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A02727 The Messiah already come. Or Profes [sic] of Christianitie both out of the Scriptures, and auncient rabbins, to convince the Iewes, of their palpable, and more then miserable blindnesse (if more may be) for their long, vaine, and endlesse expectation of their Messiah (as they dreame) yet for to come. Written in Barbarie, in the yeare 1610, and for that cause directed to the dispersed Iewes of that countrie, and in them to all others now groaning under the heavy yoake of this their long and intollerable captivitie, which yet one day shall have an end ... Harrison, John, fl. 1610-1638. 1619 (1619) STC 12858; ESTC S116532 67,755 80

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of the preaching of the Gospel which began at Ierusalem and from thence was spread over all the world Which the same Isay foresawe when talking of the Messiah he sayth In that daie shall five cities in the Land of Egypt speak the language of Canaan c. In that daie shall the alter of the Lord be in the middest of the Land of Egypt and a piller by the border thereof unto the Lord. And the Egyptians shall knowe the Lord in that daie and doe sacrifice and oblation and shall vow● vowes c. which could not be verified of the Law of Moses for by that Law the Egyptians could haue nether alter nor sacrifice but it was fulfilled upon the cōming of Christ when the Egyptians were made Christians Also in another place and the yles shall waite for his Law The same was likewise foretold by God in Malachie where he sayth to the Iewes and of the Iewish sacrifices I haue no pleasure in you neyther will I receiue an offring at your hands for from the rising of the sunne unt●ll the going downe of the same my name i● great among the Gentiles and in everie place incense shal be offer●d 〈◊〉 my name and a pure offering for my name is great among the Gentiles s●●th the Lord of Hosts Wherein we see first a reprobation of the Iewish Sacrifices consequently of the Law of Moses which dependeth principally thereupon Secondly that among the Gentiles there should be a pure maner of Sacrifice more gratefull unto God then the other not limited eyther in respect of tyme or place as the Mosaicall Law sacrifice was For so sayth God in Ezechiel I gaue them statutes which were not good and judgments wherein they shall not liue that is not good to continue perpetually nor shall they live in thē any longer but til the time by me appoynted Of which tyme he determineth more particularly by Ieremie in these words Behold the dayes come sayth the Lord that I will mak a newe covenant with the house of Israel and Iudah not according to that covenant which I made with their Fathers c. where you see a new covenant or Testament promised different from the old whereupon I conclude the old Law of Moses by the Messiah must be changed into a new The tyme of his manyfestation with all other circumstances NOw for the tyme of his manyfestation with all other circumstances of his birth lyfe death resurrection ascension and those things also that fell out afterwards if we shall consider how particulraly precisely they were all foretold by the Prophets and how long before some hundreths some thousands of yeares before they fell out as also how exactly they were all fulfilled in the person of our blessed Saviour all directed like so many lynes to one center we shall as it were in a mirrour see and behold both the truth of Christian religion setled vpon a most firme unmovable center as also the vanitie of all other religiōs whatsoever especially this most vain expectatiō of the Iewes to this day of their Messiah yet for to come as vaine and fond altogither as was that opinion of one of the Phylosophers which the word center hath put me in mynd of that the earth forsooth did move and the heavens stand still how far they are degenerate not onely from all true light vnderstāding in heavenly matters but also even from cōmon sense and reason it selfe in things of that nature tending therevnto And first for the tyme. Daniell who lived in the first Monarchie foretold that there should be three monarchies more the last the greatest of all to witt the Romane Empire and then the eternall King or Messiah should come his 〈◊〉 are these In the dayes of these Kings shal the God of heaven set vp a kingdome which shall never be destroyed Dan. 2.44 And just according to this tyme was the Messiah born namely in the dayes of Augustus Caesar Luk. 2. as both we Christians account and the Iewes acknowledge even in those halcyon dayes of peace when the temple gates of Ianus were commannded to be shut and vpon that very day when Augustus commaunded that no man should call him Lord was this Prince of peace borne Therefore to him agreeth this circumstance of tyme very fitly most vainly therefore doe the Iewes after this tyme expect for another Secondly Iacob who lived many yeares before prophesied of this tyme very precisely as already hath bene aleadged that the Mes●iah whom he there calleth Shilo should come at that tyme when the scepter or goverment regall was departed from the house of Iudah which was in the dayes of Herod and never till then who first vsurped that government his father in law King Hircanus with all his of●pring of the blood royall of Iuda togither with the Sanhedrim put to death The genealogies of the Kings and Princes burned A new pedegrie for himselfe divised In a word all authority regall whatsoever belonging to that tribe at that tyme quite extinguished And just according to this tyme was our Saviour borne namely in the dayes of Herod Math. 2.1 Therefore to him agreeth this circūstance of tyme very fitly most vainely therefore doe the Iewes after this tyme expect any longer Thirdly God himselfe saith by his Prophet Hagga● that the Messiah whome he there calleth the de●ired of all nations shall come in the tyme of the second temple which was then but new built farr inferior in statelynes and glory to the former built by Solomon which the old men in the book of Ezra testify by their weeping when they sawe this second temple and remembred the glory of the first The words of the Lord by his Prophet Haggai are these Speake vnto Zerubbabel who is left amonge you that sa●e this hous● in her first glory and how doe you see it now is it not in your eies in comparison of it as nothing yet now be of good cheere ô Zerubbubel for thus saith the Lord of hosts yet a litle while and I wil shake the heavens and the earth and the sea and the drie land And I will move all nations and the desire of all nations shal come and I will fill this house with glory saith the Lord of hostes The glory of this last house shal be greater their the first c. which must needs be vnderstood of the coming of the Messiah to wit his personall presence in this second temple in whom is the fulnes of glory therefore could he and none other fill it with glory being himselfe indeed the King of glory Lifte vp your heads ô yee gates and be yee lift vp yee everlasting dores and the King of glory shall come in So doth Mallachie prophesy in these words The Lord whom yee seeke shall speedily come to his temple even the m●ssenger of the covenant whom yee desire behold he shall come sayth the Lord of hosts c.
they must needs be understood of an eternall King and kingdome as must also those other words of God in the psalme Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee aske of me and I will giue thee the Heathen for thyne inheritance the ends of the earth for thy possession Thou shalt crush them with a rod of yron and breake them in pieces like a p●tters vess●l which prophecie was never fulfilled in Salomon nor in any other temporall King in Iewrie after him And much lesse this that followeth They shall feare thee as long as the sunne and moone endureth from generation to generation In his daies shall the righteous flourish and abondance of peace so long as the moone endureth His dominion also shall be from sea to sea and from the river unto the ends of the earth They that dwell in the wildernesse shall kneele before him and his enemies shall lick the dust The Kings of Tharshish and of the yles shall bring presents the Kings of Sheba and Seba shall bring gifts yea all Kings shall worship him all nations shall serue him His name shall be for ever his name shall indure as long as the sunne all Nations shall be blessed in him and shall blesse him And blessed be the Lord God euen the God of Israel which onely doth wonderous things And blessed be his glorious name for ever and let all the earth be filled with his glorie Amen Amen And so he endeth as it were in a traunce ravished beyond measure with the sweet and heauvenly contemplation of this spiritual and everlasting kingdome of the Messiah for to him and to no other can all these circumstances and hyperbolicall speaches of David rapte with the spirit of prophecie properly and primarily apperteyne though literally the Iewes understand them of Salomon as they doe many other places in like case applying them onely to the type never looking to the substance whereof those types and figures were but shadowes and semblances God of his mercie in his good tyme take away the vayle from their hearts that at length they may see the true Salomon in all his royaltie not any longer to grope at noone dayes wincking with their eyes against the cleare sunne like their forefathers as it is in Esay a most fearefull judgment of God layd upon that Nation of old objected to them many tymes and oft both by Christ and his Apostels but in vayne goe and say unto this people ye shall heare indeed but shall not understand ye shall playnly see and not perceiue make the heart of this people fatte make their eares heavie and shutte their eyes least they see with their eyes and heare with their eares and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed Whereupon ensueth euen upon this wincking and wilfull obstinacie a most severe denunciation of finall desolation Lord how long sayth the Prophet and he answered untill the cities be wasted without inhabitant the houses without a man and the land be utterly desolate c. But yet a tenth reserved to returne a holy seed remayning in due tyme to be converted This judgment and desolation hath been along tyme upon them they feel it and groane under the burden of it as their forefathers did in Egypt under Pharaoh yet wincking shutte their eyes and will not see it I meane acknowledge the true cause of these so great judgments revealed from heauen upon thē euen the contempt of Gods holy Prophets sent unto them from tyme to tyme but especially of the Messiah whose blood lyeth heavily upon them euen to this day as their forefathers desired his blood be upō us on our children which all the world seeth is come to passe yea they themselues feele it yet wincking with their eyes they will not see it But there is a tenth to returne c. The rest which will not this their Messiah to raigne over them let them look into that parable in the Gospel there shall they finde a farre more fearefull destruction denounced then the former The first being but for a tyme but a type of the other but a beginning of woes the other eternall for ever and ever The first he pronounceth with teares over Ierusalem the second he denounceth as an angrie Iudge provoked at length to execute his fierce wrath upō them without any compassion at all His words are these Moreover those mine enemies which would not that I should raigne over them bring them hither and slay them before me Which words of our Saviour although they will in no wise beleeve no more then they did the former yet shall they find his words one daye as truly fulfilled to them in the one as they haue done alreadie in the other And howsoever hitherto they haue esteemed of him as a false prophet a deceiver yet hath he been to them but too true a Prophet in all their calamities both first and last And so after this long digression I come to the next The Prophecie of Ieremie THe sixt which confirmeth the former is that of Iere. 23 5. Behold the dayes come sayth the Lord that I will rayse up unto David a righteous braunch and a King shall raigne c. And this is the n●me whereby they shall call him the Lord our righteousnes This was spoken of Davids seed aboue 400 yeeres after David was dead and buried which proveth manifestly that the former promises were not made unto him for Salomon his sonne or any other temporall King of his line but onely for the Messiah who was called so peculiarly the sonne and seed of David The Prophecie of Ezechiel THe seauenth which also confirmeth the other is that of Ezec. 34.23 I will set up ashepheard over them he shall feede them euen my servant David c. In which words the Iewes themselues doe confesse in their Talmud that their Messiah is called by the name of David for that he shall discend of the seed of David and so it must needs be for that King David being dead so long before could not now come againe in his owne person to feed them him self The Prophecie of Isaie THe eight is the prophecie of Isaiah 2.2 It shall be in the last dayes that the mountayne of the house of the Lord shal be prepared in the toppe of the mountaines and shall be exalted aboue the hilles and all nations shall flowe unto it c. for the Law shall goe forth of Syon and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem He shall judge among the Nations Which verie words Michah repeateth cap. 4.1 and are applyed there as also here unto the Me●siah they can haue no other meaning by the judgement of the Iewes themselues In that daie shall the budde of the Lord be beautifull and glorious and the fruit of the earth shall be excellent Vnto us a child is borne unto us a sonne is giuen and the gouvernment is upon his shoulders he sh●ll call his
And so indeed he did for Christ Iesus came into the world during this second temple and did himselfe likewise foretell the destruction thereof which came to passe even in that age Therefore to him agreeth this circumstance of tyme very fitly most vainly therefore doe the Iewes after this tyme to wit the destruction of the second temple expect any further Fourthly the Messiah by the true computation of Daniels prophesie accounting his Hebdomades or weekes for so many yeeres to be multiplied by seauen that is to say weekes of yeares as they must needs be understood was to come just according to the tyme before mentioned his words are these Seventie weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thyne holy citie knowe therefore and understand that from the going forth of the Command●ment to bring againe the people and to build Ierusalem unto Messiah the Prince shall be seauen weeks and threescore and two week● And after threescore and two weeks shall the Messiah be slayne and not for hims●lf And the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the citie and sanctuarie and he shall confirme the covenant with many for one week in the middest of the weeke he shall c●use the sacrifice and oblation to cease Which Hebdomades or weeks of yeeres whether we account from the first yeere of Cyrus who first determined the Iewes reduction or from the second of Darius who confirmed and put the same in execution or from the twentieth yere of Darius for that he then made a new Edict in the favour of Nehemias and sent him into Iury everie way they will ende in the raigne of Herod and Augustus under whom Christ was borne or in the raigne of Tyberius under whom he suffered And by no interpretation can it be avoyded but that this tyme is now out aboue one thousand and fiue hundreth yeeres Beside● this being a cleare prophecie of the Messiah howsoever somewhat more intricate and obscure in respect of the yeeres wherein the Prophet alludeth to the captivitie of Babylon as some thinke must needs be interpreted according to the former prophecies also of the Messiah And so doth the Prophet expound himself in the former words namely that theMessiah should be slaine before the destruction of the citie and Sanctuarie Yet is there one weeke more to make up the number of seauentie in the midst of which weeke the Messiah should be slayne which came to passe accordingly for in the middest of that weeke that is about three yeeres and an half after his baptisme Christ Iesus the true Messiah was slayne and not for himself for Pilat could find no fault in him I find no fault in the man I finde no cause of death in him I am innocent of the blood of this Iust man look ye to it Not for himself but for us was he wounded as sayth the Prophet Isai He was wounded for our transgressions Therefore to him doth this circumstance of tyme beare witnes and consequently the Iewes after these tymes by God himself appointed for the Messiah expecting yet for an other beside● the vanitie of this their expectation they make God himself a lyer yea and all their Forefathers Abraham Isaack and Iacob all the holy Prophets whose children they hold themselues to be who all of them sawe these dayes and prophecied of them Abraham rejoyced to see my day sayth our Saviour and he sawe it and was glad All these make they Lyers with themselues whereby they shewe themselues rather to be the children of the Divil who is the father of lyes then of Abraham who is the father of the faithfull onely For so did that vile serpent at the first euen dare to giue God himself the lye as it is in Genesis God ●ayth there to Adam In the day that thou eatest of such a tree thou shalt dye the death No sayth the Divil it is not so ye shall not dye as all So doe these Imps of Sathan generation of vipers as Iohn the Baptist in his time called them euen just after the same maner For sayth God by his prophets at such a tyme will I sende the Messiah into the world and by such and such markes ye shall knowe him no sayth this froward generation it is not so he hath not yet sent him he is not yet come we acknowledge no such marks as that he shall be poor and of no reputation in this world put to death We look for a magnificent prince we will none of such a base fellowe as this Iesus to reigne over us a false Prophet a deceiver and so forth with whatsoever els their malicious harts can imagine their blasphemous tongues being set on fire of hel are ready to utter to his disgrace But let them looke into that parable of our Saviour there they shall find him another maner of persō thē they imagine I will repeat it unto them Moreover those mine enemies who would not that I should raigne over them bring them hither and stay them before me God of his mercie giue them repentance in tyme of their heynous and high blasphemies that they may mourne for him whom they haue pierced everie familie and tribe apart Repent for the kingdome of heauen is at hand And think not to say with your selues we haue Abraham to our Father for I say unto you that God is able of these stones to rayse up children unto Abraham Now is the axe put to the roote of the tree The last trumpet will blowe and then it wil be to late when ye shall heare that shrill voyce ringing in your eares arise ye deade and come to judgment that voyce will awake you out of all your dreames and make you arise whether ye will or no when ye shall see the sonne of man come in his glorie euen your long looked for Messiah like a magnificent prince indeed but litle to the comfort of those that remayne obstinate Awake therefore to your salvation that ye be not awakened hereafter to your condemnation Awake thou that sleepest stand up from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light shake of all your ydle dreames and foolish fantasies of your imaginarie Messiah fitter for children then men of discretion consider with your selues at length how long ye haue overslept your selues how manie ages are now past and gone since both by computation of Scriptures as aforesayd as also by the observation of your owne Doctors and Teachers your Messiah was to come and yet you see him not no nor any likelyhood at all of his comming more then at the first yea rather all evidenc●s and probabilities to the contrarie that may be looke into your Talmud and there ye shall see plainly if you be not blynd there also as you are in the Scriptures the vanitie of vanities of this your expectation for so it is indeede It is often repeated in your Talmud that one Elias left this tradition that the
the world Whereof he that will see a very lamentable narration let him read but the last book of Iosephus de bello Iudaico Wherein is reported besides other things that after the warre was ended and all the publique slaughter ceased Titus sent threescore thowsand Iewes as a present to his father to Rome there to be put to death in divers and sundry manners Others he applyed to be spectacl●s for pastime to the Romains that were present with him Wher● of Iosephus saith that he saw with his owne eyes two thowsand five hundred murthered and consumed in one day by fight and cōbate among themselves and with wilde beasts at the Emperors appointment Others were assigned in Antioch and other great cities to serve for faggots in their famous bonefires at times of triumph Others were sold to be bondslaves Others condemned to dig and hew stones for ever And this was the end of that warr and desolation Quis talia fandò Myrmidonum Dolopumve aut duri miles Vlyssi Temperet a lachrymis After th●s againe under Trajane the Emperour there was so infinite numbers of Iewes slaine and made away by Marcus Turbo in Africa and Lucius Quintus in the East as vvas vvonderfull And in the eighteenth yeare of Adrian the Emperour one Iulius Severus being sent to extinguish all the remnant of the Ievvish generation destroyed in a very short time ninetie eight townes and villages within that countrie and slue five hundred fourescore thousand of them in one day At which time also he beat downe the citie of Ierusalem in such sort as he left not one stone standing upō another of their ancient buildings but caused some part thereof to be re●dified and inhabited onely by Gentiles He changed the name of the citie called it Aelia after the Emperors name He droue out all the progenie and ofspring of the Iewes forth of all those countries with a perpetuall law confirmed by the Emperor that they should never returne no nor so much as looke back from any high or eminent place to that countrie againe And this was donne to the Iewish Nation by the Roman Emperors for accomplishing that demand which their principall Elders had made not long before to Pilate the Roman Magistrate after he had washed his hands before the multitude to cleare himself at leastwise in outward shewe from the blood of Iesus saying I am innocent of the blood of this just man looke you to it Then answered all the people and sayd His blood be upon us upon our children and so it came to passe accordingly euen in that verie age Then the which what greater argument of a true Prophet and consequently of the Deitie and Omnipotencie of our Lord and Saviour who from heaven was able in so short a time and that in so full measure to revenge himself upon his enemies here on earth Yea a whole Nation together brought to finall desolation And so much for the punishment of enemies The fulfilling of Prophecies THe last consideration followeth and so an end which is the fulfilling of prophecies all those prophecies uttered by our Lord and Saviour while h● was here upon earth Especially this one of the destruction and desolation of the Iewish nation already declared might suffice for all which over and over while he was conversant amongst them he denounced against them and foretold should shortly be accomplished upon them in most fearfull maner As namely at one tyme after a long and vehement commination made to the Scribes and Pharisees in which he repeateth eight severall times that dreadfull threat woe he concludeth that all the righteous blood injuriously shedde from the first martyr Abel and so successiuely should be revenged verie shortly upon that generation Verely I saye unto you all these things shall come upon this generation and in the next words threatneth that populous citie Ierusalem that it should be made utterly desolate Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee how often would I haue gathered thy children together as the henne gathereth her chickens under her wings andye would not ●ehold your habitation shall be left unto you desolate And at another tyme euen that solemne tyme of his entrie and tiding into Ierusalem before his passion it is sayd in the Gospel that when he was come neare he beheld the citie and wept over it saying O if thou haddest euen knowne at the least in this thy day those things which belong unto thy peace but now are they hidde from thyne eyes then denounceth that fearfull desolation following that not one stone should be left upon another but all throwne downe euen to the ground Executed upon them made good by Tytus the sonne of Vespatian and finally accomplished by Iulius Severus who in the daies of Adrian as before is rehearsed utterly defaced the verie ruines of that citie in such sort as he left not one stone standing upon another of all their auncient buildings but laid them euen with the ground Againe at another time as some spake of the tēple how it was garnished with goodly stones and consecrate things he sayd are these the things you looke upon the dayes will come wherein a stone shall not be left up●n a stone that shall not be throwne downe And yet more particularly in the same chapter he foretelleth the signes whereby his disciples should perceiue when the tyme indeede was come when ye shall see Ierusalem besieged with ●oldj●ars then knowe yee that her desolation is at hand This foretold Iesus of the miserie that was to fall upon Ierusalem and upon that people by the Romans when the I●wes seemed to be in most securitie and greatest amitie with the Romans when they could awaie with no other government but that We haue no king but Caesar he that maketh himself a King speaketh against Caesar and consequently at that tyme they might seeme in all humane reason to haue lesse cause then ever to misdoubt such calamities And yet how certaine and assured foreknowledge and as it were most sensible feeling Iesus had of these miseries he declared by those pitifull teares he shedde upon sight and consideration of Ierusalem as before is mentioned when he wept over it as also by that tender speech he used to the women of that citie who wept for him as he was ledde to be crucified perswading them to weepe rather for themselues and for their children in respect of the miseries to followe then for him All which prophecies and predictions of Iesus with sundrie other his speeches foreshewing so particularly the imminent calamities of that Nation and that at such tyme when in humane reason there could be no probabilitie thereof when a certaine Heathen Chronicler named Phlegon about a hundreth yeeres after Christs departure had diligently considered having seene the same also in his dayes most exactly fulfilled for he was servant to Adrian the
Promise to Adam THe first promise as touching the Messiah is this made to Adam after his fal for the restoring of mankind to witte that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head that is to say one of her seed to be borne in tyme should conquer the divel death and sinne as the auncient Iewes understand this place which being a spirituall conquest and against a spirituall enemie the divel he I meane the Messiah must needs be a spirituall and consequently not a temporall King as the Iewes imagine Gods Promise to Abraham THe second to Abraham Isaack Iaacob often repeated To Abraham Gen. 12.3 In thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed To Isaack Gen. 26.4 In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed To Iaakob Gen. 28.14 In thee and in thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed Therefore the Gentiles aswell as the Iewes the blessing is generall without exception all the families of the earth all nations no prerogatiue of the Iewe no exception of the Gentile as touching the Messiah I meane the benefit of this so generall and great a blessing though otherwise much everie waye as the Apostle reasoneth to the Romans Whereupon I inferre as before that the Messiah must be a spirituall and not a temporall King otherwise it had been but a verie small benediction to Abraham or others after him who neaver sawe their Messiah actually if he must haue been onely a temporall King and much lesse blessing had it been to us Gentiles if this Messiah of the Iewes must haue been a worldly and a temporall Monarch to destroy and subdue all those Nations formerly blessed and blessed shall they be to the servitude of Iurie as the later Teachers doe imagine The Prophecie of Iaakob THe third which confirmeth the former is the prophecie of Iaacob at his death Gen. 49.10 The rodde or scepter shall not depart from Iudah nor a Lawgiver from between his feet till Shiloh come and the people or nations shall be gathered vnto him Which the Chaldie Paraphrase as also Onkelos both of singuler authoritie among the Iewes doe interpret thus Vntill Christ or the Messiah come which is the hope and expectation of all nations aswell Gentiles as Iewes the government shall not cease in the house or Tribe of Iuda Whence I inferre the same conclusion as before that if the Messiah must be the hope and expectation aswell of the Gentiles as of the Iewes then can he not be a temporall King to destroy the Gentiles as the later Iewes would haue it but a spirituall King as before hath been declared Secondly if the temporall Kingdome of the house of Iuda whereof the Messiah must come shall cease and be destroyed a● his comming and not before that being a certayne signe of the tyme of his manifestation how then can the Iewes expect yet a temporall King for their Messiah the scepter alreadie departed gonne their kingdome and priesthood defaced their citie and temple destroyed themselues scattered amongst all nations and so haue continued almost this sixteene hundreth yeeres yea such a fatall and finall desolation by Gods just judgment brought upon that wofull Nation that not many yeares after the death and passion of our Saviour Iesus Christ according to his prophecie in his life tyme as may fully settle our fayth in this poynt The Prophecie of Moses THe fourth is that of Moses to the people of Israel The Lord thy God will rayse up unto thee a Prophet like unto me from among you euen of thy bretheren unto him ye shall hearken c. and in the verses following I will rayse them up a prophet from among their bretheren like unto thee sayth God to Moses and will put my words in his mouth and he shall speake unto them all that I shall command him and whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in my name I will require it of him Which words cannot be understood of any other Prophet that ever lived after Moses amongst the Iewes but onely of the Messiah as appeareth most playnly in another place in Deutro where it is sayd There arose not a Prophet in Israell like unto Moses whom the Lord knewe face to face in all the miracles wonders which the Lord sent him to doe c. no such Prophet except the Messiah ever after to be expected but the Messiah he it is that must match and overmatch Moses everie waie he must be a man as Moses was in respect of our infirmities euen according as the people of Israel themselues desired the Lord in Horeb saying let me heare the voyce of the Lord God no more nor see this great fire any more that I dye not And the Lord sayd unto Moses they haue well spoken I will rayse them up a Prophet from among their bretheren like unto thee c. He must be a Lawgiver as Moses was but of a farre more perfect Law as hereafter shall appeare he must be such a one whom the Lord hath knowne face to face as he did Moses but of a far more divine nature For as it is in Esay Who shall declare his age Lastly he must be approved to the World by miracles signes and wonders as Moses was which the Lord shall send him to doe as he did Moses But no such Prophet hath ever yet appeared in the world not ever shall who hath so fitly answered this type so perfectly observed the Law of Moses which Moses himself could not doe giving us in stead thereof a farre more excelent Law as was prophecied long before that he should And finally so miraculously approued himself to the world to be sent from God by signes and wonders donne both by himself his Apostles as hereafter shall appear except this Christ which we professe therefore he alone is the true Messiah and no other to be expected The Prophecie of David THe fift is the prophecie of David a type also of the Messiah who for that he was a holy man a mā after Gods own heart out of whose linage the Messiah was to come had this mysterie most manifestly reveiled unto him for the assurance whereof as of a great mysterie euen that of Christ and his Church God byndeth himself by an oath saying I haue made a covenant with my chosen I haue sworne unto David my servant thy seed will I stablish for ever and set up thy throne from generation to generation Selah Which words although the later Iewes will apply to King Salomon and so in some sorte they may for that he was also a type of the Messiah yet properly these words I will stablish the throne of his kingdome for ever so often repeated cannot be verified of Salomon whose earthly Kingdome was rent and torne in pieces streight after his death by Ieroboam and not long after as it were extinguished but