet he hath faith The name of a bastard is contemptible and that justly God hath set many brands of infamy upon them they might beare no office in Israel for many generations Sometimes God bereaves them of their wits and senses they sustaine many reproches in the world yet for all that they may be in the number of Gods Elect and Heires of his Kingdome in the world to come From Iudges he proceeds to Kings where he names but one yet such a one as may be instar omnium a famous and worthy King as ever was Saul was the first King of Israel but David was the best King in Israel the first godly King a man after Gods owns heart his faith was wonderfully tryed by many strong and fearefull temptations without and within too before he came to the crowne and after Hee was hunted up and downe by Saul as a partridge on the mountaines he could never be quiet for him he went continually in danger of his life and could never get the peace of him After he came to the Crowne he was molested by the house of Saul sundry yeeres together his owne sonne had like to have justled him out of his kingdome the pestilence in his time was sore in Israel many inward conflicts had he in his soule as appeareth by his Psalmes Why art thou disquieted in me O my Soule hath God forgotten to bee mercifull He fought with hell and damnation yet by faith he was a glorious Conquerour over them all therefore no marvell though hee be in the catalogue of faithfull men The last that is named is Samuel He was both a judge and a Prophet therefore he is put betweene them both Shamang ael audivit Deus His mother cryed for him hee was dedicated to God before he was borne an upright wise and religious Iudge he challenged all the people for the execution of his office whose Asse have I taken to whom have I done wrong they all gave him their approbation and cleared him before the Lords annointed Last of all in generall he names the Prophets Luk. 13.28 Elias Elisha Isaiah Ieremiah and the rest all these were famous for their faith nec in caeteris contrarium est videre which is wont to be the conclusion of all inductions Therefore all are justified and goe to heaven by faith none flyes thither but by the wing of faith All these that bee here cited had their blemishes never a one of these Roses but had their Prickes Gideon besides many Wives had a Concubine he made an Ephod that was an occasion of Idolatry and made Israel to sin Barac was a faint hearted Souldier Samson defiled himselfe with many strumpets Iephte was very rash and inconsiderate David was tainted with two horrible sins Samuel as it seemeth was somewhat negligent in looking to his Children no Prophet but had some weakenesse being all as St. Iames speaketh of Elias subject to the same infirmities that we are yet they were faithfull men greatly honoured by God Almighty There is not the best man or woman on the face of the earth but it is an easie matter to spie an hole in their coate Shew mee a Garden without weeds and a man or woman without imperfections If ye will have perfect men yee must goe to heaven for them there be the spirits of just and perfect men there be none to be found on the earth St. Peter St. Paul Saint Thomas all the Apostles had their imperfections Yet some prophane wretches there be like Cham if they find never so small a slip in a godly man as Noah was they are ready to laugh at it scatent ipsi vulneribus obijciunt illis cicatrices They themselves are common drunkards beastly adulterers the footesteps of whose uncleane life may be traced in every corner yet if they heare of never so small a thing in a Noah and a David that is their table talke meat and drinke to them whereas in many things we slip all and there is not the best man but treadeth his shooe awry we should rather weepe than rejoyce at it VERSE 33. NOw to the efficacy of their faith 1. Of men then of women which is declared 1. By their actions some are generall in all as the three former some speciall in some 1. The good things they did by faith they subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises 2. The evils they overcame by faith 1. From unreasonable creatures as wild beasts 2. From insensible as the elements 3. From corruptions in themselves 4. From reasonable men 5. From death it selfe 1. Yet not without fighting and wrastling they met with many Antagonists to encounter withall by it Iosua subdued the thirty one kingdomes of the Canaanites Ios. 12. ver 24. by it David subdued the Syrians Moabites and Amorites by it Gideon the Madianites If wee had faith wee should subdue the Turke the Pope and all the enemies of the Gospell but undoubtedly by faith wee shall subdue the kingdome of Satan which is stronger than all earthly kingdomes 1 Ioh. 5.4 Not by their martiall skill and prowesse by weapons and engins of war though they used them too the principall meanes to subdue them was faith 2 There is a civill and morall kinde of righteousnesse doing no wrong but good to all defending the innocent punishing the nocent c. 1 Sam. 12.3 and 15.33 1 Reg. 3.27 Acts 10.35 Marke 10.20 There is also a Christian righteousnesse to glorifie GOD. Vnregenerate men may doe the former as Aristides Cato c. and Luk. 18.4 in them it may be called a morall good worke but no Christian good worke unlesse it come from faith This is a property of faith to worke righteousnesse Righteousnesse cannot bee separated from faith A faithfull man is alwayes a
offerebant antequam Aaron in Sacerdotium eligeretur Hier. trad Hebr. in Genesin So must wee in speciall manner bee consecrated to the Lord and as so many Nazarites serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Israel is my first borne though all the world bee mine All the world is Gods yet wee are his first borne What an honour is this A noble man hath many sonnes the yonger may goe a begging the elder hath all the land Among us there is never a yonger brother all elder brethren and shall all have the inheritance of the Kingdome of Heaven Let us be thankefull to GOD for it Israel was his even so wee being Gods first borne are his not our owne wee are bought with a price and must glorifie God in our spirits and bodies which are his The third point is the Stabilitie of the Church which are written in Heaven Not mentioned with the tongue which soone vanishes but written Littera scripta manet hee hath written us on the palmes of his hands wee are ever in his sight GOD needs no pen paper writing tables for helpe of memorie but this is spoken for our capacitie The Senatours of Rome were called Patres Conscripti because a Register was taken of their names A Captaine sets downe the names of his souldiers in a booke So GOD Almighty to shew what account hee makes of us hath our names written Where not in water not in loose papers not in the earth where peradventure they may be blotted out but in heaven whither none of our enemies can have accesse to race out our names In what Booke are our names written not of death but of life Whose the lambes booke of life Wee are not in the hands of an Angel but of CHRIST himselfe To what end A King takes the name of one of his owne subjects to preferre him to make him a Lord c God takes our names to preferre us to a Kingdome How shall wee know whether our names be written in heaven A posteriori not à priori 2 Tim. 2.19 First the Elect know Christ Ioh. 17.3 2. They beleeve in Christ Gal. 3.26 They are plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ they adde vertue to Faith This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrys. termeth it 1 Cor. hom 3. to conclude by workes I have workes therefore I have Faith I have Faith therefore I have Christ I have Christ therefore I have heaven Tàm certus esse debes de requie de foelicitate si mandata ejus custodieris quàm certus es de perditione si ea contempseris Ob. 1. Workes may bee hypocriticall 2. uncertaine 3. imperfect But being sincere they may assure us of our salvation A ring may be imperfect not fully perfected by the skill of the Artificer it may have a crack in it yet it assures us of the love of him that gave it so imperfect workes may assure us of Gods love and of the Kingdome of Heaven too issuing from the roote of unfained Faith Therefore unfaithfull doubting is excluded Let us make our calling and election sure by good workes then an entrance shall bee ministred unto us abundantly into the everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour IESUS CHRIST Psal. 37.24 Yet wee must not dormire in utramque aurem I care not how I live I shall bee saved There may bee a Christian assurance but no unchristian securitie nusquam securitas sayes S. Bern in Psal. 15. Nec in coelo nec in paradiso nec in mundo In coelo cecidit Angelus sub praesentia Divinitatis in paradiso cecidit Adam in loco voluptatis in mundo cecidit Iudas in schola Salvatoris Let us never be high minded but feare with a reverent feare all the dayes of our lives I feare all my wayes said that holy man If you abuse this comfortable doctrine setting all at six and sevens then thou art most unsure As ye beleeve in Christ so be plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ and as your names are in heaven and ye looke for a place in heaven so live as Cittizens of heaven live not as earth-wormes alwayes groveling on the earth but live as men of another world by having your conversation in heaven 1 Here it is as cleere as the noone-day that the Catholicke Church consists onely of the elect Notwithstanding it is an axiome with Bellarmine Non solum praedestinati sed etiam reprobi ad ecclesiam pertinent A strange position indeed as Augustine distinguishes excellently well the wicked are Paleae inter frumentum In domo Dei sed non domus Dei de bapt cont Donat. l. 7. c. 12. Cant. 4.12 CHRIST's Spouse is a Garden enclosed a Spring shut up and a Fountaine sealed up Haec intelligere non audeo nisi in sanctis justis de bapt cont Donat. lib. 6. cap. 27. It a munitur sayes Greg. ut nullus reprobus ingrediatur Ecclesia est Templum aedificatum ex diis quos facit non factus Deus Aug. Tom. 3. Enchyr. ad Laur. c. 6. p. 172. A. Our blessed Saviour affirmes of the Church Ioh. 10.3 for it is the Church of the first-borne whose names are written in Heaven 2 It is evident that the elect cannot perish Non perit filius promissionis sed filius perditionis August De corr grat l. 2. cap. 9. The third person to whom we are come is the founder and defender of the Church Who is described by his nature and office For his nature he is God for his office a Iudge The Lord chiefe Iustice of all the world God is a consuming fire Heb. 12. ult and dare we be so bold as to come to him He is ignis consumens to the wicked ignis muniens to the godly Zach. 2.5 I a wall of fire round about Ierusalem to protect her from all her enemies All are come to God secundum praesentiam Whither shall I goe from thy face Secundum potentiam his power is over all none can avoide it but we are come to him Secundum bonitatem Happy is the people that be in such a case blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. He is Dominus omnium more peculiarly he is Deus fideliū The Philistims said God is come into the Host woe be to us but we are come to God and joy with us Not onely to God as he is a Father but as he is a Iudge too yea the Iudge of all High and low rich and poore just and unjust good and bad Iren. l. 1. c. 9. writes of some called Gnostici who had their name of knowledge which affirmed they were incomprehensibilis judicii The Iudge could not catch them at the latter day But he will finde them out A Writ shall be returned reperti sunt in baliva nostra We must all appeare either ad judicium discretionis or damnationis as S. August speaketh of Absolution being severed from the Goats or
on their bodies fornicatio quasi formae necatio many loathsome diseases are on them as the French-pox consumptions c. Men are afraid to drinke of their cups and their bodies many times wast and consume away 3 On their goods the sinne of Adultery hath brought many a rich man to beggery The prodigall Childe quickly wasted his goods on harlots they be as sponges to drink up a mans wealth their riches melt as wax 4 On their good names they be odious to all men Yea one Adulterer will speake ill of another and upbraid one another by this sin one principall thing that the Oratour cast in Catelins dish was his beastly and incestuous life Cane pejus angue 5 On their children Sometimes they be fooles and ideots sometimes lame in their hands in their feet In ancient times they might beare no office in Church or Common-wealth Sometimes they are taken away by an untimely death as Davids childe was which he begat of Vriahs wife they cannot inherit the Lands of their Fathers One way or other the brand of Gods wrath is on their posterity So that the truth of this sentence may be apparent to us all GOD will judge Yea though there bee never so great men in the world against whom the sword of mans authority cannot easily be drawne forth yet GOD will be sure to meet with them Amnon was a Kings Son yet because he defiled his sister GOD slew him and he was slaine at a banquet when his heart was merry with wine and did not so much as dreame of death when he had little time to repent him of his wicked life Absalom was heire apparent to the Crowne nay for the time he was King having put downe his father yet because he had played the incestuous beast the Lord in justice caused him to be hanged by his owne hayre and so he dyed miserably Iesabel was a Queene yet because her adulteries were in great number she was cast out of a window and eaten with dogs Whole Cities have beene destroyed for it as Sodome and Gomorah with those adjoyning to it All the males in Shechem were put to the sword for ravishng one mayde The wrong offered to one woman was almost the utter overthrow of the whole Tribe of Benjamin Therefore let us tremble at this sentence Though men judge them not yet God will judge them though the Iudge of the Assizes will not punish them though for a little money they may escape in the Courts yet the Iudge of the World will punish them severely If for some causes best knowne to himselfe they escape his fingers in this world yet they shall feele the heavie hand of his indignation in the world to come This ye know all that be in the Schoole of Christ know this that no whoremonger wanton buggerer shall inherit the kingdome of GOD. Without the gates of heavenly Ierusalem are Dogs Enchanters Whoremongers Lyars A terrible sin that excludes us out of Heaven Therefore let us all beware of it It is a sweet sinne to the flesh but God hath provided sowre sauce for it therefore let it be detested by us all If we feele the fire of lust burning in us let us not sit at the wine goe to an whore or harlot that will but increase the fire and make us fit matter for the fire of hell But let us fast and pray or let us flye to mariage for the quenching of it for the avoiding of fornication let every man have his wife Mariage is honourable among all and the bed undefiled but whoremongers and adulterers God will judge Demosthenes went to Lais the strumpet for a nights-lodging she asked ten thousand drachmes nay soft sayes Demosthenes nolo tanti emere poenitere So if an harlot say to us as Potiphars wife to Ioseph Come lye with me c. Let us abhor it and say I will not buy repentance so deere We shall one day repent us for it either to our griefe or amendment in this life or to our condemnation in the life to come The Sodomites burned in Lust one towards another now they burne in hell fire They suffer the vengeance of eternall fire as S. Iude speaketh A full sin that banishes us out of Heaven Plutarch makes mention of a certaine King named Lysimachus that being exceeding dry sold his Kingdome for a draught of water after he cryes out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heu pro quàm exigua voluptate regnum perdidi so may the adulterer say for what a little pleasure have I lost the Kingdome of Heaven VERSE 5. 1 AN admonition 2. The reason the admonition consists of a dehortation from covetousnesse and the prescription of a remedie against it He doth not say be ye without covetousnesse but let your conversation all your manners behaviour and actions bee voide of covetousnesse Without the love of silver a part put for the whole Whatsoever some men doe it smels of covetousnesse their buying and selling all the bargaines they make all the journeyes they take all the words that issue out of their mouthes the cloathes on their backs the meat they put in their belly all savours of covetousnesse Any commodity they have they will sell deere they will buy cheape they will watch poore men whom necessity constraines to sell and they will have it of them for little or nothing They will goe meanely fare hardly all that they doe hath a sent of covetousnesse Therefore sayes he so converse among your neighbours that all may see that the world is not the principall marke ye aime at buy and sell without covetousnesse Let your house keeping bee without covetousnesse Let your talke and speeches be without covetousnesse Pay the Minister his due without covetousnesse Let covetousnesse be banished from all your actions 1 It is the root of all evill ye cannot abide bitter roots in your Gardens no root is so bitter as covetousnesse and it will draw all evill after it A covetous man will lye sweare steale kill for mony therefore root it out of the garden of your hearts 2 It excludes men by name out of the Kingdome of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.10 That is provided for liberall men that cloath the naked feed the hungry relieve the oppressed c. Not for greedy covetous misers that doe no good with their wealth 3 It ought not once to be named among us When we speake of filthy and uncomely things we doe it with a preface saving your reverence c. So when thou speakest of Nabal say there is such an one saving your reverence a covetous man it should not be named much lesse practised by us that be Christians 4 Covetousnesse is idolatry A covetous man makes an Idol of his money If the Idolaters Idoll be gone all is gone What have I m●re said Michah So if his money be gone his god is gone An Idolater makes a strong Chappell to put his Idoll in a covetous man makes a strong Chest
the Papists have two pillars for their hope Protestants but one and that is the stronger 410 Hospitality It is commended 40 41.597 598. the conditions of hospitality 598.690 many reasons for it 599. fond excuses for not keeping hospitality answered by S. Basil. 691 House or Houshold vid. family how called a Church 7 8.119 all Christians are the House of God 121. the difference betweene a House and a Tabernacle 349. what a priviledge it is to be of Gods Houshould 452 Hypostasis what it properly signifieth 139 I IAcob his faith and facts 484 485. c. Iephte his faith facts and fame 524 525. Iesting we must beware of jesting at the Word 182 Ierecho of its fall and meanes how it was effected 512 Iesus why Iesus and Iosua have one and the same name 152. the sweete name of Iesus admired and adored 586. whose office and fruite of it is enlarged ibid. c. Ignorance twofold 131. it is a capitall sin 338. yet the Papists make it the Mother of Devotion 339. It s horrid punishment ibid. It is a great sinne in all but specially in them that have the meanes 340 Impatience A notable remedy against it 433 Imposition Imposition of hands why used 209 210 Incarnation Christs Incarnation described and applyed 106 107. the difference betweene his and ours in foure things 107. How the flesh of Beasts and Birds excells ours ibid. the Ends of his Incarnation 108. the cause ibid Infidelity It is a great sinne 129.135.143 what 134. Infirmities As Christ so Chrstians especially Ministers must beare their brethrens infirmities 169. no Saint but hath his sinne 306 307 Intercession how Christ doth now make intercession for us 298 Iohn his name and office 662. An Elder ibid Ioseph of his faith and facts 487 488 c. Why bound by an oath for his fathers buriall 488. Iosua why Iosua and Iesus have one and the same name 152. of Iosuahs faith and facts 512 Ioy Christians may be Ioyfull 662 Iudgement day which is called Eternall 211. we should oft thinke of that day ibid. the fruit of such a thought 212. Iudgement followes on the necke of death 375. to whom it shall be comfortable 376. the day of Iudgement draweth nigh 415. the certainty of its being to come though none know when 419 420 Iudgement Gods Iudgements on others should teach us 142. wee must reverence Gods Iudgements 450. examples hereof ibid K KIsse it is a token of Love 665 Knowledge the knowledge of God is unspeakeable 184 L. Λατρευουσι unde 313 Law the Reason of disanulling the Law 289. the excellencie of the Gospell above the Law 289 290 294 295. All that was in the Ceremoniall Law were Shaddowes 313 Lex-Talionis examples of it 510 511 Limbus Patrum see it falsly Forged 340 341 Love its preheminence above Faith and Hope 13. A Christian cannot be without it 15 16. Love must not be verball but Real 16. It must be to the Saints specially but not wholy ibid. Love hath a greater Attractive force then Feare 22. Our Love how set or setled on one more than another 34. the mutuall love that should be among us 136. Love is Laborious 228. Gods incomprehensible Love is set forth by many similitudes 319. Love is alwayes working 412. Love though an excellent grace yet rare to bee seene 595. It hath many enemies 596. Its fruites 597. divers men Love diversely 665 666. Loves commendadations 670 671. the manifold allurements to be in Love with this grace of Love 671 M MAgistrate he must rule according to Gods word 312 Man what he is 89 90 91. hee is sometimes called an Angel 91. the difference in respect of excellency betweene man and Angells 91. his dignitie as a Christian 92 93. altogether uncleane without Christ 100. all men are one and equall but that sin and sanctification puts a difference 101. man compared to earth 220 Manna a type of Christ 332 333 Marriage a strange conclusion of Pope Siricius against marriage 443. a sweete estate yet not without some soure 552. It is commended 601. Three Etymons of the Latin words for marriage 601. its definition ibid. it is honourable 602. no Sacrament ibid. how disgraced ibid. why to be had in honour 602 603 604 605. the things and wayes that make marriage honorable 605. Ministers may marry 607. its confessed by some Papists 608 Masse a Iesuits wit in reaching above the moone for that monster the Masse 287. a cut for Masse-mongers 297. arguments against it 30● what the Papists hold the Masse to bee 351. other arguments against the Masse answered 367 371 376 401 Maundy-Thursday whence it comes 287 Meanes how meane soever the meanes be we must by Faith depend on God 514 Mediatour Christ is the sole Mediatour 361 587 Melchizedek of his name offiice kingdome c. 247 c. much more ●54 255 c. Christ prefigured by Melchizedek 275 Mercy we ought to be merciful one towards another by Christs exa 113. Gods former mercies a paune of future 130. mer. is a divine vertue yet it must go with justice 421 Merits the Popish doctrine of merits doth derogate from Christ ●0 God gives not heaven for our merits 227. opus operatū is not enough to merit 44O Milke it is for Babes 204 Minister all Christians especially Ministers are Souldiers 1 6 7. They should be fellowes 7. their boldnesse 20 21. they may not onely entreate but enjoyne 21● they should rather draw by love than force by feare 22. they are spirituall Fathers and how much men are beholding unto them 24. their love to their people ibid. what debt we owe to our Ministers 38 39. the people should so carry themselves to their Minister that they may be his joy 39. the name of a Minister is an honorable name 76 310. not to be contemned 193. by them God saveth men 194. what a Ministers lists are and what a Magistrates 194. the sacrifices that Ministers must now offer are either comon or proper 195. a Minister must not have a heart of flint but of oyle 196. they have their infirmities 197. they must have a calling to it 197. examples of a number of intruders into this calling ibid. c. A Ministers president 203. their light must shine 231. they are great men 257 258. yet they must acknowledg their brethren 259. greater in time of the Gospel than in time of the Law 313. the Minister is Gods mouth to speake to his people 323. to rebuke a Minister is a sinne of sinnes 333. Ministers duties learned of the Priests of old 337. no Minister can bee exempted from service 395 396. foure speciall duties that wee owe to Ministers 629. they are watchmen 630. they must give account for mens soules 631. we must not grieve them ibid. c. how we should love them 632 633. the great force of their preaching 634 635. they ought to have a good conscience 635 c. and how to keepe it 637. how he should be furnished 638.
though we be never so rich have never so many bags of gold and silver lye on beds of downe have never so many friends and Physitions about us yet if the worme of conscience lye gnawing on us for our sins our murders adulteries drunkennesse c. That we have no hope that Christ died for them in what miserable case are we The Hypocrite would give 1000. Rams 10000. Rivers of Oile the fruit of his body for his soule as a man that is dangerously sick would give any thing for health so a man that is oppressed with the burthen of his sins would give any thing that they were removed Now CHRIST IESUS alone hath purged us from our sins Apply this purgation to thy selfe by the hand of a true and a lively faith and then thou art a happy man if CHRIST had not purged us from sin we had fried in hell for ever Therefore let us magnifie the Lambe that was killed for us and give prayses to him for ever Worthy is the Lambe who hath purged us from our sinnes to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing Againe hath Christ purged us from our sinnes and shall we tumble in them Hath the Physitian purged thy body and made thee whole and wilt thou by ill diet make thy selfe sick Christ the heavenly Physitian hath purged us from sin that made us sick to death and shall we run into sin againe O that men would effectually consider of this great benefit the purging of our sins by Christ Who hath purged us not an Angell but the Son of God with what hath He purged us not with the bloud of Martyrs but with His owne bloud to what end hath He purged us not that like swine we should still wallow in the myre of our sinnes but that we should be an holy Nation a royall Priest-hood a peculiar people to Himselfe zealous of good workes Therefore as CHRIST hath purged us from our sins so let us hurle away our sins and have nothing to doe with them least we crucifie againe the Lord of life That proverb is knowne to us all the Hogge to the myre a Hogge is washed cleane and faire he runs into the myre againe what a filthy sight is that So it is for one whom Christ hath purged from sin to returne to them againe a Dogge to his vomit Who can abide to see a Dogge take up that which he hath cast out of his belly and a loathsome sight it is to see men daily yea hourely to take up the Vomit of their old sins againe How hath Christ purged us from sin when as sin still remaineth in us all If we say we have no sin we deceave our selvs c. The answer is easie there is in sin materia forma the matter still remaines to exercise us withall but the guilt that is the forme of sin which gave an esse to it that is taken away by Christ. In so much as we may say death where is thy sting hell where is thy victory the strength of death is sin but thankes be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. The sixth and last Argument to prove the deity of Christ is taken from His exaltation which is fitly inferred upon the former humiliation He that sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high is GOD but CHRIST sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Ergo. He doth not say standeth that belongs to Servants and inferiors but he sitteth Kings Senatours Iudges sit when they heare causes He sits not at the commandement or appointment of another but of Himselfe He knowes His place and takes it not at the left hand but which is higher at the right hand His fathers equall Regia majestas the Kings Majesty is more magnificent then to say the King Prov. 25.27 Scrutator majestatis opprimetur à gloria Heb. 8.1 We have such an High Priest who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens Christ could not purge our sinnes but by dying He was faine to shed His bloud and to dye for us yet He rose againe ascended into Heaven and fitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high Out of this we have two notable comforts 1 If Christ sitteth above in the highest places then he beholdeth all things here below A man that is upon the top of some high Tower may see farre and Christ being in the high Steeple and Tower of Heaven can see all things on the earth He that is upon the top of an high Tower may see men but he cannot discerne who they bee Christ sees them and discernes them too If the wicked bee laying of plots and snares against His Children Christ being in Heaven sees them and in due time will overthrow them and He that sitteth in Heaven laugheth them to scorne This is a singular comfort that our Head King and defender is in Heaven and hath equall Power Glory and Majesty with God If thou hast a friend in the Court that sits daily by the King and is in favour with him wilt thou care for any in England we have a friend that siteth on the right hand of God and hath all power in Heaven and earth therefore let us feare nothing he will keepe us none shall doe us any harme but it shall all turne to our good in the end 2 As Christ sitteth in the heavens so we shall one day sit there with Him Many shall come from the East and from the West and from the North and from the South and shall sit downe in the Kingdome of God Yee shall sit on the twelve Seates and Iudge the twelve Tribes of Israel Which is not spoken of all the Apostles for Iudas never sate there nor yet of the Apostles onely but of all Christians Know yee not that wee shall judge the World wee shall one day sit in Heavenly places with Christ wee sit there already in our head but we shall likewise sit there in our owne persons with our head Let this comfort us against all the calamities of this life here the children of God are oftentimes made the wickeds footstooles they sit on them and tread on them no reckoning is made of a godly man A rich man that is a common drunkard and whore-master shall be more esteemed of by many then a godly poore man Here they sit as forlorne persons none regards them Many times they sit weeping and wayling for their sinnes for their children for crosses in goods in bodies in good name the wicked deriding them jesting at them making songs of them in the Ale-houses but let this comfort us against them all how contemptible soever we sit here wee shall sit with CHRIST IESUS though not in that degree of glory yet in the same kingdome of glory with him for ever VERSE 4. THe Iewes in generall were bitter enemies to Christ
them they were not personally united to them as ours are Otherwise there is no great difference no not betweene the Angels and us How are wee to magnifie God that hath so highly exalted man The consideration hereof should cause us to lead a life in some acceptable measure worthy of that honour whereunto we be advanced We are not much inferiour to the Angels yet a number of our lives are as ill nay worse than bruit beasts The Oxe knowes his owner the Asse his masters crib but wee will not know love and feare that God which feedeth us A Dogge will love his Master that makes much of him wee will not love no not those that deserve well at our hands A Dove will keepe her selfe to her owne mate many of us will not keepe our selves to our owne Wives bring an horse to the water to the sweetest water in the world he will drinke no more than will doe him good we are excessive and more than brutish in drinking all places ring of this sinne this beastly sinne of drunkennesse what a vile thing is this How doe wee forget our selves Hath GOD made us but a little inferiour to the Angels and shall we live like bruit beasts and give over our selves to all uncleannesse How doe we disgrace that worthy estate whereunto God hath advanced us As we draw neere to the Angels any kinde of wayes so let us so farre as is possible lead an angelicall life with the Angels in this world that we may remaine with them in the world to come Thou crownedst him He shewes wherein our excellency doth consist he hath made him a King and set a Crowne on his head With many glorious gifts that are a wonderfull honour to man both externall and internall especially with the knowledge of CHRIST wherein consists eternall life One part of that glory is that he hath a Soveraigntie and dominion over all creatures which was given him at the creation Genesis 1. renewed and ratified by GODS seale after the floud Genesis 9. enlarged no doubt to the faithfull by CHRIST 1 Cor. 3.21 VERSE 8. VNder his feete This agreeth to all men in generall to the faithfull in speciall whom God hath made Kings and Lords over all his creatures by CHRIST But principally it is to be understood of our SAVIOUR CHRIST who is the chiefe Lord of the world the King and mediatour of the Church he hath all power in heaven and earth All things yea even the Devils themselves are put in subjection under his feete God hath given him a name above every name that at the name of IESUS every knee should bow Phil. 2.9 We also by him because wee are members of his body and his brethren we have an interest to all creatures all things throughout the wide world are ours The heaven the earth the birds the beasts the fishes the trees the flowers are ours Death is ours the very Devill himselfe is our slave and subject God hath put him under our feet 1. Here we may behold the dignity of Christians all things by IESUS CHRIST are under our dominion O what a bountifull GOD is this that hath given us so large a possession Let us sound forth his praises for it and use his liberalitie to his glory As God said to Peter arise kill and eate when the sheete full of all kinde of creatures was let downe to him from heaven so doth hee say to us all we may freely eate of all creatures whatsoever but let us not abuse GODS creatures to his dishonour and our destruction Let us use them soberly religiously to make us more cheerefull in the service of our God 2 Let us not stand in a slavish feare of any creature of the stars the windes no not of the Devils themselves for all are put in subjection under our feet by Iesus Christ that loved us and hath given us a superiority over all we shall be conquerers over them all a singular comfort to the faithfull Satan may tempt and assault us but God will tread him under our feet 3 For this dominion let us thanke the Lord Iesus Christ. Of our selves we are worth nothing starke beggars in CHRIST and by CHRIST we have all that we have Let us magnifie him for it Then he concludeth from the generall to the speciall If all things be subject to him then nothing is exempted from his Dominion no not the Angels themselves To the former the adversaries againe replied thou talkest of a glorious Empire Rule and Dominion whereunto Christ is advanced but it is an imaginary conquest for we see not all things subdued to him The Kings and Princes of the earth cast away his yoke and submit not themselves to the Scepter of his Word Satan and his instruments rebell against him sin and death still play the tyrants and are not subdued to him VERSE 9. TO that he answers 1. Though we see it not yet all things may be subject to him we see not God yet there is a God we see not our owne soule yet we have a soule Here it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is a difference betweene videre and cernere wee doe discerne so as it cannot be denied a man may see a thing and yet not discerne it 2 He answers it by a distinction of submission or subjection The one is externall conspicuous to the eye of the world the other internall seene by the eye of faith Christ's kingdome is not of this world it is not temporall but spirituall all things are subdued to him though he suffer his enemies for the triall and exercise of his children to tyrannize over them for a time A Beareheard may have a Beare under his rule and authority though he suffer him now and then to range abroad so hath Christ the Devill Yet we see Iesus that was made a little lower than the Angels through the suffering of death to be crowned with glory and honor These words Through the suffering of death may be referred to that which goes before or followes after after he had suffered death he was crowned with glory as Phil. 2.9 But rather refer them to the former he was made a little lower than the Angels through suffering of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little while refer it to the time that is during his death passion continuance in the grave 3. dayes and 3. nights all this while he was inferior to the Angels not at the time he lived upon the earth for Mat. 4.11 The Angels Ministred to him as servants to their Lord. But in his Passion and Death the Deity withdrew his power and the humanity was left alone then he was lower than the Angels the Angels are immortall and dye not Christ was mortall and died in that respect he was inferior to them But he was afterwards exalted to all glory and dignity placed at the right hand of God and so superior to the Angels We that are the faithfull see him
take a blow in defence of his Childe and doe ye think that Christ Iesus our spirituall Father will not defend us A Hen hides her Chickens under her wings against the Kite and Christ will shrowd us under the wings of his power and providence against Satan and all enemies 3 What Father will see his childe want being a man of ability CHRIST that is the LORD of all the world The Earth is his and the fulnesse thereof will not suffer us that be his children to want the thing that is good Because Wine is hurtfull for young children it inflames their bloud which is hot of it selfe a wise Father will not give his childe Wine yet he loves him well enough so because GOD our heavenly Father oftentimes sees wealth honour ease to bee hurtfull for his children to drowne them in the pit of perdition he keepes them away from them but let us assure our selves of this he will deny us that be his children nothing that is good for the salvation of our soules As we are the children of CHRIST so let us walke worthy of such a Father You are of your Father the Divell sayes Christ to the Pharisees for the workes of your Father ye will doe A fearefull thing to call CHRIST Father and to doe as the Devill bids us A childe must doe the commandement of his Father and if we be CHRIST's children we must doe as he will have us CHRIST would not have us sweare therefore let us not rend Gods name in peeces by swearing Christ would have us to be sober and temperate in the use of his creatures therefore let gluttony and drunkennesse be avoided by us let us shew our selves to be the dutifull children of Christ in this life that we may have the inheritance prepared for children in the life to come VERSE 14. 1 A Description of CHRISTS incarnation 2. An application of it Verse 17. In the description 1. The equity of it 2. The ends of it 3. An exaggeration of it by a comparison Verse 16. The ends are two 1. The overthrow of the Devill 2. Our deliverance out of the hands of the Devill Verse 15. In the comparison 1. The nature refused 2. The nature assumed verse 16. In the application 1. A repetition of the incarnation 2. An illustration of it by the ends thereof 1. That he might be a faithfull high Priest in making our reconciliation 2. A mercifull high Priest in succouring us in our temptations He inferreth upon the two testimonies going before in the 12. and 13. Verses a plaine conclusion of Christs humanity and makes it open to all the world Hee concludeth it à pari They that were to bee redeemed by him were men therefore he also would be a man This is amplified by the end and by a comparison Our humane nature is here described by the matter and the substance whereof it consisteth By flesh and bloud sometimes is signified the corrupt nature of man 1 Cor. 15.50 Flesh and bloud defiled with sinne subject to mortality and corruption cannot inherit heaven Sometimes it is taken for the substance of mans nature as here and Matth. 16.17 Gal. 1.16 The children did all communicate of flesh and bloud it was the common condition of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even as they did as milke is like milke That hee might be their neighbour and kinsman our Immanuel he participated of flesh and bloud too He tooke part of it .i. The substance but not the vicious qualities hee knew no sinne A spirit hath not flesh and bone as yee see mee have He was the fruit of his mothers wombe made of a woman hee names that part of our nature which is visible the other also being included namely the soule which quickned this flesh and bloud But here is the difference 1. Wee take flesh of both our Parents hee but of one Filius hominis is here of the feminine gender 2. Our flesh is polluted with sinne so is not his 3. We are meere men he both God and man 4. Our mothers ceased to be Virgins when they brought forth us his was a maide and a mother too Here we have a lively description of man he is but flesh and bloud which is weake fraile and subject to many miseries A knife may easily cut it the heate scorch it the cold benumme it it is subject to thirst hunger faintnesse wearinesse c. All flesh is as grasse With them is an arme of flesh with us is God We are not steele yron brasse but flesh and bloud A wise Salomon a strong Samson a beautifull Absalom Bathshebah a learned Paul that spake tongues more than all a Lord a Lady are but flesh and bloud dust and must returne to dust the consideration whereof should humble us all The fowles of the ayre the beasts of the field are flesh and bloud too yea theirs excells ours 1. Their flesh and bloud is clothed at their first entrance ours naked 2. Their 's well fenced ours soone pierced 3. More profit may bee made of their flesh when they dye they will sell for something so not ours 4. As sound as a fish they are free from diseases Sicknesses grow in ours and GOD makes our's meate for Wormes Let this appellation then pull downe our Peacocks feathers and make us walke humbly before our God But as CHRIST did participate of our flesh and bloud So shall we of his he shall change our vile bodies that they may bee fashioned according to his glorious body Phil. 3.21 Now hee proceeds to the ends of Christs incarnation 1. The overthrow of the Devill 2. Our deliverance out of his clawes 1. He describes him 2. He names him The cause why CHRIST tooke our humane nature upon him was that being compassed with flesh and bloud he might ●ye and so conquer the Devill and deliver men out of his clawes If he had not beene man he could not have dyed and then we had not beene delivered The meanes for the vanquishing of the Devill sinne and death was his owne death As the brazen Serpent was lifted up and by looking on it the Israelites were delivered from the fierie Serpents So Christ was lifted on the crosse and we are saved by looking on him with the eye of faith The death of this immaculate Lambe was the overthrow of the Devill and of death too which Hosea in the spirit of prophesie foretold and was afterwards accordingly verefied Hos. 13.14 1 Cor. 15.54 As Sampson by his owne death vanquished the Philistims Iud. 16.30 So CHRIST by his death overcame death and destroyed him that had the power of death that is the devill and that with his owne sword He doth not say that he might weaken the Devill diminish his force or give him a wound but destroy him So that he hath nothing against us Ioh. 12.31 Not death alone but the Devill too the LORD of death The Devill by carrying men into sinne had power also to carry them into
that he might the better pittie us that be men that he might be a mercifull high Priest to us all and shall we be unmercifull one to another As the elect of God put on bowels of mercy Col. 3.12 We have a mercifull high Priest Let us be mercifull one to another It is a token of a wicked man of a reprobate to be unmercifull as that rich glutton was that saw Lazarus dayly at his gates and would have no compassion on him True Christians are mercifull as Christ is Iudas came howling to the high Priests and Pharises Oh I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what is that to us say they See thou to that So such a neighbour is sicke in the Towne such a one is mourning for the death of his Children his Wife c. Such a poore man hath neither meat nor firing nothing to relieve himselfe and his Children withall what is that to us A lamentable thing There is a thorne in the foot that paines it and makes it to swell shall the head and hands say what is that to us We are members one of another and we have an head that is pittifull to us Let us be pittifull one to another that Christ may have pittie and compassion on us both in this world and in that which is to come This may be a singular comfort to us all They say he is happy that hath a friend in the Court especially if he be gracious with the King wee have a friend in the Court of heaven that is deepe in Gods bookes such a friend as hath a feeling of all our infirmities He and we are as Hippocrates twins weeping and laughing together Saul why persecutest thou me If we be sicke or grieved he is c. This was one speciall end why CHRIST assumed our nature that hee might the better have compassion on us in our calamities As the bowels of the true mother yerned when her Child should have beene cut in pieces so if wee bee in any affliction the bowels of CHRIST yerne towards us therefore let us sound forth the praises of CHRIST with a cheerefull heart that tooke our nature on him let us glorifie this our elder brother LORD and Saviour in this life that we may be glorified with himselfe in eternall glory in the life to come CHAP. 3. HItherto he hath entreated of the person of Christ shewing him to be God and man now he proceedeth to his offices As for his regall dignity it might bee perceived by that which he had already spoken of him that he was above the Angels themselves therefore he sayes little of his kingdome in his other two offices he is ample 1. They are propounded joyntly Verse 1. Then opened Severally and particularly 1. Hee begins with his prophesie which is contained in this Chapter and part of the next to Verse 14. Then with his Priesthood in the Chapter following About his prophesie there be two things 1. An admonition with all reverence to listen to this our Prophet 2. Reasons to induce us to it Within this Chapter there are foure The 1. is taken from his fidelity illustrated by a comparison betweene him and Moses à 2. ad 7. 2. From the testimony of the Holy Ghost who stirreth us up to listen to him where we have the allegation of the testimony à 7. to 11. an application of it Verse 12 13. The 3d. reason is taken from the fruit and commodity we shall have by it a society and fellowship with Christ verse 14. 4. From the punishment inflicted on them that contemne this Prophet to the end In the admonition there be two branches 1. A description of the persons that are to attend 2. Of the person to whom they must attend Vnde whereupon Seeing the Prophet and Doctor of the Church is the high and eternall God above the Angels and all creatures seeing in time he became man that by Gods grace he might taste death for all men therefore let us make an high account and estimation of him The parties admonished to listen to this Prophet and Teacher of the Church are described by their estate and condition and by the gracious benefits bestowed on them 1 For their condition they be brethren dulciter eos alloquitur not carnall but spirituall brethren He doth not call them brethren only because they descended of the Fathers and came of the seed of Abraham as he did but because they were brethren in the Lord Iesus Christ. By this sweet and loving title he doth insinuate himselfe into the Hebrewes and allures them to have a reverent opinion of Christ. Yea he cals them holy brethren such as are made holy by Iesus Christ the Holy one of God 1 Cor. 6.11 By nature we are unholy as well as others but Christ sanctifieth us and makes us holy We that bee Christians must not be unholy brethren brethren in evill as Simeon and Levi were but we must be holy brethren As GOD our Father is holy the Church our Mother is holy Christ our elder brother is holy the Angels our fellow-brethren are holy Heaven is an holy place so must we in some measure be holy Seeing you are holy and have all your holinesse from Christ listen to him 2 For their dignity Partakers together with the rest of the Saints of the Heavenly and glorious kingdome whereunto God in mercy hath called us by the preaching of the Gospell 1 Thes. 2.12 Now as GOD hath beene so gracious to you as to make you partakers of his owne kingdome purchased by the bloud of his Sonne so listen you with all reverence to him and cleave to him alone Of the heavenly calling that is Of the preaching of the Gospell whereby we are called to the kingdome of heaven whom God hath predestinated hee hath called The preaching of the Gospell is the bell whereby we are called to eternall glory As by the sound of a Trumpet the people were called together in the time of the Law so the Word is the silver Trumpet sounding in our eares whereby we are called to the Kingdome of Heaven Blessed are they that be partakers of this calling Such are we in England at this present day if we had eyes to see it and hearts to consider it But GOD cals and we refuse to come wisdome hath made ready her Feast she shath sent her maids into the streets to call us to her banquet but we passe not for it The King made a Supper for his Son sent and invited many to it but they made excuses and came not so GOD calleth us continually but some sit at home in their houses some ride abroad c. when God cals them to his kingdome As we are partakers of the heavenly vocation so let us make a precious account of it that we may be called out of the kingdome of darknesse into the kingdome of light and remaine with Christ for ever Then he comes to the admonition it selfe Consider not lightly as they
1.20 From the testimony cited in the former verse he reasons in this They did not enter therefore some others shall for Gods promise shall take effect and not fall to the ground If a man having prepared a sumptuous dinner shall say if these dine with me then never trust me againe thereby we may safely collect that there bee others that dine with him Hath he said it and shall he not doe it They that shall not enter into this rest are described by a prerogative vouchsafed to them and by the contempt of that prerogative The Prerogative hath two branches the 1. is the preaching and manifesting of this rest to them 2. is the order of time in respect whereof they were preferred before others They were the first that had this glad tydings of peace offered to them yet they were stubborne froward and disobedient they would not beleeve GOD and his promise for that cause they never sate a foote into that rest Yet some there be that shal take possession of it namely they that believe in God heaven and earth shall passe away but not one jot of Gods word shall be unfulfilled Though diverse regard it not and thinke it to bee but a fooles Paradise yet undoubtedly some shall have it There be first that shall be last sayes CHRIST Many may have this priviledge to have the Gospell first preached to them and yet not be saved by the Gospell Christ gave commandement that his Apostles should beginne their preaching at Ierusalem The Gospel is the power of God to salvation to the Iew first Yet easier for Tyrus and Sydon at the day of judgement then for many of them We in England in this last age of this world have had the Gospell againe revealed unto us before a number of places in the world we even in these parts have had it a long time in most plentifull measure above and before sundry places in the land yet let us not flatter our selves in that Some of them that be still in darkenesse may goe to heaven before us Howsoever they that have the first offer which is a singular priviledge regard it not yet some out of all question shall have it Many come from the east and from the West and shall set downe with Abraham Isack and Iacob in the kingdome of heaven and the children of the kingdome shall be cast out into outer darkenesse Matth. 8.11.12 Those that were first bidden to the marriage would not come they made excuses yet the Lord sent into the high wayes and hedges and his house at the length was filled God is not tyed to any If the first refuse the last shall have it therefore while this rest is preached to us let us take hold of it and not reject it as the ancient Israelites did VERSE 7. 2. HEE proves it by the circumstance of time For David spake this a long time after they were setled in the land of Canaan by Iosua even foure hundred yeares after therefore he must needs meane another rest then the land of Canaan In David 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Hebr. 1.1 2. Not that voice that spake in the wildernesse but which soundeth now in the preaching of the Gospell Christ speaketh to us at this present day he that heareth you heareth me As if God did beseech you through us Therefore let us take heede that wee harden not our hearts against him VERSE 8. Iosua which was a type of CHRIST hath the same name with our Saviour CHRIST yet in a diverse manner Iosua was a Saviour for them in temporall things CHRIST in spirituall and eternall things hee saved them from the Canaanites earthly enemies CHRIST from sinne death hell and Satan spirituall enemies He gave them a land flowing with milke and hony in this world CHRIST gives us an everlasting habitation a celestiall paradise in the world to come If Ioshua had given them this rest then would not the Holy Ghost have spoken of another VERSE 9. WHereupon hee inferreth the conclusion 1. Introduced then confirmed Verse 10. There remaineth therefore By necessary consequence by the force and strength of reasoning A rest besides the land of Canaan wherein yee now rest In this place he reteineth the Hebrew word There remaineth a sabbatizing a keeping of a Sabbath in heaven for whom not for the people of the Devill but of GOD an holy nation a people zealous of good workes Many Atheists make a mocke at the kingdome of heaven The Preachers talke much of a glorious and wealthie kingdome which we shall have after this life but God send us wealth peace joy and pleasure in this world let them looke for that kingdome I but there remaineth a rest a Sabbath where we shall never be molested any more For whom doth it remaine and who be this people of God All nations in the world are his people by Creation but these bee his people by adoption whom hee hath adopted in his Sonne Christ Iesus whom he hath constituted a Prince and ruler over this people Rebels and traitours are not the Kings people they be the kings people that obey the Kings lawes 1. Every people is gathered together by some meanes or other a people is a collection of many men So we that are the people of God are gathered together with the trumpet of the word 2. A people gathered together must have lawes to rule them by otherwise they will soone be out of order leges à ligando because they are the bond that ties the people together otherwise they will range beyond limits even so Gods people have Gods lawes set downe in his word 3 Every people must have a King or ruler which is lex loquens even so the Ruler of Gods people is Iesus Christ they that will not have him to rule over them are none of Gods people 4 A people must have some Country to dwell in some in Denmarke some in France c. So the Country where this people dwell is the Church militant in this life and triumphant in the life to come 5 All people are distinguished by some outward habite and attyre French men goe not as English men Spanyards goe otherwise then Turkes c. So GODS people have the Sacraments to distinguish them Baptisme which is Christs marke and the Supper which is his Seale 6 People must live in obedience to the lawes of their King Traytors and rebels are not the Kings liege and loyall people So we that be GODS people must live obediently to Gods lawes If we be abominable swearers that rend GODS name in pieces contemners of his word if wee bee beastly drunkards and impure adulterers and adulteresses if we wallow in the mire of all sinne we are none of GODS people neither can we have any assurance of this rest therefore let us shew our selves by our workes to bee GODS people in this life that we may have this rest in the life
and a friend of publicans and sinners yet he gave never an ill word againe Hee was buffeted spit on blindfolded whipped a crowne of thornes was set on his head and was pittifully nay led to the Crosse yet he tooke all patiently Father forgive them they know not what they doe Let us bee followers of him hee knew no sinne there was no cause in him why he should be so handled yet was patient We deserve many calamities by our sinnes and shall wee bee impatient Shall not wee take our afflictions patiently patientia est pars fortitudinis a Christian must be knowne by his sufferings ferendo magis quàm feriendo Wee must overcome all our enemies Sundry there be that professe they will put up no wrong they will suffer no injuries at no mans hands I but if we be Christians we must bee patients not agents in evill Ought not Christ to suffer and so to enter into his glory Wee must goe to glory by suffering as Christ did Let us therefore be followers of them that by faith and patience inherite the promises Remember the patience of Iob and what an end the Lord made the end of patience is comfortable therefore let us all bee patient that we may inherit the promises by faith and patience in this life and have the full fruition of them to our everlasting glory in the life to come The reverent opinion and charitable perswasion that the Apostle hath of the Hebrewes Verse 9. is grounded on two arguments 1. From the consideration of the graces wherewith they were adorned 2. From the contemplation of Gods promise wherein 1. A narration of the promise which is as the text 2. An exposition of it or a commentary on the text that consists of two parts 1. An explanation of the oath whereby the promise was confirmed 2. An application of it to us 1. In regard of the end which is the comfort of the faithfull 2. In regard of the effect that ariseth from it a certaine hope of eternall life Where 1. A description of hope 2. A confirmation of it by an argument from the relatives It is described by the similitude of an ancre where 1. The qualities of the ancre 2. The power of it In the end 1. What mooved GOD to it 2. The force and efficacie of it VERSE 13. HEE insists in one speciall example which of all other is most famous Both because Abraham was the father of the faithfull and the Iewes boasted exceedingly of him Here we have 1. A narration of Gods ancient promise made to Abraham 2. His patient expectation of it In the narration 1. A declaration of the promise 2. The confirmation of it namely by an oath 3. The matter of the promise that was so confirmed by an oath Verse 14.4 The performance of it which is 1. set downe then amplified by the time when Verse 15. Abraham by faith and patience inherited the promise bee yee followers of him in faith patience that yee may inherit the joyes of heaven promised unto you The promise was ratified by an oath where we have 1. The person by whom hee sware which was himselfe 2. The reason why hee sware by himselfe because hee could not sweare by a greater Wee must sweare by the greatest of all there is none greater than God therefore he sware by himselfe being God Object GOD the Sonne might have sworne by the Father my Father is greater than I. So in regard of Christs Humanity the Father is greater than he but in regard of the Deity they be equall none greater than another VERSE 14. HEre wee have the matter of the promise that was ratified by an oath Verily Sanè answering to ci Hebr. Some interpret it nisi except it is an aposiopesis Let me never bee believed any more In blessing I will blesse thee That gemination sometimes signifies the certainty of the thing morte morieris thou shalt surely dye Some interpret it with a double blessing temporall and spirituall here it signifies plenitudinem for the certainty was expressed before The performance of the promise is set downe in this Verse VERSE 15. THere were three things promised to Abraham the land of Canaan a great and populous posterity and Christ the Saviour the world For the first Hebr. 11.9 he sojourned in the land of promise as in a strange country dwelling in tabernacles with Isaak and Iacob the heires with him of the same promise For the second while he was alive he had but a small seede and as for the third Christ came not many hundred yeares after yet all these he enjoyed by faith he saw the day of Christ and was glad Hee was an hundred yeere old before hee had a child When he had him he was commanded to sacrifice him yet by faith hee stood and by patience obtained the promise we must believe under hope above hope as he did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being of a long suffering minde and looking to things that were long to come As patience in Abraham went before the enjoying of the promise So we must patiently endure before we obtaine the promised inheritance of glory and happinesse Patience is an excellent thing The Philosophers though in other things they jarred yet they agreed in the commendation of patience Tertul. God will take the part of a patient man If any offer thee injurie he is ultor if thou hast any losse he is restitutor if thou beest grieved he is medicus if thou beest put to death he is restitutor Tertul. The patient abiding of the poore shall not alwayes bee forgotten There is nothing lost by patience Yee remember the patience of Iob and what end the Lord made The end of patience is comfort It may begin with a Tragedie but ends alwayes with a Comedie The husbandman is faine to have much patience before he have his corne into the barne with great toile and wearying of his body hee plowes his ground harrowes it casts his seede into the earth hee knowes not whether he shall see it any more but rests patiently on Gods providence The Merchant is faine to have much patience before hee can mount up to any wealth many a storme and tempest he endures on the Sea often in danger of his life The Clothyer must have much patience in buying of his wooll in making of it out in selling of his cloth he is faine to stand to many casualities yet hope of a convenient gaine in end makes him with cheerefulnesse to passe through them all They doe it for earthly things that are here to day and gone to morrow and shall not we be patient for heavenly treasures for a kingdome that cannot be shaken but is eternall in the heavens Bee patient a while passe through poverty sicknesse malevolent tongues and all other calamities in this life that wee may at the length be taken up into that place where we shall have need of patience no more for all teares shall be wiped away
things Abraham gave tithe of all things to Melchizedec so ought yee to doe howsoever you flatter your selves to the contrary Our best workes are too often defiled with sinne many strange by-thoughts creepe into our minds while we are a praying we pray not with sighes and groanes of the spirit as wee ought to doe we preach not with such wisedome love zeale and power as we should we give not our almes so sincerely as becommeth us we receive not the Communion so penitently and thankfully as we should we heare not the word with such reverence and attention as becommeth us every one of us may knocke on our breasts after the best action we have done with the Publican and say Oh God be mercifull to mee a sinner I have no righteousnesse of mine owne to appeare before thee withall cloath us with the righteousnesse of thy deere Sonne the King of righteousnesse that wee may bee found in him to the everlasting joy and comfort of us all Let the Papists trust to the broken staffe of their inherent righteousnesse scoffing at the imputed righteousnesse of Christ but let us desire this righteousnesse By nature there is Warre betweene GOD and us hee is our enemie and wee his the flagge of defiance is displayed betweene us both Then in what a wofull case are we are we able to encounter with the GOD of heaven and earth that hath all creatures at his becke we must needs goe by the worst he can arme heaven earth and hell against us but here is our comfort IESUS CHRIST is our peace hee hath set at peace by the bloud of his crosse all things in heaven and earth This is the true peace indeed without the which wee can have no sound comfort there is no peace saith God to the wicked What peace said Iehu to Iehoram when as the adulteries of thy mother Iesabel are yet in great number Though a man have the world at will faire houses large lands ample possessions great bagges of silver and gold yet if his adulteries oppressions and other sinnes lye as an heavy loade on his conscience alas what peace can hee have hee is as the raging Sea that cannot bee quiet Achitophel had wealth enough yet because he was not at peace with God by Christ tooke a rope and hanged himselfe Iudas had money enough being the purse bearer and having lately received ●hirtie pieces of silver from the Scribes and Pharisees but alas his sinne vexing his conscience he could have no rest but became his owne butcher Therefore let us all desire God to give us an assurance in our hearts and consciences that wee are subjects appertaining to the King of peace and that Christ Iesus is our Peace It is a singular blessing to have outward peace to sit quietly under our vines and figtrees to have no leading into Captivity no complaining in our streets God hath beene wonderfull gracious to England these many yeares together and that for the admirable peace which it enjoyed we are to praise God that there be no tumults insurrections nor massacres that there is no sword of the enemies to devoure in the land but if in the meane season wee bee not at peace with God by Christ we are most miserable Therefore let us pray especially for this peace that we may be perswaded of the remission of all our sinnes in the bloud of Christ. This is most livelily represented to us in the Lords Supper The breaking of the bread sets before our eyes the breaking of Christs body for our sins the powring out of the Wine represents to us the gushing out of the bloud of Christ out of his Holy side for our iniquities therefore let us come to this heavenly banquet with broken hearts and contrite spirits with a true and lively faith in Christ Iesus the true King of peace that wee may be assured that Christ is ours so that whensoever death shall come we may say with Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seene thy salvation This is that peace which passeth all understanding the God of peace give it to us all VERSE 3. THe thing concealed by Moses is the eternity of Melchizedec not in deed but in respect of Moses History Hee is introduced by him on the suddaine as if he came then presently from heaven and returned thither againe for Moses never spake of him before nor after His father and mother were not onely not knowne but they were not at all namely in the History of the bible Cujus neque pater neque mater scribuntur in generationibus Syr. otherwise he could not have beene a fit type of our Saviour Christ. He doth not say of yeeres but not so much as of dayes dayes goe before yeeres Melchizedec was without beginning of dayes quia hoc scriptum non est Christus quia non habet initium Chrys. Theoph. Nor end of life Not that he was translated as Enoch but because his end is not mentioned So Christ had no father in respect of his humanity no mother in respect of his deity He had kindred according to the flesh but not as God without beginning and ending as God Ioh. 12.34 This he applyeth Likened they are not the same but the one like to the other As the picture of the King is like the King so Melchizedec was as a picture of our Saviour Christ. Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nothing can overthrow it An immoveable Priest-hood a permanent Priest so was not Aaron and his posteritie Some have affirmed from hence that Melchizedec was not a man but something greater then a man Origen as Ierome testifieth of him Epist. 126. said hee was an Angell others that hee was the HOLY GHOST others that he was the great power of GOD yea greater then Christ because Christ is said to bee a Priest after his order Epiphan l. 2. cont haereses haeresi 55. Aug. de haeresibus c. 34. The same did Theodotus the Heretike avouch and that hee was the mediatour of the Angels praying for them as CHRIST doth for men Tertul. de praescrip adversus haereticos in fine Some have taken upon them to set downe his fathers and mothers name that his fathers name was Eracla his mothers name Astareth or Asteria Vide Epiphanium All these are confuted by the text 1. Hee is said to bee likened to the Sonne of God but nullum simile est idem 2. Hee is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not because hee had no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stocke or kinred but because there is no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no mention no commemoration of his kinred in the Scripture from whence ariseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verse 6. So Horace lib. 2. Satyr 5. sayes of one that he was sine gente because his nation was not knowne qui quamvis perjurus erat sine
carnall that is impotent and beggarly rudiments Gal. 4.9 which served for the institution of the rude and ignorant people of the Iewes they did teach nothing but served onely for the honourable maintenance of them that taught the people 2. They bee no types of an holy thing in CHRIST and his kingdome they did signifie nothing to come in Christ or in his kingdome 3. They were not instituted for the service of the tabernacle but assigned to it for a time 4. They were not to cease at the time of reformation for still they are retained in the Church as the maintenance of the Ministery which the Church should not doe if it were a ceremony that should end at the comming of Christ. Here is no institution or assignation of tithes but a declaration of the Lords right I doe you no wrong in assigning the tithes to Levi for they be mine and not yours They are holy to the Lord that is separate from the use of men So that it is sacriledge to take them away Here is an assignation of them to the tribe of Levi only for the time of their service at the tabernacle Here we may see what is ceremoniall what perpetual in tithes This proposition all tithes are the Lords is perpetuall the assignation of them to the Levits in the second place is ceremoniall that is Levitically ceremoniall for if there bee any ceremony in tithes it is a Leviticall ceremony Object Sacrifices were in use before the Leviticall and ceremoniall law yet they are ceremonies So are tithes though paid before the Law Sol. Sacrificing it selfe is in the law of nature but particular ordinances for the manner of sacrificing are ceremoniall So the paiment of tithes is in the law of nature but certaine particular ordinances for the paiment of them are in the ceremoniall law Yet there is a difference betweene sacrifices and tithes 1. In the propriety Tithes are ever the LORD● sacrifices are not his till they be offered to him before the man that offers them hath a right in them When a man offers a sacrifice hee offers of his owne when he gives tithes he gives that to the Lord which is the Lords In not sacrificing godlinesse is violated in not paying tithes not only godlines but Iustice also is violated Now a ceremonie standeth not in paying to God that which is his but in giving to God that which is thine owne 2. In the end Sacrificing is to signifie the great sacrifice on the crosse for the sinnes of the world The end of tithes is not to signifie any thing but is the honour and maintenance of the Ministery and therefore they are to remaine so long as the Ministery remaineth That assignation of tithes to Levi or that lease being expired they returne to their proper right againe that is to CHRIST which liveth for ever Hebrewes 7. Verse 8 for though it bee first true in Melchizedec the type who in respect of the silence of his death is said to live yet most of all is it verefied of Christ. The service of the tabernacle being abrogated the assignation of tithes to the Levites is voyd but the propriety of them ever was and is in the Lord for his Ministers Improperly to speake the assignation of tithes was ceremoniall that is appertaining to the ceremoniall law but properly to speake there is nothing ceremoniall in the paying of tithes for in it there is no carnall type of an holy thing neither in the Leviticall nor Evangelicall ministery There is no proofe in all the New Testament for any other ordinarie maintenance of the Ministery therefore tithes remaine still the ordinary maintenance He that preacheth the Gospell must live on the Gospell Somewhat more sparingly then the Priests did in the time of the Law They are injurious to the Ministers of the Gospell that will say so If they had the tenth part of the peoples goods shall we have lesse Gal. 6.6 Let him that is taught in the Word communicate unto him that teacheth in all good things Though tithes were buried for a season in persecution yet they were resumed and established againe in the Church in all ages as appeareth by the Fathers and Councells till the Pope comming to the height of his usurped autoritie exempted some from paying of tithes and made impropriations In the defence of whose unjust dealing first Alexander de Hales then Aquinas and all the Schoolemen contended that tithes were judicialls yet they are still due de jure though de facto the Ministers of the Gospell are deprived of them for tithes are morall by divine institution Mat. 23.23 there tithes have Christ his approbation as a thing that ought to be done where there is an opposition betweene things of the same kinde the greatest morall things are in mercy and judgement and the least morall things in paying the least tithes Luk. 18.12 tithes are morall as fasting is The causes remaining the things must still remaine but the causes of giving tithes remaines still ergo 1. It was an acknowledgement that they had all from GOD and ought all to him Levi. 27.30 So must we doe still 2. That thereby they might learne to feare God who otherwise might bring sterility and other plagues on the land Deut. 14.23 So we must doe still Nazianz. imputes the haile to this de calamitate per grandinem 3. That the Priests and Levites having no other maintenance might have this to sustaine them in their office the Ministers of the Gospell cannot be husbandmen clothyers they cannot waite on tables but must give themselves to the Word and prayer therefore it is meete they should have the same maintenance still 2. Quest. Who they be that must pay tithes All high and low rich and poore husbandmen and Clothyers because the payment of thithes belongs to justitiam commutativam in qua non consideratur conditio personae sed qualitas rei ad rem 2. The poore have benefit by the Ministery as well as the rich the Clothyer hath as great benefit by the preaching of the Word as the Husbandman hath therefore why should not he give as largely to the maintenance of the Preacher as an other In law they may have a shift but in equitie and conscience they have none let him that is taught in the Word but the Clothyer is taught in the Word therefore hee that teacheth him should have as deepe a part in his goods as in the goods of an other man Shall the poore Farmer pay all to the Minister and the rich Clothyer nothing Shall he that sits in the lower end of the Church pay and hee that sits in the upper end not 3. Quest. Whereof we must pay tithes Some things are due to the Ministers ex justitia some ex dono as houses and gleebe land 1. God hath given us all and shall it grieve us to give him for his Ministers the tenth part 2. Give to Caesar the things that are Caesars
and it is good for Preachers to draw their matter into a summe We have such a worthie High Priest as all the High-Priests in the Law were not worthy to be named with him the same day Then he comes to shew his magnificence Hee doth not say standeth as a Lord Earle Duke may stand by a King bare-headed but sitteth Indeed Act. 7.5 6. he is said to be standing on the right hand of God but then he is seene standing as ready to pull Stephen out of the jawes of his enemies He doth not sit at his foot-stoole but at his hand not at his left hand but on the right hand God the Father as Prince and Potentate sitteth on his throne and Christ sitteth by him Of that Majestie which excelleth the Majesty of all the Kings in the world either Majesty is put for Majesticall Prince to whom is due Majesty Iude 25. or it may be an Hebraisme the throne of the Majesty for a majesticall throne Not in earth but in heaven In the heavens where there bee many mansions and in them hee prepareth a place for us The High-Priests in the time of the Law sate in Moses chaire heere upon the earth but our High-Priest sitteth in Gods chaire in heaven and thinkes it no robbery to bee equall with God In this respect he is not only higher than all the Priests in the Law but higher than the Angels Here hee sitteth as a ruler for the welfare of his Church From hence it cannot be gathered that Christ's body is every where because Gods right hand is every where for this his sitting is restrained to a place namely to heaven Stephen saw him in heaven Acts 7.55 Love is an excellent vertue because it is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the whole Law The Lords prayer carries away the bell from all prayers because that is the summe of all the prayers that can be made by all men in the world Here we have the summe of this large and famous epistle Therefore let it be reverently regarded and diligently marked by us all This may bee a singular comfort to us that wee have such a mightie High-Priest as hath all power in heaven and earth The High-Priests here on the earth were controlled by Kings and Princes Salomon deposed Abiathar and Saul put Abimelech to death but this our High-Priest is above all the Kings and Princes in the world they must all cast downe their Scepters at his feete hee can take the breath out of their nostrils when hee pleases In what an happy ease are we that have such a LORD protectour of the Church He may suffer us to be tryed as gold in the furnace of affliction but he will not suffer us to perish at the length he will deliver us out of the hands of all our enemies only let us have a care so neere as we can not to displease this our high-Priest As the people were obedient to the high-Priest in the time of the Law So let us be to our high-Priest in the time of the Gospell kisse the Sonne least he be angry and yee perish from the way All Papists kisse the Popes feete yea Kings Princes and Emperours But let us all from the highest to the lowest in meekenesse and humility kisse this our high-Priest that sitteth at the right hand of the throne of the Majestie in the heavens and he will defend us from all enemies whatsoever VERSE 2. THe second argument Those high-Priests were Ministers of an earthly Sanctuary this of an heavenly Ergo more glorious than they Of the Sanctuary The Greeke is Ambiguous of the masculine or neuter gender Some interpret it Minister of the Saints So indeed he is not the Angels alone but Christ Himselfe is our Minister O unspeakable honour Rather as the word is taken in this Epistle of the Holies that is of the Sanctuary the Holy of Holies Hebr. 9.12 and 24. The place where he Ministers is Heaven there he appeares in the sight of God for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 publicus and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui facit opus publicum So are the Angels Hebr. 1.14 the Magistrate Rom. 13.4 The third argument hee that hath the more worthy Sacrifice is the more worthy Priest Christ's sacrifice is more worthy Ergo. This sacrifice is set forth to us 1. Figuratively 2. Properly Figuratively it is resembled to a Tabernacle Some by Tabernacle understand heaven too as well as the Sanctuary but rather by it is meant the body of our Saviour Christ. 1. It is not like that in so few words he would use a tautology 2. The Tabernacle was for the Priests not for the High-Priests 3. The reason following Verse 3. doth evince that by the Tabernacle is signified the body of Christ wherewith hee did sacrifice It is an usuall thing to resemble the body to a Tabernacle 2 Cor. 5.1 2. 2 Pet. 1.13 14. As a man dwelleth in an house or Tabernacle So doth the soule in the body And as God dwelt in the Tabernacle among the Iewes so doth the deity dwell in the humanity of Christ therefore it hath the name of a Tabernacle This similitude is fitly introduced by the Apostle As the high-Priest by the Tabernacle went into the Sanctum Sanctorum so Christ by his body offered on the Crosse went into heaven Hebr. 9.11 Hence it is that Christ's body is compared to a Temple Ioh. 2.21 to a vaile Heb. 10.20 This Tabernacle is illustrated by an adjunct and the efficient cause The other was but a counterfeit to this True is not opposed to false that was not a forged Tabernacle it was of Gods institution and made by his direction But it is called the true Tabernacle as Christ may be called the true David Salomon Melchizedec the true Manna that came from heaven Iohn 6.32 And as the picture of a man is nothing to the man himselfe So that Tabernacle was but a picture of this this is the true Tabernacle indeed The shadow of the Sun in the water is not the Sunne that is the true Sun that is in the firmament so that was but a shadow of this Tabernacle this is the true Tabernacle 2. It is illustrated by the efficient cause Moses Aholiab Bezaleel and other artificers pight that Tabernacle which were mortall men though they did it by Gods appointment this Tabernacle was framed immediately by God Himselfe the body of our Saviour Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost The name of a Minister is no base name seeing Christ being now in heaven doth not thinke scorne of it He was a Minister of the circumcision when he lived on the earth and he is a Minister of the Sanctuary now in heaven Therefore let none have a base opinion of the name and office of the Ministers Christ is the head Minister and we inferiour Ministers under him therefore let us be reverently regarded for his sake There by presenting of his owne sacred body
kill our bodies the filthy stincke that issues out of these dead carkasses of sin will kill both body and soule therefore let them be detested by us These dead workes of sinne will poyson us all therefore have nothing to doe with them as wee love our life which is most deere to us all skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life so let us avoide these dead workes that deprive us of eternall life in the world to come 5. Dead things are heavy a dead man So these lye heavy on our consciences Caine Iudas they were not able to beare that intollerable burden Sins may very well be termed dead workes 1. Laedunt vitam naturae they make our naturall life more unpleasant to us in the end they cut the threed of it for the wages of sinne is death if we had never sinned against God we should never have dyed 2. Carent vita gratiae So long as we are dead in our sins we are out of the favour of God 3. Auferunt vitam gloriae they deprive us of the kingdome of heaven in the life to come therefore they are worthily termed dead workes Thirdly the end of our redemption is to serve God we are redeemed from our old conversation not to our old conversation we are bought with the bloud of Christ not to serve the Devill our selves the flesh the world we have served them too much already but from henceforth we must serve God And how must we serve him 1. Integraliter in soule and body not in body alone as hypocrites doe that draw neere to GOD with their lippes but their hearts are farre from him nor in soule alone as some fearefull Christians doe which say they have a good heart to God-ward and yet give their bodyes to the service of the Devill As God by Iesus Christ hath redeemed both soule and body so we must glorifie him with them both 2. Wee must serve God peculiariter him and him alone I am a jealous God Thou shalt have no other Gods besides me We must not make our belly our God as Epicures doe our money our God as covetous misers doe but wee must serve God alone hee must have all our service Matth. 4.10 3. Perseveranter not a while but continually to our lives end bee faithfull to the end and I will give thee the Crowne of life If wee persevere not in his service to our dying day wee shall loose our reward 4. Totaliter all the time of our whole life Wee must serve him not only when wee bee old drie and withered but in our fresh and flourishing yeeres wee must beare the yoke of the LORD when wee are young hee must have the first fruits of our service But alas though wee professe that wee are redeemed by CHRIST yet wee serve our owne lusts and affections wee serve not the living GOD as wee ought to doe Let us have a care to serve the living GOD in this short and transitory world that we may live eternally with this everliving GOD in the world to come There is no fishing to the Sea no service to the Kings nor no service to the King of Kings 1. Some Masters are poore and cannot reward their servants our master is rich heaven and earth are his Hester though a poore mayde yet because she served him he made her a Queene 2. Some masters are churlish and will not reward their servants as Nabal was wee have a kinde and loving master not the least service we doe if we give but a cup of cold water in his name but he will reward it 3. Earthly Masters give but earthly rewards they may give good wages while yee be with them and peradventure bestow a farme on you but our master will give us a kingdome 4. Earthly masters dye Gentlemen Knights Noblemen dye yea Kings themselves dye and then their servants seeke abroad but our master lives for ever Therefore let us serve him with all cheerefulnesse let us serve him in this life and we shall enter into the joy of our Master Will the Son of Iesse give you all Vineyards Our Master will give us all a kingdome We are servants here we shall bee Kings there have palmes in our hands and Crownes on our heads and raigne with him for ever VERSE 15. SEcondly the truth and substance of the Tabernacle is applyed to Christ as to a testatour Where 1. The constitution of the Testament Verse 15. 2. A confirmation of it In the constitution of it there be foure circumstances 1. The legatour 2. The death of the testatour that strengthens the Testament 3. The legatarie every believer 4. The legacie an eternall inheritance The instrumentall cause whereby wee attaine to our legacie was the death of Christ which hath a double use 1. To purchase redemption for us as a Priest we are redeemed by the bloud of Christ from the bonds of sins wherewith we were tyed by vertue of the former Testament 2. To ratifie the covenant and Testament to us as a Testatour he is a Priest in regard of God making an attonement for us with his bloud hee is a Testatour in respect of us bequeathing that to us which hee hath bought with his bloud It is ratified by the death of the Testatour Which is confirmed by two arguments 1. Iure humano Verses 16.17 2. Iure legali Where 1. A generall assertion Ver. 18. 2. A particular explication of it Verse 19.20 Here may seeme to be some contradictions 1. There it is said when Moses had read the booke here it is said when hee had spoken every precept that is appertaining to the booke of the covenant So that there is no jarre but a sweete harmony 2. There is mention only of the bloud of Beeves here of Calves and Goates they are by a Synecdoche comprehended in the other 3. There is nothing said of water wooll and hysop but there he speakes of sprinkling and these were used in all sprincklings 4. It is not said that the booke was sprinckled but that may well bee collected Verse 6. for having made an Altar and set the booke of the covenant on it with halfe of the bloud he sprinckled the Altar and the booke afterwards hee sprinckled the people too 5. There it is said this is the bloud of the Testament which God hath made with you Here which GOD commanded to bee brought to you This in sense is all one it was made according to the booke and being made was brought to them comprised in the booke Exod. 24.9 The force of the argument is this the former Testament was confirmed with bloud by the death of Calves Goats c. therefore it was requisite that the latter Testament should be ratified with bloud namely by the death of Christ the Testatour Because by his owne bloud hee hath purged our consciences which the bloud of beasts could not doe in the Law He by whose meanes and mediation the New
with his owne bloud And that he should goe but once with his owne bloud he proveth ab impossibili If he should often have offered himselfe he should often have suffered but he cannot dye or suffer often therefore hee cannot often offer up himselfe 3. There the High-Priest by his sacrifice did signifie the expiation of sins that was to be accomplished our High-Priest hath appeared to put away sin which is amplified by the time when and the instrument whereby The 4th is the application of the use The use of the Leviticall Priest-Hood was to shadow out our redemption to be wrought by Christ the use of Christ's Priest-Hood is to procure to us eternall happinesse Which is set forth by an antithesis betweene the common estate and condition of men and the grace we have by Christ. The common estate of men consisteth in two things 1. In death then in judgement These happen to all and cannot be avoyded Both members are applyed to Christ. 1. Death 2. The judgement where Christ's second comming is described To mans once dying is opposed Christ's once dying amplified by the finall cause To the fearefull judgement to come is opposed the second comming or appearing of our Saviour Christ amplified 1. By the persons to whom hee shall appeare with comfort 2. By the manner how hee shall appeare without sin not only in himselfe but in his members in his body the Church neither head nor body shall then have any sin in them 3. By the end VERSE 21. THe consecration of the Tabernacle was with bloud Where 1. The sprinckler 2. The things sprinckled 3. Wherewith The sprinckler was Moses which was Gods deputie the things sprinckled were the Tabernacle and the vessells of ministration that is wherewith they did publikely serve and minister that wherewith they were sprinkled was bloud At the first dedication of the Tabernacle it was annointed with oyle but afterwards Levit. 8. it was sprinckled with bloud The Altar and all other ministring vessells Aaron and his sons themselves were sprinckled with bloud All Christians are Gods Tabernacle hee dwells in us as in a Tabernacle and Temple we are likewise Gods ministring vessells to serve him Therefore wee must be sprinckled with the bloud of Christ Iesus or else we cannot be consecrated as an holy people to the Lord. Likewise as well as he did the people and the booke VERSE 22. THe second rite no purgation could be made without bloud Almost 1. A qualification 2. An asseveration Saint Chrysostome and Theophylact referre it to the verb all things are by the Law almost purged with bloud Not wholly but in part almost because the bloud of the beasts did but purge the flesh not the heart and conscience As Agrippa said to Paul almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian. But by the grammaticall construction it is rather to be referred to the noune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Almost all things for there were some things purged by water some by fire Num. 31.23 But howsoever some things might be purified without bloud yet there is no remission namely of sins without bloud Where then is the unbloudy sacrifice of the Masse If there be no shedding of bloud in it as they affirme the bloudy sacrifice was on the Crosse this of the Masse is unbloudy then it cannot be propitiatory for sins as they contend Bellar. lib. 1. de Missa c. 27. hath three answers or rather three cavills against this place 1. The Apostle here speakes de sacrificijs veteris legis But 1. Then hee would have used a verbe of the time past rather than of the time present hee would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. He cannot speake of the sacrifices of the Old Law but he must needs have reference to CHRIST 's sacrifice prefigured by them Secondly sayes Bellarmine this is not to bee understood as if without actuall shedding of bloud there could bee no remission but absque virtute without the power of shedding of bloud there can be no remission Now the power of Christ's sacrifice on the Crosse is applyed to us in the Masse and so by it we have remission of sins I but First the sacrifice of the Masse doth rather abolish the power of Christ's Sacrifice on the Crosse then apply it to us for if that were a full and perfect sacrifice for sinne then there needs no other the sacrifice of the Masse is a blasphemous sacrifice robbing Christ of his honour 2. Here it is said without bloud shedding no remission not without the power of bloud shedding Bellar. saw hee should bee driven to this therefore hee hath a third refuge In the Masse there is shedding bloud 1. Mystically by a mysticall signification 2. Really for as the body of Christ is broken subspecie panis so under the forme of Wine is his bloud shed But if CHRIST 's bloud bee really shed so often as a Masse is said or sung then CHRIST suffers often Certainely a man suffers when his bloud is shed but Verse 26. therefore in the Masse no shedding of bloud and for that cause no remission of sins for the same 2. Vnder the Vizzard sub specie they may cover any thing In the Masse there is no propitiatory sacrifice offered up that 's most certaine That doth plainely signifie to us that if CHRIST 's bloud had not been shed for us we could never have had remission of sins Then how are we beholden to the Lord Iesus There is a base fellow in the land that hath committed high treason he must needs dye unlesse the Kings Son shed his bloud for him We were vile wretches dust and ashes Traitors and rebels against God If the Son of God had not powred forth his bloud for us we should have beene tormented in hell for ever CHRIST hath bought us with his owne bloud O the wonderfull love of CHRIST remember sayes Saint Peter yee are redeemed from your old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ. O that the consideration of this deere price were deepely imprinted in our hearts Being washed from sinne in the bloud of CHRIST shall wee tumble in the mire of sinne Thou art washed from thy covetousnesse pride uncleannesse drunkennesse with the bloud of CHRIST and yet wilt thou wallow still in them We are bought with a price we are not our owne wee are CHRIST 's hee hath deerely payd for us therefore let us glorifie him in our spirits and bodies which be his VERSE 23. IT was therefore necessarie 1. because God commanded it to be so 2. Because it was meete they should by these ceremonies be consecrated to God 3. That they might the better signifie the things that were to come Patternes such as did lively set before their eyes as by certaine examples the things to come Of things in the heavens that is of the Church in the time of the Gospell that is called heaven because the
hath borne the sinnes of us all therefore let us not feare death 2. It is but a sleepe Lord if hee sleepe then shall hee doe well enough Men are refreshed after sleepe so we after death Apoc. 3.14 13. There bee two benefits which wee shall receive by death 1. Wee shall rest from our labours Here wee are like Noahs Dove wee can finde no rest either day or night wee shall rest from the workes of our calling Now indeed wee are early up in the morning sit up late at night and eate the bread of carefulnesse all the day long but then wee shall rest from that toiling and moiling wee shall rest from the workes of piety and Religion All that wee shall doe then will bee to sing Hallelujahs to our blessed redeemer Wee shall rest from sinne wee shall no longer cry out like tyred Porters Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death We shall rest from all miseries and sicknesses cry out no more my head my head nor complaine of troubles in our selves Wives Children or servants Wee shall rest from weaknesses and infirmities Now wee eate drinke sleepe c. but then wee shall eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God and never hunger or thirst any more 2. Their workes follow them our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. The almes of Cornelius the garments of Dorcas the Centurions Synagogue a Cup of cold water given in CHRIST 's name shall be rewarded so that we may sing like a Swanne before our death as St. Paul did 2 Tim. 4.8 henceforth there is layd up for mee a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give mee at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing 4. Comfort against death is a glorious resurrection Iob 19.25 26.27 Phil. 3. Christ's glorious body Our bodies putrifie in the earth yet there is not an end of them We have praeludia in the Old and New Testament the Widow of Sareptas Son raysed up by Elias the Sonne of the Shunamitish Woman by Elisha In the New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo Iairus daughter the other in feretro on the Beare the Widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro that was Lazarus which had lyen foure dayes and began to stincke all which are pledges of our resurrection The same God that raised them up will raise us up at the last day Death goes not alone there is one that followes her and that is judgement Iudgement either of absolution for the godly come yee blessed of my Father or of condemnation for the wicked goe yee cursed into c. If there were no judgement after death the godly of all others were most miserable and if no judgement the ungodly were the happiest men But let us know that after death comes a judgement one way or other salvation or damnation We must all appeare before the judgment seate of Christ c. The drunkard must give an account of his drunkennesse the covetous man how he hath imployed his riches we must give an account of our oppressions thefts secret or open of our negligent comming to Church and contempt of the Word of God Let this cause us with a narrow eye to looke into our lives let us judge our selves in this world that wee bee not condemned hereafter Yet there bee a number in the Church that thinke it a scare Crow and make a mocke at this judgement as the Athenians did at the resurrection Acts 17.32 they will believe the Assizes at Bury and in other places but count this a tale of a tub Felix though a wicked man trembled at it Let us all tremble at the naming of this judgement Let it be a meanes to pull us from sin and to make our peace with God in this world that we may stand without trembling before the Sonne of man Iudgment followes upon the neck of death either come thou blessed or goe thou cursed The good thiefe the same day he dyed was with Christ in Paradise that was his judgment the rich man the same day he dyed was in hell in torments that was his judgement Wherefore whilest wee have time let us repent while God giveth us a breathing time on the face of the earth for when death commeth it is too late then there is no mercy but judgement to be expected While we be alive Christ knocketh at the doore of our hearts with the hammer of his Word if we will open to him he will sup with us and we shall sup with him in the kingdome of glory but if now we shut him out and will not suffer him to enter he will shut us out and though we cry Lord Lord with the foolish Virgins he will not open to us VERSE 28. AT the which offering he dyed To take away not existentiam peccati but reatum dominium paenam Of many Matth. 26.28 he dyed for all sufficienter What is CHRIST dead and gone then wee shall never see him againe Yes he shall appeare in the heavens with his mighty Angels Without sinne Why the first time he appeared without sinne for He knew no sinne I but then hee came with his fraile body to offer up for sinne Verse 26. Now he shall appeare with no more sacrifice for sinne Then he came as a Lamb to be slaine for sin now as a King and a Lion Then he came as a Priest with a sacrifice to offer now as a Iudge to sit on the Throne To the salvation of the godly but to the damnation of wicked and reprobate men Here is another argument against the Masse Men may as well dye often ordinarily as Christ be offered up often As this is an unmoveable truth that a man ordinarily dies but once So this is a firme position in Divinity that CHRIST can be but once offered properly But to whom shall the day of Iudgement be comfortable to them that are weary of the loade of sin and looke for their deliverer Phil. 3.20 Tit. 2.13 2 Pet. 3.12 The mother of Sisera looked out at a window for the comming of her Sonne So we the spirituall mother brethren and sisters of Christ must looke out at the window of our hearts for him A Woman lookes for her Husband and we look to our money our Sheepe and Oxen but we looke not for Christ. It is to be feared if he were a comming we would entreat him to tarry still and say with the devills why art thou come to torment us before the time hee is our deliverer let us looke for him as faithfull servants for their masters and say come LORD IESU come quickly The second comming of CHRIST is here notably described 1. He shall come potenter because it is said he shall appeare 2. Innocenter without sinne 3. Finaliter to them that looke for him 4. Vtiliter to salvation He
an interrogation yet it is better to read it affirmatively otherwise they should have ceased to have beene offered Once purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne Should no more be pricked in conscience for their sins their consciences accusing them and drawing them before the tribunall of Gods justice for their sins If a medicine have once throughly cured a man it needs not againe be ministred to the man So if the ceremoniall Law with her sacrifices had healed the people of their sins those sacrifices might have ceased to bee offered but they were offered every yeare therefore they did not purge them from their sinnes The often iteration of those sacrifices shewed their inability to take away sin If the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse have purged us from all sinne then Christ must be no more offered but the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Crosse hath purged us from all sinne which the Papists deny not Therefore Christ is no more to be offered as they say he is in the sacrifice of the Masse The Iesuites affirme that the Apostle here strikes at the legall sacrifices but not at the sacrifice of holy Church I but with one stroake hee woundeth them both The repetition of a sacrifice argues the weakenesse and debility of it for if it have once abolished sinne it needs not bee repeated againe CHRIST by his sacrifice on the Crosse hath taken away the sins of the world therefore Christ is not to be offered up any kinde of way neither bloudily nor unbloudily to expiate sin There is a conscience in every man that keepeth a register of all his sins It is scientia cum alia scientia There is a generall knowledge of the Law written in the hearts of us all and conscience is a particular application of it to our selves As for example the Law of God sayes Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge My conscience sayes to mee if I be guilty of that sinne thou art an Adulterer thou hast had thy Queanes in many corners therefore God will judge thee this is conscience which setteth our sins in order before us For the better unfolding of it we know that there be sundry kindes of consciences 1. There is an erring conscience a blind conscience as was in them that thought they did God good service when they killed the Children of God Such a conscience was in Paul before his conversion for the which hee was grieved afterwards when the eyes of their minde come but once to bee opened then their conscience will accuse them for it 2. There is a sleeping conscience A man knowes the will of God yet his conscience being a sleepe for a time he lyes snorting in the bed of sinne So did David in his sin of numbring the people but his conscience awoke at the length and his heart smote him for it A man may lye sleeping in covetousnesse drunkennesse adultery and God at the length awaken him out of that sleepe which is good for him 3. There is a seared conscience such as was in them 1 Tim. 4.2 when men are past feeling and hardned in their sins Custome becomes another nature They are so accustomed to drinking whoring oppressing and deceiving of their neighbours as that they thinke those to be no sins Their consciences never checke them for them These are in the ready way to Hell 4. There is an accusing conscience which is as a scolding queane in the house of a mans heart and will never suffer him to bee quiet day nor night They are like the raging Sea continually foaming In that case were they that went out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences Such a conscience had Iudas when he cryed I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This may prove a tragedy both in the end and in the beginning too as it did in him and it may end with a comedy in Gods Children It may lead some to hell and for others it may bee the way to heaven Mordeat nunc ut moriatur It is better for us that this Worme gnaw on us here to the vexation of our hearts for a while then gnaw on us eternally hereafter This accusing conscience more or lesse wee shall have in this world at one time or other they that fall into grosse sins and yet never feele a hell in their consciences in this life shall never finde an heaven in the life to come Therefore it was well said of one being demanded which was the way to heaven hell sayes he For if thou goest not by hell thou wilt never get to heaven 3. There is an excusing and cleering conscience When the bookes are cleered betweene GOD and us A debter is cleered when the booke of his Creditour is crossed so our consciences are quiet when our sins are out of Gods booke then we shall have no more conscience of sin This could not be effected by the sacrifices in the time of the Law neither can it bee obtained by any thing that we can doe in the time of the Gospell It is neither our comming to Church nor hearing of Sermons though these bee good things not our prayers fastings almes deeds receiving of Communions noe though wee should give our bodies to be burnt These are excellent duties yet these cannot acquit our consciences of sinne for when wee have done all we are unprofitable servants and we sinne in our best actions The only way to come to a quiet and excusing conscience is the application of Christ's merits to our selves being justified by faith we have peace with God If wee have laid hold on CHRIST by a lively faith wee may take up that song death where is thy sting c. Therefore let us repent and then entreat the Lord to assure our consciences that CHRIST hath dyed for all our sinnes and then wee shall have no more conscience of sins So we shall sing for joy when wee lye on our death beds and shall stand without trembling before God in the life to come VERSE 3. BVt the offerers of them have still conscience of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not onely of their present sins but of their sinnes past too All of them doe lye as a loade still on their consciences whereof the yeerely sacrifice by the High-Priest putteth them in minde Levit. 16.21 As they in the time of the Law had many sacrifices to put them in remembrance of sinne so wee in the time of the Gospell have many remembrancers of sinne Sundry Monitours to admonish us that we be sinners The Raine-bow may be a remembrance of sin to us that the world was once drowned for sinne and that it might be so still but for the goodnesse and mercy of God Baptisme daily ministred in the Church putteth us in minde of sinne for if we were not sinners we needed not to be baptized The Lords Supper puts us in minde of
beginning 1. In Christ which was from all beginning In principio that is in filio but that is impertinent The Seventie have interpreted the Hebrew word aright for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Suidas recordeth doth signifie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 involucrum because when the booke is rolled up in a Scrowle it comes to a kinde of head In the Scrowle of the Booke that hath the forme of an head The Scripture is called one booke because though it containe diverse bookes yet it agreeth as if it were but one no dissonance in this booke There is never a booke in all the Bible but testifieth of CHRIST It is written of him Gen. 3. The seede of the woman It is written of him in all the bookes of Moses in the Historicall bookes in the Psalmes and in all the Prophets therefore to fulfill these writings CHRIST came in the flesh Matth. 26.54 hee would not escape death that the Scripture might be fulfilled To doe thy will CHRIST came not only to doe the generall will of God comprised in the Law but to doe his particular will also as the Mediatour of mankinde to dye for man Luk. 22.42 Ioh. 4.34.6 38. hee offers himselfe to death Ioh. 18.5 hee comes as a Lamb to dye for us he offers himselfe to the butchers Oh the unspeakeable love of Christ If it be to ascend to honour and preferment then we will say loe I come If any say here is a 1000l l for thee wee answer readily Loe I come but if it bee to goe to the Gallowes there to be hanged for another man who will say loe I come CHRIST was now going to the Crosse there to be hanged betweene two thieves for us that were no better than thieves robbing God of his glory yet he sayes loe I come I am here Father to doe thy will and to dye for sinfull men Who can sufficiently expresse this love It may be one durst dye for a good man but who will dye for bad men for those that be his enemies as we were CHRIST ' s ô admirable love the love of CHRIST should constraine us and cause us to say loe wee come in the like case Lord Iesu wouldest thou have mee to goe to prison for thy sake Loe I come Wouldest thou have me to loose all my goods for thee and thy Gospell wouldest thou have mee to bee banished out of my Country nay to be burnt to dye an ignominious death for thy sake loe I come I am ready sayes Paul not only to be bound but to dye at Hierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus Oh that the like affection were in us If any call us to goe to the Ale-house wee are ready to say loe I come I will bee with you out of hand If any call us to a foolish and wanton interlude loe I come wee flye speedily but if it bee to doe the will of GOD especially to suffer any thing for the name of CHRIST then wee draw backe wee have marryed a Wife wee are wedded to our pleasures we cannot come But let us in some measure goe as cheerefully about Christ's businesses as hee did about ours when He went to dye for us and said loe I come Our Saviour Christ is onely to be found in the Scripture hee is the principall object and scope of the Scripture the Scripture is a glasse wherein we behold Christ Ioh. 5.39 to him beare all the Prophets witnesse Ought not all things to be fulfilled that are written of mee in the booke of the Psalmes In Plutarch it is written of all the famous men among the Grecians and Romanes In Xenophon it is written of Cyrus In Caesars Commentaries of Caesar. In Herodotus of Darius In Ambrose of Theodotius and Valentinian In Eusebius of Constantine that religious Emperour But in the Scripture it is written of CHRIST the author and finisher of our salvation without whom wee can have no comfort in any thing whatsoever This should enflame us with the love of the Scripture this booke should bee our delight day and night Yet a wonder it is to see the perversenesse of our nature We had rather almost bee reading of any booke be it never so ridiculous of any fabulous History whatsoever of Robbin-hood c. then the Scripture Yet here we may finde Christ to the everlasting comfort of our soules All the bookes in the world are not worthy to be named the same day with this booke Timothy learned the holy Scriptures from a child so let us all doe that wee may learne Christ without whom all learning is not worth a straw VERSE 8. IN the former place of the testimony above cited When the Messiah said He reckons up all to shew the debility of them all Not because they were offered by wicked men in which respect they are sometime rejected by God as Isai. 1.13 but because there was no power in them to take away sin No though they were offered by the constitution of the Law VERSE 9. THen when those sacrifices would not serve the turne Iesus Christ. Which those sacrifices cannot doe Whereupon the Apostle concludeth that the first being taken away the latter is established The legall sacrifices being removed CHRIST 's sacrifice alone remaineth as forcible to the putting away of sinne Here we see it is not enough to read and alleadge Scriptures but wee must deduce arguments out of them for the confutation of errors and the establishing of the truth The Apostle here by this testimony out of the Psalme overthrowes the doting opinion of the Iewes which sought justification in circumcision and in the sacrifices of the Law And by the same hee confirmes this truth that wee are saved by the onely oblation of our Saviour Christ. The like must bee practised by us wee must not sleightly read the Scriptures but make an holy and profitable use of them An argument derived out of the Scripture is of more weight then all the authorities of men VERSE 10. BY the which will that hee came to doe by the exequution of which will Sanctified that is made pure from all our sins the holines of Christ being imputed to us He shewes in particular what will he meanes that speciall will of God that the body of his Sonne should be offered up for us And that not often as the sacrifices were in the Law but once That one oblation was sufficient for all by this wee obtaine remission of sins justification sanctification in this life and eternall glorification in the life to come Christ was but once offered and that bloudily the unbloudy sacrifice of the Masse hath no Scripture to leane upon Not by the offering up of the body of an heyfer a Goatea Sheepe c. which were offered up often in the time of the Law Christ's body once made By this alone we are sanctified and by it alone we stand as holy and unblameable before Gods Tribunall seate We are sanctified by baptisme instrumentally Ephes. 5.26 we
offer any sacrifice for sin but remaining in heaven still he patiently abideth Then let us waite The foot-stoole of his feete Donec imports a continuation of time Sinne the Devill and his instruments death it selfe If Christ tarrieth for us shall not we tarry for him Luk. 12.36 2 Pet. 3.12 The soules of the Saints that lay under the Altar cryed how long Lord but this answer was returned to them that they should rest for a little season untill their fellow servants and brethren were fulfilled Apoc. 6.10 11. The patient abiding of the poore shall not perish for ever Let us by patience and long suffering passe through the sea of afflictions in this world that we may be with Christ in the haven of eternall happinesse in the world to come Let us tarry for him till the breath bee out of our bodies and let our flesh rest in hope till the day of judgement 2. This phrase doth signifie the greatest and basest part of subjection that can be Ioshua made the men of War to set their feete on the neckes of the Kings that fought against them Ios. 10.24 Adonibezeck made them whom he subdued to gather crumbes under his table Iud. 1.7 The Psalmist sayes of the enemies of Christ they shall licke the dust under his feete and Rom. 16.20 The God of peace shall tread Satan under our feete I will lay thee at my foote we are wont to say Now as they shall be Christ's footstoole so our footstoole too Wee shall be conquerours yea more than Conquerours by him that loved us but this full and compleate victory shall not be till the day of judgment when death the last enemy of all shall be subdued In the meane season while we be here we must look to have our enemies on our top to spit on our face to smite us as they did Christ to make long furrowes on our backes to offer us the greatest indignity that can be but let us be of good comfort the time shall come when they shall be our foot-stoole to their everlasting shame and we shall be as Kings with crownes on our heads and palmes in our hands for ever and ever VERSE 14. THere is great reason he should sit still at the right hand of God in heaven because with one offering he hath perfected that is hath gi-given them all things that were requisite reconciliation remission of sins sanctification redemption Not for a time but for ever Not all the world in generall but those that are sanctified they that remaine dogs and swine still have no benefit by this sacrifice but those that are sanctified Eph. 1.4 1 Cor. 6.11 All have not benefit by the sacrifice of our Saviour Christ only they that are sanctified Acts. 20.32 This is the will of God even your sanctification If we be not sanctified we shall never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Dogges Enchanters Whoremongers are without Follow peace and holinesse without which no man shall see GOD. Except a man bee borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 Such were some of you but yee are sanctified c. 1 Cor. 6.11 This is little considered of us We falsely imagine that we may wallow like swine in the mire of our sinnes and yet goe to heaven when wee dye That cannot bee None are perfected by the offering of CHRIST but they that are sanctified If thou remainest a covetous miser still and beest not sanctified from thy covetousnesse if thou continuest a drunkard still and art not sanctified from thy drunkennesse if thou dwellest in thy fornication adultery stil and beest not sanctified from these sins If thou beest a proud man still and art not sanctified from thy pride to have a lowly opinion of thy selfe thou shalt never have any comfort by the oblation of CHRIST Wee must be Saints in some measure while wee are here on the earth or else wee shall never be Saints in heaven hereafter Paul writeth to them that are sanctified 1 Cor. 1.1 Therefore let us entreat the Lord to sanctifie us in soule spirit and body throughout that we may enter into the holy Hierusalem in the life to come VERSE 15. FOr the HOLY GHOST testifieth this also to us 2 Pet. 1.21 For after hee had said before these are the words of the Apostle making a collection out of the Prophet He doth not say for Ieremie beares us witnesse but the Holy Ghost The whole Scripture was given by inspiration from God it was inspired by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 The HOLY GHOST speakes in the bookes of Moses in the Psalmes and in the Prophets in the writings of the Evangelists in the Epistles of the Apostles and in all the rest In other writings men speake but in the Scripture GOD Almighty speaketh therefore how reverently are they to bee read and heard of us wee that bee the Preachers speake yet it is not wee but the Spirit of GOD that speaketh in us the HOLY GHOST speaketh by the mouth of all his servants therefore let us take heed how we resist the Holy Ghost VERSE 16. AFter he had promised a New Covenant instead of the Old After those dayes namely of the old Testament those being expired Then saith the Lord concerning the New Covenant that was promised Two things Renovation and Remission of sins Verse 17. God doth not promise to put his lawes in our eyes that wee might look on them in our mouthes that we might talke of them or on the fringes of our garments as the Pharises had the Law of God but if wee feare Him Hee will put his lawes into our hearts that the heart being possessed with the Law of God it may set the tongue and all the members of the body on worke VERSE 17. NEither the guilt nor punishment of them This testimony was cited Chapter 8. to prove that there was a New Covenant to abolish the Old Here it is alleadged to prove that remission of sins is effected by the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament which was only figured out by the sacrifices of the Old Testament So that one and the same Scripture may be applyed to diverse purposes The foundation whereupon the remission of sins promised by God was built was the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament otherwise this testimony should not be alleadged to purpose That which we minde to punish we will remember I remember Amalek said the Lord. A master being displeased with his servant sayes I will remember you anon but God will not remember our sins he will rase them out of the booke of his remembrance An happy turne for us for if he should remember but one sin against us it were sufficient to cast us into hell As God remembers not our sins So let not us remember the injuries done to us Ioseph would not revenge himselfe on his brethren for the injurie they intended against him and practised but
remitted so Christ forgot the cruelty that his persecutors used towards him Mat. 18.3 All good turnes let us remember but as for all wrongs let them bee forgotten for ever Why will he not remember our sins any more Surely because his Son Christ Iesus hath dyed for our sins and offered himselfe for them him that knew no sin he made to be sin for us therefore he will remember our sins no more To that purpose is this testimony alleadged in this place VERSE 18. WHereupon he inferreth this conclusion Of these things that is of sins and iniquities is There may bee spirituall oblations and sacrifices of prayer thankesgiving and almes deeds Hebr. 13.17 but there remaines no more offering for the expiation of sinnes If all sinnes be forgiven for the one oblation that Christ hath offered there needs no more offering for sin but for the worthinesse of that one oblation all sins are forgiven us Ergo there needs no more offering for sin Object There is Christ's As for the Masse it is the same sacrifice that Christ offered on the Crosse therefore that may still remaine as propitiatory for sinne Sol. 1. It is not the same for Christ's body is in heaven there he tarryes still Verse 13. and Act. 3.21 therefore it is not in the sacrifice of the Masse here on earth for that cause it is not the same sacrifice that was on the crosse 2. Here it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That was bloudy this unbloudy Which differ as much as light and darkenesse death and life and if unbloudy then no remission of sins in it Hebr. 9.22 3. If Christ be offered in the Masse then he must suffer there Hebr. 9.26 but he doth not suffer there ergo 4. If CHRIST be there offered then hee is there consumed for sacrificabile must be destructibile as Bellarmine confesseth and in all sacrifices there is a consumption of the thing sacrificed the Goate the Sheepe the Heyfer was consumed and Christ was consumed or destroyed on the Crosse he is not destroyed in the Masse ergo he is not in the sacrifice of the Masse Yes sayes Bellarmine he is destroyed sacramentally because he is eaten by the Priest though not physically and really I but in a sacrifice there must be a physicall and reall destruction of the thing sacrificed otherwise no sacrifice Againe a repetition of the same sacrifice is here excluded If CHRIST must bee offered up often then that one offering on the Crosse was insufficient for the taking away of sinne but the Apostle proveth that CHRIST was to be offered but once If he be offered up often it is an indignity to him for so were the sacrifices in the Law The Masse I conclude still is no propitiatory sacrifice Here we have a most sweet and comfortable doctrine by the offering of our SAVIOUR CHRIST we obtaine remission of sins his bloud purgeth us from all sin In sin we are warmed in our Mothers belly in sin we were conceived and borne We sucke sinne as milke from our mothers breasts before wee bee regenerate wee doe nothing but sinne draw sin with Cartropes and iniquity with the cordes of vanity After we are regenerate In many things we sinne all The just man falleth seven times a day If God should enter into judgement with us for our sins we were not able to answer one for a thousand We sin in preaching praying hearing our best sort of actions are defiled with sin But here is our comfort by the oblation of Iesus Christ on the Crosse once made wee have remission of all our sins In so much as wee may say death where is thy sting Let us desire the Lord to apply this oblation of Christ to us by a true and lively faith And as by CHRIST alone we have the forgivenesse of our sins which all the sacrifices in the Law could not purchase nor any thing that we can doe under the Gospell so let the love of Christ in dying for our sins cause us to dye to sinne dayly more and more and as he in wonderfull love offered up himselfe as a sacrifice for the putting away of our sins so let us offer up our selves our soules and bodies as a holy living and acceptable sacrifice to him all the dayes of our lives that the power of Christ's passion appearing in us in this world we may reigne with him in the world to come Now hee makes an application of that discourse hee had of Christ. analysis 19 1. The foundation Then the building 22. The doctrine and the use The doctrine hath three branches 1. Our entrance into heaven 2. The way whereby we enter Verse 20. 3. Our guide and leader in the way Verse 21. In our entrance 1. The manner of it 2. The place whereinto we enter 3. The meanes whereby analysis 20 In the way 1. A commendation of it 2. The conservation of it 1. For his office he is a Priest analysis 21 2. For his dignity great 3. For his dominion over the house of God The use is threefold 1. An appropinquation to God Verse 22. 2. A profession of God 23. 3. A declaration of it by provoking one another 24. analysis 22 Our appropinquation 1. Ex parte subjecti 2. Ex parte formae 3. Ex parte medij Internall externall analysis 23 Our profession must be held fast Where 1. How 2. Why. In the provocation 1. How it must be done with consideration analysis 24 2. To what we must provoke VERSE 19. 1. WE must make a profitable use of all doctrines propounded to us The High-Priest in the time of the Law could not enter into the Sanctum Sanctorum without bloud Hebr. 9.7 no more can wee into heaven hee entered by the bloud of a Goate and an Heyfer we by the bloud of Iesus Act. 20.28 We have boldnesse of entrance into the holy places How Thieves enter into an house so doe sacrilegious persons into a Church but it is with quaking and trembling least they should be apprehended because they have no right of entring wee enter boldly into the sanctuary of heaven because we have a right to it by Iesus Christ. Not to see it afarre off on an hill as Moses did the land of Ca●an but to enter into it Into what Into the holy places which is expounded to be heaven Hebr. 9.24 In the time of the Law none but the High-Priest went into the Holy of Holies and that but once a yeere here all both Ministers and people Magistrates and subjects high and low rich and poore all that believe in Christ have entrance into heaven We may be bold by prayer to enter into it in this life and in soule and body we shall have a comfortable entrance into it in the life to come None but Gentlemen of the Privie Chamber may enter into the King we may all goe to the King of Kings and that boldly because we are reconciled to him by
what Country man he was he answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mundanus The whole world is my Country all Countries are alike to me Yet in truth wee have no Country in the world England is not our Country Heaven properly to speake is our Country as Christ sayes call no man father here on earth so call no Country your Country on the earth Now heaven is our Country so we must seeke it it is worth the seeking and we cannot have it without seeking seeke the kingdom of God We must seeke it by prayer reading of Scripture hearing of Sermons by godly and fervent desire of the heart by heavenly meditations Our whole life ought to be a continuall seeking of heaven but alas we seeke for silver and gold Sheep and Oxen houses and lands and let heaven goe we are like Aesops dogge that snatched at the shadow and lost the substance We seeke more for shadowes then for the substance all the weeke long we are seeking of the world and scant on the Lords Day no day in the weeke doe we seeke heaven VERSE 15. THis is illustrated 1. By a declaration of the Country which they sought 2. By the fruit and reward of their seeking Object They professed themselves strangers because they were out of their soile the land of Chaldea Sol. That cannot be the Country which they had longed after for if their minde had run on that they had opportunity and time enough to returne in they had leysure but they would not take it 1. He shewes what Country it was not which they sought VERSE 16. 2. WHat it was which is first described comparatively then plainly pointed out with the finger The reward 1. A favour or prerogative in this life 2. In eternall happinesse in the life to come Exod. 3.15 he is the God of the whole world in generall he is the God of the wicked for temporall blessings of the faithfull for spirituall and eternall He that is the God of the whole world is now the God of three men Chrys. It is a glory to servants to have a denomination from their Lords and Masters I am servant to such a Noble man but it is no honour for a Lord to say I am the master of such a poore man such a beggarly fellow is my servant yet God glorieth of us that hee is our God Master and Father He makes this a piece of his style as if a puissant Prince would be called the King of Pigmies He hath prepared Hebr. 13.14 Ioh. 14.2 They doe not merit it GOD in mercy prepares it for them When Vide Matth. 25.34 God prepares many excellent things for us in this world but none comparable to this He prepared the world as an house furnished for man at the first We can but prepare temporall houses for our Children Some by this City understand the Church which though it bee on the earth is called heavenly because her chiefest part Christ her head is in heaven and her conversation is in heaven Hyperius But they were in the lap of the Church already within the walls of that City they needed not to seeke that which they had Heaven then is better than earth it is better by many degrees Men chuse that which they thinke to be best we choose earth rather than heaven therefore in our opinion that is the better What fooles what dolts be we men are ready to change for the better who would not change a beggars cottage for a Kings Pallace a patcht Cloak for a Princes robe We say heaven is the better yet we are loath to change our dwelling on earth for it by our good wills we would tarry here still We say heaven is a better country then this but we would faine continue in the earth still Many a Child is ashamed of his Father when hee comes to great honour We were base and ignominious wretches yet God was not ashamed of us If a great man have a kinswoman that is poore yet if a faire and beautifull woman haply he will not be ashamed of her We are all fowle and black by reason of sin yet God is not ashamed of us and shall we one of another A King is not ashamed of a beggar and shall one beggar be ashamed of another Shall one earthen Pot though it be a little guilt and tipt with silver be ashamed of another earthen Pot Though thou beest a rich man and hast more silver and gold than thy brother yet be not ashamed of him thou art earth as well as he yee are Pots of one Potter Constantine was not ashamed of the Bishops the Angels are not ashamed of us they acknowledge themselves to be our fellowes and brethren and shall we be ashamed one of another Though he be never so poore a man if he believe in Christ be not ashamed of him 2. As God is not ashamed of us so let us not be ashamed of him though Christ be afflicted here on earth yet let us not be ashamed of him and his Gospell for if we be he will be ashamed of us when he commeth with his holy Angels How doth it appeare he is not ashamed of us because he disdaineth not to be called our God He doth not say to be called their Lord and Master but God I thank my God that we read often This comprehendeth all good things for this life and that to come happy are the people that be in such a case blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. The Lions shall be hungerbit but they that have God for their Lord shal want nothing that is good This may strengthen us against poverty sicknes and all calamities against sin Satan and death it selfe Will any child feare want that hath a rich and loving father our God our Father is rich heaven and earth are his he is most loving he tenders us as the apple of his eye therefore wee can want nothing that is good The Lord is our God our shield Protectour and defender therefore let us feare nothing If God be on our side who can be against us Nay this may comfort us against death it selfe From this one word our Saviour proves the resurrection he is not the God of the dead but of the living for all live to him Though we dye God is our God he will raise us up againe at the latter day and translate us into his kingdome This may be a pillar of comfort for us to leane upon that God is our God By what token doth he shew himselfe to be our God because he hath prepared a City God is an excellent preparer Hee prepared the world as an house well furnished against the comming of man into it he prepared a Table for the Israelites in the wildernesse he gave them water out of a stony rocke and Manna from heaven he prepared a kingdome for Hester when she was a poore banished maide hee prepared a Whale for Ionah when he was cast into the
come on it what will O the magnanimous spirit of a right heroicall man resurrectio mortuorum fiducia Christianorum It is the principall pillar that Christians have to leane upon if we had hope only in this life of all others wee were most miserable Therefore let our faith bee firmely grounded in the resurrection as was the faith of Abraham the Father of the faithfull We have strong inducements thereunto 1. Is potentia dei idoneus est reficere qui fecit hee that made our bodies of nothing at the beginning can remake them when they are consumed to nothing 2. Is bonitas dei I am the GOD of Abraham of Isaac and Iacob that was spoken after they were dead though they were dead yet he was their God the God not of their soules only but of bodies too Absit ut Deus manuum suarum operam ingenii sui curam afflatus sui vaginam liberalitatis suae haeredem testimonii sui militem Christi sui sororem Spiritus sancti templum in aeternum destituat exitium Bee it farre from God to forsake the worke of his owne hands the care of his owne witt and invention let us make man after our Image the bladder or sheath whereinto he breathed the breath of life they heyre of his liberality the Souldier of his testimony that hath fought for him as well as the soule the sister and member of Christ the Temple of the Holy Ghost Be it farre from God that hee should leave this in eternall destruction As the soule and body have beene consorts in labours in this life so shall they be in rewards in the life to come 3. Exempla resurgentium the examples of them that have risen from the dead in the Old and New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo which was the daughter of Iairus the other in feretro on the beere the widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro in the grave which was Lazarus when he began to stincke These are praeludia nostrae resurrectionis forerunners or pledges of our resurrection 4. Dulcis titulus mortis a sweete description of death It is but a sleepe I would not have you ignorant concerning them that are fallen asleepe Those that sleepe in IESUS will GOD bring with him LORD said they of Lazarus if hee sleepe hee shall doe well enough The dead are but asleepe they shall doe well enough Philip slept securely while Antipater was awake and the dead sleepe safely while God is awake the keeper of Israel that neither slumbers nor sleepes Therefore let us be firmely perswaded of the Resurrection as Abraham was hee believed that God was able to rayse up Isaac from the dead and let us believe that GOD can rayse us all from the dead Abraham was a good considerer At the first when God promised Isaac he considered not his owne body that was dead Now when he is to loose Isaac he considers that God was able to raise him up O heavenly consideration in all extremities let us consider the power of God as Abraham did Art thou grievously sicke yea even to death is there but a step betweene thee and death yet consider that God if it be his pleasure can set thee on thy legges againe Art thou fallen to poverty of a mighty rich man art thou become an exceeding poore man as Iob was yet consider that God is able to raise thee up againe Is thy Sonne or thy daughter dead is thy Wife or thy Husband dead is thy friend dead that was as thine owne soule Weepe not over much consider that God is able to raise them up from the dead they bee not amissi but praemissi they are gone into heaven before and we shall follow after Doest thou thy selfe dye is thy body layd in the grave doth it there putrifie to dust and ashes yet consider that God is able to raise thee up againe Say with that holy man I am sure my Redeemer liveth The consideration of Gods power must comfort us in all calamities We have had the Tragedy now to the Comedy Hereupon followed a joyfull event he did not receive him in a parable but truly and indeed he received him from the dead that is from the state of the dead in a parable he was not deceived in his expectation In a parable that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a figure sayes Chrysostome in a darke and obscure figure or as hee unfolds it more plainely afterwards 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an example in similitudine quadam as Henry Stephen expounds it quodam modo as Beza after a sort as it was in the translation before this In a parable in a similitude for all parables are similitudes Neerenesse to death is a lively type and figure of death whereupon it hath the name of death 2 Cor. 1.10 blessed be God that hath delivered us from so great a death Yet Saint Paul did not dye then So the neerenesse of death wherein Isaac was was a similitude of Death the Altar was built the wood laid on the Altar Isaac bound on the wood the fire was ready the knife was comming to his throat to kill him Therfore Abraham received him from the dead in a similitude Old Father Iacob received his Sonne Ioseph as it were from the dead he verily thought he had been torne in pieces by wild beasts yet at that time he was alive and ruler of the land of Aegypt Hezekiah received his life in a similitude from the dead for sentence of death was pronounced against him by Gods own mouth The Iewes in the provinces of Ahasuerus received their lives in a similitude from the dead The Kings letters were sent by Posts into all quarters to roote them out kill and destroy them all even Men Women and Children in one day S. Paul and all that were in the Ship with him received their lives in a similitude from the dead For all hope that they should bee saved was taken away Act. 27.20 The King and Queene and Prince that then was the Lords spirituall and temporall the Gentlemen of the lower house in them wee Protestants in England received our lives in a similitude from the dead at the powder treason Thirty seven barrels of Gunpowder were cunningly couched under the vault of the Parliament house Vaux the same morning had his match in his hand to set them on fire we were in the mouth of death in a manner as neere as Isaac but by Gods miraculous providence through the quicke apprehension of the wise and learned King wee were delivered as Isaac was which deliverance requires hearty thankesgiving to God Gods tryalls begin with a tragedy and end with a Comedy The Psalmist sayes of the faithfull Psal. 126. ult they went out weeping and carryed precious seed but they shall returne with joy and bring their sheaves with them So Abraham poore desolate Father went out weeping with his precious Sonne Isaac to be offered up but hee returnes
one that is thy junior thy inferiour lifted up in wealth honour and dignity above thee grudge not at it it is Gods doing be contented with it 3. Here we have a patterne in old father Iacob how to behave our selves at the time of death when wee see and heare death knocking at our doores then especially we must be occupied in heavenly duties we must not be cursing but blessing as Iacob was then above all other times we must be worshipping of God praying to him praysing and magnifying him for his mercies as Iacob was upon our beds and upon our staves Though we be weake and impotent wee must be glorifying of God when Hezekiah received that message set thine house in order for thou must dye then hee turned his face to the wall and prayed earnestly to the Lord. When our Saviour was going out of the world he was blessing his Disciples and here Iacob is blessing and praysing to his dying day so must we be We must not then be swearing cursing and banning quaffing and swilling as many be like the Epicures let us eate and drinke for to morrow wee shall dye Then we must be preparing of our selves for a better life where we shall remaine for ever The neerer the time approcheth that a tenant must goe out of his farme the more carefull he will be to improve it to his best commodity the lesser time that a man is to enjoy money lent to him the greater advantage he will make of it if hee can even so when we perceive wee must depart out of the farme of this world let us use it most to Gods glory and seeing God hath lent us our life as a summe of money to be payd to him praestituto die the neerer the day of payment comes the more conscionably and diligently let us be in the use of it to the honour of God and our owne profit When the steward in the Gospell saw that he was to goe out of his office he makes the best of it he can so let us doe of our life when we are to part with it They that be actours in a Comedy or Tragedy will have a speciall eye to the last act that they may have a joyfull plaudite of the people So this life being as a stage whereon wee play our part let us chiefely look to the last act at our departure out of the world that it may be joyfull to our selves and all those that be round about us our whole life should bee a continuall glorifying of GOD but especially the closing up of our life with death that wee may leave a testimony behind us of that lively faith which wee have in the Lord Iesus Let us be praying meditating blessing talking of heavenly matters to the last gaspe VERSE 22. IN Ioseph there be two things 1. A memorandum given to the Israelites 2. A Charge for the removing of his bones which were both lively demonstrations of his faith Hee presaged his death Gen. 50.24 either by the nature or quality of his disease or by divine revelation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawing to his end Memoriae prodit brought to memorie Out of Aegypt often promised by God which he had received from his fathers he makes a certaine prediction of it He bound them with an oath Gen. 50.25 Not so much for feare of Idolatry lest the Aegyptians should worship him when he was dead as Chrys. in Genesin and August de mirabilibus Sacrae Script l. 1. c. 15. they had opportunity to doe it before his bones were removed but to confirme the faith he had in the promises of God he was so sure that they should have the land of Canaan as that hee would have his bones carryed away before-hand 2. Because the land of Canaan was a type of heaven he would be there buryed 3. Because in life and in death he would be with the godly Rhemists the translation of reliques or Saints bodies and the due regard and honour wee ought to have to the same are proved hereby Bel. l. 2. de reliquiis Sanct. c. 3. upon this example concludeth non ergo superstitiosum neque novum est transferre ossa Sanctorum 1. The Israelites were bound by oath to translate his bones not so they 2. They kept not those bones to shew to the people or to carry them about on festivall dayes but they buryed them Ios. 24.32 3. Those were translated into the land of Canaan because it was a type of heaven So is no speciall Country now Therefore that is no president Ioseph a great man the ruler of Aegypt yet dieth death over-rules us all The rich man dyed as well as poore Lazarus It is appointed to all once to dye He rubbed their memories put them in remembrance of their departure out of Aegypt whereupon the booke of Exodus hath his name containing the departure of the Children of Israel You are well seated here in the land of Aegypt you are planted in Goshen the fattest of the land It is like for my sake ye shall finde favour for a time yet set not up your staffe here but remember yee must depart hence the land of Canaan is your Country promised to Abraham Isaac and Iacob let your mindes run on that land As for this world it is a kind of Aegypt flowing with all pleasures and profits yet let us know that this is no place of abode for us we must depart from hence The time of my departure is now at hand sayes St. Paul 2 Tim. 4.6 Luk. 9.31 If he had need of such a Memorandum much more we for this end Philip had his Vsher who daily said to him memento Philippe te esse mortalem The Israelites were too much wedded in their affections to Aegypt they desired to be againe with their Onyons and such like fare as they had in Aegypt We are all too much in love with this wretched world it likes us as well as the Mount did St. Peter Many wish that they might make Tabernacles here for ever yet let us all know that this is no abiding place wee must all depart eximus è vita tanquam è theatro Farmers from their farmes Gentlemen Knights Lords from their beautifull houses yea Kings must depart out of their Pallaces A voice came from heaven to Nebuchadnezar Oh King thy kingdome is departed from thee Let us seriously thinke of this departure of ours When a Travellour comes to his Inne hee lookes about him and sayes here is a fayre Inne here I have a brave Chamber and I have plenty of all things for my money yet this is not my home I must not tarry here I must depart even so though we have the world at will and all things as heart can wish beautifull houses large lands ample possessions yet here is no place to abide in we must depart leave all goe away with a Coffin and a winding sheete Let us use this world as if wee used it not let our
to catch me but the King of Kings is with mee I feare him not I will rest under the wings of Gods protection Chrysost. answers that he did not so feare as that he should never returne againe Why for he endured with a strong and a valiant minde nothing could overthrow him As seeing him that is invisible God in himselfe is invisible and cannot be seene Yet Moses by the eye of faith saw him as a Gyant on his side which made him to contemne Pharaoh and all enemies whatsoever he saw him in the bush Exod. 3. but rather by the eye of faith The Rhemists translate it him that is invisible he sustained as if he had seene him how can a man sustaine God they have quite lost the force of the Greeke word which governes no case but is absolute of it selfe All flight is not to be condemned Moses fled out of Aegypt yet it was in faith St. Paul fled out of Damascus yet in faith Tertullian hath an excellent treatise to this purpose There is a time to burne and a time to flye If they persecute you in one City flye to another If our flight come from faith not from feare and infidelity wee may have comfort in it It had beene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost. cast thy selfe downe said the Devill to Christ so Moses should have cast himselfe into danger if he had not fled There be two wings wherewithall we must flye when wee flye out of any Country being pursued by our enemies the wing of faith and of righteousnesse Whatsoever we doe must be done in faith else it is sinne in the sight of God if we sticke by it in the time of persecution it must not be in presumption presuming in our owne strength but in faith relying on GOD. If we flye it must not be in infidelity as if GOD were not able to keepe us in security and being unwilling to suffer any thing for the name of Christ but it must be in faith to reserve ourselves for better opportunities and to fight more manfully afterwards under Christ his banner By faith Moses forsooke Aegypt The second wing wherewith we must flye is the wing of righteousnesse If wee flye not sinne as well as the Country if wee carry our sinnes adultery covetousnesse pride c. with us in our flight they will make hue and cry after us and pursue us to the terrour of our conscience whithersoever wee goe these things being observed let us bee bold to flye Christ himselfe fled and hee gave his Apostles license to flye 2 We cannot see the essence of GOD yet we may see the goodnesse mercy and power of GOD. The essence of the winde cannot be seene yet the effects of it may When David was hunted by Saul as a Partridge he saw GOD preserving him from his clawes The three children saw GOD in the fiery furnace Daniel in the Lions den Ionah in the belly of the Whale S. Peter in prison The faithfull in all calamities see GOD in poverty in disgrace exile sicknesse yea in death it selfe they see the Lord Iesus ready to receive their spirits and they have such joy at this spirituall sight of GOD as that it makes them in a manner to forget all sorrow This makes them to endure all crosses as Moses did Let us desire the LORD to sharpen the eye of our faith that we may see him which is invisible to the comfort of our soules in this life and may see him face to face in the life to come The reason why we faint in calamities why wee give place to the fury of men is because we see not GOD on our sides by the eye of faith for if we did we would not feare men Will the Souldier feare if he see his Captaine with him especially if hee bee a most wise Vlysses and valiant Ajax that can protect him from his enemies Will a childe feare that hath his Father by him which is able to defend him If Gehazi had seene the Chariots and Horsemen of fire round about him and his Master he would never have delivered that pitifull speech alas Master what shall we doe VERSE 28. THE former were proper to Moses Now follow two other which are common to the Israelites together with him the celebration of the Passeover and their passage through the red sea In the celebration of the Passeover 1. the act then the causes of it which are three the instrumentall formall and finall Made the Passeover which doth signifie both to ordaine and to keepe and celebrate Matth. 26.18 Moses did not onely ordaine it at GODS appointment but together with the Israelites did keepe and celebrate it as a confirmation of their faith in the deliverance that was to come Here by Passeover of necessity must be understood the Paschall Lambe which was a signe and token to them of the Passeover The Passeover was the passing of the Angell by the house of the Israelites when he slew the first-borne among the Egyptians Moses did neither institute nor celebrate that but that was instituted and performed by GOD. They did take and eat the Paschall Lambe which was a significant token to them of that Passeover therefore it is no new thing by a Sacramentall metonymie to give the signes the name of the thing signified This is the LORD 's Passeover Exod. 12.11 that is A signe of the Lords Passeover this is my covenant sayes GOD of Circumcision Gen. 17.10 that is as it is expounded Vers. 11. A signe of my Covenant The Rock was Christ that is a type and figure a lively signification of Christ. Therefore we are not to seeke a knot in these rushes He shewes what this Passeover is affusion of bloud not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an affusion namely to the lintell and doore cheekes with a sponge of hysope The Lambe was killed the bloud effused into a Basin the sponge of hysope dipped in the bloud whereby it was sprinkled on the doore cheekes This Moses ordained and celebrated that the Angell seeing this bloud on the doores of the Israelites might passe by their houses and kill none there That is the Angell appointed to it by GOD yet no Angell is mentioned The first borne both of man and beast among the Egyptians Touch them that is kill them Gen. 26.11 A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not so much as touch them with his finger or the top of his sword The celebration of this Sacrament by Moses and the Israelites was a lively demonstration of their faith Achaz would have no signe They did not reject this signe To what purpose should bloud be sprinkled on our doores Cannot the Angell discerne the house of an Israelite from the house of an Egyptian without such a marke or can a few drops of the bloud of a Lambe be as a buckler to us against the wrath of God They chopt no such Logick with the Lord but in
are desirous to loade our selves with them they presse us downe and hinder us exceedingly in our race The Young man was so laden with his wealth that he could not follow Christ. Can a Bird flye when she is in a snare can a Man goe when he is fettered Riches are snares yea the devils snares which is a strong and cunning Fowler therefore beware how yee are intangled in them Ye may have riches and yet not be had of riches if they be weights and incumbrances Martha thou art cumbred about many things then away with them these Camels hardly go to heaven It had beene better for the Young Man to have parted with his riches than with CHRIST Many a rich Man is so pressed downe with his wealth with the cares of the world about Sheep and Oxen Silver and Gold as that he cannot goe to Church hee can finde no time to pray to read Scripture to occupie himselfe in heavenly meditations How can he run the race that leadeth to heaven If thy eye offend thee cut it out much more if thy riches offend thee if they clog thee in this race away with them it is better to goe a poore man to heaven than a rich man to hell If a man be pressed to death though it be with gold what gets he by it And if thou be pressed to eternall death though it be by thy golden riches what doth it advantage thee The Mariners Ion. 1.5 for the saving of their lives cast away their goods and with their owne hands hurled them into the sea and for the saving of our soules shall we not cast away our goods shall we suffer them to drowne us and that in everlasting perdition whatsoever presses thee downe cast it away If an Executorship Stewardship Lordship multitude of Farmes presse thee downe and make thee to have an ill conscience before God and Man too cast it away But we love our burthens too well we had rather lose heaven than them The third thing that presseth down is pleasure Luke 21.34 Surfetting and drunkennesse are great pressers We may run with drink and wine but not with drunkennesse When a mans belly is full he is unfit to run in a bodily race much more in the spirituall race Fasting and prayer are good for this race fornication and adultery are Heavie burthens to presse us downe Hos. 4.11 they take away the heart no heart to run 1 Tim. 5.6 The voluptuous person is dead while he lives That man in the Gospell said I have married a wife therefore I cannot come how much more will an adulterer say I have gotten a whore I must solace my selfe with her therefore I cannot come Let them runne that will I cannot runne the race of Christianity Therefore let us cast away every thing that presseth downe bee it never so neere or deere to us This universall particle is worthy to bee observed every thing Some flatter themselves in one thing or other In this the Lord bee mercifull unto mee as Naaman said Herod cast away many things but his sweet sin of Incest he would not cast away A drunkard will cast away any thing save his drunkennesse in this the Lord be mercifull unto me that I may take a cup of Nimis now and then A covetous miser will cast away any thing save his love of money In this the Lord be mercifull unto me that I may keepe my purse I will come to the Church but I will give nothing so neere as I can I but we must cast away everything that presseth downe lest we misse the gold of eternall glory My life sayes S. Paul is not deere unto me so as I may fulfill my course with joy and shall our pleasures and profits be so deere to us that they shall keepe us from fulfilling our course Let us cast every thing away rather than perish eternally But there is one thing which above all others we must strive to cast away .i. the sin this is ready to give us a fall at every turne it is inclusus hostis The Snaile carries his house with him but we carry our enemy with us The Snake of Originall sin is in our bosome wheresoever we become That doth so easily compasse us about As a paire of Compasses that compasse the whole Circle so doth this the whole man It compasses about our soules and bodies our eyes eares hands feet and is ready alwayes to molest and stop us in our race therefore away with it There be two compassers the one is Sathan he compasses the earth to and fro the other is our owne corruption that compasses all men on the earth We cannot utterly cast it off so long as wee live we cannot cast off the being of it but we may the dominion of it Though it bee in us let it not reigne in us though wee cannot ejicere let us dejicere Gods grace is sufficient for us as he said to S. Paul Let us pray to him for his grace that by little and little we may cast it off The foundation being layed he comes to the building it selfe and sets the admonition on it The race that we must run is illustrated by the efficient cause and the manner of our running He doth not say run you and I will sit still but let us run All must run Ministers and People Magistrates and Subjects We must not goe but run not creepe like Snailes but runne like Roes Our life is not compared to a sitting but to a walking or running yet we must not be like foolish runners that run themselves out of breath at the first Faire and softly goes farre Wee must not come in such a rash and heady zeale as that we runne quite out of the Church as some doe Let us run but wisely and discreetly What race not that which is set before us by the devill the race of pride envie hatred malice contention the race of drunkennesse uncleannesse c. but the race that is set before us by God the race of Christianity cleaving stedfastly to Christ and his Gospell 1 Cor. 9.24 By God Almighty Hee hath appointed to every one his race some a longer some a shorter Some have many crosses some fewer all have some Yet let us all run this race 3 How long must we run not for a while but to the end Not run while we be young men till our juvenilis ardor be a little over as many doe but though we be old Mnasons we must run still never cease running till we cease breathing I have finished my course sayes S. Paul We must never leave running till our course be finished 4 How must we run with patience This must be the staffe that we must walke withall and the principall leg that wee runne withall In patience possesse your soules The best man that is shall have one thing or other to exercise his patience withall Though David be a King he shall have a rayling Shimei we must
require it we eate that which is on the Altar the Altar it selfe we cannot eat Therefore it is a figurative speech Which serve the Tabernacle that be servants unto it The direct meaning of the place is this we have a Sacrifice on an Altar Iesus Christ that was sacrificed on the Altar of the Crosse for us whereof they have no authority to eate that are still wedded to the Tabernacle and the rites of the Ceremoniall Law The Tabernacle and Christ cannot stand together If ye will needs retaine the shaddow still ye have no right to the Body If in this cleere light of the Gospell when Christ the end of the Law hath appeared ye will keepe the Law still then ye have no interest to Christ no benefit by him Gal 5.4 Therefore away with the Ceremonies of the Law The like may bee affirmed of the observation of any thing with Christ for the obtaining of eternall life either have Christ alone or have him not at all VERSE 11. THE confirmation of this proposition Where first the type secondly the thing signified by it They that served at the Altar could not eat that which was burnt The bodies of the beasts representing Christ were burnt without the host therefore they could not eate of them no more can they that now cleave to the Tabernacle eat Christ. VERSE 12. THE thing signified is Christ. Whereof the bloud of the beasts was but a type Not within the Citie of Ierusalem but without in the place called dead mens skuls as malefactors at this day for the most part suffer without the Towne and Citie the Gallowes stand without They that thinke to bee sanctified by any other thing than by Christ cannot have the benefit of his passion Iesus the Saviour of the world the Sonne of the High and eternall God Which otherwise could not be sanctified The bloud of Goats would not serve the turne It must be his owne bloud After a most base and ignominious manner he was crucified betweene two thieves He humbled himselfe to the death yea the death of the crosse O the wonderfull love of Christ Christs love should constraine us that as he hath dyed for our sins so we should dye to them We are redeemed from our old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Iesus the Son of God Let this constraine us to forsake our sins David would not drinke of the water for the which the Worthies ventred their lives and shall we drinke of the water of sinne which cost Christ his life Christ shed his bloud for our drunkennesse and uncleannesse pride malice c. And yet shall we wallow in them We lay not to heart the price of our redemption We forget the Lord that hath bought us Wee are bought with the bloud of God Acts 20.28 Therefore let us not serve the devill but him that hath bought us We are Christs not our owne he hath paid deerely for us even his owne bloud therfore let us serve him VERSE 13. THE Vse is double 1. A departure out of the world Without the Campe of this miserable world where wee have so many enemies This is enforced 1. By the example of Christ. When Christ went out of the Campe he bore reproach he bore his owne crosse a while till he could no longer for faintnesse he was nailed to the crosse shamefully reproached many wayes A Crowne of thornes in derision was set on his head because he said he was a King All that went by mocked him We goe out of the world two wayes actu at our dying day affectu in our life-time We are in the world but we are not of the world We are Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem therefore our conversation must be in Heaven Let us goe out of our faire houses sweet gardens pleasant pastures Let us goe out from our sheepe and Oxen gold and silver wives and children Let us so use them as if wee were ready to depart from them The time must come when I must leave you all Therefore in the meane season let us goe out of them Let us set our hearts on nothing in the world but on God alone Let us use this world as if we used it not for the glory thereof fadeth away Yet for all that we are loth to goe out nay we dwell in the world continually we are in the world all the weeke long yea even on the Lords-day too We are like them Phil. 3. Whose belly is their God which minde earthly things the world the world nothing but the world Let Heaven goe whither it will If it were possible we would make our Tabernacles here as S. Peter would have done in the Mount Goe out of the world that is an hard saying who can abide it Let us follow Moses in refusing a Kingdome Monica whose song was volemus in coelum How must we goe out of the Campe of the world not dreaming to live in a paradise here but preparing our selves for afflictions being content to be reproached as Christ was We must not thinke to goe to Heaven in a feather-bed to sayle alwayes with a faire wind through many tribulations we must passe thither and be tossed with the winde of many reproaches by the way Christ was reproached and shall we imagine to goe to heaven without reproaches Let us arme our selves for the bearing of reproaches and let us in a manner glory of them I beare in my body the markes of the Lord Iesus It is better to have Christs markes than a purple gowne on our backs or a triple Crowne on our heads as the Pope hath and let this be a comfort to us our reproach if it be for Christs sake is Christs reproach If men mock us they mock Christ if they imprison us or kill us for his Gospell they kill Christ and let us suffer with him that we may be glorified with him VERSE 14. 2 IT is inforced by an argument taken from our estate and condition in the world If we have no time of continuance here then let us be content to goe out If a Tenant know that his lease is expired he must be willing to goe out Wee have not so much as a lease no not for a yeere moneth weeke day nor houre therefore let us be willing to goe out But why should we goe out of the Campe of the world The world is a warme nest and we have a long time to continue in it Nay we are deceived the Cities themselves are of no continuance the windes blow them downe the enemy may sack them and make them even with the ground waters may overflow them fire consume them many goodly Cities have beene burnt At the furthest they shall all downe at the day of judgement then the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt with fire We our selves have no time of continuance in them The Major of a Citie dyes the Aldermen dye the Citizens dye there is dying of
which is worse I but looke into the 12 of the Acts of the Apostles and the 6 verse and there you shall see how Saint Peter being bound with two chaines betweene two souldiers slept more soundly than many doe on their beds of downe And againe in the 16 chapter of the Acts and the 25 verse And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed and sung prayses unto God they sung more merrily in prison than many Kings can doe in their Pallaces There were diverse Martyrs Noble men borne and exceeding rich that had no pitty of themselves nor their wives and children neither but exposed them to all torments for Christs sake A good conscience is a continuall feast no joy to that what is our rejoycing save the testimony of a good conscience The third is honour and preferment but in that let us not be worse than Balaam Balack offered him great promotion but saith hee If the King would giue me his house full of silver and gold I cannot passe the Commandement of the Lord. The devill offered Christ all the Kingdomes of the world and the glory of them yet hee refuseth them What advantageth it a man to winne the whole world and lose his owne soule Let us not lose Christs everlasting Kingdome for these transitorie good things The fourth is persecution confiscation of goods bonds imprisonments death against all these let us plucke up Saint Pauls courage I am ready not onely to be bound but to dye for the Name of the Lord Iesus Ignatius went joyfully to the Lyons Policarpus to the fire Laurentius to the gridyron admirable was the boldnesse of Basil the governour threatned to strip him of his goods as for that saith he I have nothing but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a torne gown and a few books I wil put thee to death death saith he shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a benefactor unto me it shall send me to endlesse joyes well said the governour thou art very stubborne consider better of the matter and give me thy answere to morrow saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I to day and to morrow am the same man Let us all be of his magnanimous resolution let not our lives be deare to us so as we may fulfill our course with joy Christ sayd to the twelve Will ye also goe away To whom should we goe saith Saint Peter in the name of the rest thou hast the words of eternall life Let us love Christ as dearely as Ruth did Naomi Entreate mee not to depart from thee I will live and dye with thee insteed of a life of a span long we shall have a life that endures for ever VERSE 10. HItherto he hath wished her to avoyd their errors now hee doth advise her to eschew their companie 1. Non participando in facto not participating with them in deeds 2. Non participando in verbo not participating with them in words verse 11. If any come unto you they be shamelesse fellowes they will not tarry till they be sent for they will come of their owne accord and intrude themselves What any without exception nay and bring not this doctrine namely of Christ but the contrary rather Receive him not into your house why this seemes too great incivility they might receive him and when they perceived that by him turne him out againe I but Turpiùs eiicitur quam non admittitur hospes ye shall have more adoe to eject him than to keepe him out at the first shut up the doores of your house against him It seemes that as Gajus was the Churches Host so this Lady was the Churches Hostesse her house was open to the Preachers and Professors of the Gospell but he warneth her not to receive corrupt teachers 1. It is a thing displeasing to God to give entertainment to his enemies Iehu the seer reproved King Iehoshaphat for joyning with Achab Wouldest thou helpe the wicked and love them that hate the Lord God gave us our houses they must bee for his friends and not for his enemies 2. The godly will be grieved at it and shall we grieve them for whom especially Christ died 3. It may bring a bad report of our selves that we like of them and approve them whereas we ought to abstaine from all appearance of evill and provide things honest before God and men 4. It may indanger our owne soules For their word fretteth as a canker It may over-run us and infect us ere we be aware 5. It may encourage them in their wickednesse 6. It may pull Gods wrath on us and our houses God blessed the house of Potiphar for Iosephs sake and the house of the Shunamitish woman for Elishaes sake His curse will light on those houses where the adversaries of his Gospel are harboured When Saint Iohn heard that Cerinthus the Heretique was in the bathe saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us flie least the Bathe fall on our heads Yet what a number be there whose houses are receptacles for Seminaries Priests and Iesuites and other Sectaries Ahabs house was for Baals Priests But Constantines Pallace was for godly Bishops and Ministers and hee thought their prayers to be the pillars of his house and indeede they were Then for participation in words Where 1. The prohibition 2. The reason of it verse 11. Neither bid him God speed Be so farre in shewing him any kindnesse in deeds as vouchsafe him not a kind word or greeting The Grecians used two words in their salutations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rejoyce and doe well celse gaudere benè rem gerere Albin●vano as the Poet said Here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wish him no joy no comfort vouchsafe him not a good word or familiar speech shew no token of familiarity to him VERSE 11. HE renders a reason of it For he that biddeth him God speede is partaker of his evill deeds And if wee be partakers of their sinnes we shall be partakers of their plagues Salutation is a signe of love We may not love them Therefore not so much as salute them Marcion asked Saint Iohn if he knew him Yes saith he agnosco te primogenitum Satanae I know thee to be the first borne of the devill They are the devils broode Therefore salute them not Dyonisius Bishop of Alexandria would not vouchsafe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Samosatenus the Heretique Some more nise than wise more rigid than solid will not bid any God speed in the high way side least they be partakers of their evill deeds not knowing where about they goe 1. In doubtfull matters it is the propertie of love to interpret the best for love is not suspitious it thinketh not evill 2. We may bid the man God speede though not that where about hee goes unlesse we certainely know that he goes about some mischiefe These are not much unlike them that except against the Letanie in the
is acquainted with all the infirmities of men he doth not only know them notitia speculativa but experimentali Saepius ipse miser miseris succurrere disco he that ●s in misery himselfe can the better pitty them that bee in misery hee that never tasted of poverty can hardly pitty a poore man a Physitian may pitty a sicke man but unlesse he have beene molested with sicknesse himselfe he cannot have so great compassion on ●hem that be sicke Countrie fellowes that never knew the labour of a student and painefull Preacher thinke it is no labour to preach Nothing can move commiseration so much as a fellow-feeling of the same misery This is in our High Priest our Lord and Saviour being clothed with our nature he is touched with our infirmities 2. When wee are afflicted Christ is afflicted If the meanest Christian suffer he suffers Saul Saul why persecutest thou me non meos We doe not only suffer for CHRIST but with CHRIST hee is not only the master for whom we suffer but the companion with whom we suffer If we be sick he is sick Art thou tempted of the devill sometimes to presumption to desperation so Christ art thou hungry thirsty weary or heavy of sleepe Art thou grieved for the departure of thy friends So was hee for Lazarus Is thy soule heavy and pensive So was Christs my soule is heavy to the death doe thine own familiar friends betray thee So was it with Christ art thou molested with rayling scoffing and backbiting tongues So was CHRIST as he hung on the Crosse in all his paines they derided him and nodded their heads at him art thou tormented with the paines of Death and at the last givest up the ghost So was it with our blessed Saviour No temptation hath fallen to us but the same befell to Christ before us We drink of his cup and are baptized with his baptisme When the Wife is grieved the Husband if he be as he ought to be is grieved We are the Spouse Christ is our husband therefore our griefe is his griefe When any member of the body suffers though it bee the foote that treadeth on the ground the head suffers Wee are the members Christ the head therefore our crosses are his crosses Many are the troubles of the righteous through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God But let this bee a pillar for us to leane upon in all afflictions our sufferings are Christs sufferings and he will one day make a comfortable end of them all VERSE 16. THe other comfortable use wee are to make of this Priest is contained in this Verse which is that we have an accesse to God which is amplified by the manner how the place whereunto and the end Let us not feare him because hee is a great and mighty high Priest but let us goe to him and to God the Father by him This going is not only with the feete of our bodies but of the minde Let us goe by prayer to God not feare to put up our supplications to him Not quaking and trembling as to a Iudge but with boldnesse as to a father uttering our mindes and disclosing our hearts to him To the throne of grace There is thronus gloriae Matth. 25.31 Apoc. 6.16 he speakes not of that but of grace because God is reconciled to us in the bloud of Christ. 1. We must pray to God flie to him by prayer 2. In the mediation of Christ our high Priest 3. In boldnesse with faith Hebr. 11.6 Iac. 1.6 4. The fruit of prayer which is double 1. That wee may finde mercy for all our sinnes and grace for all our miseries 2. To a seasonable helpe to helpe us in due time and season when wee stand in need of it In due time even in the time of trouble The Papists are enemies to this boldnesse they will not have us to be so bold as to goe to God immediately by Christ but we must have other intercessours by the way the Angels the Virgin Mary and all the Saints triumphing in heaven yet the Holy Ghost will have us to goe to God the father boldly in the name of Christ alone observe the words of the Text. Therefore First seeing we have such a compassionate high Priest let us goe boldly in his name to the throne of God 2. He doth not say let us stand a farre off but let us goe 3. Not quaking and shaking like Aspen leaves but with boldnesse 4. Not to the Throne of justice but of grace a gracious reconciliation being made by him betweene God and us 5. Not to finde Iack drummes enterteinments and to be sent packing away but that wee may obtaine mercy c. Therefore let us sue to God in the only name of this our high Priest Whatsoever yee aske the Father in my name hee will give it you Then why should we seeke to any other he makes intercession in the heavens for us not the Saints or Angels there is one Mediatour betweene God and man 1 Tim. 2.5 The Scripture acknowledges but one True say the Papists but one immediate Mediatour yet there be many mediate Mediatours besides him This is a playster for many soares with the Papists There is but one immediate head of the Church whereunto the Church is united as a body but the Pope may bee a mediate head of the Church So there may bee mediate mediatours betweene Christ the immediate Mediatour They might as well say there be many mediate Gods for the text sayes as there is one Mediatour so one God shall we then distinguish as they do but one Immediate God yet many mediate Gods besides him they may affirme the one as well as the other Away with all those mediatours set up by the Church of Rome and let us goe with boldnesse to the throne of grace in the name of this our High Priest and only Mediatour None so gracious with God as hee none hath reconciled us to God but he none loveth nor tendereth us as hee doth having layd downe his life for us Shall we goe to a father in the name of a servant when we may goe in the name of his Sonne Angels and Saints are but servants our fellow servants and brethren Christ is the Sonne of God therfore let us goe to him in his name and if we aske any thing according to his will he will heare us for his sake This incouragement doth the Holy Ghost give us in the next words we shall not loose our labour nor goe away emptie God the Father for Christ his sake will lade us with his benefits In due time even in affliction sayes the Psalmist God will stand by us in all our needs in sicknesse povertie imprisonment banishment yea in death it selfe The examples of Iosuah the three Children Daniel Ionah Peter stand as so many marble pillars to confirme and ratifie this when all leave us he will not forsake us when my Father and Mother
forsake mee the Lord will take me up sayes the Psalmist Even then at the houre of death hee will command his Angels to take our soules and carry them up into Abrahams bosome there to praise him for ever world without end CHAP. 5. IN the latter end of the former Chapter was contained a transition to the Priest-Hood of CHRIST now he enters into the discourse of it wherein he is very ample because many excellent points of celestiall doctrine be comprized in it 1. A proposition concerning the Priest-hood from the first Verse to the eleaventh evinced by a comparison betweene the High Priest and him 2. A large explication of it wherein 1. An entrance to the explication by a new exordium preparing them to it Verse 11. to the end of the sixth Chapter 2. The explication it selfe Chap. 7.8 and 9. The proposition concerning the Priest hood is set downe 1. Generally by an enumeration of the qualities required in a Priest in the foure former Verses 2. An Application of them to Christ from the fifth Verse to the eleaven●h In the setting downe of the proposition in generall these circumstances are unfolded to us 1. His affinitie with the people 2. The end why the Priest is ordained 3. The object whereabout he is occupied 4. One principall po●nt wherein it doth chiefly consist 5. The manner how he executes his office with a fellow feeling of the infirmities of his brethren ratified by the cause having himselfe an experience of the same infirmities Which is confirmed by an effect whereunto he is bound 6. His calling to his office illustrated by an example In the Application of it 1. He shewes that Christ hath a lawfull calling to his office as the Priests had which is confirmed by two divine testimonies 2. That hee is faithfull in the execution of his office 1. In respect of the things he was to doe with God 2. In regard of that which hee did for us which he concludeth with the repetition of the calling the foundation of all Before he comes to the explication of the proposition he prepares them to it by a new preface shewing the difficultie of the matter and the dulnesse of the hearers Which he prooveth by the effects they that have beene a long time at Schoole and have profited little are dull hearers but you have beene a long time at Schoole and profited little Ergo you are dull hearers For wee have neede to teach you your A. B. C. againe which he illustrateth by a similitude first set downe Then unfolded with both the branches belonging to it The conjunction For is not alwayes copulativa but sometimes inchoativa set for a grace and ornament in the beginning of a sentence yet it may have this coherence with the former having a great and a loving High Priest let us goe with boldnesse to the throne of Grace for this our high Priest hath all things that appertaine to an High Priest as shall appeare by the particulars Not one or two but all every one not one exempted Aaron Eleazar Iehojadah Iehosuah yea Melchizedec himselfe though his father and mother are not expressed in Scripture yet hee was taken from among men So was our SAVIOUR himselfe being made of a Woman and found in the true shape and similitude of a man Not only every inferiour Priest but every High Priest the Highest of all was taken from among men God taketh him by the hand separateth him from among his brethren and setteth him in a chaire of dignity above them all Hee was not taken ex volatilibus that he might not mount up above others not ex reptilibus because he should not be too much glewed to the earth not ex piscibus then in another element not ex angelis then he could not converse familiarly with his brethren nor have compassion on their infirmities but the High Priest was taken from among men he is a man as others be When God had brought all Creatures before man he found not an helpe meete for him So God thought it not meete to make an High Priest for men but among men All Ministers and Preachers are taken from among men it did not seeme good to the wisedome of GOD to call Angels to this office The Angell appeared to Philip and sent him to instruct the Eunuch but the Angell did not teach him himselfe It was not an Angell that preached CHRIST to Cornelius but Saint Peter that was a man as hee himselfe was As CHRIST tooke not on him the nature of Angels but the seede of Abraham So GOD hath not appointed Angels Preachers but men wee have this treasure in earthen vessels The Preachers that bring the pearle of the word are vessels of earth as you your selves be And take heede that yee doe not contemne them GOD hath honoured them with an high and magnificent office therefore doe not you dishonour them A number thinke basely of the Ministers because they be but men as they are A father is but a man yet the child honours him yea though he be a man growen himselfe as Salomon did Bathshebah A Master is but a man yet the servant though elder and stronger then he reverences him The Maior and Bayliffes of a Towne are but men yet the whole corporation yeelds honour to them Iustices of Peace are but men yet feared in regard of their places A King is but a man taken from among men and dyes as other men yet wee doe not despise him because he is a man So though the Preacher be a man as others be it may be a weake and poorer man yet in regard of that office wherunto God hath exalted him to be his Ambassadour and steward to be his arme to pull you up to the kingdome of heaven hee is to bee reverenced by you all God hath taken us from among men to carry men into his owne kingdome therefore love and honour us To what use For the salvation of men God by a man will save men not for himselfe alone but for other men he is not ordained for beasts for the building of houses the tilling of ground the making of Cloath but to build up men to life everlasting to breake up the fallow hearts of men and to sow the immortall seed of the word in them Not ordained for Angels but for men the good Angels need him not the bad Angels shall have no benefite by him He is ordained for the saving of men not of Angels not for rich men alone but also for poore not onely to tell meane men of their duties but great men too whatsoever their authoritie bee in the world So is the Magistrate ordained of God Rom. 13.4 therefore the distinction followeth in things that are to bee done with God the one in temporalibus the other in spiritualibus the one is occupied about the goods names and bodies of men the other about the soules of men Hebr. 13.17 The Ministers office is to preach the Word to teach the