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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
blessing takes away veniall sinnes But that sounds ill for the bloud of CHRIST taketh away all sin yet there is great force and efficacy in the blessing of faithfull Ministers their curse if it bee lawfull is terrible The Children whom Elisha cursed were torne in pieces with Beares and their blessing is powerfull and effectuall when they preach God preaches and when they blesse GOD blesseth Therefore they that runne out of the Church before the blessing despise GOD Himselfe GOD by us blesseth you and will you not set a straw by this blessing 2. To blesse is taken for giving of thankes So wee blesse God we give him thankes for all his mercies 3. To blesse is to consecrate a thing to an holy use So God blessed the seaventh day So the Cup is called the Cup of blessing because it was blessed by Christ and set apart to an heavenly use This is a lively demonstration of the Ministers superioritie above the people without all contradiction wee blesse you you are blessed of us therefore wee are greater than you Isaac blessed Iacob therefore he was greater than Iacob Iacob blessed his twelve sonnes therefore he was greater than they we as spirituall fathers blesse you therefore we are greater than you Some of you may bee more honourable more worshipfull more wealthy then wee yet in respect of our office wee are greater than you If there be a Gentleman a Knight a Lord an Earle in the Parish he must bee willing to be blessed by the Minister we as Gods deputies blesse you in the name of the Lord in that respect wee are your superiours highly to bee esteemed and reverenced of you all You are to receive us not simply as men but as men of God for we are spirituall fathers that blesse you in the name of God and are as Gods armes to pull you up into the kingdome of heaven VERSE 8. NOw he comes to the amplification of Melchizedech's greatnesse by comparing him with the Levites The 1. argument to proove Melchizedech's advancement above the Levits is layd downe in this verse he that is immortall is greater than they that be mortall Melchizedec is immortall the Levites are mortall ergo They dying had those that succeeded them we read of no successour that Melchizedech had because if we respect the historie he lives still Heere that is in the Leviticall priesthood though they be superiour to the people yet they dye as the people doe But there that is in Melchizedech Though the ministers as God his Lievtenants in spirituall matters receive tithes and in that respect are above the people yet they must not be puffed up with pride and swell against their brethren Heere is a cooling card for us all They that take tithes dye as well as they that give tithes the most famous ministers in the world dye Noah a preacher of righteousnesse he was saved in the Arke when all the world was drowned yet he dyed Moses a renowned prophet brought up in all the learning of the Egyptians catechized and instructed by God himselfe with whom the Lord talked familiarly as one friend with an other yet he dyed Elias and Elisha were worthy men honoured of all in their time the chariots and horsemen of Israel yet they dyed Iohn Baptist was admired of all all Iudea came flocking to him yet he dyed The Apostles were taught by Christ's owne mouth the Holy Ghost descended on them in the similitude of Cloven tongues they were the silver trumpets that carryed the sound of the Gospell over all the world yet they dyed Let not the high and magnificent office which we susteine in the church because wee stand in a pulpit of wood as Ezra did above all the people because we are as Gods stewards to dispose the food of eternal life to them let not this make us proud though we be as perfect Scribes in the Law of the God of heaven as Ezra was as eloquent a man and mightie in the Scriptures as Apollos as learned a man as Paul was that spake with tongues more than they al as powerful a Preacher as Elias or Iohn Baptist as thundering a Preacher as the Sons of Bonerges Though thou haddest the Bible by heart as Origen had of as great variety of reading as Athanasius yet die thou must They that receive tithes dye yea all other receivers dye too Though thou beest a Lawyer that receivest many hundred Angels in a yeere though a Merchant that receivest much by traffike a Clothier that receivest a great deale by thy Clothes a Physition that receivest much by thy physicke though a Gentleman a Nobleman that receivest great rents per annum it may be a thousand two thousand three thousand pounds nay though a King that receivest much by the crowne lands by taxes subsidies by imposts and other meanes how great a receiver soever thou beest the grave must one day receive thee all must dye givers and receivers too Therefore let us so live the short time we have to tarry here that whensoever death comes the Angels may receive our soules and carry them up into Abrahams bosome On the other side Melchizedec and Christ live for ever hee Secundum historiam Christ Secundum veritatem Our King our High-Priest lives continually In respect of his humanity he dyed and gave up the Ghost on the Crosse but in respect of his deity he lives for ever of his life and kingdome there is no end Which may be a singular comfort to all that belong to him Our friends dye our fathers and mothers dye our Ministers and Preachers dye our Magistrates and Governours dye but Christ Iesus the Protectour of the Church never dyeth He lives for ever and will provide for those that appertaine to him Though we heare of the death of never so many good men yet let us not be cast downe with griefe Christ our Saviour liveth for ever VERSE 9. THe second argument whereby the Apostle proves that Melchizedec is greater than the Levites the Levites payd tithes to him ergo he is greater than they therefore Melchizedec must needs be a great man Because this might seeme to bee too acute more subtile than solid the Apostle mollifies it If I may so speake if I may use so light a reason as it may seeme in so weighty a matter The reason is pregnant and needeth no excuse therefore translate it and to say as the thing is The tithe-taker was a tithe-giver Which was wont to receive tithes A participle of the present tense imports an use and custome as Matth. 17.24.25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may bee put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet here it hath his force by Abraham as a meane betweene them both as one that came betweene them Here wee see wee may doe many things before we are borne All wee sinned in Adam When hee eate of the forbidden Tree we eat of it when he was banished out of Paradise we were banished when he pulled the wrath of
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
did the rest Enoch lived so long and he dyed therefore certainely he dyed not Some maintaine this assertion that Enoch is still alive together with Elias they are kept by the providence of GOD in paradise where either they eate of the fruites of the Garden or live without meat miraculously as Moses Elias and CHRIST did forty dayes together then towards the end of the world these two witnesses shal come forth shew themselves openly to all encounter with Antichrist convert the Iewes and in the end shall be put to death But I proceed Saint Paul sayes 1 Cor. 15.51 So Enoch did not dye yet he was changed in soule and body extraordinarily assumed in coelestem patriam as Calvin speaketh yet not in coelestem gloriam freed from the miseries of this life yet not fully glorified Some glory now they have yet their full glory is now deferred till we all meete together in a perfect man in Christ Iesus It is here registred as a singular honour that God vouchsafed to Enoch to take him away They are sometimes deepest in GODS bookes that are soonest taken out of this world being fitted for it by GOD Almighty We read of two Trophenius and Agamedes that having built a Temple to Apollos required of the GOD such a reward as he thought to be best for men he granted it and within three dayes they were found dead The best we read of in Scripture tarryed not long here Iosias was taken away in the flower of his age our Saviour CHRIST lived not past thirty foure yeeres because Enoch pleased GOD he tooke him away Saint Peter being in the Mount said it is good for us to be here let us heere make our Tabernacles So we say of the Mountaine of this world it is good for us to be heere ôh that we might make our Tabernacles heere wheras indeed it were best for us to be taken out of this wretched and sinful world as Enoch was Here we are with wicked and deceitfull men there we shall be with Holy Angels here we sin continually there we shall cease sinning heere we are subject to innumerable calamities there all teares shall be wiped from our eyes Let us desire God to prepare us for death and then to take us away when it shall seeme best to his heavenly will Pope Siricius out of these words Rom. 8.8 framed this Argument they that be in the flesh cannot please God Married persons are in the flesh ergo Enoch was a maried man he begat Sons and Daughters yet he pleased God Abraham was a Maried man he had two Wives and many Children yet he pleased God in so much as heaven is called the bosome of Abraham Zachary and Elizabeth were Maried folkes yet they pleased God and walked in all his Commandements without reproofe Spiridion Bishop of Cyprus a Maried person yet he protested 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet never a whit the worse for divine duties Let us not be drowned in the pleasure of Mariage as he in the Gospell I have maried a Wife c. Let us keepe the marriage bed undefiled bring up our children in the feare and nurture of the Lord instruct our households in the wayes of God and out of Marriage we may fly to heaven as also out of a single life VERSE 6. IT is confirmed by an axiome in Divinity none can please God without faith he pleased God Ergo. Whereupon he sets downe two properties of faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be supplyed He doth not say it is hard or difficult but impossible Not to offer oblations to God that did Cain but to please God The workes of the unregenerate doe not completely please God The Iustice of Aristides the gravity of Cato the chastity of Lucretia the liberality of Caesar were not simply good works quoad formam or finem neither did they please God perfectly in as much as they wanted faith Fides est mater radix bonorum operum they did them not in faith to Gods glory therefore his soule tooke not that pleasure in them which otherwise he would have done He doth not say without policie Iacob a plaine man yet hee pleased God not without learning honour riches Lazarus a poore man yet pleased God not without beauty Ebedmelech a blackmore yet hee pleased God but not without faith Therefore let us all bee suiters to God to give and encrease faith in us that wee may please him in this life and bee glorified with him in the world to come I but all flatter themselves that they have faith wee have all faith Have yee so Saint Paul sayes all men have not faith 2 Thes. 3.2 Examine it by that touchstone Gal. 5.6 1 Ioh. 4.20 doest thou boyle in hatred against any of thy brethren doest thou say with Achab there is one Michaiah but I hate him one neighbour but I hate him then thou hast not true faith for faith and love goe hand in hand together Where there is no love there is no true faith Then he sets downe the two properties of faith That commeth that is that believeth pedibus fidei Iohn 6. Verse 44. That He is the Maker and Governour of all that sees all and judges all The foole hath said in his heart there is no God There be too many of these fooles it is to be feared in the lap of the Church Tit. 1. ult they professe they know God but by their workes they deny them We goe masked under the vizzard of Religion yet in our hearts wee say there is no God Wee speake faire and meane fowle pretend love and intend mischiefe Wee lye coozen dissemble circumvent and defraud one another as if there were not a God that sees all our juglings A rewarder In this life Gen. 24.35 The Lord blessed Abraham wonderfully so that he became great he gave him Sheep and Beeves Silver and Gold men servants and maide servants and Camels and Asses he rewarded Ioseph with honour Hester with a kingdome Dorcas with life againe In the life to come Apoc. 22.12 And behold I come shortly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his worke shall be We shall bee rewarded for our service yet not of merit but of mercy Luk. 12.32 2 Tim. 4.8 If we come diligently to Church as Hannah heare Sermons with a reverent attention as Lydia lay them up in our hearts and practise them in our lives as the blessed Virgin Mary if we come to the Holy Communion with sincere affections to have our faith strengthned and to become new men if we give with cheerefulnesse to GOD 's Minister that feeds our soules to the poore members of IESUS CHRIST God sees it and will reward it with joy of conscience in this life and with eternall happinesse in the world to come We serve not a churlish Nabal but a liberall master that will reward us for our service yea a cup of cold water shall not be unrewarded
reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift first seeke the kingdome of God GOD should bee first served yet he will have his owne service to stay till thou beest reconciled to thy brother If I speake with the tongues of men and Angels if I come to Church heare never so many Sermons receive never so many Communions talke never so gloriously of Religion and dwell in hatred be not reconciled I am as a sounding brasse and as a tinckling Cymbal 3. Wee can have no assurance of our reconciliation to God without it Matth. 18. ult As the King dealt with his servant So God will cast you into the prison of hell for ever This should make us all to quake 4. We have no certaintie of our lives This night may our soules be taken from us Iovinian the Emperour supped plentifully went to bedde merrily yet was taken up dead in the morning And if death take us before we take one another by the hand as a token of hearty reconciliation what shall become of us Wee should not suffer the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath Iohannes Eleemosynarius Arch-Bishop of Alexandria being angrie in the day with Nicetus a Senator towards night sends this message to him Sol est in occasu vir maximè honorande My honourable brother the Sunne is a setting let there be a setting of our anger too if we do it not within the compasse of a day and a night yet let us doe it within the compasse of our lives let not our anger be like the fire of the Temple that went not out day nor night Let us not say with Ionah I doe well to be angry to the death let our anger bee aculeus apis not aculeus serpentis the sting of a Bee that is soone gone not the sting of a Serpent that tarries long and it may be proves lethall Let us receive one another in all brotherly love and kindnesse as Saint Paul entreateth PHILEMON to receive Onesimus But who is Onesimus that PHILEMON should receive him Pauls owne bowels he doth not say my owne eyes though they be precious to us and we use to terme our deere friends Ocelli mei not my own hands which minister to my necessities my own feete which carry mee from place to place but my owne bowels our internall and vitall parts the longues the liver especially the heart the seat of love and affection Whom I doe most tenderly affect teneritudinem rarissimi amoris declarat he poynts out hereby the tendernesse of a most rare love As Saint Paul sayes of the Philippians I desire you all in the bowells of IESUS CHRIST 1. In an heartie love in CHRIST IESUS One Christian should be exceeding deere to another 1. It is a token of election As the elect of God put on the bowels of mercie Without these bowels no assurance of salvation 2. The affinitie betweene Christians require it We have one Father which is GOD one Mother the Church we are of one house the household of faith one Elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdome of heaven 3. We are all bought with one and the same deare price the invaluable bloud of CHRIST therefore wee should bee deare one to another 3. Every one is tender over his bowels our brethren are our bowels he that toucheth them toucheth our owne bowells Oh that we did so esteeme and commiserate one another When the child was to be divided by Salomons sword the bowels of the true mother yerned within her So should our bowels doe if we see any hurt towards our brethren VERSE 13. IN the next place he unfolds the reason of his sending 1. Negativè not as if he had not beene usefull to him In that respect he would willingly have reteined him still that he might have ministred to him in the bonds of the Gospell There bee the bonds of impietie such were Zedekiah his bonds and there bee the bonds of piety Such were St. Pauls bonds not for any sinne of his but for the Gospell which were famous throughout all the judgement hall and in all other places That in thy stead he might doe it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for thee in this hee supplies thy roome and discharges thy office The Gospell is the common cause that concernes us all if any suffer for it we are all bound from the highest to the lowest to assist them with our purses our prayers and personall presence too if conveniently it may be yea though we be never so great personages It is like that obadiah himselfe hid the Prophets in Caves from the rage of Iesabel though peradventure he might send the bread and water by his servants Our SAVIOUR himselfe washed his Disciples feet Saint Cyprian writes to the Priests and Deacons to provide all things necessary for them that were in prison wishing that he himselfe were present with them Promptus lubens readily and willingly hee would performe Cuncta dilectionis obsequia all obsequious duties of love unto them Helena the mother of Constantine being at Hierusalem served in meate her selfe to the Virgins that were there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Placilla the Wife of Theodosius the Emperour in propria persona pauperibus ministravit ministred to the poore in her owne person and PHILEMON himselfe should have ministred unto Saint Paul The Angels minister to us yea when we be in prison as to Saint Peter and shall we scorne be we never so wealthie worshipfull honourable to minister to them that be in bonds for the Gospell Let us count it an honour to us In ministring to them we minister to CHRIST and he will reward it at the latter day Mistake me not I pleade not for them that are buffeted for their faults nor doe I reckon them to be in bonds for the Gospel who worthily suffer for their folly VERSE 14. WE have had the negative cause of his sending not because Saint Paul had no use of him but because he would not keepe him without his good will without thy minde thy sentence thy judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would I doe nothing In hoc negotio in this businesse otherwise in every thing he would not tye himselfe to Philemons minde Servants must not be detained without their Masters liking Eustathius Byshop of Armenia was deposed from his byshop-ricke quia servos praetextu pietatis heris abstulerat because under a colour of piety he had taken servants from their Masters Therfore the Papists themselves will not permit servants to take upon them a religious course of life to vow chastity without the consent of their masters yet children may invitis parentibus whether their parents will or no so as they be of age a man 14. a woman 12. and that their Parents need not their helpe A strange thing that servants may not but Children may But servants may not Bellar. Reason is without reason because
come out then they murmure against God despaire of his providence and are ready to exclaime against God This was the Israelites fault and thus often times they tempted God in the wildernesse If they wanted water to quench their thirst withall then they must needs dye God was not able to provide them water If they wanted bread So they did likewise and in a pelting chafe were ready to stone Moses and Aaron Then they would back againe to Aegypt then they wished themselves dead as if the same God that had miraculously beyond the expectation of men provided for them heretofore was not able to doe so still So when some told them of the walled townes that were in the land of Canaan of the mighty Gyants that were in the Country in comparison of whom they were but Grasse-hoppers then they brake forth into this exclamation God is not able to bring us into this land wee and our Children shall perish in this wildernesse They had seene with what a strong hand God had brought them out of Aegypt how miraculously he divided the red Sea that the waters stood as a wall on both sides till they safely passed over yet for all that when they were in any difficulty then God was no body of no power or willingnesse to doe for them This was a vile tempting of God which highly displeased him But there is no reason why we should thus tempt God casting off the hope and confidence we have in him He is subject to no changes yesterday and to day the same for ever Men may change but God changes not a man may be strong to day and weake to morrow whole to day and sick to morrow rich now and poore afterwards alive now and dead a while after a man may love us this houre and hate us the next as Amnon did his sister therefore we may make a question of the helpe of man But God is one and the same continually not a shadow of turning in him his arme is never shortned the welspring of his mercy and goodnesse is never dryed up Therefore in all distresses let us trust in him though all worldly meanes fayle us in sicknesse and health in poverty and wealth in death and life let him be our pillar to leane upon The Prince that would not believe the plenty that GOD had promised was troden to death 2 Reg. 7.17 and the carkasses of these men that thus tempted God fell in the wildernesse therefore let us beware of incredultie As Faith is the best vertue so infidelitie is the greatest vice CHRIST could doe nothing among his owne kinsfolke because of their unbeliefe Shall any thing bee impossible with God Indeed that which he wills not that he cannot doe it is his will that CHRIST in respect of his humanity should be in heaven till the day of judgement therefore he cannot doe this make his body to be here on the earth The Papists set Gods omnipotency on the tainters and stretch it too farre as some bad clothiers deale with cloath But if God have once given us his faithfull promise to doe this or that let us believe it though all the world say nay to it God had promised to bring them into the land of Canaan though there were never so many blockes in the way they should have depended on this promise So God hath promised us the kingdome of heaven feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome Luke 12.32 though now and then through weakenesse we fall into sinne though Satan and his instruments rage though we be sicke dye be buryed our bodyes consumed to dust and ashes yet let us certainely know wee shall have this kingdome This is amplified by an excellent meanes which they had to pull them out of this infidelity which was a continuall view and contemplation of the wonderfull workes of God although they saw my workes in the Hebr. they saw the Aegyptians drowned in the red Sea and themselves safely walking through it they saw the cloudy pillar conducting them day and night water gushing out of a stonie rocke Manna descending from heaven that the clothes on their backes and shooes on their feet did not waxe old many yeares together they might have felt with their hands the power and goodnesse of GOD protecting them yet they would not believe in him whereas the sight of Gods former workes should strengthen our faith in all future calamities That use did David make of the workes of GOD. The LORD delivered mee from the clawes of the Beare and pawes of the Lion therefore hee will deliver mee from this Philistim GOD was gracious to mee in such a sicknesse therefore hee will be in this GOD provided for mee when I was a child and could not shift for my selfe therefore hee will provide for me being a man growne GOD preserved mee in such a plague and pestilence therefore I will depend on him still when I was in such an extremity GOD helped me therefore he will helpe me still God delivered England in the yeare one thousand five hundred eightie eight therefore if England serve him hee will deliver it still When Queene Elizabeth the mirrour of the world was taken away we looked for a wofull day yet God gave us a joyfull day after it therefore alwayes let us trust to him let the sight of his wonderfull workes dayly before our eyes be as oyle to nourish the lampe of our faith that it never dye The last circumstance appertaining to this sinne is the time how long it continued they tempted and proved him 40. yeares though they saw his workes These words in the Hebr. are coupled with that which followeth 40. yeares was I grieved with that generation Yet there is no jarre betweene Paul and David for these two are convertible and depend the one on the other They be both true they tempted God 40. yeares and he was grieved with them 40. yeares If they tempted him 40. yeares then he must needs be grieved with them and if God was grieved with them 40. yeares then they tempted him so long so that the one cannot be separated from the other They dwelt in this sinne a long time and would not bee plucked out of it VERSE 10. THe punishment of the sinne Gods wrath was kindled against them In the end after hee had borne the burden of their sinnes many yeares together his wrath did breake out against them for it They were irksome and tedious to me I could beare them no longer after that I had striven with them fortie yeares when there was no remedy I cast them off God is grieved similitudinariè That rebellious that obstinate generation Hee was not grieved with their Children but with them The Children doe not smart for the fathers faults if they make not their fathers sins their own sinnes Their Children went into the land of Canaan though they did not Least it should seeme to be a griefe or anger without reason
but as faithfull souldiers let us continue with Him to the end If we goe from Him we depart from our owne life and throw our selves into death and destruction Therefore let us tarry with Him Let us believe this our Prophet and never depart from Him VERSE 13. NOw as a Sovereigne remedy against infidelity and hardnesse of heart he prescribeth a mutuall exhortation unto them that will be as a trumpet singing in our eares to keepe us out of the sleepe of sin Call one to another as Souldiers doe in the battell Still hee persisteth in the same metaphor As souldiers when they be in the fight and conflict call one to another saying ô be of good cheere play the men start not aside cleave to your company be not afrayd of enemy the victory shall be ours So we that be CHRIST's Souldiers must stirre up and provoke one another Cast not off your confidence that ye have in CHRIST let neither Satan nor any of his instruments pull you from Christ the author and finisher of your salvation be not faint hearted but hold out to the end This mutuall exhortation one of another is amplified three kind of wayes 1. By the time when it is to be performed 2. By the occasion which is not to be neglected 3. By the end for the which it is worthy to be practised The time when is not once or twise but daily 1. We are forgetfull of heavenly matters therefore we have need to be put in mind of them every day 2. We are dull and slow in practise of them lazie horses that will scarcely go therfore we must be put forward with the spurre of dayly exhortation As Christ sayd concerning the forgiving of our brother that wee must forgive him 77. times so it may be affirmed of the exhorting of our brethren we must exhort them 77. times we must be continually exhorting them Many thinke if they have called on their brethren once or twice to pray to goe to Church c. they have done their duty I have told him of it often I will speake no more to him of it I but thou must exhort him every day That which is not effected to day may be effected to morrow gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed sape cadendo Therefore exhort him every day if thou doest no good on him yet he is left without excuse and thy reward is with God 2 To this duty of exhortation he stirreth us up by the opportunity of the time which he wishes us to lay hold of What is this day Some interpret it of the time of the Gospell which hath the name of day in regard of the great light that is in it whereas the time of the Law may be compared to the night in comparison of it But I take that to be curious Others expound this day to be the whole course of our life which in respect of the brevity of it is termed by one Diecula While our life lasteth which is but short let us exhort one another That is good counsell yet I take it not to be the direct meaning of the place By day he meaneth that gracious time wherein God stretcheth forth his armes to us in the ministery of his Word to call us unto his Kingdome We are to take the opportunity offered to us and not let it slip walke while yee have the light while our peace lasteth that we may conveniently goe one to another while we have the Scripture amongst us whereby we may learne how to exhort one another while GOD speaketh unto us by His ambassadours from whose mouth we may have instructions for a wise execution of this duty while the candle of truth shineth among us let us be carefull to exhort one another in these peaceable dayes in this flourishing time of the Gospell let this Christian duty be performed by us all 3 The third is the danger that will ensue if exhortation be omitted hardnesse of heart will grow and so our brethren shall bee incureable The which hardnesse of heart is amplified by the efficient cause of it the deceitfulnesse of sinne carrying us like a thiefe out of the way and leading us to destruction that is the nature of the word There be many to deceive us 1. We deceive our selves Iames 1. 1 Iohn 1.8 2. The Divell that sly serpent deceiveth us 3. Sin deceiveth us and that she doth three kind of wayes 1. by putting on the visard of vertue Adultery is but a tricke of youth a sweet sin that may easily bee borne withall covetousnesse is but thrift and good husbandry every man must have a care of his owne estate swearing is the part of a Gentleman of a generous and heroicall spirit they be nice fellowes base minded men that will not sweare there is no life in them drunkennesse is good fellowship they be misers that wil not spend a penny in an Ale-house we mault-men are the only companions in the world Thus we are coosened by sin 2 Sinne deceiveth us by shrouding it selfe under the coate of Gods mercy But let us not be so afrayd of sin God is mercifull he will wincke at such light sinnes as these be we shall never be called into GODS counting house for them whereas he is a severe punisher of sin even in his owne children 3 Sinne deceiveth us by custome in sinning Many sins at the first we were afrayd to commit our consciences checked us for them but in processe of time being inured to them we commit them without feare or shame A custome in sinning makes sin at the length seeme to be no sin The children of the Lacedemonians being used to stripes had no feeling of stripes and after we have beene used to sin we have no sence or feeling of sin Thus especially we come to be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin our owne consciences feared up with an hot iron Therefore for the avoyding of this let us exhort one an other dayly that the fire and heat of exhortation may cause our hearts to melt and so keepe us from being hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin Exhortation if it be used in time will be as a trumpet to waken our selves and others out of sin Saint Paul and Barnabas went from towne to towne exhorting the brethren Acts 14.22 Exhort one an other and edifie one another 1 Thes. 5.11 have compassion on some putting difference and others save with feare pulling them out of the fire Iude verse 22.23 But alas this duty is neglected every one for himselfe and God for us all Am I my brothers Keeper I will looke to my owne soule as well as I can what have I to doe with my brothers soule Let not us that be Christians have such a thought in us Let us as the Scripture willeth us exhort one an other dayly labour to preserve one an other from being hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin and let us be as Bells to toll one another to the
sharpe not with one edge but two which pierceth more speedily and throughly with two mouthes The edge of a sword is as a mouth that biteth Isai. 49.2 Ephes. 6.17 Apoc. 1.16 it is said to have two edges in respect of the two testaments Aug. de civ Dei Not sharper then some but any Let all the swords in the world be put together and they are nothing to this Piercing as water and oyle to the dividing asunder bearing downe all that is in the way as a floud doth Of soule and spirit that is of the inferiour and superiour part of the minde the affections and understanding Isai. 26.9 1 Thes. 5.23 And of the joynts and marrow Some Greeke copies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all the members of the body Nothing so firmely compacted and united together as joynts so hard as bones so deepe as the marrow that lyeth hid in the bones but it passeth through all Goliah's sword not like to this David sayd of that none to it but none to this LORD give it to us This sword can hew in peeces the most stonie flintie and rockie heart in the world to see what blindnesse in the understanding what frowardnesse in the affections it will lay the heart open and bewray the secret filthinesse and all the sluttish corners of sinne that be in it When the Preacher is a speaking the word doth so pierce the harts of the hearers as that many in the Church imagine that the Preacher is acquainted with their sins What doth this man know of my drunkennes of my adultery of my backbiting of my oppression the Word so ransakes their hearts as that they think the Preacher knows their particular sinnes wheras he speakes in generall and the spirit by the Word doth so dive into their harts as that it summons them before God his tribunall seate and makes them cry guiltie so powerfull is the Word Plato said a Poet was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word is not so It is said of Pericles that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suada the goddesse of eloquence sessitavit in ejus labris and hee left Aculeos behinde him The infinite and admirable wisedome of GOD Almighty is couched in the Word and it leaves its effects behinde in the hearts of the auditors You shall finde it to be a lively and mighty Word one way or other either to save you or to condemne you It is lively and mighty in the good and bad The one it doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodor. Isai. 11.4 Ezek. 11.13 Act. 5.1 It is lively and mighty in the godly to kill sin within them to rayse them up unto newnesse of life to be as a wing to carry them to heaven Was it not mighty in David making him cry peccavi In Iosiah making his heart to melt in Manasseh when of the most horriblest Idolater that was ever heard of it made him a zealous worshipper of the true God in Zacheus when it made him to forsake his oppression and to restore fourefold in Mary Magdalen when it cast out seven Devills out of her in those three thousand soules when pricked in their hearts they went to the Apostles in the Citie of Samaria when it made them to abjure Simon Magus and to lysten to Saint Philip Was it not mighty by twelve men over all the world when it subdued by their Ministerie all nations to CHRIST in us by making us leave swearing covetousnesse adulterie drunkenesse c. and renewing us to the likenesse of CHRIST in righteousnesse and true holinesse it is a mighty word There may be a darke and misty morning the Sun comes scatters the mist cleares the ayre and makes it a bright day So the whole world was shadowed with the mist of blindnesse and ●he fogge of sin the word comes forth like the Sunne and introduces the knowledge of CHRIST and of his Gospell into all the world O mighty word Let us all acknowledge the power of this wonderfull word who is able to stand before this mighty word It is lively and mighty too even in the very reprobate Somtimes they may bee sencelesse and have no feeling of the cutting of the Word as those in Ieremiah nay they may even scoffe at the Word preached as the Pharisees did Luke 16.14 their consciences may be seared up and feele not the sword when it cutteth as they that be in a lethargie they may inwardly fret and fume be in a pelting chafe with the Preacher for reproving sins as Achab with Micajah and Iesabel with Elias yet but like madd dogges that sit biting of the chaine wherewith they are tyed but not break the chaine So they may snap at the Preacher and the Word but they themselves have the hurt yet for all that at one time or other God will make them to feele the power of his Word and the strength of this mighty arme of his Did not Belshazzar quake and were not his joynts loosed and his knees smote one against another when hee saw the hand writing upon the wall Did not the very officers themselves wonder at CHRIST did not the very enemies wonder at the boldnesse of Peter and Iohn Acts 4.13 was not Herod moved with Saint Iohn Baptist's preaching Marke 6.20 did not Felix tremble when Saint Paul discoursed of righteousnesse and judgement to come Acts 24. ver 25. was not Agripp● made an halfe Christian by Saint Pauls preaching Act. 26.28 did not the very Devill crye in the maide these are the servants of the most high God Act. 16. The preaching of the word makes the Devill himselfe to quake for it batters the walls of his kingdome and makes him fall like lightning from heaven Luk. 10.18 This should cause us to come with all reverence to the hearing of this lively and mighty word if it save us not out of all question it will condemne us it is like the raine that comes not in vaine if it bring not up flowers it will weeds Therefore let us pray to God to blesse this word to us that it may be the savour of life unto life not to death to any of us all 1. This should cause us to stand in a reverent awe of the word of God When yee come to a Sermon doe not thinke yee come to heare musicke to delight your selves withall to heare a man that hath a sweete and delectable voyce as the people sayd of Ezekiel that yee come to heare an eloquent oration finely penned by a flowing Rhetorician to tickle the eare withall that yee come to heare the song of some Syren to ●ull you asleepe that ye come to heare the word of a King that is able to inflict some corporall punishment on you if you doe not obey it but yee come to heare the Word of the King of Kings that is able to cast soule and body into hell if yee disobey it yee come not to heare a man There is
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
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
rejoycing and brings home the sheaves of heavenly comfort with him Gods dealing with his Children is contrary to Ezekiels scrowle it was sweete in his mouth and bitter in his belly God begins bitterly but ends sweetely as hee did with Abraham Yee remember the patience of Iob and what end the Lord made So remember the tryall of Abraham and what end the Lord made The beginning was sorrow the end was joy Let us beare with patience the bitter beginning that we may be partakers of the sweete ending He that will save his life shall loose it but hee that looseth it for my sake shall finde it hee that will save his goods by the denyall of Christ shall loose them he that will save his Children by dishonouring of God shall loose them as Eli did he cockered his Children and lost them they were both slaine in a day Abraham is content to loose his Child for God's sake and he findes his Child there is nothing lost by obeying God we shall be gainers by it Contemne divitias eris locuples contemne gloriam eris gloriosus contemne filium habebis filium We shall have fathers and mothers Children as it were in this world and in the world to come life everlasting Let this encourage us to submit our selves in all obedience to God in all things as Abraham did VERSE 20. WE have had the Chapter of death here followes that of faith wherein we have an Ilias of examples 1. Of the Grand-father then of the Sonne lastly of the Grand-child Isaac was in a manner dead yet he lives still many a yeere and at his going out of the world blesseth his two Sonnes which was a demonstration of his faith he lived and dyed in faith as Abraham had done But it seemeth the Holy Ghost might have made choyse of other workes of Isaacs serving better for the expressing of his faith then this he was a devout and religious man much given to prayer and heavenly meditation he went into the field to pray or meditate he continued praying twenty yeeres together for a Child and would not give over hee was obedient to God and followed him from place to place why doth not the Apostle make mention of these but of his blessing 1. These were common to others together with him 2. This blessing did most of all argue that he had lively faith in the promises of God made to him and Abraham when as hee doth bestow the things promised with as great assurance as if they were accomplished already This blessing is a fulfilling of all the promises therefore most fit to declare his faith and to publish it to all the world In this blessing there are three things 1. The instrumentall cause whereby it was done 2. The persons blessed 3. The things whereabout they were blessed For the instrument it was by faith Was it so he was coozened in it by Rebeccah and Iacob and he was induced to it against his will and purpose for he was determined to have blessed Esau. 1. Distinguish between the action and the infirmities in it Nature lead him one way and grace another yet for all that all things were governed by GODS providence as Exod. 1.20 and this blessing was an execution of Gods will decree and counsell and in some fort issued from faith in him Some infirmities of a man cannot marre the action of God as a sicke man is a man so a weake faith is a faith 2. His constant resolution after the blessing was ended doth shew it came from faith I have blessed thy brother already and he shall be blessed The voice of faith For the persons Iacob is set first because the birth-right was his his brother having sold it to him and he was the man whom God loved and in whom the promises were continued Esau was a prophane person yet he had some blessings Therefore both are included in the blessing though diversly Concerning what did hee blesse them not things present but to come temporall and eternall in this life and that to come which was an evident declaration of his faith For faith is a ground of things hoped for he pronounced of things to come as certainely as if they were already and they fell out as he had said Neither were the things to come temporall blessings alone but especially spirituall shadowed out by earthly things In the blessing hee said to Iacob Genesis 27.29 Be thou thy brothers Lord yet Iacob was faine to crouch to Esau hee was his Lord but this was accomplished in CHRIST that should come of Iacob All Nations were subject to him In this blessing Iacob saw CHRIST though it were afarre off therefore no mervaile though it bee adscribed to faith The blessing of Parents is highly to be regarded Praerogativa parentum disciplina filiorum Though there be a difference betweene our blessing of our Children and of the Patriarkes Our benedictio is but bona dictio or bona precatio their 's was an actuall and a reall bestowing of things on them yet the curse or blessing of Parents in all ages is to bee respected whom they curse justly God curseth ●nd whom they blesse God blesseth Therefore let Children so behave themselves that they may have their Parents blessing especially at their departure out of the world These temporall blessings are blessings Wealth health honour prosperity these GOD bestoweth on the reprobate these had Ismael and Esau hee was a jolly hunter and abounded in pleasure hee flourished in worldly prosperity more than Iacob So may the wicked doe Psal. 73.4 Dives But let us be content rather to lye with Lazarus then to frye with Dives to be plaine and simple men as Iacob was then to have their felicity here and misery hereafter 2 Sam. 19.30 Faith sees things to come Isaac now was blind yet he saw things to come The eye of faith is the best eye Let us entreat the Lord to make the eye of our faith brighter and brighter to our dying day VERSE 21. TOuching Iacob there bee two facts to be considered which are illustrated by the instrumentall cause and the circumstance of time when they were performed The facts are the blessing of Iosephs two Sonnes and his worshipping of GOD described by the manner how the instrumentall cause faith the time when when he was a dying By faith for without the eye of faith hee could not see the things that should happen to his Childrens Children conteyned in the blessing Which was more than the blessing of his owne Sonnes all fathers will doe that when hee was about to dye when death did approach 1. He adopted them into his family that they might be members of the Church as well as his owne Sons 2. He preferred the younger before the elder Ephraim is put for the tenne tribes Hos. 5. they were both Children Ephraim had no more in him then Manasseh 3. Being a stranger in Aegypt he gave them portions in the land
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
hearts bee on a better world that in the end wee may depart in peace with Simeon and reigne with CHRIST for ever in the world to come Ioseph had beene a brave Courtyer trained up and bearing sway in Pharaohs Court many yeeres together abounding in all wealth honour pleasure and prosperity yet all this while hee forgets not God he lived well and dyed well he is heavenly minded at his departure out of the world he is not now talking of his honours as Haman was the day before he dyed not talking of the injuries which his Mistris offered to him in casting him into prison and taking order for the revenge of it he is not now conferring with his brethren about the solemnizing of his funerall with what pomp they should carry him to the grave but now he is talking of matters belonging to the kingdome of heaven Though we live in never so prophane a place as irreligious as Aegypt as full of carnall entisements as Pharaohs Court yet let us keepe our integrity as Ioseph did let not the pleasures of the earth pull us from the joyes of heaven Obadiah kept his zeale and sincerity in Achabs Court Daniel in Nebuchadnezars Palace Nehemiah in the Kings buttery and at his table and there were rare and excellent Christians in Neroes house most of all they of Caesars house-hold they were more mindfull of the poore Saints of Philippi then others Let us not condemne them that be in heathenish and irreligious places GOD can preserve his pearles even in dunghills his roses among thornes hee will have a Rahab in Iericho a Lot in Sodom a Ioseph in Aegypt wheresoever wee bee let us keepe our selves unpolluted of the world 2. Here we are taught what must be the object of our talke of what matters we must be talking when death approacheth not of worldly matters but of heavenly as Ioseph was Elias was talking with Elisha about profitable matters when he was taken from him into heaven as they were walking and talking the fiery Charriot tooke him away Our Saviour was talking with his Disciples about matters belonging to the kingdome of GOD till the cloud tooke him away and Ioseph here dying is speaking not of those things appertaining to the earthly Court but to the Court of heaven Navita de ventis de tauris narrat arator every man for the most part both in his life time and in the time of death is speaking of those things which hee most mindeth the things that be most in the heart are most in the tongue A covetous miser is talking of his gold and silver houses and lands of the trash of the world even when he lyes on his death bed A drunkard will then bee talking of drinke an adulterer of fayre and beautifull women but a godly man will be talking of Gods matters as Ioseph was It is very like that Ioseph ere this time had made his will and set his outward estate at a stay therefore that doth not trouble him now his minde runs about better matters it is not good to deferre the making of our wills till we see no other way but death the last thing we talke of should be celestiall not terrestriall things 3. Wee must not bee too scrupulous about the place of our buryall Now no land is a type of heaven as the land of Canaan was before the comming of CHRIST Out of any Country on the earth yea out of the bottome of the Sea out of the Lions mouthes out of the fire wherein we are burnt to ashes for the name of Christ we shall have a comfortable passage into the kingdome of heaven yea our buryall with the wicked shall not prejudice our entrance into heaven Saint Peter sitting at the same table with Iudas when he was alive was not hurt by him much lesse should he have beene hindred out of heaven if hee had lien in the same grave with Iudas Though wee bee buryed among Thieves Traytors Idolaters Drunkards Murderers Adulterers c. If our lives have beene good that cannot keepe us out of heaven Yet if conveniently it may be superstition being avoyded as we lived with the godly so let us be buryed with them as we were companions with them in their life so let us be in death if it seeme good to the prouidence of God Ruth sayes to Naomi where thou art buryed I will be buryed and Ioseph would have his bones to lye with the bones of Abraham Isaac and Iacob So wee shall give notice to the world how deere the Saints were to us when they were alive Yet let not the place of our buryall trouble us at our dying day as some take too much thought for that wheresoever wee be buryed God will send his Angels at the latter day to gather our bodies from all the ends of the world and to carry them up into heaven Hee gave no commandement touching his flesh he knew that would be consumed before Then why should we pamper this flesh so much that is so soone brought to dust and ashes caro mea inimica mea onus meum laqueus meus paramus escam vermibus Let us subdue our bodies lest like horses they overthrow their Riders His bones were durable therefore hee gives a charge of them If hee had not looked for the Resurrection of those bones hee would not have beene so carefull for the translating of them into the land of Canaan Psal. 34.20 Ezek. 37.1 The bones of a dead man are scattered hither and thither tumbled out of one grave into another yet these shall rise and come to their place againe Bucers bones were burnt in Queene Maries dayes yet the same bones shall rise againe and be a witnesse against the enemies of the truth Not our bones alone but our flesh every part and member of our bodies shall be restored to us againe with these my eyes shall I see him the very palmes of Iezebels hands that were eaten up with dogges shall rise againe Let us not sing the Epicures song let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall dye Let us not give our selves wholly to pampering of our flesh and the fatting of our bones but let us employ all our members to GODS service in this life that we may be partakers in soule and body of his eternall glory in the life to come VERSE 23. BEfore of the Patriarcks now of the Lawgiver Where wee have 1. The commendation of his Parents faith 2. The commendation of his owne faith The faith of his Parents is commended by a worthy act of theirs the preservation of their Child which is amplified 1. By an attractive cause that drew them to it the beauty of the Child 2. By a retractive or disswasive cause that might have withdrawne them from it 1. The Kings commandement which in an heroicall magnanimity they feared not Moses Exod. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catachresticè he useth this word because his
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
either to try us withall or to humble us for one thing or other 2 The Testimony of thine owne conscience if that accuse thee weepe if that excuse thee laugh that which they speake is either true or false if in be true mourne for it and amend it if it be false rejoyce in it Matth. 5.11 3 Christs example must be never out of minde An ancient Father professeth of himselfe that when hee remembred that prayer of Christs he could not find in his heart to be revenged of any It was as a bridle to restraine him from revenge So as oft as we thinke on these words consider him that endured such speaking against of sinners let them be a Bull-warke to us against evill tongues Did he that was no sinner endure and shall not we that be sinners endure ill speeches There is none that can challenge a priviledge from ill tongues Kings themselves are faine to swallow up many an ill word The persecution of the tongue is a grievous persecution to tender hearts more grievous than that of the hand Mocks and taunts goe to the heart of men and discourage many In all these let us consider our Saviour Christ that endured such contradiction of sinners he had a loade of contumelious speeches lay'd on him yet he endured them Let Christs enduring make us to endure and let them not hinder us in the race of Christianity Let us take heed we be not accessary to his persecution Some there be that are never well but when they be speaking ill of others Their mouthes are like Mils that cannot grinde without foule water A dangerous Plurisy it were well that they were let bloud of that vaine Come say they Let us smite Ieremie with the tongue Let us keep our hands off but let us lay on loade with our tongues This they thinke they may lawfully doe Our tongues are our owne who shall controll us Nay they be not your owne 1 Cor. 6.19 Of every idle word ye must give an account much more of every rayling and back-byting word The tongue is an unruly evill but labour to rule it As we sit at Table by the Chimney side let us not speak ill but sound forth the praises of GOD for CHRIST's comming into the world S. Iames sets two brands on him 1. He is a Coosener whom doth hee deceive not another but himselfe 2. His religion is vaine he may thinke highly of himselfe yet he is a vaine man Some take a liberty to themselves to speake ill of those that be not as they are so holy so religious as they thou shouldest rather pray for them than speak ill of them Acts 26.29 S. Paul wished that Agryppa and all that were then present were he was but he did not raile on them no more must we If defects be in any pray for the supply of them but speake not ill of them behinde their backs Let us remember that in sinning against the brethren we sin against Christ let not one member persecute another let Ismael doe it but let not Isaac doe it Let us all arme our selves against malevolent tongues let us never dreame to live without ill words Nay S. Luke sayes Woe be to you when all men speake well of you Let us alwayes remember this Item of the Holy Ghost Consider him that endured such speaking against of sinners that his example may be as Aqua-vitae to keepe us from fainting VERSE 4. NOw followes the second argument which is taken from a defect in their former affliction We have endured many things already Heb. 10.32 Why doest thou speake to us of enduring more I but ye have not come to the last stroake yee have lost your goods but not your lives for Christ and his Gospell as many have done and you peradventure may doe hereafter As Christ hath shed his bloud for you so must you bee content to doe the like for him if he call you to it Matth. 23.35 Vnto bloud that is unto death Such a one seekes my bloud that is my life Bloud-sucker His bloud be on as and our children that is let us be answerable for his death It is so called because in a violent death there is an effusion of bloud We must never thinke we have resisted enough to our dying-day Phil. 3.13 Striving against sin Some interpret it against the sin of the persequutors labouring by threatnings and promises to draw you from Christ. Rather against sinne in yourselves which is as Cable-rope to pull afflictions on you Though God impose them on you or suffer them to befall you for his Gospell There be Cutters sad Hacksters desperate Ruffians that will resist to bloud they will challenge one another into the field and it may be see the heart-bloud one of another but this is in the Devils cause not in Christs cause Let us resist in the defence of Christ and his Gospell to the bloud Christ hath shed his bloud for us and shall not we shed ours for him Many of the Heathen have given their bloud for their Countrey and shall not wee give it for Christ and the Church for the confirmation of it in the faith of Christ Though we have stood out a long time in Christs quarrell resisting the enemies of the Gospell yet let us not set downe our staffe Let us never think wee have resisted enough till wee have resisted to bloud Christ gave us our bloud Christ redeemed our bloud Christ hath prepared heaven for us that be flesh and bloud therefore it cannot be spent better than in his service But as for us we yeeld our selves Captives to sin we throw downe the bucklers and suffer him to over-master us there is no striving against sin We strive one with another every Towne is full or unneighbourly strifes and unbrotherly contentions We strive not against sin Sin is the greatest enemie that we have it will cut the throat of our soule and banish us out of heaven therefore let us strive against it Leave striving one with another and let us all strive against sinne We shall never bee Martyrs if we doe it not for they that will not lay downe their sins for Christ will never lay downe their lives for Christ. How must we strive against sin 1 By prayer 2 Cor. 12.8 For this thing I be sought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me Let us pray against anger pride uncleannesse covetousnesse continually 2 By Scripture If we be inticed to idolatry let us fight against it with the sword of the Spirit as Christ did saying Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve If we be provoked to adultery let us say Whoremongers and Adulterers GOD will judge 3 By the substracting of the nourishment of that sin Let us strive against lust and uncleannesse by a sober and temperate life The very Heathen could say Sine cerere Baccho friget Venus Eate and drinke sparingly and the fire of
one or other every day London Yorke c. are no Cities to continue in Many are taken away daily and GOD knowes when our turne shall be We must out of our Houses Townes Cities we cannot continue here long therefore let us goe out before in affection that when death comes we may willingly goe from all Yet a wonder it is to see how men dreame of a contiuance here and lay up goods for many yeeres as that rich man did and yet this night thy soule may be taken from thee O consider ye have no continuing here Many Townes-men many of thy neighbours be gone and thou must goe too thou knowest not how quickly therefore think upon that Citie which continues for ever Here we have none but seeke one it will not be gotten without seeking Seek the kingdome of God seek the things that be above Seeke it by prayer fasting reading of Scriptures heavenly meditations c. We are like Esops dog that snapt at the shadow in the water and let the shoulder of mutton goe that was in his mouth wee looke for shadowes silver and gold sheepe and oxen and let the kingdome of heaven goe which is the substance of all It doth not appeare by us that we seeke for any City to come we seeke to seate our selves to establish our dwellings here we care not in a manner for the life to come VERSE 15. THE second Vse is the Oblation of Sacrifices 1. of prayse 2. of beneficence 1. the Precept 2. the Exposition of it In the Precept these Circumstances by whom what when to whom wee must offer By Christ. Ioh. 16.23 1 Pet. 2.5 Apoc. 8.3 The Sacrifice .i. Spirituall 1 Pet. 2.5 of praise in it is included petition too The fruit alluding to the first fruits in the law The Rhemists interpret it the host of prayse .i. the Body of Christ in the Eucharist which the Fathers call the Sacrifice of prayse But then every Christian should be a Priest for all must offer this Sacrifice of praise This say they is the fruit of the Priests lips because by vertue of those words that come out of his lips the host is made When must wee offer continually In adversitie in sickenesse in death in prison as Paul and Silas did To whom God is the Fountaine of all good things Iac. 1.17 Therefore hee alone is to bee praysed To his Name .i. to the Glory of his Name Bellar. confesses that a Sacrifice belongs onely to God Infinite bee the occasions that may induce us to the offering of this Sacrifice Let us prayse God for our Creation after his owne Image in making us Lords over all his creatures for the goodly house and furniture of the world which in mercie hee hath provided for us the Sun Moone and Stars birds of the ayre fishes of the sea beasts of the field all are for us Let us praise him for our foode and sustenance How many creatures dye for us and yet wee are more worthy to dye then they Let us praise him especially for his holy Word the silver trumpet to call us to Heaven for our Sanctification by his Spirit Chiefely for our Redemption by Iesus Christ. If hee had not beene borne and dyed for us it had beene better for us wee had never beene borne Therefore let us praise God continually for him Let us praise him for our peace that there bee no warres in England no leading into captivitie no complaining in our streets Let us praise him for our health What a number bee sicke and wee are whole nay let us praise him for his fatherly castigations in correcting us in this world that wee should not be condemned in the world to come Thus did Iob Blessed bee the Name of the Lord. Wee can never want matter of praising of God yet this Sacrifice that ought alwayes to bee offered is seldome offered It may be we will praise God when wee come to Church with the Congregation but little enough at other times Praise yee him Sun and Moone sayes the Psalmist Frost and snow c. The very insensible creatures praise God in their kinde and wee that are endewed with sense knowledge and understanding praise him not The birds of the ayre are chirping betimes in the Summer mornings singing cheerefully to their Creatour when wee lye drowsing on our beds Paul and Silas when they were in prison at mid-night sang and gave thankes and shall not wee that have our libertie Let us stirre up our selves more and more to this dutie As his mercies never cease so let us never cease praising of him Worthy is the Lord from whom wee receive all good things for Soule and body for this life and that which is to come to receive all Honour and Glory c. VERSE 16. 1. THE Precept then the Reason Doe good to all chiefely to them of the houshold of Faith Gal. 6.10 and to communicate wee are not to keepe all to ourselves And forget not wee are ready to forget that With such as these be and with these too Phil. 4.18 Is well pleased Promeretur Meliùs est ut nos reprehendant Grammatici quàm non intelligant populi sayes Bellar. I but Divines will reprehend them nay GOD will reprehend them they breake Priscians head and Pauls too That is all one say the Iesuits If GOD bee pleased with good workes then they bee meritorious I GOD is pleased with the Saints in Heaven yet they doe not merit for when they have all joyes there remaines nothing for them to merit A number there bee that labour to gather goods but they doe no good with them Many a man of small abilitie doth more good in a Towne then some men of great wealth in the Towne Wee have not our goods for our selves alone no man liveth to himselfe nor dyeth to himselfe Yet now men are good for none but for themselves Thou gatherest for thy wife and children so doe the heathen so doe bruit beasts The birds build nests for their yong ones and an hen scrapeth for her chickens If thou beest a Christian thou must doe more good then so As thou art full of goods so thou must bee full of good workes as Dorcas was cloath the naked feed the hungry comfort the comfortles be a father to the fatherles an husband to the widdowes give to the Schooles of learning for the continuance of the ministerie and preaching of the Word doe good one way or other in the Towne and Countrie where thou dwellest If thou canst not doe good with thy purse doe good with thy tongue by exhorting others provoking them to love and good workes every way let us doe good especially with the goods that GOD hath lent us Let us shew our selves good stewards of them It is a more blessed thing to give then to take yet wee are all of the taking hand none of the giving Make yee friends of this unrighteous mammon If yee keepe all to your selves and doe
Widdow he gives her this charge go sell the Oile pay them thou art in debt unto and live thou and thy children of the rest We may not live wee and our children on that which is another mans that is an unlawfull living and Gods blessing cannot be expected on it 2. GOD will have his owne worship to give place unto it I will have mercy not sacrifice We may not sacrifice to GOD of that which is another mans The Athenians came to Phocion for money towards a solemne sacrifice to whom he returned this answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It were a shame for me to give to you and not to pay this man pointing out his creditor that which I owe him GOD will have thee to serve him with thine owne not with that which is other mens yet small reckoning is made of it We goe a borrowing with Asahels feet a paying with Mephibosheths Augustus Caesar would needs buy the Senators bed that slept so securely being so much in debt he wondred how he could sleepe it never breakes our sleepe we take thought how to borrow none to pay VERSE 19. HE gives him a bill of his hand for it I Paul have written it with my owne hand Noverint universi per praesentes me Paulum firmiter teneri obligari c. Thou hast my word and my hand too therefore doubt not of it I but what is Saint Pauls word or his bond worth he made many rich yet he himselfe was poore his wealth consisted in a cloake a few bookes and parchments Though his estate was not great yet his credite was great He could take up upon his bare word among well disposed Christians many hundred pounds I will repay it It is my owne debt now and I will see it discharged we ought to be mervailous circumspect before we give our word or bond for any He is a foole in the judgement of wise Salomon that does it rashly he is worthie of no favour take his garment that is surety for a stranger take his bed from under him Before hee was a free man now he is a bondman nay he is taken in the snare of his owne mouth he is as a bird in a snare Let us looke carefully before wee leape The best cast at dice say some is to cast them quite away the best surety is not to be surety for any hee that hateth suretiship is sure but if we be once in bonds let us labour to unbinde our selves so soone as wee can as deere to deliver our selves out of the hands of the hunter and as birds out of the hand of the fowler Regulus though an heathen stood to his word to the death If we did live as it becommeth Christians there should need no greater bond then the word of a Christian. The saying is by the word of a King who would not take a Kings word so royall are they in their performances CHRIST hath made us all Kings to GOD his Father therefore we should have a singular care of any of our bare words though the witnesses dye yet God that heard our word lives for ever But we are fallen into such an age that many mens bonds are of no validity Sampson broke the coards and some breake the seales of greene waxe at their pleasure they make no account of paper or partchment bonds till they bee cast into iron bonds Some put their hands and seales to a writing that make no conscience of the accomplishment of that which they have written They are content to goe so farre with Pilate as to acknowledge their hand writing what I have written I have written but they will not say what I have written I will performe Saint Paul was of another minde as he gave him his hand for the payment so he gives him his heart and faithfull promise to pay it I will repay it Then there followes a mitigation not an abrogation of the debt Albeit I doe not say quamvis veraciter dicere possem sayes Carthusian though I might truly say it how thou owest to me a farre greater matter than this even thine owne selfe also or besides That which the Minister receives of us is not a benevolence but a debt you are bound to pay it for you owe it But what is it that we owe to the Ministers and Preachers 1. Love not a single but a singular love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an over-abundant and overflowing love Nebridius said of Saint Augustine that he did nimium amare and was nimium amatus he loved too much and the people loved him too much Where is that nimium now especially on the peoples side 2. Wee owe them reverence Herod reverenced Iohn Baptist. Alexander honoured Iaddus the high Priest to the admiration of all his followers Gratian wrote letters to Saint Ambrose with his owne hands Valentin the elder called him father Valentin the younger though an Arrian rose up to him in token of reverence when he came into the Consistory Cornelius gave too much respect to Saint Peter we give too little to Saint Peter and Saint Paul too 3. We owe them maintenance Who goeth to warfare on his owne cost Who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof Who feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milk thereof yet many great cowes in many parishes that give little milke to the shepheards nonne vides arcam inanem praepositi tui sayes Saint Augustine dost not see his chest emptie that is over thee in the Lord Saint Basil complaines of want Nazianzen sayes of himselfe that hee was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little and a poore shepheard the like complaint may many painfull Preachers take up in England 4. Wee owe them obedience Obey them that have the oversight of you and submit your selves As the people said to Iosua so must we say to the Preacher in the pulpit speaking to us in the name of God all that thou commandest us we will doe and whithersoever thou sendest us wee will goe if they command us to goe out of the Church we will doe it but if they command us to observe the orders of the Church we will not doe it we will give them the hearing but not the obeying nay we will heare at our leysure and doe at our pleasure Wonderfull is the debt we owe to the Ministers wonderfull is our negligence in paying of it we owe them our goods He that is taught in the word make him that teacheth him partaker of all his goods we owe them our eyes we owe them our lives Priscilla and Aquila layd downe their neckes for Saint Paul We owe them our selves as it is in this place for we have the salvation of our soules and bodies from them Instrumentally they be called Saviours In so doing thou shalt save thy selfe and them that heare thee VERSE 20. HAving used his Christian Rhetoricke for the receiving of Onesimus he shuts
he painted out Christ in lively colours sundry kinde of wayes this we are sure of he was a Physitian and greatly beloved too Luke the beloved Physitian saluteth you a Physitian for the body and the soule too which is more than ordinary Eusebius makes mention of one Theodotus a Bishop that was both Medicus Theologus a Physitian and a Divine too Paul sayes of one of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is sufficient for Divinity alone he must needs be a rare man that is sufficient for both These be they that send commendations to him whom he dignifies with this Title my Fellow-labourers or Fellow-workemen Some in the calling of Christianity some in the calling of the Ministry too Both are workes both are labours Nomen Christiani est nomen operis sayes S. Augustine and S. Paul sayes he that desires the office of a Bishop desires a worthy worke Here a common place of salutations doth not only salute us but inviteth us unto it In Greeke saluting is a kinde of imbracing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because whom we salute we embrace with the armes of love or at the least pretend it In Latine Salutare est salutem optare to salute is to wish health and prosperity to the parties whom we salute The Anabaptists are not onely unchristian but uncivill also to condemne salutations Indeed Elisha willed his man that if he met with any he should not salute him and CHRIST charges his Disciples to salute none by the way Those were in matters of extraordinary importance which required great expedition otherwise we may and ought to salute Angels salute The Lord is with thee thou valiant man sayes hee to Gideon hayle Mary freely beloved sayes Gabriel to the Blessed Virgin CHRIST would not have his Apostles to be so unmannerly to goe into an house and not to salute it he himselfe salutes after his resurrection peace be unto you Saul went forth to meet Samuel and saluted him Though Nabal was a churle and a foole too yet David would not deale so foolishly with him as not to salute him Thus shall you say for salutation There is a sweet eccho of salutations betweene Boaz and his reapers the Lord be with you sayes he the Lord blesse thee say they David saluted his souldiers The greatest thinke no scorne to salute the meanest I but whom must we salute All. We must love all pray for all even for our very enemies Now saluting is nothing else save an intimation of love a kind of praying and well wishing therefore we must salute all I but Saint Iohn gives us other counsell If any come to you and bring not this doctrine receive him not to house neither bid him God speed We must not vouchsafe him a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must distinguish betweene gods enemies and our owne if they be notorious open professed adversaries to CHRIST as those were we ought not to afford them a kind salutation nay if an Angell from heaven should preach any other doctrine we should hold him accursed But if they be secret adversaries and unknowne it is not impiety to salute them Some are so rigid that they will not salute a stranger because they know not whereabout he goes 1. It is repugnant to charity Love thinketh not evill it believeth all things It is greater charity in things doubtfull to believe the best then the worst 2. As Aristotle being reproved for giving an almes to a wicked man answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I had compassion of the man not of his manners so wee salute the man not his life we bid the man God speed not his actions But how are we to salute 1. For the externall manner by word of mouth or by writing Saint Paul omits salutations in never a one of his Epistles but in Rom. 16. he is most plentifull in them So is Ignatius Commendations are requisite in our letters if they bee not made commendations matters of course not greatly regarded 2. For the internall manner we must salute sincerely not hypocritically it must bee Saint Paul's haile not Iudas his haile Greete one another with an holy kisse They must be holy not unholy greetings The end of salutations is the preservation of love which by all good meanes had need to bee maintained by Christians and a demonstration of the respect we have one of another VERSE 25. THe last branch of the conclusion is a Valediction or farewell hee takes his leave with a short yet a sweet prayer where 1. There is the substance of it then the sealing of it In the substance 1. Res optata the thing wished or prayed for which is grace love mercy favour Grace must be Alpha and Omega the beginning and ending of every worke Saint Paul began with it and he ends with it 2. Cujus sit gratia whose grace it is of our Lord Iesus Christ which hath brought us into grace and love with God who before were his enemies and out of grace which hath graciously redeemed us from sinne death hell and damnation and hath opened to us the doores of the kingdome of heaven 3. Cui optatur to whom it is wished not to Philemon alone but to all that were with him Be with your spirit Man consists of two parts a soule and a body here by a Synecdoche melior pars pro toto the better part is put for the whole be with your spirit .i. with you The grace of CHRIST is to be preferred before the grace of all earthly Kings and Princes 1. Their grace is mutable to day in grace to morrow out of grace As Haman was with Ahasucrus and Belisarius with Iustinian CHRIST is not mutable 2. They dye CHRIST lives for ever CHRIST lives for ever the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with us all Then he seales his prayer with Amen Nec Graecum est nec Latinum sayes Aug. it is neither a Greek word nor a Latine but an Hebrew word mansit non interpretatum and by the providence of God remaines in all tongues uninterpreted ne vilesceret nudatum least haply being unfolded it should bee lesse esteemed as Hallelujah Hosanna c. It is particula confirmantis a particle of confirmation as Saint Ambrose well observeth So be it So be it The Lord grant it may be so It must in a fervent zeale be the shutting up of all our prayers It is doubled by the people when Ezra praysed the Lord the great God all the people answered Amen Amen with lifting up their hands and no doubt their heart too As the Church sayes we will lift up our hearts with our hands to God in the heavens If the hand be lifted up without the heart it is an hypocriticall Amen and unacceptable unto God The end of this Commentary A COMMENTARY VPON THE EPISTLE OF St PAUL to the Hebrews FIRST the inscription of the
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
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
sin as we have but the greatest of all is his owne goodnesse and mercy Isai. 9.6 Iohn 3.16 Both had sinned Angels and men Why was Christ made a man to dye for men and not an Angell to redeeme Angels from everlasting death because it was his owne good will and pleasure his singular love to mankinde Let us therefore magnifie him for it from generation to generation Some as Augustine observeth tooke occasion from hence to be proud and insolent See Christ tooke on him our nature not the Angels therefore we are exalted above Angels we have just cause to thinke highly of our selves As if a sick man should boast the Physitian came to my house not to my neighbours therefore I am a better man than my neighbour the reason why Christ tooke on him thy nature not the Angels was because thou wert sick of sin so were not the good Angels Neverthelesse it is a preferment to us that Christ should assume our nature to his our corruptible nature to his incorruptible as if a King should take the patcht cloake of a beggar and annex it to his royall cloake decked with Pearles and precious Stones Now as Christ hath honoured our nature in becomming man so let not us men dishonour our owne nature by drunkennesse uncleannesse covetousnesse nor by wrangling and contending one with another Christ hath graced our nature let not us disgrace it VERSE 17. WHereupon he returnes to his conclusion which he would have to be infixed in our memories I will declare thy name to my brethren which he could not doe unlesse hee were a man as his brethren are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debuit he ought because it was his fathers will and his owne will too necessitate non coactione In all things appertaining to the substance not to the corruption of our nature He was like unto us in all things sin only excepted He was like to us in all the faculties and members of soule and body He had the same affections that we have yet unstained with sin We are sorrowfull so was He My soule is heavie to the death We are joyfull so was He Luke 10.21 In that houre Iesus rejoyced in spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are zealous so was He the zeale of thy house hath eaten me up We are hungry so was hee Marke 3.5 Wee wonder at all things so did He. We are afraid of death so was He My soule is heavie to the death Come to the Body We are little ones grow in stature so Christ Luke 2. ult We are hungry thirsty sleepy so was He He slept in a Ship Mat. 8.24 not in a Church We are weary so was he He rested himselfe on Iacobs-Well Iohn 4 6. We dye so He died also As He is like to us so let us be like him in meekenesse patience charity in praying for our enemies Brethren All are his brethren quoad naturam the faithfull quoad gratiam Iohn 20.17 He will not be ashamed to call us Brethren at the day of judgement Mat. 25.40 and shall not we call one another brother The King and Subjects are brethren the Ministers and their People rich and poore are brethren and let us not be snapping and snarling one at another but live lovingly together as brethren Both members are unfolded in the words following that is he was a faithfull High Priest Appertaining to God In divine not in humane matters The High Priest made an attonement for the people Levit. 16. So did Christ for his people GOD and man were fallen out Christ made us friends God was displeased with us he pacified his wrath towards us which the Father by an audible voice witnessed from heaven Matth. 3.17 This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased How by the bloud of his Crosse which was Gods bloud Acts 20.28 We were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.18 19. In many things we offend all who then can be saved our sins for number exceed the sands of the Sea the least sin is sufficient to throw us into hell without Christ. But by Christ we are reconciled to his Father and have peace with him Col. 1.20 Luke 2.14 Rom. 5.1 Oh I have sinned but 1 Iohn 2.2 Christ is the propitiation for our sins Worthy then is the Lamb the Lord Iesus to receive all glory Men at Christ-masse use to take a greater liberty to sin to quaffe swill and carowse to open the floud-gates of all impiety but the consideration of Christs comming into the world should be a bridle to restraine us from sin Christ came now to make a reconciliation for our sins and shall we plunge our selves deeper into the Sea of sin God forbid The love of Christ should constraine us to forsake sin it should not make us wallow in the filthy puddle and sinke of sin Wilt thou make much of the knife that cut thy Fathers throat David though he longed for the water of the Well of Bethlehem yet when it was brought to him by three of his Worthies he refused to drinke of it saying Is not this the bloud of the men that went in jeopardie of their lives 2 Sam. 23.17 Sin cost the bloud of Christ let us not then drinke iniquity like water VERSE 18. HEE prosecuteth the former branch touching mercy As CHRIST was like to us in nature so hee was tempted as we are Saepius ipse miser miseris succurrere disce Art thou tempted whether thou art the child of GOD or not A shrowd temptation wherewith the best men and women are shaken So was CHRIST If thou beest the Sonne of God the Devill calls it into question and would have had CHRIST to doubt of it Art thou tempted with povertie with want of things necessarie for this life So Was Christ from his Cradle to his grave he was borne in a stable laid in a cratch had not an hole to hide his head in he had no money in his purse but was faine to send to the Sea for some he kept his Passeover in an other mans chamber was buryed in an other mans grave Art thou tempted with malevolent tongues with some that are ever rayling on thee So was Christ hee was termed a Wine bibber a glutton c. Art thou tempted with sicknesse the toothach the headach the cholike the gout c. We never read that Christ was sicke because he had no sinne in him yet being clothed with our nature hee knowes what belongs to paine and will succour us in all our distresses Art thou persecuted Herod sought his life as soone as he was borne A rich man that hath a good fire continually in his house a table furnished with all delicates that lyes soft on a bed of dowlne he cannot so well pitty a poore man as one poore man may doe another CHRIST being rich would become poore he would bee a man
that doe not minde the thing they looke upon their eyes are upon it but their minde is on another matter doe not you so but let your minde be wholly fixed on him look on him with the sharpe eye of your minde consider that in him All the treasures of wisdome lye hid he is a rich and plentifull Store-house in whom ye may finde all the Pearles and Iewels of wholesome doctrine in him there is salvation and in no other therefore all other teachers set aside listen to him When the Iudge of an Assises gives the charge all that be in the shire-house especially they that bee of the great Inquest consider seriously what is spoken When a Paul or Timothie standeth in the Pulpit Christ Iesus the Iudge of the whole World gives a charge by his Ministery and shall not we deeply consider it When the King makes a speech in the Parliament-house the whole House considers earnestly what he sayes CHRIST IESUS the King of Kings speakes to us in the Ministry of the Word yet few consider the excellent things that be spoken The Queene of Sheba considered Salomon well all that he spake or did Behold here is a greater than Salomon Salomon is but a foole to him Therefore let us diligently consider what he sayes If they were matters of no moment we were not to be blamed though we did not consider them but being of such weight as they bee touching the eternall salvation of our soules what mad-men be we that we consider them no better If one should talke to us of gold and silver we would consider what he sayes Christ speakes to us of that which surpasseth all the silver in the World yet we regard him not Let us consider him now that hee may consider of us hereafter when hee comes with his holy Angels VERSE 2. THEN he comes to the description of the party unto whom they must attend He describes him by two of his offices his Apostleship or Prophesie and his Priesthood As Rom. 15.8 he is called the Minister of circumcision so here an Apostle one that is sent Iohn 3.2 he was sent from God Gen. 49.10 of Shalach Shiloach Iohn 20.21 As my Father hath sent mee so c. He is an honourable Legate sent from God to us therefore let us give eare to him he is Apostolus Apostolorum the Prince of Apostles 2 The High Priest to performe all things betweene GOD and us to present our prayers to God as the High Priest did in the time of the Law and to make attonement betweene God and us by the sacrifice of himselfe on the Crosse. Pontifex pontem faciens so Christ by his passion hath made a bridge for us to goe to heaven therefore let us consider him and no other Of our profession that is of the Faith and doctrine which wee professe And if this be not a sufficient description of him in the end he names him CHRIST IESUS the annointed of God and Saviour of the world Hee is called an Apostle or a Prophet sent from GOD in opposition to Moses who was the most worthy Prophet among the Iewes and the high Priest in respect of Aaron which was the high Priest in the time of the Law The LORD IESUS is all in all therefore let us all listen to him Non quid hic aut ille dixerit sed quid Christus qui fuit ante omnes none in comparison with him none in competition against him The first argument which is first set downe simply then comparatively Hee is a faithfull Apostle or Prophet he hath delivered to us the whole counsell of God without the mixture of humane inventions therefore let us consider him To him that is to God the Father That made him that appointed him the Apostle and high Priest of us all that advanced him into this chaire of dignity 1 Sam. 12.6 Acts 2.36 He may be sayd to bee made of God in respect of his humanitie Gal. 4.4 but when the fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his Sonne made of a woman made under the Law As Moses so greatly renowned among you His fidelitie is set forth by the person to whom hee was faithfull by the place where 1 Timothy 3.15 1 Peter 2.5 The whole Church was committed to CHRIST So is it to no other He is the head of the whole Church in the time of the law and of the Gospell too Then he compareth him with Moses 1. In that wherein they were alike 2. In that wherein unlike wherein a dissimilitude betweene them As he was faithfull so was Moses in that they agree Num. 12.7 As CHRIST was faithfull in all the Church throughout the world So Moses was faithfull in all that part of Gods house which was in Israel they were both faithfull I derogate nothing from Moses let him have his due to the full Moses made the tabernacle rites sacrifices as GOD prescribed him CHRIST was faithfull delivered sound doctrine not mixed with the glosses of the Pharisees hee was faithfull to the death Fidelitie is a principall qualitie in a Minister and steward of Gods house Matth. 24.45 1 Cor. 4.2 VERSE 3. NAy in some respects hee is many degrees above Moses Moses in the estimation of the Iewes was the most rare and famous Prophet Ioh. 9.28 The Scribes and Pharisees sate in Moses chaire Matth. 16.14 None durst say hee was Moses they thought none comparable to him yet here he exalteth CHRIST above Moses that is the builder of the house is more honourable than the house CHRIST is the builder of the Church the house of GOD Moses was but the house nay a little part and parcell of the house therefore our Saviour CHRIST farre surpasseth him CHRIST is more glorious than the whole house then all in the Church of God therefore more glorious than Moses a piece of the house The reddition is more significant The builder of the house in all mens judgement is to bee preferred before the house hee is of greater estimation then the house for his wisdome wealth and power in building of it The workeman is more to be accounted of then the workemanship the potter more than the Pot. The Church is the house of the living God the principall builder of this house is our SAVIOUR CHRIST Matth. 16.18 upon this rocke I will build my Church inferiour builders under him as it were his men are the Ministers and Preachers the toole wherewith he buildeth is the Word the mortar wherewith he fastneth together the spiritual living stones in this building is faith the ground whereon this house standeth is the whole world for hee hath his chosen in all nations the time of building is this present life the wood and stones concurring in this building are all the faithfull in all ages they are all built from time to time by our Saviour Christ he built Adam Sheth Enoch and Noah before the floud Abraham Isack Iacob before the law was written Moses David Samuel
the Gospell to give eare to Christ that speaketh to us in the ministery of the Word This is my beloved Son heare him Now in the end the Apostle makes an exposition of the Allegorie and applies it to them to whom he writeth I doe not speake of the Tabernacle or Temple which were glorious houses wherein God in some sort dwelt but I speake of Gods spirituall house the Church a part whereof you are as well as Moses and they in the time of the Law All Christians in all Ages are the house of God What a singular honor is this that we should be Gods house yea his dwelling-house 1. A Nobleman hath many Houses which hee dwels not in himselfe but letteth them forth to other men we are not houses to let but God himselfe dwelleth in us we are his mansion-House The Centurion said to Christ I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roofe so may we say we are mortall and sinfull men houses of clay unworthy that God should come under our roofe yet it pleaseth him of his infinite mercy to dwell in such base houses as we are 2 If God dwell in us and we be his house then how neat and handsome should it be kept Shall a Kings house be overgrowne with weeds Shall there be filthy and sluttish corners in a Kings Palace And shall we that professe our selves to be Gods house be full of pride envie and malice that be stinking weeds in the nostrils of God Shall Gods house be full of swearers drunkards adultereres c. The divell found his house swept and garnished to his minde and shall not Gods house be swept for the entertaining of him Let us garnish our selves which are Gods house with the sweet flowers of faith love hope zeale humility temperance patience sobriety that God may take delight to dwell in us 3 There is no man especially if he dwell in an house and it be his owne but will bestow needfull reparations on it and do you think God will suffer his house to lye unrepaired nay being Gods house we shall want nothing for soule or body If we decay in faith zeale and other graces of his spirit he will in due season repaire them againe he will keepe his house wind-tyde and water-tyde he will preserve it from wind and weather yea the gates of hell shall never prevaile against his house 4 A man may have an house and be defeated of it some wrangling Lawyer may wring it out of his hand or he may be weary of his house and make it away none can snatch Gods house out of his hand he is no changling he will keepe his house for ever Blessed are we that be GODS house and the Lord give us grace to keepe us undefiled for his Majesty that he may take pleasure to dwell in us in this World and wee may dwell with him in the World to come What are we the house of God simply Live as we list and do what we will No verily but if we hold fast the confidence c. One speciall quality of a good house is to be firme and stable if it be a tottering house ready to shake in every wind and tempest a man will have small joy to dwell in it even so we that be the house of God Almighty must not be wavering and inconstant but we must stand sure and hold fast the graces we have received There be two things which we must hold fast faith and hope the boldnesse that we have by faith to come into the presence of God to whom we have accesse by Christ apprehended by faith and by vertue whereof we may boldly call God Father and open our minds freely to him that is the nature of the word Vnto faith must be annexed hope faith makes a Christian hope nourishes and susteines a Christian we must hold both fast As we have begun to put our trust in Christ so we must make him our pillar to leane upon continually as we have begun to hope for eternall happinesse purchased by Christ so we must still stand in a stedfast expectation of it Though persecution arise for the Gospell though we be clapt up into prison banished out of our country though we be put to the fire for the name of Christ yet let us not cast away our hope let us not deny Christ and sleepe in an whole skin let not the pleasures and profits of this world carry us away from Christ though death it selfe come yet let us trust in him We are wont to be hold-fasts in our money none shall easily get that from us but let us chiefly be hold-fasts in the Pearles and graces of the Spirit Whatsoever comes let us hold faith and hope fast let Houses and Lands Wife and Children yea our owne life goe rather than them Thus if we hold the confidence that we have in CHRIST and the rejoycing of our hope to the end we shall be Gods houses in this life and be received up into that house which is made without hands in the heavens He doth not simply say hope but the rejoycing of the hope the glorying of hope Satan and his instruments goe about to overthrow our hope and mocke at it It is a goodly thing I warrant you which you hope for What fooles are you in hope of an imaginarie kingdome hereafter to deprive your selves of so many pleasures in this life bee wiser than so A bird in the hand is better than two in the bush Take your pleasure whyle you be here and hope not yee cannot tell for what To that hee opposeth this glorying and rejoycing Yea boast of your hope even before your enemies faces what excellent things are reposed for you and rejoyce in this hope as if you had the kingdome of heaven already Not as if these did make us the house of GOD but by these wee shall have an assurance to our selves that we are the house of GOD. A Father sayes to his Sonne if thou wilt be no Ale-house hunter but doe as I will have thee thou shalt be my Sonne this doth not make him his Sonne for he was his Sonne before but it assures him to be his Sonne A Captaine sayes to his souldier if thou wilt play the man and not shrinke in the wetting thou shalt be my Souldier yet hee was his Souldier before so here if yee hold fast faith and hope ye shall be my house that is all the world shall see indeede that you are my house not for a while but to the end So as neither we faint in persecution nor in the time of prosperity bee drowned in the pleasures and profits of this world Be faithfull to the end he that continueth to the end shall be saved The second argument is desumed from the testimony of the Holy Ghost In the allegation of the testimony first a charge not to shut up their eares and hearts against this worthie and heavenly Prophet but to entertaine him
Priests must submit their Miters CHRIST is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath a principality and a preheminence in all things Great Surpassing all the high Priests that ever were They were meere men this both God and man they mortall this immortall they kept their office for a time this for ever Men did but stoupe to them the Angels stoupe to this our High Priest their jurisdiction was shut up in the territories of Iudea this ruleth over all the world He is a great one therefore doe no ill because of his greatnesse and feare no enemies if we doe well Which is gone through the heavens which hath pierced these visible heavens object to our eyes and is entred into the highest heaven where hee sitteth at the right hand of God for ever The High Priest in the time of the law entred into the Sanctum Sanctorum but this hath entred into heaven whereof that was a Type and a figure there hee maketh intercession for us The High Priest went into the Sanctum Sanctorum once every yeare hee is gone once into heaven for all Christ then in respect of his humanity is not in the earth Iesus excelling Iehosuah the High Priest Zach. 3.1 Who according to his name was a kind of Saviour but not worthy to be named with this Iesus the same day The Son of God Hee was the Son of man too Mary was his Mother The High Priests in the time of the law were the Sonnes of Aaron they descended of him this is the Son of God he thought it no robbery to be equall with God Vpon that hee inferreth the first Vse Our High Priest is a mighty one able to punish us if we shrinke from our profession and of power to protect us from all our enemies if we stick to him therefore let us hold fast our profession With might and maine totis viribus the doctrine professed by us let no enemies drive us from our profession neither Satan nor any of his instruments The Pharises held fast the traditions of their elders and would not bee removed from them Mark 7.3 All Heretickes have held fast their opinions they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some Heretickes have held their opinions to the death Superstitious persons have held fast their superstitions being wedded to them All Ephesus cryed out for Diana Great is Diana of the Ephesians The losse of Michas goods did not grieve him halfe so much as the losse of his gods ye have taken away my gods and what have I more Iud. 18. The Turkes are wonderfully addicted to Mahomet he is a great Prophet among them they will not let him goe And shall not we hold the profession of the Lord Iesus They hold errors fast and shall not we the truth The subject of their profession are base and counterfeit things meere inventions of men lies and fables Mahomet was but a base fellow a Merchants man one that had the falling sicknesse a coozener and a jugler the subject of our profession is Iesus Christ the Sonne of God Therefore let us hold it fast Let neither the Syrenicall songs of Heretickes and Schismatickes in the time of peace nor the blustering wind of persecution in the time of War pull us from our confession Let us be faithfull to the death as the Martyrs were let house and land Wives and Children liberty and Country yea our lives goe before our profession But this is an hard matter wee have no strength of our selves to hold it against so many strong and mighty enemies Saint Peter thought himselfe a stout champion though all deny thee I will not Yet he denyed him he was not so good an holdfast of his profession as he should have beene Therefore let us all feare our selves and flye to God for strength that it would please him so to strengthen us by his holy spirit that wee may hold fast the profession of Christ and his Gospell to the end hold that which thou hast lest another take thy Crowne We will hold our mony fast though it be to good uses we will not part with that but as for religion a number are at this passe they care not what becomes of it let that goe whither it will So we may sleepe in an whole skinne and keepe that which we have let come what religion there will we can be of any Religion Such turne-coats and time-servers shall never set a foot in the kingdome of heaven If we hold not our profession fast wee shall misse of the Crowne of eternall life VERSE 15. THe foundation whereupon the consolation is built is the wonderfull love and compassionate kindnesse of this our High Priest It dependeth on the former by preventing an objection that might bee made Thou willest us to hold fast our profession but alasse how shall wee doe it Wee are compassed about with many weaknesses and infirmities by reason wherof we shall not be able to keep it fast Be not discouraged with the sight of your infirmities your High Priest is well enough acquainted with them who as he is high and mighty so he is wonderfull kinde and loving Hee is not stately as some great personages be Kings Priests and others that looke aloft and disdaine them that be under them his magnificence doth not make him proude he descendeth to the lowest of his brethren 1. Misericordia vera 2. Assumpta miseria 3. Servata innocentia His love and kindnesse is set forth 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively which cannot compati He is not made of steele and yron but of the same flesh that we be He is acquainted with our infirmities Simplici notitia ut Deus experientia ut homo he hath a feeling of all our miseries in soule and body But such a one as suffereth with us in all calamities being tempted as we are passing through the furnace of all afflictions as we have done temptations are put for afflictions Iac. 1.2 In all points as we are according to the same similitude that we are not in shew as a painted man is like a man but in deed in truth Phil. 2.7 Christ did really and truly sustaine the like calamities that we doe The only difference is in the manner not in the matter he was tempted as we are but not after the same sort our temptations are mixed with sinne his not wee sinne in our afflictions hee not 2 Cor. 5. ult 1. They that be in high places must have a feeling of the miseries of others Whereas many have not what is that to us Great personages in high places have little feeling of the miseries of their brethren in low and inferiour places many a Peere that fares delicately every day hath little feeling of the calamities of sundry of his poore brethren but our High Priest the great Shepheard of our soules hath a feeling of the griefes not onely of the Shepheards that be under him but of every Sheepe nay of every Lamb that is in his flocke being man he
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
into the denyall of CHRIST and grave and reverend Preachers are subject to falls at this present day which are rather to be lamented then insulted of therefore being clad with the same infirmities let us pitty our brethren when they sinne Gala. 6.1 So let us consider our selves lest wee be tempted also One poore man will pitty an other one sicke man may well pitty an other Thou art sicke of the disease of sin as well as the people therefore pitty them when through weakenesse they are carryed into sinne Are the people heavy and drowsie at Sermons pitty them thou hast the same lump of flesh as they have Is any overtaken with drinke pride uncleannesse and other sins Winke not at their iniquities yet pitty those poore soules even wee that be Preachers if GOD take away his hand may fall as they doe therefore have compassion on them and with meekenesse pull them up out of their sins VERSE 4. A Calling is most requisite in all things we take in hand especially in the ministerie Who will meddle with the Sheepe of a man unlesse he be called to it and shall wee meddle with Christs Sheepe without a calling The Iesuites triumph in this place If Luther Calvin Beza were examined by this clause there would be found foule matter against them Nay if Pope Iohn the twenty two that chose himselfe Pope Hildebrand that entred the seat with the murder of his predecessours if Pope Sylvester the second that came in by conjuring if Pope Eugenius that came in by Simonie there would be found foule matter of damnation if all the Popish sacrificing Priests were examined by this clause which take upon them to offer up Christ without any calling nay the whole Scripture calling them from it they would be in a miserable case As for our calling 1. It is of God 2. Of the Church of God We have Gods seale to our calling because he hath furnished us in some measure with gifts for it yet who is sufficient for these things 2. Wee are called by the Church which by imposition of hands representing Gods hand hath separated us to this office Let every one be assured of his calling The Brownists harpe much on this string but I pray you who called Hunt a Souldier a meere ignorant man to be a Minister or De la cluse a Cardmaker to be a Preacher Who calls Taylors Weavers and other artificers to be expounders of the Word A lamentable thing to consider what a number of intruders there be that have thrust themselves into this holy calling In Ieroboams time every one that would consecrate himselfe became one of the Priests of the high places I pray God we live not in those ●imes every one that hath mony that can fee a greedy patron may have a benefice and leape into the Ministry A wofull thing Shall wee have them to make cloth that have no skill in cloathing will any make him his Shepheard that knowes not what belongs to Sheep and wilt thou deliver Christ's Sheep into the hands of a blind and ignorant Shepheard Wilt thou have him to build thy house that hath no skill in building wilt thou make him the Schoole-master of thy child that hath no learning but any is good enough for the Ministerie If men did looke as well to the charge as to the dignity of the office if Onus were as well considered as honos men would not make such hast to it as they doe They watch over the soules of the people as they that must give an account The day of taking in our profits is sweete but the counting day will be terrible when CHRIST will require every lost Sheep at our hands Therefore let none take this honour to himselfe but see that he be called of God as Aaron was If thou comest uncalled God will say to thee Friend how camest thou hither binde thee hand and foot and cast thee into outer darkenesse But if we come in by Gods calling he will protect us in our office against the Devill and all his instruments hee will blesse us in our office in this life and of his mercy not of our merits crowne us in the life to come Therefore let us all examine our calling internall and externall for an Asse may bee in a Lions skin an Ape in a purple Coate endeavour therefore that in some measure we may be sure of our calling Before the qualities required in a Priest were generally propounded now they are particularly applyed to Christ. VERSE 5. 1. HIs calling to the office 2. The exequution of his office 1. In things belonging unto God Verse 7 and 8. 2. In things pertaining unto us Ver. 9 and 10. His calling is iterated as the foundation of all Which is first affirmed then confirmed by two testimonyes the one obscure the other plaine Aaron had his calling mediately by Moses Exod. 28.1 Christ had his immediately by God Ioh. 8.42 Aaron was the Sonne of a man Christ is the Sonne of God Thou art my Sonne tu singulariter In calling him his Son he calls him a Priest for the first begotten was a Priest In the next words it is aske of me He appoints him to pray for the Church which is the office of the Priest VERSE 6. SAcerdos Sacer dux docens orans offerens They were Priests after the order of Aaron he after the order of Melchizedek They for a time CHRIST for ever Hebr. 9.24 VERSE 7. THe Priest did offer for the people So CHRIST for us Which is amplified by the time when the things what the manner how the person to whom the fruits which are two 1. The hearing of it 2. His learning by it The Priest was a man So Christ. In the dayes of his flesh that is of his mortall and weak flesh compassed with infirmities Ioh. 1.14 In heaven he hath flesh still but immortall and void of these naturall weakenesses no need of meat drinke sleepe not subject to wearinesse without any possibility of dying As CHRISTS flesh is in heaven so shall ours bee there too with him Offered up prayers c. that in the garden He useth the plurall number because it was made thrise and so three prayers signifying wants and necessities for things wanting of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indigeo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 venio because they went after a meeke and submisse manner Father if it be possible let this cup passe c. There is his crying Teares droppes of bloud Luk. 22.44 Exauditus à metu Though Chrysostome translate it reverence yet Nazianzen and Theodoret translate it feare Calvin in this last time found it out raked under ashes but he was not the first founder of it but Nazianzen and Theodoret. Mark 14.33 Hebr. 11.7 The Iesuits translate it feared Christ as he was man did not only feare the death of the body the separation of the soule from it but also having the loade of all the
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
at the first springing up of the custome was but worth a Groate is now worth tenne shillings and yet will yee against all reason hold that custome still 2. The Iewes had a custome upon small occasion to put away their Wives derived from Moses yet CHRIST brake the necke of that custome saying ab initio non fuit sic Moses permitted that for the hardnesse of your hearts because hee had to deale with a stubborne and stiffe-necked people but from the beginning it was not so So say I the law for the hardnesse of your hearts permits this custome as it doth eight in the hundred but looke backe to the originall and yee shall finde that from the beginning it was not so It is an Axiome in the law nullum tempus occurit regi The King never looses his right for discontinuance of time And shall the King of Kings be debarred of his right because of a new upstarte custome Flatter not your selves in your customes they are but broken reeds for you to leane upon St. Paul sayes If any man list to bee contentious we have no such custome nor the Churches of God So say I to you if any list to rob God and his Ministers of their right we have no such custome nor the Churches of God It is a wonderfull delusion that the Devill hath bewitched many withall stollen waters are sweete and all is good that we may take from the Ministers He that robbeth a Minister robbeth God Mal. 3.8 and is it no sinne to rob God he that stealeth from a common Christian is a thiefe but hee that stealeth from a Minister is a Church-robber the one is theft the other is sacriledge the one breakes the second table the other the first table Therefore take heed of this grievous sinne Tithes are the LORDS hee hath given them to us therefore take you good heede how yee take them away from us least you bee found fighters against God as wise Gamaleel said to the Councell Take away maintenance from any calling and it will quickly fall to the ground who would be a Merchant if hee must be a beggar all the dayes of his life Who would be a Clothier if he get no gaine by it Who would put his Sonne to the Vniversity there be at charges with him seven or eight yeares afterwards to be a Minister and to have no comfortable maintenance in his calling it is a matter of greater importance then we are aware of the denying of the Ministers right is the overthrow of the Ministery and so consequently of the Word of God whereby wee must bee saved in the life to come therefore let us not have a finger in it You thinke to waxe rich by defrauding of the Ministers but that is the high-way to poverty and beggery too Such money is put into a bottomlesse bagge it will never prosper Consider what the Lord saith Mal. 3.10 Prove me c. pay your tithes conscionably in truth and sincerity as you ought to doe and Gods blessing shall bee on you and yours steale from the Ministers of God and thy wealth one way or other shall melt away as the waxe before the fire Therefore in the feare of God let us all looke to it let us as God hath given tithes to them for their livelyhood so give them cheerefully for God loveth a chearefull giver let us deale bountifully with GOD and his Ambassadours in this present life that he may deale bountifully with us and give us his owne kingdome in the life to come The second argument whereby the Apostle proves Melchizedec to bee greater than Abraham is laid downe in the last words of this sixth verse Hee that blesseth is greater than he that is blessed but Melchizedec blessed Abraham ergo he is greater than Abraham whom he blessed Hee doth not say him that had so many merits Abraham the Father of the faithfull had no merits whereof he might glory before God Hee was not justified in the sight of God by any of his workes but only by believing the promises this is our righteousnesse to believe the promises of God We are to make a precious account of Gods promises they be the most excellent jewells that wee can have hee doth not say hee blessed him that had silver and gold Sheepe and Oxen but the promises Abraham was a mervailous rich man God had blessed him exceedingly hee had at this time above three hundred uprising and down-lying in his house yet the Holy Ghost doth not say he blessed him that was such a wealthy man that had such large lands possessions but hee blessed him that had the promises The promises of GOD are the greatest riches that a man can have our silver and gold may bee taken from us but Gods promises shall abide with us for ever Now Abraham had not the promises for himselfe alone but for all the Children that believe as he did Acts 2.39 as hee had the promises so have wee and let us make much of them they must be our comfort in all calamities yea in death it selfe heaven and earth shall passe away but not a tittle of my word shall passe unfulfilled therefore let us highly esteeme of the promises of God they be the strongest pillars we have to leane upon VERSE 7. THe major proposition of the argument is proved by the confession of all and without all contradiction the lesse is blessed of the greater that which is of lesser account and reckoning the thing being put for the person I but is the lesse blessed of the greater Iacob blessed Pharaoh Gen. 47.10 and 1 Reg. 8.66 the people blessed the King yet they were not greater than Salomon we blesse God yet we are not greater than God 2 Cor. 1.3 There is a double blessing the one improper the other proper Improperly to speake to blesse is to wish well as to pray for one 1 Cor. 14.16 So the poore blessed Iob. Iob 31.20 So inferiours may blesse their superiours that is pray to God for them So the Child may blesse the father the people the Minister the subjects the Prince but properly to speake blessing is a pronouncing and an actuall bestowing of happinesse on them that are blessed Thus God Almighty doth blesse us all thus CHRIST blessed his Church at his Ascension into heaven hee left an actuall blessing with them and in them with us all thus the Priests in the name of God blessed the people and so doe we that be the Ministers of the Gospell at this day we as Gods Ambassadours and in CHRIST 's stead 2 Cor. 5. doe not only pronounce a blessing on the People but by the gracious operation of Gods Spirit wee are as Gods hands to powre downe a blessing on them In this respect we sustaine Gods person and are greater than the people whom we blesse The Papists ascribe too much to the blessing of the Ministers and we give too little to it they say that a Bishops
of Holies even as it is termed Hakodesh Levit. 16.2 Loe say some heaven was not opened in the time of the Law till the passion of our Saviour Christ therfore the Patriarchs and others that dyed then went not to heaven but were in place of rest distinct from heaven this is their limbus patrum which they have forged But quickly to stop their mouthes it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Gate in the Kings Pallace may be opened though not knowne The way to the Holiest of all that is to heaven prefigured by their Sanctum Sanctorum was not yet manifested it was obscured under Types and figures darkely revealed to them Not all the people but one man entred into the Holy of Holies a type of heaven and hee but once a yeare The way to heaven was not so cleerely manifested then as it is now when Christ Iesus our fore-runner is gone into it before us and for us The faithfull then knew the way to heaven and immediately after death went to heaven but they had not such a cleare knowledge of it as wee have This is probable The first Tabernacle as yet having his standing whereby he doth not meane the first part of the Tabernacle as hee did before but the whole Tabernacle for indeed it was but one though divided into two parts while the Tabernacle of the Iewes with all the rites and ceremonies belonging to it was yet standing It is called the first in respect of Christ's body which was the second Tabernacle It is the Holy Ghost that speaketh in the Scripture 2 Pet. 1. ult 2 Tim. 3.16 Iacob said of Bethel the Lord is in this place and I was not aware of it So the Holy Ghost is in the Scripture and we are not aware of it The Holy Ghost speaks in Genesis Exodus Leviticus in the Psalmes in the Prophets he speakes in the Gospels in the Epistles of St. Paul and St. Peter therefore when the Scripture is read let us heare with all reverence because God Almighty speaketh in them No place of holy Scripture is idle no not the framing of the Tabernacle the Holy Ghost therby doth signifie to us many holy mysteries in it therefore let no portion of Scripture be lightly regarded by us Wee know the way to heaven better than they did therefore wee should walke more carefully and conscionably in it then they did our Lord and Saviour our Head and Husband Christ Iesus is gone into heaven to prepare a place for us blessed are the eyes that see which we see Therefore if we tread not in this way but rather take the way to hell our condemnation shall bee the greater at the latter day As God in mercy hath opened the way to heaven more cleerly to us then to them So let us be carefull to take this way to the everlasting joy and comfort of us all VERSE 9. THis signification hee doth further prosecute 1. Shewing the use of that Tabernacle 2. The inabilitie of the service of it For the use it was a figure a parable Which signifies both a dark speech Mat. 13.10 and a figurative speech a similitude or likenes Take a similitude from the fig-tree that tabernacle was a similitude of a more excellent tabernacle to come namely of the body of Christ V. 11. that is illustrated by the time and the manner It was to bee a similitude but for the time present during the ceremoniall Law till the fulnes of time came that Christ shold come and be made of a woman The manner how it did prefigurate Christ by certaine gifts and sacrifices that were then offered Which were only figurativa not exhibitiva they did only figure out Christ by whom we are made holy and perfect but they could not make us holy Concerning the flesh and the outward man they might purifie them but they could not purifie the soule and conscience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the which time Are offered Peradventure that Temple stood when he wrote this Epistle therefore hee uses the present tense or hee speakes according to the custome of the time when they were used Make holy or perfect the word signifies both Him that worshipped God by them that by them performed divine service to God Hebr. 7.19 These did only point at Christ by whom we are made holy and perfect justified and sanctified by him so as our consciences be at peace with God Hebr. 10.2 by the meere offering up of a Calfe a Lamb c. Their consciences could not bee freed from the guilt and punishment of sin our consciences are pacified only by the sacrifice of Christ on the Crosse applyed to us by faith which was prefigured by those sacrificers Rom. 5.1 Conscience is a register that keeperh a note of all our sins Some times he may be a sleepe and say nothing but at one time or other he will awake and bring all our sins to our remembrance then what shall we doe whither shall we flie Where shall we find comfort As the sacrifices in the time of the Law could not pacifie the conscience So it is not the hearing of a thousand masses the going in Pilgrimage to the holy land it is not the building of Churches the giving of almes though these be excellent things if they flow from a true faith it is not the cogitation of our workes simply in themselves without Christ Iesus that can quiet our consciences Saint Paul in this sense disclaimed his workes I desire to be found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith It is only Christ Iesus and the application of his sacrifice to us by a lively faith that can secure our consciences and stay the rage of them being justified by faith wee have peace with God the bloud of Christ purgeth us from all sinne Therefore let us entreat the Lord to assure our consciences upon good grounds that Christ is ours that hee hath dyed for all our sinnes and that his righteousnesse is ours then shall we have comfort of conscience in all calamities yea in death it selfe in this present life and shall triumph with Christ in the life to come VERSE 10. THat they could not purge the Conscience he evinceth by the nature and quality of them No carnall fleshly or outward thing can cleanse the heart or conscience these are only Carnall rites and outward ceremonies a carnall commandement Hebr. 7.16 consisting of meates drinkes c. therefore they cannot pacifie the conscience that is only the bloud of Christ that purgeth us from all sin These are illustrated by the time of their continuance Imposed as an heavy loade and importable burthen Act. 15.10 whereof we are now eased by Christ. There is some question about the grammaticall construction because the participle is of the accusative case plurall and
cannot agree with any thing that went before Some say it is an enallage of case the accusative put for the dative Some will have it to agree with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the first Verse and all the rest to bee included within a parenthesis as Iunius but that should be a wonderfull long parenthesis Rather something must be supplyed as it is usuall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of correction Not as if any thing were amisse simply evill in the ceremoniall Law A reformation properly to speake is of abuses there was no fault no abuses in the Law it selfe it was a good and an holy thing for the time but it is said to be reformed by Christ because hee did perfect that which was wanting in the ceremoniall Law hee actually introduced the justification and sanctification of the faithfull which the ceremoniall Law could not effect of and by it selfe And it may be termed the time of reformation because Christ abolished those old Ceremonies and sacrifices and brought better in their roome namely the sacrifice of his owne body once offered which was a thousand times more effectuall for the redemption of mankinde then all the sacrifices in the Law This is that blessed reformation which the Gospell bringeth All things have their time The Ceremoniall Law had her time and the Gospell hath his time Wee our selves have but our time some threescore yeeres and tenne and then we are gone Let us use our time well here that wee may live with Christ time out of time The Gospell is a time of reformation Christ then reformed the Law for our sakes and all things that were in the Old Testament old things are passed away and shall wee our selves remaine unreformed As Christ hath reformed the Law for our salvation so let us suffer him to reforme us Let all things now bee reformed among Christians Let us reforme our drunkennesse uncleannesse pride malice contentions our negligent comming to Sermons and all other vices that be among us that when the great time of reformation comes at the day of judgement we being thus reformed may enter into the holy Hierusalem and remaine with Christ for ever There is a formation a deformation and a reformation The formation was at the first Creation of the world then God put all things into a good forme and order he beheld all that hee had made and loe it was good yea exceeding good after that came a deformation by the fall of man and that put all out of order againe upon that a reformation was made 1. By a generall deluge that purged all the earth 2. By the Patriarcks after the floud 3. By Moses when the Law was published in writing 4. By our Saviour Christ and that is double the one at his first comming the other at the second The spirit of God here entreateth of the first So that the time of the Gospell is the time of reformation Now especially ought Christians to endeavour a reformation Every one will take on him to reforme the Church Weavers and Taylors will enterprize that The Church is out of order let that be reformed I but true reformation must begin at our selves there is a ruinated house to be repaired and reformed where will yee begin at the top or at the bottome will ye goe to the tiling of it before yee look to the ground selling of it if yee doe so you may quickly bring an old house on your heads He that will repaire an house must begin at the foundation so if yee will have a reformation reforme your selves first and in the reformation of your selves begin with the heart cast out the uncleane lusts the pride envy malice covetousnesse that lye lurking in the corners of your hearts afterwards reforme your eyes tongues hands and all the members of your body first wash the inside of the Cup and platter then the outside else yee will be but whited tombes and painted Sepulchers as the Pharisees were this is the best order in reforming First let every man strive to reforme himselfe the vices whereunto himselfe is given In the next place let him reforme his family after that let every one in his place labour to reforme the Towne wherein hee dwells to rid it of drunkards of idle persons to establish good orders in it for the credit of the Gospell professed by us This is the time of reformation let us all in the feare of God reforme our selves there shall not be a haire amisse in our head but we will reforme it if we have a spotted Coate or garment we will reforme it and shall wee our selves remaine unreformed while the time of reformation lasts let us reforme our selves death may seaze on us ere wee bee aware and then it will be too late to reforme Let us reforme our selves here that we may be Citizens of the heavenly Hierusalem hereafter Now followes the application of the type with all the particular branches of the same Wherein all of them are applyed to our Saviour Christ he is the marke at the which they all aimed the scope whereunto all must bee referred hee is the true High Priest prefigured by him in the time of the Law his body is the true Tabernacle by the which he entreth into the Holy of Holies the Sanctuary or holiest of all is heaven his bloud is the true bloud shadowed out by the bloud of all the sacrifices in the time of the Law Thus Christ is the end of the whole ceremoniall Law it was but as a Schoolemaster to send us to him But in this application to observe some order that might bee a light to us all in it two points are propounded to us 1. An application of the Tabernacle à Verse 11. to 21. 2. Of the rites belonging to it à 21. ad finem The Tabernacle is applyed to Christ. 1. As he is a Priest reconciling us to God ab 11. to 15. 2. As he is a testator making a gracious Will and Testament for us à 15. to 21. 1. The dignity of his Priest-Hood 2. A confirmation of it Verse 13. the dignity is set forth by the object Tabernacle Sacrifice In the application of the Tabernacle as he is a Priest there bee three points 1. The verity and truth of the Tabernacle 2. The service of it 3. The use and end of it VERSE 11. BBeing come farre excelling all the High-Priests in the time of the Law To us in the flesh manifesting himselfe to the world hee was an High-Priest in Gods eternall counsell from the beginning but now at his first comming into the world hee shewed himselfe in all his Spirituall pontificalibus to be an High-Priest Of what not of things present and before their eyes as they were Verse 9. but of things to come shadowed out by them Hebr. 10.1 of Iustification Sanctification and eternall Glorification in the life to come of these good things to come were the ceremonies of the Law
ashes of that ashes a certaine water was to be made which being sprinckled on them that were uncleane by the touching of a dead body c. it did sanctifie them and made them capable of the Tabernacle being purified by that water they might goe with the rest of the people into the place of Gods worship This Cow was a type of Christ. 1. As shee was Red So was hee dyed red in his owne bloud 2. As she was without spot or scab or any disease So Christ was without the spot of sin 3. As shee was never used to the yoke no more was Christ to the yoke and servitude of sin 4. As she dyed so Christ. Therefore if the water made of her ashes was precious much more the bloud of Christ sprinckled on our consciences In the proofe of this hee doth not insist because it was confessed by the Iewes So I thinke holy water may sanctifie touching the purity of the flesh If a man have dirt on his face when he is about to enter into the Church their holy water may take it away but it cannot helpe for any spirituall thing to scare away Devills or to put away veniall sins VERSE 14. THerefore he proceeds to the Apodosis Where 1. The sacrifice of Christ. 2. The end of it Not equally but much more Then the bloud of a beast The which he illustrateth by diverse circumstances 1. By the Person that offered this bloud he was Sacerdos victima 2. By the Party or power by the which he offered it Some by the eternall Spirit understand the Holy Ghost as by him he was conceived in the Virgins wombe by him lead into the wildernesse to bee tempted Mat. 4.1 So through his assistance he offered up himselfe but by the eternall Spirit is rather meant the eternall deity of our Saviour Christ 1 Pet. 3.18 19. As hee was man consisting of flesh and bloud So he was also God an eternall and incomprehensible spirit From this his infinite and unspeakeable deity the bloud of CHRIST received a power to make satisfaction for our sinnes Whereupon it is called the bloud of God Acts 20.28 The bloud of none that was a meere man could doe it if CHRIST 's bloud had not beene offered up by his eternall spirit it could not have purchased our redemption The bloud of Martyrs was offered up by the assistance of the HOLY GHOST yet it was not meritorious it was not that but the power of the deity that made Christ's bloud meritorious 3. By the thing offered not any brute Creature not a man an Angell but Himselfe 4. By the quality of the thing offered even in respect of his humanity and for that cause his bloud was more forcible 5. To whom to God As a full satisfaction for the sins of the world Then he comes to the efficacy of the bloud of Christ deduced out of the former the bloud of Goats and Bulls did purge the flesh and outward man this the conscience and inward man In some Greeke copies it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our consciences All stand in need of purging We have a double benefit by the bloud of Christ justification and sanctification from dead workes that is sins Now from these dead workes that lay as an heavy loade on our consciences the bloud of Christ purgeth us Sinnes are called dead workes 1. Because they come from dead men 1 Tim. 5. Verse 6. Eph. 2. Verse 1. 2. Because they engender death Rom. 6. ult The bloud of CHRIST purgeth our consciences from all sinnes so as our consciences cannot accuse and condemne us for sinne because it is washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Hebr. 10.2 Rom. 8.1 The second fruit issuing from the former is our sanctification that being thus justified wee may be sanctified in soule and body to serve the living God Luk. 1.74 He is stiled the living God 1. Because he lives of himselfe and that for ever 2. Because hee makes us by his spirit to live a spirituall life in this world 3. Because hee will raise us up from a corporall death at the latter day and cause us to live with him for ever in the world to come 1. Grievous is the sting of Conscience This chest worme gnaweth sore this made Iudas to cry out I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud This made Iosephs brethren to condemne themselves when no man laid any thing to their charge verily wee have sinned in that wee saw the anguish of his soule when hee besought us and wee would not heare This made those Iohn 8. that seemed holy men to the eye of the world to depart out of the Temple one by one being convicted of their owne consciences This was truly said to be mille testes Now how shall wee stoppe the mouth of these thousand witnesses We are all miserable sinners our consciences accuse us of innumerable sinnes but here is our comfort the bloud of Christ sprinkled on our consciences purgeth us from all sinne being justified by faith wee have peace with God Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God 's Elect it is CHRIST that hath dyed yea rather that is risen againe that with his owne bloud hath entred into the holy place and hath made an eternall expiation of our sinnes Let us all entreat the Lord to apply the force of this bloud to our consciences dayly more and more 2. There bee living workes a reverent using of the name of GOD a cheerefull and reverent hearing of his word temperance chastitie sobriety liberality c. these come from us when wee live by faith in the Sonne of GOD there bee also dead workes blasphemie swearing lying covetousnesse pride oppression envie hatred malice and these are to bee abhorred of us all 1. Dead things stincke If wee meete with a dead carkasse by the way wee hold our noses even so sinnes blasphemie prophanations pride envie hatred malice covetousnesse these stincke in the nostrills of God Almighty therefore let them be detested by us 2. Dead men are forgotten I am as a dead man out of minde So let not our mindes run on these dead workes on the profits of the world the pleasures of the flesh let these dead things bee no more remembred 3. That which is dead must be buryed give me a place to bury my dead out of my sight as Abraham said to the sons of Heth Gen. 23.4 Idolatry blasphemy all sins are dead things therefore let them be buryed 4. Dead things are abhorred of us We shun dead things by the way we will not come neere them so let these dead workes be abhorred of us Wee decline those things that bee deadly wee will drinke no poyson because it will kill us we will not goe where the plague is least wee dye All sins are deadly they will bring us to everlasting death therefore beware of them If wee meet with a dead body by the way wee decline it yet the savour that comes from it can but
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
head of it is in heaven and their conversation is in heaven the Church which is termed the kingdome of heaven should be purified with these that is with earthly things like to themselves They were earthly and they ought to bee purified with earthly things the ashes of an Heifer the bloud of Calves Goates c. But the heavenly things themselves that be under the Gospell which is a Gate and entrance into the kingdome of heaven the Church in the time of the Gospell the true Tabernacle and faithfull Citizens of heaven it was necessary that these should be purified with better sacrifices above these namely with the sacrifice of Christ himselfe else we could never have had any right to the kingdome of heaven Christ's one sacrifice is here called by the name of many because it is compared with the many sacrifices in the Law and opposed to them Not because there be many Masse Sacrifices to represent this one sacrifice Here wee see how wee are advanced above them in the time of the Law they had the patternes wee the things patterned they painted flowers we the flowers themselves they the shadowes wee the body they the picture we the man they the lineaments of the house we the house it selfe How are we beholden to God happy are the eyes that see what we see O that wee could walke worthy of them Better No comparison betweene them no more than betweene the creatures and the Creator What are Bulls Goates Calves to the Son of God that hath offered himselfe for us VERSE 24. THe Holy of Holies was a type of heaven Not made with the hands of Aholiab and Bezaleel Which were antitypes as it were pictures in waxe to represent this a stampe of this Into heaven it selfe whereof that was a type Act. 1.11 Manifestly and openly Not for a little while to goe out againe as the High-Priest did when he had prayed and sacrificed for the people but now and continually Not for himselfe but for us By the demonstration of his own sacred body wherein hee hath suffered for us to make intercession for us So long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare in the sight of God Of themselves they cry up to heaven for vengeance but Christ our Advocate and High-Priest is in heaven to answer for us Indeed father they are grievous sinners but here am I which in my owne body have borne the burden of their sins In the Courts here on earth men have Advocates and Proctours that appeare for them Christ our Advocate appeares in heaven for us therefore wee neede not to feare Who shall lay any thing to the charge of GODS elect It is CHRIST that appeareth in heaven for us 2. As hee is gone into heaven so we shall one day bee in heaven with him In the time of the Law the High-Priest went into the Sanctum Sanctorum but hee could carry none of the people with him Our High-Priest will bring us all into the true Holy of Holies the kingdome of heaven Father I will that they also whom thou hast given mee be with me where I am The fore-runner is gone before us and we shall follow after hee himselfe hath told us that in his Fathers house there be many mansions and he is gone to prepare a place for us What a dignity is this that dust and ashes should sit in the heavenly place with CHRIST Let this comfort us against all the crosses and calamities of this life What though wee be sicke many weekes together What though wee bee pinched with poverty for a time in this world and with soares as Lazarus c. all these one day shall have an end and wee shall bee in heaven with Christ have Palmes in our hands Crownes on our heads where all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes for ever VERSE 25. HHimselfe Hebr. 1.3 Often as the High-Priest offered often Every yeere whereas Christ but once Other bloud of Goates Calves c. Let us remember that which St. Peter telleth us we are redeemed from our old conversation wee are washed from our sins by the bloud of Christ therefore let us not wallow like swine in the dunghill of sin againe VERSE 26. BEcause there were sins in all ages of the world to bee done away CHRIST 's death was prefigured from the beginning of the world by the death of Abel by the oblation of Isaac by the sacrifice of many beasts in the time of the Law yet hee suffered but once Now not in the precedent or future time but now in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4.4 End of the world 1 Cor. 10.11 1 Ioh. 2.18 Hora. Though 1600 yeeres and moe are passed since yet a thousand yeeres are but as a day with the Lord. Hath he beene manifested 1 Tim. 3.16 appeared in the nature of man truly like to us in all things sin only excepted To the abolishing so as hereafter it shall bee of no force to accuse and condemne us or to shut us out of heaven There is sin still remaining in us but the guilt and punishment thereof is put away how not by the sacrifice of a Lamb Goate Calfe c. but by the sacrifice of himselfe Why did not GOD send CHRIST at the beginning of the world 1. Hee would have sicke man for a time to bee humbled with the sight and feeling of his disease that the Physitian might bee more welcome when he came 2. He would have the prophesies concerning Christ to bee fulfilled before he came A sharpe and evident knife to cut the throat of the Masse withall If CHRIST be offered up in the sacrifice of the Masse then hee suffers at every Masse for there can bee no offering of Christ without suffering but he suffers not even in the judgement of the Papists neither Bellarmine nor any of them all can though full of shifts tell handsomely how to elude this argument for here their unbloudy sacrifice hath a deadly wound There can bee no oblation of Christ without the suffering of Christ. The world then is not eternall as some Philosophers dreamed it had a beginning and it shall have an end onely GOD is without beginning and ending for the Angels themselves had a beginning If the end of the world was in the time of CHRIST and of his Apostles then now it must needs bee at an end now it lyes a gasping and is ready to yeeld up her breath that day is at hand when the world shall passe away with a noyse Therefore why doe wee dote so much on the world wilt thou sit feasting and banquetting in a rotten house that is ready to fall on thy head Such an house is the world therefore rather hasten to bee out of it The wicked are called the men of this world wee that bee the faithfull are men of another world ye are not of the world sayes our SAVIOUR CHRIST yet for all that wee are meere worldlings following the pleasures and
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
in token of that his voluntary service But hee could not have his eares prepared for the doing of the will of his Father unlesse he had a body Therefore the Seventie to make it more cleere sayes a body hast thou prepared for me wherein I should doe thee service and suffer for mankinde And because all the Sacrifices in the Law could not take away sin therefore was this body of Christ prepared by the Lord that should be sacrificed for the sins of the world No other sacrifice was able to make satisfaction to Gods justice for the sins of men Verse 10. There is joy when any man child commeth into the world but much more have we all cause to skip for joy at Christ's comming into the world Vnto us a child is given to us a Sonne is borne behold I bring you tidings of great joy sayd the Angel to the Shepheards when Christ came into the world The Angels sung at his comming which needed not to be redeemed by him and shall not we men sing for his comming for whose redemption he came into the world it had beene better for us we had never set a foot into the world if he had not come into the world Therefore let us praise God all the dayes of our life for his comming into the world When he commeth into the world that was the maker of the world For by him all things were made nay that which is more when hee commeth into the world that was the Saviour and redeemer of the world that reconciled the world to God and yet found no kind entertainment in the world he was rayled at spitted on buffetted whipped crucified he came into the world but the world received him not And shal we that be Christians imagine to find any kindnes in the world it hated the Head and wil it love the members no we must look to have a step-mother of the world as Christ had we must looke for crosses and afflictions in the world as he had As Christ came into the world so in the time appointed by the Father he went out of the world again and so must we There is a time to be borne and a time to dye as we came into the world so we must go out of the world Where we came we may know but where we shall go out we cannot tel Let us glorifie Christ while we be here that at our departure out of the world we may live with him in eternall glory He saith not so soone as he came into the world when he lay in the cratch but he said in the time of his humiliation in the world And how came he into the world after a base and ignominious manner borne of a poore woman affianced to a Carpenter that was brought to bed in a stable in the Inne where hee was laid in a Manger wrapped up in meane swadling clouts This was the manner of his first comming contemptible in the eyes of the world But his second comming shal be most glorious when he shall come in the clouds with all his holy Angels attending on him Now he came as a Lamb to be killed therefore he came meanely then he shall come as a Lion and a King to reigne for ever Therfore that shall be a glorious comming it shall be terrible to the wicked but most comfortable to us that be the wife of the Lord Iesus A true body made of a Woman the fruit of her Wombe as ours is not an aerie or phantasticall body as some Heretickes dreamed A body in all substantiall things like to ours differing only in one accidentall thing and that is sinne him that knew no sinne did God make sinne for us God ordained him a soule too The deity did not supply the office of his soule as Apollinaris did imagine he had a true soule too as we have wherein he suffered for our sakes my soule is heavy to the death But because the body is conspicuous so is not the soule and because he was to dye in his body he could not dye in respect of his soule therefore the spirit of God nameth that God hath ordained a body for every man but a more speciall and excellent body for our Saviour Christ a body conceived not by the conjunction of a man and a woman but extraordinarily by the Holy Ghost that being a most pure and sacred body not infected with the least spot and contagion of sinne it might be a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the world Ours are most wretched and sinfull bodies that because they are poysoned with sin must one day see corruption and bee consumed to dust and ashes Lazarus body did stincke when it lay foure dayes in the earth Ours in regard of sin are stincking bodies but Christ's was a most glorious body and for that cause saw no corruption Absalom had a beautifull body yet a wretched body Saul had a comely body yet a miserable body The body of the fairest Lady on earth is a vile body only Christ's was a glorious body The Martyrs bodies that were burnt for the profession of the Gospell were in some respect to be honoured because they were the Temples of the Holy Ghost and sealed up the truth of the Gospell with their bloud yet all their bodies joyned together nor the bodies of all the holy men in the world could make satisfaction for one sinne therefore God ordained Christ a body for this purpose to be offered up for the sins of us all As for our bodies let us labour to offer them up as a lively sacrifice to God in all obedience to him in this life that Christ may change them and make them like his glorious body in the life to come VERSE 6. THe reason why thou hast prepared this body for me is because in burnt offerings and sinne offerings thou hadst no pleasure These would not content thee therefore I come with my body into the world Supply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here he reckons up two other sacrifices used in the Law which God likewise rejected Loa shealta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sense is all one VERSE 7. FReely of mine owne accord as 1 Reg. 22.21 Isai. 6.8 as an obedient child sayes to his father loe I come father if it be to preferment a man will say loe I come but if it be to the Gallowes for another who will say loe I come Why because in the beginning of thy booke that mooved him to it that the things written of him might be performed Hebr. Bimgillath in volumine in the scrowle For the Bible with the Iewes as it is at this day was wrapped up in a scrowle not printed as it is among us Megillath of Galal volvere The Seventie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath bred diversity of interpretations Some referre it to the beginning of the Psalmes Psalm 1.2 whereas that is spoken of all the godly others to the first verse in all the Bible In the
But ignorant persons cannot commit the sin against the Holy Ghost they must be men of knowledge that fall into this sinne therefore the more knowledge we have the more carefull wee should be that we be not carryed by little and little into this sinne Knowledge puffeth up knowledge breeds pride and pride may tumble us into hell before we be aware The Devill at the first and so hee is still was of wonderfull knowledge he saw what was in heaven yet he was carryed into the sinne against the Holy Ghost he sinned maliciously against the knowledge which hee had received The Pharisees were men of singular knowledge sitting in Moses chaire reading Divinity lectures to the people most skilfull in the Law of God these fell into this horrible sinne many of them as is apparant in the Gospell Therefore let them that have knowledge looke to themselves Let us not thinke highly of our selves for our knowledge least we fall into the condemnation of the Devill To whom much is given of them much is required Therefore the more knowledge GOD hath given us the more often let us be in prayer that we may employ it to the glory of the giver The more we know the more humble let us be and crave the gracious assistance of God's Spirit to guide our knowledge to his glory the good and benefit of our brethren As wee have science so let us have conscience and as we abound in knowledge so let us abound in practice and be plentifull in the fruits of righteousnesse by Iesus Christ. 3. Every sin that is done willingly is not the sinne against the Holy Ghost David lay with Bathshebah willingly and for the most part we sinne willingly with joy and delight but this sinne hath malice annexed to it as we shall see afterwards They fall toti à toto in totum scienter volenter malitiosè irrevocabiliter It is as cleere as the noone day that the sinne against the Holy Ghost cannot be forgiven it is peccatum irremissibile This is so cleere in Scripture as that the Papists cannot deny it yet they will smooth it with the oyle of distinction it is called irremissibile ordinariè non absolutè as Bellarmine speaketh because ordinarily it cannot be forgiven not because forgivenesse is absolutely denyed unto it aegrè difficulter it can bee forgiven yet with much adoe and seldome it is forgiven But Christ sayes it can never bee forgiven neither in this world nor in the world to come not it can hardly be forgiven but never Saint Iohn calls it a sinne to death not a sinne neere death that cannot be forgiven without great difficulty but such a sin as strikes the party with the dart of death without recovery Every sinne is to death without the mercy of GOD in CHRIST but this is a sinne to death without a remedy The death of CHRIST cannot cure this sinne Without Repentance none can bee forgiven These men cannot repent Ergo it cannot bee forgiven There remaineth no sacrifice for this sinne the sacrifice of CHRIST cannot abolish this sinne because it is contemned by them and was never ordained for them A lamentable sin Let us entreat the Lord above all sins to keepe us from this There is a sacrifice for Idolatry for common swearing for prophanenesse for theft treason adultery murder these bee horrible sinnes and the Lord preserve us from them yet these may be washed away in the bloud of Christ sacrificed on the Crosse for us but there is no sacrifice for these sinners Lord keepe mee sayes Dauid from presumptuous sinnes But much more let us pray Lord keepe us from this sinne of sinnes the sinne against the HOLY GHOST and undoubtedly hee will keepe all his from it for they that are borne of God cannot sinne unto death VERSE 27. BVt on the contrary side Hee doth not say the present judgement of GOD shall light on them but that which is a mervailous torture to their conscience a fearefull and continuall expectation of it being assured it will one day come upon them as a condemned man lookes every houre to dye The godly stand in a joyfull expectation of CHRIST his comming and wish for it Come Lord Iesu come quickly but the expectation of his comming strikes a continuall terrour to the wicked which is as a racke to them in the meane season The devils believe there is a God and tremble so these apostats believe there is a day of judgement and quake at the recordation of it And the Zeale or fervency of fire goe ye cursed into everlasting fire Fire is terrible therefore the paines of hell are described by it Fire is devouring it devoures an whole towne This is a devouring fire it shall alwayes be a devouring of them and yet never fully devoure them they shall ever be burning and never burned Whom them that are opposite to Christ that wage battle against him open and professed enemies set on the other side against Christ yet under a kind of pretext and colour as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth import inverting to themselves some colourable reason why they should doe so This is that which hee said Heb. 6. They are a reprobate earth whose end is to be burned Here it is evident to us all that there is a day of judgement There is a lake burning with fire and brimstone The wicked would not looke for that which is not they looke and that with feare and horrour for the judgment to come Felix trembled therefore there is a judgement The thieves would not be afraid of the Assizes if there were no judgement The very devils and all the wicked know there is a judgement to come Why art thou come to torment us before the time they knew there was a time when they shold be tormented but they complained that CHRIST with his holy presence tormented them before the time Therefore let us all after a godly manner feare this judgement As for them that thinke there is no judgement they are worse than the Devill 2 Thes. 1.8 There is a violent fire that shall devoure the adversaries an unquenchable fire prepared for the Devill and his Angels Doe not imagine that ignis gehennae is ignis fatuus It is said of the Sodomites that they suffer the vengeance of eternall fire God hath appointed a day wherein hee will judge the world in righteousnesse and wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of CHRIST Therefore let us often thinke upon it and let it be as a bridle to restraine us from sinne Whether I eate or drinke said Ierome mee thinkes the trumpet soundeth in my ears surgite mortui venite ad judicium Even now when wee are eating and drinking making merry at the Nativitie of our Blessed SAVIOUR even now when wee are in the middest of all our mirth and Christmasse games let us remember there is a judgement and let us live here that wee may stand without trembling before the Sonne of
man at the latter day The very conscience of a man doth tell him at one time or other whether hee will or no that there is a day of judgement Why are men vexed in their soules when they have sinned when they have committed such sinnes as the Law cannot take hold off as oppression and wrongs offered to their brethren secret adulteries c. Why are they grieved for these and can find no rest in them if there were not a judgment to come VERSE 28. HEre is the equity of it He that abrogates it that pulls it out of place that violates it elata manu Num. 15.30 Not he that in a small offence transgresseth the Law but that breaketh it in some monstrous and notorious manner either by blasphemy by contemptuous prophaning by contumacy against father and mother and hee that doth transgresse these lawes in a despite and contempt of them hee must needs be put to death there is no remedy No mercy is to be shewed in it the Law must have his course without respect of persons whether hee bee high or low rich or poore hee must dye for it No bribe may save his life Deut. 19.21.13 8. Yet good advice must bee had in putting him to death there must be an orderly proceeding against him his fault must be convinced by sufficient witnesses All Moses lawes were not written with bloud as Draco's were but only great and capitall crimes Such were to dye without mercy Mercie is an excellent vertue a divine vertue draweth neere to the nature of God which is the Father of mercies be yee mercifull as your heavenly father is mercifull Yet for all that mercy in some actions is to be shut out of doores We must sing of judgement as well as of Mercy as David did Mercy is not so to be imbraced as that Iustice should bee forgotten they that have transgressed the Law especially in contempt of the Law are to dye without mercy the Lord often toucheth upon this string We must not be more mercifull then God will have us Saul spared Agag but it cost him his kingdome Some will say of a thiefe a murderer condemned to dye is it not pitty such a proper man as he should dye no verily foolish pitty marrs the Citty If such a one be permitted to live hee may doe much hurt in the common-wealth therefore no pitty is to bee shewed to him mercy must bee stretched no further than God hath appointed But how must he dye orderly being convicted by the due course and order of Law The fact must be sufficiently proved before sentence of death passe against him and how must it be proved either by his owne confession or by the testimony of others Now one man may be partiall or he may speake on spleene and malice therefore two witnesses at least must be produced Iesabel procured two witnesses against Nabal Two witnesses were brought in against our SAVIOUR CHRIST Timothy must not receive an accusation against an Elder but under two or three witnesses There was thought no probability that two would conspire in an untruth the one at the length would bewray the jugling of the other Therefore if there were two then he dyed but now the world is growne to such an height of impiety as that it is as easie a matter to suborne two false witnesses to get two knaves to sweare an untruth as to take the pot and drinke A most vile age wherein we live but from the beginning it was not so VERSE 29. THe interrogation is more forcible then if it had beene a plaine affirmation they dyed the death of the body but these are worthy of the death where soule and body shall dye for ever Be you Iudges in the matter I dare appeale to your own selves Then he sets forth the greatnesse of their sin which ariseth by three steps or degrees 1. They in the Law despised Moses which was but a man these Christ which is the Son of God therfore they are worthy of a sharper punishment they broke but one particular Law these renounce the whole Gospell of CHRIST the Son of God They have not Christ actually to tread upon he is in heaven at the right hand of God but metonymically in treading his truth under their feete which they make no reckoning of in conculcating the benefits of CHRIST offered to them they tread CHRIST Himselfe or they carry such a spitefull minde against him as if possible they would pull him out of heaven and tread him under their feete They did it not actu but affectu This is the vilest indignity that can be offered to any to make him as dirt to tread on The Souldiers crucified CHRIST but they did not treade him under their feete For Traytors to tread the King under their feete is a monstrous thing yet these as arrant Traytors did tread Christ the King of Kings under their feete Horrible wretches In this they opposed themselves to his kingdome In the next to his Priest-hood Christ by his last Will and Testament gave us a Legacie of the kingdome of heaven Luk. 22.29 the which Testament was confirmed by the bloud and death of the Testatour Matth. 26.28 Now this holy precious and pure bloud wherewith we are washed from our sinnes these impure wretches account an unholy a common a polluted thing Mark 7.2 Acts 10.15 They make no more account of the bloud of Christ then of the bloud of a thiefe nay of a dogge or swine yet they had some benefit by this bloud Last of all they opposed themselves to the prophesie of Christ. It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they abuse him with some notable reproach and contumelie Which is the fountaine and bestower of all graces He had given them many graces of knowledge of some faith hope love and zeale yet they contumeliously reproach this spirit revile him terming him a spirit of errour that had deluded them all this while For this cause they have sinned against the Holy Ghost In these respects they are worthy of most severe punishment no sacrifice for this sinne Is any pitty to bee shewed to them that In this world there is Mercy but none to bee expected in the world to come Then judgement mercilesse Now CHRIST standeth with open armes venite ad me omnes but then he shall say ite maledicti no mercy to be found for the wicked at the day of judgment God shew mercy to the house of Onesiphorus at that day there is mercy for the godly that be in Christ but none for the wicked that be out of Christ. And who be they that shall be so severely punished From hence may be collected a true definition of the sin against the Holy Ghost It is a malicious oppugning of the truth of the Gospell sealed up in their hearts by the HOLY GHOST they were enlightned in the mysterie of redemption purchased by Christ that he is the only Priest which
adversitie and prosperity too Though wee bee not thrust out of our houses spoyled of our goods banished the Country clapt up into prison carryed to the stake for the profession of the Gospell yet if wee belong to CHRIST wee shall alwayes have our Crosses All that will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persequution If any will be my Disciple let him take up his Crosse. God will exercise us one way or other either he will send us sicknesse or stirre up some rayling Shimeis against us he will evermore be trying of our faith Therefore we have need of patience It is as needfull as our meat and drinke Patience is the foode and nourishment of the soule Therefore the Lord in mercy give patience to us all From hence some conclude that good workes are necessary to salvation Patience is a good worke The Apostle avouches that it is necessary not only ratione praesentiae being good workes they cannot bee separated from faith sed ratione relationis ad salutem for here hee doth not simply say that patience is necessary but with a reference to eternall life that yee might receive the promise Wee grant good workes are necessary to salvation none can be saved without them but how not as meritorious causes of salvation that is CHRIST alone which hath purchased heaven for us with his owne bloud but necessary as fruit for a tree and the way for a passenger to goe by to his house and Country Good workes are the way to heaven and so necessary for us all to walke in In that respect we have need of patience of vertues and good workes VERSE 37. HEre is a remedy against impatiencie taken from the shortnes of the time wherein we are to suffer Thou callest for patience thou wouldest have us to be patient in our afflictions but how long shall we continue in them To that he answers parvum quàm quàm the ingemination of the word augmenteth the signification of it as Toboth Toboth Raagnoth Raagnoth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee that is the Lord Iesus Christ and deliver you out of all your miseries I he will come but it may be long first Nay he will make no tarrying If wee bee in any kinde of affliction wee thinke the time long though it be never so short As the Saints in the Apoc. 6.10 cry how long Lord So if wee be sicke we say how long Lord how long will it be ere this sicknesse be removed from me how long shall we endure the taunts of the wicked how long shall Christians in some Countries suffer banishment imprisonment losse of goods how long shall the Devill and his instruments tyrannize over them but a very little while even the turning of an hand the twinckling of an eye in respect of eternity What is tenne or twenty yeeres calamity if it should be so long What is thirtie eight or fortie yeeres as Ioh. 5. a man was so long diseased in his feete what is this to life everlasting who would not fight a while that he might have the victorie who would not take physike a while that he might be whole our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth unto us a farre most excellent and an eternall waight of glory Therefore let the shortnesse of our suffering comfort us hee that should come will come in his due and convenient time GOD comes to deliver us three kinde of wayes 1. By plucking us out of the temptations in this world as hee did Saint Paul out of the mouth of the Lion the Emperour of Rome 2. By our particular death he takes us out of the world by death and then there is an end of all our sorrow 3. By his comming at the generall judgement that is not long behold I come quickly Then shall we both in our bodies and soules in heaven where all teares shall be wiped from our eyes for ever Let us be of good comfort yet a very little while and the Lord will come graciously to us one way or other VERSE 38. THe second pillar for sustaining them in afflictions is Faith Where 1. The excellency of Faith 2. The application of it Verse 39. The excellency is 1. Set downe then illustrated Beemunatho Every man must live by his owne faith he cannot live by the faith of another In the Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by my faith that is by faith in me which is all one Here we see whereby a Christian lives not by the ayre as Camelions doe not by love as we use to say not simply by his meat and drinke by that indeed through Gods blessing the body liveth but the soule lives by faith Gal. 2.20 and they that want faith are dead even while they live as Saint Paul speaketh of the widdow A just holy and righteous man lives by faith I know whom I have believed Wee know what joy is laid up for us in heaven therefore we beare patiently all the afflictions of this present life We doe not only live by faith at our first conversion and justification as Saint Paul disputeth in his Epistle to the Romans but all the dayes of our life we live by faith Therefore let us entreat the Lord to encrease our faith that in all calamities we may live by it in this world and live without it in his kingdome in the world to come This is illustrated by the contrary but if any withdraw himselfe my soule shall have no pleasure in him So the Seventy have it The Hebrew in words is much different from it yet in sence they are all one Gnuphlah hee makes himselfe a tower whose heart is not upright in him He trusts to himselfe not to God that is he withdraweth himselfe from the Lord and if his heart bee not upright in him then God hath no pleasure in him But wee need not busie our selves in the reconciling of these places for Saint Paul doth not of purpose alleadge it as the Prophets testimony but only useth the words of the Scripture in them to commend faith to them If any with-draw himselfe by infidelity and thinke it a better course to sleepe in an whole skinne then to suffer any thing for Christ and his Gospell My soule Either it may be spoken in the person of the Apostle or in the person of GOD neither any good Christian nor GOD Himselfe will take any pleasure in such a one but hee is rather detested of God and man therefore let us live by faith and not withdraw our selves by infidelity VERSE 39. THen followes an application of it to the Hebrewes which is partly negative partly affirmative Though I have spoken of some unfaithfull persons that with-draw themselves or depart from the living God yet I would not have you imagine that I meane you that I put you into that black bill nay you are of another stamp you are birds of another feather yea he includes himselfe in their number that they might conceive the
made and that immediately with his owne hands 2. Satan the enemy of mankinde did now but begin to peepe out of the window he was not as yet knowne Adam had no experience of him therefore it is like that GOD would bee mercifull to him that was first circumvented by him Iren. l. 3. c. 34.35 3. God cursed not Adam but the earth Gen. 3.17 he is none of those cursed ones to whom CHRIST shall say at the latter day ite maledicti c. 4. When Adam and Eve had sinned they covered themselves with figge leaves which are sharpe and pricking thereby declaring their true repentance as Chrysostome observeth 5. As God made them a promise of CHRIST to come the seed of the woman c. So it is most likely that they layd hold on that promise by the hand of Faith for they brought up their children in the exercises of Religion to offer sacrifice as a figure of the true Lamb that was to be sacrificed on the Crosse for the sinnes of the world Externall sacrifices of Religion have beene practised by all in the lappe and bosome of the Church from the beginning of the world Cain did not refuse to sacrifice he offered a sacrifice as his brother did they therefore that contemne the exercises of Religion that will not come to church offer up the sacrifice of prayse and prayer with the rest of their brethren are worse than Caine. 2. Here wee see that opus operatum is not sufficient It is not enough to doe a good worke which GOD requireth at our hands but wee must performe it in such a manner as the Lord requireth we must not only doe bonum but bono The Pharisee prayed in the Temple and the Publican prayed the prayer of the one was acceptable of the other abominable The Pharisees heard CHRIST preach and many of the common people heard him preach to the one it was the savour of life to life to the other of death unto death Simon Magus was baptised and gave up his name to CHRIST and Lydia was baptised the one sincerely the other in Hypocrisie Peter received the Passeover and Iudas received it to the one it was honey to the other poyson The Pharisees gave almes and Cornelius The one went up into remembrance before God the other did not So Cain sacrificed and Abel sacrificed yet GOD had respect to the one not to the other Therefore we had need to beware with what minde and affection we doe good things It is not enough to come to Church to professe CHRIST to heare Sermons to receive the Holy Communion to offer up the sacrifice of thankesgiving with the congregation but wee must doe these things with a sincere heart da mihi cor not for fashion sake to be well thought of among men to be counted devout and religious persons but we must doe them in faith to glorifie God withall Againe here it is apparent to us all that God hath a care of his Children even when they be dead hee will revenge their bloud and the injuries offered to them when they be gone He remembred what Amaleck had done to Israel many yeeres after the dogs licked up Iesabels bloud a good while after Naboth was slaine Hierusalem that killed the Prophets and stoned them that were sent unto her doth now drinke deepe of the cup of Gods vengeance Abel was dead his body raked up in the earth yet his bloud spake and God heard it he set a brand of his indignation on Cain for it therefore let us take heed how we offer any wrong to God's Saints especially how we imbrew our fingers in their bloud Though they be dead and no man living will follow the Law against us yet God will proceede as a just Iudge against us This should encourage us to serve such a loving and carefull Master as GOD is sleeping and waking living and dying he takes us under the wing of his protection VERSE 5. 1. A Narration of Enoch his translation with all the circumstances belonging to it 2. A confirmation of it Verse 6. That Abel was made famous by faith he hath shewed in the Verse going before Now he comes to Enoch who also by vertue of faith is renowned in all ages None can please God but by faith Enoch pleased God and in token thereof he was translated into heaven Therefore Enoch was justified by faith In his translation there are these branches 1. The cause of it which was faith 2. The end of it that he should not see death 3. An effect of it he was no more found 4. The author of it which was God 5. The reason why because he pleased God Enoch was adorned with many rare and excellent vertues hee walked not after the course of the world in the broad way that leadeth to destruction but in the streight path of Gods Commandements he was full of prayers of almes deeds of fastings yet his translation is adscribed to his faith The just man lives by faith Faith is the wing whereby wee must all flie into the kingdome of heaven Hee was taken from one place and put into another from earth and placed in heaven The end There is a time to be borne and a time to dye It is appointed to all men once to dye Enoch was a man yet hee dyed not hee had a birth day but no dying day Death is a separation of the soule from the body Enoch in soule and body was taken up together into heaven this was his priviledge he escaped the axe of death that cuts of all our heads For a proofe of it he was not found in any place here upon the earth It is like that as some sought for Elias when in a fierie charret he was taken up into heaven so some sought for Enoch but he was no where to be found a writ of non inventus was returned Who tooke him away not the Devill that as some write tooke away some of the Popes but GOD Himselfe tooke him away Why For hee pleased GOD for it is twise said of him Gen. 5.22 24. that he walked with God he was no man pleaser but God pleaser The translation of Enoch is an intricate question that hath exercised the heads of many Divines Some are of opinion that he was turned of a man into an Angell but God makes no such metamorphoses In the kingdome of heaven we shall be like Angels but not Angels The greatest part of the Hebrew Rabbins doe peremptorily avouch that Enoch dyed The Hebrew phrases imply death Enoch was taken away and they that dye are taken away Psal. 39. ult Iob 32. ult Ezek. 24. God hath taken away such a neighbour of ours 2. Aenenu he was not so Gen. 42.36 I but here the Spirit of GOD avoucheth in expresse words making a Commentary of that in Genesis that he did not see death and if he had dyed as other men Moses would have shut up his life with the same clause that he
the ground VERSE 10. WHat mooved him to content himselfe with so meane a dwelling they made not so much reckoning of their habitation in this world as of that in the world to come therefore they did not greatly care how they dwelt here As for the land of Canaan though it were a pleasant Country flowing with milke and hony yet they knew they were not to continue in it long this made them to looke up to the heavenly Canaan whereof the earthly was but a type and figure Erecto capite his eye was also to that quasi accepturus Here hee had a Tent but there hee looked for a City 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for that City which alone deserves the name of a City it excells all earthly Cities in two respects In regard of the foundation and the founder thereof The Tents wherein they dwelt had no foundation they were fastned with nayles to posts and stakes set in the ground but this City hath a foundation earthly houses have but one foundation and subject to earth-quakes stormes tempests inundations and other casualities this hath many foundations Apoc. 21.14 and nothing can shake those foundations The Tower of Siloam it is like had a good foundation yet it fell the Abbies and Monasteries had sure foundations yet they are fallen the pallaces of Kings Noblemen and Gentlemen have strong foundations yet they shall all fall but the heavenly Hierusalem shall never fall Aholiab and Bezaleel made the Tabernacle Hyram the Temple Carpenters and Masons set up these Citties but God Himselfe is the maker and builder of this City These Cities may be overthrowne by waters the Sea may come in tumbling and sweepe them away these Townes and Citties may be consumed with fire there bee burnings almost every day these may be sacked with the enemy and made even with the ground as Hierusalem and the Temple are which were the wonder of the world wee may bee driven by famine and pestilence out of those townes and Cities howsoever they stand a while and we in them the time shall come when the earth with all the goodly buildings that be on it shall be burnt with fire Therefore let us use these Citties as we used them not let our hearts and affections bee in this City whose maker and builder is God We have not here an abiding City London is no abiding City Yorke Norwich no Towne is an abiding Towne Death will give us a remove out of all Townes but in this City wee shall abide for ever and reigne with CHRIST for evermore therefore let us all long for it He doth not say that he believed there was such a City but hee looked for it Iud. 5.28 We looke out of our windowes on sights in the streets Gardens Orchards c. but not out of the windowes of our hearts for this City Hee that lookes shortly for a new Coate will not bee much in love with his old for a faire house will not care for a cottage Wee looke after our wooll and cloath houses and lands c. Let us looke dayly for CHRIST 's comming that will put us in possession of this City As Saint Peter said unadvisedly of the Mount let us say likewise of this City it is good for us to bee here VERSE 11. WE have had the things which he did severally by himselfe now of him joyntly with his Wife because he toucheth a thing which he could not doe without his Wife Of whom he entreateth 1. Severally by herselfe then joyntly together with others Also together with her Husband The Faith of them both concurred in this Lyra shewes himselfe delirantem senem in avouching that Sarah had no faith in this he interprets it thus through faith that is of Abraham Sarah also received power but by it is meant her owne faith 1. Certaine facts of hers which she did by faith 2. The event that issued on them 1. A narration of facts 2. An illustration of them by the cause thereof The facts are two Conception and Procreation 1. She received strength to conceive seed to receive and retaine the seed that came from Abraham It might be translated to the emission of seede to the dejection of seede For the childe is framed of the seed of them both though Aristotle be of another opinion mater à materia quia ministrat materiam procreandae proli as the father doth Whereupon Christ is termed the fruit of the Virgins wombe She was now by the course of nature past conceiving of seed being ninety yeeres old a woman as Plinie observeth for the most part is past child bearing at fiftie then how could a woman conceive ●t ninetie not by nature but by the grace and power of God therfore it is said through faith she received strength to doe it 2. She brought forth a Child when there were two obstacles in the way barrennesse and old age The one is to be repeated out of Genesis God had shut up her wombe the other is here expressed Besides the season of age it was now no seasonable time for a woman of ninety yeeres to have a child yet by faith she had one And why what was the cause of it because she judged him faithfull c. this Lyra referres to Abraham because he judged as for Sarah she laughed at it and Abraham thought it an incredible thing yet it may be adscribed to Sarah her selfe as for Abraham he is not mentioned at all in this verse Some affirme that that laughter of Sarahs did issue ab admiratione non à dubitatione as Abrahams did Abraham laughed admiring not doubting of Gods promise so did Sarah yet the laughter of Sarahs must needs be condemned 1. She opposes two impediments to the promise which Abraham doth not 2. Shee is reproved by God for laughing who tells her that it issued from infidelity 3. Shee her selfe covers it with a lye which she would not have done if it had not beene an evill laughter How then is it true that Shee judged him faithfull who had promised At the first she doubted and derided it but afterwards being reprehended by GOD better instructed by her husband and pondering in her mind that it was GOD Almighty which had spoken it she believed it and judged him faithfull He that hath promised me a child is able to fulfill his promise faithfull to performe that which he hath promised therfore though I be barren and old too I shall have a child Gen. 21.6 7. 1. Women as yee see may have faith they may believe in Christ be members of his body and heyres of the kingdom of heaven The woman was the first in the transgression yet she shall be saved though it be a kinde of purgatory by the bearing of Children 2. God is pleased with marryed folke he that liveth in the flesh cannot please God that is as Pope Siricius expounds it in mariage Abraham and Sarah were marryed folke yet they pleased God Let not
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
Righteous man a true dealing man So some as Zacheus had faith he wrought righteousnesse the one halfe of his goods he gave to the poore and restored foure fold where he had done wrong but now men make profession of faith but have no righteousnesse The first table hath eaten up the second Men will not sweare not commit adultery in some sort they will keepe the Lords day they will come to Church heare Sermons talke of religion but come to the duties of the second table they make no conscience of them they will lye cozen flatter dissemble oppresse the fatherlesse deale unkindly and unmercifully with widdowes grinde the faces of the poore wring from their neerest and deerest by hooke and crooke a manifest argument they have no faith Luk. 1.6 for a faithfull man is alwayes a righteous man and he that loves God will love his brethren else he is a lyar and all his religion is in vaine The very Turkes and heathen that never heard of Christ are more full of the workes of righteousnesse then we There is more upright and mercyfull dealing among them then among Christians therefore they shall rise up in judgement against us at the latter day wherfore let us ad vertue to our faith that as we are faithfull so we may be righteous in our dealings 3 They obtained the promises that is some particular promises made to them As the Israelites had the possesion of the Land of Canaan promised to them Caleb had a speciall portion in it Ios. 14.13 David obteyned the Kingdome promised to him Abraham a Son when he was an hundred yeers old but that generall promise concerning Christ and eternall happinesse in soule and body in heaven together they obteyned not yet they were faine to waite a long time for these promises and endured much in the meane season There is a Kingdome promised to us Luk. 12.32 By faith we shall obtaine this promise if we can be content by many tribulations as God hath appointed to enter into it 4. They stopped the mouthes of Lions Samson Iudg. 14.6 not with his cloake but by faith David 1 Sam. 17.36 Benaiah 2 Sam. 23.20 Dan. 6.23 we also by faith shal stop the mouth of that roaring Lion VERSE 34. THe violence of fire that is the force or power Dan. 3.27 If wee have faith no creature shall hurt us The mouthes of the Swords Swords have mouthes as the mouth devoureth so doth the edge of the Sword The Sword devoureth one as well as another sayd David The Israelites escaped the swords of the Aegyptians that were at their heeles ready to thrust them through if the red Sea had not made a passage for them David often declined the Speare of Saul wherewith he was purposed to fasten him to the wall Elias escaped the sword of Iesabel who had threatned to take away his life wee escaped the swords of the Spanyards in eighty eight If they had landed there had beene no mercy with them they would have put all to the sword For God put valour into them they were made strong for their weakenesse Isa. 38.9 Psal. 38.3 and 10. Was it not valiantly done of Abraham with the servants of his owne house to encounter with five Kings was it not valiantly done of little David a young stripling never acquainted with warre to fight with that huge Gyant Goliah that had beene a man of warre from his youth up did not our English men fight valiantly with their little ships against the huge ships of the Spanyards ours being but molehils to their mountaines This valour was of GOD who taught their fingers to fight and hands to warre Weaknesse is twofold in body and soule Hezekiah was brought to great weakenesse when lying on his death bed as he thought hee turned his face to the wall and wept taking his leave of the world yet God made him strong againe David was weake in soule and faint hearted when hee brake forth into this lamentable speech one day shall I perish by the hand of Saul but God made him strong againe Let us entreate him to strengthen the weakenesse of us all When we are sicke what doe we some which is monstrouse to speake send to the Divell for helpe to witches sorcerers c. but to speake the fairest then their is posting to the physitian pils potions all kinde of medicines must be received That is not amisse so as they come in the second place and wee trust not in the Physitians as Ala did The Physitian wee should seeke to in the time of weakenesse and sicknesse should be God Almighty with the eye of faith wee should looke up to him When all earthly Physitians have given us over hee can set us on our legs againe Faith is the best medicine for the recovery of health and strength Tents It is a metonymie put for armies As Gideon with his three hundred men vanquished the Midianites As Ionathan David Asa Iehosaphat c. did their enemies they were not able to stand before them When there be rumours of wars mustering preparing of Horses c. Let not our hearts be troubled faith is the best weapon if you have a strong and valiant faith one shall chase a thousand and tenne shall put ten thousands to flight Let us intreat the Lord to make our faith stronger to our dying day As the Psalmist speaketh of the Church Wonderfull things are spoken of thee thou Citie of GOD So wonderfull things are recorded of faith By that men remove mountaines cast out devils subdue kingdomes nothing is too hard for him that beleeveth All of us by faith shall subdue the kingdome of Satan which is stronger than all earthly kingdomes By faith we shall tread the devill under our feet therefore GOD strengthen the faith of us all Before we had their actions now follow their Passions 1. An enumeration of them 2. An amplification The enumeration is first generall then speciall generall some concerne name body Vers. 36. life 37. The speciall is their flight An amplification 1. By a commendation of the men 38. 2. By a commemoration of the events of their faith 1. Affirmative 39. Negative as the reason Vers. 40. VERSE 35. WOmen received their dead 1 Reg 17.18.23 2 Reg. 4.18.36 Their passions are of three sorts 1. the suffering of those things that goe before death and might provoke us to a defection from God 35.36 2 The kindes of death which they suffered 3. A miserable flying and hiding of themselves The miseries going before death are greater as racking lesser some appertaine to the name some to the body The first going before death is racking as many were under Antiochus in the time of the Maccabees Timpanum was an Instrument like our Rack whereunto the parties were straight tyed the nerves of their hands and feet stretched out their bodies also cruelly beaten even to death thus was Eleazar tormented 2 Mac. 6.30 The which is amplified by their Constancy not receiving deliverance
all make account of malevolent tongues yea and sometimes those that should be Bees will prove Waspes they that should have the best tongues have the worst Therefore we have need of patience while we are a running in this race our house may be burnt our goods stollen our children may dye our cattle may be taken from us we may be attached with a grievous sicknesse driven out of our Countrey in danger of our lives if we have no other crosses we may be sure of malevolent tongues therefore let us have patience in this our race and at length wee shall bee crowned by God Almighty and raigne with him for ever VERSE 2. THis admonition is pressed by three arguments 1 From the patterne and president of our Saviour Christ Verse 2.3 2 From a defect in their former afflictions Vers. 4. 3 From the profitable use of afflictions wherewith they shall meet in this race In the patterne of our Saviour Christ. 1. The delivering of it Vers. 2. Then the applying of it Vers. 3. In Christ we are to consider 1. What he is 2. What hee did 3. The reward of his doing Quis imitandus in quo imitandus quare imitandus Looking exactly accurately considerately as they that cast account their eye and minde shall never be off it So let us looke wishly to Iesus Christ not as the Whirry-man that lookes one way and rowes another but let our heart and feet goe with our eyes Let us looke steadfastly to Christ as Elisha did 2 Reg. 8.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 looking from that is from the afflictions we meet with in this race to Christ that hath obtained the gold and tarrieth for us Our Saviour Christ is here described 1. by his name 2. By his benefits Of our faith whereby we lay hold on Christ and eternall life If Christ be both the Author beginner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arch-Duke Leader and Finisher of our salvation what is left to us just nothing Therefore the whole prayse must be ascribed to him alone Ioh. 15.3 Phil. 1.6 It is not enough to begin a house or a garment but they must be finished neither is it enough for Christians to begin the race that is set before them but they must finish their course in Christianis non quaeruntur initia sed finis The Ministers must fulfill their ministery 1 Thes. 3.10 Not onely all the faithfull in the Old Testament have run this race before us but Christ Iesus our blessed Saviour whom we must all be content to follow First the motive that set him on worke 2. The acts performed by him Some interpret it instead of the joy which he might have had if he would rather for the joy having an eye to that joy setting it before his eyes as Hebr. 11.26 Ioh. 17.5 The thing that hee did is amplified by the end or impulsive cause So wee have joy set before us Rom. 8.18 2 Cor. 4.17 Act. 5.41 This joy was the everlasting glory hee should have in his owne person and in his body the Church which by his sufferings should be assumed into heaven to him Endured the Crosse. Though it were a cruell death 1. It was long he was many houres a dying on the Crosse. 2. It was ignominious betweene two Thieves 3. It was cursed Gal. 3.13 Christ suffered foure kindes of wayes 1. Libenter for the joy 2. Graviter the Crosse. 3. Turpiter shame 4. Vtiliter sitteth at the right hand of the Throne of God And despised the shame To endure was much but this was much greater Shame goes to the heart of many Christ despised it hee regarded it not The Shame of our Saviour was wonderfull great being Lord of all he took on him the forme of a servant Is it not a shame for a King to be in a beggars weede his supposed Father was a Carpenter his Mother a poore woman brought to bed in a stable hee had not an hole to hide his head in he was spit on blindfolded buffeted mocked by Herod and his Souldiers pittifully whipped Loe here is the man derided in a manner of all when he hung on the Crosse. Yet Christ counted all this nothing in regard of the joy Christ will not be ashamed of us when he comes in glory with his holy Angels What fruit hath hee by it what is his reward he sits at the right hand of the Throne of God Hebr. 1.3.8 1. If a man have an excellent runner before him the sight of him will make him to run more couragiously why should not I run on as well as he Alexander would run if he might have Kings to run withall Therefore here he propounds a notable example to us We may looke to the Patriarckes before and after the floud to Enoch Noah Abraham Isaac c. to David and all the Prophets to the blessed Virgin Mary and the Holy Apostles but especially wee must look to Christ he is exemplar exemplarium he ran without sin all others with sinne he ranne and never took a fall all the rest fell at one time or another Therefore let our eye be chiefely on him To whom should the servant looke rather than to his Lord and Master The Souldier rather than to his Captaine The Wife rather than to her Husband Christ is our Captaine Head and Husband our forerunner into heaven therfore let us in this race looke to him As Abimelech said to his followers as yee see mee doe make hast and doe the like so sayes Christ to us as yee see me run so run yee I have run through thicke and thinne prosperity and adversity good report and evill death and life so doe yee How did CHRIST runne Who was so handled as Christ was yet for the joy set before him he endured all and ran on to the very end So let us doe Our crosses may be great but our joy shall be farre greater The afflictions of this life are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed to us they are but a flea biting in respect of the joyes we shall have Our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth unto us a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory This is it which bred such courage and constancy in the holy Martyrs for the joy that was set before them they were sawen in pieces stoned racked put to the sword broyled alive on hot Grydyrons The consideration of this hony did sweeten all their afflictions This made Bishop Ridley to say to Latimer come my brother though we have an hard breakefast yet wee shall have a comfortable dinner So let this joy hearten us all A Merchant and Marrinour endures many stormes and tempests for the haven that is set before them a Souldiar endures the heate of the battell for the spoile a sicke man endures better pills and potions yea cutting for the health set before him and let us endure all calamities sicknesse poverty banishment imprisonment death of friends and
is the same for ever Doe not thinke that the Apostles had one Christ and wee an other they one doctrine and we an other The doctrine of Christ hath beene is and ever shall be the same Socrates among the heathen was semper idem but Christ is our semper idem alwayes the same therefore let us cleave to him VERSE 9. HEre followes the dehortation which hath two parts the one negative which wee must not doe the other affirmative what wee must doe Be not carryed about as chaffe feathers c. With diverse by this understand the legall rites and ceremonies which were diverse that are of diverse sorts Falsum multiplex verum simplex And strange doctrine which the Scripture doth not acknowledge Strange birds strangers out of an other Countrie not bred and borne in the Scripture Worshipping of Images a carnall eating of Christs flesh by transubstantiation c. are strange doctrines Now the heart cannot bee established with erroneous doctrine about meates c. but with the true doctrine of the grace and mercie of God towards us in Christ being justified by Faith wee have peace with God there is no condemnation to them that bee in Christ. This doth establish the conscience that the gates of Hell cannot prevaile against us Let our hearts bee established with this grace Not with meats .i. with unnecessary questions about the ceremoniall law A part is put for the whole There was a time when distinction of meates was strictly to be observed some had rather bee cruelly tormented even to death then to eate swines flesh but now the difference is abrogated God hath said to Peter and in him to us all arise kill and eat no creature now is uncleane all are sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer The severall Observations injoyned us in the Ceremoniall Law cannot make us acceptable to God these cannot strengthen the heart but the grace of God towards us in Christ that his bloud hath purged us from all sin this is the true Cordiall that strengthens the heart Therefore sticke to that and be not carryed away with other doctrines What went yee out into the wildernesse to see said Christ of Iohn Baptist A reede shaken with the winde Wee that bee Christians must bee as stones firmely built on Christ the rocke not as reedes If the East winde blowes the reed goes with that If the West winde arise it goes with that Christians must not bee weather Cockes that turne with the winde wee must be like the steeple it selfe that standeth firmely not like the weather Cocke on the steeple not like Ecebolius that changed his Religion alwayes as the Emperours changed In the time of Constantine and Constantius hee was a Christian In the Reigne of Iulian a Gentile offering to their gods When Iulian was dead a Christian againe lying at the Church doore and saying to the people Calcate mesalem insipidum Thus some now a dayes are carryed about there is no stay in them one while Protestants an other while Papists one while Brownists an other while Anabaptists Thus they are carryed hither and thither Be not as children c. Children are easily carryed won with an apple lost with a nut of one minde to day of an other to morrow ye may make them say and unsay yee may make them call a man good or naught with the turning of an hand Wee must not be like them wee must bee as men well advised what to doe Yee may carry a cow up and downe in the field with a lock of hay ye may carry some horses whither ye will with a horse loafe So the profits and commodities of the world carry many to any Religion So as I may enjoy my goods lands and living I care not of what Religion I be Let us carry other men to Christ but let us not be carryed by any from Christ. In the way of kindenesse any friend may carry us but let neither friend nor foe carry us from Christ. When certaine of Christs Disciples went away Christ asked the twelve Will yee also goe away but sayes Saint Peter in the name of the rest Whither shall wee goe so let us be as resolute though there bee never so many turne-coates let us say Whither shall wee goe to Popery Anabapt to Brownisme no We know whom wee have believed we will never depart from the truth and Word of God established amongst us Since the reformation of Religion in England God wonderfully blessed this land how did hee miraculously preserve it in Q. Elizabeths dayes how many treacheries have beene discovered how was the invincible Navy of the Spaniards foyled How prosperously without the shedding of one drop of bloud came King Iames to the Crown to the great joy of us al How graciously hath God protected him and his Realme since There hath beene treason on treason but God hath broken the nets of them all Among them all the powder treason that should have beene effected by a match is most unmatchable hell it selfe cannot devise such another Fight neither against more nor lesse said the King of Aram to his souldiers save against the King of Israel only So the Papists heretofore cried away with Queene Elizabeth fight against her that is enough Now not the King alone but the Queene Prince and all their royall Issue the Nobility and Clergy the Iudges the Knights and Gentlemen all the Parliament should have beene blowne up at once if this had gone forward where had we beene Here a leg there an arme here the head of such a Noble man should have beene carried about with gunpowder but GOD be thanked we all remaine still and pure Religion in despight of all is continued among us Therefore let us not bee carried about with diverse and strange doctrines As God hath upheld religion among us strangely and miraculously so let us hold it fast and persevere in it to the end Though an Angell from heaven much more though a Priest or Iesuit from Rome though a Papist an Anabaptist a Sectuary preach to us any other Gospell let us be carried by none of them all Let us carry to Christ let us not be carried from Christ. Let us say with Ruth we will live and dye with thee and with S. Peter Thou hast the words of eternall life we will not depart from thee but continue in thy truth for ever and not fall into errour VERSE 10. IT is taken from a contrariety betweene the Ceremoniall Law and Christ. If they that will bee justified by the observation of meats and other parts of the Ceremoniall Law cannot be partakers of Christ then that is to be abandoned but they that will bee justified by the observation of meats c. Ergo. Where first the Doctrine 10 11 12. secondly the Vse The Doctrine is first propounded then confirmed An Altar that is a Sacrifice upon an Altar which is IESUS CHRIST So the word is used 1 Cor. 9.13 2 The word eating doth
sicut Angelorum judicium fuit inexorabilius quàm hominum ita Ministrorum gravius erit quàm Laicorum Therefore let us be types and examples of all goodnesse to our flockes and as we are called the light of the world so let us bee lights indeede Let our light so shine before men that seeing our good workes they may glorifie our Father which is in Heaven Yet more particularly wee must examine our conversation in that speciall calling wherein wee be set The weaver labours in the loome the Merchant on the sea the husband-man is seldome from the plough and our plough must in a manner bee alwayes going ever looking to GODS husbandrie that is committed to us Many there bee that live honestly among their neighbours and are good house-keepers but they neglect their Cure I but innocens absque sermone conversatio quantùm exemplo prodest tantùm silentio nocet sayes Saint Ierome Episcopus est nomen operis Saint Ambrose compares him to a Bee that is ever gathering honey out of the flowers of the Scriptures Id componens arte oris sui and delivers it to the people Saint Chrys. is bold to say Necesse est Episcopum in singulos dies sementem facere ut ipsa saltem assuetudine doctrinae auditorum animi sermonem retinere possint Be instant sayes Saint Paul in season and out of season so often as we can for gifts of minde and body So often as the people can conveniently assemble together let the Ministers of the Lord cast forth the net of the Gospell and be drawing of some fishes to the shoare of eternall life Blessed is the servant whom his Lord when hee commeth shall finde so doing To him He will say come thou good and faithfull servant enter into the joy of thy Master O what an excellent thing is it for a minister thus to affirme with Saint Paul that he hath kept a good conscience in all things in his entrance into the ministery and in a faithfull wise diligent and religious exequution of his office to Gods glory and the benefit of the people such a one may sing for joy with the Swan when hee is ready to depart out of the world I have fought a good fight from henceforth is layd up for me a crowne of righteousness which the righteous Iudge will give me at that day It will play Ioab with us it will say nothing while the fact is a doing but when it is done it will cry alarme against us he himselfe will be most against us as the man that left Absalom hanging sayd of Ioab Therefore as Saint Augustine counselleth us let us obturare ei os in hoc mundo ne clamet contra nos in futuro let us doe nothing so neere as we can that may wound our consciences in this life that wee may make a comfortable accompt in the life to come Take heede of the thousand witnesses nay of the thousand armies as Luther calls it If thou beest arraigned of fellony murder treason at the barre of an earthly judge and but two witnesses come against thee Lord have mercy on thee thou art gone and how shalt thou quake before the barre of GODS tribunall seate when a thousand witnesses shall step out against thee then there is nothing to be expected but that fearefull voice goe thou cursed c. Wee of the Ministery are much subject to the tongues of men we are set on an hill and the eyes of all are converted upon us If there bee but a little spot in the face it is quickly espied and a great matter is made of it yea let us walke as warily as we can give no offence to any yet men will take offence and the best Ministers though living under the protection of a gracious Prince we may escape the clawes of men yet certainely not the best of us all can escape the jawes of men and let not that trouble us for if all could not give CHRIST a good word some sayd hee was a good man others nay but he deceiveth the people then let not us thinke that bee sinfull wretches to have every mans good word In all speeches and obloquies let us have recourse to our consciences and heare what they say of us If all the world commend us and our consciences condemne us we can have no comfort On the contrary side if all the world speake evill of us and our consciences speake good to us we need not to care for any of them all Let us remember that worthy speech of a worthy Father nec malam conscientiam sanat praeconium laudantis nec bonam vulnerat opprobrium criminantis We are wont to say if I have GOD and the King on my side I care for no man in England So may we say if I have GOD and a cleare conscience on my side I care for no man in all the world The Papists say it is unlawfull for a Minister to marry Some Protestants say it is inconvenient for Ministers to marry and indeed their maintenance being so small it is so yet for all that I say it is both lawfull and convenient nay necessary for all Ministers to marry for all without exception But wot ye to what wife namely to a good conscience If thou beest marryed to her if thou hast her at home to comfort thee in the house of thine heart though thy living be never so small thou shalt live marveilously well yea more at hearts ease then King Richard the third did in his Kingdome but if thou beest a minister and hast a Xantippe at home the worme of conscience gnawing on thee for they bad comming to thy Benefice for thy bad living in the same si inde te eijcit fumus malae conscientiae alas poore man whither shall thou goe wilt thou run away from thy selfe whither soever thou goest thou carryest thy conscience with thee and that will keepe a yelling against thee in domo in foro in mensa in lecto and in all places Wherefore let us all be assured that we are at peace with our conscience that wee have this loving Wife to cheere us up wheresoever wee bee what is our rejoycing sayes Saint Paul save the testimony of a good conscience Let a man be lying on his death bed let some say to him remember man what faire and beautifull houses thou hast what goodly Lordships what lands and possessions what bags of silver and gold remember in what credit honour and reputation thou hast lived on the face of the earth will this comfort him thinke you truely but a little But if his conscience say to him as Hezekiahs did to him remember that thou hast walked before the Lord with an upright heart this will comfort him and make his heart to skip for joy in his belly recta vita esca conscientiae a good life is the meate of the conscience Live well in thy calling this is meate and drinke to thy conscience this shall comfort
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
Gods glory Let your light so shine before men that they seeing your good workes they may glorifie your father which is in heaven so we shall doe all faithfully as Gajus did The persons to whom his well doing extended were the brethren and strangers Some interpret brethren the faithfull And indeede they were honoured with that title in the Primitive Church Strangers those that be not yet called but are strangers from the common wealth of Israel Rather by brethren are meant Iewes For my brethren the Iewes By strangers Gentiles converted to Christ as appeares by the opposition verse 7. Hospitality is in speciall manner commended to us in the Scripture Love ye the strangers for yee your selves were once strangers We in England were strangers in Queen Maries dayes Some faine to flee into France some into Germany some to Frankford some to Emden Therefore let us have pitty on strangers Be given to hospital●ty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pursuing it as the hunters doe the Deere we must not invite them summis labijs saith Hierom coldly for fashion sake but toto mentis ardore with a fervent affection and desire to have them We must pull them to our houses as Abraham did Origen observeth of Lot We read of no good workes of his that are registred in Genesis save onely hospitalitie for this alone evadit incendia he escapes burning when all Sodome was burnt hospitalem domum ingressi sunt Angeli The Angels entred into the house of hospitality Clausas hospitibus domus ignis ingressus est the fire entred those houses that were shut up against hospitality Audite hoc qui hospitem velut hostem vitatis Heare ye this O ye covetous misers that shun a stranger as ye would do an enemie whereas indeed ye should make your selves friends of this unrighteous Mammon Iulian writing to the high Priest of Galatia excites all to hospitality by a saying out of Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All strangers poore folke are sent to us by God himselfe peradventure to try us with all Let us be courteous even to strangers as Gajus was In entertaining of them we entertaine Christ and he will reward us at the latter day Mat. 25. VERSE 6. I But how knowest thou Iohn that I am so full of charity Many have related it to me Who both brethren and strangers they have borne witnesse of thy charity comming from thee to me It was religiously and gratefully done of them For we must all acknowledge our benefactours Of what charitie did they beare witnesse Non habitus sed actus saith Aquinas non affectus sed effectus Not of the habite of the charitie which can not be seene but of the act of charity which all the world might see not that thou haddest a good affection to doe good but of the fruits and effects of thy charity that is poore charity goe in peace warme your selves fill your bellies and give them not a crumme to fill them withall Christ shewed no such charity to the people in the wildernesse hee fed them with loaves and fishes Dorcas did not say to the widdowes warme your selves but shee made them coats to warme them withall Such was Gajus his charity he lodged them in his house they sate at his fire he fed them at his table Such must be the charity of us all wee are full of excuses to keepe us from charitable workes which S. Basil most pithily meeteth with all 1. I have not to give no saith he looke upon the rings that be upon thy fingers tell thy tongue that thou lyest if thou canst not give Zacheus gift give the widdowes gift Diversa dederunt sed ad unum pervenerunt quoniam non diversa amaverunt they gave diverse gifts yet they came both to one and the same Kingdome because they both loved one and the same thing which was God It is not the Coffer but the heart which God respecteth Habet semper unde det cui plenum est pectus charitatis hee that hath a heart full of love to Christ and his members shall ever have something to give that fountaine will never be dried up Coronat Deus voluntatem ubi non invenit facultatem God crownes the will where he findes inability of doing 2. I have children to provide for 1. Sayes S. Basil didst thou say when thou prayedst for children Give me children that might keepe me from the Kingdome of heaven 2. As thou hast children on earth so thou hast a brother in heaven which is Christ reckon him among thy children He that loveth Father or mother wife or children more than me is not worthy of me 3. How knowest thou whether thy children shall live or no death may sweepe them all away and that with one beesome too as it did Iobs 4. If they live art thou sure thy goods shall come to thy children strangers may eate them up they may come to thine enemies as Sauls Kingdome did to David 5. Take not too much thought for thy children he that feedes the young ravens will feede thy young children the rather if thou honourest him with thy goods and lettest him to have a portion among thy children The third excuse I will give by will after my death to that S. Basil answeres 1. Thy breath may be stopped on the suddaine that thou shalt have no time to make a will as Valentinian the Emperour was 2. If thou dost a dash with a pen may invert thy meaning and overthrow thy will 3. Then we may thanke death for the good thou dost if thou couldest have lived ever thou wouldst never have done good like a rotten tree that doth no good till it be cut downe 4. Were it not better for thee to have the praise of a liberall man when thou walkest on the ground than when thou art put into the ground 5. No dead creature was brought to the Altar God requires a living sacrifice 6. Thy life is the time of working not death Remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy goods wee must doe good with them in our life not in our death 7. Wilt thou commit thy good workes to Inke and Paper rather than to the disposing of thine owne hands 8. If thou didst receive a Noble man into thy house wouldst thou set the reliques of thy table before him and wilt thou serve God with the reliques of thy life while we have time let us doe good to all We are fallen into those dayes whereof our Saviour Prophesied The love of many shall waxe cold now not the charity of many but in a manner of all is not onely cold but starke dead few or none can witnesse of our charity wee are more wedded to our wealth than to our wives many a one can be content to part more readily with his wife then with his money to good uses yet they be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
and Spirit that ye may have rest and peace of conscience in this life and be received up into his everlasting rest where ye shall never be molested any more in the life to come Now followes the application of the former testimony wherein 1. A naration of the use that we are to make of it 2. A further declaration or exposition of it à 16. to the end In the use 1. An admonition 2. A reason In the admonition 1. A disswasion from the poyson of infidelity that was the bane and destruction of the Israelites 2. A perswasion to a mutuall exhorting and stirring up one of an other which may be a counter-poyson against infidelity In the disswasion the manner and the matter of it VERSE ●● 1 FOr the manner he gives them a caveat to take heede of it See to it it is a dangerous vice therefore beware of it 2 Hee drawes them to the embracing of this caveat by a loving title given to them One brother should be carefull of the good of an other I count you as my brethren in the Lord Iesus having all one Father and one elder brother Christ Iesus therfore I could not but in love give you this watchword And what is the substance of it whereof should they take heed sooner or later at no time they must forsake Christ. There is no time for them that be on the Sea to make shipwracke especially when they bee neere the haven you have begun long agoe to give up your names to CHRIST continue with Him and forsake Him at no time In any of you For mine owne part I love you all and would be loath that any of you should perish What he doth not say an evill eye an evill tongue an evill hand but an evill heart that is the fountaine of all And least they should be ignorant what kinde of evill heart hee meaneth hee addeth of infidelity that is according to the Hebrew phrase an evill unfaithfull heart that is possessed with infidelity as the hearts of the Israelites were What to doe what will infidelity cause us to doe it will produce a lamentable effect if we looke not to it it will make us depart from the living God to leave His campe and to goe to the enemies campe that is the nature of the Word From whom from God to men from him that liveth for ever to them that continue but a while this is the horrible sin of infidelity these fruites it hath therefore let it be eschewed by us all The conjunction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verse 7. is to be referred hither as if all the rest had beene included in a parenthesis Wherefore as the HOLY GHOST sayd to them of old time so say I to you now beware that the same unfaithfull heart bee not in you that was in them 1 Heere we are taught that we of the new testament must make use of the examples that bee in the old Whatsoever things were written afore time were written for our learning Rom. 15.4 Hence it is that Noahs flood wherein the whole world was drowned that the destruction of the Sodomites the overthrow of Tyre and Sydon Lots Wife and such like are mentioned in the writings of the Evangelists and Apostles and Saint Paul in this place will have them to beware of infidelity which was the overthrow of their fathers We reade the Scriptures cursorily to be acquainted with the History that we may be able to talke of it but we make not that profitable use of them for the reformation of our lives as we ought to doe If any in the time of the Law have beene punished for any sin let us take heede of that sin 2 Whereas the Apostle chargeth us especially to take heede of an evill and unfaithfull heart it gives us to understand that every Christian is to looke most carefully to his heart It is good to set a watch over our eyes hands feete tongues but chiefely for to set a watch over our hearts Keep thy heart with diligence omni custodia The heart carries all the body as the great wheele in a clocke doth the whole clocke therefore let us all have an eye to it that it bee in good temper Out of the heart come Murders Adulterie all kinde of mischiefes therefore let us take heede to our hearts It is a folly to goe about to stop the streame if the fountaine remaine unstopped A beautifull apple is not worth a straw if it be rotten at the Core The roote of the tree is especially regarded by every good husband that there be no wormes in it otherwise it is a folly to looke to the branches Let us that be Christians sift and examine our hearts let us labour to purge and clense them especially let us take heede that the worme of infidelity which will cause us to depart from God be not breeding in them That is the maine point that he aymeth at Infidelity is a grievous sin As faith is the greatest vertue so infidelity is the greatest vice Christ could doe nothing among His owne brethren for their unbeliefe sake Matth. 13. ult Infidelity is a barre to keepe out Gods blessings Our Saviour after His Resurrection reproved the eleven Apostles for their infidelity Marke 16.14 The Holy Ghost shall rebuke the world of sin because they did not believe in Christ Iohn 16.9 The Iewes were cut off for their infidelity and we that bee Christians stand by faith Rom. 11.20 The noble man that would not believe Gods promise was trodden under feet in the gate 2 Reg. 7.17 The ancient Israelites whom God brought with a mighty arme out of Aegypt perished in the wildernesse for their infidelity and never set a foote into the promised land Therefore take heed there be not in any of you an unfaithfull heart shall we not believe God shall we make him a lyer hath he said it and shall He not do it Let us not upon the sight of every difficulty murmure against God as the Israelites did and cast away the hope wee have in His mercy and power but let us at all times and in all extremities trust in Him Let us never depart from Christ Iesus which is the high and living God as the Israelites did Will ye also goe away sayd Christ to his Apostles no sayes Saint Peter in the name of the rest Lord whither shall we goe thou hast the words of Eternall life There is no name under heaven whereby we can be saved but the name and power of Christ. Therefore let us not depart from Christ to Moses to circumcision and other Iewish ceremonies to seeke salvation by the observation of the law but as wee have begun to fight as Souldiers under Christs banner so let us continue fighting to the end Let us never depart from this our Captaine Let not the assaults of Satan the allurements of the world honour riches preferment let not the sweet pleasures of the flesh carry us away from Christ
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