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

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persons preserued are said to be saued by the water because when all others perished in the water they were borne in the Arke vpon the waters and escaped drowning So likewise by Baptisme whatsoeuer is carnall naturall is destroyed and we are made spirituall when we are hereby receiued into the Church as into the Arke depending vpon Christ by faith But it is nothing outward in baptisme that saueth vs but the couenant whereupon a good conscience doth comfortably rest being able to say This thou hast promised Lord vnto me and therefore wilt performe it By the resurrection of Christ that is it being by faith apprehended not onely that Christ died for vs but that he rose againe to make his death effectuall vnto vs. Luther acknowledgeth this place to be so obscure Mayer as that he is not fully satisfied about the sense of it but preferreth this as seeming to him the best that yet could be found out Caietan saith that Christ went and preached to the spirits in hell and that not vnfruitfully But this is worthily reiected by Luther because there is no comming out of that place Gagneus And Gagneus a Papist also derideth it asking who told him of any that were there conuerted He also confesseth that he cannot attaine to any satisfying resolution of this place Some he saith expound it of Christs comming once before his comming in the flesh euen in Noahs time to preach whilest the Arke was in building but as they disobeying not flying into the Arke were drowned so now that Christ hath come in the flesh if any obey not to fly to the Sacrament of Baptisme they cannot but perish The Greekes reade that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spirits in hell which we read in prison holding that he went to preach vnto them not to saue them but to vpbraid them with their infidelity and sinnes notwithstanding the long warning which they had by Noah Beda Beda is altogether for preaching to men in this world and therefore readeth it either in prison that is to such as were shut vp in the body as in a prison or in the flesh that is such as were greatly oppressed with fleshly desires But to examine and determine in order the doubts or this place first what is meant by being put to death or mortified in the flesh and quickened in the spirit The old Latine translation followed by Tho. Aquinas and Gorra● readeth it Mortificatos carne c. as I haue shewed already and it is expounded by them accordingly of our being mortified and quickened But the Latine translation hath beene amended according to the Greeke as Lorinus acknowledgeth being by the fault of the Writer corrupted according to Gagneus and Augustine Ierom and Cyprian and Ruffin follow this reading He being quickened c. But it being agreed about this reading yet there is a question what is meant by Christs being quickened in the spirit 〈◊〉 An answer to certaine obiections against Christs descent Some contend that his soule was preserued aliue when he was bodily dead and that nothing else is meant And one taketh great paines in alleaging other places of Scripture where to quicken doth signifie to keepe aliue as Luke 17.33 Luke 9.24 Marke 8.33 Iohn 12.25 Exod 1.22 1 Sam. 27.9 c. And the Syrian Interpreter who readeth these words here Gecumen August Th● Aquin. Euther He died in body but liued in spirit Some would haue his diuine power meant quickening others that were dead who came out of their graues Some vnderstand his reuiuing againe to a spirituall life after his bodily death the quickening spirit comming againe into his dead body Some lastly vnderstand his diuinity wherein he liued ●●●d ras 〈◊〉 and alwaies liueth because the Godhead is a spirit expounding his being quickened in the spirit of his being restored to life by the power of his diuinity Beda citeth Athanasius taking the spirit here for the holy Ghost Athanesues as if it were meant that he was quickened in the faithfull his members in the spirit comming into them I subscribe to that of Augustine and Luther as seeming to me most genuine he died the naturall death but liued againe the spirituall life in soule and body For although the word here vsed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be often put for preserued aliue yet here it being opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it agreeth better to vnderstand it of that which is opposite to being put to death that is being raised to life againe in the spirit that is by the power of the Deity his very body is now become spirituall as ours shall also be And thus it agreeth excellently with that which went before that we should patiently suffer any wrongs because as the Lord Iesus did not so neither shall we lose any thing no not though we should be put to death for we shall but exchange as Christ did a naturall life for a spirituall and heauenly which is for euer Secondly What is meant by Christs going in the spirit to preach to the spirits in prison c. To this it is answered diuersly by diuers some of which answers I haue shewed already First It was a generall receiued opinion amongst most that Christ descended into hell there in person to preach to such spirits as were departed out of this world before his comming Clemens Alexandrinus Strom. 6. Athanasius Epist ad Ep●ctet Epiphan Haeres 77. Cyrillus Alex. in Iohan. cap. 36. lib. 12. Hillar in Psal 118. Ieronym in cap. 54. Esa Ambros in Rom. 10. Iustin in tryphon Irenaeus lib. 3. cap. 23. And the last of these two alleageth a place out of Esay the former of Ieremy in these words The holy Lord of Israel was mindfull of his dead which slept in the earth and descended to preach saluation to them that he might saue them Which words are not now extant any where but are thought by Irenaeus through the hatred of Christianity to haue beene put out by the Iewes yet they that agree in the generall of Christ his descent doe greatly differ about the effect thereof Some holding that hee saued all that were in hell before by his preaching as Hilary and Hermes in his booke entituled Pastor but the disobedient in Noahs time are named onely because they were the greatest number that perished together This is mentioned and reiected as an heresie by Augustine August lib. de Hares cap. 79. and that worthily because so contrary to the holy Scriptures Esa 66.24 Matth. 18.8 Luke 16.26 Some aga●ne hold that hee saued onely those that were worthy who led a good life and would haue beleeued if he had before come amongst them but vpbraided the rest by their disobedience and infidelity as Occum Gregory Nazianzen c. or that there were some penitent amongst them that were drowned by the floud whom he had saued as Lyra teacheth And it is a thing generally held amongst the Papists that there were
faithfull person liueth not as the naturall man doth though he cannot but through humane frailty sinne yet his heart is against all sinne and his life is such a continuall practice of repentance and the Spirit of Christ doth so sway and carry him as that he falleth not so often as the naturall man doth and he doth daily wash and cleanse himselfe from sinne by the teares of true repentance and that when there is no worldly shame or losse to moue him hereunto Neither can I see but that the regenerate must needs be of such an holy life as not at any time to fall into any great sinne as of adultery murther theft drunkennesse or the like although vnder the Law most holy men haue fallen for the Spirit is now giuen in a greater measure than it was in those daies and the force of corruption is more abated as is cleare from sundry passages of holy Scripture Whereas vers 8. it is said Vers 8. that the Deuill sinneth from the beginning and the Sonne of God appeared that he might dissolue the workes of the deuill the meaning is that he was euer the Author of sinne by his temptations so preuailing amongst men as that the world hath hitherto beene full of sinne but now the Sonne of God comming hath giuen a contrary Spirit into the hearts of his people whereby they are sanctified to leade an holy and new life The Deuill had them before as it were in the chaines of sinne fast bound for stirring to forsake those superstitious and riotous courses but now these bands are loosed and they are set at liberty to walke in the waies of Gods Commandements because free will which was lost in Adam is restored in the regenerate by Christ that we may now striue against and resist euill temptations Note that the most certaine marke of a childe of God Note is to leade an holy life and truly to endeuour to refraine from all sinne out of an inward affectation of holinesse and the dislike and hatred of euery sinne be it neuer so pleasing or profitable to the outward man and not in any by-respect and being ouertaken with sinne by infirmity to be humbled therefore and to beg for mercy and pardon and that toties quoties The comfort of those that doe thus is that they are not now accounted sinners but are iustified here-from Luke 13. as it is said of the poore Publican that hauing knocked vpon his breast and humbled himselfe he went away iustified The penitent person sinneth not because he doth daily that which is righteous in calling himselfe to account for his sinnes and iudging himselfe therefore as Beda saith Beda in Luc. 10. Seruos nos inutiles fatcamur vt in sortem vtilium veniamus Hieron Vnica iustitia nostra est iniustitiam fateri In confessing our selues to bee vnprofitable seruants we come to be profitable and Ierome Our only righteousnesse is to confesse our vnrighteousnesse For whoso doth thus and bewaileth it daily in secret cannot but haue his heart set against sinne and so sinneth not in will and desire CHAP. 3. VER 21. If our heart condemne vs not wee haue boldnesse towards God and receiue what wee aske of him because we keepe his Commandements c. In commending brotherly loue Mayer Vers 14. which he had often done before he saith Hereby wee know that wee are translated from death to life if we loue the brethren vers 14. By the loue of brethren all vnderstand here the loue of one another which is vsually expressed by the word neighbours in the old Testament but by the word brethren in the new Brotherly loue is a signe of true grace which is the beginning of the spirituall life that is eternall it is not the cause of life as euen the Iesuit condescendeth orinus Hereby a man may know that hee is raised from the death of sinne to the life that is by grace if he hath true loue in him because all that are partakers of this life haue this loue in them and consequently a man may know that euerlasting life is his and not only haue a probable coniecture hereof as popish writers teach For to put it out of doubt that we may know certainly he saith vers 24. We know that he abideth in vs by the Spirit that he hath giuen vs Verse 19 20 21. and in vers 19 20 21. he argueth from the heart and conscience of euery man which vpon this ground of actuall loue comming to be quiet and free from any accusation argueth most certainly that wee are in his fauour He that loueth to the exercising of charitable actions keepeth Gods Commandements which stand but in two things the loue of God and the loue of our neighbour God is said to be greater than our conscience that is more able to iudge and condemne because all things are most euident vnto him so that if our conscience condemneth vs hee will condemne vs much more And this is his commandement Vers 23. Oecumen that we beleeue in the Name of his Sonne Iesus Christ To beleeue in the name of Christ here saith Oecumenius is to giue credit to his will for by his Name is set forth sometime his glory and sometime his will Now his will whereunto he would haue vs giue credit is that we should loue one another But this exposition is forced for hauing spoken of loue hitherto and how necessary it is because God hath commanded it hee now goeth somewhat higher and sheweth that in commanding vs to beleeue in the Name of his Sonne hee commandeth loue also seeing that loue is inseparable from a liuely faith Therefore hee addeth This is his command that we beleeue and loue one another as if he should haue said For so much as I haue spoken of the Commandements of God affirming that he which loueth keepeth thē hereby it plainly appeareth to be so because that in commanding to beleeue in Christ he inioyneth vs both to beleeue and to loue loue being vnto faith as the soule is to the body which is but a dead carkasse if it be away And so hee commeth aptly to mention the Spirit giuen vnto vs in the next verse whereby we know that we are in God that is The. Aquin. Gorran Beza this grace of the Spirit loue And hereunto doe others consent Note here Note because he maketh the keeping of Gods Commandements the ground of our confidence to God-ward so as that we may pray with certaine expectation to be heard that none but such as are of a godly life charitable to the poore can haue any assurance of Gods fauour All wicked men and hard-hearted cannot but haue an accusing conscience if it bee not cauterized and therefore their hope to God-ward is vaine though they call and cry to him for mercy they shall not preuaile Iam. 5.16 Mat. 7.22 CHAP. IIII. HAuing spoken in the last verse of the former Chapter of knowing
minister about God first one and then another acteth his cryer vntill these foure seales be opened without respect vnto what was contained vnder each of them Lastly touching the voice comming out from the midst of the beasts it was as my Authours agree the Lambs voyce as was most fit for he giueth a charge as hauing authority wine and oile hurt thou not but what is meant hereby and why this rider is set forth hauing ballances and wheat is proclaimed at a peny a measure and barley at a peny three measures is a great question They which vnderstand by the black horse a famine wherewith the world was punished for infidelity will haue these words to sound a great dearth of corne but wine oile which are not of that necessity they say that the Lord in commanding to spare them meaneth that they should not be altogether left destitute of all comforts How this can any way stand I see not for in a sore famine as in the dayes of Ahab nothing that groweth is spared and truly me thinks if a measure of the finest graine be to be bought for a peny of courser three measures men should not be afraid of such a famine though the measure be but enough to make foure loaues sufficient to keepe a man a day as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is commonly expounded here the peny be as much as a man could yearne in a day according to the parable where it is said they receiued euery one a peny for the day Matth. 20. 2 King 7. By a like phrase plenty is promised elsewhere a measure of fine floure for a shekell c. but that there the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a measure of aboue halfe a bushell at fifteene pence this of three pintes at seuen pence halfe-peny of our money which though it cannot be interpreted of plenty yet neither can I by any meanes be perswaded that it is meant of famine which in reason if it be threatned to terrifie must needs bee a farre other manner of dearth than can bee collected hence Yet euen they that vnderstand this of heresie expound it of a famine of hearing of the word of God allegorically set forth vnder the termes of wheat and barley For they say that heresie commeth with ballances pretending to weigh euery doctrine by the weight of truth but the Lord giueth warning that true doctrine and good teachers shall then bee very scarce yet the fundamentall points meant by the wine and oyle shall remaine vnshaken And Pareus contendeth much to make Christ the rider of this black● horse because heretikes pretend Christ as being by him directed For mine owne part I am not satisfied with any of these expositions and therefore desire a can did interpretation if I shall put in my coniecture I thinke then that the voice in the midst of the foure beasts is the voice of the cryer of this Captaine riding vpon the blacke horse for each horse commeth out from amidst the beasts seeing the booke at the opening whereof they all appeare is held by the Lambe in the midst of the beasts as was before shewed That which he crieth is neither plenty nor scarcity but as hee maketh shew that rideth by his ballances a iust and equall price of these necessary graines and because wine and oyle are not wont to be weighed in the ballance men are secured that they shall not bee herein wronged and these are mentioned as the chiefe commodities of those countreys whereby the life is maintained according to the Psalmist Psal 104. He giueth the staffe of bread wine to make glad the heart of man and oyle to make him a chearefull countenance Now in all this it is alluded vnto the doctrine of truth the hereticke professeth to teach nothing but what hee can approue for truth being weighed by the ballance of holy Scriptures and euen as in buying and selling they are accounted honest dealers that sell a peny worth for a peny and make no mixtures in their liquid commodities but serue the buyer of them pure and vnhurt by such mixing so he seeketh to approue his dealing in the teaching of his heresies by professing equity and iustice and freedome from all deceit and if his corne shall be thought somewhat deare hee will make you amends in his wine and oile for it is not vnusuall to compare diuine instructions to corne and sometime to milke and wine Thus it appeareth what tragicall times the Church hath had but it is by Gods owne appointment and the last hath now beene long in acting neither shall wee need to feare professed enemies vnto Christ any more for wait but a while till the present corruptions be purged out and then commeth the liuing with Christ when there shall be nothing to annoy vs and in the meane season the comfort is that of all these riders the truth onely weareth the crowne wherefore persecutors heretikes and corrupt Christians shall be put downe and such as imbrace the truth shall reigne finally in glory for euer Quest 2. And when he had opened the fift feale Vers 9. I saw the soules of them that were slaine for the word of God vnder the Altar c. What place was this how could he see mens soules vpon what occasion doe they cry thus for reuenge and how warrantable is this what be the robes giuen them and what meaneth the stay till the rest of their fellow-seruants were slaine also Answ Before we come to resolue these doubts it may bee questioned also why no voyce to come and see is heard at the opening of this the next seale as in the foure seales past About this it is agreed that the apparitions past being but dumb representations it was necessary that by some voyce Iohn should be excited to behold them but here the soules appearing make a cry themselues which is enough to stirre vp to attention and therefore no other preparing voyce was needfull and the like may bee said of the sixt seale such things were acted and with such noise that it was in stead of an exciting voyce Touching the place where the soules are said to lie viz. vnder the Altar I preferre that exposition Brightman Arethas whereby their sacrificing in their martyrdome is held to be alluded vnto in this phrase they appeare lying vnder the Altar signifying what death they had died and how precious vnto the Lord the death of martyrs is which giue their liues in being faithfull vnto him And whereas sacrifices are wont to bee laid vpon the Altar not vnder it the reason why they are said to be vnder may be because they were not now in sacrificing but had been already sacrificed and therfore as the ashes of the sacrifice being burnt fall thorow a grate vnder the Altar so they are said to lie vnder Beda Haimo Pareus Bullinger Thom. Aquin. Some will haue Christ meant by the Altar and so expound
riches and therefore the poore here is one poore and brought lowe in the world This would be noted Note that we may not be carried on according to the manner of the world to be ouerwhelmed with sorrow in time of aduersity and neuer to be so merry as when worldly wealth floweth in as though happinesse consisted in these things For this is a meere delusion The onely true and solid ioy is in the future exaltation in heauen the way vnto which is by poeurty and crosses in this world and in an humble minde here in the middest of worldly wealth CHAP. I. VERS 13.14 Let no man being tempted say I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of euill he tempteth no man 14 But euery one is tempted being drawne away by his owne concupiscence and inticed 15. Then lust hauing conceiued bringeth forth sinne but sinne perfected breedeth death Tho. Aqui. in Iacob Gorran Hauing spoken hitherto of externall temptations now hee speaketh of internall that is euill cogitations suggested to the minde whereby a man is enticed and drawne to euill these come not from God but from our spirituall enemies God indeed is said to tempt Abraham Genes 22. Deut. 12. and likewise to tempt the people of Israel but it is to be vnderstood that there is a twofold temptation the one of triall the other of deceit by the first God tempteth that men may be more purified as the gold being tried in the fire but not by the other The Deuill tempteth thus that he may deceiue vs the flesh that it may allure vs and the world that it may draw vs away Concupiscence within a man as originall tinder Rom. 7. Gal. 5. otherwise called the law of the members and the flesh lusting against the spirit that tempteth by drawing away from good and enticing to euill for by these two words are set forth the two termes the terme from which and the terme vnto which the right way from which and the wrong way vnto which Aug. Peccatum est spreto incommutabili bono commutabili bono adhaerere or the immutable good from which and the mutable good vnto which Ob. The deuill tempteth sometimes and therefore not concupiscence onely Sol. Although the deuill tempteth yet he can doe nothing if concupiscence were not euen as wood is not kindled by blowing vnlesse there be fire Concupiscence when it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne c. The degrees of temptation are here noted out first there is delight alluring secondly consent conceiuing thirdly worke performing fourthly custome perfecting Lust conceiueth by the deuill who is as it were the father and lust the mother this conception is by the consent of the will or by delight Bringeth forth sinne that is into act Psal 7. It is perfected by custome and then death commeth that is it becommeth guilty of eternall damnation Rom. 6. for the wages of sin is death But why is death assigned only to custome doth not sinne delighted in or consented vnto and acted bring forth death also Answ Yes doubtlesse but it is most properly said thus of custome in sin because in such there appeare no signes of life there is little hope of his returne but in such as sometime fall into sin there are signes of life though more in the consenter vers 17. fewer in the acter of sinne Euery best guift and euery perfect guift This is added further to proue that no euill temptation is from God because good onely commeth from him which hee sheweth first from the copiousnesse of his guifts secondly from his immutable goodnesse thirdly from his liberality towards vs in begetting vs fourthly from their own iudgement Touching the degrees here set forth the good are temporall guifts the better naturall the best gracious The best guift of grace and the perfect guift of glory The first is called a thing giuen because it is in the way the other a guift without end in our Countrey The father of lights that is the author of all graces which are the lights of the soules Occum in Iac. By temptation here vnderstand that which ariseth from a mans owne sinnes and intemperance whereby trouble is brought vpon him and fluctuation of the minde now when trouble is brought thus vpon a man it is not a temptation from God but from his owne concupiscence Mayer August de verbis Domini Est temptatio inducens peccatum qua Deus nominem tentat est tentatio probans fidem qua tentare Deus hominem dignatur Pareus Faber Piscator Gagneus and all others that I haue seene follow Tho. Aquinas vnderstanding here that inward temptation that is to euill of which it seemed good to the Apostle to speake because he had commended temptations before For of outward temptations of trouble comming vpon a man by his own default it cannot be meant as Oecum would haue it because it is temptation to euill of which it is spoken here as is expressed when it is added God is not tempted of euill and the sequell of this temptation is plainly said to be sin not outward trouble in the world If it be demanded in what sense God is said to be vntemptible of euill Pareus the Latins reade it intentator malorum Pareus some others take it both actiuely and passiuely but because the actiue immediatly followeth He tempteth no man I thinke that it is to be vnderstood passiuely only The meaning is that our malice cānot stir vp euil in him neither doth he tempt any man to euill as Occum hath noted was the saying of an Heathen Numen De●s neque ips● molestias habet neque alijs exhibel 2 Sam. 24. God the diuine Maiesty neither is himselfe troubled nor bringeth troubles vpon others Ob. He hardened Pharaohs heart whō he will hee hardeneth and hee moued Dauid to number the people Sol. With Pareus I say that God doth not by tempting make any man euill but vpon such as are already euill he sendeth the iudgement of being hardened to the doing of more euill that hee may in the end receiue the greater damnation Reade more touching this point vpon Rom. 9. and August de bone perseuerantiae Epist 146. ad Consentium 2 If it be demanded what concupiscence is and whether it be not a sinne because hee seemeth here to make it but the cause of sinne and how temptation is ascribed onely to concupiscence when as the deuill also tempteth and so doth the world too I answer to the first that concupiscence is generally agreed vpon to be that originall inclination vnto euill which we draw from the loines of our first Parents To the second that S. Paul himselfe being the teacher it is sinne Rom. 7. and such a sinne as is condemned in the tenth Commandement though Popish Writers mince it and say that it is not truely and properly sinne but the cause of sinne and by the Apostle Paul
out of the Sea or out of the earth as chap. 13. and not out of the bottomlesse pit as in this place Touching the time it is said When they shall finish their testimony he shall make warre Pareus c. This is well resolued by those which hold that howsoeuer he shall oppose them all the time of their prophesying yet he shall not preuaile to kill them till they haue finished the worke for which they were sent namely to giue testimony to the truth For it cannot be imagined that these instruments of the Deuill would permit quietly the witnesses of the truth so long a time as was before set downe viz. 1260. daies but so soone as euer they began to prophesie these beginne to fight against them although the Lord for whom they stand will not suffer them to bee ouercome and slaine till they haue fully ended that worke for which he sent them So that this is not to be vnderstood as it may seeme at the first to be done at the end of the fore-described time of a 1260. daies but within the compasse of this time as each witnesse hath finished his testimony which hee was sent to giue And therefore it is to be noted that he saith not when the time of their prophesying shall be expired but when they shall finish their testimony The whole succession then of witnesses is to be vnderstood by these two who are all this time their office being done some martyred after other some to the end of the time intimated in the 1260. daies Some applying all this passage another way vnderstand by the finishing of their testimony the end of the whole time Brightman Fox which is vnreasonable and discrepant from all types and descriptions of the Antichristian rage For in all numbrings both here and elsewhere there is an admirable consent about three mysticall yeeres and an halfe sometime called 42. moneths sometime 1260. daies sometime three daies and an halfe sometime a time times and halfe a time that Antichristianisme should buckle with and preuaile against the truth but after this time ended there is not a syllable of any more hostility so that if this be taken of some time after these three yeeres and an halfe ended murdering and killing must be expected still this storme being quite blowne ouer which is far from the Lords meaning who hath expressed most plainly the contrary Elias his shutting of the Heauen was also three yeeres and an halfe Antiochus Epiphanes his causing of the daily sacrifice to cease three yeeres and an halfe the time of Christs preaching here three yeeres and an halfe an Antitype or Parallel to which is all the time of the Antichristian rage and of the witnesses prophesying in sack-cloth And hereby it appeareth further that no two particular men are meant here because thus Antichrists time must be somewhat longer than the allotted two and forty moneths for otherwise hee could not kill them after his testimony finished which they are giuing all this time nor insult three daies and an halfe ouer their dead bodies But the foresaid Authors conceiue another meaning of this place as hath beene already shewed Fox One saith that the time of the Councell of Constance is here measured out which was three yeeres and an halfe at the end of which the two famous witnesses of the truth Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prague were slaine being vildly intreated all that time and had their dead bodies cast out vnburied according to the Letter for three daies and an halfe their enemies all this time triumphing for their victory but hearing of the constancy of the Bohemians in cleauing to their doctrine they were stricken with feare as if they had beene reuiued againe Brightman The other expoundeth it of the time from Constantine the great till the Councell of Trent at which the holy Scriptures were put downe whereas the Papals had great ioy for a time this was done ann 1546. and certaine moneths and ann 1550. the Magd●burgians shewed some life and spirit againe opposing the said Councell and so manfully behauing themselues that the enemies were put into great feare I haue already shewed my reasons why I cannot consent to either of these expositions Sleid. l●b 22. It is threescore and ten yeeres agone and vpward since the Councell of Trent and much longer since the Councell of Constance and yet the Court of the Temple is trodden vnder foot by the Gentiles and great Massacres haue beene in France and England and other places in this time so that if this were the meaning it should also haue beene set forth how the Witnesses of God had beene put to death againe and againe since that time whereas the next thing that followeth is the ruine of the City and the transferring of Kingdomes to the Lord certainly the Court and holy City should thus long agone haue ceased to haue beene trodden vnder foot and not haue continued in this afflicted estate as they doe still As for their exposing of the dead bodies in the street vers 8 9. for the space of three daies an halfe Bullinger Pareus Fox they resolue it wel that apply it vnto the vsage of the dead bodies of many of Gods faithfull seruants at sundry times which they haue not suffered to be interred as the dead bodies of Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prague the dead bodies of those that were massacred in Paris when they had made the poore Protestants secure vpon a marriage the bodies of such generally amongst them as haue not by auticular confession by penance and extreme vnction reconciled themselues vnto them before their death for they deny them all Christian buriall The time of three daies and an halfe as all consent is put for a short time and the rather is this short time thus set forth to keepe Analogy with the other descriptions of this time halfe a mysticall weeke of dayes with halfe a mysticall weeke of yeeres This then is the very same time with the two and forty moneths and 1260. daies but varying in word as best befitteth the keeping of dead bodies vnburied The sense is that in the time before set forth by 42. moneths and 1260. daies as the faithfull should be killed so they should be kept vnburied in greater detestation Brightman Brightman contendeth that this must needs be a different time but he taketh for granted which I cannot yeeld that by that passage going before when they haue finished their prophesie c. is meant the finishing of their whole time But seeing it is clearely meant another way as I haue shewed already there is no such necessity to make three daies and an halfe a diuers time but another description of the same time wherein their cruelty should not be determined in killing only but in exposing the dead bodies of the faithfull vnburied The place is said to be the street of Sodome and Egypt Vers 8. spiritually so called where our Lord
was crucified Here the Papals triumph as if by no meanes the Pope could be counted an instrument from the bottomlesse pit killing the Lords Witnesses and exposing their bodies without buriall seeing it is plaine they thinke from hence that these things shall be done at Ierusalem and not at Rome for Ierusalem is the great City where Christ was crucified and which the Prophets were wont to vpbraid by the name of Sodome and Egpyt for their vncleannesse and idolatries there But who so shall attentiuely consider the whole passage here shall easily finde that by Ierusalem must be vnderstood necessarily a farre larger place than that City seeing that vpon the entrance of this prophesie that which shall be trodden vnder foot by the Gentiles is called the holy City which no man can deny to be the Christian Church in all parts of the world whereof that holy City was a type and therefore according to the vsuall phrase of holy Scripture it is set forth by that name This then being taken for granted the same prophesie still continuing about that which should befall the seruants of God in this City being a long time at the will of their enemies it cannot with any probability be denied but that this spirituall Egypt and Sodome where the Lord was crucified is the same holy City of the vniuersall Church destined yet to the treading vnder foot of the Gentiles this being one most tyrannous act executed by them to expose the murthered bodies of Gods faithfull seruants vnburied euen here But this Church becommeth first another Sodom for vncleannesse an Egypt for idolatries and yet is old Ierusalem for crucifying and putting to death the Lord Iesus in his members This great City then is the vniuersall Church before called the holy City trodden vnder foot by wicked enemies not in respect of all the parts for the Temple and the Altar are exempted but in respect of those parts which are oppressed by the enemies of the truth both Turke Pope and chiefly the Pope whose iurisdiction is most infamous for vncleannesse and therfore called Sodom and for idolatry being therefore called Egypt and for murthers being therefore here set forth by a Periphrasis Where the Lord was crucified Ierusalem I grant is properly the City where our Lord was crucified but seeing all that hath beene said hitherto of the place is allegoricall this cannot be in any reason taken properly but allegorically also the City where our Lord was crucified that is Ierusalem imbrued in the most innocent bloud for the Roman Church so full of innocent bloud Ierusalem another Sodom and Egypt for the Roman Church a very Sodom and Egypt for the vncleannesses and idolatries as much reig●ing here as euer they did in those two cursed places Our Diuines doe all generally in effect say the same for they agree vpon the popish Church here meant But that some apply it vnto Rome Brightman as from whence the authority to crucifie Christ was deriued and so the great City where the Lord was crucified setteth forth the Roman Empire for which cause it is not only called Sodom a City but Egypt a Country and whole dominion which is now vnder the Pope as it was then vnder heathen Emperours Pareus Bullinger Some repeating the word spiritually say that it is meant where the Lord was crucified spiritually in his members neither can it be meant properly of Ierusalem because all nations and tongues shall see these dead bodies which could not be in one City againe this is doubtlesse the same City ruling ouer the Nations afterwards more amply described which the learned amongst the Papists themselues cannot deny to be Rome Touching their rising againe whereupon a great feare fell vpon those that saw them vers 11. and their being called vp into Heauen and ascending in a Cloud their enemies beholding it vers 12. Some vnderstand hereby other men of the same zealous spirit that they were of which were slaine Bullinger whom God stirreth vp to abate the ioy and to strike new terrour into the Antichristian Sect who are finally receiued vp into Heauen at the last day in the sight of their enemies the Kingdome of Antichrist being first much ruined by their meanes great warres being stirred vp called an Earth-quake by which many thousands are shine here called 7000. and the state in a great part commeth to ruine here said to bee the tenth part of the great City whereupon men suruiuing who were formerly deluded returne vnto God giuing all glory to him alone not making others partners with him any more as in their ignorance they had before done With this consenteth Pareus Pa●● but that he will haue their ascending to bee the honour and esteeme which the Teachers of the truth come into when their true doctrine is againe reuiued and preuaileth by meanes of such as God stirred vp in the roome of those that were formerly slaine by the enemies of the truth for thus Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prague being killed and their tenents condemned for hereticall liued againe in Luther and Melancthon and Caluin c. and were highly honoured and esteemed of together with their doctrine as also these and other their successors maintaining the same wherby great terrour was stricken into the Papals and that state being much ruined many were turned to the truth Brightman Brightman will haue this ascending to be of their doctrine concerning which a decree was made by Cesar Ferdinand and other Princes Sleid. lib. 26. that the Religion of the Augustane confession should bee free for all men ann 1555. sept Calend. Octobris Hereupon followed a great change in the state called here an Earth-quake the Pope loseth a great part of Germany the tenth part of his reuenue and the religious lose their meanes whereupon their life depended But these are said to be but 7000. the generall losse the fall of the tenth part of the City because this losse by the supressing of superstitious houses was not so great extending but to particular persons as the vilifying of the Pope for hereby the state in generall was greatly shaken For mine own part I consent with these learned Authors in that wherein they all agree that by the two Witnesses reuiued is not meant properly the raising againe of two particular persons Enoch and Elias as the Papists hold for this hath beene sufficiently confuted already but the stirring vp of others in the roome of such witnesses of the truth as haue been slaine during the reigne of Antichrist Yet I doe not thinke that this is to be brought within the compasse of the 1260. daies as already accomplished but that this shall be in the last declination of Antichristianisme at what time the enemies of the truth shall haue no more power to persecute and destroy as yet they haue For within the compasse of that time of their power as any haue beene stirred-vp they haue not stood still as affrighted hereat but they haue
the Church cannot erre and is alwaies visible whereas if this should befall the Church of Rome which they hold to be the onely Catholike Church it should both erre fowly and the Church should sometime be ouerthrowne by the gates of Hell and put downe from the visibility into such contradictions doe they plunge themselues that are contradictors of the plaine and euident truth of Gods Word Touching the third Angell threatning eternall destruction to the followers of the beast Vers 9. enough hath beene said already to shew to what time it is to bee referred and as for the torments here mentioned and the comforts propounded to the faithfull it is easie for any man of himselfe to render the sense thereof Note from all that hath beene said Note that the doctrine of the reformed Churches at this day is the very doctrine of Gods Angell for we teach to ascribe all glory and to giue all worship ●o God only and not to make any a parta●er with God herein and in these points not to feare the tyranny of the Pope and his adherents but in the feare of God to persist herein to the end which is the very effect of the Angels teaching To this tendeth our impugning of Images and the worshipping of Saints departed our denying of the merit of workes and supererrogations the Popes power of pardoning sinnes our ascribing all to grace in the conuersion of a sinner and holding no vertue to be in crossing and holy water c. Againe Note see a plaine euidence that this is the truth and the Roman Catholike state Babylon falling before it in diuers Countries and which shall be vtterly razed to the foundation so that a stone shall not be left vpon a stone Lastly Note all prosperity and preuailing is not to be expected by the seruants of God vpon the first falling of Babylon for she maketh head still and putteth many to death whose comfort yet is that they are blessed and rest with the Lord whereas if cowardly they should for feare turne to the beast they must be tormented miserably for euermore But why is this word from henceforth put in are not all the dead that die in the Lord at any time blessed Yes doubtlesse but there is an opinion of Popery by which men were carried away in times past touching the paines of purgatory fire to be suffered after death which is secretly here glanced at as if it should haue beene said Hitherto a long time it hath beene thought that there is no r●st in death to the godly but further pangs yet to be endured in Purgatory but the vani●y of this tenent being now discouered by the preaching of the Gospell set forth vnder the type of the three Angels no such thing shall henceforth b●feared but they shall comfort themselues in the expectation of immediate rest and ioy Quest 3. And behold one like vnto the Sonne of man sitting vpon the cloud Vers 14. hauing vpon his head a crowne of gold and in his hand a sharpe sickle c. Who is this and what are the Angels next mentioned whereof one comming out of the Temple calleth to him to put his sickle into the haruest and a second comming out of the Temple also hauing a sharpe sickle to whom a third comming out from the Altar that hath power ouer fire calleth to put his sickle into the Vintage which is cut downe and trodden in a Winepresse without the City the bloud comming out vp to the bridles of the horses by the space of 1600. furlongs Answ Almost all Expositors agree that the comming of Christ to iudgement is here represented for hee is like the Sonne of man though a great Iudge he shall come in the Clouds 1 Thes 4. and the consumma ion of the world is likened vnto the cutting downe of the Haruest Mat. 13. and both to the Haruest and Vintage Ioel 3.13 from whence this phrase seemeth to bee taken But some vnderstanding Christ by one like the Sonne of man as it is commonly taken P. du Moulin yet hold that some other iudgements vpon Babylon are here set forth to be applyed to the times of the three Angels going before the first whereof come with the eternall Gospell ann 1039. in Berengarius opposing transubstantiation and preuailing so farre that France Spaine Guil. Noribrigens Eng. ●●ist lio 2 chap 13. Italy Germany were full of men holding the same with him for William Noribrigens saith that they were as the sands of the Sea but they were persecuted for this whereupon the Lord being offended sent his Angell with a sharpe sickle of iudgement ann 1076. About the time of Berengarius his death by a quarrell arising betweene Henry and Gregory the seuenth named Pope Hildebrand betwixt whom forty bloudy battels were fought and all things were filled with confusion and misery The second Angell came with threatnings against Babylon by Peter de Bruis and Henry de Tholouse ann 1130. and by Iohannes de Waldo of Lions ann 1158. for they called Rome Babylon and exhorted all men to goe out of her but Innocent the third then Pope caused the Croisado to be preached and by that meanes within a few moneths 200000. of them were slaine in Prouence Ioh. Cassanion Hist Languedoc and Guienna Hereat God being againe offended sent another sharpe sickle by Fredericke Barbarossa his armies and the Popes by reason of which the miseries were so great as that no Pen can expresse them sufficiently For whilst these warres lasted the Moores wasted Spaine together with the Sarazens murthering all the Christians which they could finde and the Saladine destroyed the Kingdome of Ierusalem which had cost so many millions of mens liues to conquer it The third Angell came with admonition to beware of worshipping the beast by the Preachers of these times against which when the Papacy shall grow most outragious some greater iudgement then euer yet shall come vpon them to the effusion of so much bloud that it shall come vp a wonderfull great space of ground to the very horse bridles which is not yet effected Forbs Grasserus Others hold that here is set forth the increase of such as should stand for the truth it being first vpheld by the immediate power of Christ set forth by his comming in a cloud with a sharpe sickle but afterwards diuers Countries being conuerted his Angels dare be bold to be seene to stand for the truth both temporall Kings set forth by the Angell with his sharpe sickle and spirituall Ministers comming from the Altar who by their exhortations and preaching stirre vp the other against Babylon so that here in briefe is set downe what is more at large described vnder the seuen Vials powred out by the seuen Angels following Some more particularly by one like the Sonne of man vnderstand the protestant Princes in Misnia Brightman Hassia Prussia c. such as Fredericus Saxo Mauritius Philippus Lantgranius Iohannes